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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

I

Tuesday, August

29. 2006

NTSB: Air traffic
controller had his back
turned when jet went down
the wrong runway, A2

•

BY J9E KAv
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Carson
Palmer aced the test.
With a brace prOiecting his
rebuilt knee, the Cincinnati
Bengals quarterback took
the hits, avoided the rush
and threw three touchdown
passes Monday night in his
first game back from the.
injury.
By halftime of the 48- 17
preseason victory over the
Green Bay Packers, Palmer
had convincingly made his
case that he ' II be ready for
the season opener.
"He hasn' t lost a thing,"
right tackle Wlllie Anderson
said. " He's our leader, and
he's back. That's got to
make any Bengals fan feel
real happy."
Showing no hesitation to
take a tackle or take off on a
scramble, Palmer completed
9 of 14 passes for 140 yards
and three touchdowns. It felt
like old times at jubilant
Paul Brown Stadium when
he pointed his right index
finger to the sky after his
second touchdown.
"I can't say I felt real emotional.'' Palmer said. "It just
felt like a business day, a
chance to get some work in."
Unless his knee swells in
the next few days, Palmer
will be on sc.hedule to start
in Kansas City on Sept. 10.
·his goal during a grueling
comeback that had overshadowed the franchise
since its playoff loss to
Pittsburgh on Jan. 8.
"He ·dropped back, he
rolled out, he got hit a few
times, he had a chance to run
the ball," coach Marvin
Lewis said. "He looked very
sood, very sharp. It's still
JUSt preseljSOn, but it's
encouraging ."

Palmer's return was the ter Rich Braham onto the
cornerstone of a buoyant tleld, entering through the
night for the Bengals, who same tunnel where he left on
are 3-0 in preseason for the a cart following his knee
first time since 1976 and injury Jan. 8.
have clinched their first winPalmer's first completion
ning preseason since 1988. went to Chris Henry, who
By contrast, a long-await- made a 66-yard reception on
ed Packers return quickly Palmer's 'lone pass ·in that
became a miserable night.
playoff loss to Pinsburgh.
Running back Ahman Kimo von Oelhoffen's
Green played iii his first shoulder slammed into the
~ame since he tore a tendon side of· Palmer's left knee
111 his thigh midway through after he released that playoff
last season. Green carried 8 pass, shredding ligaments
times for only 18 yards in and dislocating his knee cap.
the first half, unable to find
When Palmer let go of the
much room behind a line ball this time, he got tackled
featuring two rookie guards. for the first time since the
His longest run was 8 yards. injury. Green Bay's Kabcer
Mostly, it was another Gbaja-Biamila hit him
humbling visit for Brett . around the waist and took
Favre. who gets more reason him down, a tame but telling
to hate the place every time tackle.
he ·returns.
Palmer pppped right up.
Last season. Favre threw
felt good to get hit and
five interceptions - his to " Itknow
my knee could
career high in the regular
withstand
contact,"
season - and had the ball Palmer said. the
''They can talk
snatched from his hand by a
all
they
want
about you
fan who ran onto the tield in
to
go,
but until
being
ready
the closing minufes of a 21get
hit,
until
you get
you
14 loss in Cincinnati.
This time, he had the ball pressure on the knee from
tly out of his hand. during a another player, that's when
pass attempt on the opening you know you really feel
series, a fumble that Dexter confident about it."
Three plays later, Palmer
Jackson returned 29 yards
hushed
the stadium by
for a touchdown. He was
scrambling
II yards, then
intercepted on the next
series. and tripped and fell sliding safely on the side of
while dropping to pass in the his brace-supported knee. A
cheer of relief filled the stasecond quarter.
when he got up again. ·
dium
Favre played into the third
Then, Palmer siartedquarter, going 12-of-25 for
doing
what he did all last
162 yards with three sacks
and a touchdown fur the season. throwing .on-target
passes that gave the defen(l.Packers ( 1-2).
ers
little chance. After his
Palmer's
long-awaited
second
touchdown pass, the
return was high drama for
the crowd of 65,614 that usually serious Lewis shared
waved signs and sported No. a belly laugh with receiver
Chad Johnson on the side9 jerseys in support.
AP photo
The Bengals offense was line.
Cincinnati could laugh Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer (9) scrambles away from Green Bay Packers
introduced as a unit. Palmer
defender A.J . Hawk (50) in the first quarter of an NFL football game Monday in Cincinnati.
followed Anderson and ceo- again.

Sizemore has big day as Indians sneak.past Blue Jays
CLEVELAND (AP) Grady Sizemore couldn't be
playing much better if he
tried.
And if there's one thing the
Cleveland Indians' hustling
leadoff hitter is known for, it's
trying.
Sizemore homered, doubled twice and scored three
runs to help Paul Byrd bounce
back from a brutal outing, lilting the Indians over the
Toronto Blue Jays 6-4
Monday night.
The perpetually hustling
Sizemore, who in his second
full season has emerged as
one of baseball's rising stars,
leads the league with 75.extrabase hits, two more than
Boston's David Ortiz.
Sizemore also leads the

·Rio

league in runs (I 07) and doubles (46), is among the leaders
in several other offensive categories. If the center fielder's
uniform isn't dirty, then the
game probably hasn't started.
"If he's not the best allaround player in the lea$ue,
he's near the top," lndtans
manager Eric Wedge said.
"He's just a great all-around
player who works as hard as
anyon.e we have. One thing
people don't see is his mental
toughness. And· just the way
he plays the game, and the
effect it has on his teammates.
"I'll take him over anybody."

Ryan Garko added a pair of
RBI doubles off A.J. Burnett
(6-6) as the Indians, who hav.e
failed to live up to expecta-

Randi Rodgers dished out
15 assists and Veach was
11 -for- ll serving.
from Page Bl
On Saturday, Rio Grande
got its first look at an
American
Mideast
seller for the Redwumen Conference South Division
and went 10-for,-10 serving foe in Tiffin (2-2). Rio was
with one .ace.
sluggish in the loss, dropOverall, the serving was a ping the match in three
bright spot for Rio Grande straight, 16-30, 21-30 and
as. the Redwomen made 22-30.
good on 61-of 64 serves.
Urton ' and
Jessica
Veach was a perfect 16-for- · Rodgers led Rio with eight
16 with two aces and Wills kills each while sophomore
was lO·for-1 0. Wills also middle hiner Stephanie
notched one block and four Lapp added five. Jessica
bl9ck ass1sts 111 her llllllal . added '16 digs with one solo
collegiate outing.
block and two block assists.
Rio again came up a lillie
Rinehart was all over the
·short against Michigan- tloor on the . defensive end
Dearborn (3-1) in the sec- as she tallied 27 digs·to lead
ond match on Friday, losing the Rio defense. Rinehart
in straight sets, 24-30, 21- notched three aces in serv30 and · 18-30. Jessica ing the ball as well.
Rodgers and Wills were
Randi Rodgers delivered
again the kill leaders with 21 . assists and Veach
eight and seven respective- remained perfect in serving,
ly. Both players ·also tallied going 12-for-12.
10 digs and Wills was 14The Redwomen would
for-14 serving with one ace. not leave Michigan empty
the ha~ded as .. they collected
Rinehart
paced
defense with 16 digs while th~•r first wm of the season
senior Lindsay Urton added m the final match of the
· 13.
·
·
weekend
defeating

Soccer
from Page Bl
the Seton Hill cause while
Elaine Zavackas notched
three assists.
Seton Hill out-shot Rio
Grande 49-11.
Sophomore Sarah Sandlin
recorded six saves for the
Redwomen
while
Sam
Gilosnki posted fiw stops in
70 minutes and Eileen Tiano
I

lions following a 93-win sea- · of a bases-loaded jam and
son in 2005, improved to a worked a scoreless seventh.
m,Yor league-best 14-5 since Rafael Betancourt pitched the
Aug. 9.
eighth and Tom Mastriy hit a
Reed Johnson had three hits batter with two outs in the
for the Blue Jays:
ninth before getting his fourth
Byrd (9-6) didn't make it save in four tries since being
out of the first inning of his handed the closer's job.
previous start, getting banged
"Cabrera P,icked me up,"
around for nine runs - three Byrd said. 'I didn't deserve
earned - and eight hits at the win. He should have gotKansas City on Wednesday. ten it."
He escaped with a no-deciSizemore's 20th homer sion when the Indians, trailing he hit 22 last year- put the
10-1 after the first, rallied to Indians ahead 6-4 in the sixth.
win 15-13.
The 24-year-old, who plays
This time, the right-hander all out all the time, drilled a 2stayed around long enough to I pitch from Burnell over the
get a cheap win, allowing wall in center.
three earned runs and 10 hits
Six of Sizemore's last seven
in five-plus innings.
hits have gone for extra ba&lt;;es,
Fernando Cabrera replaced and his hard-nosed style has
Byrd in the sixth and got out made an impression on everyRochester in three gam~s .
30-19, 30-16 and 30-28.
Jessica Rodgers delivered
a complete game in the win,
notching 15- kills and 22
digs, she was 9-for-9 serving and 9-for-9 passing with
one solo block. Urton had a
strong for the second consecutive match as she had
double-figures in kills and
digs· with I0 and 12 respectively. Urton went 16-for16 in the serving department as well.
Will s also produced a
so11d game with eight kills,
22 digs and three aces en

added two saves in the final
· 2() minutes.
Next up for Rio
. will be the 2006 home opener against last year's runnerup in the AMC South
Division, Mount
on
Tuesday
Nalarene
(August 29). Kick-off is, set
for 4 p.m. at Evim Davis
Field.
Last year at Mount Vernon,
the Lady Cougars shut out
the Redwomen by the score
·
of 6-0.

one in Cleveland's clubhouse.
"I can't say enou*h about
Grady," said Byrd. 'Whether
he goes 0-for-5 or .5-for-5, he
plays the same way. He plays
hard. He dives, nsks injury.
.He signed a big contract at the
beginning of this season and I
don't think i(s a secret that
some guys, after they get a big
contract, get a little too comfortable. Not Grady.
"The way he plays the
game, you'd think he was in
the last year' of his contract,
not the first. Everyone on our
team should learn from him."
Sizemore, a favorite among
Cleveland's female fans, · is
commanding respect from
opponents as well.
"He's and up-and-coming
star," Blue Jays manager John

route to an 18-for-18 effort absence loomed large for
her young team, "Without
in serving the ball.
it
was Kari, we played extremely
Defensively,
Rinehart who shined the well, especially against
brightest as she tallied 35 Georgetown," Fields said.
digs and went 18-for-18 "I thought our defense was
passing .the ball. She also really good against them.
"But we were missing a
delivered three aces.
Randi Rodgers had 34 defensive player, we were
assists and 13 digs while also missing an offensive
Veach added six kills and ll player without Kari," Fields
digs to the winning effort. said.
Lapp also chipped in with
"Against UMD we played
six kills.
well the first two games, I
Rio Grande head coach was very pleas.ed with 'that,
Patsy Fields said she buttllen, Tiffin we just fell a
thought her team played part. we couldn't pass the
well, but that Kari Rodgers' ball," Fields added. "We've

0

:!0

Gibbons said. ''I've seen
enough of him in the last year·
to know that."
Sizemore took the praise in
stride.
"I'm just trying to improve
all the time," Sizemore said.
"There are a lot of things I '\
could do better."
,
Three doubles, two intentional walks and a sacrifice tly
helped the Indians snap a 2-2
tie and score three runs in the
fifth.
Sizemore led off with his
second double and scored
when
Jason
Michaels
thumped a two-base hit off the
!eli-field wall. The Blue Jays
put Travis Hafner on, am:l one
out later, Garko's RBI double
made it 4-2.
got to improve there.
"Rochester, we did come
back, so we showed that we·
can come back, I think
we're a team that's not
going to quit," Fields added.
"Overall I was pleased, it
was a tournameni where
we've got to come back and
lind out what we've got to
work on.
~
"Hopefully we can learn
from this."
• Rio Grande travels to
Marietta to compete in the
Marietta
College
Tournament over the weekend.

O'Bleness offers
new services at
Albany clinic, A6

\,.
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o (' l .r'l: IS • \'ol.

:&gt;(&gt; .

WEilN J.:SIIA Y , AUGUST 30, 2011b

:'llo . t h

"''"' .m~duil~"· ntinel.l'llno

Council, lawyer ·discuss options for demolition project

SPORTS
• Eastern beats South
Gallia. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
met with Solicitor · Jennifer
Sheets Monday evening to
discuss what recourse can be
taken to enforce the demolition order on a downtown
building.
Allan Irvin of Pomeroy
was given 30 days to demolish the condemned building
he purchased earlier this
summer from Jack Carsey.
The building remains standing, with one missing wall
and a snow fence surrounding the property.

,,

Irvin has maintained that
the building can be rehabilitated, and that he has the
financial backing to complete the work. Prior to council 's order to demolish the
building, Irvin was granted a
30-day extension of the condemnation order· issued by
the village's building inspector. The extension was granteel to allow him an opportunity to outline to the de~ ign
review board his plans for
repairing the building, and to
demonstrate financial ability
to complete the work.
No visible improvements have been made, and ·Irvin
has taken no steps to demol-

ish the buildinl? and reclaim
the site. The village considers it a safety hazard.
According to Sheets, the
village has little choice but to
demolish the building at its
own expense, and attach the
cost of demolition to the
county tax records, or collect
the cost through a civil lawsuit. The village ·cannot.
however, force Irvin to tender the cost of demolition,
nor can it impose a criminal
penalty or jail term for failing to do 'so.
.
"There is no criminal
penalty in the Ohio Revised
Code or village ordinances in
this case," Sheets said. "The

iss·ue before counci l i'
whether you can generate
suftlcient funds to demolish
it and how to collect the cost
from the owner.''
The village is already in
debt for ihe demolition oi' the
Mark V building, which was
directly across the &lt;tree!
from Irvin 's building, and
will likely not recover the
cost unless the owner. Kay
Platter, sells the property and
satisifies a first lien to
Farmers Bank and Saving's
Co.
·
Rex Darst, who owns the
property adjacent to Irvin's
also expressed concern about
his own liability in the event

or an inju ry from falling
debris from the huilding. He
and his wife. Brenda. Mayor
Sandy lannarell i. and Lenny
Tennant. divided the cost of
demolishing their building~
on the same block, which
were all condemned a month
hefore Irvin 's.
Other bu siness
Council Member Jean
Craig questioned the status
of rental unit inspections
promised as part of an
increase in rental fees
approved earlier this year.
She said council had been
assured that all rental units in
'

Please see Project. AS

OBITUARIES
Page AS ·
• Robert 'Jeff' Glass
• Dexter Odelf Erwin

,

..,.,.w.Both Sorgontjphoto

INSIDE
Submitted photos
• Polygamist fugitive
Evans walks around the field while waiting for another play between the Pittsburgh Steelers
Warren Jeffs arrested in
and the Vikings.
Nevada to face charges
of marrying off girls.
See Page A2
• SWCD fair winners
announced.
See Page A3
• Bethel Worship Center
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
schedules spiritual
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
. classes. See Page A3
POMEROY
When
• O'Bieness offers free
Meigs County's Evan Shaw,
heaHh screenings for
a senior at Ohio University,
women. See Page A3
was selected for a video pro· • Ohio's largest county to . duction internship with
National Football League
improve poll worker
(NFL) Films last spring, he
trainihg. See Page AS
thought it was "almost too
• Federal court lawsuit
good to be true."
· And now that he's beeo
challenges Ohio rating
there and back, he's more
rules. See Page A6
excited than ever about his

VIDEOGRAPHER SHAW RELA1ES
NFL INTERNSHIP ·HIGHLIGHTS

The 'Joy' of scrapbooking
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTIN£L.COM

POMEROY
"Yoi•
don't realize what you have
in life until. you see it on
paper." Joy Searles said.
Searles, 19, of Athens and
employee of Pomeroy' s
Makin Memories Scrapbook

Store is an amateur photographer and a pro at scrapbooking. so much so she
was chose n as one . of 25
finalists in a national scrapbooking coolest sponsored
by Basic Gray titled, "Be
Bold Album Contest."
Please see Joy, AS

career opportunities. In fact
he was given a try-out to
shoot four pre-season NFL
games- a first for_an intern
- and if he gets some good
footage will be hired to shoot
some games this year. the
first being a Steelers game in
Pittsburgh.
.He has also been hired to be
a camera assistant for the
Bengals and Browns home
games for this se!lson, and Evans shoots the Pittsburgh Steelers/MN ViGkings game.
was invited to return in While he had Zack Glaze of Pomeroy with him to assist and
·watch out for him as he concentrated on filming, Shaw took a
Please see Shaw, AS
hit from a Steelers player while crouching down to videotape.

WEAmER

·I

·~uo.u~
.

Joy Searles. employee at Makrn Memories Scrapbook Store
in downtown Pomeroy displays her award winning scra·pbook "Who I Am " which was picked as one of 25 finalists in
a national scrapbooking contest out of hundreds of entries.

Details on Page A6

'

Middleport paving

INDEX
'

FOtlball

Is

111118

pad

2 SECflONS -

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

Obituaries

WITCH fOR IT AUGUST 31STI

1.2 PAGES

Calendars

Editorials
Sports
Weather

Beth Sergent;photo

The latest bureaucratic delay to repair Pomeroy's parking
lot wall is the argument over using new or old sandstone in
order to repair the .wall with its historic integrity in mind.

B Section

Wall of woes

A second layer of

asphalt is goin~.
on Middlepmt
streets and alleyways this week,
through a paving
project funded
through the State
Capital
Improvement
Program.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Jeru salem
has its Wailing Wall while
Pomeroy has its wall of
woes located on the village\
lower parking lot where
gapping holes indicate the
danger of collapse. danger
that may now cost the village $7.500 to repair II'J.len it
was to co~t it nothing. ·
Pomeroy had lined up

Brian J. Rood/photo

A6

© 2006 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

..

+
•J

I00 percent funding for the
parking lot wall repair project est imated at around
$55,000 with 75 percent of
t~c cost covered by the
Federal
Emergency
Management Agency. 12 1/2

Pen.:cnt
.

comino0

from

Buckeye Hill s and the
remaining 12 112 percent
coming
from
the
Regional
Appalachian
Please see Woes, AS

�The Daily Sentinel

.PageA2

NATION • WORLD

NTSB: Air traffic
controller had his back
turned when the jet went
down the wrong runway

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
'

Friday, Sept. l
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Village
Ordinance Committee, 4
p.m.
Monday, Sept. 4
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Tru&gt;tees, 7 p.m.
at Syracuse village ball.
Tuesday, Sept. 5
RUTLA ND - Rutland
Township Trustees. 5 p.m.,
Rutland Fire Station.
Wednesday, Sept. 6
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., townshi p trustees.
Friday, Sept. 8
ATHENS ~ Area 14
Workforce
Investment
Board, 9:30a.m., OU Inn.
Monday, Sept. 11
POMEROY Meigs
County
Agricultural
Society will meet at 7:30
p.m. The meeting date was
changed due to the Labor
Day holi,day.

BY JEFFREY McMURRAY

.Polchinkc was pulled
fro m the burning plane after
the crash but has not been
l-EXINGTON. Ky.- The ab le to tell inve sti gators
lone air traffic coruroller on "ihy the pilots tried to take
·duty the morning Comair off from the wrong runway.
Flight 5191 crashed cleared
Both crew members were
the jet fur takeoff, then familiar with the Lexington
turned his back to do some airport.
according
to
"administrati ve duties" as Hersman. She said Clay had
the aircraft veered down ·the been there six times in the
wrong runway, a federal p(tSt tw o years. and
investigator said Tuesday.
Polehinke had been there W
Separately, the Federal times in the past two years
Aviation
Administration - but ne it her had been to .
acknowledged violating its the airport since a taxiway
own policies when it repaving project just a week
assigned only one controller earlier that had altered the
· taxiway route.
to the Lexington tower.
The commuter jet strugEarlier Tuesday, the FAA
gled to get airborne and adm itted it violated a policy,
crashed in a field before outlined in · a Nove mber
daybreak Sunday. killing 49 2005 directi ve. requirin g
of the 50 people aboard. that control tower observaafter tak ing off from a tions and radar approach
3,500-foot runway instead operations be handl ed by
of an adjoining one that was separate controllers.
twice as long. Experts said
EAA spokeswoman Laura
the plane '!eetletl at least Brown said the controller at
5.000 feet for takeoff. The the Lexington airpon had to
sole survivor. first ofticer do his own job - keeping
James Polehirike , was in track of airplanes on the
AP Photo
critical condition Tuesday.
ground and in the air up to a
The air traffic controller few miles away - as well Lexington Pollee Officer Joseph Sallee guards the wreckage of Com air Flight 5191 at Blue Grass Airport in Lexmgton, Ky.,
Tuesday. The flight crashed on takeoff Aug. 27 after using a runway that was too short, killing 49 people.
had an unobstructed view of as radar duties.
the runways and had cleared
Before Hersman's briefi ng
the aircraft for takeoff from on Tuesday, the NTSB said lounge singer who lives in i ng into whether runway Bahamas; starting as a first was an accident, but hi.s wife
lights or a repaving project officer and getting promot - m)(l - police she shot
the longer runway, said Polehinke was flyin g the Miami. ·
Polehinke because she feared
It was miraculou s that a week before the crash ed to captain in 2000.
National
Transportation plane ; it made no mention of
for her life after her husband
Polehinke
was
still
alive,
the
crew
into
'turnTom
Herfort,
director
of
confused
Safety Board member Clay being the one who taxthreatened
to . ki II her. The
said
Dr.
Andrew
Bernard,
a
ing
onto
the
wrong
runway.
for
Gulfstream.
operations
ied the plane into position.
Debbte Hersman.
Herald
reponed.
Miami
On Monday night, investi- was a pilot for the company
Then, "he turned his back
The crew checked in at surgeon at the University of
Polehinke declined · to
to perform administrative 5:15 a.m. but boarded the Kentucky Hospital. He was gators used the same model of at th'e same time as ·
press
charges, and Cruz said
Polehinke
.
.
not
burned,
but
he
had
facial
He
recalled
no
aircmft
that
crashed.
a
CRJduties," Hersman said. "At wrong plane at first,
the
couple
had resolved
·
fractures;
two
spinal
frac1
00.
to
try
to
recreate
the
last
.
problems
with
hi
s
colleague.
that point, he was doing a Hersman said. They staned
"You know who's got the their problems.
traffic count."
preparatinns hefore a ramp tures; a complex pelvi s frac" few rninut.es of Flight 5191 as
"They have o.vercome it,
The controller, whose·name worker alet1ed them to the lure; a broken leg, foot and it taxied away from Blue good reputation and who
doesn
't.
J
didn't
hear
anything
they are working it
and
Grass
Airpon's
terminaL
.
hand;
.
three
broken
ribs;
a
was not released, had been error. Even with the delay,
out."
he said . " It is a good
Polehinke had a clean l;&gt;ad about the guy," Herfon
working at the Lexington air- passengers boarded on time. broken breastbone; and a
record as a pilot, with no said. "As far as I know, he relationship. They were
pan for 17 years and was and a ramp worker found no punctured lung .
supposed to trave l to Italy
Polehinke's
family
issued
accidents
or mistakes, was a good captain for us."
fully qualified, Hersman said. problems during an inspecor something, just the two
Jackson
sai
d
newspaper
a statement thanking the authorities said.
Polehinke was flying the tion, she said.
Polehinke spent five years repons about her son were of them."
plane when it crashed, but it
Polehinke 's
mother, officers who saved his life.
lies, but her boyfriend and
Associated Press writers
was the flight's captain, Honey Jackson, said herson and said their thoughts were - from 1997 to 2002 Elizabeth
Dunbar
with
the
victims'
families:
in
flying
short-range,
twinbusiness
manager,
Antonio
Jeffrey Clay, who taxied the is not to blame for the crash,
aircraft onto the wrong run- and she asked people to be . " We know that if he were engine planes for Florida- Cruz, confirmed newspaper Lexington; uslie Miller in
Gulfstream repons that Polehinke's wife; · Washingron; Bruce Schreiner
way, Hersman said. Clay patient until all the facts able to, Jimmy would joip. based
us in telling them that ther, International Airlines. He Ida, shot .him in the abdomen in Louis ville; and Melissa
then turned over the con- were revealed.
trols to Polehinke for take"He could die at any are in our constant prayers. ' flew at small airpons all with a: handgun in 1999. Nelson in Pensacola, Fla.,
moment," said Jackson, a
Federal officials are look- over Florida and the Polehinke said the shooting · contributed 10 this report.
off, ihe investigator said.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

