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                  <text>•

October 12, 2006

BS The Daily Sentinel

Trail ride raises more
··than $to,ooo for
St. Jude's hospital, AS

Senior Quarterly
inside today's Sentinel

•
J.r~ • Politeroy.; Ohio
-~~~\ I'\ I '

.

• \ ,;j )h ' ''· -+~

r Rill\' ()( lflBI R

1:~. :.!OOh

'

"'"""' - •H~ fletil~ .. ,·nlm l"ltoll,

Pomeroy, Syracuse de~elop plan to protect drinking _water

SPORTS
• Lady Eagles wrap
up perfect season.

N-OAILYSENT1N£LCOM

SYRACUSE Clean
drinking water is .something that. affects us all
and now ·o fficials involved
in the Pomewy .and
Syracuse water systems
have taken steps to protect

SeePage81

their ~rinlcing water by
developing· a source water
protection plan.
Sourc,e water protection
plans are part of a United
States
Environmental
Protection . Agency (EPA)
program to help · protect
sources 41lf drinking water.
The program is voluntary

for communities but manda- the protection zone that pro- res~urces in order to protory for the Ohio EPA. vide a toll-free phone num- vide the safest and highest
. · quality drinking water to
lmplementi ng .a Source ber to report spills.
Water Protection Plan is a
. Pomeroy and Syracuse their consumers at the lowdefel)sive strategy to protect rely on ground water esJ possible cost.
resources to provide drink the water supply.
The size and shape of the
Signs have been -e rected . ing water to local business- village's proteation area was ·
by the Ohio Department of es and residences. The vil - determined by the Ohio EP,.
Transportation on Ohio 124 lages feel it's important to
ground
water
Please see •••led, AI
where the highway enters protect

Development
group tO unwi

Spencer is
candidate for ·
•
•
comnusstoner

~plan

afterRview

S'!J.FF ._ _,-

II\' 8MM &lt;I. REBI

NEWS®MYDAILvsENTINEL.coM

""BREEIJOMYt5AIL\'S£NTINEL.COM

OBITUAIUFS
Page AS
• Paul Hauber 79
• Elmer Sayre, Jr., 87

INsiDE
• Preservation Hall
performance 10
benefil: hurricane 181ief:
See_f!age .u
• O'Bbiess Memorial
Hospital to offer CPR
Training. See hge AS
• Senior Cerner
pans soup Slipper.
See P9 Q

• Areachoir
cancelS~! sing.

See ·PJ~geu
• Ux:al Briefs.
See P9 AS
• For the Record.

.....

See Pllge AS
• Judge grants robber's
wish to go to. prison.
AS
• Time to cap the beer
• issue. See . , . A&amp;

See.,.

,....u 7 7.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport's new downtown streetseape plan will
be unveiled to the pqblic
after
the
Middleport
Development
Group
reviews it next week.
Meeting Thursday, the
development group made
plans for an Oct. 19 meeting with representatives of
DLZ, the Columbus-based
design firm hired to complete the plan. The revitaltzation group used a
$10,000
Appalachian
Regional
Commissiol)
•
grant to pay f&lt;1r .the
streetscape .plan.
S.rcwnt/photo
It will include drawings These (lays life Is good for the .COllins family which includes father Brad holding son Brady
of proposed streetscape and mom Carissa hOlding son Tyler. After turning to God in times of trouble the family is
improvements, 'SUCh as new quick to praise +tim during these times of happiness .
lighting, su~eufutaiihil\gs .
and
other
aesthetit
improvements
public
areas, ~ng with projected
"We give all credit to God," Carissa said,
(Editor's note: Due to ·an editing error.
cost estimates for those
facts in tile thin/ paragraph of this story "Brady is a miracle and it's not lucie."
improvements. Once the
Brady's story began two years ago short, were misrepresented in the version that
revitalization oommittee appeiJred in Thursday's Daily Sentinel. The ly after his birth when he was born blue and
reviews ·the drawings, they
original version of tile -story appears today. toolc four minutes to talce his .first breath.
might be unveiled .at .a pubTile Daily Sentinel ·apologizes for any This was all shocking to his parents who'd
lic meeting or in local busibeen through a normal pregnancy where
nesses, allowing tlJe public i1JCOnvenieru:e to Brady Collins' family. J
Carissa
did everything right. After he began
to become familiar with
II\' 8mt 'SaliENT '
to breathe, t)le next crisis happened shortly
these proposals.
BS£RG£tirANDAILYS£NTINEL.COM
afterward when his blood sugar dropped to
"~blic ownership of the
19 from a pancreas uSC!~ to craving his
downtown revitalization
SYRACUSE - Some people lilce to mother 's love of drinking sweet tea durin g
project has always been at argue there are no miracles these days, only
.its heart,"said Development . happenstance and coincidence, but don't her pregnancy.
After the hospital tried and failed to get
-Group President Paul Reed. tell that to Brad and Carissa Collins of
his
blood sugar up. Brady was transported
"We have emphasized the
Syracuse who consider their 2-year old son
Ph1se see MlrKie. AI .
Brady a miracle.
Nuu . . uaa FLU

BOy \Vith -half a heart' is whole miracle

to

POMEROY Ernest
"Ike., Spencer announced
his candidacy for commissioner in the Nov. 7 electioQ.
Spencer is a lifelong resident of Meigs County and
lives
in
Racine with
wife,
his
Judy. They
have
two
children.
Spencer is
retired from
Southern
Local Schoo1
Distri -c t,
where
he
enjoyed ooachiqg and officiating several sports. Since
his retirement, he has
obtained his real estate
license and is now worlci~~g
for Teaford Real. Estate in
Pomeroy.
Spencer is president Of
Racine Village Council, .a
U.S . Navy veteran, having
served in .the Vietnam
Conflict aboard the U.S.S.
America, and was a member
of the VA 35 Attack
Squadron.
He is a member and Past
Commander of Racine Post
602 of the American
Legion,
Shade
River
Lodge 452 , and is past
commander of that organization . He is also an avid
golfer and· he and his wife
belong to the Gold Wings

PI••• ... 5p1acer:AS

• Bluegrass.standout
returns to Gallipolis next
month. See P.-ge M

Che _ _/.,...

INDEX.

.

2 SECilONS- l6 PAGFS

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Buckeye Edition
B8
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7

Editorials ·

A4

Faith • Values
A6-7
Movies
As
NASCAR
B3
ObitUaries
As
Sports
· B Section
AS
Weather
@ ...-Ohio Volley Publiohiflll Co.

.•'

Black

...L

On Thursday, students were dressed in outrageous costumes, and watched a student versus faculty volleyball
game. Pictured in some of the more imaginative costumes
are Cassie Hauber, Niki Young, Megan Broderick, Alan
Watson , Joey 'Vales and Zach Carson.

•

It's Homecoming Week at
Eastern High School , and .
students are participating
in a number of activities
designed to foster school
spirit - not that the Eagles
ever lack that. Seniqr candidates fcir hOmecoming
queen, and their escorts,
are (pictured above), 1-r,
Valentine Ryazantseva and
Tyler Lee. Darcy
Winebrenner and Derek
Putman, Sabrina Collins
and Thomas Bishop, and
· Kimberly Castor and Alex
McGrath . T{le .queen will be
crowned at halftime during
the Eagles· game against ·
Miller, and will be accomp&amp;
nied by attendants and
escorts from other classes.
The halftime show will also
include a performance by
the Eastern Classic -Band .
made up of EHS alumn 1.
llttan J. hed/ pltotoo

Don Hodges. left, selects a coleus slip from the wide variety
of available plants at Thursday's exchange. Extension educator Hal Kneen gives him tip·s on how to care for his new plant.

Plant exchange
encourages gardening
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MVD"ILYSENTINEL COM

POMEROY -· A wellfilled table of all sorts of
planb free for the takin g
greeted those anending the
annual fall plant exchan ge
Thur,day at the Senior
Citizens Center.
The que"ion from Hal
Kneen. Mcig' Extension educator. and the Ma, ter
Gardener'
'taging
the
exchan~e ""' "What will
you have·'"" The '&lt;:lection wa'
good with everything from
mnna and f ladiol i hu\h, lo
lilic,. snak.: plant-. dianthu'

and herbs. some to be planted
outdoors. others for inside
enjoyment this winter.
While ~e event i; called
an "exchange·· that's
where you bring plants from
home and exchange them
fo r something different - it
wa; more than that because
while many of those attending had much to share. other' had nothing but were
welcome to take plants
home with them an) wa) .
Seniors were encouraged
tn If) their hand at growi ng
new plants and many left

Please see Exchll._., ~

�,.

NATION • WoRLD
British
man
admits
plotting
to
'Living fossil' mouse f~und_ on Cyprus, bomb buildings in Washington,
Newark and New York
a rare discovery for Europe
,.,------.

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, ()ctober 13, aoo6

'

· Bv THOMAS WAGNER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

LONDON- Using DNA
testing, scientists have discovered what is believed to
be the first terrestrial mam." mal found in Europe in
·.decades: a mouse with a big
head, ears, eyes and teeth
that lives in a mountainous
area of Cyprus.
The mouse was· native to
the eastern Mediterranean
island, survived the arrival
. of man on Cyprus and could
be considered a "living fos~il." experts said.
· "New mammal species are
mainly discovered . in hot
s,pots of biodiversity like
Southeast Asia, and it wa~ ·
~enerally believect ttlat every
.;;pecies of mammal in Europe
had been identified," said
Thomas Cucchi, a research
fellow at Durham University
in northeast England.
"This is why the discovery
of a new species of mouse
on Cyprus was so unexpected and exciting," he said in
an interview Thursday.
·The mouse mainly lives in
the Troodos Mountain in the
west of the island, Cucchi
said, favoring · vineyards,
grassy fields and bushes.
. Genetic tests confirmed
the mouse was a new
-species and it was named
.Mus cypriacus, or the
Cypriot mouse. The findings appeared in Zootaxa,
an international journal for
animal taxonomists.
The biodiversity of
Europe has been reviewed
extensively since Victorian
times, and new mammal .

species are rarely found on
the continent.
Cucchi said a bat discovered in Hungary and Greece
in 2001 was the last new living mammal found in
Europe. No new terrestrial
mammal has been found on
the continent. for decades,
he said.
Recent discoveries elsewhere have included a new
tree rat in Brazil, a new primate in Tanzania and another new mouse m the
Philippines.
In Cyprus, Cucchi and
other scientists he was
working with compared the
new mouse's teeth to those
of mouse fossils. The comparison showed the new
mouse had "colonized and
adapted to the Cypriot environment several thousand
yeats before the arrival of
man, Durham University
said in a statement.
The discovery indicated
the mouse survived man's
arrival on the island and
now lives alongside common European house mice,
whose ancestors went to
Cyprus during the Neolithic
period, the university said . .
"All other endemic mammals of Mediterranean
islands died out following
the arrival of man, with the
exception of two species of
shrew. The new mouse of
Cyprus is the only endemic
rodent still alive, and as
such can be considered as a
living fossil,'' said Cucchi.
Shrews resemble mice bol
have a long, pointed snoot
and eat insects:
Cucchi, an archaeologist,

BY EDITH M. l£DERER
~SOCI~~O

PRESS WRITER

UNITED NATIONS Key U.N. Security Council
"inembers neared agreement
1ate Thursday on a U.N. resolution that would impose
"Sanctions on North Korea
for its claimed nuclear test.
: The United States report~ significant progress in
~ridging differences with
~ussia and China, which
had sought to moderate the
-tough sanctions proposed in
:the U.S. draft resolution.
: The upbeat message came ·
J!fter more than two hours of
~losed-door
negotiations
among ambassadors from
the five permanent council
nations - the U.S., Russia,
&lt;::hina, Britain and · France
;__ and Japan's ambassador
:Who is the current council
:president.
: The U.S. said it hoped a
'Vote could be held on Friday
lhough close ally Japan said
$aturday was more likely.
• "We have made very sub=stantial progress," U.S .
~mbassador John Bolton
\old reporters after the
meeting. "I don't want to
'-&gt;ay we've reached agreement yet, but many, many of
~he significant differences
'j1ave been closed, . very
much to our satisfaction."
· A new draft of the reso 1u~ion was sent to capitals
~Thursday night so ministers
&lt;an examine the latest
~hanges. Bolton sai,d the full
Security Council is meeting
Friday morning.
ln the latest version, the
lJ ni ted States dropped tht!
jdea of a weapons embargo
}lgainst North Korea hut
proposed imposing economic sanctions and a naval
blockade to punish the isojated country for exploding
..e nuclear device in defiance
:Of international warnings.
: China's U.N. l)mbassador
::Wang Guangya agreed that
''gobd progress has been
:made'" in improving the
· te,xt.
Ru~ &gt;ia\
U.N.
: Ambassador Vitaly Churkin
·-said there had been "a num~r of improvements'" and.
imponantly. council unity
~·i, in good shape."
: "We should act with a cool
flead and moderation and
:also do everything to
achieve a political, diplomat. ic outcome of thi' problem
· - and thi' i' the 'pirit we
had in tho'e di,cu"iolh ...

•

PageA2

APPhoto

Wang Guangya, China's
ambassador to the United
Nations talks to ·reporters
before attending Security
Council consultations on the
North Korean nuclear test at
the U.N. headquarters
Thursday.
Churkin said. "It's not
assured we're going to get
there, but ~ mood is good

.

IIY JIU. LAWLESS

AP Pilato

This uno.ateo. image made available by the University of
Durham shows a new species of mouse Mus cypriacus. The
"living fossil" mouse has a bigger head, ears, eyes and
teeth than other European mice and Is found only on
Cyprus. Thomas · Cucchi:, a research fellow at Durham
University in northeast England, said Thursday. Genetic
tests confirmed that the new mouse was a new species and
it was named Mus cyQriacus. or the Cypriot mouse.
found the new species while
working in Cyprus in 2004.
He was examining the
remains of mice teeth from
the Neolithic period and
comparing them to those of
four modern-day E~ropean
mice species to determine if
the house mouse was the
unwelcome byproduct of
human colonization of the ·
island 10,000 years ago, the
university said .
"The discovery of this
new species and the riddle
behind its survival offers a
new area of study for scientists studying the evolutionary process of mammals
and the ecological consequences of human ·activities
on island . biodiversity,"
Cucchi said.
·
· Another
scientist

and the effort is good, too."
North Korea .warned it
would have a firm response
to sanctions, Japan's Kyodo
· News Agency reported from
Pyongyang.
· "We will take strong countermeasures," Kyodo quoted
Song II Ho, North Korea's
ambassador in charge of
diplomatic normalization
talks with Japan, as saying.
The U.S. draft calls . the
situation in North Korea, in
particular the test the government claimed, "a clear
threat to international peace
and security" and authorizes
sanctions under Chapter 7
of the U.N . Charter.
China opposes any mention of Chapter 7, which
allows punishments ranging
from breaking diplomatic
ties and imposing economic
sancti()ns to naval blockades and military action.
But Wang reiterated
Thursday that sanctions
should be limited to the nonmilitary measures authorized
linder Article 41 - which is
part of Chapter 7. They

involved was Eleftherios
Hadjisterkotis, an officer of
the Game and Fauna
Service of the Interior
Ministry of Cyprus.
ln an interview in
Nicosia, Hadjisterkotis said
that for years he had been
collecting the remains of
mice that had been eaten by·
owls and noticing unusil&lt;1l
characteristics in ·some of
the body parts.
.
"The jaws looked different. I knew we had something different," he said.
But Hadjisterkotis said
that he and the other scientists weren't sure they were
handling a new mammal
until the DNA testing -conducted by the Uniyersity of
Montpellier, France.

include economic penalties,
~reaking diplom!ltic relations or banmng &amp;r travel.
A previous U.S. draft
called on all states to undertake and facilitate ·inspection
of cargo -to and from North
Korea to ensure compliance
with sanctions. The new
draft would allow states to
inspect cargo "as necessary."
The latest U.S. proposal
also drops a call to freeze
assets from other "illicit
activities such as those related to counterfeiting, moneylaundering or narcotics."
·:we're almost there," said
Japan's U.N. Ambassador
Kenzo Oshima.

LONDON - A British
man identified by U.S. officials as a senior al-Qaida figure pleaded guilty Thursday
to conspiracy to murd~r in a
plot to bomb high-profile
targets in the United States
including the InternatiOnal
Monetary Fund headquarters
in Washington and the New
York Stock Exchange.
"1 plead guilty," Dhiran
AP Photo
Barot, 34, said in a clear An artists impression of
voice at London's high-secu- Dhiren Barot who admitted
rity Woolwich Crown Court. Thursday, that he plotted to
Prosecutors said the plot murder people in terrorist
involved targets in both outrages in Britain and the
Britain and the United United States.
States. Other alleged targets
included, the World Bank conventional explosiv~:s.
headquarters in Washington, though prosecutors did not
the Citigroup building in offer detail on the compoNew York and the Prudential nents of the planned device.
Lawson said the dirty
building in Newark, N.J.
bomb
was designed to cause
Barot, a British citizen
"injury,
fear, terror and
who was raised a Hindu
before converting to Islam, chaos" although it was
was arrested in August 2004 unlikely to kill anyone.
"The radiation project
amid a heightened security
was
designed, among other'
alert for financial institutions in the United Sta,tes. things, to affect some 500
"Seven other men are due to · people," Lawson said. .
The clerk of the COI\rt told
face trial next year.
Barot
he was ~harged with
Prosecutor
Edmund
conspiracy
to murder Lawson said Barot planned
"the
particu
Iars of the
"to carry out explosions at
those premises with no offense ' ·ng that on
)Yarning. They were plainly diverse days between Jan . 1.
designed to kill as many 2000 and Aug. 4, 2004, you ·
conspired together with
people as possible."
U.S. officials claim Barot other persons unknown to
is a senior al-Qaida figure, murder other persons."
Barot, wear,ing a gray zipknown variously as Abu
up
sweater and dark
Eisa al-Hindi, Abu Musa atand sporting a
trousers
Hindi and lssa . al-Britani,
closely
·
trimmed
beard,
who scouted prominen't
financial targets in the .stared intently ahead but
United States at the behest betrayed no emotion as he
entered his guilty plea ..
of Osama bin Laden.
By pleading guilty, Barot
He was indicted last yeat
"makes
no admission with
in New York, along with two..
regard
to
the involvement of
others, on charges of plotany of his seven co-defenting to attack the buildings.
.
dants
in the conspiracy,"
Under British law, domesLawson
said.
tic legal proceedings take
Lawson said plans outlinprecedence over a U.S.
ing details of the attacks had
·extradition attempt.
In Britain, Barot planned been found on a computer
t9 pack three limousines after Barot's arrest in August
with ~as cylinders and 2004. He acknowledged that
explostves and detonate no funding had been
them in underground park- received for Barot's projects,
nor any vehicles or bombing garages, Lawson said.
The "gas limos" plan, making R:~aterials acquired.
Judge Neil Butterfield
found on a computer, was
"described by Mr. Barot as deferred sentencing to a
the main cornerstone of later date.
attacks planned to take place · The judge ordered "that 12
other charges faced by Barot
in the U.K.," Lawson said.
He said the "back-to- - one of conspiracy to comhack" attacks involved three . mit public nuisance, seven of
other proj~ts, including "the making a record of informarough presentation for radia- tion for terrorist purposes and
tion or dirty-bomb projects." four of possessing a record of
A dirty bomb ..:ombines information for terrorist purradioactive material ·with poses - be suspended.

In Celebration of WoJm?n in Business
October. 16th - 20th ·

PUMPKIN PATCH
Monday,
October30

•··'-

Kylie Billings
'"Love Va!"

This special section, publishing October 20th, is an excellent oppoitunity
for local businesswomen to tell their story, promote their business and
give their tips for success.
Not just for women who own their own business. but for all the women
who are the back bone of local successful businesses.
·

Mommy &amp;

Mail or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

(Each ad will have 1he same layOut

10

give everyone eqrwl opportwiity Jo tell1heir ,r;wry.)

Contact your Daily Sentinel
Representative Today!

Child's Name :.~~~~~~~~~~~~~­
From ::_~~~~~~--~~~~----~---­
Your Name :_~~~~~~~----~~~-

Dave Harris
740-992-2155 Ext. 15

Address:: _------~----~-~-

Phone; _______________________________
Ads m~st be pre-paid

Brenda Davis
740-992-2155 Ext. 16

..
•

should know that current
A1'HENS - Preservation
dental techniques minimize
Hall
Jazz Band, described as
pain, and whatever additional work his neglect has the "best j~ band in the
caused is sti II best done land" by the San Francisco
sooner rather than later. Examiner, will celebrate its
Insurance may cover some 45th anniversary with a New
of it, but if not, many den- Orleans Revue at Thmpletonti sts are willing to work out Blackbum l\lumni Memorial
a payment plan. (Remind Auditorium at 7:30 p.m. .
him that good dental care Thesday, Oct. I 7.
Audiences will enjoy a
can protect his heart.)
Dear Annie: I am in a 15- festive, multi-media event
year marriage that is sex- featuring vibrant musicians,
less. Kissing, touching and vocalists, fan dancer&gt;,
romance are .off limits . We comedians and vaudevillian
have two beautiful adopted performers in a interactive
children, and they are .the Mardi Gras celebration.
only reason I stay.
Preservation Hall , Jazz
I love and ~espect my Band
performs
New
wife. I asked her to go to Orleans Jazz nightly at
counseling, but she laughed. Preservation Hall in the hisShe doesn't think sex in toric French Quarter and
marriage is .needed. T am tours around the world over
clean, the same weight as 150 d&amp;ys a year. For almost
the day we rn,arried and half a century, Preservation
attractive. I have been 100 Hall has brought the sounds
percent faithful for 15 years, and spirit of New Orleans
but I am starting to think Jazz · to audiences worldabout getting a mistress. I
need the soft touch of
another human being. Is that
too much to ask?- Sexless
in Wisconsin
Dear Sexless: How sad
for you. Please get some
counseling on your own so
ATHENS - O'Bleness
you can make decisions
Hospital in
with professional guidance. Memorial
Athens
wiU
offer a
It will help.
Cardiopulmonary
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Resuscitation (CPR) course
Marcy Sugar, wngtime edi- Wednesday, Oct. 18, from
tors of ·the Ann Landers 6:30p.m. until 9:30 p.m. in
column. Please e~mail your O'Bieness' Lower Level
questions to anniesmail- room 010.
This American Safety &amp;
box@comcast.net, or write
Health
Institute course
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL teaches participants the
60611. To find out more .
about Annie's · Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
POMEROY - A public .
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com. soup supper will be held
Thursday at the Meigs
Senior Center with serving
to be from 5:30 to 6:30p.m.
and carryout available.
The supper will include
ested in scheduling the choir choice of chili. vegetable
can call Pastor/Director soup Or soup beans with a
Dennis Weaver or Brenda sandwich choice of peanut
Weaver at 675-5525.
butter or cheese spread.
As always. individuals of Cornbread will he served
all church affiliations, ages 16 with the soup beans. An
and up, are welcome to participate with the singing group.
The area choir and directors
wish to again eltpress their
sincere appreciation to Good
Shepherd United Methodist
Church· and Pastor Matt
Dotron for the use of their
facilities for the 2006 year.

area choir, with new members, performances and the
most recent participation in
the revival services t the
Good Shepherd Church.
The choir will resume
rehearsals and activities in
the spring, and members who
missed receiving their new
music and/or the new song
books, may call and pick
those up before the March
rehearsal or at that time.
The group discussed
expanding performances
next year and anyone inter-

wide. The band ha s
appeared at many famous
venues, including Carnegie
Hall (NYC), ~ymphony
Hall (Boston), Monterey
Jazz Festival (CA) and the
Red Sea Jazz Festival
(Israel ). Louis Armstrong
says, "Pre servation Hall .
Now that 's where you' ll
find all of the greats."
A portion of the ticket
income wi II be donated to
the New Orleans Musicians
Hurricane Relief Fund.
"NOMHRF's mission is
twofold: to provide humanitarian outreach to New
Orleans musicians affected
by Hurricane Katrina and to
revive New Orleans' unique
musical culture. By returning ·displaced ·musicians to
New Orleans, creating gigs
in the city, and replacing
nood-damaged instruments,
NOMHRF empowers musicians to earn a living and

heal their community with
music."

Additional donations will
also be accepted the evening
of the perf9rmance. Tickets
for this performance may be
pllrchased at the Templeton ~
Blackburn Alumni Memorial
Auditorium ticket office,
open from noon to 5 p.m.;
Monday thro1,1gh Friday, and
one hour before the performance. For tickets or information. call 740-593-1780.
This performance is sponsored
by
the
Ohio
University
Performing
ArrsSeries.
Amcriprise
Financial, the Black Student
Cultural
Programming
Board, Holzer Clinic of
Athens, the Ohio University
Department of Afric&amp;n
American Studies, and
Hocking Valley Bank, lifetime supporter.

O'Bieness Memonal.Hospitiil
to offer CPR Training_
skills needed to adRlinister .
CPR to adults, .children and
infants. Participants also
learn how to recognize a
life-threatening emergency,
how to provide basic life
support; and ·what to do in
the case of an airway
obstruction or choking.
Upon successful completion
of the course , participants .
receive a card to confirm

•

that they attended and completed the course.
.
To register for the course,
visit O'Bleness' community
relations office. The course
fee of $15 per person is
payable with registration.
The fee is waived for any- ,
one unable to pay. For more
information, call O'Bleness'
community relations department at (740) 566-4814.

Senior Center plans soup_supper
array of desserts will be
provided by Rock springs
Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center and is included with
your meal. Drinks are extra.
Joey Wilcoxon will perform from 6:30 to 7:30p.m.
Joey performs countr)i bal lads as well as old time standards, humorous, patriotic,
inspirational and gospel
music. He has two albums
to hi s credit. ''Haven't

Bought the Fann" and
"Bitter Side of Sweet." The
cost
for
the
soup
supper/entertainment is $5.
It is a family affair with
food and entertainment.
Proceeds go to the Meigs
County Council on Aging,
Inc. (Meigs Senior Center)
to . provide needed senior
services throughout Meigs
County.

Community Calendar
Public
meetings

America, 7 p.m. at the home
of Ruth Smith. Opal Hollon,
co-hostess.

Thesday, Oct. 17
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council, · re-scheduled regular session, 7 p.m.,
Rutland Civic Center.

POMEROY - Regular
meeting Drew Webster Post
39, American Legion.
Dinner at 7 p.m., meeting to
follow. Renewal membership dues payable.

Friday, Oct. 13
POMEROY - Widows'
Fellowship, noon, Wendy's .

