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6unbap lim~ -ientinel

Bv LEE REtCH
FOR AP W£EKLY FEATURES

If you've been picRi ng
some particularly tasty
tomatoes from your garden,
get ready now for a repeat
performance next summer
by saving seeds.
Sure, next year you
could order seeds and grow
you own transplants or buy
transplants, just as you did
this year. But what if the
place where you bought
the transplants doesn't
carry tha\ particular variety
next year, or the seed company no longer carries
those seeds?
Newer varieties of tomatoes, jusi because they are
new, often upstage older
ones, sometimes making it
"

Newaeveloper
raises hope along
Cincinnati's
riverfront, A6

Sunday, Septeptber 17, 2oo6

difficult to buy transplants
or seeds of some of the very
tastiest heirloom tomato
varieties. That's why seeds
or transplants of delectable
tomatoes such as Rose de
Berne, Carbon, and Belgian
Giant, for example, are hard
or impossible to tlnd.
Saving your own tomato
seeds is an easy way to get·
around this problem. The
only ·e xceptions would be
hybrid varieties and the
few varieties that don't
self-pollinate, such as potato-leaf types (Brandywine,
for example) and small,
delectably sweet curran!
-tomatoes.
l'lybrid types revert to
their inferior parents, and
tomatoes that don't self pollinate pick up genes from

other varieties ne.lrby. In the
latter case, reduce chances
for cross-pollination by not
growing these varieties near
other varieties.
For other tomatoes, look
to the plants themselves in
selecting fruit from which
to save seed. If you have
more than one plant of your
favorite variety, look for the
healthiest plant bearing fruit
most typical of that variety.
· No need to sacrifice your
best tomato fruits. Choose a
fruit and slice it in half, not
through the stem end but the
other way. The seed-containing locules are now staring at you, so turn each fruit
half upside down over a
glass and squeeze enough to
dribble out the seeds. Now
go ahead and eat the tomato.

Sprouting
inhibitors
around the seeds are why ·
tomato seeds don't germinate within the juicy fruits.
You need to get rid of
these inhibitors by adding
a little water to the tomato
mush and then letting it
ferment. After two or three
days, pour the seeds into a
fine strainer, then rinse
them and shake of('the
excess water.
Spread the moist seeds on
a paper towel and leave
them in a dry place. A protected spot in sunlight or a
gentle fan will speed drying.
After a couple more days,
AP Photo
scrape the dry seeds off the
·
In
this
photo
provided
by
Lee
Re
ich,
If
you've
been
picking
paper towel and put them
some particularly tasty tomatoes .from your garden, get
mto a labeled envelope your ticket to another sum- ready now for a repeat performance next summer - by
saving seeds.
·
mer of tomato heaven.

Chester gardeners tour
flower garden, A3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 ('E;\JTS • Vol. r,;~. No.:.!&lt;)

SPORTS
• Bengals bash Browns.

SfePageBl

:\10:\ID;\Y . SEPTEMBER t8, 200b

Stewart: Proposed E~911 'essential' technology
Bv BRIAN J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The 911 technolo·
gy Meigs County Commissioners
are proposing through a 50-cent
telephone line fee is streamlining the
emergency re sponse systems in
communities which already have it,
according to Slate Rep. Jimmy
Stewart, R-Albany.
Stewart calls the wireless
enhanced 911 , or E-911 , "essential."

'

.,

ww\\ .mydait)-.·ntin&lt;"i.&lt;·om

The technology allows 911 dispatchers and eme~gency personnel
to collect telephone number information and a geographic location of
the caller using E-E-911 equipment.
Meigs County Commissioners are
seeking voter approval of a month! y
fee on all land telephone lines in
order to finance E-911 service in the
county: It would generate approximately $32,000 in funds each year
to operate the system, and would
also allow the county to access

funds now held in the county's name
at the state level, collected from
wireless telephone customers by
state law.
Commissioner Jim Sheets said last
week the state fund has approxi mately $25,000 in Meigs County's
name , but the county must have an
E-911 plan and means elf implementing the service before it can be
.
d
accessed. If the county oes not
'
·1mp1emen1 a p1an be.ore
2008 , th e
. money is divided among those coun-

an
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
AS
• Delwon 'Del' Roberts
• Kathryn Hysell
Page

INSIDE
• Area choir rehearses
for upcoming sing.

AP Photo

David Crall uses a surveyors wheel to measure the amount
of corn field destroyed by someone who drove through the
fields creating circles and lanes Thursday, Sept. 7, in
Bucyrus. Farmers are angry about an Increasing number of
. crop circles popping· up in their fields, costing them time
and money. The circles. crops that have been flattened to
form geometric patterns, have nothing to do with supernatural or extraterrestrial beings. Farmers say it's probably
rambunctious teenagers vandalizing their fields.

Sfe Page A3
• Meigs County District
Ubr~ events. "- "'·
See 'Page A3
• Eat your veggies:
Fam1 family teaching
school kids healthy
habits, Sfe Page A6

..
•'i

Ohio fanners frustrated
by crop·vandalism
MARION
(AP)
the field and get caught by
Farmers are angry about an them."
Bucyrus farmer Terry
increasing qumber of crop
circles popping up in their Crall said he ' d punish the
fields, costing them time vandals by making them.
and money.
pick up the ruined corn oneThe circles - crops that by-one. Crall found mishave been flattened to shapen circles cut into his
form geometric patterns- 550 acres just weeks before
have nothing to do with the fall harvest. He estimatsupernatural or extrater- ed the damage at $4 70 for
restrial beings . Farmers an acre of lost crops and the
say it's probably rambunc - extra work he'll have to do
tious teenagers vandaliz- next year to make sure the
ing their fields. · .
fallen corn doesn't 'spoil
"Aliens don ' t typically crop rotation.
leave beer cans or tire
"lt's
just
mindless
tracks," said Ron Burkhart waste," Crall, 62, said. "It's
of Bucyrus, about 60 miles a lack of respect for the
north of Columbus.
corn plant and the process
About a dozen cases of of growing food."
crop circle v'andalism have
And while farmers can
been reported in nearby collect insurance on crop
Marion and Crawford damage caused by weather
counties. Bucyrus farmer and wildlife, vandalism
Richard Grau said he's isn't usually covered, said
never seen more wide- Chely Broerman, office
spread damage in 40 years manager of Broerman
of farming.
Insurance
Agency
in
Crawford County has Fredericktown. Some damextra sheriff's deputies on age falls under property and
patrol at night, said Sheriff casualty policies.
Ron Shawber. He's investi- · "We don't get rich out
gating seven crop circle here, and it just really ticks
reports in recent weeks. you off that they just go out
But finding the vandals on and want to destroy stuff,"
miles and miles of corn- Grau said. "That's the worst
lined roads has proved . a part of it. I can· see having
difficult task.
fun, but let's not get so
Authorities said whoev- destructive."
"er is making the crop cirThe Crawford County
cles drives a large four- Farm Bureau is offering a
wheel vehicle and knows $1 ,500 reward for informathe area well.
tion leading to the arrest and .
"The farmers, they ' re conviction of the culprits,
upset," Shawber said. "I who could face felony vanwouldn 't want to be out in dalism charges.

.

Keeping Gallia, Meigs
&amp;Mason,informed
Sunday 'fimes-Sentinel
GaiHa 446-2342 • Meigs 992-2155 • Mason 675-1333

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POMEROY - Something new
for this year's Stemwheel Riverfest
will be a contest called "Chalk it
Up" where children and adults can
show their creativity through chalk
drawings on the sidewalks of downtown Pomeroy.
Jane Harris of Dan's at a meeting
of the
Pomeroy
Merchants
Ass.ociation proposed the contest
after reading about one in ·another
community and volunteered to
sponsor one here during the
Riverfest.
Not only is she handling all the
details but she .is providing nice
green !-shirts for the first 25 who
ree;ister to take part along with
pnzes for the winners.
The contest will be held between
9 a.m. and I p.m. Saturday at which
time the judging will begin. Those
creating sidewalk art will be as.K.eo.
to sign their design to facilitate the .
judging. Once the judging is com- ·
pleted the winners will be
announced and can pick up their
prizes at Dan's.
"All we want you to do is to bring
your chalk and do your thing," commented Harris, who encouraged residents to stop by Dan's and sign up.
There; of course, is no charge
although · participants will be
requi'red to provide their own chalk.
The t-shirt winners - those first
25 to register \Jetween now and the
contest time - will be given the
shirts Saturday morning when they
check in to get their sidewalk sec·
tion assignm~nts.
Registrations are being accepted
now and will continue to be taken
anytime Saturday morning. The
Charlene Hoelllch/photo
goal is to have the art work comJane
Harris
of
Dan's
displays
one
of
the
green
t·shirts
to be given .to each
pleted before I p.m. so that the
judging and awarding of prizes can of the first 25 pre-registering for the Chalk .lt Up sidewalk drawing contest
Saturday, part of the Sternwheel Riverfest activities.
take place during the afternoon.

• ·Russian rocket carrying
U.S.·Russian crew, first
female space toulist starts
journey to ISS.
See Page A2
.,·

&lt;'•

~~1
\'

•·

WEATIIER

"

'J.,

,,

tfrteHot

•

Rabies clinic held

Details an Page A6

.

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STAFF REPORT

INDEX
2 SECI10NS -

NEWS @MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

•

Kelley Grueser of the
Meigs Veterinary
Clinic prepares to
administer a rabies
shot to a pup
brought to the low .
cost rabies clinic by
· its responsible ·
owner for vaccmation. Also pictured
are Keith Little from
the Meigs County
Health Department
and Meigs Dog
Warden Tom Proffitt.
Submitted photo

B Section

A6

© 2006 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - Rabies is a virus
that attacks the brain and nervous
system and pow 10 cats and 75 dogs
have been vaccinated agamst the
deadly disease thanks to the recent
Rabies Vaccination Clinic .
The clinic was made possible by
the
Meigs
County
Health
Department, Meigs Veterinary
Clinic and Kelley Grueser, DVM ,
who donated his time vaccinating
the animals.
Pet owners paid $6 per vaccine to
reimburse the Meigs Veterinary
Clinic which supplied the vaccine.
No charge for an office visit was
assessed because Grueser volunteered his services. Keith Little,

director of environmental health at .mals and stray animals are usually
the
Meigs
County
Health tested. Unfortunately, this means the
Department, assisted Grueser by animal must be killed because the
documenting the vaccination and test is done on the brain via the Ohio
issuing receipts for payment. The Department of Health laboratory.
health department is responsible for During 2006, no cases of rabies have
investigating .animal bite s in an · been identified in Meigs County.
effort to identify and to control
Meigs County Dog Warden Tom
Proffitt was also at the clinic to reg·
rabies transmission.
· Rabies ca'n be transmitted to ister dogs in an effort to· facilitate
humans via bites, particularly those return of the canines should they 'be
that result in puncture wounds. Alter lost or stolen. There were 15 res ia person or aninml becomes sick dents who took advantage of this
with rabies, they usually will die . If a
resident receives an animal bite, the convenient opportunity to protect
health depnrtment places the biting their pets by purchasing annual dog
dog, cat or ferret under quarantine tags during the clinic.
For 'ii1jomwtion 011 the 11ext
usually at the owner's home. If the
animal remains healthy during the rabies cli11ic contact the Meigs
quarantine, the person bitten was not County Health Departme/11 at 992exposed to the rabies vims. Wild ani- 6626. ·
·

ties which do have a system in place.
Stewm1 said House Bill 36 1 pro·
vides for routil)g of emergency calls
from wireless customers ·to a local
Public . Safety Answering 'Point
' which provides emergency responde rs Wtth the mobile number for
callb~ck mformat10n a long wnh the
loca:10n o~ the caller. Under. co~­
miSSIOners plan , the county s pnmary PSAP would be located m the
h 'ff''
rr·
·h
d ·
s en s o tee. w1 1 a secon m
Ple•se see E-911, AS

ROC-N-ROL
wellness
outing helps
kids make
better choices
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO M

POMEROY - Over 250 freshmen from all three school districts
attended the recent Right on Choice
and Right on Life (ROC-N-ROL), a
wellness ,event co-hosted by the
Meigs County Health Department
and Meigs County Family and
Children First Council.
The students were greeted by the
represe ntatives and resources of 30
different organizations ~nd agencies
that w.ere there to hel'p kids make
the right choices in life when it
comes to their physical and mental
health.
These events were funded via
grant. dollars awarded to the Meigs .
County Health Department and are
the result of a collaborative effort
between. agency delegates · of the
Meigs County FCFC Membership ,
The female health fair was held at
the Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center; the male health
fair was he ld at the Mulberry
Community Center.
Guest speakers from area social
service organizations. health care
facilities &lt;Jnd. educational institutions and displays pre se nted students with ' information to help
them make healthy ' choices
throughout life. Topics of discussion were gender appropriate and
included the negative effects ·of
drug use: the importance of higher
edttcation: sexually transmitted
disease s/ce rvical cancer; skin
care/self-esteem: breast health; eating disorders; date rape/violence;
abstinence; nutrition / fitnes s; bullymg: fire safety: emergency
response; tobacco prevention. and
many others.
Nationally and internationally
known motivational spe&lt;Ik:er Rob
Paugh discussed the epidemic of
sex, drugs/alcohol , violence and suicide and lhe way it is perpetrated by
today"s media through music,
movies. video games. websites and
television. He p'r esented at both
fai rs . Paugh's mission, via his presentation entitled ''Code Blue," is to
educate youth. t'heir parents and
those who influence them and to
empower them to make wise choices.
One male student who attended
the health fair said , "The health fair
gave him information that would
change the way he made choices
throughout hi s.bigh school years."
Many of the female students said it
gave them a better understanding
about taking ca re of and protecting
themselves.
The FCFC Coordinator. Andrea
Osborne said , "I was proud of the
way the community qme together
to offer the freshmen positive role
models and different ways to
improve their decision making
skills on overall wellness issues. I
am also proud of .tht! freshinan who
attended th e events because they
were well behaved and open to the
info rmation that the community
provided them. Together we. as a
community. ca n and do make a difference in the lives ol' the young
people in our county."

�•

. The Daily Sentinel

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PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Ul·Russian crew,
to ISS
BY MIKE ECKEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

Monday, September t8,

2006

Administration, holdout
senators speak of potential
for compromise on
interrogation program

BAIKONUR, Kazakhstan
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush administration and
· .,.- An Iranian-American
holdout GOP senators expressed confidence on· Sunday
· telecommunications entrethey could reach a compromise on rules for CIA ulterroga. preneur took off Monday on
tions of suspected terrorists. .
.
.
· a Russian rocket bound for
Neither the president's nattonal secunty atdes nor some
· the intemational space staof the lawmakers who are res isting Wh·ite House pressure
. lion, achieving her dream of
would say how they can reconcile their deep differences
becoming the the world's
after a week of public sparring.
first female space tourist.
As a result it is unclear if Congress quickly can pass legAnousheh Ansari was
islation auth~rizing aggressive · methods again.st ~errorist
· accompanied by a U.S.detainees, as President Bush wants. Congress 1s ltkely to
- Russian crew on the Soyuz
adjourn in two weeks for the fall elections.
· TMA-9 capsule. which
Bush says CIA personnel should be able to resume tough
· entered orbit about I 0 min- ·
interrogation techniques to extract tnformatton from
utes after Iiftoff from the
detainees . Several senators from hts own party are standmg
Russian cosmodrome in
in the way, seeking changes. They say the United States
; Kazakhstan.
must · adhere stricti y to international standard.s m the
Ansari reportedly paid $20
Geneva Conventions and that settmg harsher ones could
million to become the fourth
put U.S. troops at risk if they are captured.
· private astronaut to take a
"We have to hold the moral high ground," said Sen. John
. trip on a Russian spacecraft
McCain of Arizona, one of the Republicans not satisfied
·and visit the station.
with .the White House proposaL "We don't ,think .al-Qaida
· . "I'm just so happy to be
will ever observe those convenltons, but we re gomg to be
' here," she said ebulliently as
in other wars."
• she entered the rocket
McCain elaborated later Sunday at a reception in
· Monday, watched by about a
Concord, N.H., warning against breaking with provisions
dozen relatives.
of the Geneva Conventions that protect wartime prisoners.
As smoke billowed below
"That's what we do not want, because Americans would be
· the rocket, her relatives
setting the precedent for changing a treaty that has been
· gasped and her mother
untouched by any nation for 57 years," he said.
• clasped her hands in front of
. A Supreme Court ' ruling in June essentially said the
· her chest as if in prayer.
Geneva Conventions should apply to suspected terronsts m
Ansari's husband, Hamid
CIA custody. The decision froze the interrogations .and
Ansari, watched the liftoff
eventually led the administration to turn over the last 14
stoically, then hugged her
prisoners in CIA custody to the military officials running a
sister, whose · face was
prison for detainees at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
streaked with tears. Her aunt
Bush's national intelligence· director, John Negroponte,
began shrieking and jumpsaid the interro~ation program has had "precious little
ing up and down, pumping
activity of that kmd for a number of months now" because
her arms in the air.
of questions about its legality. But, he said, it is important
At
Russian
Mission
.
that the program continue.
Control, NASA flight direc" It's provided invaluable information that has saved ltves
tor Robert Dempsey rejected
of Americans, and significant plots against our homeland
the idea that .Ansari , not ·
have been disrupted as a result. And, surely, there is a way
being. a professional, could
of finding a way forward that would permit this program to
impede the mission .
continue and, at the same time, do it in a way that is both
"She will add to it. It will
respectful of our law and Constitution and our internationbe. a success," ·he said.
al obligations," Negroponte said.
But, he added, "l think we're going to have to I"Jait and see"
As to his own. opinion
if a compromise can be reached with McCain and others.
about the propriety of sending tourists into space, he
McCain said he is committed to a deal. "I still believe
said: "My personal feeling is
that we'll be able to work this out to the satisfaction of
I wish it could be me."
everybody concerned," the senator said.
The White House says the existing ban on "cruel, inhuThe Soytlz TMA-9 cap./
AP Photo
sule took off less than a day A Soyuz TMA-9 booster rocket blasts off from the Balkontlr cosmodrome In Kazakhstan, man or degrading treatment or punishment" satisfies U.S.
after the U.S. space shuttle Monday. The rocket carry U.S. entrepreneur Anousheh Ansari, Russian cosmonaut Mikhail treaty obligations. The senators' bill is silent on the issue.
Bush's proposal allows evidence to be held from a defenAtlantis pulled away from Tyurin and U.S. astronaut Miguel Lopez-Aiegria to the international space station.
dant
if it is classified and allows coerced testimony if
the orbiting station and
began
its
journey was skeptical of private to inspire girls in her home- against Sonus and nine pea- deemed reliable ..The Senate bill requires a judge to dismiss
Earthward.
tourists. But he said now it land to study science.
ple, including Anousheh charges if evidence cannot be shared. It also excludes any
On board with Ansari was clear that the Russian
Ansari and her family left Ansari.
The
plaintiffs testimony obtained by cruel, inhuman or degrading treat·
·
were Russian cosmonaut space program needed such Iran a few years after the accused her of illegal insid- ment.
Mikhail Tyurin and U.S. investment - and that with- Islamic revolution, in part er trading in the sale of
astronaut Michael Lopez- out the Russian space pro- because the opportunities for $26.3 million in Son us
'
Alegria, who were to join gram, the U.S. space pro- a young girl to study science stock.
. German astronaut Thomas gram would suffer.
were becoming limited
A spoj(eswoman for the
Reiter on the station just
"If that's,. the correct soJu. there.
couple said the Securities
over 48 hours after liftoff.
tion ... then not only is it
Speaking no English when and Exchange Commission
Ansari, 40, was due to good from the standpoint of she arrived as a teenager never accused Mrs. Ansari
return to Earth on Sept. 29, supporting the Russian with her family in Virginia,
along with cosmonaut Pavel space program, but it's good she went on to earn bache- of insider trading .
'
Vinogradov and astronaut for us as well," he said. lor's and master's degrees in
Tyurin and Lopez-Alegria
Jeffrey Williams, who have Ansari's presence in space engineering within a few are to join Reiter as the conbeen on the station since "is a great dream and a great years.
struction at the space station
. April.
hope not just for our country
She and her husband mar- is picking up pace. On the
On
Sunday,
Ansari but for countries all around ried in 1991 and later moved agenda for the four days fatdefended the role of "space the world."
to Texas to start a company lowing the departure of the
&lt; flight participants" and said
Cosmonaut Tyurin called. that made signal-switching Atlantis: The station's cur• she viewed herself as an Ans~ri "very professional" software for phone · net- rent crew will shift a
ambassador for attracting and said he felt like they had works.
Progress supply ship to a
private investment to space worked together for a
In 2000, at the height of different docking port to
- flight.
decade.
·the
telecommunications make 'way for the Soyuz;
, ''In order to make great
Ansari said she expected boom , they sold their subur- Atlantis will land back on
. leaps in space exploration ... seeing Earth from space ban Dallas company to Earth; and the Soyuz will
· private companies and the would alter her' view of the Massachusetts-based ·Son us dock at the station.
. government need to work planet.
.
Networks Inc. for $550 mil"You'll see how small and lion in Sonus stock.
During the · SIX-month
together," she said at a news
'
The value of those shares tenure of Tyurin and Lopezconference at the cosmod- how fragile the Earth is
compared to the rest of the slid from $40 to under $5 as Alegria, four space walks
. rome in Baikonur.
.Ansari gave $10 million in universe," she said. "It will the telecom industry col- are planned, with as many as
_ 2002 for the naming rights give us a better sense of lapsed but her husband said . three to be conducted in
: to a prize awarded to the responsitiility."
they had "enough opportuni- January to help set up the
, firs.t successful privately ·Earlier she said she was ty to sell enough shares to station's permanent cooling
. financed manned trip into eager to see Iran from space earn financial indepen- system. Another will take
. space.
·
place earlier to retrieve and
- she hasn 't been back dence."
Astronaut Lopez-Alegria since emigrating · to the
The timing of some stock install experiments on the
said just a few years ago he United States - and hopes sales led !()shareholder suits station's exterior.

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Pope's explanation accepted by some Muslim
leaders, but others say it's not enough
VATICAN CITY (AP) - man'' and referred to spread. Pope Benedict XVI said · ing Islam "by the sword."
Sunday that he is "deeply
He said those words did
.. sorry" his remarks on Islam not retlect his own opinions.
and violence
offended
"l hope that this serves to
Muslims, but the unusual appease hearts and to clarify
! expression of papal regret the true meaning of my
• drew a mixed reaction from address, which in its totality
! Islamic . leaders as the was and is an invitation to
::vatican worried about a frank and sincere dialogue ,
·:backlash of violence.
with great mutual respect,''
:· Some Muslim leaders the pope said during his
: accepted the statement. weekly Sunday appearance
: Others said it wasn't enough, · before pilgrims.
· but urged Mnslims to avoid
It was an unusual step for
: violence after attacks on a leader of the Roman
churches in Palestinian areas Catholic Church. Benedict's
and the slaying of a nun in predecessor, Pope John Paul
: Somalia.
II, issued a number of apolo: Benedict said he regretted gics during his papacy, but
~causing offense with his they dealt with abuses and
: speech
last
week
tn other missteps by the church
:Germany, particularly his in the past rather than errors
•'quoting of a medieval text on his own pa11.
· ·that chantctcrized some of
Vatican officials had earlier
:: the teachings of Islam 's sought to placate spreading
founder as "evi l and inhu- Muslim anger by saying

Benedict held Islam in high years in the Horn of Africa
esteem and stressed that the nation of Somalia. The
central thrust of his speech killing came just hours after
was to condemn the use of a Somali cleric condemned
any religious motivation for the pope 's speech.
violence, whatever the reli"Let's hope that it will be
g1on.
an isolated fact," the Rev.
While Benedict expressed Federico Lombardi , Vatican
regret his speech caused spokesman. was quoted as
hurt, he did not retract what saying by the . Italian news
he said or say he was sorry agency ANSA.
'
he uttered what proved to be
He said the Vatican was
explosive words.
" following with concern the
An~er was still intense in consequences of this wave of
Musltm lands.
hate , hoping that it does not
Two churches were set on lead to grave consequences
fire in the West Bank, rais- for the church in the world."
ing to at least seven the
Police across Italy were
number of church attacks in ordered to step up security
Palestinian areas over the out of concern that the anger
weekend blamed on outrage could cause Roman Catholic
sparked by the speech.
sites to become terrorist tarThere was also concern gets. Pol ice outside the
that the furor was behind the · pope's sum mer palace conshooting death of an Italian fiscated
metal-tipped
missionary nun at the hospi- umbrellas and bottles of liqtul where she worked for uids from faithful.

