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GARDENING
FOR~

WEEKLY FEATURES

· Heather can be as pretty a
plant in your garden as it is
blllllketing the bonny hills
of Scotland.
.
And it looks especially
pretty for a long time; its
pilik flowers unfolded ha~k
tn July, and enough are still
left this fall to spread a rosy ·
haze over the backdrop of
tiny, dark green leaves.
Good garden mates for
heather include rhododendron, lingonberry, cranberry, lowbush blueberry, and
heath - all members of the
heath family.
Heath . looks similar to
heather but blooms much
earlier, in winter and spring,
and its flowers have a
greater range of colors,
including white, various
shades of red, even a few
yellows and greens.
Heathers vary in their

winter leaf color, so much
so that you could also create
a colotful winter garden just
by planting different varieties. A sampling of winter
color could include the gold
leaves of Gold Haze, the
ted-orange leaves of Golden
Carpet (gold in summer),
the bright red leaves of
Wickwar Flame, and the silvery leaves of Silver Queen.
Come spring, leaves of most
varieties change back to
bright green.
The whole heath family is
somewhat finicky about
summer climate, and very
finicky about soil.
They enjoy full sunlight,
but do not like hot weather.
A good place for them is on
the east side pf your house,
where they can ·be shielded
from the hotter, late afternoon sun.
Heatll family members
grow best in soils that are
acidic, porous, moist and

Meigs H;idt.·sop~omo~
conduct fund-rmser, A3

in moderation

He.ather can add cheer
lv l£E .R£1Ct4

SuncJaY, October l, 2006

rich in humus. You can ere- other heath family mem- plants are cheery, a whole
ate these conditions by mix- bers. And it's a good thing · bed - or field or moor ing a bucketful of acidic too! Alihough one or a few of heather can be spooky: A
peat · moss with the soil in
the planting hole, then
maintain , a year-round
mulch of some organic
material, such as sawdust or
· shredded leaves, on the bed.
Occasional . sprinklings of
pelletized sulfur further
maintain acidity.· Th~;se
plants do not lj:e rich soils,
so fertilize li~tly with an
acidic-type fertilizer.
. Heathers (and heath) are
-low, spreading plants whose
thin stems turn upwards
about a foot high. Young
plants can be left alone, but
as they age they'll need
occasional .pruning to keep ·
them respectable. · Use a
hedge or grass shears in
spring, shortening stems by
about one-half.
Neither heather nor heath
spreads too much, so they
can share a bed nicely with

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
r;o CE:-.ITS • \'nl. :;h. l\i o.

SPORTS
• Meigs girts place
fourih at Rio Grande
Invite. see Ptllge a1 .

::11

'\J0:\11.\'t . OC I"OBLR

.

OPS~.

sets hearings on AEP application
.

'

BY BRIAN J. REED

Ohio
headquarters
in . · Two organizations, the can !;mild its IGCC power
This summer, the PUCO
· Colum!ms. He said the pub- Ohio Energy Users and the plant in Lebanon Township, approved the frrst phase of
lie hearing in Pomeroy will Industrial Energy Users of uicluding results of a cultur- cost recovery for ·the plant,
POMEROY - The Ohio be open_to written or oral tes- Ohio filed motions to inter- al resource investigation. which is expected to cost
Power Siting B9ard has set timony from anyone, while vene in the case, and lEU. Firms workihg for AEP are $1 .3 billion. AEP customers
two public hearings in the Columbus hearing wiD Ohio also filed a motion "to now working oti that inves" . are now paying for the
December as part of be limited to testimony from amend or dismiss the appli- ligation, which considers front-end engineering and
American Electric Power's the applicant, AEI&gt;, and any cation. Those motions were historical and environmen- design phase of the project.
application to locate a interveners wbo have filed denied in June.
The design of the plant
tal impact of consln!ction at
clean-coal power plant in opposition to the siting plan.
The OPSB will ultimately the site.
.
was expected to be complet·
Meigs County.
Rennie said the public can . approve or deny AEP's plan
The OPSB process is sepa- ed in October, and while
Jeff Rennie of AEPsaid the attend the adjudicatory hear- to locate an Integrated rate from the cost recovery · AEP first thought it might
OPSB set a public htiaring ing, and that so far, no inter- Gasification
Combined process that is decided by.the be
completed earlier,
for 6 p.m. on Dec. 12 at . veners have filed in opposi- Cycle at its Great Bend site. PUCO. AEP plans to corn- Rennie said the design work
Meigs High School, and an .lion to AEP's applicanon.
Rennie said the OPSB is plete its·design work on the is now about a month
adjudicatory hearing at 10
"That is likely to change expected to consider anum- plant this month, and will behind schedule. He said it
a.m. on Dec. 14 at the Public down the road," Rennie said ber of factors in making its then seek approval for recov- is not expected to be comUtilities Commission of Friday. .
decision as to whether AEP . ery of construction costs.
pleted before November.
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETII SERGENT