· Polygamist fugitive Warren Jeffs arrested in Nevada to face charges of marrying off girls
KEN RITTER

Jeffs' vehicle was stopped
on .Interstate 15 for having a
temporary Colorado license
LAS VEGAS - After tag that wasn't easily read. more than a year on the run able, FBI and Nevada
• and three months on the Hig)Way Patrol officials said.
State Trooper Eddie
: FBI's Most Wanted l.ist. the
charismatic leader of a Dutchover
told
The
polygamous sect was cap- Associated Press he felt
tured during a routine traffic something was amiss.
stop and now faces. charges
"Something was obvious. he . arranged marriages ly wrong," Dutchover said.
, between underage girl s and "I even told him, ' You're
t
older men .
making me nervous. J·s
Warren Steed Jeffs, 50, everytl:ting OK 0 '
was arrested without inci" He said, 'Everythin g's
dent just outside Las Vegas fine,"' Dutchover said. "He
late Munday, . the FBI said just stared straight ahead."
Tuesday. No weapons were
Dutchover called other
found, but the 2007 red officers. Even when Sgt.
• Cadillac Escalade he was David Miller found letters
•
riding in was filled with in the car addresse d to
items including three wigs, ''President Warren Jeffs ,"
15 cell phones, $54.000 in Jeffs refused to give hi s
cash and $10,000 in gift name.
cards, authorities said.
Jeffs identified himself as
Jeff's
leads
the John Findley, using a conFundamentalist Church of tact lens receipt fmm
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Florida as identification.
Saints , a group that broke . "Once the Fj31 got there,"
. • away from · the Mormon Dutchover said , "he gave
church a century ago. He is hi s full name, Warren Jeffs,
said to have at least 40 wives and kind of gave a sigh."
• and nearly 60 children.
Jetfs would not tell invesChurch dissidents say that tigators where he had been
underage marriages
hiding out, but he did say ·
some involving g,i rls as ''that he was being subject
young as 13 - escalated to what he termed religious
into the hundreds under his prosecutions." said FBI
leadership. and t.hat he agent John E. Lewis.
broke apan families by cast-.
Items inside the vehicle
ing out marri ed men and . also included four laptop
reassigning their women computers. a GPS device, a
and.children to othe rs.
pol ice scan ner, and numerArizona Attorney General ous unopened envelopes
Terry Goddard told KTAR- that were thought to contain
AM of Phoe ni x that Jeffs ' more cash. Lewis said.
arrest marks "the beginning
Jeffs wa' being held
of tlte end of ... the tyrann i- Tuesday in Clark County
cal rule of a small gro~ p of jail , awaiti,ng a court hear· people .over the practically ing Thursday· on a federal
I0,000 fo ll owers of the charge of unlawful flight to
FLDS sect." He predicted it avoid prosecution ..
will lead more people to
The two people trave ling
come forward with allega- wit h him. wife Naomi Jeffs
tion&gt; of sex ual abuse .
and a brother. Isaac Steed
Most of the chu rch :s Jeffs. both 32, were released
membe" live in Hildale, aitd will not be charged, FBI
adjoining agent Steven Martinez said .
Utah, •. and
Colorado Ci ty. Ari1 .. but Martinez said Warren Jeffs
authoriti es have 'aid they initially used an alias, hut
believe Jeft\ had "safe Martinez would not disclose
houses" in four other &gt;latcs the name.
Jeffs is wanted in Utah
- includ ing Nevada and Arizona on charges of
·and Canada.
BY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

'

arrangin g two marriages May, with a $100,000
between underage girls and reward offered for informaolder men . The charges tion leading to his capture.
The FLDS Church split
include two counts of rape
from
the
mainstream
as an accomplice in Utah ,
with each count punishable Mormon Church when the
Mormon s
disavowed
by up to life in prison.
He had been on the FBI's polygamy more than I 00
Ten Most Wanted list since years ago. Warren 'Jeffs took

over 'the renegade sect in
2002 after the death of his
98-year-old fath er, Rulon
Jeffs, who was said to have
had p5 children by several
women. Warren Jeffs took
nearly all his father's widows as his own wi ves. ·
Jeffs has been call ed a

dangerous ex tremi st by
those familiar with hi s
church. Church dissidents
said that while the sect has
long practiced the custom
of arrang ed marriages,
yo un g gi rls were rarely
married off until Warren
Jell's came to power.

Don't f&lt;lrget to say "Thanks"
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School events

Church events

Birthdays

SWCDfair
winners announced
POMEROY -. Winners year at the fair is co-sponof the my stery farm conte st sored by the Fair Board and
held at_ the Meigs County the Meigs SWCD.
fair were &lt;tnnounced today
The winners were:
by the Meigs Soil and
Class I - 75% or more
Water
Conservation alfalfa: I st .place, · Roy ·
Di strict.
Holter;
2nd
place .
The daily ·winners were Christopher Holter.
Monday, Maxine Dyer . Class 2 - All grasses:
farm, winner Jason Pierce; I st place, Roy Holter; 2nd
Tue sday, the Donna Ihle place, Brian Windon; 3rd
farm. Brenda Johnson; place Christopher Holter.
Class 3 - 49% or less
Wednesday,
the
John
Grueser farm , Troy Seyoc; legumes: I st place, Roy
Thursday the Tony Kopec Holter.
Winners recdved cash
farm ,
winner,
Jordan
Picken s; Friday, the Keith awards and ribbons from
Wood farm, winner Tyler the fair board and the first
Johnson , and Saturday, the place winner will receive
Gary Michael farm, Roy plaques from the Meigs
Holter winner. Each winner SWCD at the annual meeting and. banquet on Sept. 26
received a $10 prize.
at
Meigs High School
The hay show held each

ATHENS - O ' Bieness the woman's history indi Memorial Ho spital will cates further testing is neconce again co-sponsor a For essary, a certificate for a
Women .Only event to assi st free mammogram will be
.area women without health given to the individuaL
in surance
(including Women over the age of 17
Medicare or Medicaid). are eligible for the free serFree screenings for cervical vice. Participating healthcancer and breast cancer care professionals include
will be provided by Jane E. Broecker, MD;
0 ' Bleness;
Athens Michael J. Clark, DO;
Pathology and Radiology Andrea S. Clem, DO ; Eric
As sociates of Athens. Hoff, DO; Megan Porter.
Appointments are required. DO; Tanya Porter. DO; and
The examinatio.ris will be Jack M. Ramey. DO . .
Tv make an tippoifllment
Friday, Sept. 8, from noon
to 4 p.m. at the Castrop or for more il({ormativn,
tir e
Communitr
Center, Suite 260, in the ca ll
Relation
s
Departmeni,
O'Bleness Medical Park. If
the clinical breast exam or 592-9300.

Hayman reunion held
Nauti ca
Wolfe,
RAC INE - The 48th and
Kirsten
and
Matthew
annual reunion of the late
George R. and Vira Mae Moore , Zane Juy, Curtis
Crawford Hayman w&lt;~s held lrbyand Curtis lrby, Jr.
Nathan Kirk. Margaret
at St ar Mill Park in Racine .
Dan Hayman had grace Packmen, Don, Jean. Dave
and
Karen Carpenter,
before the dinner.
Daniel
Donna , Bryce ·and
·
Atten,ding were Lil Hart.
Sayre,
Doris
Lind~t and Allison Jewe ll , Debbie
Rogers,
Dan,
Faith.
Kelly,
Joe Kirb y, Sr.. Virgil and
Delores Ours, Tom and Sherry, Addie and Hannah
Isabel Edward s, Sid and Hayman . April. Erin and
Roa ch,
Eric.
Carol Haym an. Bob and Mallory
Judy Hrivnak , Donna Tamara and Paytyn Faith
Nease, Cherylc Kni ght , Tucker, and Gerald R.
Rhonda, Kindra, Jennifer CQ~wford .

2 Col. x 2"

Borders and Artwork may v8/y.

•

Suicide witness needs to do more than talk

Wednesday, Aug. 30
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453 special
meeting, 7 p.m. The entered
· apprentice degree will be
held for two candidates.
Refreshments. All Masons
invited.
Friday, Sept. l
SALEM CENTER
Saturday, Sept. 2
Meigs County Pomona . POINT
PLEASANT,
Grange meets at 7:30p.m. W.Va. - Alice Globokar
at Star Grange Hall located · will observe her 86th birthon County Road I, three day on Sept. 2. Cards may
miles north of Salem be sent to her at the
Center, Star Grange will Plea sant Valley Nursing
provide refreshments.
and Rehabilitation Center,
Saturday, Sept. 2
Sand Hill Ro ad, Point
SALEM CENTER Pleasant, W.Va.

I

•

VVednesday,August30, 2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 potluck
supper, 6:30 p.m. followed
BY KATHY MITCHEll
by meeting at 7:30p.m.
AND MA!ICY SUGAR
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville l-odge 411,
Dear Annie: I have a sit7:30 p.m. Members to take uation I have never seen
nonperishable food item . addressed in your col umn. I
Refreshments, 6:30p.m.
have a friend who witnessed
Tuesday, Sept. 5
his girlfriend's su icide. He
MIDDl-EPORT
is a co.mplete mess (totall y
Middleport Lodge #363 · understandable).
F&lt;'J,AM monthly business
I wan t to help, but don't
meeting . 7:30 p.m. Bring know how. I've offered to ·
non-perishabl~ food items
listen if he needs to tal k,
for Grand Master's food and we have done some
bank program. All Master talking, but I can' t underinvited. stand how he is feeling, so
Masons
Refreshments.
it doesn 't seem as if I am
truly helping. I suggested
he talk to the local mental
health department. And he
did o.n seve ral occas ion s
Th d
A
29
urs ay, ug.
(shortly
after the suicide).
TUPPERS P[.,AINS But
he
says they can ' t
"Pray for School 2006"
understand
because they
Concert of Prayer. 7 p.m..
Eastern
High
School. have not gone through this.
. Teachers, admini strators. I might add he is getting
sc hoo1 perso.nne 1, studen ts tired of people telling him ;
"I know how you feel. " He
and parents in vited.
says unless they actually
witnessed a suicide, they
don't have a clue.
He also won't go b.ack to
Sunday, Sept. 10
the local suicide support
RACINE - Annual har- group. He says the other
vest festival of St. John participants have been
Lutheran Church 33441 going for years and they are
Pine Grove Rd., will begin still really messed up . Plus.
with a worship service at II none of them actually wita.m . followed by a potluck nessed a suicide.
at noon . Robert Gibson is
He doe sn' t feel anyone
· the pastor.
understands. Is there someone he can talk to 0 He needs

O'Bleness offers free health ·
screenings for women

* Ads must be paid for in advance.

-

Clubs and
organizations

Page ·A3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 30,2006

help now. -Want to Help
Dear Want to ·Help :
While suicide-survivor support groups are helpful for
those who need to talk
about their loss wi th others
(no matter how long that
takes), your friend may
need more. As a witness to a
suicide, he may be sufferin g
from posttraumatic stress
disorder, which puts him at
great risk. Suggest that he
ask his doc.tor to refer him
to a therapist who deals
with PTSD. or he can contact the Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder Alliance (ptsdalliance .org) for information
and referrals.
Dear Annie: How do you
know when a marriage is
over? What i's it that keeps·
two unhappy peop.le together so many years?
At the moment, I am on
my second marriage. It has
been 20 years. and the re
h~ve been many roug h and
unhappy times. Th e only
good factor is the three children we've had together.
I have tried to approach
my husband to let him know
how miserable I am, but it
alway s ends in a big fight ,
which sometimes becomes
verbally or physically abusive. Annie, I'm only 52 and
want to spend the rest of my
life with some measure of
happiness . I have been

working on the financial
pan, such as getting debts
paid down and squirreling
money away, but I desperately want out now.
I am afraid of the
unknown and wonder if I
can stan over again. Times
just seem so much harder
than they were 25 year&gt;ago.
- Need Help in Illinois
Dear
Need
Help:
Actually, there are more
resources to . help newly
divorced women now than
there were 25 years ago .
First. if your husband is abusive. please call the National
Domestic Violence Hotline
(ndvh.org) at 1-R00-799SAFE (1-800-7 99-7233 )
Then look into coun se ling
before making any major
deci sion. If you choose to
leave your marriage, your
state should offer alsistance
through its Depanment of
Labor. and also check out
community colleges. the
YWCA (ywca.org) and government-sponsored OneStop Centers at www.doleta.gov/us\vorkforce/onestop
/onestopmap .cfm.
· Dear Annie: I read the
lett er from the woman
whose
elderly friend .
" Sadie. "
claimed
the
woman's 80-year-old husband . made a pass at her.
You thought Sadie ma y
have some dem entia. I

think the husband should
be tested.
My husband made a pasat someone, and it destroyed
a family relationship. It
turned out he has frontotemporal dementia - the first
signs of which are sexual .,
indi scretions .and giv ing
money away. My husband
had done both.
As our population li ves
longer. I am afraid this wi II
become more prevalent.
Maybe if my family reads
thi &gt;. thev wi ll understand
the depth of thi, disease. I
pray they can find it in their
hearts to forgive and accep("-.
my husband a&gt; he is. - C.
Dear C.: How sad. We
hope your fam ily members
will see yo ur letter anti
realize thi s indisc retion
was beyond yo ur hu sband 's controL
Arwie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the All" Lande"
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie~~ Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, lL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Bethel Worship Center
schedules spiritual classes
TUPPERS PLAINS The
schedule for cla sses to be given
by Dr. Dale s Sides' in' his
Exercising Spiritual Authority .
Seminar at the Bethel Worship
Center is Wednesday, 7 to 10
p .m., Thursday and Friday, lO
a.m. to I p.m. and 7 to lO p.m. an
Saturday, 9 a.m. to noon and 2 to
5 p.m.
There is no regi stration fee .
However, a love offering will. be
taken at each session to offset the
cost. A nursery will be available for
the evening classes only. .

Dr. Sides will al so be holding a
book signing with a live remote
hosted by Joy-FM at Bethel
Worship Center between the
Saturday sessions.
. Bethel Worship Center is located
2 miles south of Tuppers Plains on
State Route 7 and about 20 miles
from Athens and Pomeroy. and
Parkersburg.
For more information please call
the church office at 667-6793, or
visit
rhe
web
sire,
www.berhelwc.o rg; or contact
Dwight Honaker at 740-590-2783.

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�'
r

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of rel(l!ion, or prohibiting the
.free t•xercise t!Jereoj; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of' tire press; or tl1e right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to l'etitiou the
Gor•emmetlt for a redress ofgrier,ances.
1

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

-

READER'S

V'IEW

Bring it.on
Mmgan sRaid to boost county mmomy
Dear Editor: .
\1organ· ., Raid i' coming' What does that mean? Well,
it could me;ul "great economic boost for the county and
its businesse.s.
In 2003. Morgan's Raiders came calling. Many &gt;keptic' t lwu~h the event wa., foolish and misguided.
However. "i1 cuntribrned enormously to the economy of
ihc county. Thou;,ands of dollars were spent by tourists
and parlicipanh. So _it will also be donethis time.
' TI1anks 10 the Six lh Ohio Cavalry, named Daryl
Markijohn c1ncl Boh Vance. the event is coming again.
starting in Wilkesville and moving the entire length of
Meig., County in five Jays.
· I have heard many people\ lament that Meigs. County is
poor and it will alwa ys be so, ~!nd there is not mu~h that
~an be done to change that. But that is not true. Thi&gt;
eve nt is an example of how hard work and dedication to
an idea can wnrk.
Living history' Just think: M&lt;\ny of us travel hundreds
of miles to places like Gettysburg or Jamestown and
spe nd hundreds of dollars to see historical landmarks
when all alo ng we did 1101 have to leave our own country to witness 'history. This eve nt' will be like no other. It .
will be living history with real people portraying actual I
even ts .
R&lt;!memher "Field of Drea ms'''' Kevin· Costner's character was encouraged to "build it and they will come.''
Hundreds will come. Are you ready? Thousands· of dol'[ars will be spent and hundreds of memories will be
made. People from all over the United States will see
places like Harrisonville.- Chester, Bashan, Portland and
Pomeroy and will never forget it. They will tell others
~nd they will come and so on and so on.
: Fellow ci tizens in Meigs. we have a tourist Mecca. We
just have to believe in ourselves. Many counties all
around Meigs. with a lot less historica l significance,
~ave developed a lively lllurist trade , and so can we.
!=ome and support the event and see what is possible.
: Tliank you. Sixth Cavaliy Thank you. Morgan 's Raid
Ccnnmittee of Meigs and Vinton Counties.
: E&lt;tch day's events will cost adults $5. The school stu~e1m' ewnts will be held on Texas Road on Sept. 8 and
h free to all students.
i Arch Rose

! Vmg

,r:ood lttste. uddn•-.·.~Jn,~ is.w es, not personalities. Leiters nf
ilwnf..:s to mganf.-atfonv und indil'hhwls u·illnot he 'accept-

hi fin· rmiJ!icutioJI.

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I

United behind human rights
"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil
is for good men to do' noth·
mg."
Irish
state&gt;man
Edmund Burke's words
still hold true three centu rics later.
. Right now. good men
and . women are doing
something crucial: raising
their voices in outrage, trying to save . the lives of
Nazanin Fateh. Malak
Ghorbany and many other
women just like them.
Fateh: as of this writing.
awaits retrial for murder in
Iran. Young Nazanin killed
a man in self-defense as a
·group or men attacked and
tried to rape her and her
niece. During her first trial.
she reportedly said: "I
w.anted to defend myself
and my niece. I did not
want to kill that boy. At the
heat of the moment .I did
not know what to do
because no one came to our
help." (Presumably,'becau&gt;e
this is Iran. where Islamic
sharia law rules, had she
allowed the men to rape her
and/or her niece -· the victims - could both be racing possible execution as
adulterers anyway - in the
name of a perverse conception of honor.)
When I first heard about
Nazaniu 's horrific case,
though, I knew that her execution could he thwarted. In
2003, a Nigerian woman
named Amina Lawai faced
a death sentence after a
court co-nvicted her of adul-

•

been honored hy · a group
called Anists for Human
Rights, with an award presented hy actresse~ Anne
Archer and Jenna Elfman.
In May, Afshin-Jam interKathryn
viewed her namesake by
Lopez
phone . Said Fateh: "Don' t
just help me. help all
· Nazanins' and help us tn
go b~ck to a normal lilt:."
tery, but an international
There is no ~hortage of
coalition fought for her life Nazanins. In yet another
- and &gt;ucceeded. And in case out of Iran - anotJ1er
this new case. too . good travesty of justice under
people have stepped up. sharia Jaw
Malak
Iranian-born
Nazanin Ghorbany, mother of two
Afshin-Jam, a Canadian convicted of adultery. has
model and pop si nger (a nd been . sentenced to death by
former Miss World runner- stoning. In Ghorbany's
ul) ), refuses to let the issue case. too. Left and Right
die and has the attention of are united. There arc many
celebrities and diplomat s. di&gt;agreements on Iran-relatWhen she heard about her ed issues - the country's
name&gt;ake's case, she had nuclear
program,
its
the llash that it could have involvement in terrori sm,
been her. had her own fam- its Mike Wallace imerviews
ily not ned Iran after ·her
bui Ll·ga l Rights
father's tonure there at the In stitute prc&gt;ident Lily
hands of the same regime. M"1ahcry. who has set up a
(He was tonurcd. she tells Web site on behalf of
me, because - as general Ghorbany. says: '' If there is
manager of a Sheraton one thing that I have
he allowed ··m usic and learned from my htlmanminglin:g between men and rights work\.particularly on
women": "He altnost died behalf of w~n and girls
due to his injuries but than.k in fran. 'it is that everyone
God he is with us today.")
agrees and forms a united
A coalition of folks span- front against these atrocining from my conservative ties, regardless of his/her
National Review to liberal political affiliation ... For a
human-rights groups like W;IShingtonian, such as
Amnesty International have myself. such a concept is a
spoken out about Nazanin vinual miracle."
Fatch's case of self-defense.
But the consensu&gt; must,
Most recently. her devoted in the end. go beyond advoadvocate, Afshin-Jam. has cacy
for
individual

women·, lives. Michael
. Rubin. editor of The Middle
E;ht Quarterly, is emphatic:
" In cident\ sLU:h as these
should u1u.lerscore just how
antithetical it is to U.S.
interests' to legitimize the
regime." But he charges
that in Condoleezza · Rice 's
State D~partment, while
"there has been much talk
of bi·ibing Iran with incentive' ... human-rights prewnditions ha\e been taken
oft the table."
In a piece in the upcoming iss11e of Rubin's JOUrnal,
Islamic-studies
scholar
Denis MacEoin implores us
to link human-rights issues
more .firmly to trade and
other agreements:. " Islamic ·
countries and ordinary
Mu sli ms must be given
incentives
to
observe
human-rights norms within
their borders and disincentives to apply the sharia in
harsh and unjust ways."
He adds that "original
Islami c jurisprudence . ..
does not necessari Iy mandate 'uch severe punishn1ents." That when Mu slims
· violate hlllnan rights, they
are not obeying Allah they are. perpetrating an
eviL And good people must
continue to protest.
(Kathn•11 L.otw~ is the editor uf' National Re••iew
Oniim-' ( ~t 'wH·.na t ional re•·ielu·om). Slw can be contat'led at klope:@nationalrt!l'ie\\'.com.)

..

FfMA!!

MOM!

HE USED

THAT
FOUR- LETTER

WORD
AGAIN!

jstahler@dispatch.com

Letrers to thl' editor are "'''" ome. Thev should be less
itwn 31)0 ll'urds. All ll'fters ore suhiect to.editi11g, /lilts/ bl'
sig11td. oud in&lt; lude oddre.1.1 a11d teleplume number: No
rmsig11nl /crrer., ll'i/1 he pu!J/ishl'cl. Leiters sho11ld he in

!