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or'
·· mail it with a
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The Daily Sentinel

j,unbap mtme~ -~enttnel

Public meetings
Monday, Sept. 18
RACINE Southern
Local School District Board
of Education, special session, 8:30 a.m., in media
center of high school to discuss personnel and other
matters relative to the effective operation of the district.
LETART
Letart
Township Trustees, regular
meeting, 5 p.m., office
building.
'
CHESTER - Chester
·Township Board of Trustees
regular monthly meeting, 8
p.m., town hall.
Tuesday, Sept. 19
RUTLA('ID - Rutland
Village Council. regular
meeting. 7 p.m. , Rutland
Civic Center.
Wednesday, Sept. 20
POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District Board of
Supervisors, regular session, noon, district office.
Thursday, Sept. 21
ATHENS
Local
Professional Development
Committee (LDPC) of the
ESC
Athens-Meigs
Consortium, 3 p.m. at the
Athens office, 507 Richland
Ave ., Suite I 08.
·

Clubs and
organizations
Sunday, Sept. I7
POMEROY
Alcoholics Anonymou s,
12-step study, 7 p.m.,
Sacred Heart Church.
Tuesday, Sept. 19
CHESTER
Past
Councilors Club, Chester
Council 323, Daughters· of
America, 7:30 p.m., at the
Masonic hall. Membership
due payable.
POMEROY - American
Legion Post 39, Pomeroy
will meet at 7 p.m. for a
meeting and dinner ..
Thursday, Sept. 21
POMEROY Meigs
County. Retired Teachers
Association noon luncheon
· followed by speaker Dennis
Leone, a member of the
State Teachers Retirement
System
Board.
Reservations, 992-3214.
Guests welcome. Members
reminded to _take school
supply items for local students.

Roush reunion will be held
at I p.m . at Star Mill Park,
Raci nc. Take a covered
dish.
RACINE - Oscar ReedCharles Hysell reunion, I
p.m Sunday, Star Mill Park .
Take covered dish and
dessert. White elephant auction to be held.

Church events
Sunday, Sept. 17
RACINE ··
Homecoming for Mount
Moriah Church of God,
Sunday school . service
begins at 10 a.m. followed
by regular service, lunch
and special singing; Tiki the
clown will be present for
children.
POMEROY
The
Miller Famly, a bluegrass
gospel group, will be in
concert, I 0:30 a.m . Sunday
morning worship serv ice at
the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. For
more information, call 304773 -5559.
VINTON - Special services, 7 p.m. at the Spring
Baptist Church. Southern
gospel singers, Rev. Gary
Griffith preaching, Pastor
Clyde Ferrell · welcomes
everyone. For more information, call 388-8075.
POMEROY - Marvin
Whiteman will be in concert
at the Bradford Church of
Christ, Bradbury Road,
. Pomeroy, 7 p.m.
POMEROY
Zion
Church of Christ homecoming with program from I 0 to
II a.m. featuring "Forgiven
Again Trio," Zion's choir
and other special music.
Memorabilia
display.
Potluck meal at 12:15 p.m.
POMEROY
Homecoming at the Hazel
Community Church. Jerry
Frederick will preach. There
will be special singing at I
p.m. For more information
call 985-3495. Edsel Hart,
pastor.

Monday, September t8,

2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Husband can reach reasonable compromise
Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My wife and
I are in our 40s, healthy and
in good shape. Our hfe is
great, and we get along better now than ever. Before we
get any older, I would like to
try something different.
Lately, I've been talking to
my wife about experiencing
a nude beach or resort.
We've talked about making
love in the forest alongside .a
mountain stream or even in
the back seat of our car in a
secluded spot.
Coming from a very religious background, my wife
feels such things are
immoral. I explained that
going to a nude beach is not
about being an exhibitionist.
It's about enjoying nature
and feeling the sensation of
being free outdoors. I am not
asking for a lifestyle change.
I'd just like to try these
·
things.
Believe me, I am not an
exhibitionist. I am discreet
and respect my wife's limits .
But the thought of making
love outside or skinny-dipping in the warm ocean
seems wonderful. l want to
share these experiences with
her. Are my desires wrong?
She said I should ask for

your opinion. What do you
think?
Wondering
Husband
Dear Wondering: There
is no "right" or •'wrong."
Anything that goes on
between two consenting
adults is tine as long as no
one gets hurt. Your wife is a
bit more inhibited about her
body than you are. If yo~
want to spend a weekend at a
nudist resort, you might look
into those that allow you to
bring spouses who opt to
remain fully clothed. It's a
reasonable compromise.
Dear Annie: My best
friend is gay. She has a girlfriend, and they are planning
a wedding in two years.
They have already set a date.
She wants to know if I am
going to participate in the
ceremony. I don ' t believe in
gay marriage. I am a
Christian, and I accept my
friend for who she is, but in
my heart, I believe this ceremony is wrong. I want to
make her happy, but l also
want to please God. What
should I do? - Confused in
Florida
Dear Confused: If you
have religious reservations
about this ceremony, you
should not participate .
Simply tell your friend that
you are uncomfortable being

part of her wedding. We do
hope, however, that you will
wish her well.
Dear Annie: J, totally disagree with your advice to
"No Money in New York,"
who got a parking ticket
when driving her friend ,
"Nancy," to a doctor's
appointment. Even though
she was doing her friend a
favor, it doesn't mean she is
exempt from following traffic laws. She is responsible
for her actions.
If "No Money·· had trouble parking this "very large"
car, she should have found a
different space or repos.itioned the car. I have a large
SUV, and the other day, after
I shut off the engine and got
out, I realized I was too
close to the line, so t got
back in, started it up and
moved over.
Nancy, for whom she was
doing this "favor," should
not be penalized for this
woman's poor parking job.
If ''No Money" had been
pulled over for speeding,
would it have been the passen~er's fault? Would your
advice have been the same?
- .Take Responsibility in
Texas
Dear Texas: You weren't
the only reader who objected
to our advice. First of all,

there is u difference between
;peeding and parking over
the line. Speeding is intentional. and this parking mistake was accidental. They
are not comparable offenses.
Second, if "No Money" had
not done this favor. Nancy
would likely have had to
hire a taxi. which would
have cost her plenty. plus the
taxi driver would not have
stayed at the doctor's office
and given moral support.
Last, you can't squeeze
blood from a turnip. "No
Money's" signature tells you
the problem. Our advice also
included splitting the fine,
and we still think that's the
best' solution.

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers col·
umn. Please e-mail your
que.&lt;tions to ,anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
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.

Birthdays
Tuesday, Sept.19
POMEROY - George
Horak will observe his 90th
birthday on Sept. I 9. Cards
may be sent to him at 198
Union Terrace, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

Submitted photo

Wanda Gilmore stands in the gardens surrounding the Gilmore home which are marked with a variety of plants and
enhanced with statuary and garden art, water gardens, and oubbling fountains. She was leading a tour of Chester Garden
Club memoers.

Wednesday, Sept. 20
HEATH - Jake Gaul will
observe his 85th birthday ·
Sept. 20. Cards may be sent
to him at 716 Windsor Lane,
Heath, Ohio 43056. The
CHESTER - A tour of
Gauls are former residents the flower gardens of Wanda
Sunday, Sept. 17
RACINE
Gideon of Meigs County.
Gilmore , a member of the
Albany Garden Club, highlighted a recent meeting of
the Chester Garden Club.
Gilmore, along with her
husband, Gordan, has been
working on the garden for
more than 16 years, and it
POMEROY - Fall story time sessions for the Meigs snows. Together they have
County District Public Library began on Sept. II and end created what was described
on Nov. 30.
by one of the visiting club
Story time is open for children of all ages. For a com- members as "a magical
plete list of story time days !lnd hours call 992-5813.
space, a landscape to die for."
The Meigs County Drstnct Pubhc Ltbrary ts also
Gilmore started the tour
offermg computet classes thts month and for mforma- by leading her guests down
tioo about tlie classes, residents can contact Amy at · winding paths through bor992-5813.
ders densely planted with a
There will be plenty of action at the Library on variety of flora, selected,
Saturday as a part of the Sternwheel Riverfest. Fro says Gilmore, for either their
from ll a.m. to l p.m. Phil Luckydoo will be on the blossoms and fragrance,
library parking lot to perform magtc and oreate bal- their distinctive grow.th
loon anunals for the kids. There will be bounce and
face painting.
. .
. .
·
Kids are encouraged to let thetr tmagmattons run
wild as they create their very own drawings on the
parking Jot m front of the library and then enJOY a popFLATROCK, W.Va. sic! e. There wtll also be refreshments on the front Members of the Mason
porch. All activities are free of charge. .
.
County Area Gospel Choir
Another library acttvtty planned ts fam1ly craft mghl met recently for a rehearsal
to be held beginning at 4 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 26, at at Good Shepherd · United
the Racine Library. All materials will be provtded .
Methodist
Church
in
Flatrock, W.Va .
The new music was issued
and the choir enjoyed an
evening of rehearsal in
RACINE - Amy and
preparation for a. Sept. 25
Adam Roush of Racine
revival
appointment. Several
announce' . the birth of a
activities
have been scheddaughter, Ava Mae Roush
uled for next month . Singing
on July 28.
events
scheduled include
The infant weighed 7
The
choir
also has schedpounds. Maternal granduled
activities through
parents are Vicki ana John
October,
including revival
Northup and matemal
services
on
Monday. Sept. 25
great-grandparents
are
at 7 pJil. at Good Shepherd
RacheT Bissell and the late
United Methodist Church:
Joseph Bissell , and Ruth
and
Saturday, Oct. 21, gospel
Northup and the late
sing featuring the Doug
Thomas Northup.
Humphreys Family of Nitro.
Paternal grandparents
Service
will begin at 7 p.m . at
are Teri anp Gary Roush
Good Shepherd Church. ,
and paternal great-grandThe choir and directors
parents are Ann and
extend
sincere sympathies to
· Charles
Findley
and
the family of Adrian Lathey
Carrie Roush and the late
of Flatwoods.
Emma
Ava Mae Roush
Lester Roush.

Reunions

Meigs County District
Library events

Roushes announce new daughter

··············-----------------Subscriber's Name
Address

Community Calendar

PageA3

Chester gardeners tour flower garden
habits, or their intricate
details of pattem or texture
in the foliage.
The garden is alive with
roses, lilies, daylilies, red
and blue Lobelia, several
varieties of Ligularia, Ruby
Spice
Clethera,
Flax,
Hyssop, and Rose of Sharon,
which Gilmore keeps pruned
to grow up rather than out.
She also uses Turtlehead,
Gooseneck
Loosestrife,
Hibiscus,
Pee
Wee
Hydrangeas and many varieties of ornamental grasses,
including Morning Light
Miscanthus , Zebra Grass ,
and the very charming Little
Bunnies.
Among her assortment of
lush Hostas are Francis
William
and
Fragrant

Bouquet. Throughout the
garden, Gilmore has planted
a large variety of trees.
including several varieties of
Japane;e Maple, a few River
Birches , and a White Birch
that she says is supposed to
be borer resistant.
· The garden, which completely surrounds the hon)e ,
is anchored to it by a hardscape of foundation stones,
flagstone, rocks and lumber.
The steps, pathways. and
retaining walls create a natural transition between the
home and the garden.
Gilmore's husband has also
built a terraced space behint.l
the house that is filled with
small trellised, raised beds
for growing their household
vegetables.

Gilmore uses a wide variety of containers throughout
the garden, which she fills
with annuals such as coleus.
and perennials such as the
tall and fragrant Brugmalias
whose blossoms dangle overhead on the path to the house.
She also makes strategic use
of statuary and garden art,
bubbling fountains, water
gardens, and hypertufa rock
gardens that she and her husband have made themselves.
Gilmore believes in survival of the fittest, where her
plants are concerned, stating
that she has neither the time
or money to water much after
the first year. She describes
her gardening as mental therapy which relieves frustrations and give joy. ·

.Area choir rehearses for upcoming sing

Joint Jlealant ilegii~ter

.

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

.

City/State/Zip
Phone
Malt or drop off this coupon along
.with a copy of your photo tO to
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·············-----------------•

Lathey was a former member for a number of years, of
both the Mason County Area
Choir and the ladies' group,
the Victory Voices. The
choir · also recognized and
remembered the loss of at
least 18 of their members
from the early days of the

choir in 1981 to the present.
Pastor Dennis Weaver is
director of the area choir,
with Brenda Weaver serving
as pianist. Larry Smith as
guitarist,
and
Dennie
Weaver, bass guitarist.
Individuals of all churches, ages 16 and up, are wei -

come to participate with the
group .. For more information, call Carol Browning at
773-5689 or Pastor or Mrs .
Dennis Weaver at 675-552.
Information also is available
at the group's Web site and
memory page at www.geoci - ·
ties .com/countychoir.

All styles of carpet are included:

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�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congr~ss

slrall make no law respecting an
establislrment o.f f'eligion, or prohibiting the
.free exercise thereof; or abridging the .freedom
.l!fspeeclr, or l!fthe press; or the right o.fthe
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Governmmtfor a· redress o.f grievances.
-

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday, Sept. 18, the 261 st day of 2006. There
are I04 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept 18, 1793, President Washington laid the cornerstone of the U.S. Capitol.
On this date:
In 1850, Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Act, which
allowed slaveowners to reclaim slaves who had escaped to
other states.
In 185 I. the first edition of The New York Times was
published.
·
In 1905. actress Greta · Garbo was born in Stockholm,
Sweden.
In 1927, the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) made
its debut with a basic network of 16 radio stations.
In 1947, the National Security Act, which unified fhe
Anny, Navy and newly fonned Air Force into. a National
Military Establishment, went into effect
In 1961, United Nations Secretary-General Dag
Hammarskjold was killed in a plane crash in northern
Rhodesia.
In 1970, rock star Jimi Hendrix died in London at age 27.
Five years ago: A week after the Sept. II attack,
President ·Bush said he hoped to "rally the world" in fhe
battle against terrorism arid predicted that all "people who
love freedom" would join. Letters postmarked Trenton,
N.J.,. that later tested positive for anthrax were sent to fhe
New York Post and NBC anchorman Tom Brokaw. Boeing
announced· plans to lay off up to 30,000 commercial air·
plane employees by the end of 2002.
One year ago: Tropical Storm· Rita formed southeast of
the Florida Keys. Millions of Afghans defied a· Taliban
boycott call and militant attacks to vote for a new parlia. ment. German conservative challenger Angela Merkel's
bloc won the most votes in elections, but fell short of a
clear mandate to govern. "Everybody Loves Raymond"
won the Emmy for best comedy in its final season; firstyear hit ".Lost" was named best drama.
Today's Birthdays: Singer Jimmie Rodgers is 73. Actor
Robert .Blake is 73. Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah, is 73.
Actor Fred Willard is 67. Singer Frankie Avalon is 66.
Rock musician Kerry Livgren is 57. Actress Anna Deavere
Smith is 56. Movie directqr Mark Romanek is 47. Actor
James Gandolfini ·is 45. Singer Joanne Catherall (Human
League) is 44. Actress Holly Robinson Peete is 42.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Ricky Bell (Bell Biv Devoe and
New Edition) is 39. Actress Aisha Tyler is 36. Actress Jada
Pinkett Smith is 35. Actor James Marsden is 33. Rapper
Xzibit is 32. Actress Alison Lohman is 27. Actors Taylor
and Brandon Porter are 13. Actor C.J. Sanders ("Ray") is
10.
Thoughi for Today: "Loneliness ... is and always has
been the central and inevitable experience of every man."
- From "You Can't Go Home Again." by Thomas Wolfe,
American author ( 1900-1938).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR .

When President Bush
addressed the nation on
Sept. 11, he recalled the
worldview that emerged to
him five years ago from the
hot ashen murk of Ground
Zero.
Back then, he said, "we
resolved that we would go
on the offensive against our
enemies, and we would not
distinguish between the terrorists and 'those who harbor
or support fhem."
That world view was
black and white - you're
with us, or you're against us
- perfectly matched to an
epochal war against jihad
terrorism.
Listening to his speech
this week, I realize the pres~
ident's basic outlook hasn't
changed. He still sees the
war in the same stark tones.
He looks at the overthrow
of the Tali ban five years ago
and sees Taliban, black,
overthrow, white. He looks
at the overthrow of Saddam
Hussein three years ago and
sees Hussein, black, overthrow, white. So do I. He
looks at the ongoing war in
Iraq in black and white:
Sunni-dominated
insurgency, black, Shiite-dominated democracy, white.
Hmm. That's where his
palette clashes with mine.
It's hard to see a white· hat,
for example, atop the blackturbanned head of Moqtada
ai-Sadr, the Shiite guerilla
fighter, who, even as he is
accused of operating death
squads
and
battling

The Daily Sentinel

I

Diana
West

American and Iraqi troops,
leads the faction that holds
more seats fhan any other in
Iraq's parliament and controls four ministries. Indeed,
as one observer put it to The
Washington Post, it is difficult for the United States
"dealing" wifh the popular
al-Sadr "without undermining (Prime Minister Nouri
al-) Maliki's government
that relies on him."
Then there's the Sunni
side of Iraq. There, AlQaeda-linked terrorists are
described in a recent intelli!lence report as being nofhmg less than an "integral
part of the social fabric."
· It's not that this mottled
reality is better expressed in
a more "nuanced" spectrum
of "complex" grey - usually just a metaphor for inactton or retreat. But there's
something half-blind about
looking at Iraq and seeing
forces of evil to one side
("the insurgency") and all.
sweetness and light to the
other. Iraq may be, as we are
continually reminded, a
young democracy, ·but its
constitution
enshrines
sharia, and its parliament.

among other things, unanimously condemned Israel in
its war against Hezbollahneither of which fits the
presidential color scheme.
"AI Qaeda and other
extremists from across the
world have come to stop the
rise of a free society in the
heart of the Middle East,"
the president said
"extremists," black, '·free
society." white. AI Qaeda &amp;
Co. aside, constitutionally
mandated sharia will stop a
free society every time. But
never mind. Our plan , he
said, is "to ensure that a
democratic Iraq succeeds."
He continued: "If we yield
Iraq to men like bin Laden,
our enemies will be
emboldened; they will gain
a new safe haven; they will
use Iraq's resources to fuel ·
their extremist movement ... ·
But what if we don't yield
Iraq to men like bin Laden?
Does 1raq become. as the
·president predicts." a free
nation. and a strong ally in
the war on terror" - in
other words, as pure as driven, er, sand'?
It's worth pondering the
blackness and whiteness of
Iraq's possibilities around
· the 9/11 anniversary, particularly as Iraq's prime minister was simultaneously
making his first state visit to
Iran - blackest black. no?
There, ardent declarations
of brotherly love and neighborly cooperation from the
Jew-hating Iranian president and the Hezbollah-tol-

Monday, September 18, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Buffington Island Museu•n
•
• •
receives VISitors

·Delwon
erant Iraqi prime m1mster
came out more purple than
anything else.
But such disquieting cosiness - quite natural, given
Mr. Maliki 's longstanding,
Shiite and Iranian ties raises an alarming question:
What if we defeat Sunnidominated
"extremists"
on Iy to make Iraq safe for
Iranian Shiite "extremists"?
Far from being a question of
black and white, Iraq 's
future could well come
down to a choice between
black ... and black.
The president believes
"the safety of America
depends on the outcome of
the battle in the streets of
Baghdad." Examining the
chronically overlooked reality on the ground niakes it
difficult to agree. Yes, the
safety of America depended
on going to Iraq; and yes,
the safety of America probably depends on staying in
Iraq - but not to force the
freedoms of the West onto a
culture, which any way you
cut it, is reverting to Islamic
law. This isn't to say we
don't have a do-or-die mission in the region. We do,
and'l'll put ir in black and
white: It is to stop the corrosive spread of Islamic law,
through violent terrorism '
and peaceful immigration,
into the West:-....
(Diana West IS a coltunnist
jilr The WashingTOn 7imes. She
can be cnllfacted via
diallall'eSt@ ve1·iZO/ 1. net.)