0BI1UARIFS
·Page AS
• Bernice K. Saxton, 88

- ~~~ -,
§'tRsnilws.

See Page A3
• Marine killed in
V~etnam gets tribute
nearly 40 years later. ,

See Page A5

• GCC achievement
list. See Page A&amp;
· • Masons award
scholarship to ou
student. See Page A6

POMEROY- A preliminary study concerning cOntracting police services for
the Village of Middleport .
through the Village of
Pomeroy raises many questions, including the question
of when or if the Pomeroy
Police Department could
handle protecting another
2,800 citizens.
·
When that question was
recently posed to Pomeroy
Chief of Police Mark E.
Proffitt ·he said th1ii:s~ri:~=·J

was

stiii~~· PI

and it hasn't even
brought before Pomeroy
Village Council at this point,
He added the proposal
wou!O only be implemented
if both the Middleport and
Pomeroy . Village Councils
wanted it as well as the citizens of both villages.
"The Middleport committee brought the issue to
tis/ ' Proffitt said. "I can't
say whether this proposal
is wanted by either villa!le
,at this point but if the VIllage governments and citizens of both villages want
the resources that Pomeroy
has to offer then that •s
what I want."
Proffitt recently met with
the committee along with
Mayor John Musser who
referred to the proposal as

.
Beth hflenl/ .....
Around 130 motorcycles filed into the Syracuse Nazarene Church for the Second Annual Biker Sunday which reported 304
in attendance.

in
BY BETH SERGENT

'~mature."

.

.

GARAGE SALE
Oct. 2nd
9-6
3498 St. At. 141

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.

Across from t1te City Park GaHipolis

Wellston Oh 45692

Addaville Elementary
FALL FESTIVAL
Saturday, October 7, 2006
Dinner from 4:30 • 6:00 pm
Games 5:00 - 7:00pm ·
Bingo 5:30 · 6:30 prn
Auction 7:00 pm · 1?

Sweet Shop will be open
throughout the evening
Anyone wishing to donate an item
for thtJ auction may contact
Melody McKnight 441-0107 or

Jimanetti's Pizza
"At the White House"
Bucl&lt;eye Hills Rd.
Rio Grande
Mon &amp; Tue
Spaghetti Night 4·9 pm
All you care to eat
· s.erved w/salad, garlic
bread &amp; Red wine

" "" · rn)daily~t&gt;ntim·l . &lt;"om

:wn6

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELC6M

shoolilgs put school '
safety back in spotlight.

YEAH WE GOT ftiAT
Parkfront·Diner &amp; Bakery

:.!.

••
PD-IIr

• "'No perfect security' -

SandWiches, Soups; Meatloaf,
Lasagna, Fried Chicken, Steaks,
.
Red Velvet Cake? ·

'

•

INSIDE

Reception for State
Senator John Carey
Tuesday, October·3, 2006
· 5:30 • 7:30 pm
Gallia County Republican
Headquarters
2nd &amp; Pine
Free Food, Fun &amp; Prizes
Paid for by Citizens tor Carey Karen
Hammond, Treas. 401 S. Arl&lt;. Avenue,

winners,A6

•

heather moor is where the
witches
meet
in
Shakepeare's " Macbeth."

In this photo
provided by
Lee Reich,
Heather can
be as pretty a
plant In your
garden and it
·looks especially pretty for
a long time;
its pink flowers unfolded
back in July
and enough
are still left to
spread a rosy
haze over the
backdrop of .
tiny, dark
green leaves.
AP Photo

BULLETIN BOARD

Golf benefit

Bakers Rack, chair,
clothes, craft
supplies, and lots
more.

Wanted

Lot
Buy or Rent for new
mobile home

645-0156 . 645.0125

OH-KAN
COIN CLUB
Coin Show
Sunday, Oct. 8
9am -4 pm
Holiday Inn
Gallipolis
JEWELRY .REPAIR
20%0FF
Now thru Oct. 31st
Acquisitions 446·2842
151 Second Ave. ·

.

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL
MEETING
Tues., Oct. 17 7:09pm at
Masonic Lodge, Middleport.
Reservations must be made
by Oct. 4
Adults $11.00 Child $8.00
Entertainment,
Door Prizes
NOW IS THE TIME TO CALL
for spraying of Asian beetles,
spiders and crickets.
Call EllTERMITAL PEST .,
CONTROL
740·446·2801

NOTJGE .
Eagles Aerie #2171

Nomination and
. Election
of Two Trustees
Nominations Oct. 2nd · 7:30pm
Election Oct. 16th·
7:.3 0

om

BSERGENTC&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

"We didn't go to them,
they came to us and asked to
meet with Mark and
.• Food bank donation.
myself," Musser said. "We
met with their committee as
See Page A6
we would meet with any
group that has anything positive to do. We stressed to the
committee
up front that this
WEATHER
was our first take on anything and any plan would
have to go before our council before it was approved."
If the contract (estimated
to cost Middleport approxi·
mately $200,000 a year)
was
approved
the
Middleport committee estimates it would save its village $100,000 qr more
annually but .· essentially
eliminates the Middlepqrt
DetlollooinPceAe
Police Force as it is now. ' ·
Proffi-tt said at this point if
the proposal was approved
he understood there would
be no officers stationed at
the Middleport Police
2 SF.CnONS- 12 PAGES
·Department, no prisoners
housed at the Middleport
Annie's MailDox
A3 Jail,
•
no Middleport Police
Dispatchers · and
no
Calendars
A3 Middleport
Mayors Court.
Classifieds
82-4 All of these sen.:ices would
be centrally located at the
Comics
Bs Pomeroy Police Department
which uses the Meigs
Editorials
County
Sheriff's Office and
A4
Washington County Jail to
Obituaries
As house prisoners. The cnntrol
of the department would
BSection remain in Pomeroy though
Sports
the services would be
A6 shared with. Middleport .
Weather

INDEX

©aoo60hioVolleyPublishingCo.

•'

Please •

Pollee. A5

'

SYRACUSE- The population of Syracuse increased by
around 300 people yesterday when 129 motorcycles and
their owners invaded the Syracuse Nazarene Church for its
second annual Biker"~unday.
While the message was about 2,000 years old the service
was unconventional to appeal to a crowd of known nonconformists who sang along to an arrangement of .
"Amazing Grace" strikingly similar the Animals' "House Not exactly a Harley Davidson, Braden Cunningham takes
of the Rising Sun" with a little "Knocking on Heaven's his bike for a spin down \he hillside after the Biker
Door" by Bob Dylan thrown in for good measure.
Sunday service ·where several gathered for a hog roast on
a
beautiful fall day.
Pluse see Blken. AS
• ..
..,.------------.,-.,-----------------------~--­

Maps showing ·old flood levels donated to m~seum .
STAFF REPORT

Margaret
Parker of
Meigs County
Historical
. Society and
Jim Freeman
of the Meigs
SWCD look
over old Ohio
River charts
found recent· ·
ly at the
Meigs SWCD
Office. The
district
donated the
charts. which
have detailed
outlines of
Ohio River
floods from
1913 to
1937, to the
Meigs County
Museum .

NEW~YDAtlYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - There are
many different sorts of
maps at the Meigs Soil and
Water
Conservation
District: soils maps, topographic maps, floodplain
maps among others.
But when district employees found an old set of Ohio
River charts during recent ·
cleaning, . they knew they
couldn ' I just put them back
away to be forgotten.
The four Ohio River
charts, surveyed in 1913
and 1914, show the Ohio
River's contours and elevations from. Middle(:tort to
Racine, but what is unusual
is that these maps were
carefully updated to show
the extent of flooding in
1913, 1933, 1936 and 1937.

Ple•se 5ee

~pi.

A5

"""-~...J

•

Submitted plloto

�•

NAnoN • w~=~ t ~· ~.

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

M()nday, 0ctober.2, 2006

BYTHEBEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
• Bv HAROLD OLMOS
.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

' BRASILIA. Brazil Brazil's leftist president
faces a runoff for a second
term after voters denied him
an outright victory Sunday,
1\lliid last-minute allegations
his party engaged . in a
scheme of electoral corruption and dirty tricks.
· The Oct. 29 runoff was
announced by election
authorities after 98 percent
Of the vote had been count~d. with President Luiz
Jnacio Lula da Silva getting 48.)l percent compared to 41.4 percent for
the cent·e r-right Geraldo
Alckmin, Sao Paulo state's
former governor.
' It was a stunning defeat
for Silva, after polls less
than a week ago predicted
him trouncing Alckmin
with 59 percent of the vote
- far more than the 50 percent plus one vote needed
to win the' contest in the
first round:
Although S(lva said earlier Sunday he had been confident of a first-round victory, his campaign manager,
Marco Aurelio Garcia, said
the president and his campaign staff "always prepared ourselves for a twofound election."
·
Silva saw his once-commanding lead plummet on
the eve of the vote as his
Workers' Party was battered
by allegations that party
officials tried to buy a mysterious dossier that apparently contained incriminating information . about a
political rival.
Major newspapers ran
front -page photos over the
weekend showing piles of
money allegedly meant to
buy information showing
corrupt dealings by . an
opponent. Local media
reported the photos were
.leaked by federal police.
Silva's party claimed that
Alckmin 's supporters were

AP Photo

President Luiz lnacio lula da Silva, candidate for re-election, center, greets a woman overcome by emotion at the school
where Silva voted in Sao Bernardo do Campo, Brazil, on Sunday. To the right is Brazil's first lady Marisa.
involved, and fil~d a complaint Sunday with a judge
demapding that Alckmin 's
candidacy be declared
invalid because of the leak.
The judge has said he would
consider
the
case.
Alckmin's campaign has
denied involvement.
Six members of Lula's
party, including an old
friend who ran his personal security detail, . face
arrest warrants for their
alleged ·roles in efforts to
buy the damaging information and Silva fired his
campaign niana~er days
· before the election. The
president has . repeatedly
denied knowledge of any
wrongdoing.
Alckmin, of the centrist

Social Democracy Party,
voted Sunday in Sao
Pau'Jo's upscale neighborhoot! of Morumbi. He said
he was sure there would
be a runoff election and
that "ethics will defeat
corruption."
While Silva was also
criticized for failing to
appear in a presidential.
debate last Thursday night,
the corruption allegations
were a deciding factor for
many voters.
"I'm not going to tell you
who I voted for, because
the vote is secret," said
Adelaide Venissato, a 53;
year-old woman 'who owns
a clothing store. "But I will ·
tell you who I didn't vote
for. I dido 't vote for Lula.

We expected so much and
we got very little in terms
of security and clean government." .
··
·
But others seemed willing to·overlook the corruption allegations because
they feel their lives have
gotten
better
during
Silva's four years in office.
He has brought a stable
economy and social programs that have lifted millions out of poverty.,
"I voted for Lula because
he V(orried about '\Y.Grkers ·.
and the poor," said Waldo
Lima Mendonca, a 49-yearold construction worker.
"And the best prc:sident for
a worker is one who used to
be a worker."
Silva's efforts to reduce

poverty played well in the·
slums of Sao Paulo and Rio
de Janeiro.
"Zero
Hunger,"
his
expanded food stamp-like
program, guarantees about
$30. a month to virtually all
poor families provided they
vaccinate their children and
keep them in school. It distributes $325 million a

month to 45 million of
Brazil's 187 million citizens. the program has
helped
millions
of
Brazilians out of poverty,
studies show.
More than 126 million
Brazilians voted in the election for the president, governors for all 26 states and
the federal district, all 513
fed~ral deputies of the
lower house and 27 of the
81 Senate seats.
Voting is mandatory in
Brazil and those who fail to
justify their absence both
within Brazil and abroad
may be fined.
A poor farmer's son who
became a fiery union
leader and was later elected as Brazil's first leftist
presiden_t, Silva .surprised
..many by govermng a~ a
moderate once · takmg
office. His deft handling .ef
the economy won him
backing on Wall Street and
in Brazil's shantytowns.
His seqmd-term priorities
include reforming the tl!X
and labor rules.
Silva's change in style
didn't mean embracing the ..,
politics of Washington. He ·
cl"shed
head-on
with
President Bush over a U.S.
proposal to' create a conti- ·
nental free-trade area, having termed it a U.S. scheme
to "annh" Latin America.
Largely because of Brazil's
opposition, the free-trade
area never took off. ·
Associated Press Writer
Alan Cler~denning contributed to this story from
Sao Paulo.

and don ' t know if this was showed at all. Three of the now embarrassed to show
absolutely innocent or if I late arrivals announced they her scars in a bathing suit.
should have said something. would be leaving early for
I used to be a cutter, and
Dear Annie: Something Is this OK~ Is my reaction other parties. We were left my solution was not to hide
happer!ed a year ago that I some problem of mine'7 with I 0 adults for a dinner my scars but to ignore thern.
we· d prepared for 20.
My family· and · friends
still find upsetting and can- ' Still Upset
Dear
Still
U
pst:l:
·
It
not stop thinking about.
These guests are all edu- understood,
ami
when
My ex-husband and I both sounds as if your ex is doing cated professionals in their incredibly rude strangers
were invited. to my grand- some minor .flirtation. with 40s, Is it unreasonable to asked me what had hapson's high school gradua- his daughter-in-law. Trust expect people to RSVP, pened, I told them I was
tion. We both stayed at my her to handle it. If she has a show up on time and stay mauled by a tiger or that it
son's home. although in problem, she will discuss it for · the entire party, or at was top-secret government
with her husband. If she is least tell us in advance if business.
separate rooms.
In all the iime 1'\•e vis ited encouraging it, your son will . there is a change in plans? Is
My scars have faded, and
·my son and his family. my eventually notice. Either this behavior becoming , it's not a big deal anymore.
daughter-in-law has never way, it's generally best if the modus operandi for the 21st I wish "Embarrassed'' the
provided sweets, cookies, ex-wife (and mother-in-law) century, or do we just hap- be'St of luck in finding what
.
pen to run with an inconsid- works for her. -.· Virginia
cakes and the like, but on stays out of it.
Dear Annie: My husband erate crowd? - Deeply
this occasion. she did. She
Dear Virginia: We're
glad you found a way to get
, offered the~e various good- · and I invited 24 friends to Disappointed
Dear · Disappointed: through that difficult time
ies to her father-in-law (my , my birthd11y party. We sent
ex), and he enjoyed them. invitations three weeks · Both, we're afraid. Too with a sense of humor.
. immensely. He expressed ahead · and requested an many peop\e treat an RS V~ Thanks for your support .
this pleasure by putting a RSVP. We stated in the invi- as "Reply if You Feel Like
Annie's Mailbox is writhand on her waist or saying tation that we would be·. It," and they think only of ten by Kathy MiJchell and
she deserved a hug. and the serving dinner and that gifts their own preferences and · Marcy Sugar, longtime edihug often culminated with a · were nol necessary.
needs, with no considera- tors of the Ann Landers
kiss on the lips.
·
We had to phone a few tion for yours. Here's the column. Please e-mail your
This occurred· a number people, but eventually. we rule: After three attempts, questions to anniesmailof times in my pre'sence. I received
20
positive anyone who is invited but box@comcast.net, or write
felt very uncomfortable wit- responses. My husband and doesn ' t respond, fails to to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
nessing such intimacies , I shopped, cleaned and show up, repeatedly leaves Box 118190, Chicago, lL
and to me, they were cross- spent over $200 on food and early QT is otherwise incon- 60611. To find out more
qgg a line. ~y daughter-in~ drinks: Our f!rst guests siderate, is not invited about Annie's Mailbox,
law seemed a willing par.tic- showed up an hour late, and again. Period.
·
and read features by other
ipant, although it's possible one couple arrived three
Dear Annie: This is for Creators Syndicate writers
she did not know how else hours late. Three friends · "Embarrassed," the woman and cartoonists, visit the
caine without their spouses, who had cut herself to help Creators Syndicate Web
to deal with it.
I love my daughter-in-law and two couples. never with emotional pain and was page at www.creators.com.
BY KATHY MITCHELL
ANO MARCY SUGAR

Meigs High

sophomores
conduct

VISit us online at.

fund-raiser

www.mydallysentlnel.co~

Your online·source for news

I

I
i

'No perfect security' shootings
put school safety back in spotlight
JON SARCHE .

shootings in a school year SWAT teams to show up are
has ranged from three now trained in "active
(2002-03) to 24 (2004-05), shooter" programs that call
DENVER - A bearded according to · National for the first officers on the
drifter
walks
into a · School Safety and Security scene to enter the building ·
Colorado school and fatally Services. The firm does not and work as quickly as pos~oots a studept before tak- track
cases
before sible to locate the gunman,
ing his own life. Wisconsin Columbine.
Trump said.
authorities charge three
"That's why we were able
Park County Sheriff Fred
boys with plotting a bomb Wegener was among the to isolate it to just one room
~ttack on .their high school law enforcement officials and get everybody else out,"
and, two weeks later, a stu- who eagerly apflied for Wegener said. "Still, you
dent in a rural school federal aid to bee up secu- can't. prepare for something
allegedly . shoots his princi- rity at Platte l::anyon High like this. You do the best
pal. A gunman bursts into a Schogl in Bailey, the site you can."
Vermont elementary school of last week's attack in
Student Zach Barnes, 16,
looking for his ex-girlfriend which a man held six girls also said student~ last year
&lt;)nd guns down a teacher.
hostage before killing one practiced drills for emer:' All of this in the past and himself.
gencies including a gunman
1110nth alone.
A deputy was assigned to in the school. Students were
: Since
the
1999· be the school's resource told to remain calm, taught
Columbine massacre that officer - essentially, its where to go and how to
left · 15 people dead, there security guard. But that leave the school. Still, there
has been a determined effort guard was called away on appeared to be at least one
among administrators, prin- sheriff's
business
last glitch Wednesday.
·
~ipals
and teachers to Wednesday and gunman
"We were sitting there in
improve school safety. Law . Duane Morrison walked math class and ,o ver the
, l!nforcement officers across inside with two handguns. intercom
they
said,
· the nation and around the He reportedly sat in the . ·Students and teachers, we
world have added training school parking lot and wan- have a code white, repeat
~ecifically inte~ded to dered the hallways for as code white/ and nobody
ltddress school violence.
long as 35 miimtes before really knew what a code
; But experts say there is the siege began.
white was," Barnes said.
Simply no way to guarantee
Despite the death of 16He said his teacher pulled
that a strang(!r or student year-old Emily Keyes, a sheet of paper from her
~on't be able to injure or things could have been
desk, checked it and then
~ill on school grounds.
worse. authorities said.
herded her students. into a
; "There's no perfect secu"Basically, the tragedy of nearby classroom that had a
Qty, from the. White House Columbine taught law solid door. After about 25
1S;l the schoolhouse," said enforcement and educators minutes, a police officer led
~enneth Trump, president how
to avoid future · them into the. hallway and
o-f the National School tragedies," Gov. Bill Owens out of the school.
·
Safety
and
Security said. "In a couple of signifiColorado has left deciServices consulting firm in cant ways. the tragedy of sions on providing security
Cleveland.
Columbine .may
have in schools up to some 172
: Since Columbine, school helped prevent an even school boards, but state lawMficials have gotten better worse tragedy (here)."
makers said they will look
41 preventing student vioHe said educators had at training and other issues
lc:nce, he said. but authori- been instructed in August following the Bailey attack.
tks can't prepare for every on what to do. The school
Providing security guards
problem .
was also designed using at every entrance to every
• "When you factor in concept learned from the school would be difficult,
wnpredictable
outsiders, Columbine attacks, which said Senate President Joan
when you have a roaming helped authorities keep the Fitz-Gerald, D-Golden, but
lhonster walking into the gunman in one room.
others said video cameras
~hools. we have.to be realisEver since Columbine. and security sy.stems could ·
tic," Trump said. 'There are · school officials have· been help fill the gap.
·
:lOme incidents you're not taught ·to write emergency
"lf we could plug in some
going to be able to prevent." response plans and practice technology, that would
Trump's firm counts 17 them, to lock ~own schools help,"
said
George
Qonfatal school shootings so and evacuate when it Voorheis, superintendent of
far this school year. begin- appears safe. That seemed Colorado's largely rural
Ring Aug. I. There were 85 to work well in Bailey as Montrose &amp; Olathe Schools
~e previous school year hundreds of students were
bi,trict RE ll
and 52 in the 2004-2005 whisked to safety.
• Associated Press Writers
i;hool year.
Law enforcement officer; · Carherine nai and Steven
· Since Columbine in 1999. who once were tau!!ht to set K. Paulson conlrilmted to
the number of fatal "hool up a perimeter and~ wait fpr rhis reporr.
BY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

•

•

'

YOUR AD INSIDE ACOMIC-STRIP

Public meetings

night will be observed, with
inspections, draping of the
charter. Meeting at 7 p.m.
Monday, Oct. 2
Members to wear white.
LETART FALLS
POINT
PLEASANT,
Letart Township Trustees, 5 W.Va. - The Marine Corps.
p.m., office building.
League MGM Detachment
Southern #I 180 will hold its monthlY,
RACINE Local School Board, special
meeting at 7 p.m. at tht:
meeting, 3 p.m., high school Point Pleasant
li.brary.
media center.
Meetings are held regularly
Thesday, Oct. 3
on the first Tuesday of every
ALFRED
-· Orange
montti at the library.
Township Trustees, 7:30
Wednesday, Oct. 4
p.m., home of the clerk,
MIDDLEPORT
Osie Follrod.
Middleport Literary Club, Z.
· Wednesday, Oct. 4
p.m. · Wednesday, at the
• REEDSVILLE -Olive
Pomeroy Library. Gay
Township Trustees, 7:30p.m., · Perrin to review "Teacher
Olive Township Garage.
Man" by Frank McCourt. : ·
PAGEVILLE
The
Friday, Oct. 6 .
Scifio Township Trustees
POMEROY
- PERJ.
wil meet at 6:30 p.m. the &lt;;:hapter 74, 1 p.m. , Meigs·
Pageville town hall.
Senior
Multipurpose ·
Saturday, Oct. 7
Center. Dr. Douglas Hunter
SYRACUSE ~ Sutton is guest speaker.
Township Trustees, regular
.meeting, 9 a.m.. Syracuse
Village Hall.
L

Church events ·

Monday, Oct. 2
MIDDLEPORT
Revival · services will be
held 7 p.m. tonight through
Oct.
7 at the Middleport
.Monday, Oct. 2
RACINE - ,Order of First Baptist Church, corner
Eastern Star Chapter 13, of Palmer and Sixth Streets.
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. , Speaker will be Pastor Billy
Zuspan wbo will give meslodge hall.
Sl)ges on the judgment.
Thesday, Oct. 3
There
will be special musi~
MIDDLEPORT
every
evening.
·
·
Middleport Lodge 363,
POMEROY
-·
Revival
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at the
hall. Work in the fellowcraft services at Mt. Hermon
degree. Take non-perishable United Brethren in Christ
food iterns for Grand Church, 7 p.m. starting
Master's food bank pro- today through Oct. 8, evan·
gram. Master Masons invit- gelist Wayne McLaughlin
from Chillicothe, church is
ed. Refreshments.
POMEROY - Oh-Kan located on Wickham Road.
Coin Club will hold a coin just off Texas Road . .
MIDDLEPORT ·
exhibition from 9 a.m. to 3
· p.m. at Farmers Bank in Revival at Middleport
Pomeroy. Everyone coming Church of the Nazarene,
in to view .the exhibit will · tJ;trough Wednesday, 6:30
be given a coin. There will p.m. on Sunday, 7 p.m.