THE WOMEN OF
MEIGS COUNTY

Deadline for Entry: ·
Monday,
· October23

FLATROCK - The Oct.
21 gospel sing in which the
Mason County Area Gospel
Choir had been scheduled to
sing has been canceled due
to conflicting activities on
the same date.
Members of the group
were advised of the cancellation Monday when they
met for a final rehearsal this
year at the Good Shepherd
United Methodist Church iJI
Flatrock.
It was noted that 2006 has
been a good year · for the

and
organizations

presents

Dear Alabama: Explain
to your doctor that you are
developing a tolerance for
the pain medication, and ask
for a referral to a doctor
who specializes in chronic.
pain management.
If you are not .able to take
medication without abusing it; look into a pain management program that
includes exercise, physical
therapy, group therapy,
acupuncture and/or meditation. Here are some places
to contact for anonymous
help: The National Alcohol
&amp; Drug Abuse Crisis Line
at 1-800-234-0420; the
National Drug Information
Treatment and Referral
Hotline at 1-800-662HELP ( 1-800 - 662~4357) ;
The Ameri.can Academy of
Pain Management (aapainmanage.org) ; and the
American Pain Foundation
( p.a in foundation . or g).
Admitting you have a problem is a good first step.
We'll be rooting for you to
take the next one.
Dear Annie: My father
refuses to go to the dentist
to have his teeth cleaned,
although they are badly in
need . . He says he can't
afford it ·and that it is too
painful. But his teeth are
awful-looking, and he has
terrible breath.
·
My mother has her teeth
cared for regularly, so I
know they have the money.
1 think Dad has just let his
teeth go for so long that he
is now too embarrassed to
have a dentist sec them.
Should J tell him, or should
1 mention this to my mother
and ask her why she doesn't
say something to him? - ·
Caring Daughter
Dear Daughter: Talk to
Mom first , and then offer to
approach Dad together. He

Friday, October 13, 2006

Preservation Hall perfonnance
to benefit hurricane relief

Area choir cancels gospel sing

Club~

The Daily Sentinel

Pictures will run:

Dear Annie: A few years
ago, I was in an automobile
accident, and as o result, 1
suffer from a very painful
back and neck condition.
My. doctors say surgery is .
unhkely .to help and may
even make matters worse,
so I rely on strong pain
medications to tolerate the
discomfort enough to live a
normal life with my family.
The problem is. I've started taking my pain pills too
. often, and I use up my prescription long before a refill
is due. To my shame, I've
managed to keep myself
supplied with enough pills to
get through the "dry spells"
by going to emergency clinics, using different pharmacies and so on, and have
even stolen medication from
my friends' medicine cabinets. It is a wonder I've not
been caught.
I know I need help. I truly
want to beat this, but I'm
afraid. The medication is
the only thing that keeps the
pain at bay, and I'm scared
that breaking this addiction
would mean I'd never be
able to take pain relievers ·
again. Since I'm only in my
mid-30s, it is hard to imag- ·
ine facing a long future
without the activities my
medicine allows.
Annie, is · there any way
people can overcome a
dependence on painkillers
and still be able to use them
as needed? 1 know I could
· probably get help through
Narcotics Anonymous, but 1
am in a prominent profession in a small community
and would be devastated if
anyone knew. Please help.
- Addicted in Alabama

POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Elections
.monthly meeting, 8 a.m. at
office.

WOME
WEEK

In The Sentinel

Painkiller addiction forces deceptive behavior
AND MARCY 5uaAR

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
BY KATHY MITCHEll.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Show Off Your "Pumpkin"

Only ·
$8.00

The Daily Sentinel

Saturday, Oct.l4
POMEROY - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American
Revolutipn, I p.m.. Meigs
Museum annex with Craig
Hesson speaking on the life
of a Revolutionary War reenactor.

Wednesday, Oct. 18
MIDDLEPORT
Special
meeting.
Middleport Lodge, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. for work in
entered apprentice degree.
Refreshments.
Thursday, Oct. 19
POMEROY
The
American Cancer Society
Meigs County Advisory
Board. annual meeting.
noon, Wild Horse Cafe,
lunch provided, RSVP at
992-6626, ext. 24.

Church events

Friday, Oct 13
LONG BOTTOM
Gospel si ng, 7 p.m. at the
POMEROY ~ Meigs . Faith Full Gospel Church.
County
Chapter
of S.R. 124, Long Bottom.
Christian
Motorcycle · Guest singers, Day Spring.
Association "Delivered."
Saturday, Oct. 14
regular meeiing, I0 a.m., at
DEXTER
- Old -fash -·
Common Grounds Coffee
House. New members wel- inned· wiener roast at Old
Dexter Church, 6:30 p.m.
come.
Bring
lawn .
chair8.
Intormation at 742-2553.
Monday, Oct. 16
POMEROY Meigs
REEDSVILLE
County
Garden
Club
Hayride
and wiener roa't li
Association meeting 7:30
p.m. at the Pomeroy p.m .. at Eden UB Church.
located 0 11 . S.R. 124
Library.
between Reedsville and
Thesday, Oct. 17
Hockingport .
CHESTER
- Past
Sunday. Oct. 15
Councilors Club. Chester
RACINE Morning
Council 323, Daughters of

Star United Methodist
church homecoming, I 0
a.m morning service, 12:30
p.m. basket dinner, song
service afternoon. Pastor
John Gilmore invites public .

..

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community
Church,
Second St., Syracuse, 6:30
p.m. · service with Rick
Little preaching .
POMEROY Major
Cundiff,
Sherman A.
Salvation Army. Rocky
· Mount. N. C. will be the
evangelist for a rev.ival at
the PomeFOy Nazarene
Church, 196 Mulberry Ave ..
Pomeroy. Services, 9:30
a.m. Sunday school. 9:30
a.m.: morning worship.
10:30
a.m .;
Sunday
evening. 6 . p.m. and
Monday
through
Wednesday, 7 p.m.

Thesday, Oct. 17
REEDS,YILLE
Revival at the Fellowship ·
Church of Nazarene 111
Reedsville. Oct. 17 -22 .
Rev. Ron Roth preaching,
special · 'inging 11ig~tly.
nursery provided. everyone
welcome.

Other events
Wednesday, Oct. 18
MIDDLEPORT - Free
communi!) dinner. chili.
;andwich. de"ert. begin' 5
p.m .. old American Legion
Hall on North Fourth. sponsored by .Oa&gt;i' Christian
Fellowship.

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Mohawk IIRIVInll'llllth SillS IVIRl

........,.............,..,

lelllllr 1- IIIVIRIIIIr 4, 2006.

_,""........ .. ,,_

~·

. m:de with .

DuPont~ Sorona(tpoly~,

Ingels carpet
115 North 2nd Ave.
Middleport. OH
992..J028

MOHAWK
AKNIVERSARY

MONTH

�.

PageA4

OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

.
Friday, October 13,2006

•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street~ Pomeroy, Ohio

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

BY BRIAN MURPHY .
AP RELIGION WRITER

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor ·

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

TODAY .IN HISTORY
· Today is Friday, Oct. 13, the 286th day of 2006. There are
·79 ct'ays left in the year.
·
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 13, 1792, the cornerstone of the executive mansion, later known as the White House, was laid during a ceremony in the District .o f Columbia.
On this date:
In A.D, 54, Roman emperor Claudius I died, after being
poisoned by his wife, Agrippina.
· · .
··
· In 1775, the United States Navy had its origins as the
Continental Congress ordered the construction of a naval
fleet.
In 1843, the Jewish organization B'nai B'rith was founded in New York City.
In 1845, Texas voters ratified a state constitution.
In 1943, Italy declared war on Germany, its one-time Axis
partner.
In 1944, American troops entered Aachen, Germany.
In 1960, Richard M. Nixon and John F. Kennedy participated in the third televised debate of their presidential cam·
·
paign.
In 1962, "Who's Afraid of Virgil).ia Woolf/" by Edward
Albee opened on Broadway. ,
··
In 1974, longtime television host Ed Sullivan died in New
'york City at age 72.
· In 198 I, voters in Egypt participated in a referendum to
elect Vice President Hosni Mubarak the new president, one
week after the assassination of Anwar Sadat.
Five years ago: Ukraine's defense minister and air defense
chief offered to resign, conceding that the military was
involved in the explosion of a Russian airliner over the
Black Sea on Oct. 4 that killed 78 people.
One year ago: British playWright Harold Pinter won the
2005 Nobel Prize in literature. Scores of Islamic militants
launcb simultaneous attacks ·on police, and government
buildings in Nalchik, a city in Russia's turbulent Caucasus
region, leaving 139 people dead, including 94 militants.
Today's Birthdays: Former British Prime Miriister
Margaret Thatcher is 81. Playwright Frank D. Gilroy is 81.
·Gospel singer Shirley Caesar is 68. Actress Melinda Dillon
is 67. Singer-musician Paul Simon is 65. Actress Pamela
Tiffin is 64. Musician Robert Lamm (Chicago) is 62. Actor
Demond Wilson is 60. Singer-musician Sammy Hagar is 59.
Actor John Lone is 54. Model Beverly Johnson is 54. Actor
Reggie Theus is 49. Singer Marie Osmond is 47. Rock
·singer Joey Belladonna (Anthrax) is 46. Actress T'Keyah
_Crystal Keymah is 44. Actress Kelly Preston is 44. Countty
singer John Wiggins is 44. Actress Kate Walsh is 39. Actress
Tisha Campbell-Martin is 38. Classical singer Carlos Marin
(II Divo) is 38. Olympic silver-medal figure skater Nancy
Kerrigan is 37. Countty singer Rhett Akins is ~7. Actor
Sacha Baron Cohen is 35. Rock musician Jan Van Sichem
Jr. (K's Choice) is 34. Rhythm-and-blues singers Brandon
and Brian Casey (Jagged Edge) are 3!. Singer Ashanti is 26.
:Christian rock singer Jon Micah Sumrall (Kutless) is 26.
· Thought for Today: "Children are the true connoisseurs.
Whai's precious to them has no price· only value."- Bel
·Kaufman, American author and edu9ator.

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"

..

It would seem thai Roman
Catholics challenging the
ban on married priests have
found
a
leader
in
Archbishop
Emmanuel
Milingo.
He's defiantly appeared
with his bride from a 200 I
wedding where hundreds of
couples tied the knot. He
stood his ground last month
after being excommunicated for installing four married men as bishops.
But · the 76-year-old
prelate from Zambia finds
himself more shunned than
celebr~ted, even by his ideological allies.
.
Many Qf the established
movements pushing for
optional celibacy are keeping a cautious distance.
Milingo's flamboyant style
and unusual associations including the Rev. Su11
Myung Moon -· are simply
too edgy for thqse ttying to
work within the system to
alter centuries-ofd church
views on marriage and the
priesthood. It's another example of
how head -on defiance of the
Vatican whether the
issue Is openly gay clergy or
ordinations of women can attract widespread
attention but often winds up
putting anti-status quo
forces on the fringe of the
debate.
The "married priest"
groups, led by American
Catholics, mostly favqr a
different strategy: seeking
to avoid direct dashes with
Rome. Instead, ·they believe
· time is on their side.
They· predict the Vatican
may be forced in coming
decades to seriously consider married clergy because of
pressures including declin-

ing vocations and more tol- historical homelands in the
erant views from the next Middle East and Eastern
Europe.,
generation of bishops.
"The general feeling is
But the Vatican has
that Milingo is a bit too 'out strongly resisted calls for
there' . for us. Do we really broader openings despite
want to tie our future to a some rising voices.
Last year, one of France's
loose cannon?" said Bob ,
Motycka, who served for most respected Catholic fignearly two decades as a ures, Abbe Pierre, wrote
Chicago-area priest before that he favored allowing
leaving to marry in 1998. priests io ml\rry. In 2003,
He now helps lead a group . more than 160 priests in the
known as Weorc- the Old Milwaukee Archdiocese
Engli sh word for "work" signed a letter supporting
that includes nearly 2,000 . married clergy.
men who were Ndained
Mqst groups estimate
priests and later wed.
there are at least 25,000
"People have shied away men in the United States
from Milingo for the same who left the active priestreason they shy away frorh · hood to marry, and between
people calling for schisms !00,000 to 150,000 worldor those hanging out a shin- wide. The church considers
gle and starting a break- them outcasts. Some totally
away church.'' he said. drop out of religious life.
"Yes, we are dissident, but But others continue to indewe still remain faithful and pendently carry on rites
loyal to the church."
such as marriages even
Such a straddle is possible though they are not considbecause priestly celibacy is ered valid in the eyes of the
long-held practice but not church.
immutable doctrine.
The Vatican often ignores
In early Christianity, there such acts. Milingo, howevwas no formal ban on mar- er, crossed one of the red
riage for clergy. The Bible lines..
mentions St. Peter's mothThe chutch comes down
er-in-law and many scholars hard on any unauthorized
suggest other apostles had ordinations and, especially,
wives - as well as at least installations of bishops. The
some popes such as· the 9th reason is fear of a snowballcentury Hadrian II.
effect schism: the maverick
In the early Middle Ages, bishops creating more like- ·
however, movements 'for minded priests and bishops,
celibacy gained momentum and so on.
and it became a requirement
Milingo ignored Vatican
by the 12th century.
appeals and in Washington
The Vatican grants some on Sept. 24 installed four ·
loopholes; including giving married men as ·bishops
full status to married priests who claim affiliation with
who
co.nvert
from the breakaway Synod of
Anglicanism and selected Old Catholic Churches.
other
denominations. Milingo and the four men
Eastern Rite . churches, were excommunicated.
Milingo has been in escawhich follow Orthodox traditions but are loyal to the lating disputes with the
papacy, also permit ordina- Vatican since 2001 when he
tion of married men in their was married to a South

Outside Meigs County

13 Weeks
.. '53 .55
26Weeks .... ·........ '107 .10
52 Weeks . . . . .
: .'2 14.21

Korean acupuncturist chosen by Moon's Unification
Church.
Milingo . later.
renounced the union, but
has apparently reunited with
his wife - who attended a
conference last month in
New Jersey organized by
Milingo 's group Married
Priests Now!
While many older groups
remain skittish of Milingo,
they don't mind the publicity for their cause.
"Anything that puts it
more on the agenda can't be
bad," said S~uart O'Brien, a
former Boston area priest
who married in 1972 and
now leads Raynham, Mass.based. Corpus,
which
includes about I ,000 married priests.
No one expects any major
changes on celibacy under
Pope Benedict XVI. But
0' Brien and others are
heartened by the pope's
desire to reopen doors,
including talks with the
ultraconservative Swissbased Society of St. Pius X.
The Vatican excommunicat·
ed its . founder, the late
Archbishop
Marcel
Lefebvre, in 1988 after he
con,secrated four bishops
without Rome's consent.
In Brunswick, Maine,
Louise Haggett said the
Milingo showdown has
brought a flurry of inquiries
for her group, CIT!
Ministries, which serves to
connect the faithful with
priests who left active ministty to marry. ·
·~we may disagree with
(Milingo's) style and tactics, but not·his overall message," said Haggett. "But
we are not a protest organization. We believe we can
change things from inside
the church."

I S'EISMIC TEST c~
UCA.

Obituaries
LONG BOITOM - Paul J. Hauber, 79, of Long
Bottom dted Wednesday. Oct . II, 2006 at his residence
after a brief illness.
He was born Aug, 5, 1927 in Reedsville, son of the late
Paul Exavior and Martha Kibble Hauber: He was an Army
veteran of World War II and was stationed in Panama. He
was also a member of. the Long Bottom · Community
Assocmtton, a life member of the VFW Post #9053 in
Tuppers Plains and he retired after 34 years of service with
the U.S. Co"ll of Engineers at Reedsville Lock and Dam.
He ts surv1ved by his wife, Melody Roberts Hauber of
Long Bottom; his children, Debor~h (David) Dailey of
Reectsvtlle; Douglas (Brenda) Hauber of Long Bottom,
Demse Cpouglas "Butch") Dawson of Tuppers Plains and
Scott (Kimberly) Hauber of Tuppers Plains; grandchildren,
Rae Lynn (Scott) Kimes of Reedsville and Jeremy
(Heather) Johnston of Jacksonville, Fla.; step-grandchidren , Timmy (Susan) Ball of Portland and Kimberly (Greg)
Sellers of Portland ; numerous great-grandchildren and
step-great-grandchildren; a brother, Charles (Effie) Hauber
of Reedsville; ~ sister, Leoma (Ray) Hall of Coolville; a
stster-m-law, Wilma Young of Reedsville; a brother-in-law,
Raymond (Henrietta) Roberts of Hanahan·, S.C .; and several nieces and nephews. ·
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a
brother, Warren "Bus" Baker; and four sisters, Edith Young.
Opal Randolph, Betty Forshey and Louise Gluesencamp.
Friends . may call at \Yhite-Schwarzel Funeral Home,
Coolville, Friday, from 6-8 p.m.
There will be no funeral services.

.Deaths
Elmer

Sayre., Jr.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Elmer Griffith Sayre, Jr.,
87, of Point Pleasant, .W.Va. died Wednesday afternoon,
· Oct. ll, 2006, at Holzer Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be held at II a.m., Saturday, Oct.
14, at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point Pleasant,
with Minister George Topping and Eugene ZOpp officiating. Burial will follqw in Concord Cemetery near
Henderson, W.Va. Visitation will be held at the funeral
home from 6 until 8 p.m., Friday, Oct. 13, 2006.

Local Briefs

6006LE
0UST guy
NORTH
KOREA?

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
man who couldn't find
steady work had a plan to
make it through the three
years until he could collect
Social Security payments:
he robbed a bank teller, then
handed ttie money to a
guard and waited for police.
Timothy J. Bowers, of
Columbus, told a judge ·a
three-year prison sentence
would suit him, and the
judge obliged.
"At my age, the jobs available to me are minimum
wage jobs. There is age dis. crimination out there,"
Bowers
explained
Wednesday in a quiet voice
to Franklin County Common
Pleas Judge Angela White.
He turns 63 in a few
weeks and said he would
receive full Social S~curity
benefits at 66.
He pleaded guilty to robbery, and a court-ordered
psychological exam found
him competent. ·
"It's unfortunate you feel
this is the only way to deal
with the situation," White told
Charlene Hoelllch/photo
Bowers as she sentenced him.
Sharon Dean displays a cacti fairy garden she made during
Bowers says he had only
the educational program at the plant exchange.
been able to find odd jobs
after the drug wholesaler
the winter, and what to do to he · made deliveries for
prevent rot. He also demons~ated how to ·clean and
separate bulbs in preparafrom PageA1
tion for spring planting.
Several Master Gardeners
OEFIANCE (AP) - A
the Senior Center with welltook pan in the program week ago. 7-year-old Hanna
filled plastic bags of plants. including Sharon Dean who
Zipfel came home from
In an educational program created a cacti fairy garden school and urged her family
which
preceded
the in a pottery bowl container. to put up new snioke detecexchange, Kneen talked She is a member of the tors and create an escape plan.
about when to cut back Winding Trail Garden Club . Firefighters say her titsistence
plants in the fall, how to which has been active for may have saved her family.
prepare them for storage for many years in Pomeroy.
Hanna and he_r family

Exchange.

Protect

TUPPERS PLAINS -The Second Annual Car Shqw at
:.Vashburn 's Dairyette will take place this Saturday. Signin
JS from II a.m. - 2 p.m. with an en tty fee of $10. Dash
plaques will be given to the first 40 cars. All cars will be
JUdged and trophies will be handed out at 5 p.m. for all categories. There will be door prizes, cash drawings and a
bluegrass band. All proceeds benefit Saving Our Seniors, a
non-profit organization.
·

from PageA1
'

'

and provided to the villages
within a source water
assessment. The two communities have used the
assessment to develop · a
drinking water source protection · plan . The villages
have decided to join forces

Mira·cle
from PageA1

to Children's Hospital in
Columbus ' hours after his
birth where it was discovered the intravenous medication given to Brady to
bring his blood sugar up
was nnt insetted into a vein
TUPPERS PLAINS - The bands at Eastern . High in his foot but the sun·oundSchool aitd Southern High School will hold a food drive ing muscle tissue.
challenge at the Eastern/Southern football game on Oct. 28,
Once his blood sugar sta:
in conjunction with Make a Difference Day.
bilized, the doctors at
Eastern Music Director Cris Kuhn and Southern Band Children 's Hospital examDirector Chad Dodson are coordinating the food drive to ined Brady as any normal
benefit the Meigs Cooperative Parish food bank, located at newborn and that 's when
the Mulberry Community Center. Each group will try to fill they discovered the baby
a pickup truck with non-~rishable food items.
was born with "half a heart."
Southern will drive thetr filled truck to the football game According to Brad. this conat Eastern on gamt: night. and the trucks will be parked side dition was visible on an
by side for food coll.ections.
ultrasound of Brady 's before
he was born but the radiologiSI missed it ... another
piece of luck? Or, a miracle?
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department . Brad and Carissa feel the
will hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m. ultrasound, prenatal visits
and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 17. Bring shot records, lried- where the - baby's heart
ical. cards if applicable. A $5 donation appreciated but not sounded normal. the sweet
tea, the IV that wa&gt;n't proprequired for service.
erly inserted, the drop i~
blood sugar were all part of
a bigger pl an that led Brady
to Columbus where he was
diagnosed with " half a
heart"' (Hypoplastic Left
Heart Syndrome) a diagnosis that saved his life .
Though it seems stran~e
MIDDLEPORT - ·Middleport Police Chief Bruce Swifl
to say a diagnosi.s of "halt a
.reported the following matters under investigation:
• Mary Braley, Pomeroy. reported that someone removed, heart" saved Bradv\ life.
getting a legitimate-diagnoa handicapped placard from her vehicle.
• Tim Cundiff, Middleport, repor1ed two tires cut on hi' sis at all put him attd his
parents in a position to
vehicle.
receive
car~ for the condi• Meigs Carpet and Decorating Center, Middleport.
reported the building had been broken into through the side tion. though there were no
easy choices and no guardoors. Change was reported stolen.
• Aaron Jories, Columbus, reported that someone had antee' Brady would survi~e
written on his car with a marker while.p:trked on Sycamore those choices. Brad and
Street. Woodrow C&lt;!ll, Middleport. reported someone had Carissa were given three
options. give the baby comwritten on his car with a marker.

Food drive planned

The coming Republican debacle
Regular readers of these
fifth anniversary of 9111 "What did Speaker Hastert
columns will not have been
reminded anyone who need- know, and when did he
taken by surprise by the
ed reminding of the dangers know it?"
recent turn of events against ·
America faces.
There are still four weeks
the Republicans in the
The result was a brief to go before Election Day,
forthcoming Congressional
uptick
in
Republican and it's conceivable that
William
elections. I have warned for
prospects, as reflected in-the something (e.g.: a new terRusher
several months that the
polls. The American people . rorist attack on some
GOP faces "a handsome
still trusted the GOP more American city) could refodrubbing."
than the Democrats when it cus the voters. attention on
In part this is simply a
came to security matters. security and prompt them io
reaffirmation of the old tru- like Jack Abramoff man- But then . came Robert change their minds. But as
ism that the party in the aged to , steal millions ·with Woodward 's latest book, of today, the Republicans
White House traditionally the help of a few corrupt purportedly revealing that can look forward to losing
suffers losses in Congress in politicians.
the Bush administration had the House, and probably the
the Congressional elections
By midsummer it was ignored warnings about AI Senate, as welL That will
of its second term. In further clear that the Americar\ peo- Qaeda's intentions in the· guarantee
a sHilemate
pan , however, it is a ple had noticed all this, and months preceding Sept. II. between the White House
byproduct of the fact that were prcpari ng to respond The book's publication and Congress during the
this particular administra- in I he only way voters in a came just as the public's next two years, which wiU
tion and its allies in · two-party system can: by attention began to focus on probably suit the American
'Congress have succumbed throwing the rascals out, the elections coming in people very well.
to the familiar temptations and throwing the other ras- November. and undoubtedNone of this heralds·a true
of power.
cals in. The Democrat' have . ly damaged the GOP's revival of the Democratic
Having controlled the done virtu~lly nothiiTg to · image as a defender of the Party, which suffers from
White House and both meriv~. but they don't nation 's security.
deep systemic problems, or
Houses of Con~ss, as well , need to. All they have to do
Finally (at least so far) means that the Republican
as most of the major gover- i; be there when the GOP came the brilliantly timed Party has, unless it aban-.
•
norships, for almost all of loses.
disclosure of Republican dons its core conservative
the past six years. the
In August, President Bush Congressman Mark Foley's principles, permanently lost
Republican members of did what . he could .to save "'overly friendly" e-mails to its grip on the support of the
Congre;; have faithfully hi s party. Hi s role in the male Hou se pages in their American people. But all
imitated the mistake~ of coming defeat was largel y teens . Foley
resigned this remains to be discussed
their Democratic predeces- tied to hi' perceived failure promptly. but lhat accom- in
another
column.
sors. Rromi'e' of budgetary to hrinr about a successful p\i,hed nothing. The e- Meanwbile,
the
frugality went out the win- conclu ~ion of the Iraq war. mails disclosed to Speaker Republicans had better predow. and the members Iined and he hit the road in a Denni' Hasten and others pare to take a well-deserved
up to bring home federal 'eries of effective &gt;peeches were so iticonclusive that bath on Nov. 7.
pork for their districts The in defen;e of his Mideastern several newspapers had
(William Rusher is a
device of the "'earmark"' was policie,. In addition. fhe declined to pursue the mat- , Dislinguished Fellow of the
exploited beyond even the Brili&gt;h nipped an Islamic ter. Bul ~he Democrats were Clarerno111 Institutr for the
Democrah · wilde;t dreams. plQI to hlow up ten air Iiners understandably eager to Study of Statesrna11ship and
Ine vitably. fra'grant crook' headed for Ame rica, and the. keep the uproar gomg. Pnlitical Philosophy.)

Immunization clinic

For the Record

Investigations

Spencer·

Unveil

from PageA1

from PageA1

Chapter E-3 of Pomeroy.
"I am excited about the
possibility of working with
the quality people at the
courthouse," Spencer said.
"I am impressed with their
professionalism every time
I have business there."

impottance of puhl ic input
from the beginning. and we
will continue to rely nn
pubic input and support during the ndt phase."
The development group
plans to tile a second preapplication next year for

closed in 2003.
On the day he robbed the
bank, Bowers says he hande.J
his landlady his apartment
key~ and told her he likely
wouldn't be back. He walked
to a nearby gas station where
he ate a couple hot dogs on
the "Two for $2" special.
Then he walked a couple
more blocks to the bank and
handed a teller a note
demanding cash in an envelope. The teller gave him
four $20 bills and pushed a
silent alarm.
Bowers handed the money
to a security guard standing .
in the lobby and told him it
was his day to be a hero.
Then he waited for police.
"It's a pretty sad slory when
someone feels that's their
only alternative," said defense
attorney Jeremy W. Dodgion.
who described Bowers as "a
channing old man."
Prosecutors had considered arguing against putting
Bowers in prison at the
expense of taxpayers, but
they worried he would do
something more reckless to
be put behind bars.
"It's not the financial plan
I would choose, but it's a
financial plan," Assistant
Prosecutor Dan Cable said.