6

Der Roberts

Del won Brown "Del" Roberts, 84, of Mason , went to be
with the Lord on Saturday. Sept: 16, 2006. at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
He was a cutter operator for Central Coal and Southern .
Ohio Coal.
·
Mr. Roberts also was ownL .nd operator of the sawmill
in Rocksprings, Ohio , in addition to being an employee of
the Department of Natural Resources. He attended school
in Pocahontas County, W.Va. , and was a World War II
Anny veteran. He was an avid outdoorsman who loved the
mountains of West Virginia and his old home place in
Meigs County.
Mr. Robert was born April25, 1922, in Erbacon , W.Va .,
son of the late Maston and Esta Roberts . In addition to his
parents, he also was preceded in death by his brothers,
Donald and Walden Roberts; and brother-in-law, Glen
Hensler.
Survivors include his wife of 41 years, Doris John son
Roberts of Mason ; sister, Eula Hensler of Middleport; special nephew, Bill · (Sherry) Hensler of Racine; children.
Sherry Laudermilt of Pomeroy, Mark Barton of Mason ,
Robert (Dona) Barton of Jackson, Ohio; Melanie (Randall)
Simpson of Racine, John Barton of Mason, Jill (Chris)
Davis of Clifton, W.Va.; grandchildren , Del Ray
Laudermilt , Jeff (Robin) Hawk. Andy Hawk, Sherry
Barrett, Stephanie Banon , Bobby Barton, Bobby Roush,
B,.J. Davis, Aaron Del Davis, Jamie Davis, Johnny Barton,
Adam · Banon , Joey Barton , Andrew Simpson , Jenna
Simpson, and Nicholas (Annabelle) Barton; aunt. Dorothy
Roberts of Pomeroy; special friends , Danny Sayre and Sue
Payne of New Haven; several great-grandchildren. cousins.
nieces and nephews .
Funeral service will be held at I p.m. Tuesday at
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason, with Pastor
'
Mike Finnicum officiating. Burial to follow in Sunrise
RACINE - The Racine the church by Representative
Memorial Gardens. Visitation to be held today from 7-9 United . Methodist Church Jimmy Stewa11. Stewart read
p.. m. at the funeral home. Military graveside services are tq began a celebration of its the proclamation to the con·
be performed by the American Legion Post 140 and the I75th anniversary during gregation ai\d presented it to
Veterans of Foreign War Post 9926. Condolences may be Sunday morning services.
Dave Barr. lay leader.
sent to foglesongtucker@myway.com via email.
"For 175 years. the rhemFamiliar hymn s such as
'
"The
Church's
One bers of the church have kept
Foundation" and "The Old their faith alive in the Racine
Rugged Cross" were sung community, and on this speKathryn Hysell. 86, of Middleport passed away on by the congregation as they cial anniversary. they have
Saturday, Sept. 16, 2006 at Overbrook Rehabilitation came together to com memo- accepted the challenge of
rate the past and their faith carrying their beliefs into the
Center in Middleport after an extended illness.
future." Stewart read.
She was born on Aug. 8, 1920 in Middleport to the late in Jesus Christ.
The Rev . Roger Grace ,
Following the service, the
Isaac and Lida Jones Wilt. Kathryn was a homemaker.
who
·
served
as
pastor
at
congregation
had the opporBesides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
Racine
for
nine
years
.
delivlllnity
for
fellowship
with a
husband, Charles Hysell who passed in 1983; and four
brothers, a twin broiher, Kenneth Wilt. Dell Wilt: Chester ered the sermon about pot-luck dinner. The Bishop
Nehemiah being called to J3ruce Ough spoke at the
Wilt, and Richard Wilt.
repair
the walls and gates of Sunday evening service and
She is survived by three sisters, Marcella Durst and
his
homeland.
Grace said the celebrated Holy Communion
Eileen (Carl Searls of Middleport, and Julia (Robert)
Hysell of Syracuse; two brothers, Isaac Wilt Jr. of service~ reminded him of with the congregation.
The celebration continues
Columbus, Jackie (Janie) Wilt of Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.; two coming to Racine and working
to
b~ild
.the
church
up.
tonight
with the Rev . Brian
sisters in law, Marge and Doris Wilt of Middleport, and
Grace has-since moved up in Harkness speaking at 6:30
several nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be held on Wednesday, Sept. 20, the church denomination, p.m. On Tuesday at 6:30
2006 at! I a.m. at Gravel Hill Cemetery in Ches~ire with but is still fond of the Racine_. p.m ., the Rev. Kerry Wood
will be. speaking with the
Rev. Allen Midcap officiating Visitation will be on church.
One of the highlights of Rev. Pete Shaffer assisting.
Tuesday, Sept. 19,2006, from 6 to 8 p.m. at Fisher Funeral
the service was a proclama- Refreshments will ,f9llow
Home in Middleport. ·
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- tion from the Ohio House of both services ..The public is
Representatives presented to invited. ·
homes.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page'As

The Buffington Island
Civil War Museum was
recently open for visi'tors during Morgan's
Raid II and will open on
a more permanent
basis soon. In fact, the
Portland Community
Center Board is meeting next month to discuss this very issue.
Although the installation of wood flooring
and showcases remain
to be completed these
vis1tors were given a
sneak peak at the Civil
War artifacts located
insid.e the museum.
Beth SergenVphoto

Racine United Methodist begins 175th celebration

Kathryn Hysell

Submitted photo
Racine United Methodist lay leader, Dave Barr, listens to Rep.
Jimmy Stewart read the proclamation from the Ohio House of
Representatives for the church's 175th anniversary.

E-911

Attend chorus retreat

AIL BUSINESS: HP scandal latest
.example of companies playing the blam~ game
Bv RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

. NEW YORK - Things
go right in corporate
America, and companies
are quick to tout how differentiation gives them the
competitive edge. Things
go wrong. and suddenly
they say they are just fol'lowing the pack.
That's how HewlettPackard Co.'s outside counsel initially tried to frame
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services .
the board's snooping of
Ohio Valley Publishing
contidential
phone records
Co.
Correction Policy
through
questionable
Our main concern in :111 stories is to Published every afternoon. Monday
means. The methods used
through Friday, . 111 Court Street,
were common practice
be accurate. If you know of an .erro~ PomeroY. Ohlo .
Second-class
among investigators, he
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) postagfil Paid at Pomeroy.
said.
992-2 156.
Member: The Associated Press and
The same defense has
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaster:
Send
address
correcbeen
heard before, in the
Our main number Is
tions to The Daily Sentinel. 111 Court
stock-options
backdating
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
scandal, the soaring pay
Department extensions are:
packages for executives and
Subscription flates
more.
By carrier or motor route
They all seem to miss the
News
One month
'1 0.~7
point: Even if everyone else
1 123.24
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext . 12
One year
ts
doing it, fhat doesn't necDaily
so•
Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext. 14
essarily
make it right.
Senior Citizen rates
Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13
· One month
'9.24
Parents have long been
One year
'103.90
telling their kids that they
Advertising
Subscnbers should ' remk in advance
can't stay out late just
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, E.ICt. 15 clract to the Dally Sentinel. No sub1 because their friends do.
scription by mail permitted in areas
Some corporate leaders
Outside Sa!es: Brenda Davis, E&gt;et 16 where home carrier service is a'Jaiiapparently missed that · life
CiassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10
able .
lesson - and now must
face
the consequences.
Malt Subscription
General Manager.
Such behavior caught up
Inside Meigs County
Charlene Hoeflicll . Ext. 12
13 weeks
'32.'26
with the leaders of HP this
26 Weeks
'64.20
week after the company was
52
Weeks
'127.11
·
prodded
into disclosing to
E·mall:
federal securities regulators
news@ mydailysent1nel .com
Outside Meigs County
that chairwoman Patricia
13 Weeks
'53.55
Dunn had· hired private
Web:
26 Weeks
'107.10
investigators to look into
52 Weeks
'214.21
www.mydailysentinel .com
leaks of board discussions.

Lecters 10 the editor are welcome. Thev should be less
than 300 words. All leiters are subject tu · editing, must be
signed, and include address and relephone number. No
unsigned letters "'ill be published. Leiters should be in
good tasre. ·addressing issues, not personalities. Letter.~ of
thanks to organizwions and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

Monday, September 18, 2006

Bushs choice

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street• Pomeroy, Ohio

PageA4

The inquiry included the
u~ of "J?retex~ing" inwhi,ch
pnvate mvest1gators impersonated directors and journalists to acquire their
phone records using Social
Security numbers and other
personal
information.
Although a common tactic
among private investigators, pretexting tests the
bounds of California law
and caused a brouhaha in
corporate circles over its
ethics.
State and federal investigators along with Congress
have launched probes 'into
HP's actions. California's
attorney general said company insiders are likely to
face criminal charges.
Much of this has become
known · because Silicon
Valley venture capitalist
Tom Perkins quit the board
last spring in protest over
such .practices and then
questioned the legality of
the private investigators'
'\
tactics.
Perkins raised his concerns to HP's outside counsel in June, but they were
largely dismissed by Larry
Sonsini, one of the most
powerfui lawyers in corporate America wlth a huge
roster of technology companies as clients. Sonsini said
fhat the process was "well
done and within legal limits," according to an e-mail
exchange between the two
obtained by The Associated
Press.
But that wasn't all. In
brushing off Pcrki ns' wor.ries .· three months ago.

Sonsini noted in his e-mail such practices were dangerthat pretexting was "appar- ously close to the legal line
ently a common investiga- when they failed to tell
tory method. which was shareholders about it.
confirmed with experts."
There is also the case of
"It's an argument that's executive compensation,
really · disturbing," said which has come under
Charles Elson, director of intense scrutiny 111 recent
the Weinberg Center for ·years since big money has
Corporate Governance at been shelled out to some
University of Delaware. "It corporate leaders who hardundermines investor confi- · ly earned it.
.
dence in the system ... if
It's a form of competition
they think that companies run amok: Those leading
are immune to standard cor- the nation's largest compaporate ethics."
nies often keep close tabs
HP has since acknowl- on what their peers are getedged that its investigators ting paid, and then use that
should not have used pre- as the lloor for what they
texting - even if it went on deserve. So if one· gets a big
elsewhere. The mis1ake cost pay boost, others demand
Durin her chairwoman's the same or more.
spot at the company, though
One c'tm only hope that
she will remain a director the pressure now put on
when she steps down 111 companies to rethink their
January.
ethics and policies - an
The ''others do it" excuse outgrowth of the rash of
has backfired elsewhere , recent corporate scandalstoo. Just look at . the more ends such behavior.
than 125 companies that arc
"This is a transitional
now facing questions from environment. We are trying
regulators or prosecutors to determine what are
and those holding their own a(·ccptable practices and
reviews .about how thev new w~ys of doing busi gmnted options rind whetllcr · ness," said Gary Lutin. an
proper disclosures were investment banker who
made about what resulted in advises shareholders on coroutsized and potentially porate controi issues.
illegal profits for many
As he points out. there are
executives.
still plenty of "hus1Iers and
It's not mere coincidence speculators" out there in the
that so many companies arc business . world, but there
wrapped . up in this mess. are al so "bright engineers"
Executives no doubt heard who are anxious to pave a
how others were cashing in new direction.
big by manipulating grant
Their message seems
data of options, and then clcm; Following the herd
wanted to do the same for mentality won 't get anyone
themselves even though ahead for long.

POMEROY - Six members of French Colony
Chorus, local chapter of
Sweet
Adelines
International, participated in
the Region Four Leaders'
Retreat at Cincinnati. The
weekend event was led by
nationally renowned pre sen'
tcr and Sweet Adeline Chris
Noteware to members from
Ohio,
West
Virginia,
Kentucky and Indiana.
Susan Russell of Gallipolis,
French Colony Chorus director, and Suzy Parker of
Syracuse, publicity director.
took four new members with
them this year:
Sharon
Anderson,of Bidwell, Maury
Burnette of Patriot, Sonya
Call of Point Pleasant, W.Va .• ·
and Nancy Stevens of
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
. R11ssell and Parker had
attended last year's leadership event and thought the
Region Four Leadership
conference was so beneficial
Submitted photo
to the local chapter that their French Colony Chorus, local chapter of Sweet Adel ines International, women's barbershop
encouragement resulted in
. four new members partici- harmony group. sent these members to the Region Four Leaders' Retreat in Cinc1nnati,
front, Sharon Anderson, Maury Burnette. and Susan Russell , Director. and back ,' Nancy
. paring this year.
Noteware urged members Stevens, Suzy Parker and Sonya Cal L
to use their skills and one can have the time and upon the performance of the Region Four. which furstrengths not only in Sweet
thered their understanding of
relatively new
Frcn~h
Adc.line activities, but in ,energy to do what you need Colohy'Chorus.
the barbershop experience.
their career and home lives. to ~o in life.
On the return trip. the local
Park..:r
attended
a
work
Russell attended a workTopics included shared
participants
joined other
shop led· by Kay Seymour.
experiences about planning shop for Chorus Directors.
local members at a concert
and implementing meetings during which time video of assistant director of Gem by the host Huntington and
and projects. becoming your the local group during the City Chorus. for further
director's advocate, and Regional Competition w.as. information on how the lm:al Charleston. W.Va. men's
being a maintenance-free critiqued in cooperation with group can grow. Other~ barbershop groups. featurmember while "filling your Noteware and other direc- attended a group worbhop ing a highly-awarded men's
bucket with good stuff' so tors in an effort to improve led by other directors frum quartet , "U Bet:·

from PageA1
another location such as the
Emergency
Medical
Services building.
''This service is essential
in order to further improve
our emergency service&gt;.''
Stewm1 said. "These wire-

Birth announced
ALBANY - Jill and Scott Lallier of Albany
announce the birth of a daughter. Darian Nicole, bom
on Aug. 24 at the O'Bleness Memonal Hospttal 111
AI hens.

GED test offered
POMEROY - The offi - is recognized by employers
cial General Edueational and institutions of higher
Development (GED) ·te st le•irning.
will be given in Meigs
County. Oct. 25 and 26.
Any adult interested in
preparing for the test is
encouraged to call one of the
Meigs County Adult Busic
and Literacy Education
(ABLE) centers to learn
On Sale Now!
more about the rest and the
The Jungle Book
method for re~:eiving a fee
Se(!tember 23 &amp; 24
waiver that covers the cost
Scholastic Book Fair
of the test.
More infonnatim) is avail seet. 21-24
able by calling one of the
Ariel Jr. Idol Talent
ABLE centers: Middleport.
Competition Begins
992-5~08: Bradbury. 992 Sept. 25
6930, or Tuppers Plains,
$250 First Prize
667-0441.
Sign Up Now!
By passing the offi cial
GED test an adult earns the
The Ariel-Dater Hall
-l28 Sec. Ave. Gdllipnlis, OH
Ohio
High
School
740-446-ARTS (2787)
Equivalency Diploma whi&lt;.:h

~!;1£

Ariel Jr. Idol talent competition announced
GALLIPOLIS
The
Stage Lights at The ArielAnn
Carson
Dater
Performing Arts Centre are
se;trching for local youth talent to compete in the upcoming Ariel Jr. Idol - Talent
Competition.
The winner of the Ariel Jr.
Ido! talent competition will
win $250, and the opportunity to serve as opening act for
an upcoming Ariel concert.
'The Ariel Jr. Idol contest is
open to area youth age 8-18.
Contestants must perform
solo. Contestants may sing.

dance . . or play a musical
in;trument. If a contestant
.chooses to smg. they may
perform acappella, karaokcstyle. or wh1le playmg an
instrument. . A 11 performances are lumted to 3 1/2
mmute~ m length .
.
A senes of three com pet ltions will make up the Ariel
Jr. Idol ~ontest. Dates for the
competition are Mondays.
Sept. 25. Oct. 2, and Oct . 9.
All contestants w1ll compete
in the first two rounds of
compelit!Oil. Thetop contestants Will return lor the l·mal

round of compctitin on
October9.
Contestants will be J~" ge cl
by Ariel representatives. as
well as a represe ntative from
Big Country 99.9 and Sunny
93.1.
The competition "ill be
limited to )0 &lt;:ontesta nts .
Registration s arc c!cccpted
first-come. first served at the
Ariel- Dater Hall Box Ollic:e.
Registration fee is $10 per
contestant. All cmllcstants
are provided with two free
tickets for friends or fami Iy to
attend the competition .

The competitions are open
to the public. Performances
will begin each night at 7
p.m.
Admi&gt;&lt;ion is 55.
Tickets will be available al.
the door.
Local artist. Paul "Bi1b"
Williams . will serve as emcee
for the event. as well as providing a bit of entertainment
or hi~ own.

For more infomuairm
alwru Th&lt;' Ariel Jr. Idol, or
011\' Ariel erent , contact the
Ariel· Dmer Hall box office
"' NO-.J.Jo-1\RTS (27/ll), or
ri 'iif H'lnr.ariel,.lieatre .m·R.

less services give our highly
trained emergency personal
the tools necessary to do
their job and save lives."
House Bill 361 gave the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio (PUCO) the authority to implement E-911
wireless services.
To date. Athens and
Washington Counties have
been approved . by the
PUCO for this funding.

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTI.C·CENTER

D'r. f\elly [(. Jones Hend1kl;s
CHIROPRAGOR
Auto Accidents
Worker's Compensation
o

Sp11rt.,

lnJ urr t'~

o \ktltcmr

0

\1"'1 ht ,llfall&lt;f'

o ~.ml~ d.t~ .tppl

• -l.r:upunuur~

304-273-5321
3t6 Washington St

Chm•pr&lt;~dnr

nt the

~~.u

!Ill)~

\Y \\\ ChrmprJi..'lt..:
.\k!Jih&lt;:i ol .- l.lll&lt;' IKoHI

lh1,1rd 1&gt;f l·(•r~ rNr
~\)II' &lt;'\~ l h"IK~

\krnt...·1 111 -l.mcn,JH

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\,,t.i&lt;'Jll~ ••l \k,lr~.,,

\ r•tp! lnWnr..·

Vl$4

Ravenswood. WV

�'

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monqay, September t8,

2006

Inside

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page 82

'

Eat your veggies:
Fann family teaching
school kids healthy habits
MILAN (AP) - Bobby Jones hopped off his John Deere
tractor and herded a dozen children over to a row of toma•
to plants .
"You can't come to the farm without ,picking a tomato
and eating one that 's warm from the sun, he told the ktds.
A few backed away. Most, though, puiled the b~ght red
bite-sized bulbs off the vine and popped them m thetr
mouths. ·"It was sweet ," said a surprised 7-year-old Emtly
Hutlock of Lorain.
.
.
·
That's the reaction Jones was hoping for.
His family is taking the farm to the classroom with a fiveweek course that teaches fourth-graders about healthy eating habits and nutrition. "Veggie U" began a year ago and
is now being taught in 125 classrooms m 21 states, and
organizers expect it will grow to 500 classrooms by the end
of the school year.
.
. .
.
·:It's amazing to see- how ktds react to bemg. out !n
nature," said Jones, wearing blue coveralls, a whtte shtrt
and a red bow tie for the farm tour. "If we can just encourage them to plant a garden, even a few tomatoes."
The hope is that encouraging children to·eat broccoli and
carrots will help curb childhood obesity.
.
'
"If they have a choice between an apple and a. Smckers
bar, hopefully they'll think about it and weigh out their
options," said Kelly Bohn, a fourth-grade teacher at
Townsend Elementary Sc;hool in Vickery.
The course changed her students' opinions about what
they eat. "I had students come up to me and say they were
trying to eat veggies during lunch," she said. .
About a thtrd of ktds m Amenca are overwetght, !lrcording to the federal government. That has led to other efforts
promoting vegetables in schools. The results have been
mixed. ·
A three-year study released a year ago found that kidfriendly training in good nutrition got kids to eat healthier.
Another showed that what works best is using computers
·
and hands-on learning.
But a study released this month by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention found that giving kids
. more vegetables in school didn't translate to healthier eat-

Monday, September 18,2006
l..ocAISCHEDULE

POMEROY - A schedule of ~ng oai~ege
and high school varsity sporting evENlts nwtvlng
teams ffom Galia, Meigs and Mason oounties.

Coi.I.F&lt; ; E Socn·:t{

,,. ·.

1 ,,

· · •ti

••.

:·

Monday'• gamw

Volleyball
· River Valley at Meigs, 6 p.m.
South Gatlla at Fairland, 5:30p.m.
Port Frye at Eastern. 6 p.m.
Hanoan, OVCS at Southern . 6 p.m.
GaiUaAcademy at Ironton. 5:15p.m.
Soccer
Ripley at Point Pleasant. 7 p.m.
Glrla Soccer
. Lincoln County Point Pleasant 5 p.m.

Go"

Gallia Acad., A. Valley at Wellston, 4 p.m.
TVC OhiO at Fairgreens, 4:30 p.m .

TY•Idlv'• a11111• .
Volleyball

Rock Hill at South Gallia, 5:30p.m .

AP Photo

An aerial view of downtown Cincinnati and the central business district looking northwest is seen, April 13. Paul Brown
Stadium is at left, the Banks project area at center and Great American Ball Park at thEi near right.

New developer raises hope along Cincinnati's riverfront

CINCINNATI (AP) Tnwne Properties is develFinally. maybe, something oping high-end homes and
other than parking lots will condes alon~ the Ohio River.
fill the four-block gap near The Banks. Bortz, who
Paul
Brown was a member of the
between
Stadium and Great American Cincinnati City Council in
Ball Park.
the 1980s, said he was glad
A selection committee has there finally is movement on
chosen an Atlanta-based the project.
developer to take charge of
"I think it's great for the
bringing restaurants, condos, core of our community. on
in¥,What you want to do is involve them in growing it and shops, offices and entertaininvolve them in cooking it," said Alice Ammerman, direc- ment to the riverfront area both sides of the river," he
said. "AIG has the credentor of the University of North Carolina's Center for Health known as "The Banks."
tials to produce a first-rate
Promotion and Disease Prevention. "You have to find creAfter years of squabbling, project. There's still some
ative ways to get kids to try things."
city and county officials
The Jones family wouldn't divulge how much is spent on agreed to work together and financial mountains to climb,
but if you climb the mountain
.
Veggie U, which is a non-profit.
in May formed the Banks with a credible developer,
It's backed by private donors and grants the last two years Working Group, headed by
from Birds Eye Foods Inc., and has given course materials for Cincinnati Reds managing you're much more likely to
free to all of the participating schools. Whole Foods Market partner Robert Castellini, get there."
Much of the prime site has
Inc. helped put the program in I 6 classrooms in Virginia. .
whose family used to run a not been developed since
Each kit costs $400 and 'includes a grow light, pottmg produce business on the site.
steamboat days. There were a
soil, red and green lettuce seeds and a C&lt;JUrseicurriculum.
The group recommended few bars and Castellini 's proTeachers spend 35 minutes a day on the class over five Friday that the contract go to
weeks. During the final week, students create a salad with the partnership of American duce company. But the contheir lettuce. What students like most is getting their hands International Group Global struction of Riverfront
dirty and watching their plants grow.
Real Estate Investment Corp.
"Every morning they'd come in and check th~ir plants," and Carter Real Estate~wliich
said Lois Lindsey, who used the course last year m her first- is developing the Atlahtic,
grade class in Allen, Texas. "There's something about chil- Station proj&lt;l4lt inAtlama.
dren that age that thty love tf;· grow things." .
"No other appliciihtflrm has " •
Bing Yoo, a doctor in Sandusky, and her husband spon- as relevant experience as
sored Veggie U at her daughter's school, because they A!G/Carter,'' Castellini said.
decided that "the most important thing we can teach them "In addition, they have a
is to eat healthy," she said. ·
proven track record in regards
"If they. learn to eat their veggies when they're 3 or 4 to economic inclusion and
years old, it's better than them learning their ABCs,'' she rnindrity and women's busisaid.
ness enterprises."
Veggie U grew out of a conversation about childhood
A contract must still be
obesity among chefs visiting the Jones' farm in northern negotiated with AIG/Carter, .
Ohio - midway between Toledo and Cleveland. The farm and it must be aprroved by
sells rare and heirloom vegetables to chefs from the world's the City Counci and the
,
premier restaurants.
Hamilton ·
County
Barb, Jones, who runs the farm along with her husband, Commission. That means
Bob Jones Sr., and their son, brought together about 20 work on the project - valued
teachers who spent a year and a half creating a curriculum. at more than $600 mill ion The lessons are designed so that teachers can incorporate is still many months away.
science, math, health and English, allowing them to meet By the time ground is broken,
the requirements of standardized tests. The students learn · it could face stiff competition
about soil, composting, seed' structure, nutrients and plant from a similar project
anatomy. And much of it is hands-on learning, from plant- planned just across the Ohio
ing seeds to digging for worms.
.
River in Newport, Ky.
"It's exciting when parents say their .children are askmg
"Sure, there's going to be
for fruit and vegetables," said Libby Davis, who helped an impact," said developer
write the curriculum. She works with gifted and special Arn Bortz, a partner in
needs students at Lake Ridge Academy in North Cincinnati-based
Towne
Ridgeville.
Properties. "All of we people
"1 think it will have a lasting impact," she said.
who are taking risks need to
Chefs are helping promote Veggie U.
proceed carefully."