weeknights. Ray Lasalle
~so be a free drawing for a
will
preach. Spec1a:J singing,
door prize.
Sunday, Oct. 8
SYRACUSE
POMEROYPet bless,
Wildwood Garden 'Club
ing
for
pets
and
animals.
·
open house, 6:30 p.m.,
Syracuse
Community 1: 15 p.m., Grace Episcopal
Center. Lori Kelly of Bob's Church parking lot.
Market will speak on mums.
GALLIPOLIS - French
Colony Chorus, local chapter of Sweet Adelines
1\Jesday, Oct. 3
International, invites all triPOMEROY - Evening
county area women to Visit clinic hours until 6 p.m. at
practices, 7 p.m:, Tuesdays, Meigs
County
Health
,, ' .
at 259 · Third Avenue, · Department. Immunizati&lt;;ms,
Gallipolis in the Gallia blood pressure, blood sugar
Planning the basket fund raiser for the sophomore class are the officers an advisory com· County Visitors Center, call and cholesterol assessments,
mittee members, from the left, front, Olivia Davis and Rachel Davis, and back, Maria 992-5555 for more informa- WIC, pre-natal . services,
. Meadows, Courtney Mays, Crockett Crow, Ernie Welsh, Ashley life, and Brandon Haning.
head liGe screenings, envi".
tion.
CHESTER Chester ronmentill health, vital statis-·
Council 323, Daughters of tits information and -answerS
America, potluck supper at to health questions from
6 p.m. Dtstrict Friendship public health nurse.

Clubs and
organizations

POMEROY - · Students
of the sophomore class at
Meigs High School are
using a Marauder b~sket
in a fund raisier for class
projects.
The contents of the basket include over $500 ·in
gift cards and 'certificates
.and another $500 in doni!led items . from local businesses and . crafters. The
basket will be given away'
at half-time at the. BelipreMeigs Game Oct. 27 at
Bob Roberts Field. For
· more information contact
any sophomore class member or call Meigs High
School, 992-2158.

Qther events

--photo

Leone discusses STRS news
Leone discussed positive guests from Portsmouth,
POMEROY
Dennis
Leone, retiree board mem- developments, including a . discussed the ORTA instiber of the State Teachers new suspension policy for gating some changes and
Retirement System, dis- board member misconduct, said that all presidents of
cussed "what's happening a new vendor ethics policy chapters in Ohio will be
n9w in the STRS" at the now in place, new . restric- invited to a meeting in
recent meeting of the tions adopted on which November.
A brief business meeting
Meigs County Retired board members can serve as
Teachers Association, held of'ficers, and an increase in followed, ·with secretary's
STRS investment earnings. and treasurer's reports given.
at Trinity Church.
Joan Corder said there
He also note&lt;i that STRS
Gay Perrin, president,
opened the meeting with the unfunded liability stands at were some possible candipledge to the American 51 years, unfunded liability dates for scholrships and
Flag. Maxine Whitehead hurt by the 35 years/88 per- . that she has advertised an
gave devotions, "Teach Him cent rule adopted in 1999, . Oct. I 0 application dead Gently if You Can," and payroll growth of active line . The group decided to
offered prayer before the STRS members down to 2.1 give two scholarships if
meal was served to 18 ,percent instead of the nor- money is available. A donamal 4.5 percent, and the tion to the scholarship fund
members and three guests.
· Cards . were signed for . health care stablization fund was made in memory of
Jim Huf( .
.
Eileen Buck, Dorothy is solvent only unti I 2021.
Perrin
reminded
Gay
Jake and June Frowine,
Chaney and Barbara Tripp.

Zirkle.birthdays celebrated

Gizmos~· Ga

I

mm~:

To pl41ce an ad please contad:
Dave o.r Brenda ·
at 992-2155
•

The Daily Sentinel
,.,

•

2006

...

'

•

Monday, October 2,

Community.Calendar

Daughter-in-law can .handle minor flirtation

•

PageA3

RACINE - David and
Ann Zirkle of Racine hosted .
a birthday party for their
granddaughter,
Kyrie
Swann , and their great
granddaughter, Lily Dugan,
on Sept. 10. .
Kyrie was 12 on' Sept. 14
and Lily was 2 on Sept. I I.
They shared a large birthday
cake provided by Kyrie's
mother and stepfather,
Brenda and Mike Seagraves
of Mid~leport. Kyrie 's half
of the cake was a Dale
' Jarrett #88 car and flag, and·
Lily's. half was "Cat in the
. Hat."
The two received many
gifts.
Also attending were
Lily's parents, Amber .and
Arnie Dugan of Zanesv11le;
her grandmother, Debbie ·
Maynard and Joe Quivey of
f·~yrle Swann and Uly Dugan
Pomeroy; Lily's cousin,
Lily's great-great grandof W.Va.
Taylor
Maynard
Kyri
c\
mother. Roberta Swi ~her of
Sending
gifts
were
Pomeroy; and Bruce. Terri .
and Travis Hysell of Nitro . great grandmmhcr and ;\lew Ha\en, W.Va.
•

members to keep track ·of
volunteer
hours
and
thanked the group for
school supplies brought in
for God's NET.
Marge Fetty was welcomed as a new member.
Flowers dona'ted by Debbie
Roush were given to Fetty
and Maxine Whitehead.
Perrin said a representative
from the Ohio Consumers
Council and the Park 4
Barbershop Quartet will be at
the Oct. 19 meeting.

Smile! Now you c.n own h pict.J,. ot mat urtlorgdable
pt~per. P!1o&amp;ol be&lt;:ome flmelee8
when framed 01 printed on a mug 0&lt; lnOlJIIJII pad

l'I"'(JJffeff' caph..nd In ttw

'*''

�'.

-

•

•
•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Mond~y,

Page~ .
Monday, October 2,

Obituaries

2006 -;.

•

'

Calif. spinach growers take
stock of their industry after
FDA deems most spinach safe

TODAY IN HISTORY

Bv JUUANA BARBASSA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SAN FRANCISCO Relieved farmers say they
are heartened by the government's. announcement ·that
it's safe to eat most spinach,·
but they feel uneasy about
their industry's future,
knowing it may take time to
win back public confidence.
During the two-week
warning about E. coli in fresh
spinach, growers said they
re-examined the safety of
their operations, anguished
over the suffering of the 187
people sickened and one who
died, and weathered signifi . .
cant losses as they watched .
crops go to waste.
"Everybody's just trying to ·
regroup," said Teresa Thome,
with industry group Alliance
for Food and Farming.
It's too early to tell how
hard the industry was hit,
but agriculture experts said
unprecedented economic
damage was likely.
In California, where threequarters of all domestically
grown spinach is harvested,
fanners could endure up to
$74 million in losses, accordin~ to researchers working
With Western Growers, which
represents produce farmers in
California and Arizona
Last year's spinach crop in
California was valued at
$258.3 million, and each
acre lost amounts -to a roughly $3,500 hit for the farmer.
The government gave a
partial endorsement to the
· industry on Friday, with the
U.S. - Food and Drug
Administration announcing
that most spinach is now
"as safe as it was before

..
..

from PageA1

fetters to ihe editor are welcome . . They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editirrg, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters 1••ill he published. Letters should be in
good taste, addres.~ing issues, rrot personalities. 'Letters of
thanks to organi;:ations arrd indil'iduaJ., will not be accept- .
ed for publication.
·

The Daily Sentinel
Reader SeniiCes
Correction Policy

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.

Our main concern in all stories is 1o Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 1~1 COun Street.
be accl!rate . If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
in a story, call the newsroom at "(740) postage pB.id af Pomeroy.
992·2156
Member: The AssociateO Press anti
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Poatmaater: Send address correcOur main number Is
tions ta The Daily Ser1tinel , 111 Court
(740) 992·2156.
Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

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Meigs County

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

READERS'

.V IEWS
•

many strangers as I have guided· ineffectiveness of for 911 , it would only benerecently. One might ask "the war on terror" and the fit a select group with fancy
what is drawing these peo- total ubdication by the buildings and equipment. If
ple to Meigs County. Surely Republican Congress of any we go with the 50-cent "
nqt job opportunities. Crime role of oversight. ·
charge, it's not going to hurt
I hope that the voters anyone.
Dear £dihJr:
is on the rise.
For less than the price of a
Sept. 16 was the ChildsSome people say, "Well, it across this nation see
candy
bar, we can benefit
McClure wedding. The ain't Mayberry anymore." through this game of smoke
reception at .Riverbend Arts Well, folks, I think 1t's time and mirrors and are as out- ourselves. the sheriff's ·
Council ended on not such a . the residents of our small . raged as they can be. Do department. Our sheriff has
great note. As guests were towns take our "Mayberrys" people understand the worked so hard for our benleaving, we discovered the back. Lend your eyes and implications of what just efit in opening the jail. We
'
several friends' and rela- ears to our officers. Report happened when Bush and have commissioners who
Congress acted like they have concerns for the resitives' cars were broken into. things you see.
·
Even the father of the bride
If enough things are were butting heads and then dents. They really try and
reported 11nd the courts se1 quickly reached a "compro- are great. · ·
was no exception. This did examples of ·no tolerance
I think we need a hospital
mise" that made everyone
not only take place in ~ th'
worse
than .a fancy I) II. We
Middleport but other place~
or IS type of behavior, · happy?
have
no care in Meigs ·
th
perhaps the message will be
' Our nation has just taken
m e ar~a.
taken. After all, I believe very grave · steps toward County after 9 to II a.m., ..
If you ve never had y~ur · the law-abiding citizens of
except the
emergency
purse s~olen, thts ts qmte Mefgs County far out num- endorsing war crimes and squad. I would rather have
shredding the Geneva
.canceling ber the criminals.
frustratmg, .
Convention
beyond repair . care. Can you afford $440
thmgs, espectally w~en you
Twilll Childs
for the trip to the hospital .
'
for future generations.
Middleport
almost never get a hve perWhat is so outrageous is and if you are uninsured ·
son to talk to anymore.
"
the Democratic leadership you pay ·full · amount plus
Surely being ·right in the
"sitting on their hands," . the time lost getting there?
middle of town one would
saying nothing about these So let's support our comthink that someone saw
outrages. as the Republican mis-sioners and sheriff's
something. I don ' t fault our
Dear Editor:
leadership prances about department, and not the
law enforcement officers.
How astounding.
sales tax. While it doesn't
When only one or two offiBush admits to torture and tries to look like they appear as a lot, add it to the
cers are trying to watch a and justifies/defends it as , are doing important things. price of a cat. Save it in supSherry Atherton
·
town or the whole county, necessary,
port of a hospital which is
Long Bottom
it is extremely difficult.
The Congress feign s a big
desperately needed.
Many times our officers brouhaha ~d then rubber
By the way. I have 'no
back each other up.
stamps Bush's CIA torture
connection to ariy of the
I wish we could pay our program, provides immuni·
above-mentioned groups. I
policemen more or hire ty for past war crimes, and
only know that when you
more officers to watch over everyone is smiling.
unn~sary have no family to help it
us. Since that's a problem
Thi s is a ca5e of the one·
would help older people to
for our smiill towns, it\ party cabal of war criminals
Dear Editor:
have a hospital than a fancy
time for us as citizens to orchestrating an evem to
.
In reply to letters urging 911.
take action .
mitigate two of their biggest , our commissioners to put a
D.B. R11wlands
"
Never have I seen so election 'liabilities: The mis- one-cent tax on the ballot
Pomeroy

Citizens:
Take action

Grave steps

Sales tax

' .

Marine killed in
Vietnam gets tribute
riearly 40 years later

•

Bernice K. Eastman Saxton, 88, Pomeroy, died Sunday,
Oct. I, 2006, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
She was born April 12, 1918 in Meigs County. daughter of the late John and Mae Bryson St. Clair. Bernice
was .a homemaker.
·
In addition to her .parents she was preceded in death by
her first husband Homer Eastman and her second husband
Leland Saxton, a brother Avery St. Clair, a sister Pauline
Kohl and a daughter in law Cl yda Eastman.
She is survived by her s&lt;&gt;ns: Bob (Sheila) Eastman of
Gallipolis and Don Eastman of Delaware, Ohio; four
grandchildren: Brent (Teresa) Eastman, Kevin (Susan)
Eastman, Brian Eastman and Jeannie (Dorn} Almstutz; four
great grandchildren: Tyler, Adriime; Reid and Peyton
Eastman; seveml nieces and nephews.
. Services will be I p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2006 at the
pomeroy Chapel of Fisher funeral Home, 590 East Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Burial will follow . in Meigs
Memory Gardens. friends may call from 5 to 8 p,m.
Tuesday at the funeral home. Online condolences .my be
sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

When George W. Bush
weakness? And what is a infidels their enemy."'
111 Court Street • Pomer;,y, Ohio
says "Islam is peace," and
reflexively toleraqt, postThis comes stmight from '
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
Tony Blair insists the war
multicultural Westerner to the Quran. "0 believers," ·•
www.mydallysentlnel.com
now begun "has nothing to
make of it? Our dauntless the Quran says (Sura 5,
leaders may repeat that the Verse 50), ''do not hold Jews ·'
do with Islam," some of us
lslamist threat has nothing and Christians as your· allies.
scratclr our heads and try,
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
.Diana
do with Islam, but, frankly, They are the allies of one
brows furrowed, to reconWest
cile their soothing words
their mantra is getting a iinle another; and anyone who · ·
Jim Freeland
ridiculous. Writing in the makes them his friends is '
with
our
frightening
vision:
•
· Publisher
the dirty war on %stem
Wall Street Journal, Amir surely one of thc;m.'' As his- ·:
civilization waged by evil
Taheri, an Iranian author and toriun Paul Johnson noted in
Charlene Hoeflich
forces in the name of Islam.
joumalist,, recently declared · Na~ional Review, such '
' '
General Manager-News Editor
that "to claini the 11ttacks ··canonical · commands" The experts tell us militant Osama'bin Laden.
In Cairo, the,paper report- had nothing to do with Islam along with "sl~y the idolIslamic fundamentalists, or
"lslamists," represent a nar'- ed, Frida{ prayers at , the amounts to a whitewash... arers wheresoever you find .,
row, if murderous, fringe. famous A Azhar University It's also, he wrote, a "disser- them" (Sura 9, Verse '5) - •
They
number no more than mosque ended with a rous- vice to Muslims. who need "cann_ot be explained away ,
Congress shall make no law respecting an
10, maybe 15, percent of all ing chant of: "America is . to cast a critical glance at the · or soltened by modem theo- ·
·establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
Muslims. That · estimate the enemy of Arabs and way their faith is taught, logical exegesis, because ..
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
there is no such science in '
works out to somew)lere Muslims. Let us die in our lived and practiced."
·
Taheri,
frank
as
he
was,
·
Islam."
Johnson goes on to ·
between
foO
million
and
war
against
America."
In
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
Delhi's
largest did not offer how-to·. explain that contrary to the ·
150 million people. Which New
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
is a lot of murderous fringe. mosque, the imam urged specifics. But with reporters evolving nature of both
the Government for a redress of grievances.
Meanwhile, where is that "moral" support for Talibllll. . mining Islam for informa- Chri.stianity and Judaism,
peaceable majority over- jihad. In Nairobi, services tion previously limited to Islam has never undergone
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution flowing lslamdom? Are progressed from attacking specialists, it's clear how any update, reformation or
they filling the streets iri the United States to the important this call for enlightenment since its
qnity with America's effort parable: "Every Muslim is Islamic reform really is. As inception in the seventh ceoto eradicate lslamist terror- Osama bin Laden."
the horrors of our Taliban tury. "Is'lam," he wrote, .•
ism, "marginal" though its
Every Muslim, of course, is enemy have become com· "remains a religion of the ~
supporters may be? Hardly. not Osama bin Laden. But mon knowledge. we also Dark Ages. The seventhToday is Monday, Oct. 2. the 275th day of 2006. There Only last week, UPI report- why don't more Muslims say learn, for example, that a century Quran is still taught '
are 90 days left in the year.
.
ed that Pakistan's Tahirul so, quite loudly · and very similar strain of' Islam, as the immutable word of
Today's Highlight in History: On Oct. 2, 1967, Thurgood Qadri had become "the first . specifically? Muslim condo- Wahabbism, is practiced God. any teaching of which
Marshall was sworn in as an associate justice of the U.S. prominent Muslim scholar lences after Sept. II very and exported by our so- . is literally true. In other , , .
Supreme Court; he was the .first black appointed .to the to condemn Osama bin often carne across as rather called ally Saudi Arabia. words, mainstream Islam is
nation's highest cqurt.
Laden and the Taliban so generic expressions of sym- Examining a textbook for essentially akin to the most · ·
On this date: In 1780, British spy John Andre was hanged strongly in public." Even if pathy, equally as suitable for a one of five compulsory reli· extreme form of Biblical "
in Tappan, N.Y.
'
the wire service missed a natural disaster as for a terror- gion classes for Saudi lOth· fundamentalism."
In 1835, the first battle of the Texas Revolution took bin
Laden-condemning . ist act of war committed by graders, The New York
This stagnation is a key to ' ' .
place as American settlers defeated a Mexican cavalry. near cleric here or there, the sin· · co-religionists. Little sen5e of Times qu,oted a lesson the problem. The· solution, '·
· ·
the Guadalupe River. ·
gularity of Qadri's achieve- the magnitude of events is regarding whom · "good however, is beyond the ·
In 1919, President Wilson suffered a stroke that left him ment . is striking. Indeed, being communicated, and, Muslims" should befriend. grasp of non-Muslims. This
partially paralyzed.
sampling some of the thus, little recognition of the "After examining a number most critical, internal chalIn 1941, during World War II, German armies began an world's largest mosgues, urgent need for civilized jleo- of scriptures which warn of lenge falls to those Muslims
all-out drive against Moscow.
The New York Ttmes pie of all faiths and nations to the dangers of having around the world who desire ·
In 1944, Nazi troops crushed the 2-month-old Warsaw recently found clerics from denounce this evil, vocifer- Christian
and
Jewish to live and worship in peace. ·:
Uprising, during which a quarter of a million people England
Pakistan ously and by name, and arra&gt;' friends, the lesson con(Diana West is a CQlumnist ·
to
were killed. ·
. denouncing America, salut- themselves in watring soli- eludes: 'It is compulsory for for The Washington 1imes. .·
In 1950, the comic strip "Peanuts,'' created by Charles M. mg the Taliban, or even darity against it:
the Muslims to be loyal to She can be contacted via .
Schulz, was first published in nine newspapers.
declaring solidarity with
What accounts for this each other and to consider dianawest@verizon.net.)
''
In 1975, President Ford welcomed Japan's Emperor
.
Hirohito to the United States.
In i 985, actor Rock Hudson died at his home in Beverly
Hills, Calif., at age 59 after battling AIDS.
In ·1986, the Senate joined the House in voting to override President. Reagan's veto of stiff economic sanctions
against South Africa.
Ten years ago: Mark Fuhrman was given three years' pro·'
bation and fined $200 after pleading no contest to perJury
for denying at OJ. Simpson's criminal trial that he'd used
acertain racial slur in the r.ast decade. An AeroPeru Boeing
757 crashed into the J&gt;actfic Ocean, killing all 61 passengers and nine crew members on board.
·
Five years ago: NATO Secretary-General Lord
Robertson said the United States had provided "clear and
conclusive" evidence of Osama bin Laden's involvement in
the attacks on New ·York and Washington. Acting
'"
Massachusetls Gov. Jane. Swift unveiled security meaSures
that included a new security chief at Logan International
Airport, where hijackers boarded the two planes that
'
smashed into the World Trade Center.
One year ago: A tou'r boat capsized on New York's Lake
George, killing 20 elderly passengers. Playwright August
Wilson died in Seattle at age 60. Actor-comedian Nipsey
.
Russell died in New York at age 80. .
Today's Birthdays: Singer-sollgwriter Don McLean is 61.
Actor Avery B'rooks is 58. Photographer Annie Leibovitz is
57. Singer-actor Sting is 55. Rhythm-and-blues singer
Freddie Jackson is 48. Singer-producer Robbie Nevil is 48 ..
Rhythm-ahd-blues singer Dion Allen (Az Yet) is 36. Acttesstalk show host Kelly Ripa is 36. Singer Tiffany is 35. Rock
singer Lene Nystrom is 33. Actor Efren Ramirez is 23.
Thought for Today: "There's one way to find out if a man
is honest - ask him. If he says 'yes.' you .know he is
crooked.': - Groucho Marx ( 1890-1977).

.

As for . that question of
Pomeroy having the ability
to take on another even larger
village, • Proffitt
answered, "Absoll!tely."
Proffitt said if the contract
was approved it is suggested that four additional officers would be hired b)' the
department, including one
salaried investigator for
both villages which .neither
currently
possesses.
Middleport would also have
access to Pomeroy's offi cers already on staff, including a full time code enforcement officer and full time
dispatchers and clerk of
courts services. This would
make the department the
largest law .enforcement
agency in the county.
" If a contract was
approved for police services
in Middleport the good citizens of thai village would not

Maps

'

CHILLICOTHE (AP)"The
NVA
(North
The family of a Marine who Vietname se Army) were
died in a helicopter crash in waiting for us ," · Swete
Vietnam thanked comrimni, said. " ... We were getting
ty members for a memorial hit al] over the place. The
service held nearly 40 years aircraft was on fire. The
after his death.
engine stopped, and we
About 200 people gath- ~rashed." Swetc was later
erect Saturday at Greenlawn · rescued.
Cemetery to honor Marine
' After the service, Swete
Pfc. Paul Harris. who was presented Harri s· medals
19 when he died in March and ribbons. including a
1967. His body was never Purple Heart. to Harris'
recovered.
father, Clyde. Later. a color
The sole survivor of the · guard
from
Lima
crash, retired Marine· Lt. Company, a ColumbusCol. Robert Swete, came based Marine reserve unit
from his -home in Germany that suffered heavy casualfor the service.
ties in Iraq last year, pre"Paul · was a superb exam- sen ted the family with an
pie of an exceptional American flag .
Marine,'' Swete told the
The se rvice was orgaHarris family. "He was nized by · members of
respectful of others artd there- Chillicothe · High School's
by commanded respect."
class of 1965 . who put
Swete, Harris and others together plans for a reunion
were on a mission to rescue iast year and realized noth members of a reconnais- ing had ever been done in
sapce team engaged in heat- · Harris' honor.
AP Photo
ed battle with North
The Harri s family was
A Marine from Lima Company presents Clyde Harris , right, Vietnamese ·' troops. Swete gratefuL