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

Bottom

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

__,_

PageA4

General Manager
ChEHIE&gt;nt: H0eflich f:xt 12

E-mail :
rrew:;rt:. rn ydct11ysent1nel com

Web:

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Mail Subscription
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks
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13 Weeks
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L"" ':'~ ~nydal~~entrne l~~~·- ·-- ~~~-'-e-ek_s_ _ _ _ _'-21_4_2_1__,

Mat I did on their summer vacation
Our old friends Gary and
car - w'hile Sue drives.
Evelyn just had the most
Evelvn -doesn't drive.
wonderful vacation of their
What had we been
lives. For three weeks they
th inking'' Stire. we hadn't
were waited on. fus sed
~ecn them in · year:-. and
over, pampered and codthey
li ve on the other side
Jim
dled. Every meal was a
of rhe world. but three
Mullen
production, every day there
weeh'! We thou ght 1hey
was an excursion to some
would usc our hou se as
new scenic spot. They saw
kind of a ba'c where they
every lake, rive~. ocean,
wnuld gn off and do thing s
canal, · waterfall, canyon, read, they like to talk. We hy themselves most of the
mountain. valley, mansion. are 'calm, they are tense.
tim e. The'y thought we
garden vista and view posThe first few days we wer~ h tnning a su mmer
sible. They've never had so didn't noti~e how little we cam p and Sue and I were
much fun. But all good had in common. We caught the entertainment directors.
things must come to an up. Their ·daughter is a
We have plenty of 'elfend. The vacation is over, radiologist now, very hap- . directed activities here they have finally left our pily divorced and look ing biking. hiking. 'wimming.
house and gone back home. for a boyfriend. They heard go l fing none of it
Sue and I thought they all about Sue's new knees. 'cemcd In interest Gary
would never leave. Year~ Gary has to watch hi s and Evelyn. They took a
ago, when we were all blood sugar and I have to 10-minutc walk on day two
much younger, they were pay attention to my choles- and never went again. They
teroL
bright young things 'at at tht pond for a half an
We didn't notice Evelyn hour on day three. hrn they
clever, witty. Jots of fun to
he with. Now Gary is so was cutting his food for couldn't deal wi th bugs.
hard of hearing, you have . him and buttering his llrcad Evelyn and Gary had never
to say everything six times, until about the third day. been in · this pun of the
louder ea~h time until he We didn't notice that her country before ,und t11ere
finally misunderstands you. perfume was parti~ularly w~re lots of thing' lh~y
Eve lyn is used to this, we cl inging until the founh wanteJ to sec. It\ runnv
are not . They are retired. day. We found out we don't tllat the hu!" hmhcrcd hc·i-.
we arc not. We get up at like the same kind of mu&gt;ic hut walking around in It)(,
seven. They get up m nine. any more. He can"t hear degree weather ~ccmcd to
We go to bed at II, they go anything. she\ into "IU;lrt• ~nergize her. Garv\ hi ,HJto bed at one. We eat meat, dance cal ling. Our feeling de1·' w ~~~ '-ltaning to. go. tun.
she does not. We drink is a littk 'quare dance A c·~u· tr ip that 'hould take
beer. they like wine. We ll1lhic gnl':-. a long way. two hours wotild lake four.
like regular coffee. they Evelyn liJ..cs 111 li,tcn to it , W&gt;lll t11c square dunc·c cd li 11 uur ing It ·"'CiliCd like 10.
drink Sanka. We like to for how·s on c nd
.

· After the fir't week,
instead of trying to gel off
early from work to spend
more time with Gary and ·
Evelyn. Sue started spending more am.l more time a1
work each day. Special
projects started to crop up
- emergency filing. lastminute water fountain
maintenance, unexpected
fire extinguislicr checks.
Me, I work at home.
"Does il bother you if I
stand over your shoulder
and watch you type'!"
·
.. No."

''Whonps. you misspelled '
a word there .•·
'"fl1anks ...
"What'&gt;"
"THANKS'"
"No , I think it 's 'pel led
with and ·c· not an ·a_,,

Gary'·s hearing aid starts
to squeal. Maybe I'll just
fini&gt;h this when they're·
asleep.
We took them to the airport yesterday and hugged
them
when
we sa id
"Goodbye."
prom~&gt;ing
we ' d vi-..it them ~uon.
A\ ... nnn a' hell freeles 1
over.

(./mr .\ful/&lt;'11 i1· tire alllhnr
o/ "It lit!.cs a Village Idiot:
Curntdicwing r/11' Simple
Uti' " all£/ "Hahy's First
'l'otloo." )fm .,·c'11t rntch him
t If

_iim_mullefl@ myu ·ay. com)

Wednesday, August

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

30, 2006

Obituaries

Ohio slargest county to
improve poll worker training

Local Briefs

Robert •JeW Glass

Southern awards assembly

POMEROY - Robert ''Jeff' "Siuggo" Glass, 49, of
Pomeroy died at Cabeii-Huntington Hospital Monday,
August 28. 2006. Arrangements are incomplete and will be
announced by the Fisher Funeral Homes in Pomeroy.

RACINE -Southern Elementary will host its
Celebrating Achievement awards assembly beginning at 9
a.m. this Friday in the gymnasium. Students in third
through eighth .\lrades will be given awards for passing last
year's state achrevement test&gt;. Parents and the community
are welcome ..

Dexter Odell Erwin
Dexter Odell Erwin. 86, of/New Haven pas&gt;ed away on
. Aug.· 29, 2006, in Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Ce'nter.
·He was the owner and operator of the Erwins Gulf
'Service Station, a member of the First Church of God in
new Haven, Smith-Capehart American Legion Post I40
and a sergeant in 'the U.S . Army during World War II.
He was born Sept II. 1919, in Middlepon. the son of the
late Arlie Everett Erwin and Maude (Wears) Erwin. ·
. Survivors· include his wife of 65 years, Mary Susan
Erwin of New Haven ; son, Greg Erwin of Pomeroy; granddaughter, Tara Renee Whaley of Ma ~o n; grandson, Patrick
. Erwin of Omaha, Neb.; great-grandchildren Alex Whaley,
Sydnee Whaley, Katnron Whaley, all of Mason; sisters.
Julia Davis of Grove City, Ohio, Irene Hendricks of
Middleport; sister and brother-in-law, Maxine (Rich)
Brown of Chilicothe, Ohio; sisters-in-law, Erma Beach of
Allen Park. Mich., Orpha (Dave) Fields of New Haven, .
Eleanor Dav.is of New Haven , Irene Weaver of New Haven
and He ster Weaver of New Haven .
Memorial service will be at I p.m . Friday. Sept. I, in First
Church of God in new Haven with Pastor Glen Lambert
officiating. Military rites will be performed by SmithCapehart American Legion Post 140 and Stewart-Johnson
VFW post 9926 at the church. Burial wjll be held at the
convenience of the family. There will be no visitation.
In lieu of llowers, the Family has requested contributions
be made to the First Church of God, New Haven.
E-mail condolences may be made to foglesongtucker@myway.com.

Woes
from Page A1
Commi&gt;sion to cover the
village's share. Due to various bureaucratic delays the
village's. extension with the
ARC is due to run out on
Aug. 31 which means the
village may have to come
up with its share of the
repair costs, a share estimated at $7,500.
The latest bureaucratic
delay is FEMA requesting
the village use new sandstone as opposed to old
sandstone for repairs. In
researching this latest
development
Pomeroy
Mayor John Musser said he .
discovered it takes hundreds
of years for new sandstone·
to form which left him
scratching his head as to
how to meet this latest
request. Musser contends
once the old sandstone is
cut to fit the wall it will look
new.
Musser said FEMA
asked for help from the
Ohio Historic Preservation
Office on the project's sugllested repairs because it felt
It didn't have expenise in
the area of histone preservation.
After .recently speaking
with an OHPO representative who had physically
inspected the wall Musser
said the representative
concurred the old sandstone could be used to
repair the wall with it&gt;
historic integrity in mind.
The representative also
promised to pass this
information along to
FEMA right away.
· Still, as of yesterday
afternoon the village had
not heard if FEMA agreed

Project
from Page A1
the village could be inspected on an annual basis, and
questioned how ma·ny had
been inspected this year, to
date .
Craig also asked that the
traffic light at Pearl Street
and General Hartinger
Parkway be repaired.
Councilman Jeff Peckham
reponed on repairs underway at General .Hartinger
Park, funded through the
village's
Community
Development
Block ·
Grant/Community 'Distress
grant award. New bleacher&gt;
have been approved for the
. park, new lights are being
installed, and total renovation of the restrooms is
underway.
Peckham said vandals
will be prosecuted in the
event of damage to the new
fixtllres being installed.
Peckham sugge &gt;ted that
the horseshoe pits in Dave
Diles Park be eliminated.
He said someone has
expres&gt;ed an interest in the
clay used to line the pits.
Sandy Brown asked for
increased enforcemerH of

For the Record
Theft
MIDDLEPORT - Donna Spears of Middlepon reponed
to the Middlepon Police Depanment that someone had
stolen a diamond ring from her residence on South Second
Avenue.
The ring is described as a quarter-carat diamond with two
smaller stones on each si(ie, with a gold band and setting.
There were no signs of forced entry into her home. Anyone
with information about the ring is asked to contact the
police depanment.

· Fire report
MIDDLEPORT - The Middlepon Fire Depanment
answered five call&gt; in July. Vehicles were driven 524.9
miles. During the month of June, 84.5 man hours were
Jogged, along with 39.5 man hours on equipment maintenance.
.
Calls included a service run to Mason , W.Va ., a false
alarm on Ohio 7. two rescue calls on Ohio· 7 and a mutual
aid call to Pomeroy.
Fire Chief David Hoffman provided the information to
village c:ouncil on Monday.

Bv THOMAS J. SHEERAN

which ill' 2004 gave
Pre&gt;idenl Bush the electoral
votes needed to hold onto
CLEVELAND The the White House .
Cuyahoga County Elections
On Tuesday, the board
Board voted Tuesday to awarded the training conspend $736,390 to train poll tract
to
. Cuyahoga
workers under a still incom- Community
College
plete plan to · improve vot- because of its classroom
ing in Ohio's most popu- space and education know
lous county.
how.
_
In May, voting in the
The contract will allow
county of I million regi s- the college to hire subcontered voters was marked by tractors to design course
voting machine problems, materials.
poorly trained or absent
The elections board staff
poll workers, a precinct that said training of Election
opened hours late, missing Day equipment technicians
vote memory card&gt; and would be handled separatevote counting· that stretched ly through the two-year colover six days .
lege and North CantonPeople across the country based Diebold Inc., whose
have been focused on the · touch-screen
voting
county because its votes are mach ines are used in the
key in bellwether Ohio. county. ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Joy

her smiling near the end of
the book without anyone
else around. showing who'
she is.
from Page A1
"I was shocked," Searles
said upon finding ou't her
Searles was chosen out of book was one of the chosen,
hundreds of entries for her crediting her boyfriend Don
work on the scrapbook, Hysell of Rutland with
"Who I am."
encouraging her to enter the
For two solid months she contest.
spent endless hours com pi lSearles received nearly
ing not only the photos but $1 ,000 wort!) of free scrapPOMEROY -Foreclosure actions were tiled in Meigs the embellishments, paper booking su pplies from
to the use of the old sandstone to repair the wall to County Common Pleas Court by Beneficial Ohio, Inc., and ideas for her book Basic Gray for her efforts as
Elmhurst, II L, against Raymond Andrews, Middleport, and which centers around the well as recognition on its
its historic integrity.
In the meantime the others, alleging default on a mongage agreement in the idea of who she is, a person website.
"All the time I spent on it
clock is ticking down on amount of$164,689.12; PHH Mongage Corp., Mt. Naurel , that wears many hats. Those
the ARC funding exten- N.(, against Dan Romuno, Pomeroy, and others, alleging hats include being a daugh- and it's only 12 pages," she
sion, an extension. the vil- default in the amount of $152,902.90; · Dale Thoene, ter, granddaughter, girl- laughed about the work it
lage hopes to· extend past Pomeroy, against Vicky J. Haley, Pomeroy, and others, friend, cousin, friend , took to complete the album,
Aug. 31 though hope is alleging default in the amount of $JO,l.86.65; FCI Natwnal employee,teacher(ofscrap- explaining that it was wonh
not reality. With this in Fund II, Anaheim Hills, Calif., against Michelle Stahl, book classes) and photogra- it to have this piece of who
she is at this moment for her
·
. pher.
mind as well as the immi- 1\:liddlepon~ and others.
The
company
Basic
Gray
to look back on.
A.
complaint
for
quiet
title
was
filed
by
Bank
of
New
nent danger of the wall
album
as
So , what's next for
described
Joy's
collapsing, this week York, Ft. Wonh. Tex., against Beverly Holley. Middlepon.
showing that we are often Searles? She hopes tn comPomeroy Village Council
defined by the roles we play . plete an album on her famivoted to proceed on the
in life and that sometimes ly to showcase the generarepairs without the ARC
what matters most are the tions but she would also like
grant, agreeing to find the
POMEROY - Actions for divorce were filed in Meigs roles we fill for others.
to work on one of her childfunds in village coffers to County Common Pleas Court by Jewell Withrow, Pomeroy,
hood, then there' s her gradin
the
album
Of
course
pay its share of the repair against Gary Withrow, Jr., Pomeroy, and Michael Allen
her.
uation book and an album
Searles
also
describes
costs. Council unani- Altice, Pomeroy, against Wealthy Altice; Jacksonville, Fla.
as
being
a
"true
scrapself
of
her life with her
mously agreed that it was
Divorces •were granted to Diana K. Bowles from Robert booker." On each page of boyfriend and as with most
imperative to. take advan- M. Bowles, and Sharon K. Beaver from Stephen Lee
the album 'is a small journal scrapbookers the ideas are
tage of what federal and Beaver.
to explain the page, one of there, it's just finding the
state money had .already
An action for dissolution of marriage was filed by David which explains, "I am a true time.
been approved to repair E. Ross, Bidwell, and Mary Y. Ross, Cheshire. A dissoluBelieve it or not the
the wall and did not want tion was granted to Kenneth Louis Crossman and Belinda scrapbooker. This · is one
way for me to find Joy. I · "Who I Am" album is not
to risk another delay in Marie Crossman.
could do this 2417." This quite done. There is one last
the form of its share of
is· placed against a page waiting on this anicle
journal
the money not being
photo
of
her completing the to rest upon with embellishthere.
album which contains other ments and decorations
Musser feels if FEMA
POMEROY
-Curtis
Neigler
was
setenced
to
one
year
photos done in vintage color around it denoting the end
gets back · to him right
in
prison
in
Meigs
County
Common
Pleas
Coun
on
a
with the exception of a of one book and the beginaway the wall can be
modem,
full color photo of ning of another.
charge
of
theft
.
repaired in time for the
upcoming
Sternwheel
featuring Steve Smith to be were 60,000 people there a
Festival, Sept. 21-23 on
distributed
nationally. "This day for the three day
the Pomeroy river front.
was my favorite thing to do event," said Shaw noting
"The contractor is
because Steve Smith of the that he was a ·camera operaready to go," Musser
from Page A1
ESTABLISHED 1895
Carolina Panthers is my tor and camera assistant. "I
added.
French Coloney Chorus
favorite player," commented· got to operate camera on
Also involved in the
-'
December
during
winter
stage with Death Cab for
Shaw.
repair will be the use of
Sweet Adelines Concert
He also got to·work on the Cutie, The Flaming Lips,
mortar to level the sand- break to apprentice in the
Saturday, Sept. 9_
bonus feature to "Invincible" The Red Hot Chili Peppers.
stone as opposed to grout. NFL camera department.
7:30
During the internship, the upcoming movie about Kanye West, and Nickel
However. the wall joints
Fall clasSes begin thr
will not be mortared , ·Shaw was given the opponu- Vince Papale, who earned a Creek."
we~:k of Sept 10
Now he is into shooting
another ·source of con- nity to assist on videotaping_ spot with the Eagles at an
Register Now
tention in repairing the some segments of the Eagles open tryout. The movie will practices around southeastBallet, Modern, Jazz,
ern Ohio, including Meigs
wall with its historic mini-camp, interview Coach be in theaters soon.
Ballroom, String, Acting,
Joe
Gibbs
of
the
Redskins,
"As
for
the
weekends
there
and Gallia, is doing some
iniegrity in mind . .
Stage Makeup. Puppetry, .
Anymore delays and and . retired coach Dick I did freelance work on pro- "man on the street" interWomen's Aerobics
Mu»er is worried about Vermei I. He also worked on jects that the producers had views about high school
Call 740-446-ARTS
getting into flooding seac the television series. "NFL going on .... worked on sev- football, and working on
The Ariel-Dater Hall
The eral television commercials the WOUB production of
son which caused the Films · Presents."
428 Se.:. Ave. Galti~tis, ?H
740-446-ARTS 27877
damage to begin with, episodes featured - and and short films, too," said Gridiron Glory.
damage that began two Shaw had the opportunity to Shaw. His best friend , Zach
work with -Joey Poncr of Glaze of Pomeroy sent a
years ago next month.
the Steelers, Tom Coughlin few days with him and
RAVENSWOOD
of the Giants, Harry Carson toured NFL Films, as did a
the ordinance prohibiting of the Giants , and rock musi- cousin, Sara Shepherd who
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
semi truck&gt; from driving cian Phil Collins who per· was in New York City
through the village unless form s op one of the episodes. doing an internship with
they are delivering goods to
But it wasn't all work and Elfe magazine . ·
Clun•prad~1r Pllh&lt;• )-&lt;."ar
a village business.
no play. The Meigs High
Since returning to OU,
Council also:
School graduate worked at the senior certainly hasn't
VP. W\' Chimpm~th.'
• Approved appropna- the "Madden Gold Zone had time hanging heavy on
S•1o.' lc'\~
tions adjustments in the Party" held in Times Square, hi s hands. In fact he recentt&gt;.ku1 lwr u(,.\mm~a ll
Auto Accidents
B~&gt;~rd o( Fur~n~1.:
amount of $720.24 for the a release party for the new ly returned from Chicago
Worker's
Compensation
irtcome tax department
John Madden video game. where he shot film at the
~ll\T' ~~Jlt:ll&lt;'lll' ~
• Spons InJuries • M o~l ln,urnncc'
• Approved payment of "It Featured, and I helped Lollapolooza
1\ikmhc·r Aruc-ri~a n
Rock
• Medicare
,,f ro.kJ1n1l
bills in the amount of interview. Eddie George. Festival. "This was my sec• Acupuncture
$8,988.92.
I.
Orlando Pace, Marshall ond year to work on the fes • Approved a sealed bid Faulk, Reggie Bush, Shaun tival and I' m scheduled to
from Rutland Volunteer Alexander, and Cadillac work there next year
RavensvvO&lt;&gt;d. VVV
316 Washington St
Fire
Department,
for Williams," said Shaw, not- because the documentary
$41,000, for the sale of a ing that Pace who played for film will cover a three-year
firetruck to be replaced osu. was very intere&gt;ted in period of the festivaL There
later this year.
hearing all about. OU and
Also present were Mayor OSU and wanted to know
Sandy lannarelli , Fiscal how everything was in Ohio.
Officer Susan Baker. and
While in New Jersey. he
__
.._.....,
..............
Counci I members . Ferman also worked .on a public serMoore
and
Robert vice announcement for the
Presents a
Robin son.
American Hean Association

Foreclosures

Divorces, dissolutions

Sentenced

AffiEL

Shaw

1.\-. ~ K. )lies tmtkks
CHIROPRAGOR

'""'
11f

,,,.~ J..-m~

.l,,· upur~c·tllrt'

e 304-273-5321

[F ol Farmers Bank

.Cili'oe1• 61?9 s;bcl9e'.,~·

EAGLES AERIE #2171
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 2nd
9-12 PM

. flj-&lt;ulucl ion
September 2, 7:00P.M.
September 3,
2:00P.M. &amp; 7:00P.M.
· Mei~ Elemenlary School, SR 124, Rutland, OH

GOOFY GALA DJ AND KARAOKE

www.rivercityplayersohio.org
For more information call Brian Howard at 740-992-1044

KITCHEN OPEN

!Songs lnduae: •If 1Were ARldl Man I Sunrise, Sunset
1 Tradition 1 Matchmaker I Ana Morel!!

�•

PageA6

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Inside

Wednesday,,August 30, 2006

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

'

Browns notebook, Page 82

Local Weather

Bengals notebook, Page 82 ·
NFL roundup, Page 86

Today's Forecast
Forecast for W8dnesday, Aug. 30

•

City/Region

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

·High I Low temps

locAL ScHEDULE

Toledo•

_POMEROY ~ A sehedJie ot ~ing college
and hi{tl sctoo vardy £POrting evoot&amp; JmMng
teams from Gallia, MeigS and t.Aas.::n counties

75" I 59"

Youngstown •
. Manalield •

75° 160°

~

.

Today'a aames

GoH

,

TVC Ohio at Brass Ring, 4:30 p.m.
·
Women 's College Soccer
'Bluefield College at Rio Grande, 4 p.m.

L:....:)

74" 158'

· Dayton•~

73" 159"

Thursday'• gamea
'

~·

*Columbus

/////

77"161"

Soccer

Cincinnati
•

79&lt;~

OVCS at Gallia Aca.demy, 5:30 P·'!l·
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant 7 p.m.

l 63°

GoH
TVC Hocking at Trimble, 4:30p.m.

Wahama at Gallipolis, 4 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 4:30p.m.
BuHato at Point Pleasant, 4 p.m.

friday's ggme1

6

Football
Gallla Academy at Vinton County, 7:30
p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant. 7:30p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Nelsonville-York, 7:30
p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 7:30p.m.
Hannan at Symmes Valley, 7:30p.m.
College Soccer
Rio Grande at Auburn-Montgomery tourney, TBA
.

Cloudy~

Pa111y6~

Cloudy

Showens

Wea1her Underground • AP

.

Submmod photos

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital radiologic technologist Mike Sharp demonstrates the new filmless imaging equipment used
at the Albany Medical Clinic. Deborah Shaffer, O'Bieness Director of Development, assists with the demonstration.

O'Bieness offers new services at Albany .clinic
ATHENS
Laboratory
and imaging services are
now being offered by
O'Bleness at the Albany
Medical Clinic, located at
2364
Blizzard
Lane.
Albany.
O'Bleness'
radiology
department opened satellite
imaging services at the
Albany
location
on
Monday, Aug. 21. Hours for
laboratory . services are
Monday · through Friday
from 8 a.m. to noon and 1
p.m. to 4 p.m. and hours for
imaging
are
Monday
through Friday from 8 a.m. ·
to noon and I p.m. to 5 p.m.
No appointment is needed
for either service.
Both the lab and the imaging services are available to
anyone with physician
orders, making it a very
convenient choice for those
who live in the area. The
services are also utilized by
healthcare providers who
have offices in the clinic.
Jayne Arthur, MT, medical laboratory technologist
at the Albany lab, draws
blood and takes urine samples for a wide variety of
tests, including lipid panels,
comprehensive metabolic
profiles, complete blood
counts, pregnancy, flu,
strep, rheumatoid arthritis,
drug screenings and others.
Specimens that need specialized testing are deli vered daily to the Athens
O'Bleness' lab.
Mike Sharp, RT, R, radiologic technologist at the
Albany imaging facility,
said general services are
offered including X-rays of
the chest, spine and
extremities. In both the
hospital imaging department and at the Albany
facility, the filmless Picture
Archiving
and

Wednesday ... Part I y
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the morning ... Then a
chance of showers and
thunderstorms in the afternoon. Highs in the lower
80s.
Northeast
winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Wednesday night ... Partly
cloudy. A chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
evening .. .Then a. slight
chance of showers and thunders,torms after midnight.