Stadium in the late '60s. did • David Mann ,a City Council
not spur further develop- member in the '70s and ' 80s,
ment, and · the stadium said city development in those
seemed isolated from the years was focused oil the cendowntown business district, tral business district, not the
riverfront.
'
only three blocks away.
"It's always had the prob"One of the things they
lem of being . in the tlood (consultants) were telling us
plain,'' Bortz said. "The then is if you spread things
development costs are huge. out too much, you affect what
Nobody really could afford to . they call core density," Mann
come in on their own nickel said. "The great thinkers
and do everything that need- have always counseled that
ed to be done."
we not harm the downtown."
The base for The Banks
In those days, Cincinnati
project, rifting the high-rises still had four downtown
out of the flood plain, will be department stores.
parking garages bui)t by
"How pleased we were
Hamilton County.
with ourselves," Mann said.
" Now we can count on a
Today, Cincinnati has a
50-acre mud hole becoming a Macy's and a Saks downworld class retail, office and town, but others have left and
residential
community," a parking lot occJWies the
County Commissioner Phil half block that was leveled
Heimlich said when the for a Nordstrom's project that
working group was formed. · fell through.

YOUR AD INSIDE ACOMIC STRIP
'

Local Weather
· Monday .•• Partly cloudy.
A slight . chance of showers
City/Region
in the afternoon. Highs in
High
I Low temps
Forecast
for
Monday,
Sept.
18
the mid 80s. South winds 10
to 15 mph. Chance of rain
20 percent.
. Monday night ... Show~rs
likely with a chance of thunin
the
derstorms
evening ...Then showers with
thunderstorms likely after
midnight. Lows in the mid
50s. South winds 5 to I0
mph ... Becoming west after
rrudnight. Gusts up to 25 mph.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
*Columbus
Tuesday...Mostly cloudy
78°162°
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Much cooler with
highs in the upper 60s. West
winds 5 to I 0 mph with
gusts up to 20 mph.
night ... Partly
Tuesday
cloudy. Lows in the upper
40s. West winds 5 to 10 mph.
W.VA.
Wednesday
through
Thursday night ... Mostly
clear. Highs in the upper
60s. Lows in the upper 40s.
Friday
and
Friday
night ...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 70s . Lows in the
Weather Underground • AP
upper 50s.
Saturday...Mostly cloudy 40 percent.
Lows in the upper 50s.
with a chance . of. showers
Saturday night ...Mostly Chance of rain 50 perc~nt.
and thunderstorms. Highs in cloudy with a chance of
Sunday ... Mostly cloudy:
the mid 70s. Chance of rain showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower 70s·..

Todats Forecast

mzmos &amp;Ga
To place an ad please contact:
Dave or Brenda
at 992-2155

I

~:

Meigs at Vinton County, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
South Point at OVCS, 5:30p.m.
Chillicothe at Gallia Academy, 5:15p.m.
Soccer
logan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville , 7 p.m.
Glrta Soccer
Point Pleasant at SiSsonville, 5 p.m.

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE- There is
an old saying that all good
things must come to an end
and on Saturday night, one of
the most remarkable streaks
in sports came to an end.
The unbeaten regular season streak for the University
of Rio Grande men's soccer
team ended at 112 games
(108-0-4) with' a 2-1 loss to
NAJA No. 4 Embry- Riddle at

Evan Davis
Field in the
final game
of ihe 2006
Rio · Grande
Soccer
Classic.
And
a
classic
it
was, as the
se o nd
ranked
Dawson .
Redmen lost
in the regular season for the
first time since Oct. 17, 2000

c

Go"

when they were beaten 1-0 by
Ohio Dominican.
Both teams played cx·ccptional soccer as the tirst half
went by without a goal being
scored.
Rio Grande (6-1) .broke the
scoreless tie when senior midfielder Conar Dawson rifled a
shot past Embry-Riddle goaJkeeper Viktor Bergstrand on a
penalty kick in the 62nd
minute. Dawson had been
taken down from behind
inside the box and was award-

BENGALS

TVC Hocking at Brass Ring, 4:30p.m.
Wahama at Huntinglon St. Joe, 4:30p.m.

34

I

ed the kick and made the most
of it.
It looked like the goal was
going to hold up but the
Eagles had other ideas. Joe
Yoffe tied the game for
Embry-Riddle with goal in
the 78th minute. Yaffe was
assisted by Liam Mclhatton.
Embry-Riddle grabbed the ·
lead for good in the · 88th
minute when tan Thompson
slipped in behind the Rio
defense and .beat Rio goalkeeper Derek Talcott on the

BHOWN~

play. setting. up the upset. The
game-wmmnB. ass1 st was
credited to Phd Middleton.
The
Redmcn
played
exlremely well in deleat, but
as it llirned out not well
enough on thi.&gt; night. Rio outshot ERAU. \1-4 and had 3-2
edge in shots on goal.
Bergstrand tallied two saves
for the Eagles.
Rio Grande . head coach
Scott Mon·issey thought his
Please see Streak, Bl

:t 7

Wednesday's gam11

Volleyball
Ri11er Valley at Athens, 5 p.m.
Golf
}VC Hocking at Trimble, 4:30p.m.
Women's College Soccer
Urbana at Rio Grande , 6 p.m.

Harvick
dominates,
takes over
points lead
Bv JENNA

Cincinnati
Bengals quarterback
Carson
Palmer (f))
passes under
pressure from
Cleveland
Browns linebacker
Kamerion
Wimbley (95)
in the first
· half of their
NFL footba II
game, Sunday
in Cincinnati.

FRYER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOUDON,
N.H,
~
Kevin Harvick saw the hole
in front of him, a small
patch of open track between
two other cars.
Driving through 'it would
be risky, but Harvick 's
never shied away from taking chances. So he shoved
his Chevrolet in between
Denny Hamlin agd Jeff
Burton, forcing his way to
the lront and running away
with the win Sunday at New
Hampshire International
Speedway.
This is how Harvick plans
to run .for his first Nextel
Cup
title:
Unafraid,
unapologetic and with
everything he's got. .
"At thts point, it's all
about the championship and
goin!!: fm it and throwin~
.caution to . the wind,
Harvick said of his threewide pass just 37 laps into
the race. "If you look b~ck
on it, I probably wouldn't
do that again."
Harvick turned New
Hampshire International
Speedway into his personal
playground, dominating the
enttre weekend to take the
early lead in NASCAR's
Chase for the championship.
Harvick, who started from
the pole and paced almost
every practice session, led
1&lt;96 of the 300 laps to run
away with the first round of
the I 0-race Chase. He
moved to the top of the
points standiRgs for the first
time in his career, and holds
a 35-point lead over rookie
Denny Hamlin, who finished fourth.
"We sure have the
momentum right now," said
Harvick, who won for the
second straight week and
fourth time this season. "We
just have to keep ·doing
what we're doing. If we
keep winning races, we're
not gpin&amp;, to get outscored
m pomts.
Defending s~ries champion Tony Stewart, who did
not make the Chase this season and isn't eligible for the
championship, finished second m one of the more
nerve-racking races of his
Please see Harvlck, Bl

CoNTAcrUs
OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.·1 o.m.J
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fax- 1· 740·446-3008
E·mell- sports@mydailysentlnel.com
Sggrts Staff

The Daily Sentinel

·

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342, ext . 33
. bsherman@mydailytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext 33
lcrlJm@ mydailyregister.com
/')

AP pholo

Ouch: Bengals bash Browns
BY JOE KAY
AP SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI Even Chad
Johnson's touchdown dance hurt.
· The Cincinnati Bengals lost three
starters to injury, and a bunch more
were groggy and bleeding after a 3417 victory Sunday over the
Cleveland Browns - a troubling
turn for the defending AFC North

M~igswins
TVC Ohio
.
I
f
h
.
mate
go
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ROCK SPRINGS
Meigs golfers picked up
· Tri- Valley
another
Conference Ohio Division
victory by edging Wellston
1 a s t
Thursday at
The Elm.
T

h

e

Marauders,
paced by
Kirk Legar
and Dustin
Vanlnwagen, shot a 164
team score - one shot better than runner·up Wellston.
Medalist Wes Cooper and
Belpre was third ( 171) followed by Vinton County
(194), Alexander (199) and
Nelsonville- York (262).
Legar · and Vttnlnwagen
each shot 40. Teammate
Joey Blackston had a 41
while Steven Stewart and
Dan Bookman each carded
43 for the winners.
The Ohio Division schedule continues today at
Fairgreens Country Club in
Wellston. The final match is
Tuesday at Pine ,Hills.

champs.
.
·
"This is probably the most banged
up we've been," said Carson
Palmer, who was moving slowly
after the second-best passing day of
his career.
Even with their patchwork lineup,
. the Bengals (2-0) had their way with
the Browns (0-2), who struggled
mightily to move the ball and
repeatedly self-destructed for the

second week in a row.
"We felt 'like we were in position
to be able to compete, .and we came
out the first two games and stunk it
up," linebacker Andra Davis said.
"lt's'not a good feeling. "
The Bengals weren't feeling too
good, either, but overcame what
ailed them.
Palmer threw for 352 yards and
his tirst two touchdowns of the sea-

son. Chris Henry. who pleaded
guilty to a gun churge five days earlier, led the way with five catches
for I 13 yards. Rudi Johnson ran for
· 145 yards and two tmtchdowns.
lt was Palmer's. s1xth 300-yard
. game and the second-highest total of
his career. the latest piece of proof
that he has fully recovered !rom a
Please see Ouch, Bl

Gallia Academy girls win L9gan Chase

Meigs girls take seventh place _~~~~xtn~~~~~(2u9Jforthe
Logan Cross Country Chase
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
held Saturday at the Logan
Church of Nazarene.
LOGAN
Lauren · Adkins finished in a time
Adkins and Lee Ann of 20:32, second only to
Townsend finished 2-3, and Alexander's
Emily
Carol Fahmy also broke the Skidmore
(20:23).
top 1·0, as Gallia Academy Townsend was third in a
captured the girls title at the time of 21 : I0. Fahmy came
STAFF REPORT

Gallia Academy scored 60
points, I 0 better than runnerup Lancaster. Warren was
third followed by Warren
( 132), Paint Valley ( 161 ),
Morgan ( 177), Alexander
(184), Meigs (!86), Zane
Trace (196). Logan ( 198).
Athens (221 ), Trimble (289)
and Jackson (33_7).

Kaylee Milam was seventh overall (21 :44) and
20th
Alyssa
Newland
(22:52 ) for Eastern, which
did not field a full team.
Kimi Swisher and Devan
Soulsby were 12th (22: 16)
and I :1th (22:22) respective·ly to lead the Meigs charge.
Please see Chase, 82

Services held for Point Pleasant's Stouffer
Bv JOHN

RABY

ASSOCIATED PRESS .

NEW CUMBERLAND,
W.Va. An overflow
crowd attended a funeral
Sunday in the Northe~n
Panhandle for Point Pleasant
High football player Jarod
·
Stouffer.
Stouffer, a senior, died of
leukemia last week. The service was held in New
Cumberlanf],
where
Stouffer's family is from.
His No. 20 jersey was
draped across the closed casket and several photos
showed him in uniform.
Five of Stouffer' s teammates served as pallbearers .
Also in attendance were
head coach Steve Safford
and Point Pleasant's coach-

ing staff.
Safford described Stouffer
as a dedicated athlete and Astudent.
"He was just a supe!· kid,
alwaxs had a smile on his
face,' Safford said Sunday.
"Just your typical allAmerican kid. He pretty
much was the heart and soul
of our team."
Stouffer was a two-year
letter winner in football and
was defensive captain at
linebacker this year. He also
pla~ed tailback: He lettered
m baseball before swttchmg
to track last spring.
Safford said Stouffer had
been sick all summer but
played in Point Pleasant's
season opener and scored a
touchdown in that loss t(l
Ripley, his final game.

"We just didn't know what
it was . He didn ' t let anybody
know," Safford said . "He
was tired at times. We
noticed in the summer that
he was ' alittle bit sluggish in
sprints, but he put on 25
pounds from his junior year
and he had adjusted from
. carrying that weight."
Stouffer was diagnosed
with leukemia earlier this
he
died
month
and
Wednesday.
On Friday night, senior
football players released
red-and-black
balloons
before Point Pleasant's
home game with Meig,.
During warmups. Point
Pleasant players wore Tshirts wiih Stouffer's name
and uniform number. During
the game they wore a No. 20

sticker and Stouffer's initials
on their helmets. while
Meigs players wore black
wrist bands.
Stouffer's parents, Keith
and Nancy, were given ·the
game ball after the contest,
won by Meigs 35-20.
On Saturday a memorial
"celebrillion'.' was held for
Stouffer in Point Pleasant.
"It ' s been a very. very
tough experience. We knew
this was going to be a very
difficult week to get
through," Safford said. "The
family wanted us to play to
honor him on _Friday.
"We' re going to have to go
back and regroup. We've got
to get ·on with (the playe(s')
lives but keep his memory
because it's going to be with
us for a long time." ·

�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

PRO BASEBALL

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
North Olvlelon

All
PF
107
56
95
77
47

SEOAL

W·l
PF
I0
55
1.()
21
10
35
01
0
0
01
South Division
SEOAL
W·l
PF
1.()
38
1.()
48
01
33
0.1
20

Logan
ManeHa
lanesVIlle
Athens
Warren

ChilliCothe
Ironton
Gall1a Academy

Jackson
Portsmoulh

o-1

Ft1day's results
• Logan 55 Athens 0
• Chlll•cothe 38 Galha Academy 33

PA
0
0
6
55
21

W·l
22
13
22
1·3
2-1

All
PF
90
113
137
100

PA
W·l
33
3-1
20
3-1
38
31
48
22
6
35
1-3
111
Frid1y, september 22
Marlena at Athens

Ohio Valley Conlerence
OVC
All
W·L
PF
PA
W·l
PF
00
0
0
31
150
Coal Grove
00
0
0
22
93
Chesapeake
00
0
0
13
134
Rtver Valley
00
0
0
13
45
South P01nt
00
0
0
13
54
Fatrland
0·0
0
0
04
34
Friday's results
Friday September 22
Valley 37 Chesapeake 36
Chesapeake at-Tols•a
Mmtord 35 Coal Gtove 27
Scloto\lllle at Coal Grove
Tolsta 36 Fanland o
Fatrland at MetgS
Alexander 20, RPJer Valley 6
P1ke County at RIVer Valley
Rock H11l 27 Portsmouth West 22
Rock Htll at Wellston
Greenup County 36 South Pomt 12
Northwest at South Potnt

•
•• Rock Htll
'

'
:
,
•
:

'

Me1gs
Nelsonvlllt3 York
Alexander
' Wellston
, Belpre
Vtnton County
1
1
1

Tri-Valley Conlerence
Ohio Division
TVC
W·L
PF
PA
00
0
0
00
0
0
00
0
0
00
0
0
00
0
0
00
0
0
Hocking ~vision
TVC
W·l
PF
PA

• Federal Hocktng
Southern
1 Tnmble
1
Waterford
Eastern
: M1ller
Friday a resultl
' Alexander 20 Rtver Valley 6
Federal Hocktng 21 Belpre 7
Metgs 35 Pomt Pleasant 20
Nelsonvtlle York 22 Crooksvtlle 0
Waverly 21 Vtnton County 0
Wellston 53 Oak Htll26
St Marys 43 Eastern 16
Btshop Rosecrans 26 Miller 6
Southern 40 Hannan 0
Tnmble 33 Symmes Valley 20
:. Waterford 26 Fort Frye o

0·0
0·0

00
0·0
00

0·0

Friday's results
Wahama 28 South Gall1a 8
Southern 40 Hannan 0

• Wayne
• Stssonvtlla
Poca
Herbert Hoover
Pomt Pleasant
Logan
W1nheld

40
3-1
22

22
1·2
1·3

All
PF
147
147
103
101
19
44

PA
96
67
153
115

106
108

PA
57
57
102

127
75
84

PA
27
35
74
48
155
96

PA
56
46
118

Friday September 22
M Iter at South Galha
Wahama at Hannan

Cardinal Conlel'ence
CARD
W·l
PF
PA
2·0
56
13
1-0
20
13
10
28
21
,
43
59
0.()
0
0
().2
58
65
0.2
20
57

Friday's results
Herbert Hoover 37 Logan 24
Metgs 35 Pomt Pleasant 20
Stssonvtlle 35 Clay County 15
: Wayne 21 W1nf1eld 7

W·L

ALL
W·L
PF
31
69
0
0
3·1
94
0
0
31
114
0
0
3-1
76
0
0
0
0
D4
56
0-4
20
0
0
Friday September 22
Eastern at Belpre
Fatrland at Metgs
Trimble at Nelsonvtlle York
Vinton County at Minford
Rock Htll at Wellston
M ller at South GaiiFa
Wu1 County at Southern
Beallsvtlle at Watet1ord
Saturday, September 23
Ale"-ander at Federal Hocktng

Independents
ALL
W·L
PF
3·1
103
2-2
84
D·3
15

• South Gallta
• Wahama
Hannan

PA
87
68
76
89
119

Logan at Gall a Academy
Portsmouth at Jackson
Warren at Zanes\ltlle (Sat )

Manetta 21 Warren 0
Zanesville 35 Portsmouth 6

•

PA
76
71
103
171
69

Ironton at Chtlhcothe

Ironton 48 Jackson 20

PageB2

W·l

ALL
PF

4-Q

111

3.()
2 1

89
72
101
53
66
39

3 1

D3
D-4
1·3

PA
40
42
61

as

105

118

62

Friday, S~plamber 22
Herbet1 Hoover at Clay Co
Chapmanvtlle at Logan
Buffal at Poca
Point Pleasant at Wtnfteld
Wayne at Stssonvtlle

National League
Eaat Division
W L
Pet
New York
90 58
608
Phtladelphta
77 72
517
Flonda
74 75
497
Atlanta
72 77
483
Washtn~,Jton
65 84
436
Central Division
W L • Pet
79 68 537
St Louis
Cmclnnatt
73 76
490
71 77
480
Houston
67 82
450
Mtlwaukee
PittSburgh
63 87
420
61 89
407
Chicago
West Division
W L
Pel
San Otego
78 70
527
Los Angeles 78 71
523
San Franc sco 74 74
500
Anzona
71 78
477
Colorado
69 80
463

GB
13'.
16 '
18'a
25 '~

GB
7

a,
13
17 '
19 '
GB
·~

4
7;
9';

Saturday's Games
Phlladelphta 7 Houston 2
Chtcago Cubs 4 Ctnc.nnatt 0
St lou s 6 San Franctsco 1
Atlanta 2 Flortda t
P1ttsburgh 3 N Y Mets 2
Washtngton 8 Mtlwauk.ee 5
Artzone 7 Colorado 6 16 mmngs
San Otego 11 LA Dodgers 2
Sunday's Games
Atlanta 8 Flonda 1 10 tnn ngs
Washington 6 Mtlwaukee 1
Ptltsburgh 3 N Y Mets 0
Phtladelphta 6 Houston 4
San FranCISCO at St LOUIS CCd , Ratn
Chtcago Cubs 11 Ctnctnnall 3
San Diego 2 L A Dodgers 1
Colorado 6 Artzona 1
Monday's Games
Atlanta (Oavtes 2 5) at Washmgton
(Armos6 11) 705pm
Chtcago Cubs (Marshall 5 9) at
Phtladelphta (lteber 8 9) 7OS p m
Flortda (Moehler 7 8) at N Y Mets
(Trachsel14-7) 710 p m
Cmcmnat1 (Lohse 4·8), al Houston
(Oswan 13-8) 8 05 p m
St louis (Reyes 5·7) at Milwaukee
(Capuano 11 ·11) 805pm
San Franc1sco (Lowry 7·9) at Colorado
(Hampson 9·0) 8 35 p m
San Otego (Peavy 9 14) at LA Dodgers
(Penny168) 1010pm
Tuesday a Games
Atlanta at Washington 7 05 p m
Chtcago Cubs at Phtladelphla 7 05 p m
Flortda at NY Mets 7 10 p m
Cmctnnatt at Hot.tston 8 05 p m
St Louts at Milwaukee 8 05 p m
San Franctsco at Colorado 8 35 p m
Anzona at San Otego 10 05 p m
Ptttsburgh at L A Dodgers 10 10 p m
American League
East Division
W L
Pet
New York
90 59
604
Boston
81 69
540
Toronto
79 70
530
Baltimore
64 85
430
Tampa Bay
57 92
383
central Division
W L Pet
Detrott
~ 89 60
597
Mtnnasota
88 61
591
Chtcago
84 65
564
Cleveland
69 79 466
Kansas Ctty
58 92
387
Wast Dlvlalon
W L
Pet
Oakland
86 62
561
Los Angeles 60 70
533
Texas
76 74
507
Seante
71 78
477

GB
9~
11
26
33

GB
1
5
19&gt;

3H
GB

7
11
15h

Saturday's Games
Boston 5, N Y Yankees 2, 1st game
NY Yankees 7 Boston 5 2nd game
Oakland 7 Chtcago White SoK 4
Toronto 6 Tampa Bay 1
Detrott 2 Batttmore 0
Minnesota 4 Cleveland 1
Kansas C ty 7 Seat11e 4
Texas 12 L A Angels 6

Sunday'• G•mee
Boston 6, NY Yankees 3 1st game
Balttmore 12 Detroit 8 10 1nntngs
Mtnnesota 6, Cleveland 1
Boston 5 N y Yankees 4 2nd name
.,.
Toronto 5 Tampa Bay 3
Texas 8 L A Angels 1
Seattle 10 Kansas Ctty 5
Oakland 5 Chtcago Whtte Sox 4
Monday • Gsmea
NY Yankees (Rasner 2 0) at Toronto
(Burnette 7), 7 07 p m
Balltmore (Bedard 14 9) at Tampa Bay
(Hammel 0-3) 7 15 p m
Seattle (FHernandez 11·13) at Texas
(~tllwood 15 10) s 05 p m
Oetrott (Rogers 15·6) at Chicago Whtte
So&lt; (Buehrle 12· 121 8 05 p m
Cleveland (Westbrook 12·10) at
Oakland (Saarloos 7 7 or Haren 14-11)
10 05 p m
Tuetday's Gamel
Mtnnesota at Boston 7 05 p m
NY Yankees at Toronto, 7 07 p m
Balttmore at TBmpa Bay, 7 15 p m
Seattle at Texas 8 05 p m
Detrott at Chtcago Whtte Sox 8 05 p m
LA Angels at Kansas Ctty 8 10 p m
Cleveland at Oakland 10 05 p m

Monday, September 18,2006
••

Monday, September 18, 2006

••

Major league Soccer
Eattem Conference
WLTPtsGFGA
x D c Umted !4 4 10 52 45 29
Chteago
11 9
41 37 33
New England 8 8 11 35 30 32
Kansas Ctty
9 13 6 33 35 37
New Yorlc
7 9 11 32 33 32
Columbus
6 14
26 22 38
weattrn Conference
W L T Pis GF GA
FC Dallas
14 10 4 46 41 34
Houston
10 a 10 ~o 38 35
Colorado
11 11 6 39 31 41
CD Chlvas
9 7 12 39 42 38
Roa1 Sa11 Lako 10 12 6 36 39 42
LOs Angeles
9 13 6 33 27 31