Girl praised for helping family flee fire

Car show

MIDDLEPORT -Middleport Community Association
will sponsor its semi-annual Basket/Bear Bingo game on
Oct. 24 at the Middleport Fire Department.
Each Longaberger basket given as a prize will include a
specially-made Ohio River Bear Co. "Snow Bear."
Doors will open at 4 p.m., with games at 6. There will be
18 bingo games, three special games and other drawings.
Concessions will be available from the fire department's
auxiliary. Tickets are $20 and are available at the
Middleport Department Store and Ohio River Bear Co.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Judge grants robber's
wish to go to prison

Paul J. Hauber

Basket/Bear Bingo
CAN'T ·

..

. Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
(han 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
· :signed, and include address and telephone number. No
')Ansigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
;good taste, addressing issues, not persoTUllities. Letters of
:thanks to organizations and i11dividuals will not be accept·ed for publicatio11.

•

Firebrand backer for married Catholic
clergy finds cool reception from allies

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tier II downtown rcvilalization funding. A ' first
application was denied earlier Ihis year. f'armer' Bank
has ·made $1 million available to bu,iness owners
who wish to make improvemenls 1o their buildings,
Those loan funds could be
used a&gt; part of match
requirements for participating building owners if Tier
II funding i' awarded.

escaped an early morning
fire at her house Tuesday.
"I'm reallyjroud of that little girl." sai Defiance Fire
Chief Mark Marentette. "I
can't say enou~h about the
. schools for genmg the information, taking it seriously and
getting it out to the students."

in the plan development
because of the close proximity of each village's wells.
The local committee tha.t
developed .the plan wants
local residents and businesses to be aware the
actions ,they take within or
near the protection area can
influence the quality of
water provided to them.
Ground water contamination can occur through the

improper disposal' of chemi- ground or nearby stream.
cals such as cleaning, auto- The committee believes
motive and lawn/garden recycling is the best way to
products, as well as fuel oi), properly dispose of chemifurniture stripper and oil- cal products.
based paints.
Pomeroy
and
Both
Improper disposal meth- Syracuse intend to provide
ods include pouring che"m- additional
educational
icals on the ground, down · materials and opportunities
a sink or toilet that is con- through the school systems
nected to a septic system to increase public awareor down storm drains that ness ·o f the need to protect
lead . direttly .into the drinking water sources.

fort care until he passed
away, probably three days
later; . give him a heart
transplant; decide to give
him a series of open heart
surgeries which the doctors
recommended.
After praying about their
decision with literally only
a half hour to make it, Brad
and Carissa chose open
heart surgeries, knowing
Brady was basically a
guinea pig and that only one.
girl before 1983 had survived the series of surgeries
for the condition.
Brady's open heart · surgeries took place when he
was eight days old, six
months old and earlier this
year. The surgeries basically
"re-plumbed" his heart thai
had only · two workinc;
chambers. A normal hean
has four chambers.
Brad ·said his son has
defied all the doctors by
surviving and during this
last surgery, defied them
'!&gt;gain by fluid lhat was
'expected to build in his
lungs that never, came. The
hospital recovery time
should've taken 12 days but
Brady was out in four.
"The doctor was dumbfounded." Brad said.
Brad and Carissa aren't
dumbfounded and believe
God had everything to do
with why . their yminge&gt;t
son
is
alive .
This
answered prayer has made
the . couple appreciate
Bnidy and his big brother
Tyler even more.
"We live everyday a$ if

·it's the last," Carissa said.
"Brady has a sick heart,"
Tyler summed up what
makes his brother different
but special.
Both parents admit that
when Brady sleeps !ale,
they go rushing into his
room lo make sure he 's
okay, waiting for him to
speak or laugh.
"Every night we pray
we'll ·see him in the morning," Carissa said.
The young family also
visits area churches to tell
the story of Brady's miracle
and the power of prayer.
"In limes of trouble people always look to God
when someone's sick or
something's wrong," Brad
said. "We say when things
are good prai se God too."
Things are good for the
Collins family right now.
Brady's heart is working
well a'nd when a person
encounters him they would
only see a happy boy with a
big smile and a hug tn give.
The face behind that smik
doesn ' t mind lo lift up his
shin and show his scars and
then you realize this is no
ordinary child.
However, Brady loves the
ordinary things like walking
outside and singing "Je,us
Loves Me.. over and over
through the church's mino·

A!!~
ton

Ohio Val\ey Symphony
10/8
Vanessa Wilson
Vocal Recital
10/9
Ariel Jr. Idol Finals
10/14
Magic of the l"aplingcrs
Family Ewnt
www.arieltheatre.or~

·phone at Rocksprings
United Methodist Church.
As for whal 's next for
Brady, he has check ups
every three months and possibly a heart transplant
someday if it's needed bu't
that day may never come
and Brady could live to be a
happy old man with a familiar smile. The only One that
knows what's in store for
Brady isn't talking in words
but in actions thai have kept
the little boy alive despit~
incredible odds.
SPH \JG 'JALLEY
&lt; 1

~~t'

o

'

~ 11

;

.. ), ...

.

7

.~,~--o·.~~~~

Holzer Cancer Cenlei

GOOD TIMEt
INVITES YOU TO COME
&amp; ENJOY THE MUSIC OF

CHARLIE LILLy
&amp;

,',I '

THE pooR SIDE
.

. SATURDA-Y OcTOBER 1-tTH
9P1\1'1AM
Sl.00$1NGLE S5 .00(0UPLE
CR7A poMtROY. OHIO
740•99 2•7986

�FAITH • VALUES

The Daily' Sentinel

Time to cap the beer issue
To borrow a line from
Dickens, "Take nothing on its
looks. Take everything on evi- .
Rev.
dence. There's no better rule."
Touche·. After all, ''whoever
Jonathan
speaks the nuth gives honest
Noble
evidence,'' as taught the great
PASTOR,
TRINITY CHURCH
ahd wise Solomon. But herein
lies the problem with the continuing hullabaloo over beer
sales on public property.
Back in the early part of
Continuing an effort to
August an editorial appeared
nix
the sale of alcohol on
in this newspaper alleging puhlic
property based solely
gross public intoxication, dri- .
upon
what
appears to be
ving under the influence of unfounded · allegations
.alcohol, abusive language and not to mention unwarranted
physical altercations, public accusations . - is not only
sexual intercourse ''through- irrational and ultimately
out the town," all occurring at pointless but really comproor stemming from the Jazz mises the integrity and credand Blues Festival.
ibility of those involved.
Some people. who attend- And· what a shame for othed the same event, responded erwise good and decent
to these assertions by either people.
totally denying their validity
Perhaps, then, it's time to
or, at the very least, question- cap the whole beer sale issue
ing the accuracy of the pic- · and look for ways to actively
ture painted by the author of enhance and build up the
that column. This, of course, community. Proverbial wisleft everyone concerned at an dom dictates that "it's far betimpasse with I ittle 'inore than ter to light a candle than to
an ongoing "he said, she merely curse the darkness."
said" kind of quarrel.
The 18th century evangeThose who contend the list, John Wesley, made much
Jazz and Blues Festival the same point. "Do all the
degenerated into something good you can, by all the
wildly out-of-control could means you can. in all the
possibly rectify this by sim- ways you can, in all the places
ply presenting good, solid you can. at all the tithes you
evidence supporting their can, to all the people you can,
allegations. Indeed, one for as long as ever you can."
must wonder why such eviAgain, touche'. And one
dence, if it does in fact exist, might reasonably suppose
has been hitherto withheld.
he did not have in mind
Do you remember the being divisive, needlessly
Wendy's commercial from antagonistic and, perhaps,
years ago, the one in which even misleading. Enough
the little old lady drives bickering· over beer, · then,
through an unnamed fast- and more constructive work
food joint demanding . to to build the community.
know, "Where's the beef' Let's light some candles
We might ask much the here and do some real good.
same in this case. Where is
Editors Note: Jonathan
the reliable evidence·~ Where Noble is pastor at Trinity
is solid veritlcation ,that the Church· ot Pomeroy and
Jazz and Blues Festival was resides here with ''Iris wife,
at any point "out of control" Michelle, and two children.

"One day as Jesus was
walking along the shore of
the Sea of Galilee, He saw
Simon and his brother
Andrew throwing a net into
the water, for they fished for
a li vil}g. Jesus called out to
them, 'Come, follow Me,
and I will show you how to
fish for people!' And they
left their nets at once and
followed Him. A little farther up the shore Jesus saw
Zebedee's sons, James and
John, in a boat repairing
their nets. He called them at
once, and they also followed Him, leaving their
father, Zebedee, in the boat
. with the hired men" (Mark
I: 16-20 NIV).
ijow exciting it is to
watch a man or woman, in
whom the obedience of
faith in Christ has kindled
God's divine 'spark of eternallife, surrender his or her
life for God's plans and purposes! And how awesome is
the privilege to see someone
move from being a mere
"church attender" to that of
being a true disciple of
Jesus! Every occasion of
having witnessed that amazing spiritual metamorphosis
has brought to me an
incredible joy that, without
doubt; must pale in comparison to the pleasure that
God feels when someone
turns from whatever spiritual counterfeit for which they
had been settling to the one
and only source of life and
hope that humanity has: that
of Jesus Christ.
There are times when God
moves in a person's life and
ignites within hiin or her a
passionate devotion that
begs to return a harvest of
praise and service to . the
Lord. "While a large crowd
was gathering and people
were corning to Jesus from

RUTLAND - The third annual Brian and
Family , Connections Homecoming Fall Harvest
Gospel Sing will be held Oct. 20 and 21 at the
Rutland Civil Center in Rutland.
Services Friday will begin at 6 p.m. and continue through the evening while Saturday services
will begin at I p.m. and are expected to go to midnight or beyond.
Featured artist both nights will be Gerald Crabb.
Other artists ~erforming will be Mike Upright, Ron
Shamblin, David Bowen, Edification, the Cokers,
Delivered, Angela Gibson, Stephanie Stewart,
Danny LeMasters , Eastern Sky, Zepihaniah, Burns
Family. The Libbys. Spirit Led, Mercy,
Homelighters Quarter, Aaron Grate, Proclaimed;
Sheila Arnold, The Bakers and Zane King . .
There is no admission. C0ncessions will be by
Outer Limits Youth Ministries of the Bethel
·
Worship Center of Reedsville.

r

r

r

r

'

Pastor

Thom
Mollohan

town after town, H11 told this
parable: 'A farmer ·went out
to SOW his seed . As he was
scattering the seed, some
fell along the path; it was
trampled on, and the birds of
the air ate it up. Some fell on
rock, and when it came up,
the plants withered because
they had no moisture. Other
seed fell among thm:ns,
which grew up with it and
choked the plants. Still other
seed fell on ~ood · soil. It
came up and ytelded a crop,
a hundred times more than
was sown.' When He said
this, He called out, 'He who
has ears to hear, let him
hear'"{Luke 8:4, 8 NIV).
But though a person may ·
find within him or herself a
sense of calling to a certain
task or vocation, and while
he or she may initially take
up the mantle for the task
dtvinely assigned them, at
some point along the way,
the eyes of the soul perhaps
shifts, passion wanes, and
the calling is forgotten.
With such a "cooling of the
coals" going on within a
person's heart, he forsakes
the path to which God has
led him. Just think: If an
obedient ana trusting acceptance of God's commissioning on you is a cause for celebration, then the tragedy of
your falling away cannot be
described with words that
human mouths may utter,
but only by the tears that our
Father sheds in sorrow.

(AP) - Contrary
to stereotype, most college professors are not atheists or agnostics, according to new research.
In fact, only about one-quarter
of professors deny God exists or
claim it is impossible to know,
according to survey results ana- ·
lyzed by sociologists Neil Gross
of Harvard University and
Solon Simmons of George
Mason University. The rest say
they believe in God at least part
of the time, or at least in some
kind of higher. power. •
College professors are less
religious than the general population, the authors report. For

Gerald Crabb

r

r

r

r

~

r

r

r

r

r

r

·r

·r

·r

r

l?e

~ful,

0 Lord,·

For We Have Sinned
~hould try to refrain from !iinning, it is somewhat consoling to
know that none uf U!'o arc perfect. If v.c are repentant fo r our sins and have asked

Frame that newspaper

p11oto or prtnt non a .
roog or.mouse pad.

·r

(

·r

mercjfulto· us a!'. .,inner'i: and in
ordt·r for u' In h~ rt~pc ntant. we ha\'C.

(740) 992·6451

10 admit IQ our~c:l\'c.'" tha t w e have
~in ne d . We oft en try to j u ~t i fy nur
had hclla \ i11r 111 .6nkr to avo id some
corr..:tt iH: .IL'IIOn t)l' puni., hmcn l:
hO\\ ~'~r. "" ,, ~ hou l d J...~L p in mi nd th,u
JU,tlf}l ng our 1nappropna1c a~.:t1 1m.-.
dr.._:~ nntnc~o:L''~Jri l ) null if) them .
~ I 0\1 al l of the g:rcllt p!!npl c in the

Michelle Kennedy
Director nf Marketing and Admissions

Hills Self Storage

740-949-2217

God \1 ill u-.c.: "" lnr lf j, f'O(ld.
t:.\t:.ll though Y. l' h~.nt! ~i n ned .

740·985·3561 "·

992·1550

To the Lord, our Gcd bf:&gt;1ong

have reb:!lls:l pgainst Him.

507

~lulber~

Heights
l'umero~. Ohio 45769

f'ii:'•.

(740) 992-3279
"!!Y'
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

..
,

..

If ye abide in Me, and My
word.1 abide in you, ye shall
ask wllat ye will, and it shall
be done umo you.
Jolin 15:7

MIDDLEPORT
TROPtnES &amp;TEES
St. ·Middleport, OH
740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
olaaues t-shirts and more

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

,

Hours
6am · 8pm

190 N. Second

Sales • Service • Parts
Ail Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

:Tlt'rcY ct."1d forg:. Veness, '·lhough

First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Pastor: E. Lamar
O'Bryanl. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship - 8:15a.m.. 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m ..
Wednesday SCrviccs- 7:00p.m.

. flnt Btptllt Church
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
Middleport , Sunday School · 9:15a.m.,
Wonhlp • 10:15 a.m., 7:00 p.m. ,
Wcdnelda)' Service· 7:00p.m.

Old Bethel Fret Will Baptist Chu"'h
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport. ~unday
Service - 10 -a.m.. 6:00 p .m .. Tuesday
Services -6:00

faith Bapdsl Chun:h
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday School • 10
a.m ., Worship · 11 a.•n .. 6 p.m,
Wednesday Sm·ices - 7 p.m.

Ml. Moriah Baptist
Founh &amp; Main St .. M1ddlrport , Pastor:
Re,·. Gilbe rt Craig. Jr.. Sunday School ·
9:30a.m . Worship · 10: 4 ~ a.m.

•

AnHqully Baptist
SundaJ School - 9:30 a.m ..

Wor~htp

.,

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
All Accounti11g &amp;

Firranrial !jervices Fir"!
(i I S E.

Mai n Street • Pomeroy
ill0) 992· 7270

Synouw Ftnt Cbun:b of God
Apple and S~ond Stli., Pastor: Re.... David
Russell. Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m. Evenin8 Services- 6:30 p .m.,
Wednesday Services· 6:30p.m.

Cbu,.b of God of ....,....y
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt 160, Pastoi: PJ .
Chapman, SundBy School • 10 11.m.,
Worship- II a.m., Wednesday Services • 7 ·
p.m.

Catholic

·Congregational
Trlalty Chan:h
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastor: Rev.
Jonathan Noble, Worship 10:25 a.m ..
Sunday ,Sehool9 : IS a.m.

Wtstslde Church or Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd, Pomeroy. OH
Contact 740-441 · 1296 Sunday morning
10:00, Sun morning Bible study ;
following worship , Sun. eve 6:00 pm.
Wed bible study 7 pm

Episcopal
Grace Episcopal c•urcb
326 E. Main St, Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m. Rev.
Edword Payne

Holiness

•

Commuaity Church
Pastor: Sieve Tomek , Main •, Slreet
Rutland. Sunday. Worship-1?:00 a.m ..
Sunday Service- 7 p.m

PomtrOy Cbureb of Chrtsl

212 W. Main St., Sunday School - 9:30
a.m., Worship- _ 10:30 a.m.• 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Scr.·ices - 7 p.m .

DtnvUie Hollnt55 Chan:ll
31057 Slate Route 325 ; Lang~\· 1le , Pastor:
· Victor Roush, Sunday school - 9:30a.m.,
Sunday wrohip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Waulde ChurTh oi'Chrhl:
33226 Children's Home Rd .• Sunday
School -.11 a.m ., Wot"!&gt;hip- lOe. .m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sef'\'ices: 1 p.m.

Calvary PUgrim Cb11pel
Harrisonville Road, Pasto~ Charles
McKenz(e, Sunday School 9:30 a.m..
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:00 pm .. Wednesday
, Serviee-7:00p.m.

Mlddl&lt;polt Ch""'h or Christ
5th. and Maln, Pa~tor : AI Hartson ,
Childre'n5 Director; Sharon Sayre. Tttr~
Diroctor: DcxlgC:r Vaughan . SUnday School
" 9:30a .m.. Worship- 8:15 , 10:30 a.m. , 7
p m .. WedneSday Serviees -7 p.m

Rose of Sharon Holl•ess Churth
Leading Creek Rd .. Rudand. Pastor: ~ev.
Dewey King, Sunday school- 9:30 a.m.,
S!Jltday wor5hip -7 p.m ., Wednesday
prayer mee1ing- 7 p.m .

Keno Chun:h or Chrill
Worship - 9:30 a.m .. Sund11y School ·
!0:30 11.m., P&lt;l!itor-Jeffrcy Wallaee, lst and
3rd Sunday

Pie Grove Blbtt Holiness Chun:h
Ill. mile off Rt. 325. Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley. Sunda)' School • 9:30 a.m ..
Worship
10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Beltn'allow Rld&amp;t Cbun:lt of' Christ

Pastor: Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 P.tn,
Wednesday-Services · 6:30p.m.

Wesleyaa Bible HoiiDta Cburth
75 Pearl St., Middlepor1. Pastor: Rick
Bourne, Sunday School· 10 a.m. Worship
-10:43 p.m., .Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wedneiday Service· 7:30 p.nl.

Zion CbUt&lt;h ol Cbrtot
Pomeroy. Han-isonville Rd. (Rt.l43),
Pastor: .Roaer Watson, Sunclay S~_hool 9:30 a.m .. Wotahip - 10:30 a.m ., 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Hyteii·Run CommunliJ Church
Putor: Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
~9:30a.m., Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.,
Thuraday Bible Study and Youth • 7 p.m.

1\rpptl'l PlllD Cbuftb of Chrllt
lnttNmental, Wonhlp Ser.oi~e - 9 a.m .•
Commun.!on - 10 a.m., Sund.ay School 10:1.5 a.m., Youth-5:30pm Sund.ay, Billie
Study Wodn-y 7 pm

Bradllory Chuldt of Cbrtot
Minitter: 'Ibm Run)'on, 39558 Bradbury
Rolli, Mlddt•pon, Sunday School · 9:30 ·
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Rutlud Cbun:b of Cllrllt
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .. Worship aod
Communion· - 10:30 a.m., Bob J. Werry,
Minister

Bradford Cbarc• or Chrtal:
Comer of St. Rt. I24 &amp; Bradbury Rd.,
Minister: Doug Shamblin, Youth Mi_nister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worsh ip - 'll:OO a .m ., 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.
. Hkkory HUb Ch""'~ of Christ
Tuppers Phtini, Pastor Mike Moore, Bible
class, 9 a.m. Sund11y; wonhip 10 a.m
Su.nday; worship 6:30pm Sund11y : Bible
class 1 pm Wed .

Reedsville Church of Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm, Sunday School: 9:30
a.m .. Worship Sel"\'ict: 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Study,.Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Deller Cburth of Cbrlst
Sunday school 9:30a.m., Sunday worship
- f0:30 a.m.
The Church or Christ of Pomen~y
Intersect ion 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dr.nnis Sargen t. Sunday Bible Study 9:30a.m .. Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wrdnesday B.ible Study - 7 p .m.

Christian Union
Hartford Clmn:h of Christ In
Chrbtlan Union
Hanford . W.Va .. Past or:De.vid Greer,
Sunda y School · 9:30 a.m., Worship lO :JO a.m .. 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
&amp;rvice~- 7:00p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriatl Church ol God
Mil e Hill Rd .. Raci nr . Pastor: James
Sauerfield , Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.,
Evening - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services- 7

Loonl ClllrFrao Methodlat Cbun:b·
Pattor: Glenn Rowe, Sunday School •
9 :30 a.m., Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m. 1nd' 6
p.m .,Wednelday Service·7:00 p.m.

Pomeroy Church. of tbe Naure•t!
Pastor: Jan Lll''rnder. Sunday S,hool •
9.30 a.m., Worsh ip - 10:30 ll.m. lin d 6
p.m., Wednesday Se-rvkes - 7 pm .

l.oo&amp; Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10:30 a.m.
Rttdsvttlo
Wonhip - 9:30. a.m ., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., First Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. service

Lutheran
St.Joba Lulheno Church
Pine Grove, Worship- 9:00a.m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m. Pastor: James P.
Brody
Our Saviour Lutheran C....,.b
Walnut and Henry Sis .• Ravcn5wood .

W.Va .. Pastor: Da.vid Russell , Sunday
School- ,10:00 a.m., Worship- 11 am.
St. Paul Lutheran Cbun:b
Comer Syc~ &amp; Second St .. Pomeroy,
Sun. School-9:45a.m., Worship - l I a.m.

United Methodist
Gl'llham Ullked Mfthodlst
Worship - II a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
lkdtttl Uoittd M£thodlst
New Haven, Richard Nease , Pa5lor,
· Sunday worship 9 :30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible: Study .
"I.'OIIvt U•itetl MethOdi~
Off 124 behind Wilkesville. Pas1or: Rev .
Ralph Sp tres . Sunday School - 9:30a.m ..
. Wot"!&gt;hip · IO J O a.m.. 7 p.m.. Thursday
Servicr:s - 7 p.m.
Mdp CoopH'8.tin l"'arUh

Northeasl Clus1er, Alfred , Pe.stor: Janr
Beanie , Sunday Sch.nol' - 9:30 a.m.,
Wo~hip - II a.m., 6:.30 p.m.
Ched«
Pastor: Jane Beattie. Worship · 9 a.m ..
Sunday Schoo! - 10 a.m. , Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.

Carltton lntt"rdtoomlnatlonal Chun:b
Kingsbury Road. Pa, !or Ruben Vance.
Sund a} School · 9. 30 am .. Worsb1p
Service 10.30 a.m . E 1 en m~ Serv ice 6
p.m.
Fl"ftdom Gusptl '-il:ssion
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd . J l , Pastpr: Re\ .
Roger Will fo rd, Su nday Schoo l - 9:30
.a.m. Wor~h r p- 1 p m.

Cbrster Church oflbt Naun:ne
Put or: ~ev. Herben Gn11e, Sunday School
- 9:30 a,m.. Wonhip - 11 a.m .. 6 p.m.,
Wedne5day Services- 7 p.m.
Rutland Chun.:h of llw Nazan:nt
Sund11y School · 9:30 a.m., Worshtp •
10:30 a.m., 6:30 p .m .. Wednesday
Services · 7 p.m. Rev. Mike Clark

Tappen Plains S1. Paul
Pastor: Jane Beanie, Sunday School - 9
a.m., Worship- 10 a.m . ,lUesda~ Sen:i~s
• 7:30p .m.
Ctnlrai 'Ciuster
Asbury (Syracuse) . Pas[or: Bob Robinson .
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m., WOrship - 1l
a.m., Wednesday Services- 7:30p.m.

Whhe'5 Chllpei Wesle}'an
Cuohi \le Road, Paswr: Re". Phil li p
Ridenour. S u nd a~· School . 9:30 a.m..
\\'{H'!&gt;hip · 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Service

Other Churches

· 7 p.m.

Sync'* Community Church
~480 Second St .. Syrocuse·. OH
Sun. School iOam . Sundy night 6:30 pm
Under the dircdion of Dan &amp; Fatth
Ha yman
.-\ New Beginning
(full Gosptl Churth) Harrisonv1l k.
Pastors: Bob and Kay Marshal~.
Suoday Scrvi(c. 2 p.m

Enterprise
Pastor: Arland King , Sunday Schoo l 10:30 a.m., Worship - 9:30 a.m., Bible
Study Wed. 7:30
Flalwoods
Pastor: Keith. Rader. Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Worship- II a.m. -

Fore!Jt Run
Paslor: Bob Rohinson , Sunday School - 10.
a.m .. Worship - 9 a.m .

u..th (Middleport)
Pastor; Brian Dunham, S~tnday School 9:30a .m., Worship - I I:00 a.m.,
·Minersrillt
Pa.stor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School · 9
11.m., Worship - 10 a.m .

Pearl ChaJW)
Sunday School. 9 a.m., wOrship . 10 a.in .
Pomeroy
PaStor: Briait Dunham, Worship - 9J O
a.m., Sunday $chool- 1Q:35 am.

Rock Springs
PISior: Keidl Rader, Sunda)·.School - 9:15
a.m .. Worship
10 a.m.• Youth
Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

...

Rutland
Pastor: Rick Bourne. Sunday School 9:30a.m .. Worship- 10:30 a.m .. Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.
Salem Ceater
Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sunday .
School· lO:I.S a.m ., Worship· 9:\.S a.m .•
Bi[)le Study: Monday 7:00pm
, Snf!wvllle
.Sunday School- 10 a.m., Wonhip- 9 a.m.

Btllwl1
Putor. John Gilmore, Sunda)' School • 10
a.m., Worship • 9 a.m ., Wednesday
Servicea • I0 a.m.