Local Stocks

Jayne Arthur, O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's medical laboratory technologist at the Albany
Medical Clinic, works with laboratory specimens.
Communication System . images for patients to take
(PACS) is used, so digital to thei.r physicians.
The 2006 O'Bleness
images are immediately
available for physicians. Annual Giving Campaign
Radiology Associates of has raised more than
Athens continues to pro- . $153,000 for digital radiolvide physician interpreta- ogy imaging equipment for
tion services for both facil- Albany and Meigs medical
ities. "Our digital images clinics. as well as for the
go from our facility to the hospital"s radiology departradiologists, then to the ment and mammography
patient's physician very unit in the Castrop . Center.
quickly,"
Sharp
said. The campaign is still under"Healthcare providers with way and gifts can be ~ent to
offices in our Albany facil- the community relations
ity can send a patient department of the hospital
across the hall to have an or made securely online at
X-ray, view the image · www.obleness.org/gi vinwhile the patient is still at gopportunities.
the office and then begin
The. laboratory and imagtreatment immediately if ing services share a waiting
appropriate." Sharp can and check-in area. The phone
also prepare a CD with number is (740) 566-4725.

Federal court lawsuit
.challenges Ohio roting rules
CLEVELAND (AP) extra burden on them to
Opponents 'of the state's new cast a ballot.
voter registration requireSecretary of State Ken
ment concerning voters who Blackwell believes the law
are naturalized citizens filed is unenforceable, said James
a federal lawsuit Tuesday Lee, a spokesman for
Blackwell 's .
office.
challenging the rule.
The American Ci vii Blackwell is the Republican
Liberties Union of Ohio candidate for governor runalong with the Brennan . ning against Democrat Ted
·
Center for Justice sued in Strickland.
"Secretary Blackwell will
U.S. District, seeking to
overturn the provision that be asking his attorneys to
allows roll workers to work towards resolving the
matler," Lee said.
·
in~uire i a voter is a ,naturahzed citizen and ask for
Mark
Anthony,
a
proof.
spokesman for Attorney
The Brennan Center, at General Jim Petro, said any
the New York University, response must ·wait until
considers itself an advo- Petro's staff can study the
cate of inclusiveness in lawsuit.
democracy.
"
In July, a coalition of
The new rule s mean a civic groups sued over the
voter who can't show proof state's new voter registraof citizenship may cast a tion requirements, contendprovisional ballot bu~ has . ing that low income and
· to go to a county elections minority citizens might be
board with documentation hindered.
Blackwell defended the
within 10 days. The lawsuit alleges the law singles rules in thai circumstance,
out one group of U.S . citi- saying they help with stopzens and places_ an unfair ping fraudulent votes.

ACl-33.66
AEP -36.48
Akzo- 57.71
BIG -18.30
Bob Evans - 28.72
Bor&amp;Warner - 56.11
CENX -34.28
Champion - 6.56
Charming Shops - 13.28
City Holding - 38.85
Col- 52.87
DG -12.29
DuPont - 3~.60
Federal .Mogul - .36
USB .;_'32.00 '
Gannett - 56.22
General Electric -34.19
GKNLY- 5.67
Harley Davidson - 58.80
JPM -45.97
Kroger - 23.66

Lows · in the lower 60s.
Northeast winds around S
mph. Chance of rail) 30 percent.
Thursday... Partly cloudy
with a slight chance of showers and thunderstorms: Highs
in the upper 70s. Northeast
wirds 5 to l 0 mph. Chance
of rain 20 percent.
Thursday night. .. Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows around 60. Northeast
winds 5 to lO mph. Chance
of rain 30 percent.

College Volleyball

College Crou Country

Satuntav'a gamao

Football
Southern at Portsmouth Notre Dame,
7:30p.m.

Cross Country
River Valley, Gallia Academy, Meigs at
Warren Invitational. 10 a.m.
College Soccer
Rio Grande at Auburn--Montgomery tour·

ney, TBA

Women's College Soccer
Muskingum at Rio Grande, 1 p.m.

Eastern to hold
'Meet the Team'

Ltd. - 25.23 .
NSC -42.30
Oak Hill Rnanclal - 24.91
OVB- 25.26
BBT- 42.78 ·
Peoples - 29.65
· Pepsico - 65.81
Premier - 14.35
Rockw.e ll- 57.25
Rocky Boots - 10.80
Sears - 144.55
Wai-Mart - 44.49
Wendy's -. 63.87
Worthington - 19.40
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Financial Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern football team
will have a "Meet the
Team" on 6 p.m. Thursday
in the parking lot near the
weight room.
All parents, students and
fans are encouraged to
attend. Come and cheer for
the players as they prepare
for their Friday night home
opener against 2005 playoff
participant South Gallia.

O.J. may be
moving to W.Va.
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - O.J. Mayo, one of
the nation's elite prep basketball players, appeared
brietly at Huntington High
School on
Tuesday
a· m .i d
reports he
w o u I d
transfer
from Ohio
to
his
hometown.
- Mc~yo ,

Mayo

• ~.1' =( 1 ~ Armi.ii!!PeJt: f:'rltilr;r. I.:! &lt;'itt! MlGl :: l).~~e(J e n ; UlHJOU OJ !ON~ i•l I ]7':&gt;1¥ ;r1'[, ,'1i '-~!1&gt;. ((~r~·c u !e(J o•1 .".tSI.) rn;)'i!f l. ·eo,:~p r~ent
te rrn.. PI'\Yrl'l!':-111 c~f ~ t&gt;'l! 09. tOtill r,."''f&lt;nc&lt;e ctld' g e :::.f $ i 50,033 56, w rw :h ; 'l(i_;de~ ~ ! .~SO DC: o~e D&lt;• •:5 r,n.;m c-e ~ -· ~ ~~ r~Jo~ "0' rnar •: .bS•!t;J
'c.~ tJ ~~e e~1:n.~ed ~~t Std:i (JO lcn."l tQ V;;oi·.i~ ot i:lO% ~o.'n '.('(!""~ &lt;'l~;, ~ :i,'IOIP. (Wif ro ;Y·r:rwy •:;- :. :•.&lt;t:rr. . ~. oW'le! rx.n.&lt;n'f'd :..:m'lf
' t·~l 'K. hJr!) i!Df)~· ~flil!," -"''i:ldo&gt;Lil~ lor i1rn• lt:!'Jr.rre or&gt;ly OrJ·~ · ,ol(_y~;~t&lt;' bir.' &lt;' '";(; I we(l ·ilf\~ ) &lt;." ''~1 ~~~ · 'l~ Cr'/i:! k&gt;L;k• :il'"ill'."'(1i''9 C'1 !o:.:':''l
t

'
I

"

Whether your kids get sick or simply need a well-check, Holzer Clinic has t t
Pediatricians available 7 days ·a week, 365 days a year to care for them. That
way, your litHe ones can grow up healthy.and achieve their dreams.
Dllnie//e T. Cappelkllti, 1110 recently joined lhe Holzer Clinic Pediatrics
She received her Medical £?agree from the Marshall University ·
s::~:~ot~ Medicine • in Huntington, WV and completed her Pediatric
R
at Geisinger Health System in Danville, Pennsylvania.
Cappelletti is Board Eligible and is a member of the American
IACadEomv of Pediatrics.

1

Pleas~ · see Mayo, Bl

CoNTACT US

Travis R. Neely, MD, MPH also recenHy joined the Holzer Clinic
Pediatrics Depat'tlllenl from the MetroHealth Medical Center in
Cleveland. Ohio, where he served as Chief Resident. Dr. Neely
received his Medical Degree from Case Western Reserve
University in Cleveland, Ohio and completed his Residency a1
MetroH~allh Medical Center. In addition, Dr. Neely has completed
his Master Of Public Hea~h from Case Western Reserve llfliversity.
Dr. Nealy is Board Eligible and Is a member of the American Academy
Pediatrics.

Dr. Cappelletti and Dr. Neely are both accepting new patients. They are seeing
patients in Gallipolis, Jackson, Meigs, and Pt. Pleasant.

Gallipolis (740)446-5371 Meigs (740)992-0060
Jackson (740)395-8805 Pt. Pleasant (304)675-4498

+

carrymg a
backpack
that read "NBA", left the
school without comment
along with his mother,
Alislia Mayo, and grandfather, Dwaine Barnes.
Barnes said Mayo hadn' t
enrolled at the school.
. "Not yet," Barnes said.
Cabell County schools
spokesman Jedd Flowers
said Mayo's family requested that school officials not
comment.
Principal Greg Webb said
Tuesday that Mayo was not
a student, but Mayo told
The Herald-Dispatch of
Huntington that he's in the
process of transferring.
"My mother and Dwaine
thought it would be best to
come here my last year and
be with my family and
friends," Mayo said.
The 6-foot-5 Mayo ts a

OVP Scoreline

(S p.m.-1 a.m.)

1-740·446-2342 eKt. 33
Fax- 1·740-446·3008
E-mail - sports@mydeilysentinel.corn
~ILlill!tl

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor

HOLZEH
CLINIC

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

Everywhere

(740) 446·2342, ext 33
bsherman@ mydailytribune.com

BryaQ Walters, Sports Writer
(740)446·2342. ext23
bwalters @mydailytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740)446·2342. ext33
lcrum@mydailyregister.com

~~ [~lltfll.
Harris

Johnson

Eastern's
Johnson and
Michael Owen each fired
rounds of 40, rinishing tied
·
for the runner-up spot.
Jake Hunter was next for
SHS with a 43, while Alex
Hawley and Taylor Deem
followed with rounds of 44
to round out the scoring.
Trenton Roseberry also· shot
a 48 for the victors.
Nathan Carroll and Kyle

Edwards
followed
Owen with
respective
rounds of
43 and 46,
while ·Nick
Schultz
rounded out
the
EHS
sco r ing
Owen
with a 48.
J a k. e
Warner and Tyler Carroll
completed Eastern's day
with rounds of 50 and 51.
respectively.
.
Host Waterford. led by
Scott Huck's 43, finished
third overall with a team
total of I84.
Defending-champion
Trimble struggled to a
fourth-place effort , finishing
with a 188. Both Ty Barrett

and Joey Dunlap J:ircd
rounds of 43 for the
Tomcat s.
Federal Hocking wntinues 10 show improvcmcill
after a fifth-p lace cl1'ot1 . firing a team score of 211 .
Miller was last with a total
or 219.
Match five wi II he held a!
Fore&gt;t Hills Golf Course on
Thursday at 4:30 p.m.
Trimble wilL be the host
school at the event.

Reds fall to
Dodgers in
16 innings

LOS ANGELES (AP) Ramon Martinez homered
TVC Hocking Standings
le•Jd ing off the 16th inning,
and the Los Angeles
Southern
18
Dodgers beat Cincinnati 6-5
Eastern
15
Tuesday night lo knock the
Trimble
14
Reds uul of the NL wildWaterford
8
card lead.
Fed Hock
3
It's the first time since
Miller
2
June 13 that the Reds don' t
have at least a share of the
throtigh four events
lead in the wild-card race,
which San Diego leads by· a
.half-game over Cincinnati
and Philadelphia. The Reds
remain 3 1/2 games behind
first- place St. Louis in the
NL Central.
Brandon Phillips was 4for-7 with a home run and
two RBis for Cincinnati, but
he grounded into an inningending double play with
runners al the corners in the
I Oth
against
reliever
Takashi Saito. Adam Dunn
also had four hits and Rich
Aurilia homered for the
Reds, who have lost five
straight.
· Jeff Kent was 4-for-7 with
.a home run and Rafael
Furcal also homered for the
Dodgers, who maintained
their three-game lead in the
NL West with their fourth
straight victory and made it
a happy and weary 35th
anniversary for manager
Grady Lillie and his wife,
Debi.
Derek Lowe ( 12-8), who
came out of last Saturday's
start at Arizona after taking
a line drive .off his glove
hand. made his first relief
appearance since the 2004
AL division series and
· pitched three inning s of
one-hit ball for the win. The
Dodgers have played 14 or
more innings on five occasions this season, and this
was th·e first time they won.
Ryan Franklin (5-7), the
eighth Cincinnati pitcher,
made only one pitch which Martinez. drove over
the fence in left-center for
his second homer of the season to end the game after 4
hours, 54 minutes.
Phillips put Cincinnati
ahead 5-4 in the sixth with
an RBI single. The Dodgers
iiecl it in the bottom half
Brad Sherman/photo
against
reliever Matt Belisle
Eastern senior Brittany Bissell (30) sets up a kill opportunity for classmate Erin Weber
(24) during Tuesday's 25-15, 25-5, 25-8 straight set victory over host South Gallia in on a bases-loaded RBI sin·
Mercerville . Bissell was 44-for-52 in set attempts and Weber added two kills and eight
Please see Reds, Btl
blocks in the triumph.
·

Eastern serves up win over South· Gallia
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Soccer

Gallia Academy at Logan, 1 p.m.

•

we're luept~ tjOur ~tds ~ealtltttj, so tlttetj
caV~v ac~teve tlttetr tireaV\AS ...

BEVERLY - Southern
extended its overall lead
after four events, while
Eastern moved up to the
two-spot after Tuesday's·TriValley Conference Hocking
Division golf match at
Lakeside Golf Club.
The Tornadoes - led by
Bryan Harris' medalist
three-over par round of 38
-· finished the day with a
team tally of 165, a dozen
shots ahead of the runner-up
Eagles.
Southern's
Patrick

-

Rio Grande at Shawnee State Invite, 5
p.m.

www.fbsc.com
·Pomeroy 992-1 136
'Tuppers Plain&gt; 985-3385
"Gallipolis 446-BANK
•Mason 77 3-6400
"Point Pleasant 674-8200

st..~ nda•ds

JP ' ,.,

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Rio Grande at Marie!1a tourney, TBA

For Purchase.
Refinance or Construction

vaiue~ ~!"!d

Eastern moves
.ahead of Trimble
for second place

Volleyball

River Valley at Fairland, 5:30p.m
Southern at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Gallia Acaclemy at Vinton County, 6 p.m.

// /

~

Tornadoes continue Hocking Diyision tear

MERCERVILLE
Eastern's serves served it
well.
The Lady Eagles, behind
the serving of Katie
Hayman, jumped out to
big early
leads in the
first two
games and
s w e p t

s

0

u t h

Gallia in
non-league
h i g h
school volleyball
action on
Tuesday.
Ea s tern
won
by
scores of
25-15, 255 and 25-8.
Hayman
was
24for-24
from the
service
Brannon · line, scoring
16
points with seven aces.
She helped the unbeaten
Lady Eagles (2-0) take a 70 lead in the first contest
and an 8-0 lead in the second.
Jillian Brannon added 14
point's for Eastern, including nine in the second
game. Erin Weber added
II points followed by
Kelsey Holter with six,
five from Brittany Biss61l
and
one
by
Darcy
Winebrenner.
The only trouble . the

Please see Eastern, Bl

Grueling start awaits Buckeyes
BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - Over the past six weeks,
the Ohio State Buckeyes have heard again
and again about how good they ' re going to
be.
After all that talk, it's now time to prove
it.
"No one knows if we're a good football
team until we line up," coach Jim Tressel
said Tuesday.
The No . !-ranked Buckeyes take on
Northern lllinois on SatUrday. opening a
September in which they play three ranked
teams .
"We play .a lot of great learns the first
m~mth ," center Doug Datish said. "It does
help us focus on the task at hand . You look
at those names, it's not Si ster Mary School
of the Blind we're playin~. Those are some
of the toughest games we II have all year."
While Tressel said he isn't certain of the
caliber of his .team, the sixth-year head
coach said he had no doubt about the
Buckeyes' first opponent.
"We said long ago thai this is going to
be a great opener because they give you
all the different pressures that you could
possibly have and they are a fightin g,
tough , nasty bunch," Tres sel added. "We
know they're good. They're going to
come in here with nothing on their mind
other than a victory."
That's the way il is throughout the early
going for the Buckeyes. Of course, in
Week Two they hit the road to take on No.
3 Texas in a highly anticipated rematch
from a year ago. The Longhorns scored

Northern Illinois at Ohio State
late to win 25-22 on their way to. their first
national title since 1969.
·
After that first road trip. the Buckeyes
host Cincinnati and the team they tied for
the Big Ten title last year, 19th-ranked
Penn Stale, before hitting the road for a
night game at No. 16 Iowa.
It all start s with Northern Illinois.
picked to win the Mid-American
Conference title. The Huskie.s are coming
off a 7-5 season in which they lost two
games by a point apiece (Northwestern.
Akron in the MAC championship game)
and another in . overtime .(Akron again,
thi s time in the regular season).
While every Ohio State fan is already
tal)dng nonstop about the second go-round
with lhe Longhorns, the Buckeyes say the
only game on their mind is against Northern
Illinoi s.
"I believe it with all my heart;' quarterback Troy Smith said. "Every game is an
increment or step you have to take .
Northern Illinois is the first step. The games
after wtll come but we have to deal with
Northern Illinois first."
The chief concern s for Ohio State are
intertwined. The Buckeyes have new
.

Please see Buckeyes, Bl

+

AP photo

Ohio State University football coach Jim Tressel holds up
the new football jersey during the Alzheimer's Association
luncheon at the Woody Hayes Athletic Center in this April 5
photo in Columbus. For the first time since 1998, Ohio
State is preseason No. 1 in The Associated Press Top 25.

�\

Page 82 • The Daily Sentmel

www.mydailysentmel.com

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

VVednesda~August30,2006

Browns keeping eye on veteran QBs
'
BEREA (AP)
The
Oak! and R uders dusted oil
38 ye.tr old Jeft George and
the Tennessee Titans stgned
the well traveled Kerry
Collms as a backup Wtll the
Cleveland Browns be the
next team to stgn a veteran
NFL quanerback?
Coach Romeo Crennel
hasn t ruled out that poss1
bthty
The door ts not closed On
that he smd Tuesday
For months the Browns
have been explonng the
potenttal of bnngtng 111 a
seasoned quanerback as a
No 2 behmd Charhe Frye
thetr second year QB who
was handed the stanmg JOb
when Trent Dtlfer was tract
ed thts spnng
Crennel has been pleased
wtth Frye s progress dun ng
trammg camp and the pre
season Howe~er backups
Ken Dorsey has JUSt I 0
starts and Derek Anderson
has none
Crennelts sttll toymg with
the tdea of addmg another
expenenced quanerback
Just because 11 s the last
preseason game 11 doesn t
mean you are gomg to close
the door Crennel satd as
the Browns prepared for
thetr final exhtbttton game

.tg.llnst co.tche' md then take 1
Chicago look trom there
Wnh Colhns gomg to the
o
n
Thursday Titans another name that
Whether could be k1cked around at
th,ll door Brown; headquarters "
ts
open Btlly Valek Tennessee s
Notebook JUS!
a current starter who ts hold
mg thmgs down unul Ytnce
cr.tck
halfway or flung wtde at the Young 1s ready to take over
hmges IS anybody s guess
In the meanttme Crennel
But Crennel has been satd he mtght alternate
around the league long Dorsey and Anderson us hts
enough to understand the second strmger on a weekly
1mport&lt;tnce of havmg a quar bas ts
They have done well
terback ready and wallmg 10
c 1se of an mJury or tf Frye enough that tt could be close
duesn t perlorm up to ex pee th10ughout the se 1son sa1d
tauons
Crennel One game one
The Browns have cont1nu guy m1ght be No 2 and the
ally scanned the watver wtre next g.1me the other guy be
to see what mtght be ava1l the No 3 We feel decent
.tble and the latest name to thou! those guys They con
appear ts A J Feeley a one tmue to flash and do thmgs
ume starter tor Phtladelphta that show they mtght be .tble
and Mtam1 who was cut by to run the team tf somcthtng
the San D1ego Ch.trgers on happens to Charlie
But neither young QB has
Monday
Ctennel sud the Browns ddzzled to the pomt where
wtll examme Feeley s case the Browns h.lVe stopped
to see tl he could help them \ookmg elsewhere lor help
Nobody s p\,tyed well
I thtnk we w1ll take a
look at htm to see how much enough to rule out bnngmg
mterest we ha\ e he sa1d m somebody else Crennel
I m not gomg to say tf we satd We could btmg some
have mterest or nut I thmk body 111 at .my t1me and I
we have to do due d1llgence te I I them that
In Cleveland s 20 I 7 wm
with the front otfice the per
sonnel department
our over Buffalo on Saturday

AndeC'on drove the Browns
64 y&lt;tHh tn the fm.tl 2 08 to
set up Chns Chandler s
game wtnmng 1:l yard field
goal as tune ran out
Anderson tlso put the
Bt owns ahead wtth a 28
yard TD p&lt;tss to Joshua
Cnbbs 111 the fourth quarter
and fimshed 4 of 7 tor 83
y trds
One
week
earlter
Anderstm p!.tyed well late 111
a "111 over DetrOit ,md
.tppeared to close the gap on
Dorsey who came over the
from the 49ers 111 the deal tor
Dtlfer
You want to see them
produce perform md how
they handle and manage the
game wh1le they are 111 there
That 1s what you want to
see he Sdtd You want to
see them run the team Thev
guy who does the best
tntght get an edge They are
close It IS a competition
The Browns dtscussed the
posstbthty ot keeptng JUst
two qu.trterb tcks but 111 the
end Crennel tell that w IS
too nsky
You have to h&lt;t\e three to
survtve the NFL he said
In the case of the unltkely
thmg that yo u Jose one you
stand a better chance In my
mmd I m keepmg three

Bengals QB Palmer close to form in first start
CINCINNATI (AP)
Instead of gettmg caught up
111 those three perfect touch
do" n passes Carson Palmer
chose to dwell on what went
wrong
A few things were a btt off
dunng hts return from a de\
astatmg knee lllJUry He
mtssed hts mark on a pass or
two He dtdn t make the nght
dcctstOii on c~erv play There
was a little btt of rust on htB
game
I defimtely have a long
way to go to get where I need
to be he smd
Nttptckmg
While Palmer l&lt;;&gt;oked at
areas of unprovement .tfter
the Cmunnat1 Bengals 48
I7 preseason vtctory over the
Green Bay Packers on
Monday ntght e\ eryone else
saw the btg ptcture
From that '1ewpomt these
Bengals are contenders
agmn
\\ e are p1ckmg up from
where we left off last year
recetver Chad Johnson satd
Some say that what we dtd
last year really doesn t matter

anymore
but we are
p1ckmg up
from nght
where we
left off last
year
Notebook
T he y
ended last
season as AFC North cham
ptons losmg a f1rst round
playoft game at Paul Brown
StadiUm 1 agamst
the
Ptttsburgh Steelers
On
Palmer s first pass of that
game K1mo von Oelhoffen
drove hts shoulder mto
Palmer s left knee shreddmg
two ligaments and dtslocat
mg hts knee cap
The Bengals chances of
contendmg for another tttle
depended upon how Palmer s
rehab went and how long 11
took He sat .out the first two
preseason games acknowl
edgmg that he wasn t ready
to try to reclatm his JOb
Alter playmg less than one
half on Monday mght the JOb
was hts
A crowd of 65,6 I4 fans the btggest for a preseason

game m Cmcumatt - went
s1lent whenever Palmer got
htt or took oft runmng It
cheered ever) 111ne he got up
And ll marveled at how well
he played Palmer went 9 of
14 overall lor I40 yards
three touchdowns and a pass
er ratmg of I36 9- about as
good as 1t can get
By halftime the Bengals
had a 34 7 lead and thetr
playoff swagger back along
wtth thetr stanmg quaner
back
I m sure he answered all
the cnttcs questions and all
the doubts that everyone had
tn thetr mmds satd Johnson
who d1dn t catch a pass We
scored 34 m the first half
That IS ndtculous lmagme tf
we had the ltrst team pla) the
enttre game I need not say
more
Even coach Mar\ m Lewts
hmted that Palmer had done
better than expected - a rare
conces&amp;~on by a coach who
hkes to gtve the 1mpresston
that he s on top ot everythmg
mvolvmg hts team
' I can t say I'm all that sur

pnsed Lewts satd 11 half
ttme Maybe he was a httle
sh&lt;~rper than you d expect
but we 1 c seen hun worktng
every day to1 stx months
Afterward Lewts named
htm the startmg qu u1erback
for the season opener Sept
I0 m Kansas CJty
Perhaps the b1ggest test for
Palmer was getting htt for the
first t1me smce h1s mtury
wh1ch came on a 66 yatd
completton to Chns Henry
In an mterestmg b1t of sym
metry hts first completiOn on
Monday also went to Henry
And Palmer got htt agam
nght after he released 11
Thts ttme Gteen Bay s
Kabeer GbaJa B1amtla h1t
htm around the wmst and
took htm down The !me
man s 6 toot 4 250 pound
body landed on top of
Palmer a tame but telhng htt
Pal mer made all of the
doubts vamsh a shon ttme
later when he couldn t find a
recc1ver saw a huge opemng
and took off runnmg, sltdmg
untouched at the end of an
I I yard scramble