Major Collage Football Scores
EAST
Boston College 30 BYU 23 20T
Brown 34 Georgetown 0 C 21
Massachuset1s 31 Villanova 21
M~hlgan St 36 Plnsburgh 23
Penn St 37 Youngstown St 3
Prtnceton 14 Leh!gll 10
Rutgers 24 Ohto 7
San 'Otego 43 Yale 17
Towson 10 Liberty 3
Wake Forest 24 Connecticut 13
SOUTH
Alabama 41 Loulstana-Monroe 7
Alabama St 3t Ark -P1ne BluH 13
x-clmched playoH spot
NOTE Three potnts for vtctory one Appalachtan St 41 Mars Htll o
Arkansas 21 Vanderb It 19
point lor tie
Auburn 7 LSU 3
Bethune-Cookman 45 S Carolina St 21
Wednesday's Games
Bowling Green 33 Fla lnternahonal 28
D C Umted 1 New England 1 tte
Clflmson 27 Flonda St 20
CD Chtvas USA 1 FC Dallas 0
East Carolina 35 Memphts 20
Colorado 1 Chicago o
Flonda 21 Tennessee 20
Saturday's Games
Georgta 34 UAB 0
New York 1 Columbus 0
Georgta Southam 36 Coastal Caroltna 21
Real Salt Lake 3 FC Dallas 2
Colorado 0 Los Angeles 0 t1e
Georgia Tech 35 Troy 20
Sunday's Games
Hampton 48 N Carolina A&amp; T 14
Ch1cago 1 DC Untted o
Jacksonvtlle St 38 SE MISSOUri 7
National Football League
CD Ch1vas USA 0 Hbuston 0 tie
Kentucky 31 MISSISSippi 14
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
LoUtstana Tech 31 Ntcholls St 21
East
LOUISVille 31 Mtaml 7
WLT Pet
PF PA
Mama 20 Wtlltam &amp; Mary 17
New England 2 0 0 1 ooo 43 34
Morgan St 28 Bowte St 20
BuHalo
1 1 0 500 33 25
Weekend Sports Transactions
North Carolina 45 Furman 42
NY Jets
1 1 0 500 40 40 I
BASEBAll
COMM1SS10NER S
OFF1CE- Northwestern St 23 Delaware St 3
Mtamt
0 2 0 000 23 4&lt;-.
Rtc hmond 58 VMI 7
Suspended Chris Chambliss Ctnctnnatt
South
SE Loutstana 41 Jacksonvtlle 13
htHtng, coach one game and fmed htm an
WLT Pet PF PA
tnd 1anapohs
undtsclosed amount for tnappropnate South Caroltna 27 WoHord 20
2 0 0 1 000 69 45
Jacksonv ne
1 0 0 1000 24 17 1 acttons dunng Thursdays game aga nst South Flonda 24 UCF 17
Southern MISS 37 N C State 17
Houston
San Otego
0 2 0 000 34 67
Tenn Martin 35 Gardner Webb 9
American
League
Tennessee
0 2 0 000 23 63
1
DETROIT TIGERS-Purchased the Tennessee St 31 Jackson St 30 OT
North
contracts of RHP Chad Durbm and C Tulane 32 M SSISStppl Sl 29
1
WLT Pet PF PA
Valparatso 42 Morehead St 35
Mtke Rabelo from Toledo of the IL
Cmctnnatt
2 0 0 1 000 57 27
Vtrgtnta Tech 36 Duke 0
Des gnated RHP Colby Lewts for ass1gn
Balttmore
2 0 0 1000556
men!
W Carolina 20 E Kentucky 17
1 0 0 1 000 28 17
Ptttsburgh
National League
w Kentucky 28 Chattanooga 21
0 2 0 000 31 53
Cleveland
HOUSTON ASTROS - f1ecalled RHP W Mtchtgan 17 Vtrgtnla 10
Matt Albers and C Hector G1menez from
M1DWEST
W L T Pc1 PF PA
Round Rock of the PCL Purchased the 1 Cent Michigan 24 Akron 21
San Diego
2 0 0 1 000 67 7
contract of C Ertc Munson froM Round
Drake 35 Wls -Platteville 7
Denver
1 1 0 500 19 24
Rock
lllmots St 44 E Illinois 30
Kansas City
0 2 0 000 16 32
FOOTBALL
Iowa 27 Iowa St 17
Oakland
0 2 0 000 6 55
National Football Lea~ue
Kansas St 23 Marshall 7
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
1ND1ANAPOUS COLT5-AC1ivatod DE Kent St 16 Mtam1 (Ohio) 14
East
Bo Schobel from tile practice squad l Mtcll gan 47 Notre Dame 21
WLT Pet
PF PA
Waived WR John Standeford
Mtnnesota 62 Temple 0
NY Giants
1 1D500 51 50
MIAMI DOLPHINS-Stgned TE Jason Murray St 59 Indiana St 40
1 10500 4434
Dallas
N Dakota St 23 Northeastern 10
Philadelphia
1 10500 48 40 1 Rader from the practice squad WaiiJed
TE Tim Massaquol
Washtngton
020 000 26 46
N llltnots 31 BuHalo 13
South
N Iowa 27 s Dakota St 17
I
WLT Pel PF PA
Northwestern 14 E Mtchtgan 6
Atlanta
2 0 0 1000349
OhiO St 37 Ctnclnnatt 7
I
New Orleans 2 0 0 1 000 53 41
Purc:lue 38 Ball St 26
1
The AP Top 25
Carolina
0 2 0 000 19 36
The Top 25 teams tn The Assoctated
S Illinois 35 lndtana 28
Tampa Bay
0 2 0 000 3 4 1 I Press college football poll w1th lust
Syracuse 31 IHtnots 21
North
place IJotes m parentheses records
Wtsconsln t 4 San Dtego St 0
WLT Pet PF PA
through Sept 16 total points based on
SOUTHWEST
Chtcago
2 0 0 1000607
25 pomts for a f rst-place vote through Houston 42 Grambling St 22
Minnesota
2 D 0 1 000 35 29
one po1nt for a 25th place vote, and pre
N Colorado 14 Te"-as St 13
DelrOII
0 2 0 000 13 43 I IJ tous ranking
Oklahoma St 48 Flonda Atlanttc 8
Green Bay
0 2 0 000 27 60
Record Pts
Pvs Pratr e Vtew 26 Southern U 23 OT
Weal
1 617 1
'I
1 Ohoo 51 (59)
3.()
SMU 45 Sam Houston St 14
WLT Pet PF PA
2 Auburn (2)
3·0
1 507 3
TCU 12 Texas Tech 3
Seattle
2 0 0 1000 30 16
3 Southern Cal (2) 2-0
1494 4
Texas 52 Rtce 7
Anzona
1 1 0 500 44 4S
4 West Vtrgtnta (2) 3·0
1 419 5
Texas A&amp;M 28 Army 24
San Franctsco 1 1 0 500 47 47
5 Florida
30
7
1 350
Tulsa 28 North Texas 3
St LOUIS
1 1 0 500 31 30
6 MIChtgan
30
1 297
FAR WEST
7 Texas
2- 1
1 160 8
Anzona 28 Stephen F Austtn 10
Sunday's Games
8 Loulsvllle
3·0
1 121 12
Artzona St 21 Colorado 3
Buffalo 16 Mtamt 6
9 Georgta
3·0
1 105 10
Bo1se St 17 Wyomtng 10
ChiCago 34 DetrOit 7
10 LSU
2·1
1 065 6
Caltlornta 42 Portland St 16
lndtanapolts 43 Houston 24
11 Vlrg1ma Tech
30
931
14
Cent Washtngton 21, E Wash tngton 14
12 Notre Dame
2 1
912 2
Minnesota 16, Carohna 13 OT
Hawan42 UNLV 13
130regon
30
633
18
Baltimore 28 Oakland 6
Idaho 27 Idaho St 24
831 16
Atlanta 14 , Tampa Bay 3
14 Iowa
3.0
Mtssour 27 New Mextco 17
15 Tennessee
2· 1
13
585
New Orleans 34 Green Bay Z7
N Artzona 66 Dtxte St 14
16 TCU
3·0
20
527
Cinci nnati 34, Cleveland 17
Navy 37 Stanford 9
17 Oklahoma
2- 1
510
15
N Y Gtants 30 Philadelphta 24 OT
Nevada 28 Colorado St 10
466
18 Flonda St
2-1
9
Seattle 21 Anzona 10
New Mextco St 48 Texas Southern 14
San Franctsco 20 St Louts 13
19 Clemson
2- 1
399
Oregon 34 Oklahoma 33
New England 24 NY Jets 17
20 Arizona St
3·0
384
22
Southern Cal 28 Nebraska 10
San Diego 40, Tennessee 7
20 Boston College "'3 0
384
23
UC Davts 45 Montana St 0
Denver 9 Kansas Ctty 6 OT
22 Caltfornta
2-1
21
383
Utah 48 Utah St 0
Dallas 27 Wash1ngton 10
23 Nebraska
2·1
162
19
Washtngton 21 Fresno St 20
Monday's Game
24 Penn St
2 1
143 25
Washtngton St 17 Baylor 15
Pittsburgh at Jacksonvtlle 8 30 p m
25 Botse St
30
110
Weber St 24 S Utah 13

Harvick
from PageBl
career Although he wants
to run hard these final I0
races, he"s struggling to find
the balance between domg
so and bemg respectful of
the 10 drivers battlmg to
take hts ll tie
. "I don't feel hke we have
· to prove anythmg. I thmk
26 (career) wms and two
champtonshtps ts proof
enough~ we JUSt had a bad
year thts year."' he satd "Jt"s
JUSt a matter of wtll at th1 s
pomt We want to go out
and wm races fur ourselves.
"But It ts a frustratmg day
when you are racmg those
guys that are in the top I 0 m
pomts You are JUSt so cauttous around them and tt 1s
hard to race real hard and be
around those guys. worry·
mg about getttng mto
them'
Jett Gordon was th1rd and
JUmped all the way up to
founh m the standtngs, the
lone bright spot m an other-

Chase
fromPageBl
Jesstca Hohday was 33rd
followed
by
(23 45)
Meghan Clelland (54th,
25 13), Cectha Core (I 05th,
31 00) and Veromca Grimm
(I 09th, 32 42)
Also for vtctorious Galha
Academy. Genna Baker was
24th (23 13) and Alh
Saunders 31st (23 35) to
round ou t the scoring
Andrea Wtseman was 50th
(24 59), Sara Elberfeld
7 I st {26 34 ). Jesstca Wtllet
75th (26 57) , Hannah
Roush 86th (28 20) and
Damelle Sanders II th
(33 24)
Southern "s lone runner,
Ahsha Smclatr was I OOth
(30 12)
Warren won the boys
meet w1th 31 pomts, 1n
front
of
fellow
Southeastern Oh1o Athleuc

can be lost m the first round
of the Chase, and 11 happened m each of the first
two seasons ot NASCAR's
new format
Stewart, Ryan Newman
and Jeremy Maylleld all
were taken out of content10n m 2004 followmg an
early acctdent at th1s I 058mlle oval Then defendmg
senes champu:m Kurt Busch
sultered the same tate last
season when he was
wrecked moments mto the
race
So the tone was set
Sunday, with Harvtck estabhshmg early that he "s the
driver to beat The other
Chase contenders held thetr
own. w1th everyone but
Johnson .utd Busch 11mshmg tn the top 16
Bus(h's day went bad on
the very tu st lap, when he
cui off Jeff Green and the
cont,tct caused enough damage to h1 s Chevrolet that he
had to pit several 11 mes and
d1opped a lap down A se(·
ond acc1de nt I 00 mlles
from the fmtsh dropped htm
to a :l8th-pl.tce hmsh

League member Athens
(67) Lancaster (80) was
thtrd fo llowed by Morgan
(96), Vmton County ( 178) ,
Logan ( 189). Tnmble
(221), Pa1nt Valley (227),
Huntmgton
(234),
Alexander (283 ), Zane
Trace (304 ). Southern
(305) and Wellston {368)
Eastern 's M1chael Owen
was second overall m a
t1me of 17 03, behmd only
race wmner Tyler Cantley
of Warren , who had a t1me
ot 16 49
Owen's
teammates
•Aaron Marttndale and
Kellh Aetker were 13th
{19.08) and 63rd {2 1 II)
respecuvely
Southern 's Kyle Goode
was I 81h overall m a ttme
of 19 17 Drew Hoover
took 72nd (21 35) Cody
Patterson 84th (22 09 ),
Colby Roseberry I04th
{23 41 ), Chns Burkhamer
I05th (23 46) , Kns K!esk1
(107th. 23 5 1)
Galha Academy had on ly

four runners, paced by
Seth Amos' 34th place
show1ng (19 57). Dallas
Craft and Brandon Welch
were 67th (21 25) and 77th
(21 46) whlle Tyler Counts
catne m 82nd (22.05)
Metgs was pa(ed by
Andrew O'Bryant m 74th
(21·39) Other Marauder
f1mshers Included Dusty
Eads (93 rd, 23 14), Lucas
Franca (94th, 23 15), Jan
Bullmgton (I 16th, 25 29),
Jacob
R1ffle
(!18th,
23 43), Morgan Kennedy
(I 24th. 26 42) and Ketth
Wllhams ( !25th, 26 46)
In the JUmor htgh races,
Peyton Adktns beat her
nearest competitor by more
than a mmute as she won
the gtrls event m a lime of
12 55 37 Galha Academy
took second as a team, JUSt
one pomt behtnd Vtnton
County. 49-50
Gall13 Academy's JUmor
h1gh boys fumhed runnelup 10 L1herty UniOn 36-66

'~

:"

CLASSIFIED

Others receiving votea Alabama 94
Mlamt 78 Rutgers 46 UCLA 40
Mtchtgan St 33 W1sconstn 29 Mtssourt
22 George Tech 19 Texas Tech 16
Texas A&amp;M 9 Arkansas 2 Purdue 2

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COLLEGE FOOTBALL

I

I

,

Ouch
fromPageBl
knee lDJUry The Bengals
needed a steady game from
Palmer on an unsettlmg day
"'We go how far Carson
take s us,"" satd recen er
Kelley Washmgton, who
had a 22-yard touchdown
catch "He 's a great leader
and a great quarterback "
InJUri es forced one of the
NFL's
most
balanced
offenses to 1mprov1se
Recetver
TJ
Houshmandzadeh and left
tackle Lev1 Jones wete macuve wtth lmgenng mJunes
During the hrst halt, the
B e ng&lt;~l s lost center Rtch
Braham to a knee lllJUiy,
safety Dexter Jackson to an
ankle 11lJury. and ltnebacker
Dav1d Poll,tck, who was
taken to a hosp1tal for evaluatton of an unspectfted
neck 11lJury Pollack had full
movement m h1s arms and
legs
Few Bengals made tt
through unscathed They
won anyway
"That's what you've got
to have ~ a deep football
team,'" coach Marvm Ley,1s
sa1d "That's what the best
teams are "
Thts one hurt from start to
fi msh
Chad Johnson got h1s first
touchdown of the season,
stretchmg far out oF the end
zone to catch an 8-yard pass

Streak
from Page Bl
team played well desp1te not
commg up wtth the desrred
result. "I really felt like, I
know we lost the game, but
we
played
fantastlc."
Momssey sa1d "We created
a ton of chances and I really
thmk, to limit that team over
there to two shots on goal, I
thtnk we completely shut
them down
'"We had a lapse &lt;ln the set
ptece. the ktd was ovei on the

from Palmer He got the lips
of hts black cleats down
before Iandmg hard on hts
right shoulder
The Pro Bowl rece1ver
popped up, dtd an encore of
the "Ch1cken Dance" that
he performed at the ctty's
Oktobertest a day earlier,
then slouched m pam. He
• d1dn't m1ss any plays, but
ended the game on another
pamful note
Brian Russell's htgh htt
knocked off Johnson's hel·
met on the Bengals' !mal
pass, leavmg htS wh1te No
85 Jersey spotted wnh
blood Johnson had still had
glassy eyes and several
stttches JUSt below h1s chm
when he emerged from the

offense never got off the
ground
The bumbling
Browns fa tled to get more
than one first down on any
ltrst-halt drive They had a
fteld goal and Charlie
Frye"s late 2-yard touchdown run set up by mtercepttons
Ftye 1epeated ly threw
behmd rcce1vers m a conservative approach ~ hand
off. dump olf, throw short
over the mtddle He didn't
put together a touchdown
drive unt1l the fourth quarter, when he completed a 75yard pass to Braylon
Edwards down the left stdehne to set up a score.
"We weren't good on
etther s1de of the ball,'' coach
Romeo Crennel sa1d "It
tramer's room
good That's about all
"How do I look ?" he smd, wasn't
I ~an say··
hymg to focu s hts eyes
Notes: Frye was 20-of-33
He was too disoriented to
244 yards The 75-yard
lor
conduct an mterv1 ew
completmn
to Edwards was
"I talked to Chad,'"
the
longest
of
h1s career, and
Palmer satd " He's a httle the second-longest
of the
loopy He's a httle out of It " recetver's career
The
The Bengals' balance Browns are 0-2 for the thtrd
allowed them to stay tlme smce they reJomed the
unbeaten for thetr long- league as an expanswn team
awaited game next Sunday m 1999. . Bengals K
111 Ptttsburgh, agamst the
Shayne Graham mtssed a 44team that knocked them out yard field goal attempt to the
of the playoffs m January
right, endmg hts club-record
"That's the thmg we try to streak of 17 made 111 a row It
get to around here,'" sa1d was h1s first miss smce last
nght
tackle
W1lhe Nov 6 at Baltlmore
Anderson, blood oozmg Graham made hts next two
from the bridge of his nose tnes
W1th LT Lev1 Jones
"It's not about one player or out, the Bengals moved LG
one stde Wtth our schedule, Eric Stembach to tackle and
thts team can't be one· gave second-round ptck
s1ded "
Andrew Whttwonh h1s first
By contrast, Cleveland's start at guard
stdelmes gettmg a drink, we
dtdn' t recogmze tt and he
shps h1mself in and a short
comer and we d1dn 't do a
good JOb there," Momssey
added "And then the throw
m at the end of the match
where we bastcally let a guy
tum and go mto the 18-yard
box and cut the ball across
the heart of the goal
"We made two rrustakes
an.~ got pums~e? tw1ce
The loss, tt s not somethmg that we've been famt ltar Wtth, but these guys w11l
be fine, they know m therr
hearts how they played and
I'm confident that we'll be

fine," Momssey s:ud
Embry-R1ddle Improves 50 on the season With the wm
over Rto Grande after defeatmg NAJA No 21 Mobile, 31 on Fnday mght.
In the ftrst game on
Saturday, Mobile salvaged a
VIctory, defeatmg Notre
Dame College, 5-3
Rw
Grande
opens
Amencan
Mtdeast
Conference South Dlvtston
play
hostmg
Walsh,
September 23 at 7 p m It
w1ll be at that game that the
umverstty wtll hold a dedtcatton tor the new lights at
Evan Dav1s Ftelt;l

.

3Regtster

Sentinel

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

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reject or cancel any
ad at any time

Errort

Must

B

oported on tho firs
"'ol publlcatlon an

he Tribune-Sentinel
eglolor
will
ooponalble lor n

are than the cost o
he apace occuple
the error and on
he first Insertion.
hall not be liable lo

ubllcatlon or omls
ian of an advertise
ent. Corrections wll
mode 1n lho firs
vallablo oditoon

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
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Announcement .
Antiques
Apartments for Rent
Auction and Flea Market

Auto Parts &amp;: Accessories . ...... .
Auto Repair
Autos lor Sale
Boals &amp; Motors lor Sale .
Building Supplies...
Business and Bulldlngo.
Buatneas Opportunity
Business Training ......... •••••• ••
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .... •
Camping Equipment....
CardsoiThanks........
Child/Elderly Care............ .......

Electrical/Refrigeration
Eq•lpmanllor Rent

725

030
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.. 440
080
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........ no
710
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•••••••••• 550
••• 34D
210
• ••• t40
•....... 790
78D
otD
t 90
840
480

Excavating....
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Farm Equipment ...

830
61 D

Farms lor Rent •• • ,
Forma for Ssto
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Fer Sate.
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Frutto &amp; Vegetables
Furnished Rooms
General Hauling
Giveaway
Happy Ada.... ..........
Hay &amp; Grain • •••
Help Wanted ••••
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Homes lor Sale ...... • ••
Household Goode...
Houaea tor Rent .......
tn Memoriam

430
330

490
585
590
580
•. 450
1150
040
05D
• ..... 640
•••110
810
310

510

41D
020
Insurance... .......... • .
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment. •• •• ..........
680
Livestock
•••• 630
Loollnd Found . ••
060
Lots &amp; Acreage...
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M1ace11anacua...
• .... 170
•••540
Miscellanecua Merchandise •
Moblla Home Repair • ••••
86D
Mobile Homes lor Rent ..... • .......
420
Mobile Homes lor Solo...
..320
Money 10 Loan ...
••••• •• • •
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Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers..... •
740

Mu1lcallnstrumenta

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Paraonala • •• •
••••005
Pots lor Sate ......
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Plumbing &amp; Heating ......................
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Professional Services • • • •••••••
.......... 230
••••• 180
Radlo, TV &amp; CB Repair.. •••
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Wanted to Rant • ••••
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quest ons
Chnstmas ts comtng Earn
call/(304)524 7203
MEDI HOME HEALTH
gtfls to gtve or keep wtth
AGENCY
Abstractors/Landman want Tupperware Just a $500
ed Full or part ltme party wtth two daltngs and a
HAS OPENINGS FOR
Compensalton based upon $10 co pay wtll earn you
eKpertence Send Resume $347 worth of Tupperware
"""""PRNRNs··· ··
to C E H&amp;tlmann Land products you can keep or
Servtces LTD PO BoK 235 give lor gtfts A $.400 party
Evans WV 25241 304 372 with two dattngs V(tll earn $26 PER HOURI $42 PER
VIS1T
9336
you $238 tn hostess g1fls
Or maybe you are looktng
An E"-cellent way to earn
Call Vtt:kt .Reynolds AN
lor part ttme employment to
money The New Avon
Cl nlcal Manager at
earn that extra Chrtstmas
Call Mantyn 304 882 2645
(740)441 1779 or
cash
Call me today for
1 800·46 1·6334
more detailS (304)773·5830
AVON I All Areasl To Buy or
Sell Shirley Spears 304· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Communi ty Action ts seekOffice Atslstant
675 1429
lng an Intake Clerk to work
wtth Emergency Programs 1MPW Industrial Servtces
BANK1NG
OrgantzattOilal sktlls com Inc 1s seektng an Offtce
Branch Assistant I
puter expertence and abtllty Ass1stant for the Gallipolis
Oak Hill Banks has tuiHtme to deal with parsons ot van Ohio locatiOn Thts position
career opportunity n our ous socto economic back 1s responsible for all admtn
Valid Ortvers tstratlve duttes mcludtng
Jackson ofhce for a fnendly grounds
energetic self starter As license htgh school gradu btlling accounts recetvabte
Branch Asstslanl I you wtll ate or equtvalent Resume accounts payable and pay
ttmekeeptng
etc
ass st wtth overall opera wtth three (3) reterencas to roll
hans of the branch provtde Ms Edwards Gailta Metgs Oualtf 1ed ca'ndtdates must
outslandtng customer serv C A A 8010 N State Route possess strong communtca
ce complete appltcattons 7 Cheshtre Ohto 45620 by 1on (verbal and wnnen) and
PCisystems sktlls Use of
lor mortgage and consumer 9129106 GMCAA s EOE
loans as well as new Pepostt - - - - - - - - - Microsoft Wtndows 95
accounts Must exhtblt lead Oo you went high wages Excel and Word a must
ershtp skills have stgntftcant same day pay and to make Expenence work tng tn an
expenence In a bank cred1t your own schedule ? Call AS400 or JD Edwards envt
Staffmg
@ ro"ment a plus
unton or other ltnanctal tnSII Taylors
for
an
tutton Excellent compensa (740)446·3305
Monday- puallfted candtdales should
tton and beneftts tncludtng appbtnlment
health Insurance and 401(k) Thursday 1Dam 2pm Wa submtt a resume thcludtng
Pre
employment drt.tg are now hmng State Tested salary requtrements to
screen
requtred
Send Nursmg Asststanls LPN s &amp; Please submit resume or fax
to
rlii,adway @mpws§l::
resume and salary reqwre ANs EOE
n~~ or fax 614635
ments to Oak Htlf Banks
3688
AHn Human Resaurces PO
FEDERAL
Box 647 Jackson OH
POSTAL JOBS
MPW lndustnal Servtces
45640 or to t1r@oekhlll
$1567$2619fnr now hr
1nc
banks com Please refertn~ For application and free
ence Job Code 11595E
governement job nlo call
EOE MIFIDN
American Assoc of Labor 1
Cosmetologtst needed Call 913 599 8042 24/hrs amp
serv
(740)446 7425