F~irview

SundaY School - 9:.' 0 a.m .. Worship. 7:00
p.m.. WedneWay B1ble S t u d ~· 7:00p.m
Faith l'dlo&gt;A·ship Crusade ror Christ
Pll~\or. Re1. Fmnl lm Dicl~ll~. Service:
Friduy. 7 p.m.
C alvHr~· Dible Chun·h
Pomei'O}' Pil e. Co . RJ. P;~,l~lT : R~\.
B l a~· kw uml , Sundn) S~ h.~w l . 9::&lt;0 a.m..
Wu r• h1 p IO .JI) a.m. 7:30 p.m..
\.'v edncsdtl)' Sen'icl" - 7:JO p.m .

Am11zing Gract Community Church
Pastor: Waynr Dunlap. State Rt . fit! I.
Thppers Plains: Sun. Wmphip: 10 11m &amp;
6:30pm .. Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m.
Oasi!i Christian Frllowshlp
(Non-denominational fellowship!
Meet ing in !he Meigs Middle s,·hool
Cafeleria Pastor: Chris Stev.art
10:00 IUTl - Noon SlUiday: lnfornial
Worship , Children's minis!!)'

Stln•rs\'lilll C:ommunit~· Apostolic:

Church
P:t ~ Tor : W:~~ n e

·Mol'lllniStar

Communlly of Christ
Por11and-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Ji m Proffiu.
Sunday School - 9 :.~0 a.m.. Wor~ hip 10:30 a.m .. Wedn esda y Serv1ces- 7:1X)
p.m.
Bethel Worship ~tntrr
39?82 S.R. 7, Reed sville. OH 4~7 7 2 . 1 /~
mile nonh of Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Go spel Church , Pastor Rob Barber.
AssoC 'iate Pa stur Karyn Dt~vi s , 'YOllth
Pastor Suzie Franci s. Sunday ~ er v i rc s
10:00 am worship. 6:00 pm Family Lil'e
Clu~es . WeQ . Home Cell , Group~ 7:00
p.m., Outer Limits Cell Group aT the
church 6:30pm to 8:30pm

Rejoicing Life Churt'll
!\\'~· . M1ddlrport. Pa-. l l~
Mike Forema11. Pll)ll•r l.: ntl!n!ll ~ Lu.,\· ri.' nc~·
Fort.'mrm. Wor\hlp- IO:lKiam
Wedne:.Ja) ~~· 1 t ~c~ · 7 p.m
500 N. 2nd

Clinon Tabernacle Church
Clifton . W.Va .. Sund•1)' Schoo l·- lU a:m..
Wor~ h1p - 7 p.m.. Wednesda) ~ crv i cl.! · 7
p.m.
New Life \'ic'tnr~ Crnter
.\Tl.l G ~! orge , frrd.. R,•;ul. Godlipnli \. 011
Pa~ tor : Rill St ill ~n . .Sun(l,l) Srr\' i~·r~- I()
a.m. &amp; 7 Jl. m Wcdn i.'~ ,ta ~ · 7 p m. &amp;
Youlh 7 p.m

Ash Slreet Chun:h
398 Ash St., Middlepon-Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Morning
Worship
10 :30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pm.
Wednesday Sen·ice - 7:00 p.m.. . Youth
Service- 7:00p.m.
Aaape Life Center
"Full-Gospel Church", Putors John &amp;
Patty Wade. 603 Second A~o~e. Mason. 773 .S017, Service"time: Sun4ay 10:30 a.m.,
Wedne5d&amp;)' 7 pm

Full Gospd Churcll
of tht&gt; Lh·ing Sa"ior
RL) )R . A1i t iq u i t ~. Pa, tlll. Jesse
Sen·1 ~e ~: Sa turd a~ ~ : on p.m

Bethel Cburdl .
Township Rd ., 468C, Sunday School · 9
a.m, Worship - 10 a.m., Wednesday
Services - l0 a.m.

Ratol'lllon Chrl1tlan Fl!llowahlp
936.S Hooper Rosd, A1hens, Pastor:
Lonnie Coah, Sunda) Worlihip 10:00 am ,
Wednesday: 7 pm

or

House Healln1 Mlnlstrie1
St. Rt.l24 Lan11sville,OH
Full Goipcl, Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Ro~na
M~tsser. Sundu y School 9:30 am, ,
Worsh ip IOJO am • 7:00 pm, Wed.
Service i ;()() pm

HarrllonvUie Community Church
Putor: Theron Durham. Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednesday· 7 p.m.

.S7~

MldcUtport Community Churth
Pearl St.. Middlepon , Puror: Sam

Aitdeuon, Sund&amp;)' School 10 a.m..
· Evening-7:30p.m. , Wednesday Service7:30p.m.

Pentecostal
Penlrrostal Assembly,
St. Rt 12-l , Racine, Tornado Rd . Sunday
School - 10 a.m .. be ning - 7 p.m ..
Wrdne sd a~ S er\'ice~ - 7 p m.

Faith Val~y Tabernadt Ch'urch
Baile)' Run Road. Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Rawson . Sunday Evening 7 p.m..
Thursday Servicr- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrlson\·JUe Prtsb~terian Church
Pa~t or Roh..' n Crnw. Worship -') a. m.

Syracuw Mission
14\1 Bridgeman St .. Syracuse, Sund11y
School • 10 ot.m, Evening - 6 p.m..
Wednesd11y Se~ice. - 7 p.m.

~liddkport Presbylcri11n
Paotor: Jumc ~.sn:- dcr. Sunday School IU
:.t.m.. wor~ t'up ~crn cc II urn.

Hazel Communlty.Chun:h
Off Rt . 124, Pascor: Ed~el Han, Sunda)'
School -9:30a.m.. Wors hip - 10:30 a.m..
7:30p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Snenth-Day _,d,·rntist
Hb . Rd . P omqn~. Sat urda~
Sl.'n · i~.:, : Sabhath SchM I - ~ p.m ..
wor~ h i p . } p.m
\lull'oc rr~

HfldllDalon Chlll'dl

Grand S~t. Sunday School - 9:30a .m.,
Worsliip -'tO:JO a.m .• Pastor Phi1_lip Bell
Torcll Chardt

Co. Rd . 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .,
Worship - l0:30 a.m.

Nazarene

Cburch or lhe Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap, Sunda~ Sch~ l 9:30 a.m .•Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 6:.m p.m..
Wc:d{lcsday Services - 7 p.m.. Pastor:
Allen MiOCap
Middle:~

Retdsville: F.:Ho"·ship
Church of the Nazarene. Pastor: . Sunda)'
School - 9:30a.m.. Worship· 10:45 a.m..
7 p.m., Wednesday Sen· ict: ~ • 7 p.m.
Syranase Chun:h ol thr Saurcnr
PastQr Mik.~ Adkins . Sunda~ Sc hool . IJ:30
a.ITJ .. Worship - 10 30 a.m., 6 p.m..

Morri ~.

Salem Commuult) Chun;h
Ba'\:k of West Columbiil. W.V11.om Lie~·ing
Rood , P11stor: Charl e ~ R l'U~h (304) 6752288, Sunday ~chool 9:30 am. Sunduy
evening ser vice 7:00 pm, l:hbly Siudy
Wednesday service 7:00pm

EutLetart
Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School ·
9a.m., Wor1hip - 10 a.m., ht Sunday
every month evening 5ervice 7:00 p.m.;
. Wednesday· 7 p.m .

Coolville Unlled Metbodlst Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline. Coolville Church,
Main &amp; Fifth St. , Sun . School - 10 a.m ..
Wo~hip -- 9 a ~m . , Tues. Scf'\'ices- 7 p.m.

R. Jl.'well. Sund:t;. worsh1p

· 6:00 p.m .. Wi!dne&lt;.da) : I'd (! p.m. Bil'lk
·StUd)

. Fatth FuD Golp£1 Cburdl
Lana BDltom, Putor: SlCive Reed, Sunday
School • 9:30 a.m. Worship-9:30a.m.
and 7 p.m .. Wednelday • 7 p.m.. Friday •
fellowship service 7 p.m.

Putor: Jobn Gilmore, Sunday School - 11 _
a.m., Worship· 10 a.m .

lladnt
Pastor: Kerry Wood, Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Worship - 11 a.m.Wcdnesday
Sef'\'ices 6 pm; ThW" Bible Study 7 pm

Bible Churth

le!art . W.Va. R!. l. Pasmr: Bria n May.

Abundant Grace R.F.I.
Hob100 Chrl1tian Fei\01nhlp Church
923 S. Third Sl., Middlepan, Pastor Teresa '
Putor:
Hmchel White. Sund11y SchoolOavh, Sunday •ervice, 10 a.m..
tO
am,
Sunday
Chu rc h service· 6: ~0 pm
\Yednesday service. 7 p.m.
Wednnday 7 pm

Cana I·SUttoD
Carmel &amp;: Balltan Rdt. Racine. Ohio,
Pastoi-: John Gilman, Stmda)' School •
9:30 a.m ., Wonhip • 10:4~ a.m. , Bible
Study Wed. HXI p.m :

Latter-Day Saints
The Church"' J CIIrtot of Lo-Doy Salata
St. Rt. 160. 446·6247 Or 446·7486,
Sunday School I 0:20·11 a.m., Relief
Sociery/Prieathood .I t :05-12:00 noon,
Sacrament Service 9-10: \.S a .m.,
Homemaking meeting, I st Thun . • 7 p.m.

Sunda) Schoo l • 9 11 m , Wor ,hJp Serv1ce
10 a.m 2nd and 4! !1 Sundu}

Dyesvllle Community Churth
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worshi p 10:30 a.m .• 7 p.m.
MOI'Sf Chapd Churth
Sunday school · ·10 a.m .. Worship · 1I
a.m., Wednesday Serv1ce · 7 p.m.

United ·Brethren
.\11. Hermon L'nitrrl Hrrlhrrn
in Chri.o;t Church
Tc\a~ Comm uni!) JfM I I W1rl..ha m Rd
P:J'I•lr: Pr.t~ r Mar1 mdJir Sunda:o S~ h ool •
9:JO a.m .. \'•or•h •p - IO·JO am. 7:00
p.m .. w~ dn .:' d &lt;l~ S.:n I•'~ ' - 7:00 r m
Y~uth group ml"r tllig 2nd &amp; -4th Su n~ a y'

Faith Gospel Churcll
Lons Bonom, Sunda} School - 9:3'0 u. m..
Worship - 10 : 4~ a.m., 7:30 p.m ..
Wedne sday 7: 30p.m.
MI. Oti\'e Community Church
Pastor: Lawrcncr Bush. Sunday Sch ool 9:30a.m.. E\'tni ng - 6:30p.m.. Wedncday
Sel"\·icr - 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Llgltthoust
3JO.I 5 Hiland Road. Pomeroy.Pastor: Roy
Hunter. Sunda) School - 10 a.m.. Evrning
7 :.~ p.m.. Tuc:.sd ~ &gt; &amp; Thurs.- 7:30 p.m.

7'p.m,
Eden United Brdhret1 in Christ
St ate R,oute 1 ~4 . bet v. t"~n Reeds,illr &amp;
Hod.ingpor1 . Su nda} School - 10· a.m ..
Sunday Wcir~h ip · 11 :00 a.m. W~nesda:o
Srr\'ke ~ · 7:00 p.m .. Paslor- M Adam
Will

South Bethel Commuaity Churt:h
S•l vc:r Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood.

Church announcements sponsored by these area merchants
"Let your light so shine before
men , that they may see your
good works and glorify your
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

Sizes available 5x 10 to 10 x 20

The ftppliance man

P~.:rhap.-.

Hope Baptist Oturth (Southern)
570 Grant St. , Middleport. Sunday school
- 9: ~ a.m., Worship · II a.m. und 6 pm ..
We&lt;Jocsda)' Scr\· k~ - 7 p.m. Pa~tor: G&lt;~ry
Ellis
Ruthmd t'lrst 811ptist Church
SuJKlay School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy l'lnt Baptist
Pastor Jon Brockert, East Main St ..
Sunday Sch. 9:30am. Worship 10:30 !In}

Foresl Run Baptisl· Pomer'oy
Re\·. Joseph Woods. Su!lday School - 10
a.m.. Worship - 11 :30a .m.

740-992·7713

Racine, OH

Hihlc ~omminc,!.,omc "rnngdoi n~ .
rmd 'tdl, God ua~ ahk to u.,c: lht·m.

Ctiahlrc Haplloil Chun:h
Pastor: Ste\'e Little , Sunday School: 9:30
11m, ' Morning WoNhip: I0:30 am.
Wednesda)' Dible Study 6:30pm; ehoir
practice 7:30; youth and Bible Buddies
ti:30 p.m. Thurs. I pm book itody

Pastor: Bob Randolph, Worship - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.

pm.

Minister: Larry Brown, Worship - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a.m. , Bible
Study - 7 p.m.

CarPenter Bapdst Church·
Sunday School
9:301UT1. fuaching
Service !0:30am, E\·ening Smiee
7:00pm, Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm,
Interim Prtncher - Aoyd Ross

Wednesday Sm·kes - 7 p.m.

Joppa

Rutland Ch""" of God
Pastor: Roo Heath, Sunday Worship · 10
a.m., 6 p.m .. Wednesday Serdceli · 7

Hemlock Grove Chrlitlan Cbun:h

Open 7 days a week

29670 Bashan Rd.

PO. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

Baptist
Pagtvllh: FJWWIII Baptist Chun:h
.Pa~tor : Mike Harmon, Sunday Schocil
9:;10 tiJ lO:JO am , Wofship ser~o~ice 10:30
to 1I :00 am . Wed . preaching 6 pm

Victory Baptist lndtpn~nl
525 N. 2nd St. Middkpon . Pastor: James
E, Kee see , Worship - tOa .m., 7 p.m..
. Wednesday Services - 7 p m.

llomt Cooktd Meols &amp; Daily Sptculls

"A Home &amp;ink for
Home People"

. rcjX'ntance th&lt;:~t a!'. ks the Lord to he

Ubnty .U..mbly of God
P.O. Box 467. Dudding Lane. Mason ,
W.Va .. Pastor: Neil Tennam , Sund!ly
Servi ces- 10:00 a.m. ~tnd 1 p.m.

Hillside Blptlst Churth
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7. Pastor: Rev.
James R. Acree , Sr .. S4nday Unified
Service . Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m ..
Wednesday ServiCes -7 p.m.

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

.740-949-221 0

Church of Christ

Betht.hem Bapdll Cb"""
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine , OH ,
Pastor: Ed Caner, Sunday- SchOOl · 9:30
a.m., Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.

Miffie 's 2{estaurant

God for Hi!'. forgive nc-;, we ~hou ldn ' t he too h:m.h on ourselves nor dwell on
our past transgrc"'&gt;lOil, . Sin is a reJection of God's love: hoWever, our Heavenly
Fatht!r has give n u~ a mt!ans ~o rid o ur~cl ves of sin providing that we try to
re frain from "inni ng 1.i1the future. In the Bible, Psalm 51 is a prayer pf

Assembly of God

Pastor: Dennis Weaver SQnday Scbool9:45 a.ffi .• Evening • 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Service5 · 6:30p .m.

Warm Frit•ndlr
Minmphen' ·

And. al though v.t·

· Emmanuel Apostolic Tlbernadt Inc.
Loop Rd off New lima Rd. Rull~~ond,
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 pm.,
Thurs . 7:00p.m .• Pastor Mart)' R. Hutton

161 Mulberry A~o~e .. Pomeroy. 992-~898.
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sat. Con .
4:45-5:15p.m.; Mass- 5:30 p.m., Sun .
Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m.,. Sun . t-:1ass - 9:'30
a.m .. Daily Mass- 8:30 B.m.

Mt. u"""' Boptltt

Tht Rihlc tell" us that w~ all have -;inned and have come short of the glory of'
~od

Sacred Heart Catbollt Cb~.nb

WEEK .

pm.

Rud1nd Free WW B1plllt
Salrm St ., Pastor: Jamie Fortner. Sunday
SchOQI - 10 a.m., Evening .:. 7 p.m.,
Wedneiday Services • 7 p.m.
Sewnd B11pdst Cburtb
Ravenswood, WV, Sunday School 10 am' Morning worship 11 am Evening - 7 pm ,
Wedne~y 7 p.m.

River VaUey Apo5tolic Worship Cent:er,
873 S. 3rd
Ave.. Middleport, Rr v
Michael ~radford. Pastor. Sunday, 10:30
a.m . Tue s. 6:30 prayer. Wed. 7 pm Bibk
Study

SUver Ru• laptlll

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156
"Still small enough to cure"

IUvtr Valley

Pa'stor: John Swanson, Sunda)' School ·•
!Oa.m., Worship • lla .m .• 7:00 p.m. ·
,Wednesda)' Service•· 7:00p.m.

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

VanZandt and Wll'd Rd., Pastor: Jamts
Miller, Sunday School · 10:30 a.m..
Evening · 7:30p.m.

Radne Flrtt Boptbl
Pastor: Joseph Oodwln , interim pastor :
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship •
10:40 t .m, 7:00 p.m.. Wednesdly
Servlce1 • 7:00 p.m.

example, about 40 percent of
professors frequently attend
religious services, compared to
47 percent for the general population. But the authors say
religious commitment levels
are higher than indicated by
previous surveys. which did
not to include professors at
community colleges.
Community college professors are more religious than
those at elite; doctoral universities. But even at the elite universities, a majority of protessors are neither atheistic or
agnostic, and 20 percent say
they have no doubt God exists.

r

10:45 a.in ., Sunday Evening . 6:00p.m.,
Pastor: Don Walker

Chu~&lt;h of Jnuo Clulst ApoiiO)k

Survey: College professors more
religious than commonly believed
~OSTON

r

Fellowship . .
Apostolic ·

"attender of church services" but now become
instead a servant of the
Living God. Has He placed
a. need in front of you for
which you ·have the remedy? If He has indeed placed
within you a hunger for
more than the common life,
now is the time for you to
step into the role that He has
ordained by releasing to
Him any self-will, fear,
ambition, greed, pride, and
even .a love for comfort.
Don't wait to follow Jhe
Savior. Don ' t put off knowing Him better. Don't delay
the fruit He might harvest
through your life. Let today
be the day you pick up your
calling and walk with Jesus.
· "But the seed on good soil
stands for those with a
noble and good heart, who
hear the Word, retain it, and
by persevering produce a
crop. No one lights a lamp
ami hides it in a jar or puts tt
under a bed. Instead. he puts
it on a stand, so that those
who come in can see the
light. For there is nothing
hidden that will not be disclosed, and nothing concealed that will not be
known or brought out into
the open. Therefore consider carefully how you listen.
Whoever has will be given
more; whoever does not
have, even what he thinks
he has wi II be taken from
him" (Luke 8:15-18 NIV).
(Thom Mollohan and
his family have ministered
in southern Ohio the past
11 years: He is tile pastor
of Pathway Community
Church, which meets on
Sunday mornings at tile
Ariel Theatre. He may. be
reached for comments· or
questions by e-mail at
pastortllom@patllwaygallipolis.com).

Jesus, having just told a
group of listeners this storY.
about the seeds and the sml
explained what it all meant.
"This is the meaning of the
parable: the seed is the Word
of God. Those along the
path are the ones who hear,
and then the devil comes
·and takes away the word
from their hearts, so that
they may not believe and be
saved. Those on the rock are
the ones who receive , the
word with joy when they
hear it, but they have no
root. They believe for a
while , but in the time of testing they fall away. The seed
that fell among thorns stands
for those who hear, but as
they go on their way they
are choked by life'.s worries,
riches and pleasures, and
they do not mature." (Luke
8:1 ~- 14 NIV).
How sad when a child of
God , though called to walk
with Him in a way especially designed for her. turns
away for whatever reason.
It occurs to me, though, that
if God 's people remain in
love with their Savior and .
their feet remain faithful to
. the trail especially chosen
for them, t]]ey are a truly
formidable force. Just con-.
sider the implications for
Gallipolis and the surrounding area if Christians would
take the Bible's admonition
in I Tin'iothy 4: 14-15: to
not neglect their callings
and unique spiritual giftedness to till the soil of the
corners of the Kingdom of
God to which He has
appointed them'
. As God calls to you to
leave the stagnant and fruitless fields of complacency,
will you rise up and go with
Him or would you have
Hiro pass you by? It is time
to be more than just an

The Dally Sentinel ·Page A7

WWw;mvdallvsentlnel.com

~'ORSJ:np GOD THIS

friday, October 13, 2006

- - A Hunger For More

Gospel sing to be held

r

.PageA6

Frldav. October 13. 2006

..
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IMS.S..-·7

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be done unto you.
Services
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992-6677

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Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

rffilt
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Bkssed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
: Matthew 5:8

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Let your light so shine before'
REHABILITATION CENTER men , that they mav see rour
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740-992-6606

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SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
For God so loved the ll'orld
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PHARMACY
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We Fill Doctors'
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John3 :16
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Acts 24:16

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Middleport, OH
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�'

•

LocAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Local Weather

STAFF REPORT

Today's Forecast

NEWS@MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Clty/Roglon
High I Low temps

Toledo•
51

I 30"

Mansfield •
49: 128"

f""A ·

· Youngatown •
48• 128'

t
t' t''A.. ''

t_ __~

)

oavton· r~

,50• I 28'

·:--

.

*Columbus
49· I 29 '

Cinci nlloti
• 5.2 ' l '3D

Friday, October 13, 2006

Inside
NASCAR, Page 83
Scoreboard, Page 84

l'

y;"'Jz..... /"' ' ~..
~ ~- .•.

GALLIPOLIS - Rhonda
Vincent,
International
Bluegrass
Music
Association's Female Vocalist
of the Year for 2006 who
entertained audiences at this
year's Gallia County Junior
Fair, returns to Gallipolis on
Sunday, Nov. 5 with two
shows 'at tHe Ariel-Dater
Performing Arts Centre.
Vincent and her band The ·
Rage will perform at 3 and 7 ·
p.m. Local favorite the Joe
Freeman Band will open
both shows.
The artist is also the recip1 ient of IBM A\ Entertainer
I of the Year honor for 200 I.
·I Her
CU!Tent
single

"Heartbreaker's Alibi," a duet
for Dolly Parton, and the
video of the same title are
receiving heavy airplay on
Country Music Television
and GAC. The single is her
first release from her current
CD, "All American Bluegrass
Girl," that debuted at No. I oil
the bluegrass charts.
The CD is her fifth release
on Rounder Records and
follows the hi!lhiX successful "Ragin • L1ve ' CD and
DVD. A Christmas CD
called "Beautiful Star: A
Christmas Collection" is
scheduled for release on
Oct. 17.
Vincent started performing
at the age of 3 in her parents'
bluegrass band imd on local
television at age 5. Honing

her skills on mandolin and
fiddlj:, she has recorded
eight albums with her family
band by age 23. Following a
brief stint in country music
in the mid- 1990s. she
returned to her roots in bluegrass and has been gaining
immense popularity since.
· Tickels for the Nov. 5 shows
are on sale ' now. A limited
amount of VIP tickets arc
avaliable at $25 each in
advance. Other seats are available at $15 and $12. There is a
separate ticket charge for each
show. Tickets are on ;ale at the
Ariel-Dater box office. 426
Second Ave., or by phone at
446-ARTS (2787). 1l1ey can
be purchased by cash or credit card (additional service fee).
Tickets may also be ordered·

Friday, October 13, 2006

l.ocAL ScHEDULE

!

i

Meigs
finishes
3rdin.
league

POMEROY -A schedule oii.4Xl(ll'ni'Jg college
and higl 911ool varsily aportjng events inYoMng
1&amp;amS from Galla, Meigs and Muon ooo.mes.

Rhonda VIncent

b)
e-mail
at
arieltheatrc @fi·ognct.net or
visit the Web site at
www.arieltheatre.org.

1 - - - - - - - - - - --------~--------~--------------------------~-------------

Trailride raises more than $10,000 for St. Jude's
hospital
.

RUTLAND
-Every place. All riders that particiyear one day in Rutland pated and donated to St.
Weather Un6erground • AP
benefits children that rely Jude will receive gifts 'from
on
research done at St. Jude . St. Jude and pictures taken
Friday... Mo,;l\ s unn~ in Monday ••. Partly cloudy.
·
Research of . the riders during the
the mori1in ~ ... Tiien becom- Lows in the lower 40s. Children's
Hospital during the annual event.
ing partly· cloudv. Parchy · Highs in the lower 60s.
Also donated were many
frost in the morning. Highs
Monday night ••. Mostly Fun Day At The Dill Farm
St.
Jude's
Trail
Ride
which
prizes
the winners of which
in the niid 50s. ~o u1hwc11 cloudy with a 50 percent
this year rai ,ed a record were as follows: Kim Fetty.
wind ' 10 lu I~ mrh with :chance l 1f showers. Lows in
$10.
II) with I D riders par- Ravelfswpod, w. Va ., saddle
· gusts up l&lt;l :5 mph.
_,0
1
'
ticipa[ing.
.
.
Frida~
ni i[ht. .. ~ i&lt;•,lh tl: uppn + ' ·
All
proceed
'
WCIIt
to
St. and bridle; Margie Wisecup.
clear. Patch v frihl after 1mJ.-. Tuesda)' and Tuesday
. night. Cokl.wiiii lows in rhe night .•. Mostly cloudy with Jude Children's Research Rutland. · John , Deere
baskets:
mid '30s. Smnhwest winds 5 · showers likely. Highs in the Hospital which provides Longaberger
free medical care to chi!- Wayne
Huffman,
to I 0 mph.
upper 60s. Lows in the dren.
Submitted photo
·
Glenwood, . W.Va., cash
Saturday... Mo&gt;rly sunny. lower 50s. Chance of ·rain
For several years now the Life family of Chester (from left)
Many of the "Fun ,D~y" drawing; Barbra Phillips ,
Patchv frost in the morning. 60 percent.
Larry, Janet and Austin, have been participating in the Fun Day
riders
filled
up
a
hollow
on
Kathy
See,
Larry
Life.
bags
Highs in the upper 50~ .
Wednesday ... Mostly
At The Dill Farm Trail Ride for St. Jude Children's Research
West wind' I0 to 15 mph.
cloudy with a 40 percent the Dill Farm with h.orse of grain.
Hospital which this year raised $10,115 for the facility.
and
trucks
before
Along
with
event'
orgatrailers
Saturda~· night... Mostly chance of showers. Highs in
stocking up on refresh- nizers Isabel and Michael
clear. Cold with lows in the
mid 30,. West winds arou nd the mid ()Os.
ments and leaving for the Pill, countless volunteers
5 mph .
Wednesday night and trail which cut · across . pitched in to make the event
Sunday... Mostly sunny: Thursday... Partly cloudy. Beech Grove Road and a "success" as Mrs. Dill
Highs in the lower 60s.
Lows in the upper 40s. h~aded
through
the described it.
night
and Highs in the mid 60s.
Sunday
Ruthind woods. After
"This ride is open to
returning to the farm riders everyone,"
Mrs.
Dill
were treated to a cookout .
with ·beans and cornbread, explained. "All you need to
hot dogs, a hog roast and bring is your horse and a
cake all of which were warm heart to help the kids
donated by businesses and at St. Jude Children's
ACI-.31.04
Worthington -17.77
individuals.
Research Hospital."
AEP-40.40
Dally stock reports are the
Receiving ribbons were
Mrs. Dill said she hopes
Akzo-60.32
4 p.m. closing quotes of
top three money collectors: to see everyone back next
Mhland- 65.53
the previous day's transac- Brenda West, Crown City, year and those interested in
BIG -20.74
tions, provided by Smith
first phice; Larry Bunger, 'participating can call her at
Bob
32.99
Financial Advltors of
Chester, . second place; 742-2849 or Joyce Frye at
BolltWarner..., 60.27
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.
Kenny Turly, Racine, third 742-2081.