Mayo

I don t know what hts
plans are as of nght now
We d1dn t get a defmtte on
anythmg
Mayo s posstble return
to West Vuguua may have
been sparked by a July I0
rulmg by the Ohto Htgh
School Athlellc AssoctattOn
that satd teammate and fel
low Huntmgton nattve B1ll
Walker was meltg1ble to
play h1s !mal year of htgh
school
The two have led North
College Htll to conseculive
DIVISIOn Ill state champ!
onshtps W,tlker h.ts satd he
will remam at the school
even though he can t play
Mayo who has not md1
cated a college chmce or
whether he would even
attend college has nothmg
left to prove on the h1gh
school level But by movmg
to Huntmgton he would
reJOill several fnends and
make a sohd team unstop
pable 111 a state that pro
duces few Dtvtston I play
ers each ) ear
Huntmgton beat George
Washmgton Htgh to wm tts
second stratght Class AAA
champwnshtp m March
I m not sure what to do
unttl we see when the~
scnmmage
Marshall
George Washmgton coach

R1ck Greene sa1d JOkmgly
Tuesday 111 reference to the
nearby Dn IS!On I college
Earher thts mooth at the
AA U nattonal tournament
111 Orlando Fla the cham
pwnshtp game featured
Mayo and tour current
Huntmgton players
A team wtth Mayo
Wal~er Huntmgton s Mtke
Taylor and Jamaal Wtlhams
beat a team that mcluded
Patrtck
Patterson
,md
Huntmgton teammate Chns
Early Pattetson ts the
returnmg state pl.tyer ot the
)ear
If he d1dn t show up
they re stil l a whole nother
level abo\ e anybody else
Nobody s
Green Satd
gomg to be able to compete
w1th htm
As a se\enth gr,tdet
Mayo was recruited to play
h1~h school basketball at a
pnvate school tn nearby
Ashland Ky Once m h1gh
school he 11 anste1 red wtth
W1lker to North College
Hill 111 2003
The 6 6 Walker a~eraged
21 7 pomts a game and I0 I
rebounds last season l;le
was ranked only behmd
Mayo among the natton s
best prep players
In an tntervtew last year
wtth The Assoctated Press

Ahsha Mayo satd she d1dn t
want her son attendmg
Huntington H1gh She sa1d
when she was m school
athletes recet~ed httle help
m Jandmg college scho!,tr
sh1ps and she feared the
same thmg would happen to
her son
You ve got to go where
11 sat It s not gomg to come
here
she
satd
last
December
I knew he
wouldn t get hts JUSt nght
here
But she dtd mdtc tte th,tt
M.tvo was fond ot hts
hometown
He II .1lways 1emember
whete he came from she
sa1d He s the same as he
w IS when he was 8 or 9
years old
Mayo would be el1gtble to
pl.ty tl he enrolls m s~hou l
before the I lth mstructtonal
day Classes began on
Monday
Btg crowds have follo"ed
Mayo s tc,lms But Mtke
Hayden executtvc sectetary
ul the West Ytrguua
Second,u)
School
Aclt\ttles Commi SSIO n smd
!l S lOO edt\y to diSCUSS
Mayo s posSible 1mpact
We d have to make sure
they dot all the I s and cross
all the T s With regard to eli
gtbthty Hayden satd

from Page Bl
two ttme Assoctated Press
Mr Basketball tor Ohw and
was tournament MVP of
thts summer s nat1onal
champion AAU I 7 and
under team He averaged
28 8 potnts per game last
season at North College Htll
Htgh School m Cmcmnat1
Mayo s mother ts a grad
uate ot Hunllngton Htgh
School and lt~es tn nearby
South Pomt Ohto She dtd
n t tmmedtately return "
telephone
message
Tuesday
In West Vtrgtma enroll
ment of an out of state stu
dent reqUires a tuberculosts
test Webb satd a student
cannot attend school unHI
the test results whtch can
take up to 72 hoUI s are
known
After walktng out of
Huntmgton H1gh Mayo
went to a local gym
Tuesday
He was Jooktng mto
commg m here and domg
some trammg tf he does
dec1de to come thts way
satd Dan Ptckens, executive
dtrector of the HIT Center

Buckeyes
from Page Bl
starters at linebacker and m
the
secondary
whtle
Nonhern llltnots has a tat!
back (Garrett Wolfe) who
averaged 176 yards rushtng
a game last season
The btggest thmg ts not
to get moved out of the
"ay' defenstve tackle
Qumn Pttcock sa1d Thetr
btggest scheme ts trytng to
get Garrett Wolfe g01ng
stratght ahead Once he gets
a head of steam he s tough

had a respectable game
agamst Mtchtgan hlttmg
I 7 of·25 passes for 200
yards wtth one mterceptton
tn a 33 I 7 setback
Already, some natiOnal
publicatiOns have pmpomt
ed the tmponance of two or
three or tour btg games tor
the Buckeyes Two offen
stve stars (Smtth and recetv
er/returner Ted Gtnn Jr)
have thetr own Web sttes
toutmg them for the
Het sman
Trophy
Compansons are bemg
drawn between the current
team and the one that "on
seven games by seven or
tewer potnts tn 2002 to go

I4 0 and wm the nattonal
champ10nshtp
It s heady stuff - the
ktnd of stuff that can d1s
tract a team from the task at
hand
It s an honor to be
named No I · satd deten
stve tackle Davtd Patterson,
wtth Pttcock the only two
starters back on defense
But at the same t1me at
OhiO State there are always
the expectations of makmg
tt to a natiOnal champt
onshtp every year If we JUSt
keep our focus and play one
game at a tune that wtll be
the best w.ty to ach teve out
go,lls

The Datly Senttnel • Page 83

m::nhune - Sentinel - R
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Meigs County, OH

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photo
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethl1sberger (7)
hangs onto Philadelphia Eagles safety Michael Lewis (32)
after Roethlisberger was catted for mtent1onalty ground mg
the ball dunng the f1rst quarter of a preseason football
game Fnday 1n Phltadetphta
AP

the right to edll

reject or cancel any
ad at any tlma
Errore Mutt
B
aported on the firs
ay at publication an
he Tribune Sentinel
agister
will
b

Steelers in danger of third
winless preseason in 41 years
PITTSBURGH (AP) The Ptttsburgh SteeleiS have
had on!) two wmlcss exhtbt
!ton seasons smce I965 and
none under coach Bill
Cowhe1 The) ,rre 111 d,mger ol
havtng thetr thtrd not that
.myone seems womed
Cowher for ob~ to us rca
sons ts much more concerned
about the Steclers opener
a1amst Mtanu a week from
1 nursday than he IS thetr final
preseason game Thursday
.tgamst Carohna That s why
quarterb 1ck
Ben
Roethhsberger and some
othet starlets may not even get
off the bench tlus 1\eek fot the
detendmg Super Bowl ch,tm
ptons
Roethhsberger has played
only foUl senes 111 thtee
games mostly to get te 1c
qu,unted wtlh playmg .tt g une
speed and to develop lllnmg
wtth hts recetvers If he plays
ag,unst the Panthers 11 likely
wtll he only one senes and no
more
Cowhe1 generally doesn t
pia) h1s starters much m the
final exh1 bttton g.tme even
when the Steelers had mne to
I0 d&lt;~ys bet\\ een the fi n,t\
exhibitiOn game md the sea
son opene1 Wtth only a week
hetween g,unes Cowhe1 IS
even more reluctant to put
them on the field
Smce we ve gone to thiS
Thursday format ol ope111nif
up - wh1ch "as done lor all
the nght reasons - 1t hIS uet
mttely altered the thmkmg ot
the fourth prese.tson g une "
ll !Cities tO you1 stute!S
Cowher sa1d Tuesday
Or m this c,tse not playm,
the Stdrlets
The Stee!eiS h.tve come
dose to gomg wmless 111 exht
bttton play under Cowhe1 they were I 3 m I994 1995
1999 and 2003 - but h.t~e
never .tctu.tllv dune so Not
that tt matters much th~ Colts
were ()..5 111 the plCSCaSOII l
yc.rr ago then t1111ed With ,m
unbc,tten se.tson belore losme
Ill thetr 14th g,une
You never pl&lt;ty .my !i"me
not to wtn Co" he1 satd I
don t l1ke losmg at anytllm,
re~,trdless of the st.tkes 01
wnat the grou nd tules ue
But even m the prese.tson
you have a plan on hoi\ you
are ~omg to play your pl.tyers
I m not worncd about th1s
team from" confidence stand
pomt 1! we go through tillS 0
4
Cowher te tsons that a wm
I nmg team doesn t need to
prO\ e tt c,m w111 111 the presea
son although te.tms wtth a
htstory of losmg mtght benefit
!rom developm!i some confi
dence by wmnmg exhtbmon
games

aeponalble for n
ore than the coat o
e apace occuple
y the error and onl

at

~Waulta

Eastern
from Page Bl
Lady Eagles had came
mtdway through the open
1ng game Down by seven
to start the game and 9 3 at
one po1nt South Gallta
rallted back to eventually
knot the game at 13 aptece
alter a Megan Dehlnev
block
But Eastern outscored
the home team 12 I the
rest of the wa) en route to
the wm
Wtnebtennet h.1d tour

902 Vanco Ad September
1 9 3 and September 2 9
4 Bar stools costume tew
airy Gal a Academy togo
Items clothes and much
more

ant Corrections wll
e made In the tlrs
vallable edition

&gt;Box number ada ar
lwaya confidential

&gt;Current rate car
ppllea

ccepta

1.,.110-·HEl-·P·W·A;·N-·ED_...IIIlO
Financial Services
Officer

-------'-

Gallipolis Ohio

(Ag consumer)

3 FAMILY YARD SALE
Saturday Sept 2 Bam to
Spm 45061 BaumAddhon
Road
Top of the H 11
Clothes all s zes 2 T to

Fr

Sam ? 813

Ant que

Fenton Mtddlaport

Man
p1ctures
belts glassware
rocker oak mantel

k !nnr1ylfGcomctll ntt

3 fam ly yard sa e Sat Sept
2nd 9am 5pm follow s gns
at Tuppers Pta ns cau l on
lght

rrom th

ubllcatlon or omla
lon of an advertla

game

Broadway

S1reet

Sept 1st Fr

sew ng Sept 2nd Sa
house - ' - - - - - - -

hold goods chatrs Fostona
28ft extens on ladder
Garage sale 7th house on
775 Sept 1st &amp; 2nd 9 00 ?
Grafters you don t want to
m ss th s ooe Supp es for
candles wood
sewing
ce ram cs wreaths dolls
Some tools c oth ng hOuse

Farm Cred 1 Serv ces s
seek ng a F nanc at Se v ces
OH car (Ag Consume r) n
our upcom ng Ga lfpol s OH
off ce Th s cand dates prl
mary espons b lites w I
center around building
strong elat onsh ps w th
bL s ness contacts anct cus
tamers m the cons umer and
agncultural rna kets This
person w1ll use h1s/her
knowledge of I nance and
agriculture to provide bus
ness contacts/ nf uencers
t.:~:.;;;:::";:;m:::':;"::';::m_______..:;~:.:zo::;"=''o.:'::':::•.::"::lc
value added nformat on
about he r customs needs
the FSO w1ll marKet FCS
f nanc1al ser 1 ces to cus
orne s based upon the nd
v duals need for these prod
ucts and serv cas
The m n mum qual1f cat ons
a e Bachelo s degree m
ag cui ure bus ness o
elated I e d Work re ated or
educat on related ag or
ag bus ness exper ence s
des rable and n some mar
kets may be reqwed

newapape
only hel

anted ads meetln
EOE standards

Please ma I la11. o ema I
your resume by 9/1112006
to Farm C ad t Serv1ces
Attent on Job Code 06 69
PO Box 34390 LOUISVIlle
KY 40232 Fa' [502) 420
3490 Emal
resume@ e farmcred I com

We will not knowing

accept any adver
lsement In \llolatlo
t the law

1\\(l\ \(I Ill \IS

Form !"lg Rock/Meta Band
Call 740 992 9904 o 740

416 1090

'

1 ma le Boston Ter e
Pek ngese m 11 small ns1de Huge Yard Sa e Fn Sat 9/1
9 2 Bam 4pm 330 Keeler
dog (740)379 2467
Ro past Shnne Cub
3 yr old male AKC Back Lab Baskets hoi day craft lems
m x 4 yr o d male Elhew party supples fu n tu e ale
Po1nt (740)44 1-0405
gnll baby swtng bassnet
clothes for baby toddler
Full blooded Rat Terr er no men women rna ern ty
papers Black/Tan loves plus
people call for more nfo ' - - - - - - - (304)675 5392
Huge yard sale Sept1&amp;2
9am 5pm 32 Henkle Ave
B cycle exerc se eq ct')a s
toys
d shes
c oth ng
books small appliances
much more
-------Mov ng Sale
Saturday
9 2 06 Bam 1Pm Ta 8
Esates Baby Fu n lure
(Womens Bah~
Magg e
spayed Clothmg
an d dectawed housecat g rls) househOld tems
Ch ld became allerg c l~~
~s~m~s~'~-------­
Please g ve Magg e a home Mult lam ly ya d sale Sat
Cal (740)645 7275
Sept
2nd
9am 5pm
Rodne~ Community But d ng
LairAND
(SI AI 850 &amp; old A&lt; 35)

i.................
FOLND

Found
Choco ate Lab
Male Duly Ad a ea Please
call (740)446 4043 to ldenti
ty
-'-'------Found M )(8d Female Dog
Approx 1yr 0 d Good
natured lr endly &amp; tovab a
(740)256 111 to Identify
LOST Male Bassett Hound
Bud Chattm area needs
Mads Reward (304)895
3399

r
__

kt!l~

for the Lady Eagles
Weber and Hayman each
added two Defens1vely
Weber had etght blocks
Btssell led Eastern 111
asststs and was 44 for 52
m settmg
Eastern was also a wm
ner tn the reserve contest
25 I 4 and 25 12 Lauren
Cummtngs led Eastern
wtth I 3 po1nts .tnd Katte
Wtlfong added e1ght
South Gallta stattstt cs
we 1e not available at
release t 1111e
Eastern plays host to
Metgs on Thursday mean
whtle South Gallia we!
comes Sou the1 n

586 Ann D ve F Sat off
Raccoon Ad from At 7
Boys womens bar stools
homecom ng gowns

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

YAROSALE·
PoMERot/Mn&gt;DI E

e tlret ln..rtlon W
hall not be liable to
ny lo.. or expens

The cultUie that you retry
mg to cstabhsh so to speak
may play " factor Cowher
satd I am nut 1eall) con
CCI ned With that Wilh thts
team I thmk the locus ul thts
team (Monday) was deutcated
solely to Mtdmt We II strut to
do a ltttle C lfohna stuff but
we te 1\eanng up 101 that first
"Wtde IC Cel~ e l Hmes Ward
who hasn t gone through a lull
practtce smce &lt;\ug 3 because
of h1s achmg hamstnng wtll
stt out 1 tounh consecttltve
game Thursday The only
other stwtel who won t play
because ut lllJUry 1s nght tack
le Max Starks (knee) He wtll
be replaced by tookte Wtlhe
Colon 01 second year lineman
Trw Essex
The Steelers haven t had a
wmless preseason smce g01ng
0 4 111 I987 and thetr only
other one 111 the last 40 plus
yeats was an 0 5 111 I965 dur
mg Y!tkc Ntxon s onlv season
as coach They went 1 12 that
year le&lt;tdmg owne1 An
Rooney to bnng 111 former
Packers tss1stant B1ll Austm
as coach m 1966
The Steelers have made
only t'Ao other coachmg
swttches 111 the last 40 ye,rrs
- m 1969 "hen Chuck Noll
replaced Au sun and 111 I992
when Noll retued ,md Cowher
\\as hued
Notes. Cowhe1 w 1tched
some of Ca1 son P,llmet s
comeb&lt;Ick game wtth the
Beng 1ls on Mondav mght the
qual tel b 1ck s ftrst g.tme
JCttnn smcc senously lll)Urtng
1 knee 111 a playoff game
10 1111st Ptttshur~h Cowher
termed P,tl mer s recovery
3mazmg but conceded he
" IS 1lso watchtng the US
Open I teall y wanted to
watch Andte Agass1 play so I
"&lt;Is "atchmg th 11 most of the
t1111e Cnwhe1 satd
Wtth
backup TE Jerame Tuman
lh umtnng) st1 II out the
Steelers Signed TE Ttm Euhus
md teleased rook1e TE Is tac
Smolkn Fuhus st.trted three
~ tmes I 01 the Bills l.tst season
t&gt;elot e betng tJ,tded to the
Samts who ~ut htm Mond.ty
Cowher tsn t 1eady to tnme
a starter 11 flee safety though
fimnet Redskms starlet Ryan
C\ 11 k ts expected to st ut
ag,l!nst Mttllll
CB Deshea
Townsend IS ptacttcmg 1gam
two weeks ttter hreakmg hts
nght thumb
G Kendall
Sm1mons m.ty play mother
senes at center 1s he dtd
agamst Philadelphia on
Fnday, even though backup
Chukky Okobt IS practtcmg
agam Okobt mJured hts neck
mtd'-' ay throu gh camp and
was tnttlally expected to be
out untt I mtdseason

r

4

~ARD SALE

S

o.am

pup or blg dog
5354

tARD AI &amp;

Dr~ve 8 dwell

Yard sa e Sept 1 &amp; 2 8642
1'11'1(1\\ll\1
At 7S Aanorshne Tuck
'-II 1{\ H I "
topper gospel sound t acKs
.h·':.:":.::se.:..h:.::o~ld_te_m_s_,---__
1110 fi£Lp WANilll
Ye diMov ng Craft Bus nttss
Sale Fr day/Saturday 330 " - - - - - - - - '
Kee er Ad off Bulavl e P ke
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Chnstmas crafts Baby tOO
Assemble c aHs
dler boy &amp; g~ clohes and
wood tams
much more!
To $480 wk
Malena
s prov ded
"'4
y \RD SALE·
Free nlormat on pkg 24Hr
PoMEROY/MillDLE
801 428 4649

t5 Ann Drve Sept 1 2 4
8 30arn Ill 5 OOpm

2 Fam• y Yard Sa e Baby
boy and toddler g dothes
5 lam ly yard safe on SA scrubs lo ladles men and
554 2nd house past ra I oad women clothes baby tams
tacks 1n Chesh1re at the cor and toys shoes purses
ner of Watson Grove &amp; 554 m sc One day only Sat
Sept 2nd 9 00 A M 500
8/31 912
Grant St M ddleport
Garage Sa e Sept 1st &amp;
2nd 8 30 ~ 6 m tes below Yard Sale Sept 1 and 2 35
R~Verv ew Dr ve M ddleporl
Gal pol s on St Rt 7S

EXTRA' EXTRA'
NO EXPER ENCE NECESSA.R'I'
FU L f ME CLASSES

COL TRAIN NO
F NANC NO AliA LABLE
JOB F'l.ACEMENT
ENRO LNG NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TAA LEA
TR4 N NG CENTERS
WYTHEV LLE VA

e

1 800 334 1203

Ill~~·-:•:•~"';";"':•:•:•"'~~

(304)675

Zuspan Metal Salvage Now
buy ng JUnk cars buses
ppe I beam tin etc
Mason WV 304 593 1904

A 9 year company s lo6i&lt;: ng
fo a we I mot vated HVAC
tnstaller
and
helpe
EKper ence s preferred Pay
s based on eKperlence If
nterested cal (7 40)441
1236 and leave message
w th ecephonisl
Call

HE!J&gt;WA.'ffill

RN NURSES
Pleasant Valley Hospital
IS cu ranlly acceptmg
esumes for Full I me
Registered Nurses
Appl cants mus have a
cu rent West V rgmla
I cense Flex ble
schedul ng excellent
salary holidays health
Insurance s ngle family
plan dental plan life
nsumnce vacat on
long term d sabllty and
et~remenl

Send resumes o
Peasant Valley Hosp lal
clo Human Aesou ces
2520 Valley Or 11e
Ponl Peasant WV
25550
(304) 675 4340
AAIEOE

Moto Route Dr ver
needed n the Leon area
Pay over $1 000/month
Must ha11e Reliable
Transportation &amp; alternate
ca Qual fl9d applicants
Contact
Sean M Cu len
(304)875 1333 eX1 20

must be 21 years o d w th a
val d dr vers cense Contact
West V rg1n a Elect c 1885
Eastern Ave Gal po s
LPN s PAN and Casual
Contact Ang e Me Mill n at
M ddleton
Estates
(740)446 7148 or 1740)446
48~4 or fa~t resume to
(740)446 0136 An EOE
FJMIDN

Mlrkttlng Po1ltlon for ocat
Mad cal
Equipment
FEDERAL
Company You must be
POSTAL JOBS
highly mot vated e~tper ence
preferred
Salary
+
$1567$2e9hrnowh
omm 1ss on
nego1lbl
a e
ng For application and lree Send resume to Bo)( 55.5.
governement job nto call c/o Gall pots Tr bune PO

c

Not aattanact with your
current job?
We re oak ng for
dependable emp oyees
to wo k , the Gall pols
area
$7 00 $9 25/hr
Call or the nat on s lead
ng non p oft o gan za
tons Weoterpadtran
ng hoi days and vaca
liOns
A~ply today by ca lhng
(740)446 7442 ext 1901
Toll Free
1 B7H63 6247