with a U.S. flag during a memoriat service for his son. said.
"It brings closure," said
Marine Pic. Paul Harris, at Greenlawn Cemetery in
A landing zone looked Paul Harri s' sister, Elsie
Chillicothe ori Saturday. Paul Harris was 19 when he died in clear, but it was a trap, he Shabazz. ''I ju st wish we
said.
had his remains here.''
March 1967. His body was never recovered.

this event."
But the warning remains
in place for spinach recalled
by Natural Selection Foods
LLC of San Juan Bautista,
which covered 34 brands in
packages 'with "Best if Used
By" dates between Aug. 17
and Oct. I.
Growers on California' s
Central Coast have another
four or five weeks to harvest
Bv DAVID HAMMER
before shutting down (or the
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
winter, when spinach production moves to the southWASHINGTON
em valleys and Arizona.
Ohio's
U.S. Senate candiBecause they stagger
plantings to allow for an dates triea to paint each
uninterrupted supply, many other as t;xtreme, each refergrowers still have young ring to his opponent's past
votes on Capitol Hill. but
greens maturiflg.
When California Farm · the numbers and 'facts didn 't
Bureau officials visited the always add up.
In a contentious debate
S!)linas Valley on Friday to
on
national
television
meet with fanners, they found
fields of overgrown spinach, Sunday, Democnltic chaltoo big for the processors who lenger Sherrod Brown took
had ordered them under con- issue with Republican teletract, fann bureau spokesman vision ads saying that ~ he
had voted against body
Dave Kranz said.
armor
for U.S . . troops. He
"Farmers are just -waiting
said
he,
not GOP Sen. Mike
to see '\f they' II have
De Wine, had pushed to
orders," Kranz said.
Growers are trying to sal- help troops who did not
.vage what they can of their have adequate body armor.
"You are absolutely unbecrops, but many say a Joss
of public confidence is the lievable. How can you say
biggest threat to the indus- this when you, Sherrod,
try. Before the E. coli out- voted five different times
. break, . health-conscious · against funding for body
Americans had driven -up armor - when it counted,
demand for spinach in sal- when it was real money?"
ads and other healthy meals. De Wine said.
The DeWine campaign
California farmers have
more than doubled the amount listed five votes by Brown
of acres dedicated 'to spinach against legislation that
to keep up with·consumption, included money for body
from I 5,000 .acres in 200 I to armor. but one of those was
31 ,000 in 2005, with much of to simply set aside the
the growth being driven by money for certain purposes.
demand for pre-washed, pack- not a final decision' on·
appropriating the money.
aged spinach:.
Also. four of the five
votes came before the currentconllict in Iraq began in
only receive a very effective
2003. and three of them
·police department but would
realize an immediate change
in the atmosphere and condi-·
tions that Middleport residents have now because of
the resources not avai Iable to
from PageA1
them atthis time."
Proffitt m)lintains services
Making a "joyful noise•·
in Pomeroy wouldn't suffer
aside.
the attention turned
with the additional mantowards
a testimony frorri
power and ·th~t he couldn't
speak for Pomeroy Council, Jacky Stewa11 who had rode
the ·mayor or anyone ·else 400 miles from Gastonia to
except himself and the abil- be at Biker Sunday. A
recovering addict. · Ste,wart
ities of his department.
"If this proposal is talked about how he felt letapproved I wouldn' t give ting Jesus Christ into his life
more to Middleport and less changed it for the better.
to Pomeroy or vice versa, · "I. ve had the Lord in my
there would be no separation life for two years now and
of villages in the depart- I ran with ihe devil for 35
ment's eyes,'' Proffitt said. and all it got me was bust·
"W~ would do our job to the ed, disguSted and cou ldn't
best of our abilities and our be tru sted." Stewart said
services will be provided to to "amens ...
·'Try to let God into your
. both villages and delivered
life
just once:· Stewart
with the same respect. We
don ' t want to alter these vil- said. "You can always go
lages' sense of their own back to pick up your misery
identify or community. This and sorrow." .
Stewan ·s testimon y . WJS
would only be about providing services and resources." followed by Pastor Ste ve

through the years. so it 's
only ·fining these maps be
di splayed at the Meig&gt;
County
Museum," said
from PageA1
Steve Jel)ldns, Meigs SWCD
program administrator.
"We realized we had.
The Meigs SWCD Board
something pre,tty special of Supervisors agreed that
here," said Jim Freeman, the maps. should. be moved
Meigs SWCD wildlife spe- somewhere else for people
cialist. "They arcn 't much to use, and approved donatuse to us here anymore, but ing them to the museum. On
we thought they could be of Friday. the maps were presented to Margaret Parker.
historical interest."
"Aooding has been such president of the Meigs
an important part of the his- County Historical Society.
Compared to modern
tory of Meigs County

· The Daily Sentinel • Page As

'

Be: nice K. Easb11an Saxton

•

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

www. mydailysentinel.co~

2006

..

The gap between Islam and peace ~

The Daily ·sentinel

October 2,

•

.

..

Senate debate's main arguments depend on how votes are counted·

Bikers

maps, the old chart&gt; a're
more like works of an with
beautiful script notes. a deep
patina and canvas backing .
" I wa:; impressed with the ·
detail on them." Parker said.
'' My thobght was that ·we
could get them framed ...
they need to he put out
wh~e people can see them.
"It gives us a good opportunity to look at the past
compared tn Lhe present day
river and see ho-.. the land·
scapc has changed . . . can
see exactly 11 here the 11 .Iter
wm, at (durinu the tloods 1. ..
d'

•

were before Sept. II, 200 I.
One vote clearly at issue
was the October 2003 supplemental spending bill for
the war in Iraq. Brdwn
voted againstthe $87 billion
measure because, he said, it
gave the Bush administra·
tion "a blank check" to give
no-bid contracts to favored
compani~s, including the
one . once led by Vice
President Dick Cheney,
Halliburton Co.
But when "Meet the
Press" moderator Tim
Russert asked if Brown
would consider~measures ·to
cut off fundin~ for the war,
Brown said, • No, I would
not vote against the troops
in the field."
·
DeWine kept -at the issue
in Sunday's debate. He said
Brown, who has been in the
House for 14 years, had
voted 15 times against
increasing military funding
"when it really counted."
De Wine referred to the IS
times Brown voted against
Defense Department spending packages that the House
and Senate had agreed upon
since 1993. DeWine's campaign later pointed to at
least 26 other times Brown
voted against the House 's
initial version of military
spending bills.' Lawmakers
often must vote for the same
legislation several times . if
the House and Senate ver·
sions differ.

But five of the IS votes
were on preliminary measures for setting aside
money, not for actually
spe nding it. · In addition,
jusr two of the votes were
for final funding of military operations in the current conflict.
Still, De Wine could point
to six times that Brown was
in tlie minority of his own
party in -voting against military funding packages,
buttressing the senator ' s
contention that Brown is
too far to the left.
Another shouting match
between the candidates
erupted over DeWine's contention that Brown !Voted I 0
times against increased
intelligence funding during
the 1990s. Brown had
already accused De Wine, as
a member of the Senate
Intelligence Committee, of
failing to hold U.S. intelli·
gence accountable for mis·
takes in Iraq.
"You know better than
making charges like that .. .
that are just unsubstantial·
ed," Brown said.
· .Republicans tried to back
up the claim with a list of 10
votes Brown cast from
August 1993 to May 1998
in favor of Democratic
amendments· that would
have cut intelligence funding. But they counted three
of the amendments twice.
Brown
questioned

Combs, founder of Leave a message of how, as he put it.
Mark Ministries, who'd "Heaven was not for the
trave led with members of good or the bad but for peohis Grove City Nazarene ple asking Jesus Christ to
Church on their motorcy- come into their hearts ... He
cles to anend Biker Sunday then reminded those in
attendance of the · word
in Syracuse.
"
· Combs •. delivered a mes- RSVP which is French for
sage that focused on heaven "please respond."
"Please respond."' Combs
and just who was getting in.
With a mixture of humor said. encouraging tho se that
and sincerity Combs soft hadn't ahd wished to accept
spoken vo ice delivered Jesus Christ into their lives
names that may or.may not to do so. And, with the supbe on the list for heaven as port of not on ly the church
determi t]ed by a ·poll taken regulars but the leather. clad.
by Americans which includ· . vest and blue jeans wearing
ed Mother Teresa whom 70 visitors, several did just that
percent ' of
Americans with Combs' help.
So with a modem mix of
believed would get into
heaven, Oprah who got 60 video screens. wireless
percent of the vote and 0. J. microphones, electric gui Simpson who scored near tars, a drum se t and tw o
the bottom of the pile with hogs roasting outside the
Second
Annual
Biker
20 percent of the vot.e .
Sunday
ca
me
and
we nt
The list tied into Combs

DeWine 's votes in favor of
various free trade agreements that Brown said have
led to Ohio jobs going overseas. Proponents of free
trade, however, say open
international markets promote job growth.
DeWine noted he helped
convince President Bush to
set tariffs against unfairly
priced steel imports in ·
2002, and he worked with
Sen. Robert Byrd, DW. Va., -to redirect federal
fines against foreign com·
panies to the companies
hurt by the sale of undervalued imports. ·
"Neither of those laws ..
that he ... talks about are
still in effect," Brown said,
adding that he too worked
on those issues in a bipartisan effort.
Brown is right that Bush
lifted his steel tariffs in
2003, when the indu stry
had recovered significantly
from a c risis. But some earlier steel tariffs remain in
effect atid automakers
argue they are artificially
inllating steel ~rices. and .
therefore car prices .
Also. the so-called Byrd
amendrp.ent was repealed
las1 y,ear. but it remains in
effect for a11other year and
companies receiving the
money will be ab le to keep
doing so as long as they
can show t!1ey are still hurt
by the imports.
though so me rode aw&lt;1y
with more than they'd anticipated : but . that secret is
from their mouths and
hearts to God's car.

A!!t;!4

Auditions: A Christmas
Caroll0/1 &amp; 10/2
..
Ariel Jr. Idol Talent
. Competition
10/2 &amp; 10/9
MTV's Reality Check
Tour 10/3
Ohio Valley Symphony
IOn
www.arieltheatre.org
The Ariel-Dater Hall

428 Sec. Av•. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-A RTS (2787)

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The Daily Sentinel

LocAL • STATE
BY JoANNE VIVIANO
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Submlttocl pftoto

Members of Shade River Masonic Lodge #453, Chester, collected and donated 200 cans
of food to the Meigs Cooperative Parish food bank. Rev. Keith Rader, director, received the
·
items from Car! Robinson, Worshipful Master of the lodge,

Golf benefit winners

Submitted photo
Secret Angels, Inc. , founded in memory of Pamela Surson, a 1972 graduate of Meigs High
School, held it's second annual Southeastern Ohio golf benefit recently at the Pina ~ ­
Golf Course. The winning team was, from left, Rory Bartrum, Gene Holly, Scott Bartrum and
Paul Michaels.
·

LIST

\

Owens, Connie Potts.
Kelly Ramey, Shaumber
Reed, A~anda Searles,
Jessica
Sharp,
John
Spencer, Teresa Spencer,
Rachel Stolzenburg, Lisa
Stone, Lindsay Taylor,
Shirley Thacker, Nancy
Vanderberg, Ilo Walton ,
Joyce Ward, and Jennifer
Warren.
Students earning a 3.5 or
better grade point average
were Tammy Casto, Angela
Collins, · Kristi Cremeans,
Pam Davis, Keri Evans,
Bessie
Fisher, . Curtis
Gilbert, Nyoka Hairston,
Veronica Holcomb, Edna
Holman, Brandy Kasee,
Amanda K;ing, Amanda
Mcfann, Chatel Myers,
Angie
Rippey,
Erica

Williams, Derek Wilson,
and Maria Young.
Those students who
achieved a 3.0 or better
grade point average include
Alice Cremeans, Jason
Cremeans, ·
Rhonda
Glassburn, Lovona Harris,
Charity Howell , Lottie
Israel, Angela Johnson,
Teresa Kidd, Megan Kropf, .
Charla Little.
Amanda Lucas, Terri
McClellan, Keshia Oldaker,
Brandy Rodgers , Jessica
Roush, Julie Sargent,
Amber Shadle, Katherine
Small, Jennifer Smallwood,
Janie
Smithka,
Tina
Spencer, Tammy Stewart,
Lori Taylor, Regina Walls,
Judy
Wilcoxon , .and
Jennifer ~ord.

COLUMBUS
Children in deep sleep
awoke to recordings of thetr
mothers' voices - calling
them by name and ordering
them out of their bedrooms
- · even if they · slept
through the beeping sound a
smoke
alarm · makd,
according· to a small study.
The stud~ reaffirms pre vious research that shows
what works for adults doesn't always work for children, said Dr. yary Smith,
·one ·Of the .co-authors.
"Clearly, the strategy that
has been tried and true and
used for years ... fails miserably for children," said
Smith, director of the
Center for Injury Research
and Policy at Columbus
Children's Hospital. .
A safety expert said the
study was·a start.
"We have a piece of the ·
puzzle now and we're really
happy someone has taken
up this research and we
hope it moves forward,"
said John . Drengenberg,
manager of consumer
affairs for Underwriters
Laboratories Inc., an independent organization that
certifies safety for consumer products.
The study of 24 children
ages 6 to 12 found that 23
awoke to the recorded voice
of their mother · saying
"(Child's first
name)!
(Child's ftrst name)! Wake .
up! Get out of bed! Leave
the room!" Fourteen of the
children also awoke to the
traditional tone alarm,
meaning nine awoke only to
the voice. One child didn't
wake up to eitner.
The children woke up
faster to the voice, at a
median time of 20 seconds
compared with three minutes for those who awoke to
the tone alarm, according to
the study by Columbus
Hospital
Children's
re~,I!Ms being released
Monday ·in Pediatrics, the
journal uf the American
J\~.i!~~wY .of Pediatrics.. .
'·Bolll ·aJ.Iums were created
using a large speaker and
sounds measuring ( 100
decibels, about four tflnes
louder than ·levels used in
standard home . alarms, .

Page,A6

Monday,
October 2,
.

Monday••• Patchy dense
fog i·n the morning. Mostly.
Cltynteglon
sunny. Highs in the upper
Forecast lor Mond8y, Oct 2
· High I Low temps
70s. Light and variable
winds ... Becoming southf&gt;,liCH
west around 5 mph in the
..
afternoon. .
Toledo•
Monday night... Mostly
76° ISO"
clear in the evening ... Then
becoming partly cloudy.
YOWlgiiiDwn •
Lows in the lower 50s.
72° 143°
South winds around 5 mph.
M=oafield•~
PA
· Tuesday... Mostly ·sunny. •
75" I 45o t:...__:)
Highs in the mid 80s.
Southwest winds 5 to l 0 mph.
Thesday night ... Mostly
Dayton• :/'Y-....
*Calumbua ~
clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
76o I 47•
L...:..::')
re·
1
oo·
t:...__:)
South winds 5 to I 0 mph:
. Wednesday .. . P a rtly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Chance of rain JO percent.
Wednesday nighL ..Partly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thundcr,tonns.
Lows in the lowe'r 50s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
~ Cloud' ~ ~- ~ Flurries ~ Ice
.Thursday and Thursday
Panty
,,t,,. ~ ~ ~.. .....
night...Partly cloudy. Highs
Ooucty
Shower&amp; ~
Rain ~ 9r\ow
......
in the upper 60; . Lows in
weathef '-"'ergro.nl ·loP
the lower 40s.

Today's Forecast

..

...~,

6

C

2006 · ..

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

voice alan

•

Monday, October 2, 2006

Findings of pediatric
smoke alarm study

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEACIV -A o:hedu~ol-eolego

PARTICIPANTS: 24 children, ages 6 to 12, tested
while in stage four deep sleel?..
RESPONSE: 23 of the chtldren (96%) awoke to an
alarm that was a recording of their mother's voice,
while 14 (58%) woke to a tone alarm. One child did not
awake to either alarm. Twenty of the children who
awoke to the parent voice alarm successfully performed a simulated escape procedure within 5 minutes
of the alarm starting, versus nine of the children awaking to the tone alarm.
· TIMING: The median time to awaken was 20 seconds with the voice alarm and three minutes with tone
alarm. The median time to perform an escape routine
was 38 seconds with the voice alarm and the maximum
allowed 5 minutes with tone alarm.
AGE FACTOR: Older children responded better to ·
the tone alarm. While only two of the I 0 children under
age 9 awoke to the tone alarm, 12 of 14 children age 9
or older awoke. There was no association between ag~
and awakening to the voice alarm.
·
None of the children under- age 9 performed the
escape route to the tone alarm, versus 9 of 14 of the
older children. With the voice alarm, 20 of 24 children
escaped. Those who did not were ages 6, 6, 8, and 9.
SOUNDS: Both alarms were created using a large
speaker and sounds measuring 100 decibels, about
four times louder than levels used in standard home
alarms, researchers said. There is at least one voice
. alarm on the market, but it was not used in the study,
which instead used a digital recorder, amplifier, mixer
and speaker system.

and hlgl
""""
......
l88mS
from
daNia,- Meigssporting
and Mll&amp;OI"'
ooonties.

Monday'• um11

.

Volloybloll

Fairland at South Gallla, 5:30 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.
Gallla Academy al Chllllcolhe, 5;15 p.m.
OVCS at Ironton St. Joe, 6 p.m.

Soccer

Gallla Academy at Warren, 7 p.m.

.

Juudly'a pmu
• VOIIoyboll

GaiHa Academy at Jackson, 5:15p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 6 p.m .•
Southern at Waterford , 6 p.m.
Fairland at OVCS, 5:30 p.m.

Soccer
Piketon at Gailia Academy, 5:30p.m.
Glrta Soccer
Herbert Hoover at Pl. Pfeasant, 6 p.m.
. College Volloybloll
Rio .Grande at Shawnee State, "7 p.m.

October 6, 2006
· /O:OOAM
·Featuring a reunion of old friends who have successfully
completed their rehabilitation therapy at our facility.
Learn valuable safety tips and exercises to continue
your success at home.
Refreshments will be served.

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center
· 36759 Rocksprings .Road
'
Pomeroy,
OH
•
•
Please RSVP at 740-992-3245

RIO GRANDE- NAIA
No. 2 Rio Grande rolled
over · visiting Malone .on a
rainy,, soggy Saturday night
ai Evan Davis Field as the
Redmen
soccer
team
improved to' 9-1 on the season with a 7-0 win.
Rio Grande is now 3:0 in

,.
_,

•• J '

'

,..'

Dawson

American
Mideast
Conference
So u . t h
Division
play.
T h e
Red men
picked up
where they
left
off,
Wednesday

Oakland
BY JosH Duaow
ASSOCIATED PRESS

OAKLAND, Calif.
The crowd can be nasty and
the stadium is dingy. Yet to
Charlie Frye, the Oakland
Coliseum must feel like
home.
Frye threw three touchdown passes and Cleveland
med three long rl:turns to
rally from an early IS-point
deficit and beat the Raiders
24-21 Sunday.
Frye, making his ninth
start, used a second-half
rally to ·win 'in Oakland for
the second time in his
young career despite another late interception that
almost cost him the game.
After Jeadin~ a gamewinning drive m the final
minutes of last year's 9-7
victory that was the ftrs!
win of his career, Frye did
his work with TD passes to
Kellen Winslow and Joe
Jurevicius in the third quarter to win his third game for
~Jeveland (1- 3).
A week bff helped the
Raiders (0-3) regroup after
being outscored 55-6 in the
first two games in Art
Shell's second stint as
coach. It seemed like
Oakland was poised for a
win after breaking out to a
21-3Iead..
But p&lt;&gt;or play on special
teams, a mediocre performance by Andrew Walter in
his firsi career start and a
questionable spot by the
officials doomed Oakland.
Early in the fourth quarter, Walter drove the
Raiders down the field and
completed a 15-yard pass to
Ronald Curry on thin~-and16 from the 45. Curry
appeared to stretch the ball
to the 28, but the officials
marked him just inside the
30 and short of a first down.
Shell chose not to challenge the spot and Orpheus
Roye beat Langston Walker
and stopped LaMont Jordan
P111se see llrMns, 86 ·

Heywood played .- add-on
with a goal in -the 29th
'minute. Heywood was
assisted by ·freshman midfielder Marc Young.
The Redmen would score
three more times in the seCond half. Sophomore forward Frank Brown notched
an unassisted rnarker in the.
Please ·see Rolls, 841

~'

·Ria ..G·r

Socc.r

Browns
rally past

night versus Shawnee State, minute tO-make the score 4in playing a complete first · 0 and also scored in the 68th
half, building 4-0 lead. ' . minute on an unassisted goal
Rio Grande senior mid- ,to make the score 6-0 at the
fielder Conar Dawson time.
scored the first of three
Junior mid-fielder Ryan
goals, as he picked up the Baxter scored in the 28th
famed "hat trick" in the minute after receiving a feed
ninth minute on a penalty from ·freshman forward
kick. Dawson would team , Jason Massie which made
up with senior mid-fielder ihe score 2-0.
Paul Fiddler in the 44th
Junior
forward
Guy

6rande ._,Cross Coun try Invitational
-.

Winfield at Point Flleasant, 7 p.m.
College Socc.r
· CharlestOn at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.
College Womono Socc.r
Rio Grande at Salem lnt'l, 2 p.m.

,,

National Rehabilitation
Therapy Week ·
with us!

WIWAMS

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Soulh Gallla al Soulllorn, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Eastern , 6 p.m.
Meigs ~~Trimble, 6 p.m.

satisfactory progress in a
bachelor's, associate's or .
other undergraduate degree
programs at a- qualifying
Ohio
institution.
The
Masonic Home Scholarship
Committee is responsible
for administering the annual
scholarship.
·

Join Us for a Rehabilitation Reunion
at Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center
.

. BY MARK

VOIIoybloll

Smith said.
Services Board,
The next step, he said, is
Various
researchers,
to determine why children members of the fire comi-esponi!ed to the voice munity and others started
alarm differently, whether looking at the issue a few
they were responding 'to years ago after media
their names, their mothers' reports showed children
voices or the frequency at sleeping througl) the tone
which the sound was emitted by conventional
delivered, which was smoke
alarms,
lower than the frequency Drengenberg said .
of a beeping alarm.
The
U.S.
Fire
of Administration estimates
Nancy
Baron
Columbus said her daughter that 3,300 fatal fires killed
Mad'aie, who was 8 at the · 3,380 people (not includtime of the study, awoke to ing firefighters) in 2005,
the voice alarm in 15 to 20 with 14 percent of victims
seconds but slept through being y9unger than I 0.
the lone alarm, while nei- Smoke alarms ·were not
ther alarm woke her son present in 42 percent of
Rhys, who was 7,
residential fatal fires;
"I was totally shocked," alarms did not operate. in
Baron said. "It was actually 21 percent.
a little frightening to thin!&gt;
Drengenberg said statiswhat would happen if this tics show that no children
was real."
· have died because they didFunding for the st'!dY · n't wake up to .a smoke
came from il grant from the alarm.
Ohio Department of Public
"What we do know is farSafety's · Division
of ents instinctively ... wil go
Emergency
Medical to a child's room and grab a
Services and the Ohio child out of the crib or out
Emergency .
Medical of the bed," he .said.

toward accounting as her
main area of business study.
The Ohio Masonic Home
Scholarship Program is an
endowment established by
1be Ohio Masonic Home to
provide tuition assistance to
children of
deceased
Masons who are making

Dawson scores three times as No. 2 Rio -rolls

Wedottdly'a Qlmtl

(AP)

Please celebrate

Local Weather

'

Reds finish season, Page B2