Local Stocks

Ev--

CENX- 34.54
Champion - 7.33
.
Channl~ Shops - 14.60
City
40.25
Col- 67.83
DG -13.75
DuPont - 45.17
Faderal Mogul- .40
USB :.....33.87
Gannett - 57.07
O-ral Electric - 36.22
GKNLY -5.25
Harley Davidson - 64.88
JPM -47.64
Krocer - 22..33
Ltd.- 28.60
NSC-46.15
Oak Hll Financial - 2!p4
OVB-25.15
BBT-44.09
Peoples- 30.44
Pepsico - 62.85
Premier - 14.65
Rockwell - 60.86
Rocky Boots ~ 12.98
Sears- 171.17
Wai·Mart - 48.32
Wendy's - 35.11.

Hoi--

Fddav'1 QIRIII
Football
.
JaCkson at Gallia Academy, 7:30p.m.
· Pt. Plea~nt at RaVenswood, 7:30p.m.
S.Gama at Symmes Valley; 7:30p.m.
Buffalo at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Fairland at River Valley, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Ale&gt;cander, 7:30p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
S&lt;luthem at Waterford, 7:30p.m.
·
Volleyball
, OVCS at Grace, 5:30p.m.

,

~cer

OVCS at Grace. 5 p.m.
College Womena Soccer
Rio Grande at Cedarville, 7 p.m.

BY ASHLEY SHAW
SPORTS@MYDA.ILYSENTINEL.COM

Saturday's GIIIJII
F0!\1b411
Hannan at Bishop Donahue
Vollayball
Gall!a Academy at Athens·, 10 a.m.

Soccer

Warren at Gallia Academy, 1 p.m.
.
Girls SoCcer
Point P!easant at Uncoln County, 2 p.m.

·college Soccer
Rio Grande at Ohio Dominican, 2 p.m.

College Womono Soccer
Rio Grande at Asbury College, 2 p.m.

-

College vot;.,oboll

Urbana/OOU at Rio Grande, ~ 1 a.m.
Monday's 9'011'
Tournament Volleybllll

Miller at Soutn~m. 6 p.m.
St Joseph at South Gallia, 6 p.m.

Tulldlly'a qamaa
Tournament VOlleyball
CrOOksville at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Tournament Soccer
Gallia Atademy at Att1ens, 6 p.m.
Ripley at Point Pleasant. 7:30 p.m.
Vollayblll
OVCS at Miracle City, 5:30 p.m.

College VOIIeyboll
WVU Tech at Rio Grande, 6 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

OHSAAhoops
officiating
course offered
WELLSTON
An
instructional course will be
2006 Eastern Lady Eagles (22-0, 10-0 TVC Hocking,
offered on Oct. 28 for anyone wanting to obtain an
OVP File
Ohio High School Athletic Pictured are the members of the 2006 Eastern Lady Eagles. In front from left are Georgana Koblentz, Ryan Davis, Jillian
Association
basketball Brannon, Hannah Pratt, Morgan Werry and Megan Boderick. In back are Brittany Bissell, Katie Hayman, Erin Weoer,
officiating
permit. Amanda Eason, Darcy Wineorenner and Kelsey Holter.
Graduates will be eligible
to officiate in the upcoming season.
-Eligible candidates must
be enrolled in high school
BY BRAD SHERMAN
this. They spent a lot of time in the
or older.
BSHERMANOMYDAILYfRIBUNE COM
weight room, traveled a lot of places to
For more information,
play. They deserve what they have now.'~.
including fee, contact John
WATERFORD - Howie Caldwell's
On Thursday, EaStern won the same .
Derrow at 740-71 0-5069 or pregame pep talk was perfect.
way it had all year - in three strai~t.
jsd 14@bright.net.
'There s not a club in the state ofOhio The Lady Eagles won by scores o£15that )las done what you have done," he 13, 25-18,25-11 and then the celebration
told his girls. "You can do sometliing began.
toni~ht that will never be ~n. it can
Even more impressive than the spotbe
ned,
but
never
be
broken."
less
22~ match record the Lady
AMC
. The coach's words were perfect, just Eagles, rahked No. 7 in the state in
like his team.
·
Division IV, didn't even lose a single
On the strength of a 3~ victory at game all season. Before the season startCEDARVILLE - For Waterford Thursday, the Eastern High ed, Caldwell knew his team would be
the second week iri a row, a School volleyball team completed a good,. but even he couldn't imagine his
magical run - becoming the school's girls winning every game.
.
member of the University first-ever
team to go undefeated in the
"I
thought
realtstJcally,
there
was a 9-26 .
·of Rio Grande men's soc- re~mlar season.
.
chance olgoing undefeated." he admit- 9-28.
10-3 .
cer team has been selected
y.l'm very proud of them," Caldwell ted, "but to win 66 games during a year 10-4
as · the American Mideast Continued. "We, as a coaching staff, -no, I didn't think.that was attamable.'' 10-5 •
.
Conference men' s soccer we're very proud in the fact they were
Eastern won by an average score 25- 10-10
10-12 • .dol.
player of the week for the able to accomplish that.
Piease see Fl-'ess, B1
Totals: 22-0 match record; 63-0 game record
week of October 2-8.
· 'They worked very hard to achieve
This week's honor was
bestowed upon junior forward
Guy
Heywood
(Preston, England).
Heywood tallied backBY ASHLEY SHAW
SPORTSii'MYDAILYSEr'TINEL.COM
to-hack hat tricks in a pair
of victories for NAIA No.
WATERFORD - If the playoffs
I Rio Grande. He scored
three goals in a 7-0 win started today; the Southern High
Southern running
versus NCAA Division II School football team would be the first
back Butch
Charleston and then added in school ~lstory to make it.
Marnhout
(21)
Unfortunately for the Tornadoes, the
three more goals in an 8-2
eludes tacklers d!JrAMC South Division deci- postseason is still weeks away, and there
ing a week th re~
is still much work to be done. Southern
sion against Urbana.
loss
to South Gallia
Heywood was also the is in a great position to make a run at the
in Racine.
NAJA' Region IX Player of Division VI state playoffs, though,' and a
Marnhout and the
crucihl Week 8 game awaits tonight in
the Week .
Tornadoes
face
against the Wildcats.
Senior mid-fi'elder Conar Waterford
Waterford in a key
Kick-off for · the Tri-Valley
Dawson earned the award Conference Hocking Division battle is
TVC-Hocking grid
last week and fre.shman
battle tonight.
set for 7:30 p.m .
mid-fielder/forward Jason
OVP File
The Tornadoes are currently ranked
Massie claimed the honoF eighth .in the Ohio High School
earlier in the year.
Athletic Association Region 23 comRio Grande is 12-1 over- puter ratings; the top eight qualify for a
all with a perfect 5-0 Week II game.
record in the AMC South
Southern (5-2) likely needs at least
Division.
two more wins to have a shot at its runs a lot of sweeps." Teaford contin- way tie at the top of the Tri- Valley
first-ever postseason bid.
.
ued, "He's going to be the key player Conference Hocking Division by winning their last three games of the sea"The playoffs, 1don't usually like talk- we're going to have to worry about."
son.
They didn't receive a playotl bid
ing about them, we usually take it one
Jason Sampson rushed for 1.261
CoNrAcrUs
game at a time." Southern coach Dennis yards, scored 16 touchdowns and was in 2005. This year the Wildcats enler
their contest with Southern with a
Teaford said. "We're just worried about All-TVC last season as a junior.
. OVP Scorellne ts p.m.-1 a.m.)
Waterford this week. If we get in the · The combination of quarterback record of 4-3 meaning they would have
playoffs, that'sjust a plus for the season. Bradley Lang, who passed for 721 to win the last three games this year to
1,740-446-2342 ext. 33
"We're going to give it our best effort, yards and seven touchdowns as a match last year's record .
FIX- i-740446·3000
A win tonight will keep the Southern
Waterford is a big challenge.'' he added. junior, and his favorite receiver Derek
E-mili - sports@mydailysentinel.com
''The kids know thl!fe is an urgency to Hoge. who caught 22 passes for 384 Tornadoes . in strong playoff conSoorts Staff
win this game, I think they'll play well." yards as a sophomore, are back again. tention. while a loss puts them behind
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
The Tornados face the Waterford
"The Lang boy at quarter back, he 's the eigh~-ball.
(740) 446-234 2 e)(l. 33
"Hopefully we can contain their
Wildcats, who are coming off a near a good athlete." Teaford .explained,
bsherman @n·, . '1•1Y1ribune.com
player!. and bring in a win."
skilled
miss playoff berth in 2005 and are hun- "Hopefully we can contain them two."
gry for a berth this year. The Wildcats
On the other side of the ball. the said Teaford .
l.llrry Crum, Sports Writer
So far Teaford's club has played well
(740) 446-2342, e..t. 33
retained most of their skilled position Wildcats returned only two offensive
Ierum 0 mydailyreg1ster.com
linemen from last year, "They're on the road. going 3-0 &gt;O far.
players from last year's team.
"They work hard every week in
(Jason)
Samson
kid
is
a
real
young up front, but they're strong and
"The
Ashley Shaw, Sports Writer
practice
weather it's at home or away,
good
tailback,
I
think
he's
been
with
they
work
hatd,"
said
Teaford.
(740) 446-2342 . e..t. 23
:sports 0 mydailytribuna .com
them for four years, he's quick and ' The 2005 Wildcats forced a three- they come to play." 'aid Teaford.

Eastern completes perfect regular season

Heywood tabbed
as
Player
of the Week ·

Southern, eyeing playoff spot, takes on Watelford

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The Daily Sentinel

Bluegrass standout returns to ·Gallipolis next month

- - - - ---- - -Fcncast for. Friday, Oct. 13

. Page AS

•

NELSONVILLE
Minu s its top spiker. the
Meigs High School volleyball team saw. its winning
streak snapped, and also lost
out on second place in the
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division, after a loss at
Nelsonville-York
on
Thursday.
The Lady Buckeyes took
advantage in the absence of
Meigs' Amber Burton, wh9
injured her ankle in warmups, to win in three straight
by scores of 25-15, 25-23,
25-20. It put the brakes on
the Lady Marauders' sevengame win streak.
By virtue of the win,
Nelsonville took took sole
possession of second place
in the TVC-Ohio and Meigs
(14-6 overall, 6-4 TVC) finishes third.
·
Many of the Lady
Marauders had perfect service including, Lesley
Preece II -for-11 scoring
one ace, Talisha Beha 8-for8, and Amy Barr 5-for-5. .
SJ?iking for Meigs was
Katte Wolfe and Preece
each killing five, Barr added
one.
Barr was credited with sill
assists, Wolfe and Patti
Vining helped out .with two.
The
Meigs
La,dy
Marauders plays host to

~~h~~~ti~~a~'i:~~~~~/or

Devtlettes
rally past
Southern
BY ScoTT WOlFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va Spotting both Williamstown
and Southern one game, host
Ravenswood came from
behind in both matches to
claim a non-lea~e tri-match
win Thursday mght to earn a
spot in the LKC Night of
Champions and boost its
record to 17- 13 overall.
After losing the first game
to Williamstown 17-25,
Ravenswood came back to .
win 25-13 and 25-11. Against
Southern (5-17), the Lady
Tornadoes won the exciting
first game 27-25, then
Ravenswood claimed th~ last
two games 25-15 and 25-17:
Southern
lost
to
Williamstown 25-19 and 2523.
In the second match of the
night, Southern played
Williamstown. Williamstown
led initially, but Southern
came back behind seven
Stephanie Cundiff serves and
kills from Whitney Wolfe·
RifOe and Sarah Eddy. Amber
Hill had two great d1gs and a
block surrounding two
Cundiff aces (8-5 Southern).
Close at 16-15, the game
swayed slightly to the much
taller Yellowjackets. who
despite a pair of Wolfe-'Riffle
aces. were able to claim the
25-19 win.
After a close beginning, the
second game looked to be all
Williamstown. The "Jackets
led 2-t-17, but after a
South&lt;:rn time out. Emma
Hunter served up siX poinLI,
including three aces to make
it a 24~23 game before a
Southern side-out gave WHS
the win.
Emma Hunter was 12-13
'erving and 5-7 passing,
Wolfe-Riffle was 8-8 passing
and 7-9 ;piking, Sarah Eddy
was I0-13 passing and 6--10
spiking: Cundiff was 9-10
,er\'ing. and Chelsea Pape IQ.13 pa.ssing. Riffle had four
kilh. Eddy two and 'Kasey
Turley one.
The first Ravenswood
Please see Southern. Bl

�Page 82 • 1he Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 13. 2006

www'.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, October 13, 2006

Mets take Game 1 from Cardinals
NEW YORK (AP) Sharp and deceptive as ever,
Tom Glavine took charge
again, putting the pitchingdepleted Mets on his 40year-old back to give New
York the lead in the NL
championship series.
Car.los Beltran rocked
Shea Stadium with. a homer
that cr~shed otT the score- ·
board to back another gem
hy Glavine, and the Mets
beat the St. Louis Cardinals
2-0 in Game I on Th).lrsday
night.
"Tommy was . the key,"
New York manager Willie ·
Randolph said. "He's quiet,
goes about his business and
is one of the leaders on our
staff."
Making his 34th postseason start, Glavine shut down
Albert Pujols aml extended
his scoreless streak to 13
innings in these ·playoffs.
Beltran, who wore out St.
Louis in the NLCS with
Houston two years ago, hit a
two-run shot off an otherwise impressive Jeff Weaver
in the sixth. That was all the
offense New York needed to
win its eighth straight game,
dating to the.regular season.
"lt pains me," Cardinals
manager Tony La Russa
said. "No way to suggest
that he's a losing pitcher.
Jeff was outstanding. So was
Glavine. We hit too many
balls in the air. I mean, it's
tough to win when you do
. that."
·
After rain postponed the
opener Wednesday night, the
Cardinals bumped up ace
Chris Carpenter, who will
pitch on regular rest Friday
night in Game 2. Rookie
ri~ht-hander John · Maine
wtll be on the mound for the
Mets.
Missing injure.d starters
Pedro Martinez and Orlando
Hernandez, the Mets are
counting heavily on Glavine
as they chase their first
World Series title in 20
years. The cagey left-hander
has delivered in a big way.
He threw six scoreless
v·

Flawless
rrom PageBl

good sets.·
Caldwell credits his team's
hard work, and focusing on
one game at-a-time as some
of the reasons for the flawless
reau]ar season.
f. As the season went on, I
really don't really think the
fact that we were undefeated
or the fact that we had gone
that many games without losins; a game," he said. "I don't
thmk that even weighed on
the kids' minds until maybe
this pa~t week.
"I think they just took
every game as a new challenge and
., they wanted t.o win
game.
·
Eastern, a regional qualifier
last season, now takes to the
·tournament trail. The Lady
Eagles will play host to either
Miller or Southern on
~ursday, Oct. 19.

innings in Game 2 of the David Wright said.
· Beltran also hit a gamefirst round. helping the Mets
Weaver, cast off by the ending · homer against the 12 and. its closest call was a
to a three-game sweep nf the ' Los Angeles Angels in July, Cardinals in August.
25-23 score versus Meigs on
Los Angeles Dodgers. And was nearly as good. He
''He's a big-game guy. Sept. 26.
the two-time Cy Young cruised through 5 2-3 He's shown what he can do
On its final win of the re~­
Award winner, \&gt;olhO wait..:d innings. blanking the Mets' in
the
postseason," ular season Thursday, Katie
four seasons to reach the menacing Iineup on one Randolph said. "He has a Hayman led the Lady Eagles
beautiful swing. He's a very with 13 points. Kelsey Holter
playoffs with New York harmless single.
after doing so year after year
But Paul Lo Duca special individual. You don' t and Erin Weber each had II.
in Atlanta, was just as goO!! boum:ed a hit through the see the ball jump off the bat Darcy Winebrenner five,
agamst St. Loms.
left side in the sixth, and like that with many hitters." Brittany Bissell four and
"I uni:lerstand the impor- Beltran drove a 2-2 fastball
La Russa has his team in Jillian Brannon chipped m
tancc of when I pitch now. an estimated 430 feet off the the NLCS for the tbird three.
But at the same time, I'm giant scoreboard in right- straight season and fifth time
Winebrenner had seven
trying my best to mentally center - the ball clanging in seven years overall - a kills, Weber six and Hayman
play games with myself and niT Jose Valentin's No. I 8 in run that began with a loss to five. Weber was also a wall
dismiss that," Glavine said. New York's lineup.
the wild-card Mets in 2000. defensively at the net, amass"I don't want to go out there "Every time you do some- But St. Louis is 1-3 in its last ing II blocks on the evening.
with any added pressure on thing in October it means a four .NLCS appearances and . Hayman added four.
The seller, · Bissell, had 46
myself."
lot," Beltran said. "Hitting is still looking for its first
Helped by two inning" the home run today, of World Series championship
'
ending double plays and a course brings memories."
since 1982.
15 win, capped by a pair of
sprawling catch by super sub
It also woke up a curiousThe winner of Game I in
Allison Peery serves,
Endy Chavez, Glavine ly quiet crowd of 56,3 I I at the NLCS has reached the
. Turley had a pair of kil!s, a
yielded only four hits and Shea, which was plenty World Series· 12 of the last
an ace and three pomts,
dtnk,
£rom Page 81
two walks. He struck out noisy during two · home 13 years. The
2005
Hill had tJrree [X!ints and an
Pujols in the first, walked games in the division series, Cardinals were the excepace; ·Eddy and Cundiff two
game was competitive and kills, and Riffle an ace. For
him in the fourth and retired and left them chanting tion.
him on a liner to shortstop in "Wea-ver! Wea-ver!"
The Mets lost left fielder exciting. Tied ten times, Raven.swood, Burgess had
the sixth.
"I'd been feeding him Cliff Floyd early when he numerous v.olleys, solid seven points and two aces;
Still , the slugger wasn't fastballs all day and he final- aggravated his injured spikes, great saves, and tanta- Wolfe four kills and an ace,
impressed.
Iy caught up to one," Weaver Achilles' tendon while run- lizing blocks highlighted the and Willis three kills and a ·
"He wasn't good. He was- said, "If you would have told ning out a foul fly in the sec- action. Southern . loo 23-22, block.
but Ravenswood made a save
Kill-kill-kill was the formun't good at all," Pujols said. me I'd have allowed one hit ond. After feeling two pops for
the tie. Southern again la (Riffle, Cundiff, Thrley) in
"I think we hit the ball hard. through five innings, I in his foot, he will have an went up 24-23, but a side out a 6-l Southern lead in the
We didn' t get some breaks." would have liked our MRI on Friday. He is day-to- let the hosts back m. A Thrley nightcap. The Lady ' Does
Guillermo Mota worked a chances. But it just didn't go day.
kill gave SHS a 25-24 lead, appeared to be playmg upset
hitless eighth to avoid facing our way."
Floyd was replaced by but a side out again tied the in jamming the cogs on an
Pujols himself, instead passThe right-hander knows Chavez, a defensive whiz, in ~e at 25-25. Fmally, Sarah already
successful
ing the reiJlning NL MVP all about tough crowds in the tor of the third. Chavez
y delivered a booming . Ravenswood season. Matics
along to Bally Wagner. But New York after an unsuc- · got a late break on Ronnie kill and Wolfe-Riffle served had a kill and three points as
the Mets' closer got Pujols cessful stint with the Belliard's fifth-inning loop- up a deceiving ace for the 27- · the game took .the form of a
to line out to first, and Juan Yankees from 2002-03, er, but recovered in time to 25 SHSwin.
·
two-point bamburner. On an
Turle;y led Southern with Eddy ki II, Southern led I0-7
Encarnacion follQwed with a when he 'was often booed make .a diving, snow-cone
three kalls, two dinks, and a before Kylie Wolfe tookconhard groundout.
lustily in the Bronx. Weaver, grab.
Wagner then walked Scott lifted in the sixth after 98
Poor baserunning . by block; Wolfe-Riffle and Eddy trol of the game for
Rolen, who is l-forcJ4 this 'pitches, is scheduled to Pujols cost the Cardinals in had two kills; Amber Hill ·had Ravenswood.
Wolfe served up twopostseason, and retired come back on only three the fourth, when he was dou- an ace, and Emma Hunter had
five
points
in
the
~t. For straight aces in a string of five
pinch-hitter Scou Spiezio on days' rest in Game 5 - as is bled off first base by Beltran ,Ravenswood, Kayfa Matics
a popup for his third save of Glavine, who threw 89 on Encarnacion's soft fly to had two kills, two points, and points that gave RHS a lead
13-10 following an Ashley
the playoffs.
pitches.
a center.
an ace; Kyle Wolfe had two Murphy kill. A Turley dink
Giavine matched Andy
"There's no question I feel
"Albert is an outstanding kills, and two aces; Tiffany brought SHS back to withil)
Pettitte for the most postsea- better about coming back on baserunner and I'm not Willis had three kills and an one 12-13 then consecutive
son starts in major league a small pitch count like I had exaggerating," La Russa ace; and Raehael Hellyer had Murphy and Maries' kills
history.
Glavine
also tonight as opposed to setting said. "That was the excep- four points and one ace.
gave the Devilettes a 15-12
improved to 14"15 in the over 100," Ghivine satd.
tion."
,
In the second game, ·Katie lead. RHS led 18- I5 when
postseason, tying Pettitte for
The Cardinals have . seen · Notes: It was Glavine's Burgess gave Ravenswood a Peery served three straight for
the
second-most
wins all too much of Beltran in 16th LCS start, the mqst in 3-0 lead as the Devilettes a 2 I -I 5 lead. Southem made
behind former Braves team- October. He batted .417 with major league history. He edged to a 6-2 advantage. a two !'Oint run on Turley
mate John Smoltz ( 15).
four homers and five RBis lowered his career postsea- Then super frosh Kasey serves (21-17) before Kayla
"He made a lot of hitters' for the Astros in the 2004 son ERA to 3.27 .... Ex-Mets Turley got a dink and began a Matics had a kill and three
tonight look foolish, kept NLCS, a series St. Louis slugger Darryl Strawberry string of four serves that more serves including game
included two booming aces point in the 25-17 lead.
them off balance," Mets star won in seven games.
threw out the first pitch.
and a 6-6 tie.
·
For Southern, Hunter had
Junior and former Southern five
points and an ace, Riffle
student· Kylie Wolfe gave had an
ace, Turley two kills,
Ravenswood an 8-6 lead with two points,
and a dink; and
two hammering kills, .then
Cundiff
a
kill.
Wolfe led
after a .side-out Wolfe had
Ravenswood
with
five
points,
another kill, and Willis added
two
aces,
and
two
kills;
a block as Wolfe served up
had
three
kills,
four
Matics
five points including a parr of
.
points,
and
an
ace;
Peery
had
aces as RHS led 13-9. Amber
five
points
and
an
ace,
and
"Are we taking snowmo- · Hill countered with four
Tigers, coincidentally, played played baseball in this weatha World Series game on that er, so I'm used to it," he said. biles to the game tomorrow?" points,
and
Southern's Murphy two kills.
Ovemll, Hunter was 14- I6
afternoon, with Ty Cobb get- "Back then, I was a center backup first baseman Dan Cundiff and Thrley had ki lis
serving.
and I0-13 passing;
ting a hit and scoring a run in fielder, so it was more standto tie game two at 13- I 3.
Johnson
joshed.
Wolfe-Riffle
8-1 I passing, 6an 8-4 loss at Pinsburgh.
ing in the. outfield and. not
A Willis kill regained the
Vucinich,
who's
worked
for
9
spiking
with
two kills and 7, More like football weather, moving. I think the worst was
serve and restored the lead to
for sure. The Detroit Lions probably sleet and freezing the Athletics since I968, said Ravenswood at 14-13, begin- 9 serving; Hill was 10-10
and Buffalo Bills will play rain and you get the wind he dido 't nero 10 buy anything ning a string of six Katie serving; and Eddy had 13-17
Burgess point~ (including two spiking with six kills. Turley
next door at Ford Field on coming."
special to combat the cold.
aces)
that gave the hosts a 20- had four kills, and Cundiff
Only a few players pracSunday - indoors, that is.
"We
hact
it
all
already,"
he
13
lead,
Willis and Wolfe three.
"It' depends on how cold it ticed outdoors Thursday. The
said.
"Only
it's
been
a
while
Southern plavs Miller in the
added
additional
kills as
is," A's slugger Frank Thomas infield was covered with a
sectional
Monday in Racine.
Ravenswood pushed to a 25said. "It's going to be tough if tarp. so most of them hit in since we' ve had to use it." .
indoor cages.
it's under 40."
'Tm osed to playing in this
Thomas is hitless in eight
at-bats during this series. He from when I was growing
flied out with the b;tses loaded up," said Tigers leadoff man
to end Wednesday night's 8-5 Curtis Granderson, originally
loss at Oakland, where it was from Chicago. "I have pictures from high school of us
67 degrees at gametime.
"I've been 0-for-8 maybe playing with jackets on in the
20 or 30 times this season. snow. But when it is this cold
I'm not fazed," he said. "With and the wind is blowing, it
me, you can tell they've dqne doesn't matter if you are used
their homework. Even when I to it or not, you still feel it."
do get a slrike, the ,pitches· Said Tigers mana?er Jim
aren't in the same area code. Leyland: " I'm sure it s going
But sooner or later, they 're to affect both teams somewhat."
going to· miss."
The Bicr Hurt won't be the
Leyland has experience in
only one feelin~ the Big Chill these conditions. He managed
in Game 3. Pttchers notori- Florida in 1997 and, with
masly have a tougher time many experts predicting his
gripping the ball in chillier cli- Marlins would become frozen
mates, especially ones that fish in the World Series, they
rely more on touch and feel. won a key game in the snow
such as Detroit staner Kenny at Cleveland.
Rogers.
"I've been through this situFresh off his shutout effori . ation before," he said.
The Arctic blast actually
against the New York Yankees
in the first round, Rogers will seemed to provide a cute ·
be opposed by hard-throwing diversion for · the A's. They
Rich Harden. a . native of picked through the parkas,
British Columbia who keei?s turtlenec~s. gloves and long
hockey . sticks at his locker m johns - thin and thjck verOakland.
sions - that equipment man"Growing up in Canada, I ager Steve Vucinich packed
played hockey outdoors and for the trip.