HUMES

Lazy T Aoye Cnapa ra .__...FO_R_SiiiALEiilil-,..1
Fam I~ Reso t Campg ound
Are you nsp red to he p the membersh p
tor
sale
aide ty tve life to the fullest? (304)372 6569
Put yoU&lt; skis 10 use anct - - - - - - - toln HCA Manor Ca e for a
Exc
chal)eng ng and ewe d ng
caree
-------New LO\o,er Pr ces on
L mestone a Rodney Stone 997 b evel house 2 ca
MOS NURSE
(740)245 5316 Ave Gravel garage w th 7 ac es 3~A 2
bath 40x20 pole barn
COORDINATOR/ &amp; Sand also avalable
12x20 decK pond heat
ADON
Tr AKie Load Qf I ewood pump Meigs Gall a I ne
$350 A Load
740 949 $ 40 000 Call (740)742
Qual ttcatlons include a cur 2195
154
rent AN l1cense In Oh1o 2
WA~TFD
years ol long term care
experience MOS expe
To Do
ence p elerred Sl ong man
agement and commun ca Are you II ed of w nkled
lion skills are a must Pr o clo hes? le me help w th
superv sory exper ence We your on ng and laund ~
offer competitive pay ad a Call (740)446 7525 leave a
comprehens ve
bene! ts message
package ncludmg 401 (k)
2990 State Route 124
w th compa y match \u 1on Housekeep ng ove 6 years Syracuse out of flood pta n
ass stance and more
exp Honest and re abe Oho Rver vtew 6 roon 3
Ca I [740)379 2898
bed oom 1 2 bath 1 acre
Please torward resume to
at garage (740)992 7866
Mag c Years Day Ca e Pre (740 992 5776 1740)339
Bonne MeGan NHA or
Cheryl Bo en HR Heartland Schoo Inc' Open ngs ava I 3363
able now accept ng Fa I
of Jackson 8668 SA 93
En aliment State L censed 3 bedroom t story 1 1 2
JacKson Oh o 45640
Putt ng Ch ldren F st bath gas heat c/a 2 car
Fa' 740 2B6 0295
(304)675 o647
ga age
n M ddlepo I
V1s t us onl neat
-------~ $72 500 (740)992 6926
www her meno care com
Wanted to Do Hous ng - - - - - ' - - - EEO/Drug Fee Emp cye
Clean ng [740)339 0537 4 bedroom 2 bath double
[740)339 0546
ga age pool 2 acres
Easte n SchOol D str ct
Weight No More
Fa~:
I 740 992 3465 afte 5 OOPM
Natural Nutrition
Easy We.ght l oss Dodo
4 enlal houses Fo Sale
Center IS current y accept ng
Formulated
lnd v1dua ly
Good ncome produc ng
appl ca ons for STNAs AI
Coached Prog ams 740 prope I es G eat local on
shifts pa 1 t me No Phone
742 2092 ask or Dav d P ce(s\ a e Negot able
Calls P ease AI nterested
Rob nson
He ba le
Mot vated
Se ler
In
appl cants should p ck up an
Independent ~~~tnbutor.
Gall po s
Call Wayne
appl cat on at 333 Page
1404)456 3802
St eel M ddleport OH Far 190 CHII tYEttJF.RLY
further nformat on please
CARE
contact Hollie at (740)992 · - - - - - - · 4bd 2 bath Only $32 900
FORECLOSURE Fo
Sl
6472 EOE
ngs 800 39 5228 ext F254

Transit ons tor Youth s seek
ng a full tme Oho ce tied
LSW lor the purpose of case
managemef.lt rec u1ting and
hcens ng of foste homes
and publ c relat ons Work
f om home and schedule
your own hours P ease
send res~me to TranSit ons
for Youlh 5801 State Route
141 Gall polls Oh o 45631
Resumes must be ece ved
by Soplember 9
Wanted D ect Superv son
Employees to oversee rna e
you h n a !:i alf secu e es
dent a env onment Must
pass a phys cal tra n ng
reqwement Pad benefits
Cal tletween 9em Jpm
Man Fr to apply (740)379
9083
-------Warehouse
Posston
Loadlng unloading t ucks
pull ng orders dellver to
multiple store locations
Must have va id dr ver s
license ava able to work M
F Please send esume to
the ~o1nt ~leasant Reg star
CLA Bm 200 ISC.29. Man
Sr Pt Pleasant wv 25550

_a'~'-46-9-:-G_a_ll_p_o_ns_O~H-~t.,t56_ _ _
ScHooiiiiiiiiiiO.LSiliiiO..~
l~STRUCTION

Arne 599
can8042
Assoc24/hrs
of Labor
9!3
emp1 45631
sarv
lfr'"~~F.i'!~~:!:\""111
Needed Contract labor lor
Technician. Wanted
ocal home mp ovemen
company Some eKpenence
would be benefic at
Pay
based upon JOb and expe
ence Please cal (740)992
5094

HI \I I ...,I \II

Nu se

se'E!k ng a part t me dr ver

•

GAUJPOLIS
1480 Add son P ke 1
m1les tram SA 7 8131 911
915 Bam ? Hulch \rash
cornpac or ugs ch ldrens
clothes toys &amp; lots of house
hold ltems

\

I

Absolute Top Dalla U S
S lver and Go d Co ns
Proofsets Gold R ngs Pre
1935
US
Cur ency
Saltaire Diamonds M TS
Trash &amp; t easure sale 1111 Coin Shop 151 Second
Ohio Ave near GOC Frl &amp; Avenue Gallipolis 740-446
Sat 1st &amp; 2nd B 5 Couch 2842
tw n bed complete clothing
Cl nseng
marble dishes m crowave Buying
Septem0e1 1st tor fresh
something fo everyone
September 61t'l for dry
Yard sa e 119 Bastian! Dr Call
c ty Fr day &amp; Sat Sept 1st &amp; Woodlandwlse Botanicals
2nd
95
Computers
stereo entertanment cen I wll buy J.u.oK
Call
ter queen s ze bed I ame (740)388 9303
teens mens &amp; womens plus '--:;;,;:_:.::...;~:____
Want ng
to
buy
sze clothes &amp; mise terns
ChlckensiBanues &amp; a wofe
Yard sale Saturday only
Sept 2 f om 9 2 K ds cloth
tng battery ope ated scoot
e s Bow1leK lays lots of
m scelleneous 345 A nold

HVAC Pas Ions
PO Bo;r; 363
The Pans Oh 45780

Yard Sae I 112 m1le out
Sto y s Run Hobson Sept
1st and 2nd Large 5 lam y
WANTI'])
Til BUY

VISA

11~70 ....._,.'""A'~ I
. . ...-..~·~~· riO

Part T me Syracusa Mayors
Cou I Clerk Ma Resume
to Syracuse V1lage Mayo
Er c Cunn gham P0 Box
266 Sy acuse Oh1o 45779
Deadl ne Sep 5th

Tremendo us Yard Sate
Sept 1 39pm Sept 2 9
am 3 pm IS house on
ght past Nazarene Church
between Syracuse and
Rae ne 4 draws chest
queen wale bed footon
bunk bed With mattresses
fax mach nes console TV An Excellent way to earn
flat screen computer man money The New Avon
to golf clubs Harley cloth Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
g Chevy truck buckets
seats apd much more

r

-

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added lo your classified ads
&lt;.:.~
Borders $3 00/per ad
l!_iiolll
Graphics SOC for small
$1 00 for large

Monday t:hru Friday
8:00 a.m. t:o 5:00 p.m.
*POLICIES'*

JUST SAY
CHARGE lil

992·2157

OftfceHO~~

v

to stop
The Buckeyes haven t
been
busy
watchtng
lnvmctble or Talladega
N1ghts The Ballad of Rtcky
Bobb~
The
v1deo
machmes at the Woody
Hayes Ath!eltc Center have
been hummmg wtth replays
of the Hu sktes agamst
M1ch1gan m the 2005 sea·
son opener
Wolfe Oust 5 foot 7 I 77
pounds) streaked for 148
yards on I 7 cames mclud
mg a 76 yard run
The Husktes also have
quarterback Phtl Horvath
who completed 7 I percent
of hts passes last season He

www.mydatlysentinel.com

Attention
Loca company otter ng NO
Lo s Daycare accept ng
DOWN PAYMENT pro
ch ldren ot all ages State
g ams fa you to buy your
&amp; p vale pay accepted
home nstead of rent ng
St~:~le Route 124 1740)992
1ooo o f nancmg
7676
Less han perfect cred t
II\ 1\1 I II
accepted
..,~-....- - - - ,
Payment could be the
p1o
Bust~IX~
same as en!
Ot'I'ORllTSITY
Mo lgage
Locu ors
· - - - - - - · 740)367 0000
For ento sae 17600sqlt
wa ehouse on Rt 2 w th 3
ac es fenced n &amp; gated
$27 500 86 Burdette Ad n
blacktop
park ng
lot
$2
900 4BR Bnck R~nche
(304)937 412.,
Souths de $85 000 4B R
.--~~~~-., Lesage $24 500 Many
•NOTICE•
Olhe s May Vance Rea ty
OH 0 VALLEY PUBL SH
n the Va ley 304 757 1687
lNG CO ecoo nends
that you do bus ness w th
people you know and Bank Owned 2800 Sq Fl
NOT to send money Home 2 car garage p us 3
through the rna 1unt 1you ca detached garage nea
have nvest gated the Po nt P easant $224 90C
M i&lt;:e Slack 0 d Co on~
oHe ng
-;;::::;===~ GMAC Rea y 1304)542
r-1
5B88
220
Mo~n
1'0 [..&lt;)Ai"
Beau t fu 3BR home w ap
~======~ a ound po ch downtown
1
Ga 1pols
C ty Schools
u~O IICfH
$118000 Ca 740446
996t
Bo 9w Sma I Con act
the Oho Ovson of
F nanc at
Ins! tut1on s
Olf ce
of Consume
AHa1rs BEFORE you ref
nance your home o
obtain a oan BEWARE
Allrtill 111111 ldVIrtlllnQ
of requests lor any arge
in thl1 new1paper It
advance payments or
subject to the ll'filerel
fees or nsurence Call the
Fair Hou1lng Act of 1&amp;e8
011 ce of Consume
which makeelt lllegelto
Affalrs tot f ee at 1 866
advertlae any
278 0003 to tea n 1 the
prarerance Imitation or
mortgage b oker OJ
dlacrlmlnat on ba11d on
Iande
s
p ope y
race color religion 1111
I censed Th s s a pupt c
famllal atatua or nat one
or gin or any Intention to
make any such
prelarence 1mltaUon or
dlacrimlnatlon
-;;:;:::::::::~

Concealed P stol C ass R'
Onto WV Sept 9 2006
$75 00
9 ooam VFW
Mason WV Ph (740)843
555&amp;

PROFI$10"AL
SER\ IC~

ovzone
he
Company
tha de ver
Gallipolis Career College
un Cool I ghbng Ret o
(Car&amp;er6 Close To Home)
bo c tems e~ c emenl o
Call Todayl 740 446 4367
he 60s and 70s wth
1 BOO 214 0452
ooern day tw st For Mar
www Q8 :xJ a 11 e11 co eg11 com
Ace ed ed Memt&gt;e A ed ng eta Is cal 740 742 323
Count !o neependen Co eoes r 740 742 1066
Fo
a d Schools 2746
1 866 550
V s t Novzone a
ww novzona com
omlng Soon The Zon
Retail Store
89 Suzuk Fat Boy muffle
Boored out many eKt as Soul males LLC com ng
$1 500 740 985 4258 90 Soon For people who are
Ford ProBe TuBro Ch8ger took ng to true love a
n take wth head 2 2( 2 Sou mates 740 742 3232
valve)$1 000 00 740 985 or 614 783 12:)2 Look 1g tor
Reps
4258

Fa Sale
Wood Bu ne
At 35 Adult 13ook S ore need Fu nace used very I ttle
M dn ght Clerk Ful t me $350 00 Phone 740 992
(304)937 4900 Drug Tes\
4228

==="'-----'

Th a newspape w I not
know ng y accept
advertisements for real
estate which 11 In
v olaton ol the law Ou
1adars are h11reby
lnlo med that all
dwellings advertised In

lh1s newspaper are
available on en equal
opportuntty basta

2 fu I baths IV ng oom lam
ly oom arge ceda sun
oom open ng onto pat o
d n ng com k tchen ut tv
oom pa I at basemen I
Attached Ia ge 2 car ga age
w bu It n cab nets una
ached 3 ca heated ga age
n ground poo b 1Ck pa o
TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? profess onal y landscaped
Pr ce $275 000 00 Call 740
No Fee Uness We Wn
949 2217
8B8 5B2 3345

�Page B4 • I he Uaily Sentinel

weanesaay, August 30, 2006
10

Taking
applications for
remodeled
3
bedroom
house. NO PETS. $375/mo,
S3001dep.(740)446·3617

Brand new 2 Bedroom
Apartments Washer/dryer
hookup, stove/refrigerator
Included.
Also avarlable unrts State
Route 160. Call for details
(740)44 1-1)194 or (740)4411 184

r Mc:t::r\DS

Pecan wood dlnin9 roonr
table, lour chairs, hutch
$300: 1960's Walnut Danish
bookcase bed , matchmg
dresser and chest ol drawers $275; 1940's Four
poster bed, matching dresser and stool'$275 (740)2455488 before 10pm

1 br Trarler furnished, utilities
pard. 7 mrles from Power CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
Co
Morgan
Twp
and
Mergs
mg Payment around $550
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Co Salem Twp Land carr- Plant rn Letart. $350 a Tow nhouse
per month 740-367-7129
apartments,
tracts
a"a1table
Some montll (304)882-2858
and/or smal l houses FOR
restnctrons No calls after
2 &amp; 3 8ed10om Trailers, Call RE NT. Call (740)441-1111
9 6oprn (740)609-0143
(740)367-7762. (740)446· for application~ rntormation .

••n

BEITIIY

..._EI
HUGE 3 Bedroom

$31,891
MIDWESJ HOMES
mymiclwesthome.com

(740)828·2750

°

'

Reduced: Mason 3rd St ~740)446-2003 or (740)446Zbdrm , 1 ba, corrrer lot
1409
wl storage burldrng &amp; garage
$62 ,500 Prud~ntral Bunch 360
Ru\1 , E.''\T An:
Re ~;~(lors. Bobby Mun cy
\V\\TtJ)

"-------_.1

(740)709-0299

1\=i':::';.,~:-,:-IO•R•II•}•:':'H:-O•\•tt•::._~t;-, Need to sell your hom e?
L~;~te on payments. clrvorce,
..__ _,;,f1iiliiWiiSjj,
AiiiLii;;- r JOb transfe r or a de~th? 1

can buy your home. All cash
2003 3 Br , 2 B.:1.th, 28 X 60 and qurck closing. 740 _416 _
Redman
double wrde Jt 3o.
Sittrng On
1 3 acres
IU'\1\IS
Concrete waiks and porch·

as. landscaped. shade
trees country &lt;;ettrng on SA
'"

143. Mer;:j S Coun ty

Askrng

$62.500

Downtown Apartment: 3
bedrooms. 1 1/2 baths, central air. carpet/hardwood
ltoors, appliances including
washer/dryer
provided.
Ample storage available
Deposrt
required .
Call
(740)446-7654

For AeAt- Nice 2 BA. 2 Bath
Mobile Home .in Gallipolis,
$ 450 per month plus ·
deposit. (740)645-7765
For rent. Nrce 2 bedroom
mobile home In Country
Homes. $325 + depos_lt.
(740)385-40 19
:.,.....:_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Mobile Home sites for up to
16•80 rn Country Homes.
(7401385·4019.

r

F'Rurrs

lliJ'.rlr--.-,r_.,~~,_j

Thompsons

Appliance

r '-------J

97 Beech Street

10x10x10x20

• Helios

• Hospilal Beds

• Homefill

• Wheelchairs

•

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

UK' ned. n~

....... -

.

..........

South

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

.... •rltmllllll•-

OF COUilSe, vJITti ONLY
/

1- Craftmat rc XL twin bed: t
Mob1le Homes lor Rent , Furnished apt , 3 rooms &amp;
set- ludwrg drums; 1·4 ft
tocated i_n Gallipolis Ferry, ba th, upsta1 rs, clean. no
metal brake to bend tin- with
Point Pleasant and Mason pets. Ref/deposit req u1red
stand. (740)441-2667
call (30 4)675-3423
(740)446-1519

Manor
and
Riverside
Pets deposit.
~7 40 )446 ·9 11 6, Apartments m Middlepor t
(740)339·2541
From $295·$444. Call 740 992-5064. Equal Housi ng
APARTMFNrS
ppportunities
~
FORRENT
-------C lean we ll rrarnlamed 95
Honeysuckl e ·
Hills
Clayton t'4x70. ail elncrrrc.
1 and 2 bedroom apart- Apartments, Gallrpolis, now
3 br 2 bath . complete wrlh
ments, furni shed and unll,lr- accepling apPlications for 2
oippliances. washer dryer. 3 bedrQom in Gallipolis.
nrshed,
security deposit Bedroom Apartments. No
curtarns. new blrnds. heat Great locat1onl WID conn
requrred. no pets, 740-992- Rental Assistance avarlable
pump wrth central. arr. 2 $309/month. $100/deposil .
2218.
at this lim e Rent starts at
porches, now underprnnrng No pets.
$315/mo. Equal HOUSII'] g
1
bedroom
rn
Gallipolis.
$16,000 0MO ()04)5931 bedroom , upstarrs unturOppor~unily. (740)446-3344
Great tocationr $1 79/month, nrshed apartment
6437 or (304)675-8668
with
StOO/deposrt. No pets Call
range, refr. drsposal and Immaculate 2 bedroom
Great used 3BR home only Wayne (404\456-3802
garage. 136 First Ave . rear. apa rtment rn the country.
$9 .995. Wrll help with delivDeposit and reference. New carpe l &amp; cab rnets.
3BA
homeSA
554,
Bidwell.
ery Call (7401385-7671
$575/mo. sec . dop all alec (740)446·2561 .
freshly painted &amp; decorated,
New 2006 Clayton srn- (740)446-3644
tBR apt. , all utilities &amp; cable WID hookup. Beautiful coun glewrdes stn rting at5199.84
pd. S400/month, in C rown try setting . Must see to
per month. Trade-urs wel - 3BR house- LeGrande Blvd
$399/mo
Crty. For sale doubtewide, appreciate
$600
rent
&amp;
sec
dep.
You
co mes Call (740)385-2434 ,
(6 14)595-7773 or 1·80C1/2
acre,
(740)256-8
13.2.
pay utih1ies Lease &amp; refer798-4686
ences requ rr ed (740)4 46- 2 Bedroom Apt Cen tenary
l..&lt;m; &amp;
364 4 lor application'
ALH~:~(;E
Road.
appliances. Twrn Rivers Tower is acceptwasher/dryer hookup, no ing applications lor warting
4 br House rn New Haven,
1.75 Acre Lol
$500!month ... $400/deposlt. pets. (740)446-9442 alter Jist for Hud-subs tzed, 1- br.
5:00pm. ·
Mason Co WV
apartment . call 675 -6679
No Pels (304),!382-3652
At. 2 Bo~ 127.
Equal Housrng Opportunity
4-5 bedroom , 2 bath, 3 _000 2 bedroom clean upstarrs
Leon . WV 25123
sq.ft.
Hardwood
floors apt. Water. trash included.
Approx. 500'
lhraughout
the
house. refrig _, stove. $325 rent,
Road f!rontage
water/trash
pard.
Call deposit
requ rred.
Call
Utrlrtres Avatlable
(740)446-7425.
(740)446-7620.
(7
40)441
58 995
Commercial burldrng "For
- - - - - - - - 9872.
i304t295·9090
Rent" 1600 square feet, ot!
4brl H UO home 1 Buy tor -,-,-,-d,-o-om-.--b-a-th-.- w-a- e,
1
1
streli,t parkr i1g. Great loca$ .
43 Beautilul acres-N1cholt; 520,900' For Lrstings 800391 -5228 x 1709
pard. $350 month, 3 50 tron! 749 Third Avenue in
Road , Rutland Oil and gas
security
deposit.
Call Gallipolis Rent "Negotiable''
well Free gas. lots ol deer ·
Call Wayne (404)4_56-3802
(740)44~·3481.
Attention !
and turkeys.
$65.000 00
Local com!)q,ny altering "NO
740-742-2233
2BA Apartment, Newly Downtown
Co mmerCial
DOWN. PAYMENT" pro- Renovated
1n Historrcal
Retail space lor Rent. $4001
grams for you to buy your
Large Private Mobrle Home
Downtown Gallipolis with
mo nth
Upsta1rs Offrce
home instead of rent1ng.
Lot Water, Sewer, At 87
great view of Park, Central
Suit es tor Rent $125/ month
100'"~
frnancrng
•
$130Jmonth {304)675,4 138
HIA. All Wood .Floors, Large
you pay the Utiliti es. CaJJ
• Less than ·perlect credit
Bath w/ Tub &amp; Shower. (703)528·o617
accepted
In cludes
Range,
· Payment could be the
Retngerator &amp; Dishwasher.
same as rent.
High ceilings, large wrndows ~r~lo~~"'-'"':'~----.,
Mortgage
Locators.
with custom shades that let
HOUSEHOlD
(7401367·0000
in lots olli ght. Call (740)709Clean, pretly 3BR house tor _,6_9_o__ _ _ _ _ _
rent Downtown. $695 +
3 bedroom. 1,000 sq. ft . apt 4 pc bedrbom set, sola/
chair, Pioneer around sound
utrlttres. Call 740-446-9961
Gallrpol rs. OH. located in
set 1,000 watt, entertainHouse for rent. 2 Br in town. S650/mo, reference
ment
cent er, microwave with
Mrddleport · $325 per month requ rred . No pets (740)441stand, new vanrty. (740)2450110
or
(740)992
-5174.
plus deposi t 740-742-1903
5078.
"House tor rent. No Pels. 34 1/2 Smithers, upstarrs.
2BR, 1 bath, large front
740-992-5858
porch . $320/mo. ,. $200/dep.
House rn Middleport lor rent. renter pays all utilrties.
Two Bed1oom
$425 00. 740446-9061
Appliance
'
740-843-5 264
Apt. for rent 2 or 3 Br.. No
Warehouse
NrCe 3 BR home 1n Spring Pets.
Valley. Nice yard. no pets, 1 : - ' - - ' - -- - - - yr lease Taking apps. $600 BEAUTIFUl
APART- rn Henderson, WV. Premo. Call Da11e@ (740)441- MENTS
AT
BUDGET owned Appl rances sta rting
PRICES AT JACKSON at $75 &amp; up all under
114
ESTATES, 52 Westwood'
Pomeroy Big 4 Bedroom/2 Drive !rom $349 to $448 Warranty, also have reconNo

r

r

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS

"---•Gooosiiiiiiiiiiiioo-_.1

1578

NEW AND USED STEEL tors @0% Fixed for 36
months
through
John
Steel Beams, P1pe . Rebar
Deere Credit Car michael
Far
Concrete,
An gle. Eqwpment (740)446-24 12
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains, Quality Johr:t Deere Hay
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp; L Equipment for less-round
Scrap Metals Open Monday. balers, square balers &amp;
Tue sday, Wednesday &amp; mower condilloners @4 7%
Friday, Bam -4:30pm. Closed Fixed for 48 months through
Thursday .
Satu rday
&amp; John
Deere
C redit
Carmrchael
Equipmen1
Sunday. (740)446-7300
1740)446·24 12.
Oversize
Blue
Leathe r
Recliner Chair, good condt LIVESTOCK
lion , $125 (304)675-4318
leave message
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _...

r

I'ORSAu:

•AlUMA

•ALUMINUM

AKC
Mrni
Pinschers
Puppies. Mal es blaCk/rust,
vet. checked . AKC Minr
Schnauzer
Puppi es.
White/ black,
salt/pepper,
black/silver.
S400 each .
740-696- 1085.

Hereford Oull calf. born
3/16/Q6. Dark red , great 4-H 2004 29ft Dutchman Sport.
steer or herd sire. $800. All cabl es. hoses. and camping
supplies
1ncluded.
(740)256· 1385.
Steeps 10. Excellent con dr I It \\ \ l't )I{ I\ 110\
tion. (740)388-0410 nrQht or
(740 )645-0993 day.
10

Mmiaturo

Alcros

2005 28ft. Dutchmen w.tslide
AKC Pomeranian Pups, 3
out, bunk and extras. Still
Male, 3 Female: wormed,
_
$
_( 0)
350 74 388 8642
$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS: unde r warranty $14,500
CarsfTrucks from S50D! For (740)36'7-7755.
Basset Hound Puppres. both
listings_800·391-5227 x3901
parents registered 1 male,

I'OR SALE

CONSTRUCTION

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

THE BORN LOSER
I BOU&amp;I{'i 1\ ~Ew,""'~

3 miles west of
l'omeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

740-992-1671

Wf.\t\\ W-¥f. ':;""''

GE£, Uf.\ "·"
Tf.\E PR.ICE:..,
t WESS!