OFroRfllNITI'

Rockspnngs Rehabtt !alton
Cenler ts now accepttng
appltcalto ns lor a l1censed
beauttclan to work two days
a week at our factllty (Musl
have an tndependent con
tractor ltcense) Interested
cand1dates should apply to
Rockspr ngs Rehabtlttatton
Center 36759 Rockspnngs
Road
Pomeroy
Oh o
45769 Extend!care Health
Servtces Inc ts an equal
opportuntty employer that
encourages
workplace
dtvers1ty M/F DN

Free ktllens to good home
(740)446 0016

rate ca

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifiedads
tf~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics 504 for small
S1.00 for Iorge

POLICIES Ohio Valley Publiahlng reHrvntt. right to edit reject Of cancel any ad at any time Error• muat be reported on tha flr1t
Trlbune-Senti'*"Reglatar will be ,.aponalble for no more than the coat of tha apace occupied by the error lnd only tha flrat inaertlon
any loaa or expen11 lhll ruuna from lhe publicatiOn Of omlaaion of an advertisement Correction will be mede In the Jlrat avelleble edl11on
are elwaya conflftnllel • Current rele card apptlu • All real ..tate advertlnmenta are aublect to the Federal Fair Hou1ing Acl ol1&amp;e8
I
!OE alend..-da We will not knowtngly actept any advarllalng In violation of the law

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Inetude Complete
Duc;:rlptlon • Include A Prlc;:e • Avokl Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES*

Oeacltir~

Dally In-Column 1:00 p.m
Monday-Friday far In•ertlon
In Next Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column· 1:00 p.m .
Friday For Sunday a Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

w••,

I

Websttes.
www myda1iytnbune com
www myda1iysent1nel com
www myda11yregtster com

Your Ad, {740) 446-2342 {740) 992-2156 {304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

1968

w1se dtsmal day for
Hendnck
Motorsports
Chase drivers Kyle Busch
and Jfmm te Johnson both
wrecked early, ft mshed 38th
and 39th, and dropped to
the back of the 10-dri ver
champ10nsh1p field
It was yet another heart.
breakmg blow for Johnson,
who led the standmgs fm 22
weeks th1s year only to see
hiS season fall apart w1th the
Nextel Cup on the !me
Although he has mne weeks
to race back mto contention,
he knows how dttficult It
w1ll be
"R1ght now 1t looks ltke
thmgs are out of our control
to get back m th1s thmg
nght now,'" smd Johnson,
139 pmntsout of the lead " I
can only JUdge on how guys
are runmng today, ,md all
the Chase guys arc runnmg
up lronl
"I hope I eat the words I
sa1d early on when I satd.
'You can't wm the champt·
onsh1p here m New
Hampshtre, but you can
lose It today'"
Indeed, the champ1onsh1p

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Oh to Valley Home Health
Inc h1nng for Full Time AN
PT PTA Full Ttme and Part
Time CNA STNA CHHA
PCA and Per Otem PT PTA
OT ST Accepttng appltca
!tons for LPN s Compettlwe
Wages and Beneftts tnclud·
mg health msurance and
mileage Apply at 1480
Jackson Ptke Gallipolis or
2415 Jackson Avenue Po nt
Pleasant WV or phone 1011
free 1 866 441 1393

•NOTICE&lt;
OH1D VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
that you do bustness w1th
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the mall unit! you
have mves\l~ated the
oHenng

Syracuse Vtllage tak.ng
resumes lor a part hme
Pollee OHtcer 16 hours a
week
$7 00 per hour
Deadline Sept 27 ma t! to P
0 266 Syracuse Ohto
45779

MoNE\
JULoAN

Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohto D VISton of
Fmanc1al
lnsttlutiOn s
Offtce of Consumer
Affatrs BEFORE you rell
nance your home or
obla n a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advan ce payments of
fees or tnsurance Call the
OHtce ol Consumer
Afiatrs toll free at 1 866
278 0003 to learn tf the
mortgage b1oker or
lender
s
property
hcensed (Thts IS a publtc
servtce announcement
from the Ohto Valley
Pubhshmg Company)

Tru£k Dm-ers
I NEED ONE DRI\ERt
Small 1 ruckmg Com pan\
Look mg fur lmctor Trader
drtve~ wnh flatbed expenrnce
P11ymg JO~o of g.ros~ Dma
averages StlOO 00 1 1 Sl}l!U 00
take home a!~er taxo Home
nel) week: end and some "eek
dn~s ddt\ermg to Olt K) \A
W\ fN ,_,o '~7 '~H9

Vetenn!lry Ass1slant need
ed Expenence preferred
but wtll tra1n PT/FT some
weekends
requtred
Mtntmum
wage
Send
resume to French Town
Vetertnary Clintc 360 SA
160 Gallipolis or fax
(7401446 4101

ISO

ScHOOLS
)~TRUCfiON

·--oiiiiiiiiiiiiiioii;.,,.J
Concealed
Ohto WV
$75 oo
Mason WV
5555

Ptsto! Class
Ocl 7 2006
9 ooam VFW
Ph (740)843

J'ROFl.'\'liONAL

Sootcl:S

Gallipolis Career College
(Ca reers Close To Home)
Call Today• 740 446 4367
1 800 214 0452
-w gal opoi16Carlilli&gt;ICO lug!! com

OTRICOTA
Come JOtn a dynamtc therapy company wtth great
career opportuntttes F1,.1ll
benefits &amp; generous salary
Currently
htrtng
FT
OTRICOTA tn the A1pley
WV area For delatls call
Stephan e Swtsher
at
(740)418 1398 or ... 1 888
288 9348 ext 14
Overbrook Rehab Center
333 Page Street Mtddleport
OH 45760 ts currently
acceptmg appl cat1ons lor
the followtng full t1me STNA
post! ons and two 7 am
7pm pos !tons These post
!tons are t 2 hour shi fts wtth
a set schedule We also
have Part t1me STNA post
hons avatlable for all shtfls
II you are Interested tn JOtn
tng our ded cated staff
please stop by our front
office and p ck. up an applt
cat1on Monday Frtday from
9 am to 5 pm No phone
calls please
Overbrook
Rehab Center IS an E 0 E
and a participant tn the Drug
Free Workplace Program

For re.-.t or sale 17 600 sq ft
warehouse on At 2 wtth 3
acres fenced m &amp; gated
blacktop
perktng
lot
(304)937 4127

Accred~ed

CouocH 1o1
~nd

Schools

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECUR1TV /SS17
No Fee Unless We Wtn 1
1·88S 582 3345
Membe .G&lt;:crt'd I ng
lndepeflCl{'l!l Cot eges ' 1 U· IIISI\Il
1274B

10
Overbrook Rehab Center
333 Page St Mtddleport
OH 45709 wttf be hold1ng
an STNA class starling on
September 19th ll you are
tnterested tn JOtntng our ded
tcated staH please stop by
our front offtce Mon Frt
9am Spm and ftU out an
appl cat1on Full ttme &amp; part
ltme posthons avatlable to
those quallfted tnd tvtduals
completing
the
class
Apphcattons wt ll be accept
ed unt I September 15th
2006
No Phone calls
please Overbrook Rehab
Center sanE 0 E &amp; a par
tectpant of the drug tree
workplace plogram

Hmi!S
FUR SAL!

14 1 acres wtth 2 900 sq f1
home
Vtew
at
www orvb com
code #
7156 Call (740)441 1559
3 acr on rtver 4 bedroom 3
bath laundry rm 1st II 2
camp kitchens 3694 sq ft
ltvtng space + garage boar
dock 40"-50 barn work
shop Must see to apprec
ate (740)44 1 C596
4 bedroom 2 bath double

garage pool 2 acres
Eastern School 01strtct
740 992 3465 alter 5 OOPM

4 rental houses RFor Sale
Good ncome producmg
Shotokan Karate classes at properltes Great locatton•
Carleton School Syracuse Pnce(s) ere Negoltable
600 pm to 700 pm
Mottvated
Sellerl
In
Slartmg Sept 18th and 21st Gall polls
Call Wayne
then every Man and Thurs (404)456 3802
For more Into call 378 5144
or 667 3039
Attention!
Local company offenng "NO
Qualified
Wmdow
DOWN PAYMENT~ pro
Installer/He lper Part ttm e
grams for you to buy your
PoSSible Full ttme Quality
home Instead of renttng
Wtndow Sy5tems 37700
New Lo wer Pr1ces on • 100% ftnanctng
King Hill Road Pomeroy
Ltmestone at Rodney Stone • Less than pertect credtt
Resumes accepted 11119 20
(740)245 5316 Atver Gra vel accepted
06 Nq Phone Calls Please
&amp; Sand also a.;atlable
' Payment could be the
same as renl
R&amp;J TRUCKING
\Vo\.,"IHl
Mortgage
Locators
.,__.
lo Do
Leading The Way Deadhne for apphcants " - - - - - - - - (740)367 0000
R&amp;J Trucktng now Htnng at 9/26106 Equal Opporluntty Georges Portable Sawmtll
Employer
our New Haven WV
den 1 haul vour Logs to the
Termtnal For Regional
~ Beauttfu l Ranch
M II ust call 304 675 1957
Hauls Dump Dtv 1 year
Brtek Home
190 CH111rl':1JJER1 I
OTA •
on
2 Bedrooms {large master
verlftable e11p
CA.RE
SAVINGS
Call 1 800 462 9365 ask lor
bedroom wtth large walk tn
closet large make up room
KenI
Care for vour loved one
&amp;iyhght wtth stti ng area and
Pr
vale
roo
m
and
bath
3
hot
ResCare
prwate bath\ Ltvtng rOom
meals aM snacks crafts
Lead ng provide~ for tndivtd
farmly room Large ktlchen
(740)388 0118
'uals wtlh mental retards
dtntng room 2 full bath
!ton/developmental dtsabtl
rooms total aclosets total 2
ttes ts accept nO appltcattons
STNA WILL TAKE CARE OF car garage Conc1ete dnve
for
DtreCt
Care
YOUR ELDERLY L.OVED way Heat pump With central
Professtonals
ONES wh le you wo•k Call a1r
Fenced tn baclo. \ ard
Ouahhcattons Valid dr vers
C1"&lt;fY 740 99.2 5917
w1th large deck Approx 2
license htgh schOol dtploma
New
1 2 acres ot land
or GEO Apply tn person at
W 1 dHe for vour loved one Improvements ~pp1tanoos
Mtddleton Estates 8204
Shop
n your ho tnc (7401245 ncluded Approx 3 mtles
Carla Drtve Galltpol s Ohto
from Potnt Pleasant un At
5601 lv m~g
Classlfleds!
No telephone calls
62 S Mov ng !rom area
Must see to apprec1ateHt
$160 000 080
Call for
appomtment
(304)675
4235 or 1304)593 3220

WANTED Part It me pos1
ttons avatlable to asstst 1ndt
vtduals wtth mental retarda
t1on at a group home m
Btdwell
1) 35hrs Sam Spm Sun 2
10pm M!Tu/VV
.2) 35hrs t 1pm 8 30am
Th/F Sat 7pm 9am Sun
Must have high school dlplo
ma/GED
valid drtvers
ltcense and three years
good drtvtng eMper ence
$7 25/hr Pre-employment
Drug Testing Send resume
to Buckeye Communtty
Servtces PO box 604
Jackson
OH
45640

tao

:':(::!:

IFIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER IN THE CLASSIFIEDS I
--

--- --

__,

--

�Monday, Septemb~a 18, 2006
lllR S.o\IE

t 999 Oakwood 14~~:70, new
Oak kitchen cabinets. 2ba. 2
bed, central air. $15,500.
1740)441·9925

~arage.

covered patio,
fenced back yard, newly
remodeled, 3 or 4 bedrooms , close to schools,
Pol' nt PI e asa n1 $69 ,500
( 740)709-1382.

All realeatate advertiaing
In this newspaper Is
aubj~t to the Federal
Fair Hpualng A~l of 1968
which mekesJt illegal to
advertlae " any
preference, limitation or
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
race, c~;~lor, relig.ion, MK
familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such ·
preference, limitation or
discrimination."
Thla newspaper will nat
knawlngly accept
adwertlaemanta far real
estate which Ia In
wlolatlon of the taw. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings edvertlaed In
thl• newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

2 bedtoom. AIC. porch &amp; One bedroom apartment.
awning. Very, very nice, no Location: 403 112 Third Ave
pets. In Gall~lis . (740)446· One block !rom GAHS.
2003, (740)446-1409 cr Washer &amp; dryer hDO«up. For
. (740)o446-2692
an app~catlon call (740)446r.ousa for sate in Syracuse. Great used 38A home only - - - - - - - - : - : - - 46311.
two·bedroom w1th bath, $9,995. Will help with deliv- 3br. 14x70 on Private - - - - - - - - , - attached, garage and base- ery. Call (740)385-7671 .
Property (304)675-4088
One bedroom. nicely fur.
men1. An estate sale.
nished apt. quiet area, sui1Ha\IEI 78 mobile home needs Fo
... Nk: 2 bed
S70 ,000 Phone (740)992·
r re1 ..:
e
room able for 1 adult, private
some repairs.
Needs mobile home In Country drivaw- w/C8!pot1, no pels.
3690
1 ned
1 k ood fl
_,
no ea · g
oar Homes. $325 + deposit.. $400 mo. dep. required.
- - -- - - - - - c2 ea
yrs. ti11e make otter. 740NO OOWN PAYMENT even
(740)385·40t9.
(740)446-4782.
992-5616.
With less than perlect credit ::_:::_:::::_::______ Mobile Home sites for up 10
ROOMS FOR RENT
tS avadaole on this 3 bed· New 2006 Clay1on sin16)(80 In Country Homes. Construction WOrkers-Large
room 1 bath home In gtewldes starting at $199.84 (740)385·4019
newly remootle9 furnish&amp;lj
Middleport. C orner lot, vinyl per month. Trade·ins wel .
apartment In Middleport.
s1d1ng, l 1replace m llv•ng comes. Call (740)385·2434. Nice 3BA. 2 bath, city $ 125 .00 each person per
room. good carpet, tile floor
schOOl district . (740)256 • . week. Call740-441-5171
in kitchen. French doors
Lars &amp;
14171.
open to master bedroOm, L_,.;.,;;A,;;CREA~~G:;E;;.,..,I ,-------c:c-cjaclJzzi tub, off street parkTrailer lor rent with CIA. Twin Rl\18rs Tower is accept·

r

I

ing. Payment arolJnd $550 Attention Hunters &amp; Farmers
per month . 740·367-7129.
160 acres, Barton Cllapel
Ad. 20 minutes frOm 1-64,
Ran ch style home on 2.6
Milton exit. City water. For
acres overlooking the beau - information (304)937·4127.
llful Ohio A1ver in Long
Bottom. Ohio located at Mobile Home Lot tor rent
618t8 SA 124. This six near Vinton. Call (740)441·
room house includes 2. 5 1111 .
bedrooms. one full bath and _:_:_:_::_______
a three quarter bath. 1421 Mobile Home Lot in Johnsoo
square feet of living space Mobile Home ParK in
with a full finished basement Gallipolis,
OH.
Phone
and an. attached two car (740}446-2003 or (740)446garage.

Also includes

a

32'~40' heated metal out·
side building with concrete
floor. Home Is equipped
with heating, cooling, water
af1d all electric utilities.
some kitchen appliances
are Included.
For more
InfOrmation call 740 -985 3315(daytime) or 740-9922071(evenings).
Price
$160,000.00

i

1409.

·

RFALFsrATE
WANI'ED

L~--~~:.;.:,~-•

=--------

r

_74:!!:0~-94-9--2-2':37:-.---....

F.. . u~~.~
~·~
tl)R RENT

IF

Meigs Co. furnished farm
house. Acres of solitude.
$1,000 per mo. (740)594·
5210.

iri:ii:;;..-:-__..............,

APAR11\o1F.NI'S
roR RENT
·--ttlliiiiiiiiiii.-.,J
1 and 2 bedroom apartments.• furnished and unfur·
nished , security deposit
required, no pets, 740·992·
2218.
--------1 bdrm refrlg. ·&amp; stove.
Water, sewer, trash pd.
$350.
(740)367-7015,
(740}446-4734 .

r

Phillip
Alder

ched&lt;. (740)707-1964.

n.--::-:----....
Mt51CAL
~

Dean Edge Bass, natural
flntsh , 4 string, play great,
lOOks
like new $140

For Sale

"Take the pain

Kiwi Fruit! Cherry and
Hickory nut size , smooth
skin, 740·992·7449. Virgil's
Berry Patch, St.Rt. t24, East
or Syracuse, Ohio.

painting-let us

FOR SALE

Downtown
Commercial
Retail space for Rent. $4001
month.
Upstairs Office
Suites for Rent $1251 month
you pay the Utilities. Call
(703)528{)617

""~~

,

a.:A.[V

4 Bedroom- 2 Bath
ln Syracuse- 2,800 sq It
quality bwlt multi·level brick

....

11ft

........ .

home, maintenance tree . _ . . . • • •
Nice quiet neighborhood. 3·
_.... -•4 bedrooms, 2 bath, with
mymldweathome.com
hardwood trim thr~ughout.
(740)828 2750
u-shaped kitchen W&lt;1h 40' ol _:___:__·_ __
cabinets. Wood burning fire
place. ~ car detached
garage .. Nicely landscaped
.60 acre lot. Immaculate
condition. Low utilities.
Selling price $249,000. Call
740-441-517 1 Shown by
appl. only.

THR EE Bedroom, TWO
bath, oversized 2 car
Garage: Storage B~ilding ,
newer carpet and roof. 112
acre level lot. Wall maihtained hOme. Vine Street, workers OK. (740)446."2515.
RACINE . $95,000 nego 4bd. 2.bath HUD home. Buy
tiable. 740·949-80101
$32,900! For listings BOO·
391·5228 eKt F254

MOBILE HoMES

Handyman special, comes
IUK SAL!:
with 2 lots, close to schools,
Point Pleasant, $24,900.
16x80 Schultz, 2 acres,
(740)709-1382.
10x16 building, all kitchen
appliances . Nice country
Home For Sale Outside
, Racine, Ohio. Ranch Style, seHing. $60,000. (740)2568801.
2600 SI:J . tt. 4 bdr.. large
master bdr.w/waiK-in closet. 1984 t4x70 MH. Central air.
2 full baths, living room, fam10x16 covered porch, good
ily room. large cedar slJn condition. $8,500. (740)388·
room opening onto patio.
8403.
dining room. kitchen. utility
room , partial basement. 1997 t4x72. clean with fireAttached large 2 car garage place. 2 bedroom, 2 bath.
wlbuill in cabinets; unat - 1997 14x70 3 bedroom. 2
tached 3 car heated garage. bath, vinyl siding, shingled
In ground pool , brick patio. roof. 4 more to clloose from .
professionally landscaped _ (740)388·0000
daytime;
evening;
Price $275.000.00 Call740· (740)388·8017
(740)645-6150 cell
949·2217

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

liCENSED PRACTICAl. NURSES
Pleasant Valley Private Duty is accepting
applications for LPN's for private duty
home care cases located in Meigs County.
Six months nursing experience and an
Ohio license required. Excellent working
conditions. For more information, call
(304) 675-7400.
'
AA/EOE

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $349 to $448.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446"-2568.
Equal

H
-,--o-us_
in_g_o_p_po_rlu_n_ily_.__

ED&amp;:

waterltrash. (740)256-1106.

Attention!
Local company offering ~No
DOWN PAYMENT~ programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
' Less !han perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
.Locators.
(740)367-ooDO

Pomeroy 2 Bel., 1 bath, new
CIA $550 740 843 5264
.
·
·
PomeroY Big 4 Bedroom .
C/A, 2 full baths, . Lots of
ceiling fans. $850rent. 740843·5264

EllmView
Apartments

2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
Starting at $3a5 and up
Central heal &amp; air, WID
hook-lJp, coin operated
laundry, owner pays water,
sewer &amp; trash .

(304)882-3017
Furnished apt, 3 rooms g
bath, upstairs, clean, no
pets. Refldeposit required .
(740) 446 _15 t 9.

--------Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed-

NURSE AIDES ·
Pleasant Valley Private Duty is recruiting nurse aides for home care cases
located in Meigs, Gallia and Athens
Counties. Flexible scheduling, excellent pay, mileage reimbursement, visits and hourly care available.
Certification
is
not
required.
Applicants must have one of the following: One year experience or formal training or · be state tested. For
more information, call .(304) 6757400.

r

M~~J!.rQ\IEN

Help Wanted

District Circulation Sales Manager
Rcspon~ i hilitic s in~.:!udc recruiting and trai ning
rarrie r ~.

cus1ome.r se rvice

and meeting sal es

goals.lfyou have a posili\c

auitud~. are self-

starter, and a team player we woulJ like to talk
to you. Must

he clrpendahlc

arid

have reli able

tran~portation . Po~ittfln offer!'. ull compuny
bendit'i induding hca(th. dental. VI !lion and

in~uram:e,

lite

-+0\K. paid va.:at ivn.

and )JCr~onal day~

Please send resume to:
Paul Ba~er -

Circulation

1\tanager

Ohin Valley Publishing

S2S Third Ave. • Gallipolis. OH 45631
Or emaiiiO pharker @mydailytrlbune.rom

r
(
0

r

33 4.5"x12', wllite vinyl sidAuras
ing $150, 39 12"X 12' white
FOR
solid vinyl soffit $325, 1 roll
ridge vent $35, 1 roll roof felt
432 sq. ft. $24, Misc. chan- $5001
Cars!
Police
nel pieces (304)675-4197
Impounds from $500! For
listings 800-391-5227 x3901
Highland House floral Sofa - - - - - ' - - - - - on white background origi- 1961 Cadillac convertible.
nall price $2,000 asking v
ery good condition. leather
$350. "ut"
Wing-Back interior, classic_ (740)245Cllairs by Ethan Allen, origi· 9142
nat price $1 ,200/aach ask- - - ' - - - - - - - ing $250/each. will give 1992 Acura Integra LS.
away wrap-window Valance clean ti11e. records available,
in matching fabric of Sofa. 157,000mi. ale &amp; cd player,
Call (304)675-1481
new speakers. 740-992_ _c____:_c__JET
_ :____ 2454.