"

-~~3""ro~
tildliiC!Ip
: 1llll1k or America 500.

•

' ==~~;:::
..,*7=- · i~

,.... .....

Rio to bring back winter indoor league
RIO GRANDE - 'The
University of Rio Grande
softball program is once
again having a high school
winter indoor softball
league . The league will run
from January 7 through
February 25, 2007 . The
games will be played on
Sunday afternoons.
The focus of the league is
offer any softball player the
opportunity to further
develop their skills and in a
competitive program . ··
All game' wi II be ei ther

seven innings or I hour, 15
minutes whichever comes
first. All players wi ll be in
the balling order unless a
player .elects not to hit and
all hillers will begin with a
I - I count:
Ohio high school rules
will be followed with the
exception of unlimited reentry for defense.
The teams will be
coached by members of the
Rio Grande softball team .
Team s, will comist of 10
players with eight nn

defense .
Players will be issued a
T-shirt , but must provide
the remainder of their uniform.
Deadline to sigp up is
November 17.
For additional information. including cost , or to
register contact Rio Grande
head coach David Pyles at
(740) 245-7490, (304) 6757492 or by e-mai I at
dpyle,@rio.edu or Denita
Robin son
at
robin,onl!! rio .edu .

··• ·NASCAR vice president tor
eQmpetltlon Robin Pemberton
" told "'POrters on Oct. 7 thet no
• res1Jfelor1)1ate cl1a'l!e5 woulq '
.. be made, ellen \hOugh practice

speeds had surpas~ 198
mph ell Talladega~ freshlyrepaved SUfface. On the fl10II&gt;
ing of Oct. 8, Pemberton ar&gt; .
nounced tile plates would be
changed from 57/64ths of an
inch to 7/Sths. He also said he
• hadn11ied to 8fl)'Oile.
. • Another NASCAR assertion
was that tile c~~anges would be
across tile bOard and wouldn't
l1llve any effect on competition.
David Gilliland went out and won
the pole. His J)4'evlous best qua~
llylng perf{)rmano:e had t&gt;ee'n
22nd. Gilliland'S Robert Yates
Racing teammate, Dale Jarrett,
Qualified second. Jarrett'S previ·
ous best had been a fourth granted, it was also at Talladega
- and It was only his third top.
10 start of the year.
• Mar11 Martin will drive a Chevy
neid year. The last time Martin
drow anything other than a Ford
in a Cup race was in 1987. It
was an Oldsmobile owned by
Roger Hamby.
.. AI MB2 Motorsports, the driV·
ers ne.t ye\r will be Martin,
. Sterling Marlin and Joe Nemechek. At the Daytona 500,
the combined age of the three
will be 140.
• Next year, for the first time in
21 years. the flagship of ·
Richaro Childress' Chevrolet
fleet will carry sponsorship from
sometlling other than GM/Goodwrench. Shell and Pennzoil will
combine to sponsor Kevin Harvick in No. 29. The number- 3
to 29- has cnangM, as well
as the driller - Dale Earnhardt,
then Harvlck - but the black

and silver colors were a con- .
stan! ... but not in 2007.
• As of now, Martin will -compete
In 20 races, plus the Budweiser
Shootout and NeJ&lt;tel AII·Star
Chalfe~Ce. His BVO¥ol'd goal of
competing full time in tile
Claftsman Truck Series has ap.
pamntly been abandoned, at
least for now.
• Quallfylrg at Talladega takes a
lorg, long time. After taking sec·
ond place, Dale Jarrett noted:
"EnUre college football games
haVe begun and ended since we
started qualifying."

• Wllo.. llot- Brian Vickers·
the 170th driller to
win a , _ In NASCAR's pre.
mier ~. althoufl he was
booed as loudly as ~ prev~

-

-

ous winner.... Martin ltuex Jr.
finis~*~ o career.oest filth.

.......

-Jet!Gor·
do?" led 21
laps but

-.nd up in

• orash thet
left him 36th
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Jimmie Johnson

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matlp m:ribune

Ctt.vlsMM TRUCK !iERIES

446~2342 .

L Todd Bodine
2. .Jollnnx Benson

3. David Reutimann

The Daily Sentinel

(740) 992-2156

Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC '""'~~

·

ers initially used one word: ~Excit­
ing: Then he anticipated the obvi·
ous question: ~ ves, I did have
mixed emotions.~ A't one point.
Vickers said, he dropped to the
back, hoping to miss the almost
inevitable multic.3r crash that al· ·
most always characterizes the
races at this sprawling track. But,
he said, it was too boring back
there. •1t,we get in a wreck, we get
in a wreck," he said, ·and that's
what we did .~ "I showed Brian
(Vickers) a couple of moves earlier
in the ra ce 1probably_ shouldn't
have shown him,· said Earnhardt
Jr. Once upon a 'time, a Talladega
race ha.d 75 lead changes. This
one, contested on brand-new coat
ofsilky·smooth aspl]alt. had 63.
Twenty~t~ree. different drivers led.

• A.ce: Bank of America 500
• WheN: Lowe's Motor Speedway,
Concord, N.C . (1.5 miles), 334
laps(501 miles.
• When: Saturday, Oct. 14
•Lnt ,...,.. winner: Jimmie Johnson
• QUIIIfytre roc:onl: Elliot\ Sadler,
Ford,193.216 mph , Oct. 13,
2005.
• R- roc:onl; Jeff Gordon,
Chevrolet, 160.306 mph, Oct . 11,
1999.
• Last week: Brian Vickers
wrecked the sport's most popular
driver. Dale Earnhardt Jr.. and his
own teammate,. Jimmie Johnson,
on the final lap at Talladega Super·
speedWay. That's the way he won '
for the first time in his Nextel Cup
career. Asked to describe it, Vick-

This Week. C/O The Gaston

---l!HAf!lilffHJAfA- '

0

. ;~ -: Dollar General

• Race: Kroger 200
• Where: Martinsv1He
(Va. ) Speedway (1,526
• WheN: lowe's Motor
Speedway, Concord, N.C . miles). 500 laps/263
(1.5 m11es). 200
{niles.
• When: Saturday, Oct.
laps/300 miles.
21
• Wilen: Friday, Oct. 13
• Lnt yeao's w1nner:
• lilt year'o winner:
Ricky Craven
Ryan Newman
• QuatlfytnC roc:onl: Jim· • Quollfylng roc:onl: R•ck
Crawford, Ford , 95.966
mie JOhnson. Chevrolet.
mph, Oct. 21, 2005.
187 .735 mph , Oct. 14,
2005.
• Race recoro: Jon
Wood, Ford, 72.069
•R-rec:ord: Mark
mph, Oct. 18, 2003.
Martin, Ford, 155.799
mph, May .25, 1996. ,
• lilt : Marl&lt; Mar·
tin. in a Ford, wail for
• Last rac:e: Points
the fifth time this sealeader Kevin Harvick
son. capturing the inauwon the Yellow Transportation 300 at Kansas gural truck race at Talladega Superspeedway.
Speedway, holding off
Matt Kenseth.

May20

)

(

KYLE PETTY

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No. 45

v
VICTORY JUNCTION DODGE

4.

TedMu~r-

·-••

Rick Crawford
Ron Hamad~
David Starr

.
T.

'·

T!!!!} Cook

Demis Setzer
:Ill- Mike Bliss

3,076
.. 113
. 255
. 281
. 368
· 411
· 432
· 495
. 499

· 502

E
R

Johnson

s
u
s

VIckers

Jimmie JohnOII

·vs. Brian VIckers

Petty's not competitive anymore, but he's a key NASCAR figure
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week
Kyle Petty, at age 46, is no longerone of NASCAR's leading contenders.
The most recent of his eight Cup victories occurred, on June ~ •. 1995, in
Dover, Del., 356 races ago.
.
Does he remain· a significant figure? Most definitely. Petty is a link to
the past because he carries a name
that is synonymous with stock-car
racing as the founding Frances. Kyle
Petty's grandfather, Lee, competed in
the first major race staged by William
H.G. France, the founder of NI\SCAR
and grandfather of current chairman
Brian Z. Franc~. Kyle Petty's father,
Richard, is, by virtue of his 200 victories and seven championships, the
most successful driver in history.
No,' Kyle Petty isn't in the Chase for
the Nextel Cup and.likely never will
be. But he's still out there every week,
trying to bring Petty Enterprises, the
family team, back to some semblance
of the place of honor it once occupied.
So what would Kyle do differently?
"The last 10 races of the season, the
point system has been really good, but
I don'tlike it," he said. "We've had exciting Chases, but that still doesn't
mean it's the best system. I'm not a
big fan of continuing the same points
system in the last l(j races that you
had in the first 26 races.
"! would probably judge those 10
guys off of each other rather than off
the field . The highest finishing guy, if
you win, gets X number of points, and
the second-highest-finishing guy gets
nine, eight, seven, six, or whatever it
may be and the last guy gets at least
one point. They race inside the race
because that's basically what it is.
They race inside our race now. If
you're going to have a different race
inside the race, why not have a different point system?"
The Chase, at present, includes at
least the top 10 drivers at the end of

Vickers·. leaving Hendrick Motorsports at season's end, won his first ·
race at teammate Johnson's ex·
pense. When Vickers' Chevy tapped
Johnson 's·, it also had the purpose of
wrecking both Johnson and leader
Dale Earnhardt Jr. ~I can't believe it,"
said Johnson. "Here we went all day
long and had a great chance to
make up some points ... and got
crashed by a teamrn;:,te
.ft

NASCAR This -k'o Monte
Dutton gives his hike : ·wrecking a
teammate and the sport's most popular driver on the last lap won't help
VicKers p1ck up ground in the mostpopular-driver voting:

NASCAR has Nn a -pie

of..--- tile bonier

NASCAR 's top senes has never
raced in Mexico. but that doesn't
mean that wtiat is now, known as
Nextel Cup never crossed a border.
· Richard Peny made his first start at
Canadian National Exposition Speedway, a 1/ 3-mile paved track in Toronto, on July 18, 1958. in a race won
by his father, lee. The race was run
in what was later known as Exposi- .
tion Stadium, home for many years
to the Toronto Blue Jays.
That. however. wasn't NASCAR's
first Canadian visit. On .July 1, 1952,
Buddy Shuman drove a Hudson to
victory at Stamford Park. a half·mile
dirt track, in Niagara Falls, Ontario.

John Clark/NASCAR This Week

~

Plrtty hasn~ wan a NASCAR lliCII since 1995, 11ut lhlt doesn~ diminish his popularity
or his stlndltte within .tile spart.

the 26-race regular season. Any other
driver within 400 points of the lead
would also make the field , although
that's never happened in the three
years of the Chase's existence. Petty
would be even more inclusive.
• At the end of 26 races, I don't think
you should knock the hottest driver on
the circuit out, especially a driver
with a huge following," he said. "We
could have gotten Junior (Dale Earnhardt Jr.) and Jeff (Gordon) in with a

little bit of a different system (in
2005).
"I'm not saying it's right or wrong.
On a personal level, I'm not a big fan
of it. Obviously, it's working because,
for two years in a row, there has been
exGitement leading into the last race.
There's been some hype .... You can't
say it's all bad."

Contact Monte Dutton at
hm(luttonSO@aol.com

in the

"••
~allipo[i!)

;-,

NEXTE'L CUP S £·F UES

NASCAR

and-111

'

(304) 675-1333

..,

1 p.m,, Oc:t. 21

To nave Your
Business Included ...

~oint ~lea!)ant ~egi!)ter

~

lllqjer200,

Southem

eaa

·

. 7 p.m., SatimlaiY

Fastballs, curveballs and •.• snowballs?
Frosty.forecast ahead for ALCS
DETROIT (AP) - Nick
Swisher trotted out to right
field and. with freak October
flurries swirling at Comerica
Park, plopped onto his back
and began making mock
snow angels.
Only for a minute, though.
Shivering, the Oakland first
baseman put on his ski cap
and retreated to the dugout
Thursday. when Detroit was
hit with its earliest snowfall
ever.·
Welcome to baseball's winter wonderland, a.k.a. Game 3
of the AL championship
series, where the forecast is
calling for fastbal,ls,. curveballs and ... snowballs.
"This is when the boys of
·summer turn into the men .of
fall," Detroit pitcher ~amie
Walker srud.
The Tigers, leading 2-0 in
the best-of-seven matchup,
and Athletics got somewhat of
a break when Friday's s(an
time was moved from 8:19
p.m. to 4:30p.m.
A combination of factors
figured into that decision by
the commissioner's office the local conditions. a rainout
that took away a trdvel day in
the NLCS, and TV ratings.
"It's definitely not going to
be baseball weather tomorrow," said Dave Gurney' of the
National Weather Service in
Michigan . "Around 45
degrees, wind gusts up to 35
mph and some snow showers."
Detroit set a record for its
earliest measured snow,
breaking by one day the mark
set on Oct. 13. 1909. The

II&gt; H you hiiYe a qHStlon or a comment, write:

. . . . EalllliiM .

~Gineral300.
8 p.m., Friday

The Daily Sentinel • Page B'3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Jeff Gordon's cllalttr

holtllnc ............ctton
The Jeff Gordon Foundation is
holding an online charity auction that
will include various mementos from
Gordon's career as well as an authent ic. race-used Budweiser firesuit
used in a race by Dale Earnhardt Jr.
The online auction is being hosted by
GoMotorBids .com, an online auction
house. The Jeff Gordon.Foundation
benefits the Leukemia &amp; Lymphoma .
Society, Make-A-Wish Foundation. Riley Hospital for Children. Marrow
Foundation in partnership with the
Hendrick Marrow Program and the
Jeff Gordon Cni ldren's Hospital at
NorthEast Medical center. For more
information. v1slt WWW.Jeffgordonfoun·
datlon .org .

·Harvick says the Chase doesn't change much
By Monte Dutton

(

J

JD·f::;;

J._J

]i.) ,::;c_,.!..;f::;; )

NASCAR This Week
Banquet 400 at Kansas SpeedTALLADEGA, Ala. -Kevin way on Oct. I. Jimmie Johnson
Harvick said it's a myth that wanted to pit. When Kasey
the dynamics of the Chase have Kahne spun, his spotter told
a notable impact on the final 10 him to stay on the track beraces.
cause a yellow flag might re"1 know there has been a lot suit. It didn't, so Johnson, who
fli.ade of racing guys different- had been dominating .the race,
Iy," he said. "I've been on that accelerated back up to speed .
side of it (i.e.; out of the Chase) and pitted the next lap, after
the last couple years. No mat- which NASCAR officials penalter what series you're in, the ized him for speeding.
last couple'races of the year, if
When the race ended, Johnyou're racing the guys who are son was driving down pit road
racing for the championslfip, -the "drive-through" penalty,
you give them a little extra as opposed to .the window at
room. When you're out on the . McDonald's - at the time Tony
race track, everybody has Stewart's car was taking' the
something at stake. Everybody checkered flag.
.
is trying t.o win the race, anct
Somehow, Johnson finished
everybody is trying to' get as Wh, on the lead lap.
high in the points as .they can.
Asked how this could be pos"If you get caught up in all sible, Johnson said: "! don't
' that , you're probably putting ha\·e a clue."
more into it than necessary."
•
•
Driver change~ - Scott
An astonishing performance Wimmer is out, Todd Bodine in
- With five laps to go in the as driver of Larry McClure's

•

Ken Schrader will split the No. than one because Talladega
21 Wood .Brothers/JTG Ford hosted a Craftsman Truck Senext year with Jon Wood, the ries race for the first time. In
Busch Series regular and son February, the 47-year-old Marof co-owner Eddie Wood .
tin won the truck race held at
The team will continue to Daytona, a similar track.
field one entry at the Nextel ·
Cup level and two in both the
Busch and Craftsman Truck se·
Getting longer - Talladega
ries. Eddie Wood said the team
is
the eighth track of a mile or
would enter a second car in oclonger that has been added to
casional Cup races.
Little Debbie will sponsor the truck sc'hedule since 2000.
Schrader in 18 races', with Ore- When the series began in 1995,
Ida and Delirhex combining to it had no races at tracks longer
sponsor Jon Wood in the other 18. than a l)lile.
Wood will also continue to run
the entire Busch Series schedule
in the team's No. 4" Ford. His
New tour ~uide -The VictoBusch Series teammate wtll he
the Australian Marcos Ambrose, ry Junction Gang Camp , foundwho 11 ill replace Stacy Compton ed by Kyle and Pattie Petty, has
launched a new Web site
in the team's No. ~9.
( W\\'W. •·ictoryjunction.org) that
mcludes a debut of the camp's
new mascot. Vic the Horse,
Martin continues to set which is used to give "virtual
record s - Mark Martin, b\ tours" of the camp. The camp
winning the Joh n Deere 2SO, relies solely on donations to
became the only dnver to ha\'e gtve chi!'dren life-changing exwon races in Cup , Busch and periences. The cost of having
'lrucks at ·Talladega . There each child at camp is $2,500,
Wood plans - Inc umbent could, of course. be no more and ho child pays 10 aJtend.

No.4 Chevrolet. Bodine failed
to make the field at Talladega.
Mike Bliss fared better. qualifying 2oth in the BAM Racing
Dodge after being tapped toreplace Kevin Lepage. Lepage
moved to another team but failed
to make the Talladega show.
Wimmer's release was announced last week. Bodine ,
who leads the Craftsman 'lruck
Series standings, will take over
for at least one more race.
"We are sorry to lose Scott,
but at the same time we all ha ve
to do what is best for each M
us," said McClure. "He is one of
the nicest young men I've had
the opportunity to work with .
and we enjoyed having him-with
us this year and gelling to know
him and his family''
"We just decided to go different ways in '07," added \Vim·
mer. "We were working real
hard to put sponsorship together and get things going In the
right direction, and it just never seemed to materialize.''

•

•

•

•

�..

•

SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel

-n

PRo FooTBALL

HIGH ScHooL FooTBALL

National

Soutllelstem Ohio Athlllk: l.elgul
North Dl¥liiDn •

'

ALL
PF

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····
··
Philadelphia
....5·2 .. 172 .. 166 N.Y. Giants
..
~~
J5077 .. 113467 Dallas
" " ,,... :: :
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T Washington
148
93
212 .. 123

I

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:: ·: :~~ Division
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W-L

Federal Hock1ng
fr~mt;e .

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list
exan era e on
Nelsonvme-Vork at Belpre
Meigs at Vinton County
Eastern at Water1ord
Federal Hocking at Millar
Trimble at Southern

•

Independents
W-L

Sout!&gt; Gallia

ALL
. PF

Satutdly's game

Next Week
South Gallia at Oak Hill
, I

Matewan at Wahama
Hannan at Tug Valley

Sissonville . . .
. . . . . . . . . . 3-Q
Wayne .......................3·1
l~ ... "'
......... 1-2
Po~ntPieasant . . . . . . . . ........ 1·2
Herbert Hoover . .
.. .
.1-3
Winfield . .. . . .. . .. . . .. .. ..
.0-4
Frlday"l games
Sissonville at Logan
Winfield at Poca
Po1n~Pieasant at Ravenswood
Wayne at Tolsia
1.

'

WNortlTh Pet

~ ~

11.00
9.66
9.33
8,71
8.00
7.71
7.t 7
7 17
6.57

4
6
7
11 2
15
16
112
t18
9
11
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1
2
3
5
6
4
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9
7

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PA
86

(tie) Park. Csth.
(lie) Tug Valley
(tie) Wahomo
16 East Hardy

5-2
5-2
4·2
5·1

6.00
6 00
&amp;.00
5 83

116
IS
13
14

1

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

42
90
91

ALL

PF
M
W(. PF
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.201 ' .95
'" 117 .. 41 " " .~1
.. 46 .. 31 ..... ~1
.. 123 . 82
... 101 .. 35 ..... ~1
.. 156 ' .62
.128 .. 195
. 81 ... 78 " " 2-5
. .. 43 ... 100 .... . t-5
.96 '' .205
. 58 . 126 .. 4-3
.167
170
... 53 ...65 . . : . .1-5
.72
.106

D•

~~

Natlonlt League

St.

Next Week
Herbert Hoover at Bluef•eld
Logan at Point Pleasant
Poca at Wayne
Shady Spring at Sissonville
L1ncoln County at Winl1eld

I
I

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9~oN~~t~~~~so~o~6-,1~ ~:~;~:P*e~~~

I

PREi&gt;

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LoUis~=~:~.=~
~.:n
1'huroday,Oct.12

Anaheim
Dallal
S&amp;nJoae
Los Angello
I PlloenllC

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3
3

2

3 0

2

12 9
4

10
15
12
10

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Gallla
County
OH

1
1

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--.y'a'GII. . .
Atlanta•. ~stan 1
Detro~ 9, Phoenix 2
Florida 6, Carolina 3
Montreal 3, Phllodelphlo1
N.Y. lalanolers 5, Anaheim 4, SO
Tlun'adey'a Gltmaa

Websj!es:
In One Week With Us
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1

I CPIIIsburgh ~.Y. ~angers 5
1 algary 1 · ....m..wa
New Jersey 7, Toronto 6, so
I St Louls3,floston2,SO
Minnesota 3, Waahlng1on 2, SO ·
Ch1C8go3, Nashv1He1
Edmonton 6, San Jose 4
Dallas 4, Los Angeles 1
1

I

Buffalo at

c.:';...":i...

=~ :.:'*

·

Carolina at -'tlaAntald,~' 3 ° p.m.
Tampa Bey at or a, : p.m.
San Jose
10 p.,m.
~,u, .... -,
(Maine6~5) , S:05pm
NYAangei'SatBuffa10,7pm.
1
Sotunday, Oct. 14
' Ottawa at Montreal, 7 p.m.
' New York (Traschel t5..S) at St Louis : Calgary at Toronto, 7 p.m.
(Suppan 12-71 8:05 p.m.
i Boston at N.Y. islanders, 7 p.m.

7 30

~

· l~~~.'"oct.

Dtvtafo

n

w L OT Pts GF
New Jersey
2 1 0 4 12
1 Pittsburgh
2 1 0 4 10
NY. Rangers 2 2 0 4 17
I Philadelphia
NY Islanders
0
Nonheaat Dlvlaton
W l OT Pts ClF
Buffalo
3 0 0 6 12
,I Tororrto
2 1 2 6 17
1

1
1

~ ~

1
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~ ~0 ~:
GA
9
15

2 0 1 5 tO 8
1 2 1· 3
9 17
1 3 0 2 7 12
Southeast Division
•
W l OT Pts ClF'G.e.
1
Atlanta
3 0 1 7 13 4
1 Florida
2 1 1 5 15 14
Wash1ngton
1 1 3 9 10
Tainpa Bay
2 0 2 5 6
1
Carolina
0 3 1 1 7 18
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Dlvllton
W l OT Pts GF GA
Colurnbus
2 0 , 5 12 a
Chicago
2 1 0 4 15 12
1 Detroit
2 1 o 4 12 5
i St Louts
1 , 2 t 3 8 13
0 3 0 0 12 17
1 Nashville
• Northwett Dlvialon
W L OT P1s GF GA
' Minnesota
4 0 0 8 , 14 10
1 Vancouver
2 1 1 5
9 8
Edmonton
2 1 0 4 10 7

I
!

' Montreal
Boston
Ottawa

1

I

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Rorldul Tampa Bay,' 7:So p m
Phlladelphie. at New Jersey, 7:30p.m.
Chicago at St.Louis, 8 p.m.
Phoenix at Nashville, 8 p.m .
C
bus t M'
o1um
a mneso18 • 8 p.m.
Edmonton at Colorado, 10 p.m
Dallas at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.
Sums.,'• Gamel
Dallas at Anaheim,$ p.m.

I

Or Fax To

446-3008

Monday thru Friday

Carolin8 at Pittsburgh 7·30 p m

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y-Chicago
12 11 8 44 4ll 39
Kansas City
10 13 8 38 41 42
New York
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' NOTE : Three points for viCtory, one
~ po1nt for tie.
I

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Saturdly'a GltiiiH

2GCEC19AVV1220558. ·45831 , -

Countr

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P.O.IIOI&lt; 151

.