Stewart wins at ~ Page B6

Masons award scholarship to OU student
POMEROY Abbie
Chevalier of Pomeroy was
awarded $3,000 in college
tuition assistance from The
Ohio Masonic Home in
Springfield.
She is a sophomore at
Ohio University where she
is studying business, leaning

-

Inside

nre

WhO

Food bank donation

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis Career College
has released the list of students named to the achievement list for the 2006 summer quarter..
Those students earning a
perfect 4.0 grade point average were: Medina Angel,
Vicki
Burris,
Paul ·
Carpenter, Paul Castaneda,
Crystal Chapman, Jessica
Davis, Heather Day, Tamara
Drummond, David Eakins,
Mary Ezeonu , Cecilia
Goett. ·
Donna Gorselene, Angela
Hatcher, Cathy Hesson,
Cora Hill, Kimberly Jones,
Brandy Lane, April Layne,
Phil
Lee,
Jennifer
McGinness, Jay Mitchem,
Crystal Owens , Melissa

I

•

Invite

· RIO ORANDE - As
Lauren Adkins ., e~erged ·
from · · the · woods, · and
crossed the brid~e the first
time at the Uf~!versity 9f
. Rio Grand¢ Crpss. Cl)qntry · 1•
Invitational on ~ Saturday,
she was only .a few steps m
front ' of ri~al Emily
Skidmore of Alexalider.
But tiJose few steps
turned inJo many,' and dte
Gallia Academ¥ sophomore
ran a sub ~nunute time to
beat Skidmore by 15 secont1s to win the .Red (seed·
ed) high school varsity girls

race. ·

. .

Adkins finished in a win- .
~~ time of '19:5~;.49 in
I ing, het Blue 'An~els to
the o:verall team title as
well. , .
Gallia Academy's Lee
' Ann Townsend and Carol .
F11hmy also had tQP five fill·
ishes as the Blue · Angels
. amassed just 49 points.
Logan Elm was second with
74 followed by CirCleville
~eigs'

(89),

. (!\.8),

Alexander (l23);" 'Morgan

(125),

~e ·

Washington ·

(153) ~~. Mmf~..:~~J2),
·· · Tow~waswijubver- ·:
·all with li tiiQe of21:0l"alid· ·
Fahm'y ran th¢ C()UI'Se ·in
21:33, good&gt;cnouu for ·
. fi~. Also. scoring lor the
aract ~
wmners were Genna Baker Meigs.' Devan Sou!sby and Klmml Swisher run together at the University of Rio Grande Cross Country Invitational on
PI 111111
· . . liiwll a:a· ' ,, Setur9&amp;Y.. Soulsby was the top finlstier for the Lady Marauders with a 12th place run, while Swisher turned in a 20th
•
.
. I,
.· ' pi!ICI! Ume to help place the Meigs gills cross country team fourth at the event.
.
.
.
'
.
'

~

.Rio ·,Grande..men ·rmish fourth at Rio Invitational
JIYMAIII

\Yitt'W
. ~ 10 'lliE SENilNEL

RIO GRANDE ~ The.University
of Rio Grande men's cross QOUillcy
-team ~ fourth plaal at . the
2006 Rto Grande Invitational ·on
Saturday .inonung
. •
at the Stanley
Evans Field~ .
Sophomore Corey Culbertson was
the ·top llJIUleC for the RMmen as he
finished 6lh ovemll with a time .o f
27:50.87. Fellow ~ Paul
Webb was two iij!Qts behind
CUibertsoilin 8th place with a time of
28:12.37.
.
Other Redmm results saw freshman Kyle
Hively finish
.
. 21st and

BY LuKE MEREDITH
ASSOCI ...TED PRESS ,

IOWA CITY, Iowa
Troy Smith believes to be
the best you have to believe
you're the best.
The way Ohio State has
manhandled the competition
so far, there's every reason
for the Buckeyes to think
they're unbeatable. ·
Smith threw for 186 yards
and four touchdowns and
CoNrAcrUs
No. I Ohio State made
another September stateOVP ScareUne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
ment, thumping No. 13 Iowa
38-17 SatU'fday night and
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
extending the ·nation's
Fu - 1·740-446·3008
. longest winning streak to 12
e~u- sports@mydailysetitinel.com
games.
,
SAO!!.I..Slltf
"I think if there's a guy in
Bllld Sherman, Sports Editor the locker room who said
(7-40) 446-2342 . .... 33 .
that we weren't the No. I
bshermanOmydaitytribune.com
team jn the nation, he· d have
a problem with me," Smith
Larry Crum, Sport• Writer
said. "You have to have that
(7-40) 446-2342, eort. 33
kind of attitude, that kind of
lcrumO ~dailyregister. com
swagger."
·
Ashley Shaw, Sports Writer
0f
course,
having
Smith
(NO) 446-2342, 0&gt;&lt;1. 23
behind center doesn 't hun.
sponsOmydailytribune.oom

and Elkins was seccover the five-mile .
· l:ourse in a lime of
oodat42 points and
;30:28.30, sophothe UDiversity of
more
Troy
Owrleston finished
Howdyshell .. was
third with 59 points.
26th (31 :24.20) and
Ohio
Valley
University
was
1!9Phomore Jordan
Cunningham was
fifth, tallying 145
points. .
28th (32:42.64).
Ri,o scored 82
On the women's
pointS for the meet,
side, Rio Grande
finishing fourth out
.Webll
had two runners in
Cullertwon of five teams. There
.
the rare and freshwere· 37 runners in man Kayla Fulkerson continued her
the men's rare. Kevin Garwick of strong rookie campaign with an 8th
Columbus State won the race with a place finish overall. Fulkerson covtime of 27:59.89.
ered the 3.1-mile course in 22:04.67.
Alderson-Broaddus was the men's Sophomore Brittany Dixon finished
team champion with 40 points. Davis 32nd with a time of 27:01.39.

Once again, Smith kept his coach Jim Tressel said of
cool in the toughest of set- Smith. "I thought he was
tings - remember Texas- one of the elite ones (in the
and Jed the Buckeyes (5-0, nation) before this game.
2-0 Big Ten) to a surprising- Bl!t he keeps getting better."
ly easy win.
·
Tate had his worst game
Ohio State faced three last season against Ohio
ranked teams in September State. He wasn' t much better
- Texas. Penn State and the Saturday. He finished 19-ofHaw keyes - and beat them 41 for 249 yards.
"I gave them two touchall by at least 17 points.
Saturday's showdown was downs," Tate said. "You take
one of the big~es\ games in two of them away, it's a
Kinnick StadiUm history, pretty close ball game." .
and more than 70,000 fans
It looks like smooth sail- about 69,000 of which ing for the next six. · weeks
were· decked out in , Iowa for Ohio State. None of its
gold - did their best to help upcoming opponents, until
the Hawkeyes (4-1, 1-1) Michigan comes calling on
pick up their first win over a Nov. 18, are currently
No. L
ranked. ·.
"'thai's something we
Smith didn't let that happen.
'
talked about, how brutal that
All four of his TO passes September schedule is ,"
gave Ohio State breathing Tressel said, "We· ve played
room. Hi s counterpart, against some tough teams
Iowa's Drew Tate, threw who brought all they could
three picks that helped kill bring us."
Iowa (4-1. 1-1) fell to 0Iowa's upset bid.
"He was in command the .
PieaH see Bucks, Bl
whole game," Ohio State

••

There were 39 runners in the
women's race. Rebekah Daniel
from the University of Charleston
was the individual winner with a
time of 19:58.55 .. UC also captured
the team championship, sconng 28
points.
Alderson-Broaddus was runnerup with 33 · points followed by
Bethany (3rd) with 81 points, Davis
and Elkins (4th) witll 97 points,
Ohio Valley (5th) with 130 points
and Kc:ntucky Christian (6th) wifh
145-pomts.
· .
Next up for Rio Grande is the AllOhio Championships, Oct. 6 at
Ohio Wesleyan. The men will run at
2 p.m. followed by the women's
race at 2:45 p.m.

AP photo

Ohio State's Chris Wells (28) tries to break a tackle by
Iowa's Migue l Merrick , right, during the second half of this
college football game Saturday in Iowa City. Iowa.

�.

•

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·Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Cktober 2, 2006

www.mydailYsentinel.com

Bucks

Reds fmish out season with shutout loss
BY ALAN ROBINS!IN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITISBURGH - For a
moment, Freddy Sanchez's
unlikely pursuit of the
Ndtional- League batting title
gpt to him for the first time
all season. He felt stressed
out and nervous, and began
swinging at anything to try
for a hit.
·
. Sanchez shook off his selfimposed P.ressure to get two
hjts and become the Pirates'
ftrst battins champion in 23
years, help'mg Pittsburgh to a
1-0 victory Sunday over
Cincinnati that was decided
~Xavier Nady's third hit of
tlie game.
Sanchez was a 28-year-old
utility infielder beginning his
second full season in the
majors, yet he hit .344 -the
P;irates '· highest average
since Roberto Clemente's
.345 in 1969. Sanchez's 200
hits wete the second-most by
ll Pi_rates player, to Jack
Wilson's 201 in 2004, since
Dave Parker had 215 in
1978. '
"It hasn't sunk in yet, but
it's something special," said
Sanchez, who beat out
F_lorida's Miguel Cabrera by
five points. "There's a lot of
relief, excitement and joy."
· After the game ended,
Sanchez stayed on the field
and waved . his cap to the
crowd, and his teammates
• crowded around for a ceremony to pay tribute to his
season. Many in the crowd
of 25,004 stayed to chant his
name and display black-andgold "Go, Freddy, Go" signs

Invite
fromPageBl
(15th, 23:06) and Alii
Saunders (28th, 23:57).
Devan Soulsby, in 12th
place overall (22:55) was
the top finisher for Meigs.
Jessica Holliday also · ran
well to finish right behind
her teammate in · 13th
(23:03). Kimi Swisher was
20th. (23:23) while Megan
Clelland and Emily Fields
were 33rd (24: 12) and 56th
(28: 13) respectively.
.
Also running, but not fig-

from PageBl

that were handed out all the first time since 1992.
as many RBls and so few
weekend by the Pirates.
Or a couple of halves at a homers since divisional play
Sanchez went 0-for-4 consistency
level
like began in 1969 was the 10-1 against top-ranked
Saturday night, keeping Sanchez's; he hit .300 or bet- Indians' Julio Franco with teams. The Hawkeyes
Cabrera in the race. Sanchez ter in every month of the sea-. six homers and 90 RBis in couldn't put up much of a
was determined to be more son.
1985.
fight in the most anticipated
Sanchez's title was all the
Matt Capps (9-1), a rookie game at Kinnick . in more
relaxed Sunday and he was,
getting hits in each of his more unlikely because of making his 85th appearance, than 20 years.
first two at-bats. Cabrera was what he endured to get to the got the victory by retiring
The Buckeyes were just
pulled after going 0-for-2 majors. He was born with a one batter in the eighth after the fifth top-ranked team to
when it became obvious he deformed foot thai needed Shane Youman gave up four visit Kinnick, the last being
couldn 'i catch Sanchez.
surge_ry when he was I, and hits in seven innings. Miami, who beat lowa 24-7
"After I got the first hit, it some doctors felt he might Salomon Torres pitched tbe in 199!2. And the la~t game to
took a load oft"," Sanchez not walk, much less run. But ninth for his I 2th save in 15 generate this much buzz in
said. "Last night was the not only did · he reach the chances, during his' 94th Iowa also came in 1985,
wqrst feeling. I was so ·ner- majors, he became the appearance - tying a club when
the
top-ranked
vous and felt so much pres, Pirates' 25th NL batting record set by Kent Tekulve Hawkeyes beat No. 2
sure. I kind of forced myself champion, the most of any in 1979. The only pitcher in Michigan 12-10.
to try to get a hit and, and club.
major league htstory with . All the buzz, and a loud
"
H
·
d
'
.that s not me.
" e ts a tremen ous over- more appearances was . the sellout crowd, wasn't enough
N·ady 's go-ahead hit in the achiever," manager Jim , Dodgers Mike Marshall to stop the Buckeyes.
eighth followed two-out sin- Tracy said.
with 106 in 1974.
"By.my vantage point, this
les
by
Jason
Bay
and
R~an
Sanchez's
title
probably
·Torres
struck
out
Javier
is
the best
they've
played
all
g
year,"
Ferentz
said
of the
D9~mit against Todd Co ey meant more to the Pirates Valentin to. end the game Buckeyes. "This" wasn't an
(6-7).
than it would have to most with runners on first and easy one to walk into as a
The Reds were· shut out in other clubs because they third - the only time in 18 visitor.',
the\r final two games of the have gone so long without a innings over their final two
Ohio State broke open a
season after being eliminated winning sea.son - 14 years, games the Reds advanced a 21-10 ~arne with long scarfrom NL Central contention two short of tile major league runner to third
ing drives on its first two
and finished 80-82, their best record. Sanchez's title also
Both starting pitchers were possessions of the second
record since 2000 but their illustrates one reason why lifted after 'pitching shutout half. Anthony Gonzalez, who
sixth consecutive losing sea- the Pirates have flopped for ball - Youman after sevl!n caught two touchdown passson.
so long: their often curious innings in his third _career es, took the air out of the
"It hurts, but not as much personnel decisions.
start and the Reds' Matt · Kinnick crowd with a specas not being in the postseaEven after Sanchez hit Belisle after throwing a . tacular 30-yard TD catch that
son," manager Jerry Narron .29llast year, the Pirates felt career-high six innings.
put the Buckeyes ahead 28said of finishing below .500. he didn't hit enough for
Notes: The Pirates finished 10 early in the second half.
"St. Louis winning yesterday power. So they signed Joe with a winning horne record
Gonzalez caught the ball
definitely took a lot out of Randa to a $4 million con- (43-38) for the first time .on the left hashmark, cut
~s: But these guys battled all. tract to play third and moved since PNC Park opened in baek toward the right sideyear and gave us a chance in Sanchez into a utility role. · 200 I .... Capps finished Oile line - using his hand to
the last weekend of the sea- But Sanchez hit so well early game short of the NL rooki~ . keep from falling down son to get into the postsea- in the season that he forced record of ~6 appearances by and fought through a tackle
son."
them to make him an every- Arizona's Oscar Villarreal in to reach the pylon.
The Pirates' 67-95 record day player, and he began 2003. ... ThePirates'wereone
Ohio State's next drive
was identical to that of last starting regularly May 2.
of six teams in the maJors only netted an Aaron Pettrey
season, even though they had
Sanchez also drove in 85 that didn't draw 2 million, field goal. Butit ate almost
a winning record (37-35) · runs despite hitting only six attracting 1,861,549 in 80 eight minutes off ihe clock
and gave the Buckeyes a 21after the All-Star break for homers; the only player with dates.
uring in the team tallies
were Qallia Academy 's
Andrea Wiseman (32nd),
Sara Elberfi.eld (49st),
Jessica
Willet
(51st),
Hannah Roush (53rd) and
Danielle , Sanders (69th);
and Meigs' Cecilia Core
(60th), Nicole Andrus (6lst)
and Veronica Grimm (68th).
Eastern's Michael Owen
. was the top local finisher in
the Red (seeded) boys race,
taking thirdflace overall in
a time o 17:22. The
Eagles, with only three runners, had no team score.
· Aarqn Martindale was 41st
· (19:23)· and Keith Aeiker
104th (21:32).

Unioto took the boys title
by edging runner-u~ Logan
Elm 55-59. Circleville (68)
was
third
while
Ravenswood (73) and
George Washington (156)
rounded out the top fi;ye
. schools. Gallia Academy
was 13th (367) and Meigs
(448) last in the IS-team
field.
Seth Amos was the top
Gallia Academy ·finisher in
62nd· place (19:59). Shane
Plantz wasn'-t far behind in
73rd (20: 14) followed by
Brandon Welch . (I 09th,
Counts
21:43),
Tyler
(121st, 22:14) and Dallas
Craft ( 132nd, 22:36).

J~y Morgan ran 'll2th

(2 I :46) overall and was the
first Meigs runner to finish
the race. Also for the
Marauders,
Andrew
O'Bryant
took
115th
(21:54), Lucas Franca
l42n'd (23:30), Jacob Riffie
I 56th c(25: 14) and Haakon
Jahr I 64th (26:40).
In the girls White
(unseeded). race, Eastern's
Kay lee Milam and Alyssa
Newland were seventh
(22:18) and 21st (23:46)
respectively.
.. Ashley Fitch was the top
RiverValleyrunnerin 16th
place
(23:28).
Like
Eastern, the lady Raiders

For fast results, advertise in The

D~ily

didn't have the necessary
five runners for .a team
score. Tara Workman was
41st (25:02), Samantha
Lawson 81 st (26:58) and
Brianna
Frash
!26th
(30:53).
.
In the boys White race,
River Valley · was I Oth
(232) in the team stand.ings
and Southern 16th (336).
· Vince Weatherstein was
the top River Valley placer
in fourth place, finishing in
a time of 18:36. Next for
·the Raiders was D.avid
· Householder
in
59th
(21:01). Brandon Kirby
(76th, 2 I :54), Ryan Clary
(98th, 22:46) and Yoot

Monday, October 2, 2006

point lead heading into the
fourth quarter.
The Hawkeyes pulfed
within 31-17 on a 4-yard 1D
pass from Tate on fourth
down. IJut Ohio State forced
a fumble and llf'O inrerception on Iowa's next three
possessions. · Smith put
Iowa's comeback hopes to
rest with ' a 12-yard touchdown pass to Brian Robislcie.
Antonio Pittman and Chris
Wells combined for 55 yards
ruslling on a 12-play. 89-yard •
scoring drive late in the second quarter. Smith capped it ·
with a 6-yard strike to seldom-used senior Roy Hall.
. The Buckeyes rush¢ for
124 yards in tbe firs~ half.just 15 shy of theu game
headin~ . irito
average
Saturday - and ptcked up
5.9 yards a carry agamst an
Iowa defensive line considered one of the Big Ten's
strongest
"The run is what killed
us,"
Iowa
cornerback
Charles Godfrey said. ''They
ran the ball down our
throats."
Iowa got as close as 14-10
on a 15-yard touchdown run
by Albert Young.
The Buckeyes IJlOVed
ahead 14-3 l)y capitalizing .
on an interception by
Brandon Mitchell, who
returned it to the Iowa 30.
Pittman followed a 23-yard
rush with a 4-yard TD run.
Ohio State scored on tbe
game's opening possession,
marching 53 yards in just
2:24. Smith, who firiished
16-of-25 passing, found
Gonzalez for a 12-yard TD
pass to give the Buckeyes a
7-0 lead.
Pittman rushed for I 17
yards and a touchdown.

· . ~rthune ~- SentinelCLASSIFIED
· Gallla
County

OH

In One Week With Us
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.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS Suled pioposals will 64086
Electric
Capital on form 3541. (!ndude
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be accepted ftom pr&amp;- (9) 25, (10) 2
Corporation,
2325 ~·a proof end
DEPARTMENT. • OF qwolllled bidders at the
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Annoge No. Copies Street Vendors and
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060452
located In Meigs ERSHIP
MANAGE- !'Needing 12 Months:
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s.ted proposals will Mlddl1port, Ohio 45710 St.. . Pomeroy, Ohio,
3. Othar claana 8:00 a.m. a vining
be accepted from .,..... Unit Mt
45761.
Managing mailed through tile will tau pi- at thi
qUIIIIIed blddere Ill the DMna Hardwlci&lt;
Ed"or, Kevin Kally, 111 USPS: 0.
Pa;evllle aubdlvlslon
ODOTOfllc.a
of Rt. 1, lox 131
Court St., Ponoeroy, 4. Frae Distribution In Scipio Townahlp lor
Conlrllcla until 10:00 West Columbia, WV Ohio 457&amp;.
Outelde tho Mall the purpoae of vacata.m. on October 1.1. 21217
10. ·
Ow-: (Carrier or Olher lng the pubic right~29011. Project 11104531s Unit In
H a 1 r 1 I 1 n d Means): 0
way. The hearing lor
laaaled In Melga lonnie Shea ·
PubiiCitlons, LLC, 20 E.
TotAtl
FrH thla closing Ia IIChed·
Co11nty, CR 24-0.00 P.O. lOx 11
Rt-ch
Distribution: 2.
uled IDI' October 5th at
(tlnlon,A-) India SyriCUM, Ohio 45nt Sultti 0, Old
F. Total Dlltrlbutlon: 1:00 p.m. Ill the
a At1IirfRing (2·Lane) Unit 174
CT, 01471,
lchlll 3,513.
Commlaal.....,'e Olflot
praJect. The dlle set 1111 Kauta
8uah,1U On:utt Drive, · G. Copies Not which lalocalld on the·
!Of 'complllllon of IIIIa 41475 Stan:hlr Rd.
Gulllord, CT, 01437, Dlatrlbuttd: 212.
third noor o1 the Court
wortc 111111 be 11 set PoiMtoy, Ohla 45718 Wachovlt · Clpilll
H. Total: 3,725
Houn. Eva,.Yona ta
fortll In the bidding Unit HO
Partnara 2004, LLC, A-llli' No. Coplea welcome to attend,
propoHI. Plana end Leigh Clnter
301 South College of
Slngla
tuue Plelsa contAtct the
Speclllcllllone ere on P.O. lOx 413
Sti'Ht, 12 th Floor, Publlahed lllearaat to Commlaslonara Ill 1182fl)l In 1111 Depanment Burna, TN 370211
Charlone, NC 28218,. Filing Date:
2815 H you have 1ny
of 'l'r8rlapclrtlllon.
Unit.II
W I c k 1 15. Extent ond qwstlono.
(I) 21, (10) 2
Angell Powell
Communications l nalure of Circulation. (1)27, (10)2.
31321 SR7
Media Pertnera, L.P. A. Total No. Copies
Long Bonom, Ohio 405 Park Avanii!I;Sulta Printed: 3,697.
Public Notice
45743 .
702,
New
York, B. Paid · and/or
Unit 13
NY! 0022,
Wlcka requested Cltculetlon:
Parallel
(Limited) 1. Peld/Requeatt~
NOTICE TO BIDDERS RH llaoh
P.O. Bo\42 .
Partnerahlp L.L.P. 405 Outelde-County Mall.
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF Tuppers · Plalna, Ohio Parle A-. Suite 702 Subscriptions Slated
45783
New York, NY 10022.
on Form 3541. (Include
TRANSPORTATION
Unit 174
11 .
Known adVertl-'o proof ond
Columbua, Ohio
Crylibll Kauta
B o n d h o I d e r s , erchange copies.) ; 81.
0111ee of Contracts
Legal Copy Number; 1405 Ridgeview
Mortgagees Holding 2. Paid In-County
Leea Summll, MO 1"4 or more: General Subscripliono stated
060465

e

e....,.. .....

........, '....,

c/o H - Resoonus

1510 Valley Drift
1"oinf: Ple8SIInt, wv 25550

(3114) 675-43o40

AA/f!JE

T'=2:

ADVERTISE

Help Wanted

r

kitncar1ylet~comcast . net

L,-..iGiiiWJRJUSiiii-iilii,O..,.I

for a Single'
Christian lady, 40- -55 yrs •

r

0

October

lost- Tor!oise oo1or boblail
cat. Missing 1rom Country
Lane area of 160. (740}44, 0538 or(740)441 ·28r.

area.

$300

I)•

'

(304)675-6144

Longaberger -

Annou...,.._ ............................................030
Antiques ............................._. .........................530
Apa1tments lor Aent .....;............................. 440
Auction end F1N Mark&amp;t.............................oao
Auto Perla 6 AcCBII Dries .......................... 760
Auto Aepalr..................................................

no

,.._lor Slle .............................................. 710
Bollia • Motorslol' sate'...,........................:750
Building Suppltes ......,.......................- ........550
Bulllniosa end Buildings ............................. 340
Buslneu Opportunity.................................21 0
Buslneu Tralnlng ....................................... 140
Campers • Motor Homes ...............:........... 790
Camping Equlpnwrt ......................,............ 780
Cards ol1banka .......................................... 010

Chl:di'Eidlrty Clre ....................................... 190

36895 SA 114. Middlepon.

garage ,

EIICir1caiiRafron ............................... tl40

Equ1pm1nt for Alnt.; ................................... 480

Excavilttng ................................................... l30
fll'lll Equlpment .............................:............ 610

• Farm. for AM1t................................... ,••_••... 430
F....,. lor Slla ............................................. 330
For .,_,,............. - .........- ......................... 410
For ...................................- ....................... 585
For sale or TI'ICII ............. ,........................... 590

1

~ ..................................... 580

Fumilhed Aooma ........................................450
Glnlnl Hlullng...........................................850
~., ....... ;..............................................040

Hippy Adl..... :..............................................oso
Hay &amp; Gralri .................................................. 640

Help Wlnlld .................................................110
Home Jmprovementa ........... , .......................810
llama lor Slla............................................ 310
Houlthold Goodl .............................. :........ sto
HouMa lor Rent .......................................... 410

Medical Records
Coordinator

C&gt; 2006 by NEA, Inc.

1 10

Barbies-~&gt;Ut ~~.,,...___..._

1n Memorlam ......................................~ ......... 020

lnsurance ..........:.....................;.................... 130
Lawn • Gilden Equipment ...................-... 660
u.estoc:~c

...........- .......................................630

Losl mel Found ........................................... 060
!..am &amp; Acrelge.-..................................: ..... 350

.

Mlacel'-'-..............................................170
lllrceUaneous Mlrehandtle.~~ ...................S40