SALE

r"~ald

1

(740)446-9209.

Trade, new Washer &amp; Oym,
lor Tilt Bed Utility Trailer.
Now taking applications for
Wanted · Car CO Stereo
one bed apartments at
(813)385·, 926
Spring Valley, Green and
Brookside apartments. Call
(740)446-1599 lor Informa-

tion.

AA/EOE

Help Wanted

LEGAL NOTICE
The
undersigned
offe~s ror aale an unim·
proved tract of real
estate consisting of 38

sh•r• each end by

David
Jenkins,
an
undivided
one-hall
Interest.
The
real
eabita Ironto on Stale
acres, more or lass sh· Route143.
usted In Town 7, Range Offere lor the real
14, Ohio Company's ealata wtll be received
Purcha" and being a by KH R. Neal at Route

part of Fracllon No. 32, 1, Box 24, Letart, WV
Section No. 27, Scipio
Townohlp,
Meigs
County,
Ohio,
described In Volume
239, Page 349, Meigs
County
Official

Records,

.. ------------10% OFF W/AD

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furnlalre

25253
and
whoee
phone number Ia 304882-3190.
Bids will be received
until September 20,
2006 al 12:00 o'clock

2001 Dodge Stratus 4 dr,
books for $6,200-$6,600.
Price $5,000. (740)4461759.

Rat Terrier puppies. Tails
docked, 1st shots. Males
$125, female $150. Call
(740)379-9515 or (740)6456657 .

ton $2,995; 97 Chev.
SilveradO 4x4 $5 ,500. B &amp; D
Auto Sales. Hwy. 160 n.
~(7•4..0);.4.,.46;.·6;;8,;.65;;....,_ _,

r

SUVs
~~---FO·R·SiiALEiiiii-_.1

BARNEY

••

PSI

ROBERT
BISSEll

CONSTRUCTION
I{ !IHJ II \ddilioll ....
l{t&gt;ll H Hft·j j II~.

CONSTRUCnON

97 Beech Street
Mlddl
OH
epOrl,

llr~ \1 &lt;I ll. l(nulill~ .
Sidim.:. lkd,~. l'nl1·

• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
-Remodeling

10X10X10X20
992-3194
Of 992 • 6635

Barn ....
llour . . /\\ indo\\"

FnT 1·.-.timatl'"

740-992-1611

niJ- '1'12 -111 ~ -~

l~kk

Stop &amp; Compare

"Middleport'sonlv
r

H

~;;:======
self-storage"

.

\

Prin·

HH 11111 0: 1

~rr~~~~~~~~~~~~~;=~

THE BORN LOSER
P":SO, '(OU DO!'&lt;'I

Wl\1-\1 TO 1-\E.I\lZ
r-1\'{ 1-\UMOROUS
-t--.-.. 5\'-0IZ.'(?

Sur\ 'iOU~e.LF! BUI 11'~
'(OUR. LOSS- I
t-10\E.t&gt; fOR 11.'(

~BRU\US\~OR~~PL~:

i

Mf&gt;.STt.tzcr 1\-\(.

Slt-IGL~-(N.1UII)I&lt;£.!

~

"---···.,--~--

"~

2003 Chevrole1 Trailblazer
EXT LT. 4WD. Third row
seat Garage kept. like new
$16,500.
condition.
(740)446·7484 or (740)441·
7411.

0

l)J1 . . N"IE, TIME
TO TA.K.E THE
FIELD.

4x4

FOR SALE

IMPORTS
Athens
aYw~~~~ees~ewe

~

wlloels, goose neck hitch,
flatbed , new hres, 47,000
actual miles. (740)446-8189.

AI

89 Ford F-250 diesel, 4
wheel drive, make a good
fire wood truck. runs good!
$2,000. 740-843-1065

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
74Q-949-2217

All types of roofing:

·

40 MOTORCYCUS"
4 W HF..ELERS

New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

FREE
ESTIMATES

·-------

~

m

J~

.:·f

•

"'

G"'IE . 50 r'l"\ EATINt;.
" TWELVE-P"Cl'- OF
"POWEll- BAI&lt;.S"'