Order

of

Sate

cenllfllne
of
said
Caunty RMII 3 to the
POINT OFBEGINNING,
uld described tract
conllllnlng 1.00 acres,
more or leas, except·
ing all ieglll utility
•nd rights

of way.
Atllete- DMd: being
1111rt at the l'MI ·
described In Volume
261, Page 23, Meigs
County Deed A«oids.
llellrlnga . . . .uiMd

be County Court House and " ar11

Pq,lntlff
vs
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Bunch II •1

Deland8nts
Court
at Common
Pills, - g s County,
Ohio
In purouanee of en
order at ule to me
directed from IIIII
Court In the llllllded octlon, I will
llptllle to ule I\ publie auction on the lion!
steps at tho llolgs

for

angle County 'Court House
on Friday. Nt&gt;v.17,200&amp;
til 10 a.m. o1 Mid day.
till
following
doserlbed ,.., __,,
O.Crlptton at RNI
Property
Sltueted In the Village
of Mlc:ldlaporl, County
County of Meigs, ond 37683 ludlng Cr111k at llolgs •nd Stalo ol
Ststs ol Ohio .nd AOIId,
Middleport, Ohio
belli{; In Section 6, Ohlo,45760
tn100.cr11lo1No.3011.
Township 5
North, Pareett114141i.003
Range t3, Town 2, 01
Range 14 West at the Prior
Instrument the Ol)lo Companfs
Ohio
Companr"• Aelereneef
Officilll Pureh••· · and m0r11
Purehose . and being Aecond Book 151, l'oge PllrtiCUiarly lloundacl
described •• follows:
891.
and described n lol·
Beginning at a palm In Current
Cindy Iowa; Beginning at on
the
centerline
of S. Clemenle et 11
Iron pipe et the lOUthCounty Road 3, said 37663 Leading Creek -comer at HanyW.
polrrt !lelng S. 54 dog . •Rd.
.
Mellaster'a Lot; lllenee
07'32"W., 1 dillence of Middleport, OH 45760
South 58 deg. West
350.48 feel from the·· PP~tl-004101 .003
32.5 feet to an Iron
SW corner ol lhe Prior Deed relerances: pipe; thence South 18
Tucker
2.00
Aero Volume151,PIIge89t
deg. East 33.5 !oat to
parcels deocrlbed In Apprallld at $15,000 on Iron pipe; thence
the
Molga
Countr tenns of ule: cannot South 78 deg. 30' East
Official
Records be sold tor less th•n 323 teetlo an Iran pipe
Volume 8, Page 359;
213rd of the appraised on the Wut side of the
Thence, S. 30 dog. value. 10% down on Rutltmd AOMI; thence
39'35" E., a cllotence of cler of sale, caah or along the Well Iitie o1
344.24 leot ID an iron certllled cheek, bill· uld 1011d North 18 dog.
pin aet, 1111111ng an iron anca due on conflnM- West 57
to an
pin aet at 19116 feet lor lion of aale.
Iron pipe; thence North
reference;
The appraisal did not 78 deg. 30' W..1 287
Thence, N. 78 deg. 25' Include an Interior teet to the place of
50" W., a diawnee of aumiMiion ol the beginning, conlalnlng
244.63 feel to an Iron house.
381100 acres.
pin aet;
Robert
E.
Beegle, Proper!)' Address: ~11
Thence, N. 22 deg. 24' Meigs Countr Sheriff
Rutland ·
Street,
47" W., a distance of Attorney
tor
lhe .Middleport, Ohio 45760
159.551eetto·a poinlln Plaintiff
'
Parcel · No.: 15-012118the
centerline
of Chrlstopt&gt;er M: Hill
000
Countl Road 3, PIISS· P.O. Box 4989
Currenl
OWner:
lng an Iran pin set at Frankfort, KY 40604· Barbara K. Bunch et sl
140.28 teet tor refer- 4989
Propertr
at:
311
arlee;
502-226-4;100
Rutland St. Middleport,
Thence, N. 50 deg. 57' (10) 13, 20, 27
OH 45760
55" E., a distance of
Prior Deed References:
132.55 leet along the
Volume 320, Page 161
centerline
ol
said
Public Notice
Apprai- •t 540 000
County Road 3 to a
Terms at ute: Ca~not
point;
Sh8riff Sale•
be sold tor
than
Thence, N. 54 deg. 09' Case Number OSCV017 213rds at the oppraloed
03" E., a distance of USDA
Rural value . 10""- down of
27.37 feet along the Development
dlsy of sale. . .sh 01

The F•!'iMIS Bonk- - n a d u e - ow1ng 100E.2ndSt. PotT•or• . _ t o the Sherllf o1 on Friday, November measurement only.
Sevlngo
Company, 547.547.51 with Inter· . Ohio 4S76t
llolga County. Ohlo.lo 17, 2006 11 10 a.m. of The lbove deterlpllon
Ponleroy,
Ohio, 11t11 at a v a . - ,.,._ U s D A R u r • I appraise, edvertllle In Mid day, the following ia on a SUt'VIV In
-rves the right to fiUi'IIIMI ID the Nolil. O.Ualllfll••il vs .
the DeUr Sentinel and delerlbild r u l - : July 2002 by E U
bid at this •le, lo lild currently at the .IMnM Feiguson, 11 et sell Uld r1111 Ht111, Legal Oeseriptlon
Borderline Surveying,
withdraw the above rtill of 13.5 percent per
Na. 06ciiO!III
1hll the pram- be Ellllblt A
Robert R. Ellston, Ohio
eotlaler•l prior to ule. - m lnlm Jonultt')' 1, John Doe, Unknown aold r- cre.r o1 Situated
In
the P.S. No. 7033.
Further. The Fa......, 20116, •nd coalS: that Spouse at Jolonn• all cl•lmtt, liens and Township of Rulllild, Addreoa ot Propertr:

ca.

•nd Savings the ~ MIMd Fergu80n,
end
H
Company teMI'\'IS the In the Complaint mar - - · •II · heirs,
rlghttorajectonyorall " - . , 1 - l n u k : l d w l - ,
•-·
blc:llaubmlttld.
proper!)';
th-..... aQCU!ora,oxeeutmteo,
The obove doacrlbed pq,lnlllf domltndo that admlnlllrslors. Mlinlneol,_.l w111 be aold It be found to hove • lst[llriK•
lllld
•"H IS w1lere to", w1lll good, Vllld and aub- aaslgneea
tolhOH
no ••preslld or sl.tlng lien on oald addr111S to unkn.....,,
Implied
werranty pr•miMS,
tor
lhe wftl hiNby.nottee
given. For further infor· amount owing; that the that on JuJr 14, 2006,
maiion, or tor an Defendants equity of U S D A A u r • I
~-to Inspect redemption be tore- Dewolopment, filed Its
eotlllentl, prior ID •to eto.d; that all the 1111r· Compl•lnt
In
deto con1ac1 C)'ndle or !lea be required to Foreclosure
•nd
Aandr tll740-t92-2136. anowar AI to their l .......,lllng ol Liens In
(10)11,12,13.
l~lnse\dpremls· 1he Common Pl. .s
uorbefonMirberred...CourtolllolgaCounty,
from aasertlng •nr Ohio, being CoM No.
I~ lhenlln; that •II 06eV099
aSJillnst
Public Notice
, , _ an aaid preml- JoanM Ferguson pray·
In the Court at com- be iililrwhaled Mldlhelr lng tor judgment In the
man Pleaa, Putnam prlorltlu determined; •mount of 166,655,63
·c ounty. Ohio Benellclal that aald premleoo be with I n ! - ' thereon
Ohio, Inc. dbtl
aolc:l ao upon erecutlon ecconllng to the terms
Beneficial Mortgage. and jHoeeado at uld ol the note lnlm ~ 8,
Co. ol Ohio
ule be oppllad
2006, urrtll paid •nd tor
P'-lntiff,
lng to low; Hd tor such foreclosure of said
VS
other r111.., . . Is just Mortgage Dead on the
Jay G. Ridgeway, etal equitable.
lollowtng
deacrtbed
~dants
Delendltnta first ...,.. rMI eswte, of which
CUe No. 06CV137.
lnsl&gt;ova mentioned Is 81\d
Defencr~,nt,
Cophal
Bonding further notHied !hot Joanna Ferguson Is
Corporation
whose they oro required lo the owner at:
leat known addiiU io • - aald comJ*Irrt •• further dHertbed In
525 Penn Street. f200, on or before November P'-lntlff'o
mortgage
-ding, Pennsylvania 10, 2006, which Indue!· recorded on July 1,
19601 and 234 South ed lwerrty-elght (28) 11191 In Volume 183
4th St-', Columbus, days lnlm the leat dete pege
615
of
the
Ohio '3215, Is flerebr 'at publication. or judg- Mortgage Records of
' notHied that Beneficial merrt moy be rendelad Meigs County, Ohio.
Ohl~,
Inc. · dba as dernlndedllllrein.
Also known as: 748
Benelietal Mortgage Fr•nk &amp; Wooldrldgt High
Street,
Co. or Ohio tiled • Co. LP.A
Mk1dleport. OH 45760
Complaint
lor Attorneys
lor
the and that Oefend•nt,
Foreclosure and Other Plairrtlfl,
John Doe, Unknown
Eqult.ble Relief on 600 South Pearl Street Spouse of Joanna
June 12, 2006, Caae Columbus, Ohio '3206 } Ferguson,
and
it
Bonk

accOnl-

1 - at •ny ol the
........ hei81n, that 1he
pracno lnlm the ule
·of uld pr11ml- be
applied
lo
tho
Pl•lntlfl"l
judgment
end tor. IUCh other
relief to which USDA
Rural Development Ia
enUIIed.
Said
Delend•nt
Is
directed
10
the
Compl•lnl
wherein
notice under 1he fair
debt· eollacllon praellceacllsgtvon.
Sold Detendarrta are
.required to · answer
w11hln
,twenty-eight
days after the publicaliOn. Said Detendents
w111 take notice that
you ars ,.quired to
answer uld Complaint
on or 'before the
November day at 24,
2006 or Juclgmerrt w111
be rendered accord·
lngl)&gt;. . .
USDA
.
Rural
Development
Plalntlfl
Stephen D. Miles
Attomay tor Plalntlfl
18
W.
Monument
Avenue
DayiCifl, Ohio 45402
(9) 22, 29, (10) 6, 13, 20,
27

Public Notice
SHERIFF SALES
CASE
NUMBER
06CV013
VANDERBITI MORT-

www.comics.com

HElP WANITD

This
1 pccejpta ' only hoi
nlod ado moolln

dnver for garbage
route Must have experience
&amp; knowledge of GaU1a Co
Full or part tlme (740)388·
9686
'

-rds.

414"1 For Sale .............................................. 725
An1101111Cen*11 ............................................ 030
A1111quet1 ....................................................... 530
Al*tments tor Rem ................................... 440

oertWied check, biiJ.
enae due on ccwllh•w
tlon ol ule.
The a...,....lul
did
Include •n Interior
exllli!lnetton of 1111
""'-·
,
Robert
£. Boogie.

Auc:lton """ Flea Market .............................080
o\uto P - a. Aeeesaorles .......................... 760
o\uto Ref*r.; ................................................ 770
Auloa tor Sale .............................................. 710
-

llelga County Sheriff ·
*Dorney for 1he pletntift
Stophettfl.llltes
18 W. Monument Ava.
Deyton, OH 45402
437-461-11100

Shop
Classlfteds!

(r1i0)~1~3,~20ii,2~7BYiii·fi=======]

caU....

• - n o tor Sale .... .-............. ;.......... 750
Building Suppltes ........................................sso
Buildings ............................. 340
8u81Ma Opportunrty .................................210
- - Tr•lnlng ...................... .......:......... 140
Molar Homes ......,.................... 790
camping Equlpmerrt ................................... 780
tarde ol Thllnki .......................................... OIO
Chtk:IIEidel'lr ca ......................................... 190
£1ectrte1111Rotrlgeretlon ...............................840
Equipment tor Rerrt .....................................480

·TECHNOWGY

c.n.,.,.. .a.

etc

For Sale........................................................ 585
For $llle or Trodo......................................... 590
fnllts a.Vegeta-..................................... 580

COMICS SPillS

Fumlahed Aooma ........................................450
Oenem Hooullng..............,............................850
Glwew8y ...................................... !~··· ..··..·····040
"-PPY - ....................................................050

ENTERTAINMENT
and more...

Harr a. G18ln..................................................640

Help Wllfll*l ..................., ............................. 110

l'lomo lmpro-nts...................................BIO

- t o r S.le ............................................310

a

To Subscribe Call
The Dally Sentinel
992-2155
HelpWaniM

Houwhold Goods ....................................... SIO
HouMa tor Ranl .......................................... 410
In Memor'-m ................................................020
tneursnce ..................................................... 130
Uwl1 Gllrdon Equlpmerrt ........................ 860
630
LoR and Found ........................................... 060
Lots Acreage ............................................ 3SO
170
..._,,.,_us Merellllndllle .......................540
Mobile Homo Raplllr .................................. .. 860
Mobrle Homeo tor Rlnt ................. :............. 420
Mobile Homeo tor Sete................................320
Money to' Lolln ............................................. 220
~ctes • 4 vn-~ero
740
Muatcallila11'Uments ................................... 570
...........1...................................................... 005
- t o r S.le ................................................ 560
Plumbing - l n g ....................................820
_ . . . . . . , Servtees ............ :....................230
Radio, 1V • CB AIPIIIr ............................... 160
RNI .:.tale Warrted ............: ........................ 360
Schoololnslructlon ... ................................. ,150
Seed , P'-nl &amp; Fenlllzer .............................. 650
snu.t~ana Wonted .... ................................... 120
Spoc:e for Aent .............................................480
Sporting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV's tor Sote ..............................................720
Truelca tor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholalefy ................................................... 870
Vans For Sele ........... ~................................... 730
Wonled to BIIY ............................................. 080
' Wllnled to Buy· Fenn Suppllea .................. 620 ·
Wllnled ToDa ......... ..................................... 180
WMIICI to Aent ............................................ 470
V•nd S.te- Gltltlpalls ....................................072
v..a s.IH'ornoroyiMiddte..... .................... 0'74
V...S Sete-PL P-.nt .............................. .. 076

u -......................................................
a

..._1,._1..................:. . . . . . . . .. . . . .

I

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

Medlall AllisUint/MediCIII Aec.pllonl11
Pleasant Valley Hospital Is currently
recruiting lor a Medical Roceptionist/Medicill
Assistant for "" physician officiis. The
mdividual should possess prior physician ·
office experience
with knowledge of
CPT/ICD-9 coding, front office roceptionist
procedures and clinical experience a plus.
E•cellenl salary, holidays, health Insurance
Slnglellamily
plan,
olental
plan,
IHe
insurance, vacation, long-term disabllhy and
retirement .
Send resumes to: Pleasant Vallay Hospital,.
c/o Human Resources. 2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant WV 25550 (304) 675-4340,
lax to (304) 675-6975, or IIP,Piy on-line at
www.pvalley.org
AAIEOE

,.

j

a.

I

'

l\11'!11\\1!'1
-..1 J(\ II I "-

2295 Graham School Ad..
Gallipolis. OH. Saturday (10·
14-06) HousehOld Items.
mens &amp; women clothing.

&amp;u•--

exc.vetlng .......................,........................... 830

CURRENT EVENTS

1110 Second Ave. Thur-Sat
9-5 Baby clothes up to adult
clothes, angles, out s1de
stuff, new porcelam dolls
lots more•

2336 Centenary Road, Sat,
Oct. t~th 10 til ?, Bally
clothes &amp; Items, clothing,

F - Equlpmertt ..........................................810
hrtno for Aent ..................................:..........430
hrtno tor Sele ............................................. 330
For ........................................................... 490

.s -

•

Heiner's, 8 DIVISIOn of Sara
Lee . Food &amp; Beverage,
seeks qualified maintenance
eng1neers to work 1n the
Huntington bakery Ou11es
1ndude preventative main1e·
nance, machine fabncaiiOn,
electncal work, basic plumb·
1ng, refngeratiOn repatr ,
weldmg, machme shop
work, bakery productiOn
equipment repair and troubleshooting
Candidates
must have' a high school
degree or GED. techmcal
trammg or certification 1n a
maintenance field of study
and previOUS mamtenance
experience. Apply 1n person
at the Heiner's Bakery
Outlet.
1709
Eastern
Avenue,
1n
Galt1polis,
between 9:oda m. and
2:00p.m , Monday-Saturday

Scemc H1Us Nurs1ng Center,
a Tandem Healtt1 Care fac ility, is seek1ng a select few to
JOin our outstandtng team
as:

2378 Jackson Pike, Friday &amp;
Saturday, 9am·" Clothes of
' all Sl29S.

-------="--

Centerpoint Free Wilf BaptiSt
Church and five famity yard
sale. Plus size clothing,
Amish products , hotDogs,
and baked goods. Come to
Perry's Greenhouse on St
Rt 588 east of Bob Evans.
Fri through Sunday
- - - - -- - - ' Fri-Sun Del t3· t5· yard
sale, 554 Jay Dr , Spring
Valley. Clothing &amp; large vanely of ttems. 9am-5pm
Garage Sale Fn &amp; Sat 2 112
miles east of Porter on 554 .
yard sale. Fr,day
L.arne
tf
10113/06 and Saturday
10114106, 8am until Bpm .
Rodney VIllage Two. Third
Street last house on nght.
Lanat Drive Sam, Saturday
across from fairgrounds.
Longaberger, Home Interior,
toys clothing all sizes .

Oct

13th-14th, Buckeye
Hills Rd., Thurman ex1 Lots
o1 m1sc., antique glass. furntture, Iarge sale.
Sunday.
Saturday
&amp;
Porcelain doll. clothes, m1sc.
items. 1556 Centerville Rd .
Thurman. County Rd 77 .

r

' NO EXPERIENCE

NtCESS"RY
• FULL TIME CLASSES
. COl TRAir-.ING
"FI"'ANCING AVII.IUI.BLE
' .lOti PLAC£1JENT
" ENROLLING "-CHI

AUITIUS ANil

F'u.A MAAKEJ·

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS

Cross Greet\ AuCilOO Buffalo
WYTHEVIlLE. VA
Auction Saturday 6 PM 'Jim
from Parkersburg Building
1·800-334-1203
Is ful . ,Seatmg for 200 We
- a!loarx:Mr&amp;etortra,lllr ~
gladly actept VISI'I and
Mesler Card (304)937-2tt8 Mali:e SOO'o selling Avon Call
"' (304)550·t6t6
(740)446·3358
Stephen Reedy LJci' 1639

Dispatchers
and/or
Ambulance
dr~vers
Competitive wages. Apply at
L1fe . Ambulance,
, 770
Jackson P1ke. Galhpolts,
Ohio.
FEDERAL

©IP)i

i~IAOifflO~®l

MEDI HOME HEALTH
AGENCY
HAS OPENINGS FOR

Chaplam Part Ttme,.
Corporate Chaplains of
$28 PEA HOUR/
Amenca IS seaktng cand1·
$42 PEA VISIT
date
for
postt1on
1n .
Parkersburg Please r9\ltew
Call VIcki Reynolds. AN
weo -snc www.iamchap org
Chn1r.al Manager at
for information &amp; applicat1on
(740)441 1799 or HOO·
lmk
Contact (919)57048t-6334
0700/e~~.: 204

POSTAL JOBS
$15,67·$26.19/hr., now hir·
mg For application and free
An Excellent way to earn governament JOb in1o, call
Amencan Assoc of labor 1·
money ·The New Avon.
913·599-8042, 24/hrs amp
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
serv
AVON! All Areasl To Buy Of
Sell Shirley Spears, 304- Form1ng RocWmetal band
675-1429
Looking for smger Call.
740-992·9904 01 740-416-.
Bartender/Waitress, Jericho ~t;;.,
090;,;.;;=....,==,..,..=
Inn,
804
22n0
St
u •me emporary
1
Applications now being
lark: Posl11on invqlve
accepted
rocesslng program appli
-C-A-RP_E_T---N-S-TA_l_l_E_RS_
lions, greeting lhe public
1
ping, filing, Knowledge
NEEDED to bid on lnstalla1crosof1 Word. ability t
tion of commercial carpet In earn IBM System 36 Men
a church and a hospital
rograms &amp; other ~nera
Aeferen(fes required. Ph
ffice skills. . Appllcat•on
{740):446·0332
re availabl e at Maso
ounty FSA Off1ce. 224
Cattle Manager/herdsmen
irst Street , Po1nt Pleasant
for 300 cow commercial
25550 No calls.· Las
10
cow/calf
operation
o file IS COB October 20tr.
South'eastern Ohio Must be
SA IS an EOE.
experienced •n cow/calf
operatiOn, hay produCtiOn . Furniture w'arehouseldeliv·
and lence metntenance. etc ery person needed Apply tn
Compel1t1ve salary. hous1ng, person
tO·S,
lifestyle
health Insurance and other Furniture,
3rd
Ave.·
benatlts offered Reply With GallipoliS No phone calls.
resume . references and ·
salary requirements to Help wanted at Darst Group
Benedict, Inc.. PO BoJI: 315, Home, working with elderly,
Me Arthur, Ohio 45651 or heavy llft1ng Involved. 740·
tax 10 (7401595-38 1t..
992·5023
--------Help 'wanted Bartender &amp;
Part t1me Cook apply at
Pomt
Pleasant "Moose
Lodge Charlesloo Ad

ePo~c:v~1 ·
Garage Salel Mciv•ilQ. Oct
16th-21st 38924 Bradpury
Road, Middleport

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts,
wood 1tems.
To $480/wk
Materials provided
Free Information pkg. 24Hr
80 1·428-4649

RN SUPERVISORS &amp; RN
UNIT MANAGER
Full &amp; Part Time
All Shilts Avalloble
Proper l1cense required. We
offer an excellent work env1·
ronment. shift differential,
competit1ve wages, great
benefiiS, perf~ attendance
mcentives and much morel
For qu!CkeSt consideration,
please apply online

HVA9 INSTALLER
Must be prOficie nt with
•nstallation of heating and atr
cond1t10nmg
equJpment
Competitive salary'benehts
Drug-tree workplace Send
resume to Dan Inman
Eleclnc, Inc . 6246 Radford
Ad. Athens. OH 45701. No
phone calls please.
Our guest serviCe onented
dmmg room ISloo6ong 10 hire
tnendly, energetiC servers.
Pul on your best sm1le and
apply 1n person at the
Holiday Inn o1 Gallipolis No
phone calls please

PARTTIME ,
COOROtN.e.TOR
GALLIA COUijTY
RETIRED SENIOR
VOWNTEER PROGRAM
The Univers1ty of R1o
Grande, R.S V.P (Retired
Senior Volunteer tirogram
Grantee, InVItes applications
tor a part-time coordmator
the Galha Ret1red Sen10r
VolUnteer Program T)"us 1s a
grant-funded program
Responsibilities Include, but
ere not limited to. coordinating grant-based programs.
such as C1t1zen Corps and
inter-generational services
iaarnmg volunteer programs
as well as other volunteer
projects; recruiting, plac1ng ,
orrent1ng volunteers aM statlon supervisors, maintaining
necessary wnnen reports ,'
attending monthlyI quarterly
staff meetings and assisting
the RSVP Director with pro-moting the program to ctviC,
faith-based and community
organizations

Barrow Smert Contact
the Ohro Drvis10n of
Fmanc1al
lnstitullon's
Office
of Con~umer
Affa1rs BEFORE you refinance your home or
obtam a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or tnsurance CBII.the
Off1ce · · of Consumer
Afta1rs toll free at 1-866278·0003 to learn if the
mortgage
broker or
lender
Is
properly
licensed. (Th1s is a pubhc
servtce announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publtshing Company)

tandemheaHhcareera.com
Scenic Hills Nursing Center
31 1 Buck Rtdge Road
B1dweU, OH 4561 4
Ph. 7401446-7150

POSITION
.e.NNOUNCEIIENT

Sunday._ Gltmn

Chicago at D.C. Unl1ed, 5 p.m
i Real Salt Lake at co· Chlvas USA, 7
, pm .

Help Wanted

AN

A.

TANDEM

~~,. ~..xt u~ '

C&gt; 2006 by NEA, Inc.

1

o-r:

res.

~

10-1.;

Colorac:IO at" Houston. 8:30p.m.
FC Oellas at Los .e.ngeles, 10:30 p.m.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
GAGE &amp;fiNANCE INC.
PLAIN11FF VS.
CINDY S. CLEMEN~
ET All DEFENOANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
In pursuance of an
order at aale to mo
directed from uld
court In the above enUlied action, r will
er&lt;pos41 to aale 11 pubHe auction on thetrorrt
steps of the Uelga

Plant MJintenance

No phone calls please. EOE

I Columbus at New England, 7 30 p.m.
r Kansas City 8.t NeW York, 7 30 p m.

I

It"

~-~~k·~--~t..-•
' G•l\'11A-•wA:.:v_,r r:-::-':"""'::~=--~-:-:-:-=-------------r
~
kitneartyle@comeasl.net

""'"""''"""""""'" •

SAVINGS
06CV137, on the 614-221·1662
decea-. 111 heirs,
ptoperty - b e d ea (9) 8, 15, 22, 29, (10) 6, deviH8s,
legatees,
Fallows;
13
encutora. executrixes,
511..- In 1he Vllillge
-lnlstillonl, Mminat CanllnentJtl,
lstrl1r1Kn
and
at Putnam - Siile o1
Public Notice
~ be required
Ohio: fn lot Number '
lo Ill up anr lntlliell
one Hundred F~!~Mn NOTICE OF PUBLICA· lhty mar have in uld
(115) In •ld Vlll9 at liON
,
prsmtses or b e - . .
Continental, PutMm IN
THE
COMMON barred, tMt upon filii·
County, Ohio p....,.J PLEAS COURT
ure o1 u1c1 Delendenls
No.
24-0511900000 OF IIEIGS COUNTY, ID~orto ...... tobe
Also known •• 204 OHIO
Pllid sold judgment
Soutll 4th
s-1, llolga CoUnty Clel'lc ol w1lhln days from
Contlnenwl,
Ohio Coul'ts
Its rendition that •n

•

·Y"

1 x·chnched conference

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfiedads
(.~
..1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics SOC for small
5 1.00 for large

POLICIES· 0"'o V.ltey Publ11hlng n~•rve• tha right to edit, .-.jtct. or cancetany ad at any lime Error. mull be reported on the flr11t
Trlbune-S.nllnei·Aeglster wHI be rnponalbla for no mora thlln the c011 of the apace occupied by lhe error and only the first Insertion.
any lou or expenH thllt rwulh from tM publication or ~i11lon of an ~rtiMme:nt. CorrKtion will be made In lhe first liVIIIIllble ed~on.
art aiWJYI eanf-ntlal. • Current rate cird applies. • "" real ntate advertfMtMnhl aJW subject to the Federal Fair Housing .S.Ct of 1188.
.ccapts only help wantH act. meeting EOE st.ndard1 . W. will not knowingly accept:.ny 41dv.rtltlng In violation of the law.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

on
Na.

be prepaid' ·

5 pups, born Aug 1 Father- Tan German Sheppard, 2
Jack Russell, slick haired,
old (304)675-796t

I

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is herebr
given tlu!t an Satunllly,
October 14, 2006 11
10:00 a.m., 1 public
Mle w111 be held et 21t
W
Second
St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Thll
F•nners Blink and
Savings Comp11ny Ia
selllng tor cash ·tn
handorcenlfledthe following ~
al:
11197 CHEVY C t500

·

Word Ads

• Sbrt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

PRo SoccER .
GA
9
7
16

Or FIX To

/}earllfiriM'

I AtlsntaatWashlngton,7p.m.

PREP HOCKEY
" AU.ntlc

.

!~~.::."~.V.-r,

NewYoril: at St. LouiS, 8:19p.m., '' neeesssry
Wedneaday. Oct. 18
S L .
N ~ ~
1
t. outs at ew T 0 '"'• 4 · 19 p.m., 11 nee' essary
Thurodoy, Oct. 1'
St Louis at New York, 8:19p.m., If neeessary

•Nlltlonlll Hockey - . .ue
EASTERN CONFERENCE

- Sentinel - l\~n-•

CLASSIFIED

OTPIIGF GA

0 1 7
0 0 6
1' 0 6
2 0 4

· · The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

I 'TWO

New York 2. St. Louis 0. New York
' leads series 1·0
,
' Frldey, Oct. 13
k
Sl LoU1s (C8rpenter 15-8) at New ,or

F~o~da

urg~.