I\ "&amp;OUR~\'?

G.OUR.ME\ IC£. Cr;(EM!

992-568i

Stop &amp; Compare

I DON.T TH INK .
SO, NATE! THEY.VE
GOT

HOLES

IN THEM'

IMPORTS
Athens

~'"ii:lwritiSBI"'"l
~ andSons , ~

...
I

Hill's Self
Storage

~

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771

All types of roofing' ;
New or Reparr
Downspout

~

Basket Bingo
August 3 1st 6 pm
Doors open at 5:00
Syracuse Com munity Center
Advance tic kets
992-3804
20 games $20.00 . il1"fproceeds to
Syracuse Community Center

American Legion
Middleport
September 2 ·6:30 pm
Paper Packs you· can
play for 525.00
Guaranleed $99.00 a game
Guaranteed $500.00
9overall co uld be higher
depending on crowd
Early Bird starting at 5 pm

A If the

Tuppers Plams
VFW #9053
Friday Nights
OOOfS Open at 5 pm
Bingo starts at 7 pm

.

,,,

BUS TRIP FROM
PVH
Charleston,
South Carolina
September 29, 2006 to
October 2, 2006
Includes transportation,
lhOtlel, breakfasts &amp; to
$320/person (double)
$310/person (triple)
$300/persoll (quad)
$450/person (single)
to make reservations
please contact PVH ·
Community Relations
(304) 675-4340,
Ext. 1326
LIMITED SEATS!

Cheri

and

court In the above entiaction,

In

on the record

plat
Plat Cablne1 19
A &amp; B Record o1 Plats
ol Meigs county, Ohiq.
Parcel
No,
05·
0046~ .011
Properly
Address : Vacant Lot 7,
Chestnut Ridge Sub,
Albany, Ohio 45710.
Situate In the Township

Douglas of Columbia, County of

Campbell
Delendanta
Court of Common
Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio.
In Pursuance . of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
tled

eated

I

will

expose

to sale at public auction on the front

slaps ·ol the Meigs
County Court House

on Friday, Sept. 8, 2006
at 10 A.M., olsald day,
the
following
described Real estate:

Three (3) Lots sold
separately.

Situate in the Township
ol Columbia, County of
.Meigs and State ol
Ohio, to wit : Br.ing Lot

Meigs and State of
Ohio, to-wit: Being Lot
Number 9, Chestnut
Ridge
Estates,
a
restricted subdivision,
as the same is delln~

eated on the recorded
plat In Plat Cablnel 19
A &amp; B Record of Plats
of Meigs County, Ohio.
Parcel
No.
05·
Property
00462,013
address: Vacant Lot 9,
Chestnut Ridge Sub,
Albany, Ohio 45710
Situale In the Township
of Columbia, County of
Meigs and State of
Ohio , to-wit: Being Lot
Number 2, Cheatnul
Ridge
Estates,
a

plat in Plat Cabinet 19
A and B Record of
Plata ol Meigs County,
Ohio Parcel No, 05·
Proparty
00462.006
Address: Vacanl Lot 2,
Chestnut Ridge Sub,
Albany, Ohio 457t0
Current owner: Cheri

&amp;

Douglas
Campbell
Property at Chestnul
Subdivision,
Ridge
Albany, Ohio PP# Vac
Lot 7 05-00462.0 t 1, Vac
tot 9 05·00462.013 Vac
Lot 2 05-00462.006
Appraisal a1 : Lot # 7
$25 ,000.00, Lot #9
Lot
#2
$28,000,
$28,000.00 terms ol
sale: Cannot. be sold
lor less than 2/Jrda ol
the appraised value .
10% down on day of
sale , cash or certified check balance due on

confirmation of sale .
The
appraisal did
include

an

interior

examination of
house.
Robert

the

E.

Beegle, Meigs County
Sher i ff , Att o rney tor
the PlairHi1f Frank &amp;

Wooldridge Co LPA ,
600 South Pearl Street
restricted subdivision , Columbus, Ohio 43206
as the same Is delin- 614-227·1662
eated on the recorded (8)2, 9,, 16

sixth

World

Youth

Pairs

ou~ly with tile !irs! World Schools Pairs.

Tak&gt;lg place lrom June 30 to July 2·in
Piestany,

Slovakia,

tl was lor

players

bornafter0ec.3 1, 1980.
The winners were 17-year-old Cecilia

against

~

partner. Still, West would have retreated
to four diamonds, which can be tJeaten
by only one trick.
Against lour spades doubled, Wesl
madelhe i nlell~entlead olthe diamond
king. Now, knowing that Sooth was out
of diamonds and with his club honors
under those on the board, We~t should
have shifted to the heart ace or ~ueen.
But he continued with another diamond.
The declarer, Aimstedt. ruffed , drew
lrumps endong in her hand, and played a
club to dummy's jack. Back to hand with

G

~

ffi

740-949-2217

~

.Slies 5'Jt10'

m

~

SOlOOL STARTS NEXT WEEK '·
I NEED '&lt;OV TO TEST ME ON
M'{ MULTIPLICATION TABLES ...

· to 10'x30'

~

PEANUTS
OKAV, ~OW MUCH
5 FIVE TIMES EIGHT~

Hours

~!~2J'"~~~1!~!1

7:00AM· 8:00PM
1114! 1 mo pd

Cornerstone
Construction
Kt''iidenliul • ( 'omnu·rcial • (;t-neral Contracting
Ptlin1rng • Dnnr~ • Wimlmb • Dcd.-~
• Sidiu~ · · Routing • RtiP ill.'\tltliti om • Remodelin g
WV 038992
• Ptumhrng • Elc.:1ril:al 740·367-0544
" A~c~lll ,l t ..: Cl't ling
740-339-3412
Of-138244

SUNSHINE CLUB
11£. L.t;AKS IM~tRrAtJT
INFORMA"TIOtJ

JONES'

1D"M.PR£SS

Tree Service
Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

Number 7, Chestnut
Ridge
Eatatas,
a
reslrlcled subdivision,
as the same Is delln·

The

Championsh ip (formerly called the
World Junior Pairs) was held simultane-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Cipher Ciyplograi'M are created lrom qoolatoos by li31110USpeople. past and l)'esent
E&amp;dl WJtter m:he Op/18' !lands for anothef

Today's due: A. equalS v .
"HT

GARFIELD
t'D I..IK!:

1"0

ORDE:R A LARGE.

Af\ICj.IOVt,&gt;, ONION, AND &amp;ARL.IC

arksrr1an Dog Food
~~~.~~. 501b Bag

PIZZA

River Wood Shavings
cu. ft, $3.99/Bag
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N ¥ Pom~roy, Ohio 45769

GRIZZWELLS
YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Add ltlona &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages

• Electrical 6 Plumbing
• Aoo ling &amp; Guttera
• VInyl Siding &amp; Patntlng
Patro and Porch Oecks
036725

wv

V.C. YOUNG Ill
2~

'"

992· 62 15
Po mero y, Ohr o
V~ m s Local E:x pc rrence

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work

GWH

XYNLOS;
YKL

XN

WH

XNOWHC ,

LALPF

GWH

RTHYXHLHY ,

GWXH. " -

a diamond ruff, South led her second

Jiupp ,

FREE
ESTIMATES

Melga County Sheriff's
Office
Sheriff
Robert
E,
· Beegle
104
East
second
Street, Pomeroy, OH
45769
Shariff Sales
Case
Number
06CV034
Belmont Savings
Bank
Plaintiff
VS

40
42
43

UTKH

W

XN

W

EWPY

LHYXPL

TS

EKLRL

TS

TS

YKL

CTHHL

club, and Wesl was held to his lhree

BIG NATE

, Rocky ''RJ"

Purebred Golden Retriever
puppies, vet checked , lirst
shots, pareMt s &amp; prevrous
pup an prem1ses. rererence
orr prevrous . liners, females
$200,
male s
S150 .
(740)662-0364

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN TI1E
CLASSIFIEDS

39

percent

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"We are wiser than we know ." - Ralph W. Emerson
1'he wise man thinks once b~fore he speaks tw1ce." - Robert Benchley

board

lor the gold medalists.

Seamles~:&gt; Gutter

BASEMENT

38

From the junior
to the youth

tricks . Plus 590 was a 90

I female, $200 eacl1. Has 1994 Honda Civic $500 ..r.8~10:;---:o:--....;.;;;~ ~
H&lt;J'1E
I st sh.ots ()• wormed Police tmpoundsr For listing s
" ·
~
::-13_04..:1_67_5_·4_5_10
_ _ _ _ aoo- 391 _5227 ext. c 548 _
11\IPRO\'EMI•:!\TS
2000 Chrysler Sebrmg
Convertible Limited. Cloth
top. leather lnlirNty sound
Garage
kept.
sys tem
30mpg. New tires $7,500
(740)446-7484 or (740)441-

:rl

debatable. And South's run-out was an
error - she should have trusted her

ROGER HYSELL I
GfiRHGE

-see

Dachshund puppres ,
1
sho th
· d &amp; 1 1 h ·
r arr re
ong arr
bla ck/tan
vet
checked
·
'
(304)593 3820
•

male

All.pass

740
446 9200
usc!

FoH SAl£

1- 1986 Chevy- 'apassenger
Angus Cattle Auction
van. V8 . PS.. PB AC .
Labor Day Monday, Sept.
740 44 1-2667
4th Crrcle B Far m LLC lis
At
35 So uthside , WV
CAMt ..:R~&amp;
(304 )675·6053
MIYIUR IIO\II:S

Obi.

33
36

suit but only 5-7 high-card points. West's
1hree no-trump was bizarre - more like
poker than bridge. North's double was

VA~S

2 female Boston Terrrers. 4 NECK '
months old $100 . (740)379- Carmichael
Equlp~ent
2467
(740)446·2412

Pass

an opposing pre-empt.) West Inquired
with two no-trump, East showing a good

S1 ,450. 1740)446-1655.

730
HITCHES.

Dbl.

not make a weak jump overcall

•GoOSENECK, 81 ,Dodge 112 ton. 4x4. 6 cyl.
&amp;
UTILITY 4 speed . Runs good

TRAILERS 'B&amp;W GOOSE·

Jt

3 NT

+

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furniture

ROBERT
BISSEll

1!1:11"'-------.,
i

PJ.~IS

2NT

Pass
4•

32

East
2

with a weak two diamonds.
Soul,h overcalled two spades. (You can·

.

St. Rt. 160 ,•GalllpoUs

4X4's For Sale. 1998 Dodge
Ram SLT Larime, hood
scope, crome bed rails, Am .
racing tires, 2 inch tift. Club
Cab 18,000 080.
1995
Ford F250 5 spe9d , reg ular
cab. w1th ca.mper topper .
$7.000.
0 8 0. 196 1 F250.
S.eth Thomas We1ght Clock' "KIEFER BUILT •VALLEY
5 Speed $2,500 OBQ.
•BISON
•HORSE
&amp;
LIVE15"W '25"H $75 (304)862·
STOCK TRAILERS •LOAD· 740-992-0202
2688

MAX
DUMPS

2.

Pass
Pass

East opened

CAll F R FREE ESTIMA

2002 Chevy Bl azer 4wd 2
door au tomatic trans. 55,000
miles. AC, power locks,
power windows. aml tm
radiO. ~;d player in great conditi on. $10 ,500. 740-6453601

WATERPROOFING
Unconditi onal lifetime guarantee. Local references furnrshed. Es1abhshed 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4467411 . ,...--- - - - - 0870, Rogers Basement
•Chihuahua, registered, 2001 Grand Am 4dr 72.468 Waterprooling
tiny apple head.
mite:; $4.300· 1999 Taurus
Fu ll Baths. Newly remod- . Walk to shop &amp; movres. Call dltloned Brg Screen rv:s •Tea cup York 1e, teg rstered , $3,70~; 1998 Olds Intrigue
eled. $875 00. 740-843- 740-446-2568.
Equal by Ron's TV (304)675- baby-doll
fa ce,
qualr ty $3,400 We have Grand
5264
·
Hou si ng Opportuntly.
7999.
_babres. (740)446-9428.
Ams, Sunfires. Satur ns
S- 10.
Ni ssans,
Neon.
Toyota .
Blazer,
Van s.
Stratus. 3 months. 3,000
mile warranty. Cook Motors
328 Jackson Pike, (740)4460103

o

.

I.

Fcm Sut-:

28
29
31

big assist on this board.

------

~

Nortb

2 Starfish part
3 Groundhog
48 MscGraw ol
mo.
23 Hotel
4 Son mineral
employees
films
gear
5 Bell tower 24 Nearer
50 Uncle or
granddad
Insect
6 Okra dish
25 Gets more
lllgllalwalch 7
one
out of
51 Work unij
reoclol.(
8 Gator Bowl 28 Links goal 52 Tlnl
Not tanned
alto
30 Mad. perDreamlike
9 Fragrant
sonnet
Felipe or
tree
.
34 Designs
Mally
t 0 Journal
35 Faint (2
Ominous
YIPs
wds.)
sign
12 Beethoven's 40 Attendant
Dazzle
Third
41 King
Weeps over 13 Sports
Harald's
Python
network
capital
inlormai'MB' t 8 Sponge up 43 Hymn finale
Ftmallowar 19 Waklkl wear 45 Astrologers
Is priced at 20 Saw eye to
of yore
12111-grade,.
eye
46 Recede
Unser and 22 ,Improvises · 47 Mail-motto
Gore
(hyph.)
word

._In

26
27

6 5

West

Victrola
maker

Rimstedt and 24·year·old Sara Sivelind
from Sweden -the first women's pair to
w1n a world open title. They were given a

EXT LT. 4WD. third row
seaL Garage kept. Like new
JET
· John Deere 10 tt No T1l Orrll cond rtion.
$16 500.
AERATION MOTORS
for
rent,
Ca rmi chael · (740) 446-7484 or {740)441 Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Equrpment (740)446-24 12.
7411.
Stock. Ca ll Ron Evans. 1800-537-9528.
John Deere Mini EKcavatort 99 Chevrolet Subu rban,
Tractor Loader Backhoe/ loaded with leather interior.
Skr d Steers . Carmichael new 1ices. good condl1ion.
Kenmore Elit.e wash er &amp;
$4 BOO. (740) 446-6323.
dryer. white, 5 yrs old . Equi pment [740)446-2412
E)(ceiL con ditron. $350 . New John Deere Compacts
4x4
(740)446-2350.
and 5000 Series Utilrty trac-

2

A COUPLe I&gt;O'ZeN ~,
PeOPLe IN Ttle
~~
viOflLI&gt;, MAilt:eT ~~
StiAfle viiLt.. ,e - '"
~sVellY IMPOilTANT.

(740)446·2412

i

94 2

Opening lead: ??

EQUIPli1ENr

MERGIANDL~E

AQJI053

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: East-West

~

581BIIt•l!r IIIIIItDI45160
140-912-31114

6 4
9 4

10 5 3

•

carr abuut uu!

-Manley" a
Recycling

channel

18 Rx writers
org.
21 Mover's
challenge
23 Roc-room

• 4

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Localf

15
16
17

. A K 1097 53

Delivering Daily *One Slop Shop*
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877·669-0007

Commercial building
Sate" 1600 square reel, otf
10
AI rr.:~stre et parking. Great toeaFOR SALE
tiont 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Price "Negotiable"
2002 Mercury Mountaineer.
New rool l Motivated Seller!
Loaded with on!y 48.000
Call Wayne (404)456-3802.
miles.
I \I&lt;\ I St 1'1 '1 II S
2002 Ford Lrghtrng F 150
,\II\ I Slf){ 1,
pick up 30.000 miles. Call
(740)2 56 - 1245
eve nrngs
10
and weekends. ·
FAKM

(304)882-3017

J 8
•
AQ J 2
•
t K 62
+
of, A Q 10 3
•
South

'

• Nebulizers .

~

MISCFJJANWUS

•
•

~:::.

u

ae- JO~

East

West.

MONTY

I

• CI'AP

1!!1

6

• Q'

• Portable Oxygen

"Middleport's only
S'eii-Siorage"

paint
49 Bubbled up
Faux pao
53 Short jocko1
Drelm up 54Tooe-,
Geometry
maybe
55 Exlrema
edge
Ertc- 56 Hint of color
Smudges
Corp. bloole
DOWN
"Nature·•·
rapids

• K a7 s
• 9 8 7
of, K J s 7

Middleport, OH
992-3194
or 992-6635

1 Rides the

13

&amp; .I IWIUL EVUP)IENl

2040

Wanted- Antique Dealer:
AiverBend Antique Mall,
downtown Ravenswood, WV
has spaces for rent . Mall has
good traffrc from 1-77 and
Eat-West At . 33. Open 7
days a week , for information , call 304 868-2088

Phillip
Alder

SJ,'r)(ltl•lunw ntJ;Itt'~trliHI"I

'oXYGE?

Antwer to Prevlout Puzzle

44 Tenet

46 Gloeev

11

NOW RENTING ('1:~ 111~/11 :1111111
MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

Repalr-675-7388. For sale, • ~-·
re-condriiOned · automatic
washers &amp; dryers. relrigera - Apartment Building with 2
l ors, gas and elec tn c Apartments, 3 bedroom ,
ranges, air condrtioners, and upstairs, 2 bedroom downwringer washers Will do stairs, Front lot rncluded
repairs on major brands in $60.000 080 '(304)576·

ANTIQUES

,ACROSS

North

~42jji9f2;.,
. --;~:-::----,
&amp;.
FoK SAl .F.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

"KIEFER BUILT •VALLEY
"BISON "HORSE .&amp; LIVESTOCK TRAILERS "LOAD·
MAX
'GOOSENECK,
10
HOl SE"i
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
FOH REVf
•ALUMA
"ALUMINUM
Dell
Laptop Computer.'
Nrce 3BR, 2 Bath , Storage Gracious living . 1 and 2 bedTRAILERS "B&amp;W GOOSE·
lnspiron Wmdows XP, $320.
2-3 br house rn New Haven, Burlding, Large Di:lck, Green
HITCHES.
room apartments at Village (740)446 -8241 ' (740)709- NECK
$425 'm ~n!h.
+ Schools. $485/mo, $485
Carmichael
Equipment 2003 Chevrolet Trartblazer

Ban" Owned 14x70 Mobrl e
Home. wrth hall acre land,
near
Pornt
Pl easant. S300 'deposr!.
$14 900, Mrke Slack. Old (3041882-3652
c0tony
GMAC
Rea lt·i
(304)542·5888

Shop the
Classifieds!

Conn. Alto SaKophone.
Have Beginner Books and
New Reads Good Shape
$400 00 740·949·2453.

rshop or at your hom e.

2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
Starting at $385 and up.
Central heat &amp; air, WID ,
hook-up, coin operated
laundry, owner pays water,
sewer &amp; trash.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

To place an ad
Call 992-2156

~.

Ellm View
Apartments

wwW.mydailysentinel.com

Business Services

Bundy saxophone II jlmror
sax $250; Clarinet $ 100.
(7401245·5812. (740)645·
2312

Sale sofa &amp; cha1r $350 Sora
&amp;
&amp; I seat $400. Recliner -~--Vioii
EiGi•iiEJiiAiiiiBLiiiiES_.I
5200. Mollohan Furn. Clark •
Chapel Ad , Po rter 0 Canning Tomatoes. Picked
(740)388-0173.
Open or pick your own. 740-247Salucday only.

Mercervrll e br.uldrng lot lor 4060 or (740)367-7762 .
sa.e. 4 745 acres SA 218
close 10 schools Good 2 bedroom, 2 bath , new carpet &amp; vrnyl. $375; 3 bed·
hom e
sr re .
$t6,000
d
b
2 b h
(740)2h6-1553 [740)339- ro~m .
at · gar en tu .'
.utrhty room, S475 , deposrl
9236
requrred.
(740)992 -7680
Mobile Home Lol for rent Syracuse.
near Vrnton Call \740)4412 bedroom. all electric. AJC.
t 11t
porch &amp; awnrng. Very. very
Mot11!e Home lot rn Johnson nrce. no pets. In Gallipolis.
Mobtle Home Perk m (7 40)446-2003 or (740)446Gallipolrs,
OH. Phone 1409.

•

MUSICAL
IN.'iTRL"~I£,TS

NO DOWN PMMENT eyen Approx 3 acres , 2 • house
w1th less than oerfect credit srtes Utrhtres x2. crty water
IS a&gt;Jar able on thtS 3 t&gt;ed- large sohd 2 storY barn.
room 1 bath home m appro~ 1 2 mrle our SR 218.
Mrddeport Corner lot vmyl B~aulllul lot crty or county
srarng frreptace rn lrvmg schocls Serrou s buyers
room. good carpet. hie floor only $14K (740)441·7333
m ~rtchei"' French doors
open to master bedroom Land lor sale Several 5 to
JSCuzz tub off strem park 12 acre lots located m Galha

Wednesday, August 30, 2006
ALLEYOOP

MAKE rf AN

IOX'T"RA·I..A~'

';:~:::~' S©~&lt;ltllA-~"Eifi~· GAM!
- - - - - - !411o4 CLAY I. POlLAN - - - - - 0 faut
ltortonge ltttt" cf the
bt·
WDID

AstroGraph

~~

-'lllrlh&lt;IIIY:

ICtGtnbl•d words

low ~o form f01.1r simple wctdt

Thursday, Aug. 3i, 2:006
By Bernice B.wte O.al
Your probabilities tor success took very
good in the year ahead. However, what
you do and hOw much effort you devote
lo 11 will determine the degree ol beneficial developments you get out of tl
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Try lo be
patient because good things can come
to you wllen you're wilting to gtve them
lime lo materialize. Attempting to hurry
things along cou ld derail your etforls and
endeavors.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Pettiness Is
a counterproductive motivator and, when
used, can cause much regret later. It
lessens your cllances for success and
ends up hurting both your Image and
reputation .
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- How you
handle your material aflalrs could end up
.having a negative inlluence on your
linancial picture for a number ol weeks to
come. Don 't gamble on it and add to your
debt load.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - It
might be necessary to revise those tac- ·
tics you've used thus tar that are tailing to
achieve a critical objective. Quit repeatIng unproductive procedures that aren't
·
working .
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Let
com passrona te instincts lake, precedence over your logrcal assessments.
That which you do from tile lleart cot,~ld
prove to be more gratifying than that
wl'lrch comes from your head.
AOLIAAJUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19)- n is usually best not to tnvolvo yourself financially with friends with whom you're closely
involved socially - no exceptions. Daals
Wllh paiS will cause complicationS.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - II you llope
10 succeed, you'll need team players as
dedicated 10 a project as you are.
Reluctant allies writ greaTly redu ce yoUr
probabilities for success with what you're
Trying to do.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) - Co-workers aren't likely to perform up to your
expeclallorrs, especially II you don't firsT
spe!l out In detail all you anticipate from
lhem. Don't expect them to secondguess what you want .
TAURUS {April 20-May 20)- Be wary of
making an investment ·In people where
lhe ,success of the union Is dependent
solely upoo certain things gorng In a parllcular way. Involvements olthls type klok
too fragile. ,
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - The entire
picture must be analyzed caretully before
you can make any Important decisions.
Get a comp rehensive view In order to
help you see how the less significant
places fit together
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - If you
have a dispute with someone, don 't air
your differences In public and cause lurther complications. Go oft somewhere
alone and try to resolve It quietly
betwe&amp;n yourselves
LEO {JUt y 23-Aug . 22) - Unknown entl- .
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Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, August 30,

off the court·

USA Basketball re-emerges as favorite
SAITAMA. Japan (A P) As the United States was
rolling through play in the
world
championships.
Dwyane Wade couldn't help
but notice· that something
seemed missing.
"No boOing," he said.
The ·absence of those ugly
sounds was a welcome
change for Wade, LeBron
James
. and
Carmelo
Anthony, who listened to
them on a nightly basis
while playing for ,an unpopular U.S . Olymptc team two
years ago.
"We heard some real foul
stuff back in 2004," Anthony
said.
But it's.been almost entirely cheers this time for the
Americans, who headed ·into
their quarterfinal matchup
with
Germany
on
Wednesday night as perhaps
· the bi ggest · tournament
favorites, both o n and off the
court.
In their first game here on

Sunday, the Americans were
cheered on by a crowd that
included one fan from the
Philippines who was wear·
ing a Jar\Jds Cleveland
Cavaliers jersey and holding
a ;ign that asked Wade for
marriage.
''You go out on the court
and you see all the fans
chanting 'USA,"' James
said. "and they 're not from
the USA."
Terrorism fears following
9/11 kept many American
fans - not to mention some
NBA players who were supposed to suit up for the U.S.
- from traveling to Athens.
With little support from their
own fan s and declini ng U.S.
popularity around the world
because of th e war in Iraq.
the America ns felt like they
were playing road games
most of the time.
It was obvious how much
thi ngs had changed starting
in Sapporo, where the
Americans · closed g roup

Pe~ngton Jets' starter;

Martin placed on PUP
·

BY THE .ASSOCIATED PRESS
Curtis Martin will miss at
least the f!fsl six weeks of the
season. It could be the end of
the 33-year-old running
back's career.
The Nfl.'s No. 4 career
rusher, who underwent knee
surgery last December, was
placed by the New York Jets
on the regular-sea,on physi-