,'•

•
~~~~ ! ~~~~
PEANUTS

. .s-.t'X'Iv_
.
'""'•''ll_I·.•.
to 1O'li$0' ~
:·

I'LL roiEEO LOTS OF
ENERGY FQ&lt;. THE

\.

Hill's Self
Storage

H.l. Wrhesel
and Sons

- -- - 1997 Ford 350 4x4, dual

SCHOOL STARTED
L.AST WEEK !!

'

Hours

I WASN'T SU~E
'IOU I-lAD NOTICED

mo. pd
(7!~L:~~:~:~s
~
Cornerstone
!!I '' Ill Construction
7:00AM-8:00PM

2000 400 EX, runs great
$1 ,600 (304)675-2263

1/ 14/1

2000 John Deere Gator 6 x
4, 165 Hrs.· $5500.00. 740992-5189.

-~_::_:_:___ _ __

R~sklcnliul ~ Commutiul • General Cuntractl~g

ELECTRA
Glide
Classic . smokey
gold
pearl/black, cruise control ,
enhanCed stero sys., securlty sys., plus other extras.
20,000 miles, e~~;cellent condt1k&gt;n $16,000. 740-992 6919.
-- - - H
- - - - t-a- - -e-u-ce,
0 8 0 1 11 0
200 5

Pamtmi! • Uuun. • Win(luw~ • Q~,.·~;k~
• Siding • Roofing • Room AUdilion.s • Rc!mJdcling
WV 038992
• Plumhing • Electrical 740-367..0W
OH lU44
• Accou~ti..: Ce iling , 740-339·3&lt;112

SUNSHINE CLUB

JONES'

Tree Service

camper,
refrigerator,
indoor/outdoor sto'w'e, heat
lAC very good condition.
740-949-0020
-

"I I(\ It I "

GARFIELD

HoME

_

.....

.... _ ..lllliltlll-lll_ _

.,.. ...... 1111111M-···

. -~~·, ·--··
PIYINIITOP
PIICES JOI

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

[~

Room AddltiOfle &amp;
Remodeling
New Garag1ta
Electrlctl &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Guners
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Pallo and Porch Decks
036725

... THE

NEWSPAPER
HAS

wv

SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

c::dU

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pn nwroy OhiO
2!'&gt; 'I'C'&lt;lr'o Locill Expc1•encl'

Advertise
in this
space
for
1
54 per
month

Sorlh

1-~ ast

••

Pass

lril

54

Obi.

21\T
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead:

t 4

A small slam
with an overtrick
You reaCh a sr'nall slam. In the "play. you
can settle lor your contract, or yolJ can
take a finesse for an overtricK, which, 11 it
loses. will msult in your going down one.
Woulct you finesse?
The auction in this deal was B)(~ling.
After West's pass and North's modernstyle opening bid, East overcalled two
no·lrump, the Unusual No-Trump, promISin g at least 5·5 1n the minors.
Considering the vulnerability, this was
e1ther brave or foolhardy, depending
upon the result.
Soutn had a ditficult hand to describe,
but his four·heart response was an
underbid. Then, if South had passed OlJt
five ·cllJbs doubled. the penalty would
have been 500, better than game but
worse than slam. South, though, trusting
that his partner's values were primarily
outside clubs. jumped - ·bravely or foolhardily- to six hearts.
Wesl led his Singleton. diamond.
Declarer won w1th the king on the board.
took lour rounds of trumps, played a diamond to dummy's queen. rellJrned a diamond to his ace, and cashed two more
rounds of hearts before leading the
spade queen. covered by the king and
ace. Back to hand with a diamond ruff,
declarer led hi s remai ning spade and
called for dummy's nine- why?
East had followed to two rounds ot
trumps, so could have at most one
spade. DtJmmy's spade nine was bound
to holci, so why not get an overtrick When
it is a risK-free offer?
Finally. note that West should not have
covered the spade qlJeen. If he had
played low smoothly, declarer might
have thought East had a singleton
spade king and put up dummy's ace.

need
56 Rice wine
57 Near ~reds
58 ' B &amp; B s
59 Theorem

Item

ender

20

Had bills to
. pay
21 Decade
22 Unruly

DOWN

Japanese
soup
2 Forever and

mane
24 Cover girl
27 Ll&lt;l! nsta1lly

3

(2wda.)

TKO
ofticlals
4 Pine
5 - de

30

Love, to
Claudius
31 Grass:sklrt

accessories
32 Fratle1ter
34 Fait to keep
up
35 " Misery•

costar

cologne

19 Slippery
fish
20 Unfold, in
poetry
22 Might's

35
36
38
39

Twist-off
Heckles
Faced
Daughter's
brother
partner
41 Gets frizzy
23 Approves
42 Baby seats
24 - de mer
43 Arab ruler
25 FitzGerald's 44 Pals ol
pool
Tarzan
26 Old ruler ol 46 Where Ur Is

Venice
27 Furniture

47 Diver's
position

6 Walen readout
28
7 Upsilon
29
follower
31

48 Bird food
Ore hauler 50 Kimono
Taft' s state:
fastener
Tomb
51 Camper,

8 Gnaw

Raider -

Dri~1e
9 Not diluted
37 Comment
10 Developed
39 Mead Island 12 Bird ctog

36

wood

maybe ·

Croft
33 Go-dlel

52 Munich
single

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cfietl!ity Ciphf, cry01og,ams are c•eat~ f1om QU~at· ons 1Jo,o fai!ICI'.'li pe~fll past aa:J _[.leseri
Each ~ener 11 the apher star(!s lor :11omer

Today's clue: Fequals M
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OPULW'

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'We are nol viclims ol1he world we see. We are
'victims olthe way we see the world.' - Shirley MacLaine

AstroGraph
'bar 'lllrthda,y:

Tueaday,Sept. 19,2008
By Bernice Bede Osol
If you're able to \real being in the baclo;ground as unimportant, you may find
yourself invited Into somethmg that turns
out to be extremely beneficial. Keep 1n
mind the advantages of being in the rear
ranks.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - It won't
take outnght blatant actions on your
behalf to make your 1mpact felt. Actually.
you will function tar more 1mpress•ve1y by
d1recling _matters from behind the
scenes
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Don't think
soc1a1 involvements will be a fri-.olous
waste at 11me. In reality, yotJ"re likely to
denve tar mom benefit at a fr1endly gath enng than in a cold. hard-nosed busi ·
ness meeting .
SCORPIO (0cl. 24·Nov. 22) - Using a
combination ot both (aCIICS and style
could be of greater sigmficance to you
than usual today. How you accomplish
something m1ght be as important as how
you develop things.
SAGITTARIUS ~Nov . 23-Dec. 2t) Much can be accomplished, p10V1ded
you truly believe in tt1e positive ideas and
philosophy you espouse. If you do, it w11!
rellecl i[l benefic•al ways 10 all your
undertaking s.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - You
may be able to derive substantial materi·
al benefits through 'o ther than your usual
sources of revenue. Starl lookmg for
these b1g opportunities 1n fresh helds
today_
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - In order
10 advance your own personal lmerlilsts.
tt might be necessary 10 make some
comprom1ses and (::OOCSSSions in your
deal•ngs w1th others_They'll be worth it to

SOJTU
Several mother$ had
remarked how much 1heir
children knew. ''II isn't what a
teenager kmn•~." a mulher of

"'
0

I
~

5

I

T O E lJ

"'
fa:

14 sighed. "bul how !hey -----

1

g.'~omplele

r--tj"""'1jr.r"'-,lf"---T:ls-'-'1--1

lhe chuckle

~uolod

_ _ .
.
by f .hn9 ifl rhe 11\tUmg word1
L--1-...L_.JL-...L-L-...J yov dettelop irom step No. J below.

I III

0
__.:.;~; .;:~: .:.:~·~; ;_~·'![_l_~0--~.1 1 _ _,. __1....~1---~...1...~I_
SCRAMLETS

ANSWERS 9!1l1116

Garish- Logic -Icing -Quorum- SCHOOL
You can always toUJ1t on someone lo stale tl1cy know a
successful pcr.;on. IJ's usually because they wentlo the

same SCHOOL

ARLO &amp;.JANIS .

yoc

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

10se;.U.-74,;;0;.-;9;.92~-7,;.7;.71;;..._...,
!NO CAJ'I~"'S &amp;

West

G

l__:___l::::=j

BIG NATE

1!'11'!---~--~

'-------'
1991 Toyota 4x4 . Too many
new paris to list . Sharp
truck . $4,500 No trades.
(740)992-5329 (740)4166398.

,

~

1

Thii'ROVEMFJVIS
AKC Pomeranian Pups, 3
Mala, 3 Female, wormed, - - - - - - - - BASEMENT
$350. (740) 388 _8642 .
2006 Honda Accord. 4 door,
4 cyl. 5 speed, aluminum
WATERPROOFINQ
AKC registered Bassett wlleels. 6 disc. CD changer. Uncondilional lifetime glJar.
Hound puppies, brown/red &amp; 13,000 miles. Like new. amee. Local references furnislled. Established 1975 .
white. 1 male, 3 female. $18,200. (740)441-7390.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446wormed/shots
$200.
92 Dodge 15 passenger van 0870, Rogers Basement
1740)367 7651
·
·
$1 ,600; 98 Dodge Gr Waterproofing.
Lab pups. AKC- quallly Caravan $1.500; 98 Chev S·
Labrador pups smce 1993. 10Biazer$3,200;01 Ppnllac
Excellent hunters, ,great Gran Prix $3,500; 98 Chy.
pets. Yellow &amp; black. Sebring 2dr $2,500; 97
(740)256-£038.
GMC Jimmy Blazer $2,600;
00 Ford Ranger 4x4 $2.600;
Pet Sale Aemo1e Training oo Ford Escort ZX2 $2.200:
NO MATTER
Collar lor targe dog, Hardly 94 Toyota Tercel 51 ,OOO; 99
WHA-T YOUR
used. Paid $165 will take Caravan $2,500; 97 Dodge
STYLE...
5100 · (740 1388"0191 ·
e)(. cab $2,300; 90 Ford 1·

Registered Chihuahua pupp1as. shots &amp; wormed $200 9804)895-3101
2002 Chevy Avalanche
the right to reject any
1500. 2 WO, loaded, 77.000
or all blde.
Registered
~iniatura
miles, rodlgray, s-title, 20
Pinschers.
Males
and
Kit R. Neal
mpg.
$11,900
OBO.
$200
each.
(9) 13, 14, 15, 17, 18,19 females.
(740) ~46 -8050
(740)388-8788

being noon.
.
The owners reserve

Au~ltor'a
Parcel
Number 17-00453.000.
The real aolate Ia
owned by Kim B . Neal,
Kit R. Naal and Jaffrey
Lee Neal, a one -sixth

r

PETs
lllR5

2000 Ford Taurus SE. V6,
auto, AC, new tires &amp;
brakes. $3,000. (740)4460425.

~~

2459 St. Rt. 160 - Ga!UpoUs

1994 Saturn SLZ--5 speed
trans., excellent mechanical
cond., llkt1 ~ew tires, air
cond. and engine have been
overhauled, 34 to 40 miles 3900 miles. Like New condi·
per gallon gas.
Asking lion. $2300 in e~~:tras. Must
_s_2._ooo_._9_49_-_22_02_
. ---

H

740.446.9200

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

i

fl

www.'llmb-.e-blaetr)'.com

------~-- 2005

1994 Pontiac Grand Am
$400. Police Impounds! For
listings 800·391-5227 ext.
C548 .

lion

JUST
r~~Y

n

~A(.~ OT~~~ ~~
OUT/
'3

,.L:.Io,I;.IIJ.U,U.LL~

~

L~T'S

/

I

Suuth

'"

von1 wtiAT AIOUT

(.AN(.~/.

' Leave a message

Q6
AKQJ872
A 5 3

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: ~ast- West

Co llt&lt;ge Rd. • S~ru ~'U~, OH 740-992·0122
., L\56
____________
_

74Q-742-2293

oloAK.J62

.. 9

IGNDilAN(.,f: ANP APATtiY1

Call Gary Stanley-

SA'

6 5

+

50 Above
53 Buffalo's
Jake
54 Pastry
55 Accused's

16 Import vehltie
17 Betore
18 HaH-shell

+J1 0962

•
"

EV~f(YIOI&gt;Y CAN

"insuredu

SUVs

8

•

South

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

I~R

•

•

••

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

Free

r

t:ast

... 107543

David Lewis

I!

Wtst
\0 4

11 Unlucky
time
13 Per cap~a
14 Hold close
15 Ho1el con-

venience

l.t K\0543

. 70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

In Gallipolis. clean , upstairs. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; 200 0 Chevy Camara V-6
11' I"Lfti
M~R HoMES
1 2 bedrooms. 2 bath. dish- Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed auto, T·tops, 84,000 miles . .__,.;:;:;v~•v~~=~
washer, WID hookup, $500, Thursday,
SatlJrday
&amp; $6.800 (304)593-4750
..,
deposit,
re1erences'. Sunday. (740)446-~300
1999 19 ft Camplrte pop-up

14x80· singlewide. Good
condition, 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths, nice yard, storage
building, Porter area $400
per month. $400 deposit
Call (740)446-4514 or !HI out
application at 1403 Eastern
Ava.

MONTY

740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

740-992-6971

9 3
KQ8 7
Q8

•

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

~reen

room apartments at Village
Pomeroy Big 4 Bedroom/2 Manor
and
Riverside
Full Baths. Newly remod· Apartments in Middleport.
eled. $750.00. 740·843- From $295-$444. Call 740·
~92·5064. Equal Housing
AERATION MOTORS
52.64
Opportunhias.
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1Ready Oct. 1st, 3br, 1ba, 20
lmmaculate 2 bedroom 800·537·9528.
miles from Toyota Plant
$550 a month · + $550 apartment In the country.
New carpel &amp; cablnols, NEW AND USED STEEL
Deposil (304)576.2217
lreshly painted &amp; decorated. Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
h~_kup. BMeau tiflJ! cou n- Fo~
Concrete,
Angle,
Totally remodeled. New out:
Y sa mg. us1 see 1o Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
side siding, 2 bedroorns.
For
Drains.
appreciate.
$3991mo. Graling
bath, kitchen, nice neighbor·
(614)595·7773 or 1·800- Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
hood. Call (740)44/l-7425.
798-4686.
Scrap Metals Open Monday,

:ID

®

(304)593-4750
TV's - - - - - - - - by. Ron's ·rv (304)815· John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill
7999
for
rent.
Carmichael
Equipment (740)446-2412.
.Berber carpel 6.95yd. vinyl - - - - - - - - 5.95yd. New rod&lt;er recliners John Deere Mini E:~~cavator/
$199.95; new COlJCh &amp; Tractor Loader Backhoe/
loveseal $450. Mollohan Skid Sleers. Carmichael
Carpet
76 Vine St., Equipment (740)446-2412
Gallipolis, OH (740)4467444.
New John Deare Compacts
- - - - - - - - and 5000 Series Utility trac·
New recliner S200; sola &amp; I. lors @0% Fixed for 36
seat $400. Mollohan Furn. months
through
John
202 Clark Chapel Rd. Porter. Deere Credi1. Carmichael
Phone
( 7 40)388·0173. Equipment (740)446·2412
Ope n 9 3 Sat on~
•
· •r·
ditioned Big

Thompsons ApplianCe &amp; Equipment
tess-round
auauty Johnfor oeere
Hiv
Repair-675"7388 · For sale. balers, square biilers &amp;
re-conditioned automatic mower conditioners @4.7%
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- Fl
)(ed for 48
months through
tors, gas and electric John
Deere
Credit.
ranges, air conditioner'S. and Carmichael
Equipment
wringer w8shers. Will do
7 40 4 24 12
repairs on major brands in ,.,;
.;.1_40,;.·,;._ .;;;.·_ _ _..,
shop or at your home.
LMl.TOC'K
--'----'----Washer/dryer sat. good con· ~-------_.1
dition . $350 080. (740)44'1·
'KIEFER BUILT 'VALLEY
606
and/or small houses FOR 11°~~-~------,
'BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVERENT. Call (740)441 -111 1
~a
· .. ~ I_ STOCK TRAILERS 'LOADfor application &amp; information. __ lYU!.K ...._..,~ .
MAX
'aOOSENECK,
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
'ALUMINUM
334.5.)(!2'whitevinyisiding 'ALUMA
•
$150-39 12~x12 ' while solid TRAILERS 'B&amp;W GOOSEHITCHES.
vinyl soffi1 S325- 1 roll ridge NECK
vent $35· 1 roll roof felt 432 Carmlc::hatl
E\".l pment
sq.ft. $25- misc. channel
places. {304)675·4t97.

Brand
new 2 Bedroom
_
Apartments Washer/dryer
hookup, sto"Je/refrigerator
Included.
Accepling application· 3BR, Also available units Stale
1 bath. 2 story farm house, Route 160. Call for details
recently
remodeled, (740) 441 •0194 or (740 )441 •
includes refrigerator and 1184.
electriC range. Approx . 7
miles oUt Lincoln Pike. LP CONVENIENTLY LOCATgas
heat.
$400/dep.,
AFFORDABLE!
$450frant.
includes Townhouse . apartments,

Newly
remodeled , fur:
nished, 3 bedroom house in
Gallipolis. Also 2 bedroom
garage apt. Call (740)379·
2303.

®

..

3BR. 2nd Ave , Gallipolis.
$600
mo.
dep.
req.
(740)446·2422
4BD, 1 112 balh, 86 Gameld.
WID llookup. $575 dep.
$575 rent , you pay utilities. 6
month lease. Construction

•
•

•

"KIEFER BUILT "VALLEY
"BISON "HORSE I LIVE-

og 18 oo

. A J 9 72

26 Years Experience

lllRRENr

lhiBIGene

North

{]amihJ •·&gt;31tlM•

Interior Only

rlb .

(740}446-l4S1. ·
--------6 rooms &amp; bath rg. &amp; rer. furnlshed off st. parking $425 a
month + dep.
In city.
3br, 2 bath, large living (740)44 1 _0596 .
room. lamily room , craft - - - - - - - - room,
$625
wfdeposlt Apt.1or rent 2 or 3 Br.. No
- · 740-992 -5858.
(304)675-3512

do

far you"

Need to sell your hOme?
STOCK TRAILERS •LQADLate on payments, divorce,
MAX
'QOOSENECK,
job transfer or a death? I
DaMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
can buy your home. All cash
'ALUMA
'ALUMINUM
\1 1 1!111\\IH-.1
and quick closing. 740-416·
2 bedroom Apartment avail· -ii~;,::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ TRAILERS 'B&amp;W GOOSE3130.
HITCHES.
NECK
able In Syracuse. $200.00
HOlSEHOW
I{ I \ I \I "
Carmichael
Equipment ·
Goo
deposit, $350.00 per mor;lth
(740)446-2.12
Ranch Style Home, Yost
Rent. Rent incllJdes water,
Road with 2 Acres. 3 bed·
sewer, trash .
No pets.
--------HOUSEl&gt;
rooms. 2 baths, garage,
Sufficient income needed to
100 bushel gravity bed on
quality. 740·378·6111 .
enclosed breezeway. Pool
heavy duty wagon,; 1 raoN
and Spa included.
Idea corn piclo;er; Paul
Appliance New
$83,500
Call 740·992· 2 bed room House, $425 per 2 bedroom upstairs apt.,
Baer. -At. 7, one mile west of
month, S300 deposit. refer· stove, fridge, water, trash
4001 .
Chesler,
(740)985-3830
ences required (304)675- Included. Rent $325, deposit
Warehouse look for Mail Pouch sign on
Route 7 Tuppers Plains· one 4469 ()( (740)441-7193
required. (740)446·7620,
barn.
floor, 3 bedroom, 1 1'12 bath,
(740)441 -9872.
I
- - - - - - -house
in - - - - - - - - - n Henderson. WV. Pre- double car garage. appx. 1 2 bedroom
A with Cultivators
owned
Appliances
starting
Farmall
2
b
h
bed room, I at , water
acre, $75,000, can sllow Gallipolis. Reasonable rent.
at $75 &amp; up all under and side Dresser $1,850, JD
$350
ld
$
0
(740)446..()974.
pa
,
35
month,
10/0512006,1740)667-6329
Call Warranty, also have recon· 6ft Bush Hog $3,500
security
deposit.
2BR home· Vinton Ave .
$375mo.+sac.dep.Youpay
utilities. Gas heat. (740)4463644.

•RENTALS •SALES
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•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

INDA'S

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Call Wayne (404)456-3802

Clean water
org.
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4 Dog
42 Bog dirt
complaint
45 Opens, as a

8 Financial

~---OililiiiiiOiO._.I

r

40

ACROSS

ing applications for waiting
1
740-985-4180
nst for· Hud-subslzed, 1- br,
apartment, call 675-6679
,
Leave message
Equal Housing Opportunity Commercial building "For
before 6 PM
Sate" 1600 square feet, off L_.:::::.:::~~;!...­
stree1 parking. Great locatlonl 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Price wNegotiable~
New roofl Motivated Seller!
Commercial building ~For Call Wayne (404)456·3802.
Renr 1600 square feet, off
street parking. Great locaI \ln t " l 1'1'1 II -.
tionl 749 Third Avenue In
,\JI\1...,1(111\
Gallipolis. Rent "Negotiable" ,.,.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

I
ic:z::o---::----S.,AO:

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Siberian Huskies, $350,
AKC &amp; APAI registered, 6
weeks old, 1st shots, vet

Sentinel• Page B5

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

"-----·DS--_.1

COUNTRY LIVING
REPO. new Ranch 3bdrm. 2
baths,
needs
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Located 10 southern Oh10.
Buy lor balance due. Call for
details (740)489·9146

l;he Daily

ALLEY OOP

MODD..EHOMFS

Central air, lull basement,
hardwood floors. detached

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c=~J._LLL~
· GAIZZWELLS
I \\-\ \\-11&lt; 1\Wl'i 11-1~ ~oct. iW.T
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A\101\-1~\?.. 10AI'&lt;\'

PISCES (Feb. 20· Mt:Hch 20) - What
gives you that slight edge in your com·
petitive career Involvements today is like·
ly to come from the tact that you'll be far
more imag1nat1ve than those who com·
pete agaiost you .
ARIES (Ma rch 2P.April 19) - Tak1ng a
spontaneous enlertatnrnent break m1ght
do you a world of good at this point in
time. if it 1s possible tor you to do so.
There's no need to feel guilty - "It's well
deserved.
,
TAURUS (Apr1l 20-May 20) -This IS an
·excellent day . to work on ass1gnments
that are In need ot Some refined finishing
touches. You're 1n tune w1tt1 your practical
and artistic sides today and will use them
well.
GEMINI (May 21·JlJne 20) - Your imag inatlva and crea.t1ve lnstlncis will be quite
pronounced today, especially in areas
pertaining to commu nicative skills.
Advance yoursell through writing, promoting and selling.
CANCER {June 21·July 22)- There are
times when 11 may be necessary to be
frugal and times when 11is OK to splurge
a little. You should "be able to combine
these two extremes wlthou1 abuses in
either area .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22') • Vou may l!nd It's
time to step In and take control ot a matter 1n which you 've been itwolved for
some t1me with another, who hasn 't man-

'I Know iTS HaRD

•

'·

UP TH&amp;AIR ."

SOUP TO NUTZ
To BeL-ieve.

\

'"llJRJJ

aged things too well . Do so now.

MA5toT

IM~COT

SH~. &amp;AID, 6ACK 1&gt;\~~1&gt;.

'r

e..&gt;T THeRe was a liMe
I was :rusT a NiNe N E'&lt;G&gt;-11 !WNo weakV

W&gt;*n

SO WA!i ~H~ COI..D
OR 00 WAr; !iH&amp; HOH

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Monday, September t8,

2006

Al-Qaida in Iraq
warns pope that
Islam will prevail, A2

lo. I Ohio Stata rollS ovar ·Cincinnati
BY Rus-ry

MIUER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS Ohio
State took awhile to get
untracked before Troy
Smith and Ted Ginn Jr.
hooked up on two touchdown passes and the topranked Buckeyes rolled to a
37-7
victory . over
Cincinnati on Saturday.
Much like its win at Texas
last week, Ohio State was
overpowering when it had
to be and always seemed to
come up with a big play at
the right time.
The defense held the
Bearcats ( 1-2) 10 minus-4
yards on 22 attempts. The
Buckeyes (3-0) had eight
sacks for minus 59 yards.
Still, they didn't have a
firm grip on the game until
tailback Antonio Pittman
raced 48 yards around left
end for a score with I0 minutes remaining to push the
lead.. to 27-7. Pittman fin ished with 155 yards on 16
carries.
Smith, who tossed passes
to Ginn when both were at
Cleveland's Glenville High,
completed 21-of-30 passes
for 203 yards before taking
most of the fourth quarter
off.
Ginn was limited to five
~atches for 33 yards, including touchdowns of 12 and 9
yards.
Linebacker
James

Laurinailis, who had an
interception and forced a
fumble against Texas, ended
a drive by the Bearcats by
pi~ king off a pass late in the
half. Malcolm Jenkins and
Anderson Russell also had
interceptions
for
the
Buckeyes, who open Big
Ten play next week; at home
aga·inst Penn State.
Leading just 13-7 at the
half, Ohio State got some
breathing room on its second possession of the· third
quarter. Pittman had runs of
13, 6, 8 and II yards and
Smith
hit
Anthony
Gonzalez for 13 yards to
give the Buckeyes a first
down at the 9. Smith then
found Ginn, who was crossing over the middle, ducking inside a potential tackler
for the touchdown.
After Pittman's touchdown run early in the fo.urth
quarter, Ohio State cruised
72 yards in just I :43 - with
mostly subs on the field to score on Maurice Wells'
9-yard run.
The opening half was not
easy for the Buckeyes, who
have a 12-2 record against
the Bearcats and have not
lost in the series since 1897.
Ohio State drove 28 yards
after forcing UC to punt on
its first possession, taking a
3-0 lead on Aaron Pettrey's
47-yard field goal.
But the Bearcats didn ' t
back down.

Jesse Jackson blasts
Republicans at
political summit, A2

ne
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. :;C&gt; , Nu. :1n

• Meigs wins over River
Valley. See Page 81

AP photo
Ohio State's Maurice Wells (34) runs into the end zone for a touchdown against Cincinnati's Haruki Nakamura. left, and
Dominic Ross Saturday during fourth quarter of a football game in Columbus.

utes of the half.
Smith connected on all
six of his passes for 79
yards in an impres sive drive
that put them on top to stay.
The key plays were Smith's
33-yard gainer to Gonzalez,
who was pulled down when
Dominic Ross grabbed his

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM
POMEROY - The Ohio
Department
of
Transportation has asked
the contractor, C.J. Mahan
Construction Co. to prepare
the· approach
to
the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge for
a Friday re-opening.
ODOT ·
Spokesman
Stephanie
Filson
said
ODOT has given t~e q:mtractor three days to rebuild

.

Grulza finished 18-of-22
for 202 yards with two
interceptions.
..,...All Ohio State was able to
muster in its next three possessions
was- another
Pettrey field goal but the
Buckeyes
finally
got
untracked in the final min-

• &lt;!.,.,_·,

~

t.• ••..

ODOT preparing bridge approach for Friday re-opening

SPORTS ·

Grutza tossed a 28-yard
pass to Derrick Stewart on
first down and later scrambled for 23 yards. Jared
Martin then caught his first
career pass for a 22-yard
touchdown from Grutza.
Kevin Lovell's kick gave
the Bearcats a 7-3 lead.

~w.myduiiyiiChtinei.t:,f.n "':

T ll l·:SllAY, SI·. PTEMHER IIJ , !!out.

jersey and held on tight, and
the 12-yard TD pass to Ginn
that capped the 80-yard
march.
Amid all the . big plays.
Ohio State 's offense was ·
hurt by penalties. They
were flagged eight times for
75 yards.

•

a counter-berm and remove and restore traffic. Filson was closed Saturday and related to the blasting activany loose materials on the . said ODOT's decision to
hillside across from the order a Friday re-opening is
bridge, where a rock slide based on the engirteers'
closed traffic over the inspection of the site and
weekend . Filson said the public safety considerations.
Meanwhile,
motorists
counter-berm is a temporary
barrier that is designed to making the routine trip
protect traffic from debris. . between Middleport and
ODOT engineers were at Pomeroy and back again are
the site of the new traveling Pom eroy 's flood
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge on roads or the Ohio 7 bypass
Monday to determine how as detours. The' Pomeroy
to stabilize the rock hillside side of the bridge approach

BIKERS VISIT ROCKSPRINGS
,.

remains closed to traffic:
however, motorists travel-·
ing to and from Middleport
may use the bridge.
Filson
said
ODOT
assumes the rockslide \vas
the result of blasting at the
construction site, but Sltid
even that has not been
&lt;.leterrnined for sure .
"Crews were blasting at
the site earlier in the day.
and we assume th e slide is

ity. but there was no blasting tak ing place at the time
it happened," Filson said.
ODOT Director Gordon
Proctor was scheduled to
visi t District 10 Tuesday to
review major cO nstru ction
pro1eus. and will visit the
bridge site as scheduled,
Filson said. She emphasized
that tl1c director's visit is in
no way rclatc&lt;.l to the rock
slitle.

Head start

Cubs slam Reds Rice runs wild as Rutgers beats Bobcats
CHICAGO (AP)
out there today."
Carlos Zambrano is hoping
The Reds began the day
his arm and bat can help the on the fringe of the wild·
Chicago Cubs achieve a card .race. With Milton
modest goal - avoiding struggling, they were out of
100 losses.
this game right away.
"You could tell real early
Zambrano hit his fifth
home run of the season and that he wasn't anywhere
pitched seven shutout close to his game," Reds
innings in his return to the manager Jerry Narron said.
rotation, leading the Cubs " I even talked to him
over the Cincinnati Reds before the game and he said
11-3 Sunday.
he was ready."
Jacque Jones, Ronny
Aramis Ramirez started
Cedeno and Zambrano all the scoring with an RBI
homered in the Cubs' single
and
Zambrano
seven-run first inning . capped it with a solo shot
Ryan Theriot added two off Milton's replacement,
home runs as the Cubs sent Sun-Woo Kim.
the Reds to their fourth loss . "You saw everybody
in five games.
chipping in and producing
Zambrano (15-6), who in that first inning, and it
missed his last two sched- was very refreshing to see
uled starts with stiffness in that," Theriot said. "And
his lower back, earned his those early hits and runs set
first win since Aug. 24. He the tone for the game."
gave up four hits, .struck
The Cubs started the
game under a cloud after
out si~ and walked four.
"I was feeling good . star Derrek Lee said he was
today," Zambrano said. taking a leave of absence
"I've told , you before, I from the club to care Jar his
never give up and I know I 3- year-old daughter Jada,
. can get to 16 or 17 wins." who is suffering from an
The Cubs have the worst undisclosed illness that has
record in the NL at 61 -89, affected her eyesight. Lee
and Zambrano had said he talked to the team privately
wanted. to pttch ag~m to before the game.
h~lp hts. team avotd the , "It looked like the guys
trt~le-dtgtl mark tn losses. were inspired," manager
He II h~ely get two more Dusty Baker said. "Derrek
. ~tarts, wah the .Cubs need- spoke to the team before
tng to wtn . twice tn thetr the game and he told the
. t go out and pi
fmal 12 games 10 stay away
from No. I 00.
guys o
ay
do
what
. ht -han der 1e ft a. . ball,, play harddand
Th e ng
,
game on Sept. 4 in the sec- you ve 15°1 to o.
.
and inning complaining of
The ftrst four Reds pttchback troubles. The Cubs ers gave up at least one
have actually been trying to home run.
. .
get Zambrano to cut down
Matt Murton ~omered tn
on his swing, thinking that t~e second off Ktm. The not
might be further hurting his· htt hts second career
back
homer. a solo shot, tn the
Za~brano's five homers . fourth off Jason Johnson
are the most by a pitcher a~d added a sol.o shot m the
since Mike Hampton hit SIXth off Jason Standndge.
seven for the Colorado
Theriot had never hit
more than one home run in
Rockies in 2001.
"I was a little lucky a season, httttng f1ve total
today," he said. "I didn't in parts of six mino~ lea~ue
try to make a hard swing se~sons. He doesn t thmk
and just tried to contact the he sever had a multthomer
ball. I didn't really make a game.
strong swing like ' before
"You ' re not out there trybecause I didn't want to ing to get in the air, you're
just trying to hit it hard,"
hun my back ."
Jones hit a three-run Theriot said.
homer, his 26th, and
The Reds scored three
Cedeno hit a two-run drive runs in the ninth "off Ryan
off Eric Milton (8-8), who Dempster.
Todd
left the game after record- Hollandsworth had an RBI
ing just one out. It was the double to end the shutout.
shortest outing of Milton's
Notes: Zambrano's five
career.
home runs this season are
Milton gave up six runs one shy of the Cubs' singleon six hits and threw just season record for pitcher,
22 pitche s. He left his last set by Hall of Farner
start with shoulder soreness Ferguson Jenkins in 1971.
and got a cortisone shot in ... Milton 's previous shorthis left elbow after his l,ast est outing came when he
start on Sept. 12.
got two outs on Sept. 18,
Milton said he 's probably 2005, against Pittsburgh ....
done for the year. .
The Cubs hit six home runs
"Obviously, I wasn't in a game for the first time
right," Milton said. "I prob- since Aug. 20, 2004, at
ably shouldn't have been Houston.

BY TOM

CANAVAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PISCATAWAY, N.J.
Ray Rice ran for .l90 yards
and two touchdown~ to
lead Rutgers to a 24-7 victory
over
Ohio
on
Saturday, givingthe Scarlet
Knights their first 3-0 start
·
since 1981.
Rice was the lone bright
spot for Rutgers' error-·
plagued offense, scoring on
a pair of 4-yard runs in collecting his fifth straight
I 00-yard rushing game .
Defense and special teams
set up all the Scarlet
Knights' points against
Ohio (2-1 ).
Linebacker
Brandon
Renkart recovered a fumble in the end zone for a
touchdown tale in the first
. half and Jeremy Ito added a
29-yard field goal for the
Scarlet Knights, who overcame a couple of early mis:
cues that put them behind
for the first time this season.
Austen Everson tossed a

!-yard touchdown pass to
Thomas Christy for Ohio,
which was looking for its
first 3-0 start since 1976.
The Bobcats raised some
concerns about Rutgers'
quarterback situation , picking off Mike Teet three
times.
After beating N.orth
Carolina and Illinois, the
biggest
concern
for
Rutgers in its homecoming
game was a letdown .
The · Scarlet Knights
offense . was off, but
defense and special teams
·forced four turnovers and
blocked a field goal to help
overcame it.
On the second play from
scrimmage, Tee! threw a
pass into the hands of linebacker Matt Muncy, giving
Ohio possession at the
17 .
Scarlet
Knights
Everson, who completed a
20-yard third-down pass to
keep the drive alive, eventually found Christy on a
third -down,
play-action
pass for a 7-0 lead.
Ito, who had hit 12

straight field goals, missed
a 31-yarder on the next
possession, but Rutgers
defense got things going
when safety Ron Girault
intercepted Everson and
returned it 39 yards to the
Ohio 31.
Teet (6-of-16 for 83
yards) comp'leted ' an 11yard. third-down pass to
Shawn Tucker to keep the
drive alive and Rice, who
had 29 carries, went off the
right side to tie the game.
Special .teams took over
on the next two series.
With Ohio facing a fourthand-8 at its 34, James
Townsend broke through
after a low snap and hit
punter Matt Lasher, forcing
a fumble. Kardell Young
recovered at the Bobcats
16, setting up Ito's field
goal for a 10-7 lead.
The Bobcats were faced
with another punt from
their own 15 on the next
series and · Rutgers came
with an all-out rush . Lasher
was hi't on the ensuing 23yard punt but the offi~ials

didn't call a penalty
because . the
Scarlet
Knights might have gotten
a hand on the ball.
Rutgers took over at the
Bobcats 38 and needed
only five plays to score,
with Rice dragging safety
Michael Mitchell the final
2_yards for a 17-7 lead.
A 52-yard punt 1 by .Joe
Radigan and an illegal
block against Ohio gave
·the Bobcats the ball at their
own 5 with I :24 left in the
half. ·On third down,
Quintero Frierson sacked
Everson in the end zone,
forcing a fumble that
Renkart recovered for a
touchdown.
It marked the second
straight week the defense
scored, the first time
Rutgers has done that since
1994.
Girault also blocked a
short field goal attempt by
Lasher in the third quarter
and Courtney Greene made ·
·a one-handed inte~ception
to end another drive by
Ohio in the fourth quarter.

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OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Clarence Oscar St.
Clair Jr.
• Herald Newlan

INSIDE

Brian J. Reed/photo

• E. coli outbreak only
the latest to be traced to
produce from California.
See Page A2
• Vatican opens secret
archives on years leading
up to World War II.
See Page A2
• Teaching scholarships
available. See Page A3
• Trevor Thomas coming
to First Southem Baptist.
See PageA3
• Fire truck parade set
for Thursday.
See PageA3
• Holzer designate
tobacco users quit site.
See PageA3
• Report show modest
fund-raising in legislative
races. See Page AS
• Ohioans enjoying.some
relief at the gas pump.
SeePage AS

Members of two motorcycle clubs, Ohio River chapter of Devil's Disciples
and the "Delivered"
Chapter of the Christian
Motorcylists Association
helped residents of
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center enjoy the early fall
weather by offering motorcyle rides around the facility recently. Here, John
Trout of Rutland; a member of the Devil's
Disciples, takes Emma
Adams on a spin, while
Jeff Davis of Syracuse and
the local CMA receives a
"thank-you" hug from
Frances McKenzie. Such
service projects are an
important part of both
motorcycle clubs.
SubmlttH photos

WEATHER

•

Some sternwheelers got a head start on finding a place to
dock for this weekend's Sternwheel R1verfest. Four boats
were docked at the Pomeroy Levee on Monday afternoon in
anticipation of the festiva l which begins Thursday.

2 Col. x 4"

.

STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM
I

~
Detallo on Page A6

INDEX
SECftONS- 12 PAGES

2

Calendars

A:3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics
Annie's Mailbox

2 Col. x 2"

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports

Borders and Artwork may vary.

Bs
A:3 ·

A4
As
B Section

Weather

only affects Gavin because
the company's pollution control technology has prevented
CHESHIRE - A trial similar ~louds or mists from
began Mbnday in U.S. ocCllrring at other AEP
District Court in Columbus to plant,..
·
decide if American Electric
The company has also
Power ~hould be ordered to shared its technology with
reduce sulfuric a~id emis- other power companies,
sions from its Gen. James M. McHenry said .
Gavin Power Plant. as
The trial began on the day
requested by a local organiza- AEP announced it was named
tion that JTied suit against the to a "Climate Leadership
electric utility.
Index" released bv the
Attorneys representing Carbon Disclosure Project
Citizens Against Pollution. · (CDP). a coalition of global
which filed the suit, told the investors that issued a survey
Columbus Dispatch the trial of responses from Fortune
has national ititplications 500 companies to the issue of
because a pollution ~ontrol climate change.
"A EP has been acti velv
technology installed at G&lt;!vjn
· that CAP blames for an acidic engaged in etforts aimed at
mist is being put in place at succesfullyaddressingglobal
power plants across the coun- climate change since the
try.
emly 1990s. and we me 'ery
AEP contends that it has proud to be recognized for
created pollution controls at taking a leatlership role in our
Gavin that lwve reduced the industry ,on this im1e," said
amount of sulfuri&lt;; acid emit- Dennis E. Welch. AEP's
ted fro m the plant. The utility senior vice president foren vialso said it's not required to ronment. safety and health.
notify regulators and nearby
AEP is a member of the
residents of r~leases from Chicago Climate Exchange,
Gavin becau se it has notifi~d a voluntary. lcgal'ly binding
them of a wide range of gree house gas · em i ss ion~
r~leases that can be expected reduction and trading profrom the plant. the Di spatch gram. As a member of this
. l'epqrted.
organ izati(m, AEP said it 's
CAP, formed in 2002. ' is committed to gratl uall y
responding to what it callctl reduce. avoid or se4U:ester its
the blu[! cloud or plume that greenhouse gas emissions to
came from Gavin after tech- 6 percent below the ave rage
nolog y to ietlucc nitrogen c&gt;fits 1998and200,J emission
oxide from its emis;ions was le,·els bv 20 10.
installed. Gavin was the fiN · In response to environmenAEP plant to bring in the tal and health concerns uristechnology in 2001.
ing frnm resitlents. AEP
That summer. and in s u~ - offered a property buyout to
ceeding years '" alleged by . residents of the village of
CAP. the acidic mist has been Cheshire in 2002. The buyout
responsible for respiratory was accepted by the majority
ailments and other •health of property owners. with
problems for individuals liv- ahout 20 of Ches hire \ onei11g near the plant.
time 221 res ident s choosing
'The thing we· re after is to remain.
clean air.'' Paul Stinson. one
An annexation effort that
ofCA P'sorganiLcrs. told the expanded the vi ll:tge·s
Dispatch .
boundaries. l'Ompkted foiStinson was unavailable lowin g negotiati&lt;)lb with
Submitted photo .for furth~rwmment Monday. AEP. wa' approvc·d by Galli a
Southern Administrative Assistant Scott Wolfe donated over
AEP
,pokeswoma n County Commissioners and
$200 worth of books as resources to the Southern math pro- Melissa McHenry to ld tl1c hccamc effective in October
gram. Accepting·the books is Math Coach Tricia McNickle.
newspaper that CAP's suit : &gt; t)OS .
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDAtLYTRIBUNE.COM

New Southern math program
hopes
to boost .test scores
"'

't\\ANK YO{]

1 Col. x 2" -

Trialbegins in citizen
group suit against AEP

A6

© 2.006 Ohio Valle)· Publishing Co.

RACINE - For students,
earning a low score is nearly
always an undesirable event
but for the Southern Local
School District a low score
in mathematics has resulted
in over $80,000 in grant
money to fund an Ohio based
Mathematics
Coaches
Project.
The project has been
under review in Columbus
City Schools and also
Franklin County fpr the past
two years. Southern was the
only district in Southeastern
Ohio to qualify for the grant
in
the
Perry-Hocking
Educational Service Center
region.
' Southern would have
liked not to have the distinction of being at risk in mathematics, however, the district is pleased to have the
Please see Math, AS

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