Mobile Home Repalr....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes lor 5ale ................................320

•
'

Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Molorcyclel &amp; 4 Wheelara ..........................740
lluaicallnllnl..-ta .................................. 570
Peraonata ................................................. ..... oos
Pets for sale ................................................ 560

Plumbing l Heltlng .................,.................. 820
PrOfesaiOnll Sarvlces.................................230
Radio, Tv 6 CB Repalr............................... 160
11ea1 e.- Wlnled ..................................... 360
SchoolS lnatructlon .....................................150

Seed. Ptant. Fertll'-·•........................,... 650
Situiltton~led .......................................120
Space lor Ren ................., ...........................460
Sporting
........................................... 520
SUV'alor Slle..............................................720
TNCI!Io lor 5a1e ............................................ 715

Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vtnl For Slle...............................................730

Wlnted to Buy .............................................090
Wlnled to Buy- F.-m Supplles ..................620.
Wlnted To Do ....................................:......... 180

Wanled to Rent ............................................470
Yard sate- Gllllpolls.................................... 072
Y1rd sate-Pomero~i\llddle ......................... 074
Yard sale-Pt. ,_r1i ............................ :... 076

I

UI'.U""

1

u~:.U

·

1
ATTENTION . CRAFTER$·
Overbrook Rehabilitation
' be hOS1ing it's
Center witt
10th aMual Ol&lt;toberfest on
Saturday, OctOOer 7, 2006.
Events begin at 10:00 AM
and end at 3PM. lmerested
crafters should cont act
Mic!'lelle
Kennedy
at
(740)992-6472 no tater than
Wednesday. October 4th.

FEDERAL

$15.67-$26.19/hr.,

now hir-

.e.ssoc.

serv.

. Pr.l'u:AsANT

•Competitive wages
•EKP&amp;rienoe pay ·
•Regular rate lncreue
•Untlorm Allowance •

Ocl.2nd·3rd·41h . 9:ooam-?

Elmwood Terrace, · Aaclne,
Ohio.

WAN!Dl

roBu\'

•HearthiDentallllte Ins.

•Dublity lnsu111noe

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silwer and Gold Coms,
Proofsets, Gold Rings. Pre, 935
U.S.
Currency,
Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S. ·
Coin Shop, 151 Second
AVflnue, G·allipolis, 740-446-

•401 k ('her f yoar)

Ploase stop by an&lt;! see
us at 380 Colonial
Drive, Bidwell, Ohio or
glw Mary Shuler. RN
DON
a call at
(7-40)446·5001

2841.

'-I I \ I I

~

100 WORKERS NEEDED

Assemble crafts,
wood items
To $480/wk
Materials provided. ...
Free information pkg. 24Hr
BOt-428-4649
AnoratloniSeamsHess. need
part time wlclerk dulles at
the Workingman's Store in
Pomt PI8BS8nt. Please call
(800)264-3404 a9k. tor Diana
An E11cel!ent way to earn
money. The New .A:von.
Call Mar~yn 304-882-2645

Appl ications are being
accep!ed for experienced
Electncians. Appl~ at AB
Eleclrical Contramor. Inc.,
33 14 Mossman Avsnue
Poinl
Pleasant.
WV
(304)67 5· 1537

' JOtl PL.ACEMEI&gt;Il
~

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR ·TRAILER
TRAlN NG CENTERS
V«n-4EVII,.LE , VA

~

~~lloU\.0

·------pi
A.ll Types Masonry, Brick.

~!!!!!!!!!!E!!!mp!!l!!oy!!!
er!!!!!!!!!!;IJ
~

HAVE A CLEAN DRIVfNG
RECORD 80% OF WORK
IN ATHENS AREA EXCEL-•
LENT WAGES BASED ON
EXPERIENCE.
SEND
• DETAILED RESUME TO:
HVAC POSITION , p 0 BOX
363, THE PLAINS. OH
45760
We are now accepting

app1 1cat1ons for pan ltme
Ma11room
he lpe rs
Apphcants mus1 have
val id hcense To appl~.
stop Oy tile Galhpolls

Da1ly Tnbune 825 Thi1d
Avt! , Galhpohs. Ohro

lh,456;;;3=' =

(7-40)367-0000

2415 Jackson Avenue, Point
Pleasant WV. or phone toll
free 1_866-44 1_1393.
Our guest servk:e onented
dining room is looking to hire
friendly. energetic servers.
Put on your best smile and
apply in person at the
Hollaay· Inn' of Gallipohs. No
phone calls piaase.
::....::.:....:..::.::..::..:=---

:::.
.Part-time cool&lt;fne\per need·

= ==d

I

:~:::ro;Lo::AN::'=~·
••NOTIC:Ilu
Borrow Sman. Contact
the Ohio Divjs1on of
Financial
Institution's
Office ot Consumer
Af1airs BEFORE yo u..refi•

nance ~o u r nome or
obt.iin a loan BEWARE
,
of requests lor any Ia~

·w·

j

t ·BBIHiB:\·334~

,,

• Bodroom- 2 811111

MUD

~-mym-.oom :.
(740)828-2750
Vary nice 38R , bath
upstairs, furnishsd 1BR apt..
downstairs. Furniture store~
1n rea r. Car lot on side . All on .
1/2 ac. lot at 130 Bulaville-Pike.. . Gallipolis.
OH..
$135,000. 1740)446-4782.

r M=S~

1.

. 1997

rJ6

inQ ~cility. Interested appli· · advance payments of
cants should ·appl)4 to: tees or tnsurance. Call the
ROCksprings Rehabilitation Office of Consumer
Center, 36759 Aocttspnngs Affanlt toll free at 1·866Road , Pomeroy,
Ohio. 2?8-0003 lo learn if the
45769 . E.rtend1care Health mortgage
brot&lt;er
or
services, Inc. is an equal lender ' is
4properly
licensed. (This is a publk:
opportunity emp Iover tha1
encourages
workplace serv1ce announcemem
from the Ohio Valley
diversity M/f. ON
Pubhih1ng Company)
ANdy for 1 Rewarding •
Challenging C.reer?
App'y for a CHHA Classes
~Ml
beg 1nmng
Oct
9th.
SERVICES
ApplicatiOns must be sub· ...._
mrrt&amp;d by Del 6th We help
TURNED DOWN ON
w/JOb placemon1 and are SOClAL SECURITY JSSI?
also h1nng PCA, CliHA &amp;
No Fee Unless We W1n1
STNA u

Call 740-992·'

14~~:72 , clean with fire-~
place. 2 bedroom. 2 bath.
etc. 740.949-2987. Alk for
1997 14x70 3 bedroom, 2.
Gregg.
Central air, full basement. bath, vinyl siding, shingledhardWOOd floors, detached roof. 4 more to choose 'from. '
gar~~ge ,
covered 'P&amp;tio, 17•0 1388·0000
dayolmo; .
ovonlng;
iiijji;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ fenced back yard , newl y (740)388·8017
~
remodeled, 3 or 4 bed- (740)645-6150 c:etl ·'
C1PPolnt.Mrv
roorrni, close to schools,
Poi nt Pleasant $69.500. 2003 16x80 mobile home for

people yoo know, and
NOT . 1o send money
lhrough lhe mall unt!l you
have investigated the

Equal Opportunity

L-~!!;
•·~~
'""!!"~::!
""' ' ~
~.J

Affordable , peacelul living
Newer 2BR Jog home, 1
tiath , level lot surrounDed by
farm land $55,000. Call
(740)446-2801.

Racine/Letart, Ohio areal

·Time CNA, STNA, CHHA,
PCA and Pet Diem PT, PTA

m , ST. Accepting appllce:
tlons tor LPN's. Competitiw

.......

5e3,500
4001.

Mowing/Farm worf&lt;/Palntlngl

r

. Openin~ tor S&amp;les/Counter
person.
Pomeroy Aut o
Parts, 11g West Second St ..
Pomer oy, · OH
740-992•
2139

.:._...:..:_ _- ' - ' - -

ItA

Wages and Benefits inc\ud· :oll::er:in:g·:;;:;=~
1ng he8nh insurance and
mileage . Apply al 1480
l.'doNEv
Jacblon Ptke, Gallipolis or ~
·
,

1-B00-334-1203

Payment $525. enclosed breezeway. Pool.
740- and Spa included

Hot TOO tor sale. $2000
_740 -992...,.22. Leave mes- ;__;_.:___;__ _ __
,....
Attonllonl
sage and w111 call - T··
Local company offering "NO
WANTED :
Responslbte DOWN PAYMENr proparty to take on, small grams for vou to buy your
monthly payments on High nome instead ot rent'•ng
Definhion Big Screen TV. 1- ' lOO"'o financing
800·398·3970
' Less 1han perfect credi1
accepfed
•
Payment could be the
WAN'IID
same as rent.
To Do
Locators .
Mortgage

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
11181 you do business with

TIAL EXPERIENCE MUST ed ror 100 bed skilled nors·

' ENROUJN{; NCNI

ItS . . . . . . . . • . .. ,. . . . . I

Ohio Valley Honie Healfh ,
Inc hiring tor Full Time AN ,
PT. PTA. F~ll Tune a~d Pan

P

' CDL TRAINiii.G

required

Accrodil&amp;d Member ,t,ccrediling Appraised $70,000.
Council for l~noent Colleges 361·7129.

•NOTICE•

©D&gt;l

' FINANCI'OG ,W.-.tlABL.E

1-60G-214-0452

and Scho~HG 12748 .

Prime property on 4 comer
lots in SyraCuse, Oh, great ·
001ghborhood , .well built
house w/5 rooms &amp; bath
upstairs and famll~ room
with bri~ fireplace/ bUck
stove insert and bedroom In
finishect basement, house
has hardw.ood floors &amp;
beaut~ul woodwork, kitchen .
appliances built in, patio and
Screened &amp; glassed sunporch, shal:le &amp; fruit tr~.
grapes &amp; berritis. reasonably priced, 80 's. John
VanMeter, (740)247·2229

3rd. Ave., Middleport . Totally Ranch Style Home, Yost_.
remodeled. 3 bedrooms. 1 Road with 2 Acres. 3 bed--.
bath. Perfect credrt not rooms. 2 baths. garage:

orne

217. SCOttown. Ohio 46678

Carpenter wanted· only exp.
person
need
apply. HVAC POSITION AVAIL·
(740)446-7039
ABLE WITH A WELLESTABLISHED ATHENS
AREA ·coNTRACTOR WE
HAVE AN OPENING FOR A
SERVICE
TECHNICIAN
~WITH 3 YEARS OF COMMERCIAL A.t.JD RESIDEN· NO ~ liEQIE ~ £ N;;cESSARV
' FULt TIME CLASbi: S

areers

._.91JI~IICIIreeroolleQe. corn

. Part · time miscellllneo&amp;ie
office
tasks
tncludlng
reports,
order
entry,
newsletter, copying, filing,
Inventory,
phone,
etc.
Knowledge of Word Perf8cl.,
EICcel. L01us. Publisher.
Good dat&amp; entry skit Is.
A"'urne 1o 13563 $1, At

74o-2•5·5992

Want 10 buy new and Old Carpenter Helper needeq.
junk carsttrucks/vani. 74~
to· use tools of trade
416-1594 Of 74(}-416-1588 ability
and ~ on house conI \I I ' I • I \
11 ... I
struction. 74Q-742·3304.

1456 3802

Golllpollo C... Col'- About $3000 down. 812 S.
(C
Cl 066 liH
)'
0

F1-l

"::-"-'-==-----:OFFICE "'SH!TANI

We are also accepting
apphcahons lot a Full Time
and Part Time STNA
pot; !lions.

Cabinet shop in·need of proauction line assembl&amp;,' and
cleane1, two openings call

~

~ &amp; ~rug·fOSI. Please 8100&lt;. Slono . Froe£slimll18,
""" WorkForce (~)675· (3()()B82-388B • 304 •5930857 or 1304)34&amp;1675
fi.o2 1_
MallO 50% selllr•iAYon. Call - - , . . - - - - - - (740)446-3358.
Wanted 10 dol Mise, Jobs In

•$1 ,500 Sign on bOnus
•12 hour shifts available

four Fimily ylllrd sale.

9:ooam. VFW Prlce(s) are Negotiable .
Mason wv. Ph. (7&lt;10).843- Motivated
Seller!
In
5555,
G(•~'!;p o ii~ c_an Wayne

Call Today! 740-446·4367.

Are you concerned about
the threats to the rights of
?
gun owners
. At lnfoCision, you can
earn up to S8.501hour while
helping to protacl the rightS
of those that own guns.
Fu!l·time and Pan-time
shifts are available.
We also ·otter paid training.
vacations, and holidays.
If you are serious about
wol1&lt;1ng to help tho NAA.
give us a Gall today!

ing. For application and free
governement job into, call
American
o1 Labor 1913·599·8042, 24/hrs. ernp.

Pistol

Ill About Your

POS,.•L
1"' JOBS

pool, • 2 ag-es,
SchoOl District

$75.00.

__, ~,.,10~-----..,, r,I1:::10;--IIDP--W-ANIDI--.,,
u---WAN~

u~
. •. " ' ··~

IIU¥ n r•.r.. u:.v

shirts-miscalls-

BUying Jurnt Cars,Trucks &amp;
Wrecks, Pay Cash J 0
Salvage
(304 )773-5343
(304 )674 _1374
;________
want to buy Jurw: Cars
(304)n3-5Q04

3_
722
_
_ _ _ _ _ __

4 rental houses ~For SaleClass Good income producing
Ohio, W}l. Oct· 7. 2006. properties. Great location!

Concealed

-------Help wanted at Darst Group
Home , wor1clng with .elderly,
·•
Yard S&amp;le. House next to AVON! All Areas! To Buv or heavy lifting involved. ·740·
Sell.
Shirley
Spears,
304- 992·5023..
'
Eastern
High
School
675-1429.
CommerC;ial Floor Scrubber.
In-line Skates. lighted 4 X B
Holzer Senior Care
sign wlletters, disco lites.
Sign on Bonus
1-877-463-6241
O.J. Equipment w/Polk
tor AN Position
-ext. 2301
speakers, 2 - 14' good t1res
w/rlms, novelty Hems. weight
If you are interested In
Janitors now hiring In PDirn
bench, baby items, l17t'S, lots
joining our Resident
Pleeaant, OYOning shift 2hri;
of clothes and etc. Oct.
Centered.Nursing Team
1,2,3. 9;00. 5:00.
per night. Mon·Fri, $6/per
·we have a full t1me
hr., must pass background
opening
tor
an
AN.
0
YARDSALE-

t

view. $155,000 (304)895-

740-992·3465 aher 5:00PM

lo- l.

L--A-~
~tl"tf

Collection, and china pig
collection. Exercise bike .
Dishes, c~thes. tcrts of mise
, 1'99
College
Road.
Syracuse, Ohio.

~

3,000. 741).991-2571 .

Eastern

crac+;ers-1onton-glasswareold books-tableware-lug·
gage-Chris1mas
Decorations-old memorabil-

r

1740)709·1382.

1act:
Paul
McElroy. $120.000. (740)709-1166.
(740)742-2990 by October
11 . 2006.
4· bedroom. 2 bath, double

Ocl . 5th · 61h, 9:00 • 4 00.

4x4's For Sale ........_,...................................725

Help Wanted

23-24-25-26-27.

0hio 45760. · (Behind the 3 b8droom, 2 bath, whh firenew Elementary School).· place, 40x60 barn. Rio
For more 1nformBfion con- Grande area. On 8 fla! aces.

Reward Pre Christmas yard safe!

CLASSIRED INDEX ·

www.pvalley.org

wwwlorvb.com, code 8246

Ave ., Middleport, Ohio. - - - - - - - 2006. 10:00am ·- 1:00pm. Basement. double gar•~.
n
All sessions to be held at : and targe deck..
Fir:#~- House and 10. acres at
Meigs Local sus Garage. $6
Mt. A~o. Private with great

Church yard sale, 2 &amp; 3,
good 9am to 4pm, 873 S. 3rd,
home.· Sonous calls onl~. Middlopon.
•
Call (740)388-0083.
. - - - - -- Depot Street. Rutland. Oct .
Free Kittens (304)0511·1920 3rd lhru 51h New &amp; Used
items, boys 8-10, mOfe .

Help Wanted .

I'

~&gt;VII-'&gt;,

0

Oct 5 · 6 · 7. One mHe
South Chester" Rt. 7. 9 · 5.

~oad:

For Sale .. 34575 Crew
in Pometey. ThiS Is a MUST
1996 Redman 28•60 in SEE TO BELIEVE home. 5
App~ Grove 304·593-6719 bedrooms, 3 bath&amp;, full finview
online
at ished walttout basement

tree kittens lo. a

r

.I

~ I

wlkllchen. All this and an.·
extra lot for $159,9000 (price.
3 bedroom sits on .69 acre. is firm). Call Larry Conrath
country setting. Possible Reatty 0 740--592 _3015 _
land contract with 10% down
or rent with op. to buy. Price Handyman special, oomes
Kem
- - - - - - - - $80.000.(740)256· 1567:
w~h 2 lots. dooe 1o ocllools.
School Bus 'Driver TrainiflQ, 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath. 306 2nd Point Pleasant. $_24,900.

0

Doll Collection, Poo Bear

CLASSIFIEDS

cF fWo

I

1a-sweat

IN THE

""'" fJ'F ~
~~ fM I.I&gt;~~R

•

riO .

Rlll SALE

R&amp;J Trucking now Hiring at
our New Haven, WV
Terminal. For Reqional.
Hauls-Dump Dlv. 1 year
OTR
verifiable exp.
Call 1-800-462-9365 ask tor

\ 1'/PNDEI' IF

r

Five

I r'o ~

HtuWAmm

R&amp;J TRUCKING
lea ding The Way

YARDSAI.I!-

LOST; Male Copper nosed
neous.
~~ lyrs old, tn the Leon

MEIGS COUNTY FARM
BUREAU ANNUAL
'
MEETING
Tues ., Oct. 17 7:09 pm at
Masonic Lodge, Middleport.
Reservations must be made
by Oct. 4
Adults $, 1.00 Child $8.00
Entertainment,
Door Prizes

lno

YARD SAJJ!

our home. Donations are'
welcomed. We have furniture, all size clothing , lots of
everything. Oct 4· 7. 9·?
Adopt:A happily married 4867 StAt. BSO.
coupkl wanos IO give your .;;;;;;.,;;;;.;.;;;.;;;;;;,~-~
4
newborn wonderful opponuYARD SAI.h
n~ies, uricondilional k&gt;Ve &amp;
J'Owxo\•/MIIlOU:
security. Expenses paid.
Please call Barbara &amp; John 3 family 2nd·3rd-4·th. Route
@ 1·800-941-6780.
143. Chnstmas crafts .
Fenton. dishes. small furniture and more.
GivEAWAY

Pleasant Valley Hospital and
Rebilitation is currently aceepting
applications for a full-time LPN
Treatment Nurse. Long term care
experience preferred. M)lst have WV
license.
Holidays , health insurance,
single/family plan. dental plan, life
insuranc~. vacation, long--term disability
and retirement.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Re,ources,
2520 Valley Drive.
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
or fax to (304) 675-6975, or apply
on-line at -www.pvalley.org
· AAIEOE

'

r
1'---_.l

L~ing

S1.00 for larQe

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

country music, ·who· is dfug Airport Rd . Gallipolis ,Ohio
, Please Call Bob
Yard and bake saki to save

F1u1ts I

Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation is currently accepting
applications for a :full-time · Medical
Records Coordinator. Long term care
experience preferred. Registered Health
Information Technician preferred.
Supervisory and management skills and
experience preferred. Understanding of
infonnation systems in long tenn care.
Knowledge and understanding of
·
ICD-9-CM coding in lang term care.
Holidays . health . insurance
single/family plan. dental plan, life
insurance, vacation, long-term disability
and retirement.
Send resumes to:
'Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Resources.
,2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
or fax to (304) 675-6975, or aPply
on-line at www.pvalley. 0 rg
AAIEOE

~

Thu.....:a.y- for Sunday.

• All lids must ~~e·prepald"

Who us trust worthy, Rummage-Sale 9-3 Oct 6 &amp;
who like&amp; to cook &amp; listen to 7, New Ufe Church of Goa,

Distribution: ''========-======="!
-

~

Publlclltion
Sundlly Dleplay: t.:OO

Old.

Treatment Nui'Se

Pleasant VaJiey ·Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a Full time- LPNPH or Medical Assistant LPN applicants
must have a current West Virginia license.
One-year experience in a physician office
h rt. 1 · 1 t d
_,_ ·
'th
or osp a re a e area, wo. ~'"8 WI
direct patient care.
Excellent salary; hoi idays, health
insurance single/family plan, dental plan,
life insurance, vacation, long-term
disability and retirement
Send resumes to:
Pleasant V~ ltes-hl!l

r

A11 Dl-.play: :1.2 Noon 2
•usl...- oaya Prior To

Sunday ln-co1umn: I ;00 .p.m.
For Sundap Paper

•

Ohlo'&lt;lollew
Publlahlng r111n•
'!lo r~Qh!IO odll,
r-foc~DO'-­
odlll..,-.

you can have borders and QrGphlcs
added to your classified ads
(.~
Bonters$3.00/perad
~
GraphiCs SOC for small

Display Ads

Dally ln.. Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Frtday for In-rtton
In Next Dav'• Paper

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

LPN

LPN-PH OK MEDICAl AsSISTANT

Oeo.tlllirM

Word Ads

Anukoolkarn
(120th,
23:45) rounded out the
scoring. Jon Porter was
!29th.
South Gallia's Steven
Call was lith in a time of
18:56 and his teamm;lte
Jacob Watson was !19th
.
(23:44).
Southern's top runner
Kyle Goode crossed the
finish line 22nd overall in a
time of 19:48. He was followed by teammates Colby
Roseberry (74th, 21:51 ),
Cody Patterson (88th,
22:21 ), Drew Hoover
(97th, · 22:45),
Chris
Burkhamer (124, 24:02)
and Kris Kleski (I 26th).

Help Wanted

Sentinel
l\eglster
(740) 446·2342 (7!~~To992~~!~6 (304) 675-1333

cal:;...":;...

*POLICIES*

W9bsjtes;
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

t!Cribune ·

TO Place

'
Help Wanted

285,000 P~OSPECTS

YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Sentinel classifieds!

Help Wanted

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentlnel.com

- -· -

(740)709- 1382.

sole. (740)446·0527.

Comfortable house, livi ng
room. dining room , 2 ~
room, olltl, good, baSement
could have addltio!UII room,
heal pump, declc., large tront
porch, good Nolghborf'IOOd
(304l6-75 "1536

.3 bd., 2 ~h . 1990 M.H. ,
2acres. 10 )( 12 building.
pool.
Off Ne"" Lima in
Rutland. $63,500. 740.7421080.

G).

-Gr-ea_t_use
_ d_3_
BA
- ho_m_e_on..L
iy
$9 ,995. Will help with deliv-

r---~---, ery. Cal1'(740)385-7671

All ,...1 ntwt11 M.,.,-tt•lng
In thll newtpe])l'lr Is
aub)lct to the Federal
fllf lioullnt Act of 1961

New 2006 Clayton sin- '
gtewieles starting at $199.84per month . Trade-1ns wei·
comes. Call (740)385-2434 -

r

loTs&amp;
ACRFAGE

whk:h mek•".h 11~1 to
ldvertlte "tn~

302 Acres In MornlnQ Star

preference, limitation or
d!Krtnt!Mtlon based on
I'KI, color, reltglon . tu
t.milt•l .t.fut or national
origin. ot anv lntemlon to
make any auc:tt
pl'lft.-.nct, Umltltlon or

949-2544

d*rimlrwtlon."
Thil niWIPipel" will not
lmowtnglf KC8pt
tchltrtiHmentl tor rwt
-.tat. which Ia In
vtotl1ioll of tn. 1. .. Our
I'Mders are .,_reby
lnfonMd thllt all
dWIIUnga actnntted In

th'- ' •• paper are
IVIIIattle

on In eq•t

opportunity bun. .
Vf!ry 01ce part brd. 3-bedroom on .52 acre, fm1shed
basement wltn day light
entrance. hardwood · floors .
hea t pum~ear. Pomt
Pleasant (3D4)675-1536

•

--- - · - -- ------ - --- -.-~- ---

Area w/nght-A·Way.

740-..

Anent1on Hun... rs i t:arme.rs
160 acres. Sa noll Chapel
Ad 20 mmutes from 1-64 .
Mitton eKit Crty wa!er For .
inlormallon (304)937-4127.
Four tl!Jildl~ 1ms from 10 43
to 12.00 acres along St At
1-43 one mile east ot
Harnsonvillo · Pnced from
$2695 per acre 742-3033

Ho'me ~ot tor ,.,,
near Vm10n. Call (740)441 ·
1 , 1,

Mobile

Mobile Home Lol m Johnson ,
Mobile Home Park In .
Glillipo!ls. OH. Phone
(740)446·2003 0' (740)446-

1-409
Trailer lot lor rent 1001i:100 ,
510 0 a month 1304)6754874

�•

Mondlly, October 2, 2006
ALLEYOOP

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sel)tinel • Page 85

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
w.ntod: Lot Buy or ram lor
,_mobile home. (740)645·
015e, (740)645-0125

r

REu, FSI'Arn
~AN'ml

"'-••llllioiiiiiiiiio•_.l

2 bedroom, AJC. · porch &amp;
awning, Very, very nice, no
pots. In Gallipolis. (7401..a.
2003, (7401446-1409 or
(740)446-2692

BEAUTIFUL
Al'o\RT· Sorber carpet 5.95yd. vinyl Commercial building "For
MENTI
AT . BUDGET 5.95yd. roei&lt;er recliners Sale" 1600 squaNI liMit, olf
PIIICES AT JACK- $19U5; new couch l otreet par!dng. Gmt loco·
ESTATES, 52 Weotwood lovt188t $450. Motlohon llonl 749 Third Avonuo In
Drti'O from S349 to ~- Carpet
76
VIne
St., Gallipolis. Price 'Nogoltoblo"
- - - - - - - : - - - Well&lt; to shop &amp; movies. Call Golllpolla, OH (740)oW!· rooii Motillllo&lt;l Solo1rl
2 Sr., furn~hed. cia, carpon , 740 ..~..2568 .
Equal 7....
storage t&gt;urldlng, front porctl. Housing Opportunity.

job transfer or a deeth? 1 per Mo.. plus depoeR. 740- 1&amp; 2 BD RM APTS, UTILI· 202CIIrt&lt;CIIIpe!Rd.FMer.
can buy your home. Aft cash 992·396t .
TYS PD. 740-843-6264.
Phono
(7401388·0173.
-quick Cloelng. 740-416~-~ apt, 3 - · &amp; Open 9-3 Sat. only.
2BA trailer Rio Grande cam· Furn •••lli'U
......,. ....
pus. 530 0 m. dep. req. bath, upstairs, clean, no Thompaons Appliance &amp;

(7~01446·2422.

3BR, 2ba, doUblewlde,

t

no

pets, ref. reQu ired. $475
month $~75 dep. (7401367·
7025

2 bedroom house $350 mo 3B r Re!ridg &amp; Sto110,Waaher
rent + deposit, no pets. &amp; Dryer Included Saotl0!1 8
(7401..6-0924.

approved 1304 1576' 2934

Phillip

05

Rom 2500, 4 dr, - ·
••4 $29,999
oo F-250 qui!! Clb - ·
._. $12,4811
00 Noon $2,888

Alder

and

w

•0.

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

97 Wranglor $4,49~
89 Mustang GT$t895
94 Coraloa $895 ·

"'lllk• die p8in out
palntlq·lel ... do It

94 Cutlasa Cktna $1~95
92 Otds Eighty Eight $1 ,495

Rent $350 month each Homes. S325 + depos/1.
- WID"""'"'" S500
·
was.~~::~r.
''l"""""''
•
0 9
" (3041593-1~
(7401385"" 1 ,
depos" ,
re!oronces.
LOT !or rent in Pt. P~esant (740~9209 ,
2 Bodroom House. Nev.1y
;._;,.__ _ _ _ _
remodelad

on

Bob

McCormick Road, SSOO/mo,
Call
(7401441·01 94,
(7.0)441 ·11a..

-------~

28R (poss~e 3 BR). t beth,
full boeement,. large wrap

couche&amp;, mtlttresltl,

.new

w(a~hlor,!rv;~2 $4G~

•,ot.

one with front loader, gas &amp;

r·

I

STANLEYnEE
niMMINCi
I
,..,..,..,.,

around deck, 1 acre, $550
One bedroom apartment Stock. CaH Ron Ev&amp;.ns, 1• Tractor .Loader Bact&lt;hoel 1994
Cadillac
Sedan
month plus first and l~st Mobile Home sites for up to LocAtion: 403 112 Third Ave.
_ _
_
Skid Steers. \ carmichael Deville, all leather. Low

800 537 9528
months rent and deposit . 16)(80 in Country Homes . .One block from GAHS.
Call anytime (3041634·9t40. (740)385-40 19. ·
Washer &amp; dryer - u p. For _NE_W_AND-- IISE-- -TE
0 5 - E-L
7
28A home- Vinton Ave. One bedroom fu rnished an application call ( 40)o446- Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
4639.
F
c
A 1
$375 mo.+ sec. dep. Yoo pay mobile home for rent. ~rlvate
or
oncrete,
ng e.

Dri-

Equipment (740)446-2412

New John· Deere Compacts
andSOOOSariesU1IIRy 1ractors 00% Filed for 31
lh1 th roug h J 0 h n
mon
0 eera
·
creu"It . carm1chee1
Equipment (740'""-2412
,....._.
0"•i"
r
ty
J-~
~- w....
uom ~· ·-,Enulprr..m
tor tess-round
.....
balers, square balers &amp;
mower condlllonars 04.7%

3-4 SA house 2nd Ave. mo. plus deposH. (740)445·
4782 . •
Gallipolis ${X)O mo. dep. req
~~~A r"'"'
{740)446-2422.
~·~
o-....
FOR
.•
11
38R home· SR 554 , Bruwe . $575/mo· sec. l;lep. ret~r·
1 and 2 bedroom apart·
ences, ell elec (7401446·
meniS, !urn~hed and un!ur·
36«.
nished, security deposit
Pine Siree1 2 bedroom . t required, no pets, 740-992·
bath house lor rent S400 per 2218.