~~~~~ict~~~-~~~;~s ~~~

will miss the first six weeks
and the Jets will have 21 days
10 decide whether to activate
him.
Another star running back.
Priest Holmes of the Chiefs,
was put on the smpe list on
Monday.
The Jets also announced
that Chad Penningt.on is their
starting
·
quarterback.
Pennington, who ha' undergone shoulder surgery for two
strai~ht years, had been the
starling QB throughout the
preseason . But first-year
coach Eric Mangini had not
designated a starter from
among Pennin~ton, Patri ck
Ramsey, Broo s Bollinger
and rookie Kellen Clemens.
"It's become really clear 10
me he's distinguished himself
in the way 1 was looking for,"
Mangini said of Pennington.
"He's made great progress in
the preseason, especially over
the last couple weeks.
'That consistency I've been
looking for has been there: his
presence, his ability ·to move
the team, his leadership, all
those things I've been looking
for. He's done an outstanding
job. It's clear to me he should
be the starter. and he will be."
Denick Blaylock appears to
be Martin's replacement,
although the Jets obtained
Kevan Barlow last week from
San Francisco.
Cowboys
Terrell Owens practiced for
the flrst time in 10 days, an
indication he 's getting over his
hamstring injury and is heading toward his debut with the
Dallas Cowboys.
· Will it be in the preseason
finale Thursday night at home
against Minnesota or the season opener a week from
Sunday at Jacksonville?
Considering the safe-notsorry approach everyone
involved has been preaching.
Owens is likely to be held out

·

until the op&lt;;ner.
However, he has so much
catching up to do there 's a
chance he could be used for a
series ·or two in the preseasoA
finale . ·
Neither Owens nor .coach
Bill Parcells were available
fo r comment after a team
spokesman announced that
Owens participated . in an

~~~~d~~ ":'e~~~:s th0~~~~

aPent, Drew Rosenhaus. also
dfd not immediately return a
phone call seeking comment.
Bills
J.P. Losman will start the
season as · the Bills quarterback after beating out Kelly
Holcomb and newcomeL
Craig Nail.
Losman began last season
as the starter, but was 1-3 and
was replaced by Holcomb. He
got the job back when
Holcomb was injured.
"I told him he should feel
good about it, he earned it,"
coach Dick Jauron said.
Losman is 37-of-57 for 462
fiards passing in three exhibi1005 with two touchdowns,
two interceptTiiC!ntans
s.

play amid chants for Wade,
who sat out that game
because the result was
meaningless.
•;we weren't even expecting any cheers coming out
here," Wade said. "It was a
surprise to us, it was a great
surprise, that we could come
out · here and gain some
fa ns ."
Actually, James had a feeling lhey were coming.
As the NBA and its. partners have found a thriving
market in Asia, some players
had already establis hed a
presence and recognitiqn in
the Far East. Posters and ads
featur in g
James,
Elton
Brand and Kobe Bryant who isn't playing but is in
Asia helping conduct clinics
and is expected here for the
gold medal game - greet
passengers geuing off the
subway stop in front of the
Saitama Super Arena.
James has spe nt part of the
last two .sumn\ers in Asia

making promotional appearances for Nike, with stops
last year in Hong Kong,
Tokyo and Beijing. His shoe
marketed only in China sold
out in two hours. More tours
this
year
when
the
Americans had trammg
stint s before arriving in ·
Japan convinced him that
the crowd was going to be
on the U.S. side - even if
he didn 't let his teainmates
know it.
"I was here last summer,
so I kind of knew what to
expect," James said. "So I
was kind of just prepping the
~uys, letting them k11ow,
Well, it' s not going to be
that good.' Then when they
got here it was all crazy, so
. it's been every thing I've
expected and more."
U.S.
coach · Mike
Krzyzewsld attributed his
team's popularity to the way
hi s players have acted. More
likely, it ha s to do with the
way they play.

2006

"Japanese people are fascinated with strong teams,"
said Masa Oshima, a Tokyo
resident who is working as a
media· conference interpreter
for FIB A. "If it was a major
league All-Star team, the
same thing ""ould be happening. But if it was the
Amen can socce r team, they
wouldn ' t think twice. They
would rather follow England
and David Beckham .
"They pretty much just
want to see a good show, lots
of dunks and stuff."
T he Americans quickly
seized on that, with James
and Dwight Howard frequently drawing roars after
their dunks and that's
during pregame warmups.
" Playing overseas, the
crowd is a little different
than NBAcrowds , so just try
to get them ·going," Howard
said. "Get the crowd into it
early; that way when the
game comes they'll be so
hyped becau!e they saw us

doing all those dunks that
they'll want to see them in
•
1hc game. "
By
doing
so,
the
Americans
have
been
rewarded with the type of
crowd response they got
when NBA players first
were used in international
tournament s. Even when
they played an exhibition
here against Japan before the
2000 Olympics, Oshima said
the Americans received just
as much support as the home
team.
That had all changed by
the time the three U.S. cap-.
tains arrived in Athens four
years later. This time, the
Americans sent a better team
- and they're finding that
their hosts love it.
"The fans are great and
they love the game of basketball," James said. " You .
don't understand how big it
is until you get over (here)."

McKelvey wins
horse show, A2

en
Middleport • Pomeroy, 0\lio
)II~ l 'I"" • \

1.l

~t'

'

Predictably, Billy Volek
isn't happy aboutCTennessee's
stgnm~
of Kerry ollms.
Colhns practiced for the
first time since signing a one- coach of the year.
year deal on Monday.
Chris Mullin, who played
"They brought Kerry in for Nelson throughout the
here to learn the offense, and coach's first tenure, will .
he needs reps. They' re going now be Nelson's boss as
to take them from me," Volek the Warriors' executive
said.
vice preside nt of basketball
A six-year veteran, Volek operations.
was given the starting job over
With ju st five weeks left
top draft pick Vince Young before training camp
after Steve McNair wa' traded opens, Mullin made hi s
in June. Now he's unhappy at move with awkward timing
the perception he hasri 't done
enough to earn the job despite
throwing for more yards in his
first I0 NFL starts than any
other quarterback si nce 1970.
"I guess they want a quarfrom PageBl
terback who's perfect in every
. throw and every read, and
that 's goin_g to be hard to
lind," he satd. " I guess they 're gle by Furcal with none out.
unhappy with my producllon. But the right-hander miniIt's hard when you're only mized the damage, retiring
Nomar Garciaparra on a fly·
getting a quarter a game. .
out
after Aurilia · fielded
"And whe n you ,get two
qu arte rs m a game last · Julio l.,ugo's grounder to
Saturday against Atlanta and first base and threw to the
throw for 140 yards and plate to start a 3-2-3 double
they' re still disappointed in play.
you. I. don' t qu1te underEdwin Encarnacion, who
stand it."
failed to drive in a runner

Reds

- but suc h inelega nce is
far from surpri sing with the
Warriors ,
who
hav e
changed
plans
almost
annually since Nelson's
departure.
Nel son went 2,77-260
from 1988-95 and · led
Golden State to its last
playoff appearance
in
1994, crea tin g charisma
and respectability that
g radually · van1shed over
thhe ne xt pe c ade . Nel.son
~s won 1, 19 0 games m a
career that. also mcludes
stops m Mtlwaukee, New
York and Dallas, where he
won 339 g~mes and led the
Mavencks revnahzatJOn
~00~ 1998 unttl March
·
He left · D allas amid
health concerns and a general weariness with the
leag ue's
grind.
Avery
Johnson , hi s groomf:d suecessor, became the league 's
coach of the year. while
leading the Ma'\ls to their
first NBA finals last season.
But while Nelson spent
the season as a Mavericks
consultant and a regular at
Nellies Sports Bar in
downtown Dallas, he was
widely rumored to be eager
to return to the st'delt'nes.
The Warriors scheduled a
news
conference
for
Wednesday night but didn't
divulge the reason.
Montgomery ·had identical 34-48 record s in hi s
two seasons with the club,
failing to make a dent in
the culture of losing and
distrust that has permeated
the franchi se. Mullin has
been thought to be unhappy

with Montgomery since - ex perie nce," Mont gomery
shortly after he was hired, said in a state me nt.
but the Warriors' top execOnly Lenny Wilkens ha ~
jjtive repeatedly stated more
NBA . victorie s
'Montgomery would return (1,315) than Nelson , who
for the upcoming season.
took over the Bucks in
';Based on this agree- .1 976 after a stint as a playment, we will now fbcus mg asststant coach.
our efforts in a different
He was the coach of the
direction and do what we year twice in Milwaukee
think is in the best in terest before moving to Golden
for this "&lt;.am," Mullin said State, where he won the
in ·a statement.
award again. He also
Mullin didn't return a · installed the run -and-g un
phone call. and Nelson did- offense that made stars of
n't answer hi s phone at his nm Hardaway, . Milch
home in Maui
·
Rtchmond and Mulhn, sttll
Nel son' s arr.ival is a dra- beloved to Warriors fans as
matic move that mi ht the " RunT-M -C" trio .
drum up interest in fhe
But thing s. we nt sour in
Warriors, who promi sed 094akland durhmg hthe 119h93d· .
big offseason c hanges after
. season w en e·c as .. e
missin
the
Ia offs. wnh Chns Webb er, the fir st
M 11 . g ld ' t d)·
· overall ptck m the draft.
u m c~u. n
e 1\er any Webber was traded to
such theatncs .. only swap- Washington early in the
pmg Derek Ftsher 10 the following
sea son,
but
Utah Jazz fo r three players. Nelson stuck around only a
. But the key players lett few months longer.
Ill O akla nd
. . Baron
The parting was acrimoDavt s, Ja sory Rt chardson, niou s: Cohan sued Nel son
Troy Murp,hy a~d young- when the coac h took a job
sters Ike Dtogu and Monta with the Knicks in 1995,
Elhs- caul? be a good fll and the dispute went on for
for Nel so n s fas t-paced more tban three years t I f ff
s Ye 0 0 ense. ·
longer
than
Nelson 's
Montgo mery, who led unsuccessful tenure in New
Stanford to 393 win s over York.
18 se·asons before J·umping
Nelson 's tenure in Dallas
across the Bay to Golden started poorly but beca me
State in 2004, was midway quite
s ucce ssfu l
with
through a four-year, $ 10 owner
Mark
Cuban's
million
contract.
The money behind the coach's
Warriors didn 't release any unorthodox schemes . But
detail s
about the Mavericks didn ' t win
Montgomery' s seve rance their
first
conference
package.
championship until Nel so n
"This was a new chal- who has never led 'a
lenge that I wa s eager to team to the NBA final s embrace and glad that I had turned over 'fhe Club to
the chance to pursue and Johnson .

"

• EastegJ •. South Gallia
renew annual rivalry.
See
81
'

third with hi s 13th homer.
~ Notes:
Th e
Red s
optioned
LHP
Chris
Michalak
to
C lass-A
·Sarasota, one day after he
gave up four runs and
se ven hits over four
innings in a 6-5 loss and
failed to strike out a batter. •
OF Chris Denorfia wa s
recalled from Triple-A
Louisville .... Jason Repko
started in CF · for Los
Angeles in place of Kenny
Lofton, who is 1-for-19
again st Milton. Lofton
pinch-ran in the eig hth.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Harold Nonnan
• John Reitmire Sr.
• Robert Jefferies Glass
• John Henry
Coffman Sr.

INSIDE
• Smith wins AKC Ohio
.State Hunting Show.
See Page A2
• Kyger Creek Credit
Union nears anniversary.
See Page A2
• School security officers
fired after background
checks. See Page A2
• Detectives involved in
fatal shooting sue city.
SeePageA2
• TOPS recognizes top
loser. See Page A2
• Community Calendar.
SeePage·A3
• 2 injured when steel
bars fall through concrete
floor. See Page AS

WEATHER

Friday,.September 1st

SSO Buys Unlimited Packs

INDEX
2

124 HIGHLAND AVE.

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(304) 675-3877

SBCI'IONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
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't

.WATCH FOR IT AUBUST 31STI

:Jt . :.!UOb

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
MIDDLEPORT
Midtlleport Village Council
met with Solicitor Jennifer
Sheets Mond ay evening to
discuss what recourse can be
taken to enforce the demolition order on a downtown
building.
Allan Irvin of - Pomeroy
was given 30 days 10 demolish the condemned building
he purchased earlier this
summer from Jack Carsey.
The building remains standing, with one mi ssi ng wall

and a snow fenc e surrounding the property.
Irvin has maintained th at
· the building can be rehabilitated, and that he has the
fina ncial backing to complete the work. Prior to
council 's order to demoli sh
the building, Irvin was
g ranted a 30-day extension
of the condemnation order
iss~ed by the vi llage's building inspector. The extension
was granted to allow him an
opportunity to outline to the
design review board hi s
plans for repairing the buildil)g,· and .to demonstrate

financial ability to complete
the work.
No visi ble improvements
have been made, and Irvin
has taken no ste ps to de molish the buildin{; and reclaim
the site. The vtl lage consid· ers it a safety hazard .
According to Sheets, the
village ha s little choi ce but
to demolish the building at
its own expe nse, and attach
the cost of demolition to the
county tax records, or co ll ect
the cost through a civil lawsuit. The village cannot,
however, force Irvin to ten der the cost of demolition,

\\'\\'\\l.m ythtil y:-.c n ti iU' I.(om

nor can it impose a crimi nal cost unless the owner, Kay
penalty or jail rerm for fai l· Platter, sell s the property
mg to do so.
and sati sifies a first lien to
"There is no criminal Farmers Bank a nd Savings
penalty in the Ohio Revised Co.
·
.
Code or village ordinances
Rex Darst, who ow ns the
in thi s case," Sheets said. property adjacent to Irvin's
"The issue before council is also expressed concern
whether you can generate about his own liability in the
sufficient fu nds 10 demoli sh eve nt of an injury from
it and how to coll ec t the cost fallin g debris from the buildfrom the owner."
in g. He and hi s wife,
Mayor
Sandy
The village is already in Brenda,
.debt for the demolition of . lannarelli ,
and
Lenny
the Mark V building , which Tennant, divided the cost of
was directly across the street · demolishing their buildings
·
from lrvi.n 's building. and
will likely not recover the
Please s,e e ProJect. AS

12 PAGES

A3
B2-4

Bs

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Editorials
A4
Places to Go
A6
Obituaries
AS ·
Sports
B Section
Weather

MASON,
W.Va.
Wahama
High
School
Principal Roger Rainey has
bee n removed from duty and
will not return to the school.·
Declining to elaborate on
the detail s of· Rainey' s
alleged
mi sconduct.
su·p erintendent Dr. Larry
Parsons said it was sufficient
to remove him from duty. He
said he told Rainey on Friday
that he would be removed.
"There is only so much I
can say about this," Parsons
said. "We&gt;'re involved with
investigating some allegations.at this point in time. It's
a person nel matter the
administration is dealing
with."
Carrie Ann Wolfe/ photos
Don Bower, fo rmer princiThe bell from the old church stands strong as a reminder of the past, next to the present . pal at Beale Elementary and
c urrent director of federal
day Racine United Method ist Church.

Racine ChUrch

1J5veall of

A2

© 2«106 ObJ,p VaHey Publl.ohlna Co.

Ropr Rainey,.
interim
principal
on
Wednesday, the first day, Qf
the !leW SChOO] t\ii'af r at
Wahama.
"The situation is on~oing,"
Parsons said. "There· is · an
interim principal assigned at
this time, Don Bower, and I
am not certain how long he
will be there."
Please see Principal, AS

BY CHARLENE HOERJCH

HOEFliCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
RACINE - In celebration
of the 175th anniversary of the
founding of the Racine United
Methodist Church special ser.
vices will be held Sept. 17- 19
at the church.
As the church celebrates the
milestone, "all those who have
gone on before and paved the
way for today will be honored
and remembered," said Carrie
Ann Wolfe, church communications coordinator.
"From humble beginnings in
a member's house the church
continues to grow 175 years
later," added Wolfe. 'Through
floods, changes in the Church,
depression, war and population
shifts the congregation marches on carrying the message of
the resurrection of Jesus In the sanctuary of the Racine IJnited Methodist Church, a
Christ."
blend of traditional hymns and contemporary praise music
She said that one of the are offered for the congregati dh.
Sunda~ school rooms will be
Former pastor, the Rev. potluck luncheo n·. Bi shop
turned into a "mini-museum"
featuring pictures and items Roger Grace will be speaker at Bruce Ough will be the 6:30
from the church's past for the II a.m. services on Sunday,
Please see Church, AS
members and visitors to enjoy. Sept. 17, to be followed by a

Meigs County Walks designed
to get residents healthy

Detatlo on Paae A2

(16) $250 Games
(1) $1000 Game

\l · ( ; L ' ~I'

BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY®MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

WEST VIRGINIA JOBS FOUNDATION

Plus CRAZY L&amp;4 LEAF CLOVE

l' lll KSil.\\

1

Superintendent removes Hilhama
principal for miscondUct ,

,Y

from third base in each of lead to 4-3 in the fourth
hi s first three at-bats with hi s 19th of the season,
Monday night , came up a two-run shot that followed
with the bases loaded in ihe a leadoff single by Griffey
fifth and Cincinnati trailing that extended hi s hitting
4-3. Red s pitcher Eric streak 'to 14 games.
Milton was forced at the
The Dodgers jumped on
plate on Encarnacion's Milton in the fir st inning for
grounder, but Ryan Freel three runs. Furcal hit his
scored the tying run on a 16th career leadoff homer
grounder by Ken Griffey Jr. and fourth thi s season. Lugo
Phillips got Cincinpati on reached on a fi elding error
the board in the second · at second base by Phillips
against Mark Hendrickson and scored on Kent's single.
with his 15th homer and Toby Hall added a sacrifice
second in two nights. fly.
Aurilia sliced the Dodgers'
Kent m ade it 4-1 in the

11

Council~ lawyer discuss options for ~emolition project

SPORTS

Warriors drop Montgomery, rehire Nelson
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP)
The Golden State
Warriors have lured Don
Nelson back from retirement to see if he ca n fix a
. franchise that 's bee n broken ever si nce he left II
1/2 years ago.
Coach
Mike
Montgomery was abruptly
dismissed by the Warrtors
on Tuesday. and Nelson
wtll be rehtred for the JOb
he held for nNeBarAiy seven
seaso ns , · a~ ..
sour~e
told The Assoctated Press.
The so urce, who spoke
on condition of anonymity
because the deal ~adn ' t
been announced, satd the
6h?·yeard-oflfd Nelson settletdh
1 erences
IS •
w1.
Warnors
owner . Chns
Cohan and agreed to return
to a team tha.t has been
Golden in name only since
the
seco nd-winningest
coach in NBA history left
in February 1995 .
The ,Warriors have the
league s longest playoff
drought, with eight fai)ed
coaches dunng 12 consecurive losing seasons despite
a loyal fan base that still
remembers the uptempo
excitement of the club's
years under its beloved
"Nellie," a three-tt' me NBA

River City Players to
revive ·Fiddler', A6

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - Circle the
date because on Sept. 5 the
program Meig s County
Walks will remind residents
how important it is to exercise daily by giving out
pri zes for walking.
Meigs County Walks is a
one-day, free event designed
to promote cardiovascular
health and get residents
moving in the form of a
daily walk. This walk can be
done anywhere throughout
the county but from 4:30
p.m. to 6: 30 p.m. on Sept. 5
at the Pomeroy walking

path, the first 100 partttl pants will receive hats,
visors. and flashlights while
they last. Walkers not able to
be in Pomeroy are also eligible to receive these free
incent~ves by simply registering for the event by calling Andrew Brumfield, cardiovascular health coordinator for Meigs County at 9926626.
.
Registration will also pro"vide participants with free email newsletters on other
upcoming walks and tips on
staying healthy and act1ve.
Mei~ s County is partici·
pating m the one day event
with both Washington and
~

Athens
County.
Meigs
County Walks is a program
designed to help peop le preve nt chroni c diseases. lose
and mai ntain weight and
develop relationship s with
new ·people.
" I would li ke people to
become more active in an
attempt to achieve better
health ," Brumfield said.
"Exercising for as little as 10
minutes a day most ilays of
the week can improve your
health. Bein g acti ve can
lower your choles terol.
lower hlood pressure , prevent and regulate diabetes;
Please see Walks, AS

Beth Serpnt/plloto

Nora Ellis, Meigs County WIC 's new breastfeeding coordinator he lps new mothers feel at ease with breastfeeding
th.eir children just as she did for all four of her children
including seven·month old daughter Lydia . .

What you 'don't
.lmow about WJC.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - One of the
biggest misconceptions of the
Women Infants and Children
(W IC) nunition progratn is that
people think it's atl entiUement
(welfare) program, accordilig
to Meigs County WTC Director
Debbie Howell.
. "This a supplemental food
and nutritional program for
both the less fort unate and
working class," Howell said,
setting the record straight.
In fact the WIC prognun
income guidelines for a family
of one is $349 aweek, $1,5 11 a
month and $ 18; 130 a year
while a family of two can have .
a weekly income of
a

$.no;

monthly income of$2,035 and
an annual income of $24,420.
For more income guidelines
call the WTC office at 9920392.
Howell also stressed that
WIC was an educational program as did WIC's new
Breastfeeding Coordinator
Nora Ellis of Alfred.
"We're here to help women
make informed choices," Ellis
said, explaining those choices
have everything to do with the
babies. "We're all about the
babies. If we fail to take caie of
them who's going to take care
of us when we're older?" ·
Ell is, a mother of four,
breastfedall ofherchildren and
Please see WIC, AS

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