e

able for 1 adutt, prlvote
. dnveway w/cerport, no pots.
~~'"'OO mo. ..
"""
· d
9fo'. require .
(7 oov
'"1'~
'" '782

I-

L,-lllliiiiil""""iii;;,;,'-r

se

&amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
~ ....... u - 1s Open M •••
-"" -ta
on-,.
11u~a~.
--•
~
&amp;
euue-y
c..&lt;• • 8am-4·30pm Cl-',....,.,
·
· u-..

w

·•·

Thursday, Saturday
&amp;
r.-n RiYilrs Tower Is aooapt· Sunday. (740)W;-7300
lng """""......... lor wa.._
..........--~
""'"
list tor Huckubslzad, 1· br, ·
Vent Free 3-Piaque Propene
apartment, call 675 ..a679 or Natural Gas Heater,
Equal Housir,g Opportunny (Manual Conlroll $143.95
Upsialrs Apanment 2 bed· Aluminum Roof Coating .....

F~ed lor 48

month, water aild trash
R
room . 49 Spruce Street , 5-Gai. $36.95
lnctuded. Call (740)446- 2 bedroom apt in
io $400 per month, water and Blacktop Filter and Sealer....
&amp;677 days. (740)256-1972 Grande, S340 month plus trash included. (740)446- 5·Gat. $12.95
,
evenings.,\ttenttonl

utilities,
$340
(7401245-9050.

r

1

~~~er,h~~-p , pe~~se C~~

1

IAvl!srocK

= :::~ci~rtaot

same es re ·
Mortgage

(740)367-0000

(404~456-3802

147 t ,

Commercial

qu.t""•-m

- - - - - - - - Suites for Rent $125( month ...
2 bedroom upstairs apt.
t
f
t
t h you pay the UtiiHies. Call 2. male Basel Hound pup·
House for Rent (304)675- s ove, re ridg , wa er, ras (703)528-0617
82241eave message
included . $325 deposn
pies, 9 weeks old. $150 .00.

5062i!li''ij;;;i:;Jjk;;;l

f

7-'0~.

i

"i~--==-~--,

u.. •·

G:.:·

Mobile home space in Rio
Grande.
$135/month 2 mate CKC registered _____
$includes watCaer &amp;( sewer. Mlnil!lure
10
1000 Bales of mbced
100/deposlt. 11 740 ~ weeks otd ask1ng $300 ha th'
3617.
(304)59S·3S20
y
rs veers nei'Or
.
51 _00 per bole. 740-992 •
CKC Jack Russell Te"ier 56 16
l!'lll"""~!"""-----, puppies 5125 _ 17401256- - - - - - - - -

Dachs~unds

~

·--·UUUU'Iiiiiiiii-_.1
~

Applili~

W•Nhouse

Alsoavellableunitson State

~::Have

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: East-West

'

'

South

•
_,

5·10 121 ,000 miles.
Runs good, fair condition ,
995
$
·

Klmmy's fwnlture
Outlet

'j

·

74t-7M-117~r

4x•

F(Jl SAlE

· v
loa
~:sL, ~i~~ge de~~
4WIB:"ft mK&gt;

..,..u..oru-..

191 Lincoln Sln'd Midc:Uepon, OH

.

-

741-367-7441

r

IIIEIJ
1111"1
------

·.)Aolaol:.~=--~.':"
A fee

1994 N~rnad, slide

out

'
·•

THE BORN LOSER

late removal, ex anytime
access is wanted to
fairgrounds other than
stated dates. Building
:.':":!:rstcome
Inside Storage: $4.00111
Open Span: $2.00/lt
Inside Fen ce·. $1 .00/lf

Remodeling

5th

wheel , ex. condition. Cell for

. . . . . .~.--~---· price

o1 $20.00 wilt be

charged lor early arrival,
late arrival, earty removal,

~-""

.

_,

MeigsCouhtyFalrgroundl

C··- .. I .Complete

MoToR HoME&lt;;

11

.lntvlll: oct. 21, 2111

Garages

•

..

.IIIIMTrf) t'l'l'lb.li'r
"''" 1r:lfi ~ IVIVf!Tr:

.
• New Homes

~;="'~-m~Bi:":.o.:· ~:r:;;:=~

(740125e~92.

Caii98S-4372

'WH'( 1'10\ LL\ ~ 00 ~E. ~

;.

lZf.t:&gt;E.~:M,~I~

ii

SHOP
CLASSIFJEDS

(740)645-2193.
- - - - - - - - $7,999. Locelly
2002 Honda 400EX, adutt {304)965-1513.
owned, low hours, many

, \:), If IT ,t..,l~i
erROl(( .. ,

2,800

miles.

'(OU'U. ~oeA&amp;-'1
~f&gt;,K \\! ;_.-/(:,....-:~

located

~=~ed24Es~~~~s~~l ~~

7

z• ·

PaSs . Pass

ics. In this deal. there are two possible
lines ol play. One is malhemetically
·mush bener than the olhor. •gains! you1
four·heart contract, Wes1 leads a low
spade. What would you do?
·You have nine top tricks: one spade. six
hearts, ofle diamond and one club. YOU
could lake the spadelinesse at I riel&lt; one.
That is a Sll-50 shot. Here It !ails, and
East would surely shift to the diamond
queen, killing your contract.
What is the alternative? Try to establish
a long club. But II the clubs are spWtling
4·2, you will n~ three dummy entries:
two for dub ruffs In hand and one to
reach the 13tt1 dub. Those entries are
the heart ace, the heart nine and the
dub ace. So, win with the spade ace on
the board and call for a low club. Let's
assume W"l'' takes the trick with h~ jack
and plays a spada, East switctllng to the
diamond queen after taking his spade
king.
Win with your diamond ace, cash the
heart king, play a club to dummy's ace,
ruff a club high. lead a trump to the nine.
ruff another ~lub high, play a hean to the
ace, and cash the club eight. , ·
This line requires heans 2-2 or 3--1 and
clubs 3-3 o r 4·2, a combined 75.6 per·
cent - much bener than 50 for the

;~====~~~

LOCalI
Maid

~

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~
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29670 Bashan Road

~ VK.J:'

Racine , Ohio

Alfordloble
Dependable

7~17

PEANUTS

4sn1

~t:"':&gt;t:, '(OV

DON'T 1-lAV:E I
TO TEL.L ME EVER'{

Fully Insured

·~

'

LITTLE DETAIL !
l'loUill

7:00AM • 8:ob PM
1n 4/1 mo. pd

Cornerstone
Construction

!l'"li

'

Men'# llial• Commercial• Geaen1 C.lnctiac
Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling

03M2
3I2M

• Plumbing • Elcctriu d 7-41_.7...._
• Accoustk Ceiling · 7~t2

'"

I

SUNSHINE CLUB

Tree Service
Top • a.-1 • Trim
• Stump Grinding

•

• Bucket Truck

GARFIElD
~!
'·

''

~

.
I'M LeARNINrl 60
MUCH AIOCJ'f WOMeN

~I

3
9111'

-.....---....
,.,_.

-~

Electric81 &amp; Plumbing
Roofing I Gutters

VInyl SWing ' Painting
Patio and Porch Decb

WV036725

V C YOUNG Ill
._J,

•

'

~

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•

•

• J'p

' • • • ;&gt;

~ rp· •If•'

Take 1
break

19

DOWN

24

Nichola
36 Ear part
Apply paint 39 Fnlen ·
French
.a Rooter's
article
need
Equip with 41 ·Cllf1lllde
weapons
refuge
Continent
42 Mala Harl
Carioca's

home

21

1 NYC 1lrport 25

2 y.,...

colllr·
29 lleloN. to

33 Almost
grodt
35 Ivan«

3 loan figure 26
4 Prepaii!S
divider
dough
Z7 Romon
5 Deep vo~
market· '
3ol BucJts
6 Cry ol
ploces
37 Astroneut's
disdain
28 -Alamos
lab
7 Navaho
30 Gamble
38 Catherineloos
31 Toll bird
~
8 Foll plontlng 32 Fix , as a
39 Fo-le
9 Go for s
lloxlng
mentions
siYoll
match

Illite
30. Flnst·llllge
roclllla

portroyer

43 CoiiOCiod
44 Loud cry
45 Splaah 0111
47 Icicle site
48 101 and 1-5
51 RY haven
53 Aardvllt&lt;
sniCk

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cele""Y Cipher ~ • e CB8Ied trom QootabOI'I$ 1:1v tsmrs people
e.::h le!ler intire ~r slards t" ar.ottl!!r
Todsy's ctoo: Pequals U

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tl VBDLFM'L OBJZOZFM ,

VMFE

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TKZRC

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wedding anniversary." - Scree"nwriler Gene Fowler

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loy
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Granny tol d the newly -

weds:You onty get the full
r--::""'C~-:-:--..,---,value of joy Wyou have some·
T WI N H E lone to -- • •. it ••• •:
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!&gt;tiNT NUMBEaeo
tenus
.

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ICIIAMLETI ANftmts 9.~106

Inlaid - Usurp - in!tc - Orchid - PLASTIC
"Things sure llave changed. • one old timer sigherl.
"Now: he continut!d. .,ifyoo gel down to brass laoks lhey
will be malk out of PLASTIC."

ARLO&amp; JANIS

one you &amp;hould.

SOUP TO NUTZ

space .
for
1
54 per
month

,

.'

111 1ht l'l'l •ss,ng ....,o,ds

L-...J.-,.I.....J.-.1-...J.__,J you de... P. ioo from lteP No. 3 below

compaa11on and mtsl an1111n g aome·

l

past and prasent.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' Nerct to pnvacy, the rarest thing 1n Hollywood is a

THat to which you aspire wilt h8118 an
excellent chance of being achieved in the
year ahead, owing to the fae1 you'll be
(TIOre pragmatic than you've been in the
pas!. And you witt now take measures to
make your dreams realllies.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Be ~treme­
ly selective regarding individualS with
whom you choose to socialize. ll you
should get mhced up with lhe wrong people. i1 could tum into a very negative
m:perienc8
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Your -,,
image co uld be a trifle tragih~. so be Metra
mindful o f your behavior when oul
among those who are Important to you.
Do nothing that would Provide fodder for
you'r detractors.
SAGITTARIUS . (Nov. 23- Dec. 21) Associates could have a stronger lnflu·
ence on your thinking than you usually
permit. If you link up with negative pals,
you may vtew the world with a sour note.
CAPRI CORN (Dec . 22·Jan. 191 Teaming up with others In an arTangement where an investment may be
required on you r ·pan mighl not be the
best thing for you to do. Be sure to test
the walers before jumping ln.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Independence is an admirable quality,
but you could nave a tendency to carry it
tO eJCtremeS. Wl'len Coopf!r&amp;tion is celled
for; don't try to be a lone eagle. Be a .
team player. instead.
PI SCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Gu.;~rd
ag ainst tendencies to be too frighiened
to treat situations with the seriousness
'they deserve. lmportanl matterS that
require caution shOuld not!Je trealed in a
cavalier fashion ·
.,
ARI ES (March 21~ Apr ll 19) - Accept
your tnends tor Who they are. If you dis·
play intolerance tor them. you can expec!
them to call at1ent10n to those trails that
need correcting.
TAURUS (Apnl 20·May 20) - If you
hope to get a necessary message
across to either frie nds or family thai they
- may not like, lead by ~ amp le . If your etti·
tude rs ~do as I say. not as I do." the
results will displease you
GEMINI (May 21· June 20)- Unless yr:~·
are absolutely certain your friends and
associates know what you're talking
about, don't expecy them to put r,1uch
credence in what you aay. Be as factual
as possible.
CANCER (June 21-July 224 - Even II
yoU're in a reuonably good financial
po5ltlon, lhings could gttla bl1 rodc.y from
time to ttme. Tnls could be one ol thou
moments when dili gence Ia necet.u.ry.
LEO Puly 23· Aug. 22) - You are uauat·
ty a rather decisive pef'IQn wM hN no
trouble m•klng a dedalon, but you could
make others a bit Impatient be ~UM of
your inab1111y to makt up your mlnCI .
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept . 22) - Und• r
moet condltion1, you're an Individual who
jumps right In to help othera in nM CI.
Today, tho~ . you might lack your u&amp;ull

•
- - - · - - - -, --;-·-- - - - -

24 ~......
geor
27 t(tnd ol

nock
10 Not hard
Augull skin 13 Lootcs
Foot tile blll
happy

·in this

"oom Additions I
-.-!Ins

•

"

Advertise

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•

'

•

YOUNG'S

56=-Md

18 GecseloMr
20 l'llltftiO
57
56
22 Sllldciwy
59
23 Bound
~-

5•

By llemloe -

1·7...992-6196

J • -

Pass

Tueodoy, Oct. 3, 20jl6

&amp;Bonded
Dally, Weell:ly, or
Monthly'..._
Av.U.ble

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Pass
Pass

W~!r!t.

BIG NATE

7

.

,.

4•

~Astro-

1

Excellent condition . Like [}870 , Rogers Basement
new. $4200. Ca~ 992 •2076 Waterproofing.
after 5 ·
-Fo-re_me_n_400--4,-4-.-.,-oe-1-le-nt
condition, new front end: - - - -- - - Ohio. 740-992·3490.
bearings, brakes,. tune-up. ~g
, ~~~in:;, ro:;~:'ngr·
$2,900 OBO. Call after 4pm
1978 Silver Anniversar~ ( 40)~ needs. No job too big or
Edltton Corvetti. red, auto,
small. 10+ years 81q)Bri·
new tires/battery. T·top, Kawasaki Mule, like new. ence. Pomeroy and surcover Included , $9,500 original
flres.
$2.400. rounding areas. Free esti·
(~)773-595?
(7401446·3117.
mates. 1·740-416·1411 .

Pass

· spade finesse.

''

4Pallil)olis 1llail!J Wrib~ne
(740) 446-2342

,.I-tO-IF 1\ NN'T Brot&lt;.E.,

, .

riO

2002 Saturn 4 D, Auto,
56.000 mites. 1995 Buicte:
Riviera Supercharged, nice:
Riverview Motors, 2 blocks
above McOonakis, Pomeroy,

Reach

OON'T ~

/1\'1 fo\OTTO

---------' ~f~~~~~~~~~~or~mor~e~ln~!o~rm~a~ti~on~~

'

$2,900. Cali (740)446-o425. Volusla .

Route 160. Call for detail s in . Henderson, WV. Pre{740)441.01 94 or (740)44 1· owned Appliances starting Kiwi Fruit! Cherry and
1184 .
at $75 &amp; up all under Hickor~ nld si:ze, smooth
14x80 singteWide. 3 bed· Apt. tor rent 2 or 3 Br.. No warranty, also have recon- stein. 740-992-7449. VirgM's
rooms, 2 full batris, 6 miles _Pets. 74 o-- 9 ~_ 5858 _
..
d B' Sc
TV' Berry Patch, St.Rt. 124, Eas1
from Gallipolis down Rt. 7.
dbltloRne ' IQTVreen
s ot S~racuse, Ohio.
All electric, oen1ral air, $400 CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Y on s
(3041675depo:8tt, 5400 rent monthly,
&amp; AFFORDABLE!
7999
applications being taken , 1 Townhouse
apartment 5, - - - - - - - 1
year l&amp;ase. No pets. Call and/or small houses FOR For Sale: Loveseat, chair
(740)446-4514iormorein1o. RENT. Call (740I.. 1· 11t1 and ottoman · $250. Call
for appticatioo &amp; Information. 740·992·t997.

P"'~ !

OS Honda Rebel , less then 1999 Jayco Eagle Slh wheel
900 miles, windshield, sa&lt;l· 24 ' wlthsllde. Mintcondtlon.
52 •400 ·
dlebags,
Call hitch
ind uded, eiCtras.

r

V~

OF OUR. .

WEe SITE, CJ-1.\E.F?

Straw$2.50-e, oats$6.00 or&lt;tras. Asking $3,500 OBO. •=r--~!"""--__,
per 100 lb.
Evenings (7401379·2604,
Full bloodad Norwegian
clay 1740)37&amp;-1908.
EIIChound 7 months old $75.
"' -•iiiiiiliiiiiiiliioP
Call (7~0)388·8129.
.,
2003 Bombardier DS650 '
At.JtOS
Baja HMF exhaust, i-razor
BASEMENT
P~gm~ &amp; Boer Goats &amp; 2
Ft*.SALE
tires, $3,500. (740)441. .
WATERt !LOCWiNG
Coonhounds (30oft675-1858
5150.
Unconditional lifetime guar·
F d 11
SE
nt
, ---I ~
2000
FRu'rs &amp;
_or
aurus
2003
Suzuki
Intruder a ee. I..VI...CII •en::rences 1ur-

i

.THEM STO~
WfNJ)OWSARE
ALREADY ON !1

FER FAU.

Jf.l.,"#,~

~~;;~~·~~~~~·~~~~ii~~
2A~ St. Rt. 160 •

mm ,,..,,

92

1 "'

Stolen

of the l~w e11cuses no man:
Not that all men know the taw, out
because 'tis an excuse every man will
plead, and no man can tell how to refute
him." ·
It can also be hard to relute rnathemal-

1 AIN'T START€D MY SPRING CHORES
YET AN' ElVINEY JEST
GIVE ME TH' UST

www dzrt uasal o.M ..,._.

drive, ext. cab. $(,000. CaM '-==:;;.;:;.;:;;;=~
(614)313-47 17
I"
"""'"""'

East

17

~I gnorance

HMits1. Cltlllelt AH Fllli&amp;lre

"MkWitpelfs
Only
Self-stor••

=-

._..

1s e..... 11101 55

John Seiden, an English lawyer and par·
iiamentarian who died In , 654, said,

s;::a-n

BARNEY

740 446

North

are irrefutable

.

.. . .
-

.,

992-3194
·or 111--6635

West

r-FR_A_N_K_&amp;_E_AR_N_E-:-ST_--=~,.......---------,.......------, . The mathematics

~
·~

t3S6 Coliele Rd. • Syraca~~e,OH 740-992-0tll

.

K Q J 10 6 5
A7 4

"' 6 3

97 Bee+
..___
---~n _,_.
"dll
Mi eport. OH

I

1552.

-_.1

eo

.

Show steers, hailer broke, 740)245-9183.
priced to sell. (740)256·
9250, (740I64 5 .~ 1 .
,., Mo'rollcvaJi!i/

'"
7"f\1 - 743- 5264 -

S325.
(740)441·9872,
House tor rent on Hidden (740)446·7620.
Valley Drive. 3 bedroom :..34-'1-/2_S_m_Rhe-rs-.-upst-a-irs-.
wltree water. $500/mo. Call · 2BR , 1 bath, large front
(7.0)285-757t .
porch. S320imo., $200/dep.
Pomeroy 2 Bd., 1 bath, new renter pays all utilities. No
C/A, $550. 740-843·5264
pets, no PRC 740..46·
Taking appKcations. House 9051 .
API&lt;.R'J'MENTS
NOW
f1· nice 2BR, • mi from AV"II.Ml.E,
Ho&amp;Dnl on 'Mwy 180. S«Xl Brand new 2 . Bedroom
per mo.
House it2- Nice 2-3BA in Apartments Washer/dryer
Vinton. Both are plus u1ililies hookup, stove/refrig erator
&amp; depos~, (740)379-2923. Included, 1 located In city, 1
(74Q\AA.c .-'lo65 or (7401441 - approiC. 1 mtle outside city
~
limits.

.FOR
......&amp;u!:·-•~

www.nationwide- 2 yr old Black Mare
Purebred Quarter Horse 4sale
w/papers
$900 1996 Blazer 108,000 miles

~g~ 5 :eNTMI~D~~Po': ~~:~t~·773-9t81 or304· ~~~~spa~:;:,";;'~: t..• ..;:;:;::~~i;.,_.l (~)675·38S6

f

.. ___ • ___ - __ • - •

IOXI-OxiOxlO

K 9 6 3

• Q J 10 9
oToQ1097

•

~lrrlo:~~......~~~"''

·3389oqulppod, $5,500. (7401446·

.4

•

52-.to

AWJ ... a"
crunch
Mudllo't 54 F -. In
IIMnded

• QJ

•

~~~--· EHIT~ ~~~leage.

=="------

Lo--tors. and last months rent of Cati Wayne
......
S350.00
No utilities.
References req. m Mason. Downtown

~
~
41 6-0 135,
--------1999
Cadillac
Coville,
Excelrent Condttlon, n,OfXJ
miles, 2 owners, Fully

Ir·15

I

~

credH (7401446·9442
5:00pm.

ted
accep

11"""""

'KIEFER "110RSE 'VALLEY
"BISON
• 1JVE. 1!198 Ford Ranger 4 wheel

after Rent" 1500 squaro!oe1, off
street parkfng. Great toea:- Pole
Barns
30x50~~:10 - " - . . . tion ! 749 Third Avenue In $6.995. ~aimed metal, slid· (7.0)44&amp;-2412
,
• Paymen~ could be. the 2 bedroom garage apt First ·Gallipolis. Ren1 -r-legotiabJe" er, free · delivery. (937)718·

:

Call GafY Stanley
74i--l41-:Z.21:J

months through

Local company offering "NO 2
bedroom
apt
on
Pl6m Plua 1181dWMI
S10Ct( TRALERS "LOAD·
Centenary Rood , weter
SI'-'&lt;E
(304)675-4054
MAX
•GOOSENECK,
COW" PAYMENr pro·
, Filii RENf
-:-~----.,
- DUMPS •
UT1UTY
1
grams 101 you to t&gt;uy your paid, appliances umlshed, ' - - - - - - - ·
~
:ALUIIA
'ALUhome instead of renting.
Commercial building "For
SlPft.Es
. TRAILERS "'BBtW GOOSE-

i

·

-.r

8677
1
7
deposit . euenlniiS.
days, ·( 401256- 972 Beautnul
Fe! Mums ...........
31or $11 .97

I

•

8 72

South

leave a m
., ___ • 10%0FFWIAD
• • - - ·- • • - - I
conditi011
, $6,85CLOOor 080.
Cell
7'"·949·1072
7'"· • :;,;;;;;;;:;~ r=~:=:;~~~~~=~===l
'·

·
John
Ooere
Credft. 2002 Chevy Gavalier, looks
Carmichael
' Equipment and runs great, 117,000
(740I.w&amp;2412.
miles, automatic, $4,500
OBO. Call.(740~56·1253.

r

e.

15

Opening lead: • 4

AU Makes&amp;. Models
Pickup&amp;. DeiMry Av.nable
OPE Ce1lfled
,
Certified Mec:hanlcs
ATV Parts&amp;. Sorvke Avalloble

"Insured"

1997 Cadillac Calera low
mies-4•ooo loaded""""

•

•

+K B2

All Work Guaran_.

Free Estimates

•

MUeage. Ftriced to SELL,
call (3041675·1625

.

. l:lfllitles. Gas heat {740)446· lot with a carport. No pets. One bedroom, nicely fur- Channel, Flat Bar, Sleet
3644.
Refere nces required . $450 nished apt . quiet area. suit- Grating
Fo1
Drains,

nVal,a

10 8 5 4 2

SO Tunclno
........

14 bvnl
"'
"The

.,.,.

'

""lhorlzed

Prompt &amp; quality
WOrk
• Affordable Rates
• References
•· ·1 bl

6 53

•

'

S1noe 1978
Service For:
Q~ Woi'k ~a Folr Price!

•

•

oTo K J

~Ded:en

...-==-,...
"""'~'""""""

on.

•

IJr•••• S•an

96 Mustang $2 1999

otlwell swollbor, pt, takoolf 92 ,Dodga C.rgo \llln, low
74 4
4
allpo Is, driven International 1600, mills $2,500.
OH, Hrs 11.S (M-51
--StOO monlh, S100 deposn. Now tal&lt;lng appllcatlons .1or ~--~~,.;,~....,~ 16'dumpbed.Ph. (740)2.S.
(7«1)WI.740 388 8 28
5535
Ca ll (
1 • t
or one bed apartments at
~~
_
_'
c
---:-~:-(3041675- 1996·
Spring ~alley, ,Green and ~ ,...........,..,__ • John Deore 1
No Til Drtll 1961 Cadillac conuortlblo.
Mobile Home tor Rent, Brookside apartmonts. Cell
for
rent.
Carmichael Very good ooodltion. leather
Apple Grove, WV oraa call (740I.w&amp;1599 !or ln!orma·
JET
Equipment (7401..a-2•12. Interior, classic. (740)245·
9142
(3041576-3389 or (3041593· tion .
l\ERATION MOTORS
•
Repolrad , New &amp; Rebu!H In John Deere Mini E&gt;ca\llltorl - - - - : - - - - : - 87 t 4

•

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
740-4440-0007 Toll Free 877-669..0007

Bedroom

A 7
A9S

Wtlll

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT . ••

740-98!-4180

•
•

oToABHZ

r7tuftihJ 1•!3'@4:1

for you"
Interior Only

99WI-$1695
95 Da- •••. V6 $1895
92 F2 50 V8 4, 4 $3,2iS
97 K-2500 VB, auto, 4x4
$3,295

Bedroom House &amp; 2 For rent: Nioe 2 bedroom In Gallipolis, dean, upstairs. &amp;Iaviiie Pike. Gas ranges, 2·14·1 0 CUe·DIIIIki Brown 87 c.vatfer $3095
Apartment tor mobile home ' in Country 2 bedrooms. 2 both, di&amp;h· bunk beds, ChesiS, dtnanea,
·
rarm tractor. SSHp . diesel, 9EI Cel/afler 22&lt;4 $2688

2

p.,-

1 Qulcl&lt; pun 43 111110111 tnlel !-*~
5 PC'I breln, 44 Lonp for
8 - ~ do 46 Otit, II tile
dlnlltlt't
cwanel
41 Do the
12 Soma
Wlallfl thing 1-7-1.~-lo
plllbo-

Norllr

9e Mozda 826 $1395
98laurUI $2300

petl;. Rof/depoeft required. Ropolr-!175-7388. ·For BOlo, 'IJ!I ER IULT 'VALLEY
(7401-w&amp;1519.
ro·oondftioned autor"atic . _ 'li()fll( • IJVE.
'--- ' - - - - - - - woiii\Ors &amp; dryers, ratrlgara- S10CK TIIMEIII 'LCMDGracious living., and 2 bed- to,~, gn and electric · MAX
•QOOIENECK,
room apartments at Village ranges, air oonc1monors, and DUMPS
• ,, UTILITY
Manor
"Riversida
'ALUIIA
'"'-UMINUM
Apartmtlnts in Middleport. wringer waehors. Will do TRAILERS ... 0008E·
From 1295.$4... Call 7
repolrs on major brands In NECK
..
HITCHES.
992·5064. Equal Housing lhop or at your homo.
C.rmlcftaol
Equ~
Ueod !urnfturo store, 130 (7.0)44&amp;-2412
DpportunRios.

Anowerto P....tous

lldr8CI

, er.me

._. $22,888
01 G111nd Pr11&lt; GT $1,-4H
00 Aloro$3,895
9e Ecllpoo $2,288

$400. Mollohan Fum.

41 ~

ACROSS

00 FSSO quod Cllr, -

-------rodlnor $200; l&lt;lfB &amp; I.

NMc:l to sell your home ? bocl&lt; doci&lt;.
Close to
U. on payments. divorce, Wolman in MilSOn. $475.00 FOR RENT MIDDL.EPOIIT -

OS Ecllpoo $6,500
03 Neon $4,395

'

I

I

�•

'

Gunptan kiJJs 3, then
self at 1-room Amish
schoolhouse in
Pennsylvania, A2
•

··Tony .Stewart's garitble pays otT with big Kansas·victory
'

BY CMIIIs JINKINS
ASSOCIA~D

PRESS

KANSAS CITY, Kan. Tony Stewart was on fumes.
Jimmie Johnson was fuming.
Eliminated from championship contention, Stewart
and his crew deoided to
gamble on fuel mileage. It
paid off - but just barely,
as Stewart crawled ·across
the finish line Sunday to
win the Banquet 400 at
Kansas Speedway.
Meanwhile, Johnson tried
to play it safe to remain in
the hunt for the Nextel Cup,
giving up the race lead to pit
for an extra splash of fuel
with four laps to .go. But he
was penalized for speeding
on pit road and finished
14th.
.
Johnson was upset about
the penalty after the race.
"I was just trying to get
off and get on and get back
in the race, and I got a
speeding
violation,"
Johnson said. "I wasn't
doing anything differently."
Johnson 's
Hendnck
Motorsports teammate, Jeff
Gordon, saw his championship momenmm evaporate a few laps earlier.
Gordon was running

NEW YORK (AP) -· If
the Detroit Tigers are going
to extend their surprising
season by making a run in
the playoffs, they'll have to
get past the New York
Yankees.
After wasting several
chances to wrap up an AL
Central title, the slumping
Tigers slipped to a wildcard spot Sunday and now
must open the postseason
Tuesday night ,at Yankee
Stadium
against
New
York 's powerful lineup.
, "Once we get to New
York, we'll be ready to
go," Tigers first baseman
Sean Casey said. "It's a
new season cpme Tuesday
night."
All the other first-round
m•tcblq)S we~e alsO ~ed
on l'be final day of the regular season. The playoffs
begin Tuesday, when AL
West champion Oakland
visits Minnesota at I :09
p.m. EDT.
In the National League,
the St. Louis Cardinals
play at San Diego in Game
I at 4:09p.m. Tuesday. The
New York Mets will face
the Los Angeles Dodgers,
who took the wild card, in
series
that
starts
a
Wednesday
at
Shea
Stadium.
All four
first-round

JlillphcM

.Tony Stewart (20] had to be pushed into Victory Lane after winning the Banquet 400 at
Kansas Speedway in. Kansas City, Kan. Saturday. Stewart crossed the finish line on fumes
with an average speed of 121.754.
eighth when his car developed an apparent fuel-pressure problem with 29 laps to
go, causing him to slow to· a
crawl on the backstretch.
· After getting a push. back
to the pits 'from former
Hendrick teammate Terry
Labontl:, Gordon's crew
tried to fix his car but couldn't get him back on the
track. He finished 39th . .
"We don't know what it
was," Gordon said. "1 don't

like to speculate. I know I
dido 't have any fuel pressure, but 1 don't know what
it was."
·
Casey Mears also gambled •on gas and finished
second, zigzagging his way
to the checkered flag to try
to. force the last drops of
fuel from his tank into his
engine.
Chase contender Mark
Martin finished third.
Jeff Burton, who broke a

· five-year winless streak and
grabbed the points lead last
weekend at Doyer. also
used a conservative fuel
strategy and ·finishe9 fifth.
Burton was .running second
when he pitted for a splash
of fuel w1th nine laps to go.
Sunday's race caused a
major shakeup in the points
standings, with Burton leaving with an unofficial 69point lead over Denny
Hamlin, who managed to

Climb two -spo.ts with an ing thr&lt;&gt;ugh .t he infield
l8th-plaoe fimsh. · ·
grass. ·
.
.Martin moved up to third
Harvick: and Gordon were .
in the standings. 70 points shuffled back to 37th and
behind Burton.
38th for the restart. Gordon
Gordon ~ped four rallied quickly, working his
spots to sixth, 120 points way back into the top five
behind Burton.
before the race's halfway
NASCAR's postseason- point. Harvick: struggled to
style Chase for the Nexte.l stay on the pace and was
Cup champions!Jip format lapped by race leader Kyle
again was affected by a Busch on · Jap 118, but
non-Chase
driver
on climbed to 12th with 83 laps
Sunday, as thRlt of the top to go and finished 15th. He
five championship-eligible remains fifth in the standdrivers had to swerve to ings.
avoid an early spinout by
Sunday was rougher &lt;&gt;n
· Ryan Newman.
Matt Kenseth, who carne
.But the incident )!lasn 't as into the race third in the
bad as it oould hive been.
points but struggled with ·his
Newman, · who failed to car's handling all afternoon
qualify for NASCAR's sea- and spun out on lap 145.
son-ending tO-race champi- Kenseth was able to rejoin
onship showdown, spun out the race but finished_ 23Fd
by htmself on laf 15 and dropped from third .t o
directly in front o Burton. · foorth in the standings.
Burt~n quic~ly swerved to
Hamlin also spun out with
the nght, dnvtng thlough a ! 15 laps to go. and had to
blinding cloud of SQioke ' to make another unscheduled
miss
hitting stop with 55 Japs leff.
narrowly
Newman.
Busch ran in the top five
Gordon
and
Kevin for·most of the race, but was
Harvick were right behind penalized for speeding on
Burton. and had to juke to pit road before a restart with
the left I!J avoid Newman's 68 laps to go and dropped to
car as it slid down the the back to the back of the
l'rontstretch. Gordon and pack.. He rallied in the closHarvick both ended up slid- mg laps to finish seventh.

series are a best-of-five manager Jim Leyland said.
"We needed our pitchers to
format.
Making their first trip to give us more than we got in
the playoffs since 198 7. the the last five days. If we
Tigers pulled out all the keep pitching like this,
stops Sunday as they tried nothing else is going to
to win their division and matter.''
earn home-field advantage
The NL East champion
in the first round. But they Mets, who tied the Yankees
squandered a six-run lead for the bl:st record in the
against last-place Kansas majors at 97-65 , also are
City and lost 10-8 in 12 concerned about their
innings for their fifth con- pitching . . ,
secutive defeat.
The Mets will be without
All-Star . starter Kenny an injured Pedro Martinez
Rogers came out of the throughout the postSeason,
bullpen for his first regu- while the Dodgers have
Jar-season relief appear- Derek Lowe and Greg
ance in three years, but he Maddux lined up to pitl:b
gave up the go-ahead runs. the first two games. Los
Detroit's lo~s coupled Angeles ended the season ·
with Minnesot~~'s 5-1 vic- on a seven-game winning
tor~ over the Chicago streak, while New York
White .Sox gave Minn~;sota won its final four.
its fourtb ALCentral cbam''One benefit we have is
pi.o nship in five years. we faced them a short time
Playing at the noisy ago," Dodgers outfielder
Metrodome, the Twins will J.D. Drew said. "It will be
send rested ace Johan a tough matchup. Their
Santana ( 19-6) to 'the bullpen is pretty much set.
mound in Game I against I'm sure the loss of
Oakland curveballer Barry Martinez is disheartening
to them."
Zito (16-1 0).
Nate Robertson (13-13)
The Padres and Cardinals
will pitch Detroit's opener held on to win division
against Yankees right-han- championships Sunday, so
der Chien-Ming Wang (19- they will meet in a rematch
6].
of a first-round series last
"It's a lot e..sier to beat year,· wh~n the Cardinals
them three out of five than cruised to a three-game
four out of Seven," Tigers · sweep.

Browns ·
from PageBl
for a 2-yard loss in the
backfield on fourth down to
end the drive .
Frye led the Browns to
the 6 before throwing an illadvised ball across the field
that was intercepted by
Nnamdi Asomugha with
3:58 left
Last wee~. Frye threw an
interception in the end zone
with
3:21
left
with
Cleveland on top of
Baltimore
14- I 2.
The
Ravens·· then drove for the
winning field goa.L
The Raiders were unab le
to do the same and are off
to their worst start since
losing their first three
game&gt; in 1961. just their
secol)d year of existence.

Jprdan ran for 128 yards,
a 59-yard score,
Sam Wtlliams returned a
fumble 30 yards for
Oakland's fitst touchdown
of the year and Walter connected on a 5-yard pass with
Randy Moss for his first
career touchdown.
Frye's third-quarter TD
passes helped the browns
avoid the third 0-4 start in
their history. He finished
22-for-32 for 192 yards and
outplayed Walter in a
matchl!P of players taken
two picks apart in the 2005
draft. Reuben Droughns ran
for I 00 yards on 25 canies
for Cleveland.
·Walter was 9-for-23 for .
68 yards, a touchdown and
an interception in place of
injured
starter
Aaron
Brooks.
The Raiders were unable
to score after Jordan 's long
run made it 21-3 with 4:08
includin~

left in the second quarter.
Cleveland's two first~half
scores came after long kickoff returns by Joshua
Cribbs.
A 65-yard return set up
Phil Dawson 's 28-yard field
goa I,. and after Jordan's
touchdown run, Cribbs took
the kick back 53 yards. That
led to frye 's 2-yard pass to
Darnell Dinkins that cut · it
to 21-10 with 58 seconds
left in th.e half.
·
Frye led two touchdown
drives in the thin;! quarter as
Cleveland rallied to take a
24-21 lead. He hit Winslow
on a 22-yard pass on fourthand-8 from the Oakland 31
to set up a 2-yard ID pass to
Winslow.
After Dennis Northcutt's
58-yard punt return, Frye hit
Jurevicius in the comer of
the end wne fot a 5-yard
score late in the third quarter.

Untreated cider
has fans, despite
label o~ risks, A6

AEP rues Ohio,.West Virginia environmental applications

SPORTs·

BY BRIIUII J. REED

• Trimble trips up
T~Seep._B1

BREEOOMVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - American
Electric Power filed state
environmental . permit applications for clean-coal power
plants in Meigs .and Mason
counties on Monday.
. The applications were
filed "in an effort to continue
moving the generation
plants forw.ard," according
to to AEP news release. An
apJ!lication was filed with

the . Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency for ~·s
proposed
Integrated
Gasification
Combined
Cy&lt;Jie plant in Lebnaon
Township arid with the West
Vit:ginia Department of
Environmental Protection
for ·its . proposed Mason
County
· AEP · sident Michael
Moms said AEP plans to
begin construction on the
Ohio plant first, and begin
construction on the New

"J!:t.

Haven, W.Va. site - adjacent to the Phillip Sporn
plant -· 'two years later.
"It remains our intent to
begin constructitln on the
Ohio plant first," Morris
said. "Our start dates will be
determined by the completion of the regulatory
approval pr-ocesses in the
states·."
Last summer. Morris said
he eKpected construction to
begin in West Vi~ginia first,
the Mountain
because

State's permitting process
was eKpe'cted to take less
time that Ohio's. He said
Monday construction would
begin on both plants as soon
as regulatory hurdles are
cleared.
"'nce we receive final
rost-recovery authority and
(any) legal &lt;:hallenges have
been received, we will begin
construction," Morris said.
Last week, the Ohio
Power Siting Board set public hearings in December on

AEP's application to build
the Meigs County plant. The
P~blic ·Utilities Commission
of Ohio has authorized A'EP
to colleot &lt;:Osts associated
with the design of the plant,
but will not rule on the.come
pany's plans to recover construction .costs until the
design has been completed.
It is eK~ted to be finished
later thts fall.
"We have teams working
PI n' !seeAEP,AS

OBITUARIFS
Page 1\5
• Mary L Nelson
• Rodney E. Spires
• Gladys Sterrett
• Clarissa Grace
F191,Mnd

--......

INSIDE
• Renewed gunballtes

11Mcltiift=at8h and

.

Har:nas militants l&lt;iH 2 ·in
Gaza. See Pillge A2.
• Couricil studies workem comp haud.
See.,. A3
• AACO healS 'Think
Pink' presentation,
disCI ISS Star Mill.'
See Page Ali

...

WEATIIER

Rons·

Mau Eversole for the final the ftrst 45 minutes were
tenific," Morrissey added.
22 minutes of the game.
..
Malone's Mike Porter "I know this sounds bad to
posted seven saves in 51 say, to win 7-0 but we probfromPageBl
minutes while Scott Garber ably had a dozen chances
had three saves in 39 niin- that we missed, we just got
47th minute. That was folutes.
to be better.
lowed by Dawson's third
Rio Grande head coach
"I know that sounds bad
goal and later by freshman Scott Morrissey said the
to say, bu.t we've got to do
Luke Van De Burg's second conditions really favored
a better job of finishing our
goal of the season.
his club. "These conditions chances . because . in tight
. Van De Burg was assisted · are what .t:hese guys are suitby Brown in the 80th ed to play in and ,ifs never a games those chances come
only so often and you got
minute.
problem for them, a liltle to do better on those."
Rio pounded the Malone cold, but it's not a problem
net with 32 shots and 17 on for them," Morrissey said. . Next up the Redmen will
goal. Malone (4-4-2, 0-3-1 "A nice slippery surface is step out of cenference ·
Afv'ICS) did not get a shot what they're used 10 and the · when they play host to the
off in the game.
surface and playing condi- University of Charleston
SeniQr goalkeeper Derek tions were fantastic tonight. on Wednesday evemng .
Talcott played 68 minutes
"1 thought overall, they Kick -off is set for 7 p.m. at
and was spelled · by junior really played well, I thought Evan Davis Field.

•

n :•

1111tlnlc

INDEX

.

ftlowTip .

Finn

)299 J399....
""="'

-

. tnt
Mlllset .......... $Ill
King set .. ", ........ , II/A

Twin set . . . .. .. .... $111
Full set.. .. .. ...... S3JI
King set ............ -

llc:stunic

Rc:stonic
s.per ltulb .

Twin set . .

z SOCI10NS -

f'tulll

Calendars

""r

King set

... -

Obituaries

.....

llutanlc

Sports

.s-

Weather

.. $711

llc:slonlc
'

J799
Twm set
Full set

Twin set
Full set

Kmg set

K1ng set

FLAIR
Tue,Wed, Thnl, Sit 9 to 5

Mon. Friday 114
C'-d Sundly
to be wlllt flmtly

•

FURNITURE

'1IRANI) !'lAME

FtJiii'U1UII£ AT DISOOIJNT PRICES"

Rte 2, Gallipolis Ferry, WV

(304)67s-1371

s~ ..... IGIIIh o1 Paint l'leo- on IlL 1 in

.

A3
~

As
B,Section
..
A6

© 11006 Ohio Volk:y l'ubliohiQ&amp; Co.

. Ultrl Pillow Top

Super Pillow Tap

· Bs

Dear Abby

. . -..

Twin oet .
Full !let..
King set. .

B3-4

· Comics

•J599
Twtnset ......... . .
full set ..........
...

A3

Classifieds

Editorials

12 PAGI!S

il••

The Meigs High School team which took the top soore in the agricultural category in the
land ju~ing conteSt recognized here by Meigs SWCO education coordinator Jenny
l'lidenour. at' the banquet .we~e from the'left, Shane,Mi\hoan, Michael Ball, ~nd Eric Wood,
and included Adam Lavender, not present.

EXPERIENCE .IN IRAQ
HIGHLIGHTS SWCD PROGRAM
bA' REPOIIT
NEWS41&gt;MVDAILVSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - A presentation by wildlife specialist
Jim Freep1an crn "his .el(periences in Iraq was a program
highlight .o f the Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District's 63rd annual meeting and banquet.
For !he more than a hun- ·
dred people attending the
banquet held at Meigs High
School, the Racine man
talked about the 13 months .
he spent in Iraq , presented a
10-minute slideshow and
displayed militarY issue and The Meigs High School urban soil judging team of Steven
personal items and memora- Adkins, Dakota Arms and Sarah Lantz had the top score in
the urban land juqglrig contest. Recognized at the Meigs
bilia.
Other features of the meet- SWCD annual banquet by Meigs SWCD education coordinator Jenny Ridenour were Arms and Lantz, from the left.
. 11!1 IRFI! see .SWCD, AS
Adkins was not present.
~·

-BY CHARI.ENE HoEFucM

HOEFLICHI!!&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Intermediate Schools' 200607
plan
· called
"Where Marauders Begin··
was presented by principals
Rusty Bookman and Kristin
Acree.
Bookman noted that the
2005-06 report card shows "a
performance index of 87.1 ,
that adequate yearly progress
Was not met in: reading, and
that the status of continuous
improvement designation

POMEROY - A school
impro¥ement plan which
includes a goal· statement for
the
Meigs
Elementary
School -"All students will
meet or exceed Ohio's standards for reading, mathematics and writing~ · - was
reviewedarlasr week's meeting of tile Meigs Local Board
of Education . .
remains."'
The Meigs Primary and
As
for

where

the

Book chronicles
history of·Meigs
BY8EIM5Ern
BSERGENf@MVDAJLYSENTlNELCOM

POMEROY - The old
Meigs Theatre in Pomeroy is
long gone as are the ftrst settiers of Portland though their
photos and stories remain as
do those documenting the
county's modem staples. businesses and festivals which can

be found in "The . Meigs
County Chronicle."
"The
Meigs
County
Chronicle" is a 56 )ll!ge hardback book published by the
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce that chronicles the
events, attractions, scenic
beauty. trivia and maps of
Plene see 8aal:, AS

Four car .accident rt$uln
in daiiUlge, no injuries
'

...

Elementary School goes
from here, both principals
expressed a vision of ""providing a learning community
that uses the, best teaching
strategies and technological
inoovatiom to enhance student learning."
Listed in the plan priority
needs were "improving student reading, m!(th and writing performances, providing
professional development
PI

sq

see SdluuL AS

.

Beth S.fllOnt/Photo

A Monday afternoon accident in front of Pizza Hut on West
Main Street involved four cars though no injuries were
reported. Pomeroy Patrolman Eric Augenstein, Who is investigatiAg the accident, said it appears the ·rear vehicle failed
to stop and caused a chain reaction in which all vehicles
sustained damage. As the report was incomplete at pres~
time the names of those involved were not released. Also
responding to the scene · were e,mergency personnel with
Meigs EMS and the Pomeroy Volunteer Rre Department
who contained a fuel spill.

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