6

1

bl'

Top 25 Fored
No. 1 OhiO State (6·0) did not play. I N
~ '· s(~~·y••0&lt;:,3t).15 Sl l .
Next at Mtchigan State Saturday
ew ' 0 r"' rvrez or ' at · outs
58
No 2
(6SO) did ;,,"play NeJCt at (Reyes
16

r"

220458
11!2478
W l

LEAGUE CIIAM-- SEIIIES
A~ntAegul
,..,_...,,Oct. 10
1 Ot!ltrolt 5, Oaklanl:l 1
_.....,, Oct. 11
Detro~ 6, Oakland 5. Oetroh llado
senes 2-o
Fr1Gey,Ocl.13
Oakland (Harden 4-0) at Detroit
{Rogers 17-8), 4:30p.m.
Sotur&lt;lay, Oct. 14
Oakland (Haren 14-13) at Detroit
(Bondermo n 14·8), 4 30 p.m.
Sundoy, Oct. 15
Oakland at Detroit, 4:4ll p.m .. If necessary
I,
Tuoldoy, Oct. 17
Detroit at Oakland, a·t9 p m .. If neces'I sarv
Wadneldoy, OCI.18
Detroit at Oakland, 8:19p.m., If necessery

1 4 o 200 87 138 , NNo 1~ Su ~~n, ~t~r~i'O) d'd t I
1 no Pay.
Detroit
0 5 0 .000 88 141
o.
ou ern 8
•
West
Next· vs . Ar_tzona State: Saturd~y
T P
PF PA
No. 4 M1Ch1gan (6·0) d1d nol play Next.
W L
cl
at Penn State, Saturday
4 1 0 800 111 98
St Lou•s
No. 5 West Vt rgin•a (5·0) did not play.
3 1 0 750 78 · 83
Seattle
NeJCt· vs. Syracuse. Saturday.
San Franc.sCo 2 3 o .400 105 146 ! No.6 Texas (5-t) dtd not play. NeKt. vs.
. Arizona
1 4 0 200 88 119 Baylor. Saturday
No.7 Louisville (5-0) did not play Next.
Suhdey, Oct. tS
vs. Clncinnati,. Saturday.
Buffalo at Detroit.. 1 p.m.
No 8 Tennessee (5-1) d1d not play..
Houston at Dallas. 1 p m.
0c 2
, NeJICt. vs. Alabama. aturday.
t. 1.
1 N y_ Giants at Atlanta, 1 p.m
No. 9 Notre Dame {5-1) did not play.
Seattle at St Lows, 1 p m
C
0
'· Tennessee at Washington, 1 P m.
Next· vs. U LA, aturday, ct. 21.
, No 10 California (5-1) did not play.
' Carolina at Baltimore. , P m.
Next· at Washington State, Saturday.
' Philadelphia at New Orleans, 1 p.m.
· No 11 Auburn (5·1) did not play NeKt:
C•nclnnatl at Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
, vs. No 2 Flonda, Saturday.
I Miami at N Y. Jets, 4.15 p m ·
·
City ast PlttsbF
4:1451p5.m
an lego at an ranclsco, ., P m ' Saturday, Oct. 21.
' No. 13 Georg11o Tech (5·1) d10 not play.
Oakland at Denver.. 8:15 p.m.
Open Indianapolis, New England, Next: at No 12 Clemson Saturda Oct.
Green Bay, Minnesota, Jacksonville, 21
y,
Cleveland M d
Oct ~
N~. 14LSU (4·2) did not play. NeJCt: vs.
on ay,
·
1 Kentuclqt, Saturday
Chicago at Anzona. S:30 p.m.
No. t51owa (5·1) did not play. Next at
fndiana, Saturday
Fool'B~LL
No. 16 Georgia (5·1) did nol play NeJCt:
vs Vanderbilt, Saturday
Taam
Rec Pta
Pva
No. 17 Arkanus (4-1 ). did not play.
,
CLASS A~A
Next: vs SOutheast M1ssoun Saturday
1 1 Parkersburg
7-0 14 14 1
No. Ml Oregon (4-1) did not play. NeKf:·
1 2. St. Albans
6-0 14 00 2
vs. UCLA. Saturday. .
1 3 Bndgeport
7·0 13 43 3
No. 19 Missoun (6·0) d1d not play. Ned
4 Nitro
6-t 12 57 4
al Texas A&amp;M , Saturday
5 Capital
5-'t 12 17 5
I
No 20 Bo1se State (6-0) did nol play.
6. ManmSburg
5-t 1t 17 9
Next: at New MeXICO State, Sunday.
{tie) Robert C. Byrd 5·1 11 17 8
No. 21 Nebraska (5-1) did not play.
8. Morgantown
5·2 10 57 1 1
Next: at Kansas State. Saturday.
9 Cabell Midland
5-2 9.57 14
No. 22 Virginia Tech (4-2) lost to
(tie) East Fairmont 5·2 9.57 13
Bosto n College 22·3
Next vs.
1
{tie) Wheelmg Park 5·2 9.57 7
, Southern M1ss. Saturday, Oct 21
12 Hunicane
4-2 9.33 6
No. 23 Oklahoma (3.:2) dtd not play.
13 Fa1rmont Senter 4-2 9.17 16
NeJICt: vs. Iowa State, Saturday
14 Brooke
5-2 9.00 10
No 24 RUtgers (5.0) d1d not play. Next:
5-2 8 14 l7
at Navy, Saturday.
1 15 John Marshall

KSansaD~

Cardln1l Conference
· CARD
Poca " '" ""' "'"' ' .. ' "' .3-0

7.88

7.86
7.33
7.14
7.00
6.67
6.57
6.57
6.50

3
5
8

1

Hannan at BIShop Donahue

w-L

e.

9.50
9. 17
9.00
9.00
8 ·71

s

.1·5 '' .47 '' .178

Friday's games
Sou1!l Gallia al Symmes Valley
Buffalo at Wahama

I

500 113 86
400 96 ItO
Pet PF
.800118
750 69
.600 86
000 48

I Calgery
Coloraoo

PRO BASEBALL

~. ~~s Monroe ~:g ~g:~~ ~

PA
3. Slssonvme
'5·1
4 · Poco
5•1
74
132 ' 5. Bluefield
4·1
t05 (tie) Wayne
5·1
7 · Tctsla
6· 1
91
I
liberty Harrison 5-1
9.Magnolla
5·2
RA
I
10.
Kayser
4·2
100
11 lndepandenoe 5·2
74
113 12 . Sherman
4-2
135 13. Mount VIew
4·2
"
14. Grafton
• 4·3
RA
(tiel ~erbe~ Hoover 4·3
46
16. Berkeley Sprlngs4-2
85
77
CUSS A
109 1. Wheeling Central 6-0
' 2. Williamstown
7-0
PA
3 Mount Hope
6·0
34 ' 4. Greenbrier West 6-1
36
5.Ciay-B'attelle
6-0
52 ,.· 6 Pendleton County 6·1
113 7 ' CalhounCounly 5-t
(tie) St Marys
5-1
9. Gliben
5·2

www.mydailysentinel.com

~rtbune

-DMIIon

CLASS AA

s

PA

.161 .90
.4·2 ' '' t4ll ' .65
6-t

Wahama ... ..
Hannan ..... .

No. ~5 Wisconsin (5·1) did not play.

7.86 . t18

NeJCt: vs. Minnesota, Sat-Urday.
'

Fridlly, October 13, 2006

Friday, ()etobft q, 2006

~ 6· ~500
"c:o ;:5
=~ 12~ ~· Meadow
~f~;:n~aT':I
~:~ ~ ~; ~ 1
100 95
Br~dge 5·2 6.00 !16

:
2 2 0
2 2 o
2 3 0
SOIIth
W L T
New Orleans 4 10
-'llanla
3 1 0
Carolina
3 2 o
Tampa Bay
o 4 0

:~~ ~~n~~:ra
I Green Bay

Next Week

Friday
·
Ale ndle's ~
MeJgs at
~
r
Belpre at Vonton County
)\'ellston at NelsonVIlle-York
Miller at Eastern
federal Hock1ng at TTimble
Southern at Waterford

1

4-3

1 16. University

LMgua

AMERICAN CONFERENCE
E..t
W L T Pet PF
M
M
Logan .......................4·0 · ... 180 .. 33 ....5·2 ...212 .. 109 I New England 4 t 0 .800 t 08
,. 2 3 0 .400 96
Zaile$ville ' " " ' " . ' " " " " ' .. 3-1 ' .. 130 .. 58 "' ..4--3 ... 190 .. 155 I N.Y. Jets
2 3 o .400 77
Marietta .................. . ·..2·2 . .76 .. 77 .. .. 2-5 ... 111 .. 146 Buffalo
1 4 0 .200 6,
warren .
.. ................1-3 . .57 . .. 156 .. ..S-4 ... 104 ..224 Miami
8outtl
Athens ..... ... .. ..... .... .. dl-4 . .59 ... 165 .... 1-e .. .138 ..281
W L T Pet PF
South Dl¥liiDn
1 lndla~apolls 5 0 0 t.OOOt 35
SEOll
ALL
.
W(.PfM
~PFM
Jaclcaonvllle 3 2 0 .600 118
Chillicothe ·............. . ......3-1 ... 129 .. 117 ....5·2 .. 181 .. 171
Houston
t 3 0 .250 66
Gsll1a Academy ..... .. ....... .. .2·2 ... 100 .. 96 .. ..5·2 ... 204 .. 134 Tennessee
o 5o 000 60
lronton ........... .. .... .. ....2·2 ..97 . .' .101 .....4-3 ... 162 .. 149
North
Jactcson ·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2·2 . . 129 .. 99
..4-3 '· 209 .. 14ll
w
L T Pel PF
Portsmout!l ................... 1·3 ...75 .. .110 ....2·5 ... 180 .. 194
4 1 o 800 89
Baltimore
Frtdlly"l Pft*
Next Wtelc
Cinc1nna1i
3 1 0 .750 98
1 3 0 250 6t
Athens at Chinlt01he
Jackson at Athens
, Pittsburgh
1 4 a 200 81
Cleveland
ChilliCOthe at Monetta
Jackson at GaR1s Acaolerny
-t .
I
Gallia Academy at Warren
Ironton at Portsmout!l
w
L T Pet PF
· Logan at Warren
Portsmout!l at Logan
I Denver
3 , 0 750 49
t.4arietta at Zanesville
.f· Ironton al Zanesville (Sat)
: San Diego
3 1 0 .750 103
------'-------..,-----'-~-----'--.- 1 Kansas City 2 2 o .500 80
Tri·VII~Conference
Oakland
o 4 0 .000 47
OhiO Division
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
1VC ·
' ALL
Eaot

SEOAl
W~ 'Pf

PageB4

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win I
1-888·582-3345
I ~ I \I I "I \II

· SFIDA/EOE
HR@tandemhealthcare com

Ho~m;

FOR SAIL
Tramer PoSition

1996 Redman 28~~:60 m
Apple Grove 304·593-6719
Are you Interested 1n a
v1ew
online
at
rewarding position? PAIS 1s
wwwlorvb com, code 8246
currently seeking a part time
staff for Mason County, WV 2 Story House For Sale
prov1dmg residential/com· (304)675-3151 '
muntty Skill trammg w1th 1nd1·
v1duals with MAIDD The 2924 Centerpoint Road .
positiOn IS Tuesday end 3BR/1B, t ac Shirlene Goff,
Thursday 3 30pm -7 30pm Agent. Century Hcvne s
and two Saturdays per Holley and . Associates,
month 9am·5pm located 1n (7 40)285-2447
Pornt Pleasant. WV High
school diploma or GED 3 Bedroom. 2 Bath, 306 2nd
1eq01red No exper1ence Ave ., Middleport Ohto
necessary. Cnmtnal back ' Basement. double garage.
gro und check requ1red . and large deck
F1rm
Must have reliable trans· $63.000 740·992-2571
porta\lon and va lid auto
InSurance Patd tra1nmg 3 bedroom. 2 bath, with fireplace . 40)(60 barn . A1o
Hourly rate starting at $6 50·
Granele area On 8 flat aces
sa 00/hour
$t20,000 (740\709-tt66
-------WanteO· full·ttme vetennary 3 yrs. old, 3 BA, 2BA lg
recaptlonlst ,exper renee Porch
Heat .
pump.
helpful but not essen11BI for Appt1ances, Meadowhill off
person writing to learn Sandhill Ad was $89,000
respond With complete reduced
to
$79,900
resume &amp; 3 reference to (30415253 or (304)593-5949
Box-TSC10
Pt Pleasant
Register 200 Main ST P1. 3076 White Road, Gallipolis,
4BR/2B 4.533 ac Sh~rlerte
Pleasant WV 25550
r=:--~----, Goff. Agent Cen1ury Homes
Ho'lley and Assoctates
11!10
SrnoolS .
(7401286-2447.
~urnos

A high school diploma or
equivalent Is required with
an Assoc1ate Degree preferred Good oral and tnter·
personal communications
sktlls reqUired . A valid dri·
ver's license is required.
Preference wtll be gtven to "--ttiiiliiliiiiiii-_.1·
candidates who have previous work experience with Gallipolis C•reer College
the sen•or c1t1zan populatton
(Careers Close'To Home)
Must be computer literate CAll Today 1740-446--4367,
'da
'II be b' ~ 10
1·800·214-0452
Cand1
tes WI
su te..,
1!1 profeSSIOnal background
www Qi!IIMpol~ree, coll ege com

I

ThiS IS a 24 hOur per week
posit1on, with poss1b11ity of
Increased work hours pass I·
ble tn the next two years
depending on additiOna l
'd
H 1
grant Iun •ng our Y wage
$6
25
h
1s
oer our wttt1 no
.
'I bl
empIoyer oeneI tts avat a e

M11mber

Accrl!dllmg

-~----~-Karate sell·defense, profes·
s•onal Black Belt tnstructor
Men
women, ch 1ldren
Spacious f!JIIY equipped
gym . Bltanga·s Martial Arts
Ce'lter. M1ddleport
740~
99i~·5715 Ocen datly

Resumes Will be rece•ved. ,t70
until the position IS 'i1llad
MISCEUANFOL'S
Otrio Valley Home Health, Interested applicants should
Inc htnng tor .Full T1me AN. send an up-dated resume
PT, PTA. Full Time and Part mcluamg the names and
Time CNA, STNA. CHHA. addresses of th ree profesI='CA and Per D1em PT, PTA s•onal references and a let·
OT ST Accephng applies· ter o1 11 .1e1est to Phyllis
t10ns tor LPN's. Competitive Mason SPHR, D1rector at
Wages and Benefits includ- Human
Resources,
tng heallh msurance and Umvers1ty ol R1o Grande
mileage Apply e.t 1480 PO Bmc 500 Ate Grande
Jadl.son Pike, Galhpolis or OH 45674 e-mail ·Wili:
2415 JaCkson Avenue Point sqnflno edy taM (740)2457
'
Pleasant, WV. or. phone toll 4009.
-------tree 1·866·441·1393
- - - - - - - . , . - - RMdy tor 8 Rewarding &amp;
Overprook Center 1s current - .. Chaltenglng Career'?
iy acceptmg applica tions for Apply tor a CHHA classes
01e1ary TeCr'1111CI8n or equ1v· beginning
Oct .
9th.
alent for 20 hours per weetl Applicettons musl he· sUb·
PlASse stop by and 1111 out an m1ned by Oct 6th We help
appl tcaMn l od~;~y. If you WIJOb placement and are
have quest1ons please con· also h1nng PCA. CHHA &amp;
tact MIChelle Gilmore at 992 · STNAI'(740)44t-t377
6472 EOE
Plumber· Expertenced res1·
dentlal &amp; 11ght commerCial
Top pay insurance, retirement Contact T1m (304)6757824

SHOP
..
CLASSIFIEDS

4 bedroom, 2 bath. doubl€
garage. pool. 2 acres
Eastern School District
740·992-3465 after $ OOPM

4 bedroom, 2 'bath, double
garage, pool , 2 8CrBS
Council k1r lndepenc!onl Cohg&amp;s Eastern School Oistnct
ern:l Schools 12}48
740-992-3465 after S·OOPM
Accredted

check

----:----

I

~.- - - - - - - • ·
Amos and Son's Trash
Serv1ce . F1rewood &amp; EJCtra
Haulmg, ReliSOnable Rates
Heap Accepted (740)388·
0371
t80
\\'A,,1 l1)

To Do

4 rental houses "For Se.le"
Good Income produc"mn
':1
propertie s Great locationl
Pn ce(s) are Negotlab'le
Mot•vated
Seller'
lr
GallipoliS. Ca.u Wayne
(404)450-3802
5 Room House w~h Bath, 3
lots. $30 000 Leon afea
Phone (304 ) 67~·0t32
About $3000 dowri 812 s
3rd Ave ., Middlepprt Totally
remodeled 3 bedrooms, 1
bath
Perfect credit not
reCjulred Payment $525
Appratsed $70 000
740·
367-7129
AttenUon !

C:iaorrm's Portable Sawmill, Local company offer1ng "NO
tf ~
don't haul yow Logs 10 the DOWN PAYMENr
pro·
1
t b ,~
i'lli
· st
icell
i304
ii
675
i1957
i l grams or you o uy ,~ur
d f
nome tnstea o remmg
1
'• 00% f•nanclng
1
Bl'S~
Less than pertect creel~
OPfoRn'Tn'
accepted
• Payment could be th e
same as rent
Locators
Mortgage

I·

rio

•NOTICh

OHIO VALLE\' PUBLISHlNG co recommends
that you do busmeSii with
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the ma1l unttl you
have Investigated I he
offering.

(740' 367·0000
very moe 3BR.' ba!h
upsta11s furmshed 1BR apt
downstatrs Furn1ture store
1n rear c;a1 lot on s1d6. All on
112 ac lot at 130 Bulavtlle
Ptke
Gall1pohs
0H
$135,000 (740\446-4762

i

�Fridlly, October 13, 2006

www.mydlil'feenlinetcom

AUEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

Nli:A Cro11word Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS
Bria&lt; houoe &amp; 7-acres land.
1501 sq.Uvlng aroa.
1203 oq.ft unfinished base·
ment , 3~bedroom, 1-bath ,

Farm

1997 t4x72 , clean with flre·
A-1
BEAUTIFUL
A""RT·
pisco, 2 bedroom, 2 bath,
Local company olforlng 'NO IIENTS
AT
IUOGET
1997 14x70 3 bedroom, 2 DOWN l'lt.YMENT" pro· PRICES AT JACKliON ·
bath, vinyl siding , shingled grams for you 1o bUy your ESTATES. 52 Westwood

llvinQ rd, kitchen dingtno rm roof. 4 more 1o choose from. home Instead of renting.
combination. TV room and (740)388-QOOO

daytime: • 100% financing
2--car detached ga rage (740)388-8017
evening, • less thin perfect credit
Located 3-mlles south on (740)645-6150 cell
accepted
Rt-62 at the y $125,000 for .,.-------~- • Payment coUld be the
Appt. caN (304)675·2845
2 bedroom, 2 beth, t4x70. same 08 rent
Like new. [740)379·2540. , Mortgage
Locators.

machinery,

Ph...lp
Alder

baller,

plows, 501 mower, .tedder,
bUOkot, polo, llieYator, blade,

John Deere Mini Excavator/
Tractor Loader, BaCkhoe/
Skid
Steers . Carmichael
Hauling Opportunfty.
- - , - - - - - - - In Henderwon, WV. Pre· Equlpinent (740)446-2412
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· owned Appliances starling New John Deere Compacts
ED AI'PetiD'ILEI
It S75 &amp; up all under

a

NMit
•

•RENTALS ·•SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY

and 5000 Series Utllty tractors 00% FIXed tor 3e

Town- , apartments, WoJTOnty, have recooandlor omoll hoooo&amp; FDA d~loned Big Screen TV's montha through John
7
sale. (740)446-o52 .
Taklng•"""....._forrental RENT. Clll (740.....,1·1111
......- - •by Ron's TV (:11141175- Deere Credit. Carmichaal
For sale- al' elec1rlc 2 bed- out~de of Pomeroy. 3 Br.• 2 . for applloa1ton &amp; lnfonnatfon, 71111
Equipment (740)446-2412
2003 t6x80 -ile home lor (740)367-&lt;lOOO

1i)

.,

All ,..1 •tete Hwrtislng
In thtl ~paper II
lllbfK:t ,to the Federal
F.. r Housing Act of 1968
Which mittel It ll+eg.IIO
advertlae ·"any
llmlbtion or
dltcrlmlnt~Uon bHed on
l'lletl, COIOf, rellgiof) , se•
t.miUal st.t~a or ~tonal
Origin, Of anv intention to
m~~ke any .uch

.,...,...,c.,

poefwtwt~ee ,

llmlt.tion or

lot also. Catt (740)446-~78 . month, utilities not Included.

c

•

$400 mo.

u-FORft~lbNrn-.1
~

w

r

lms &amp;

Rainbow E
ries Vacuum Fixed for 48 months through
with attachments. In grea1 John
Deere
Credit

Free Rent
Special

Great used 3BR home only
$9,995. Will help with delivery Calll740)385·767t .
2 Bedroom Trailer, large

Garage. Partially Fum~hed.
Ney., -20 06 C layton sin- C
glewtdes s tart1ng at $199.84 lose to ai·Mart in Mason.
per month . Trade-ins wei· &lt;740)256 -64 15 or (740)256comos. Caii[740)38s-2434. 6947.

mower condldoners 04.7%

Se

lUUDu...r..

2&amp;3

Bedroom

condition .

Asking $750. Carmlctlael

•~.

r

L-------

••pllance &amp;

Thompsons

""''

...,.

Aepalr-675-1388. For sale,

Central heat&amp;. air, WID
hookup. Coin operefed
laundry, owner pays
weter, sewer &amp; trash.

re-conditioned automatic
washers&amp;. dryers, refrigara·
tors, gas and electric
ranges, ail condlli&lt;&gt;r-.l. and
wringer wa~hers. Will do
repairs on major brands In
shop or 81 your home.

Ellm View

Apartments
{304)882-3017

•LIYMIUU\
... ~

•KIEFER BUILT '"VALLEY
"BISON "HORSE a UVESTOCK TR~IlEAS 'LOADMAX
•GOOSENECK,
DUMfS
&amp;
UT!UTY
•A:.UMA ·
'ALUMINUM
TRALEAS •saw GOOSE·
NECK
HITCHES.
Cormlchoel
Equlpnien1
(740)446-2.\12
'--'------8 week old pigs $35

Used lurniture store, t30
Bulevtllo Pike. Gas ranges,
Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp; bUnk bods, Chests, dinettes,
bath. upstairs •• clean, no couches, mattresses, new
pets. Ref/deposit required. washer/dryer $400 set.
(740)446-4782 Gallipolis,
(740)4'6-t5t9.

Leave message

'II.LI:.t..l.a.LL:I.I.LU~

97 Beech Street

Middleport. OH

r

~

i
House tor sale in Syracus·e,
two-bedroom with bath,
attached, garage and basement. An estate sale.
$70,000.Phone [740)9923690.

REALW.AN11lll"'~·nc
.1;...')1111

•

Ir ·.---lmrr-.~~nuumuu;,

Need to sell your home? 1 and 2 bedroom apartLate on payments, divorce,
f
. hod -• ntu
men1s, urnts
a,l\l u r}Db transler or a death? 1 nished, security deposit
can buy your home. All cash required. no pets, 740 _992•
and quicl&lt; closing. 740-416- 2218.
-------3130.
f,' I \I \1 '

r10

I

House with ~rge lot. 2 car
H~
garage, wood floors, maple
fOR JbNr
khchen. gas fireplace call
(30 ) . _
4 875 2364
$148/mo! 4 Bedroom HUD!
4% down, 30 ueers @ 8%.
'
In Patriot, 3 bedroom, new For listings 800·391 r5228
kitchen cabinets, new fur- eJtt F254
nape, AC , new plumbing, - - -- - - - large"lot. Call (740)446·0761 1·2 Bedroom hOuse. Racine.
or (304)675-2329.
One Car garage, all utilities
paid $625.00 plus $t50.00
Prime property on 4 oo'i"'iier deposit. 740-949·,020.

..__,.;tiiiiioiiilili--'

~

lots In Syracuse. Oh, great
neighborhood, well built
house w/ rooms &amp; bath
5
upstairs anc:l family room
with b"'rick fireplace/ buck
stcwe lnsen and bedroom in
finished basement, house
has hardwoOd floors &amp;
beautiful woodWorl&lt;. khchen
appliances built in, patio and
screened &amp; glassed sunporctl, shade &amp; fruit trees,
g&lt;apes &amp; berries. reason·
ably · priced, SO's. John
VanMeter, (740)247-2229

..........

fiiijj

-mymictwestbome.com

(740)828-2750

'Two Sfory house/1 acre .
4 Bd, 1 112 Ba.. D.R..
kllatchen, _utility roorh, fire
P celgas logs, 1iving room
plus family room, 2 car
garage. front porch, basement, storage buildings,
TPC water, heat pump,
paveo driveway. Latart Felis.
740·247-2532

2 bedroom 480 Pak'lon AC .
$350 rent , $350 deposit,
WOH &amp; uti. Hud ok.
(
_
.
7401446 2515
-------2bdr. House freshly painted,
new carpet , full basement
garage, Rei., Oep., No Pets

(3041675·5t~

c

74014464782

2BA home- Vinton Ave.
$375 mo. + sec. dep. You pay
utiht;es. Gas heat. [740)446'
3644.

2
bedroom
apl
on
Centenary. Road, water
paid, appliances furnished,
W/D hookup, clooe to
Holzer, no pets. Call
2br. House fo1 rent in down- (740)446·9442
after

:=';h73c!;;:o;~so

i

Downtown
. Commercial
Retail space lor Rent. $400/
month.
Ups1alrs Ofllce
SullosforAent$125/month
you pay the Uttlltles. Call
(703)528-0617

and runs great, 117.000
miles automat'
$4 500
OBO.'eau
12s3.
----'----98
38
Ford Mustang,
0°
engine, automatic.
87 Ford pickup, F-150.

I'Eis
RlR SALE

w/351 engine, automatic
(304)576-2703

j

2 AKC male Boston Temers.
4x4
Vet~
. •.shots&amp; wormed,
FORSAu:
POP, will accept depJslt or · - - - - - - . .
•-·- peyment . $350 ea~..
~"
•

3 Bedroom house in
Pomeroy $450 plus deposit Brand new 2 Bedroom
Apanments Washer/dryer
and utilities. No Pets. 740hookup, stove/refrigerator"
992-5228.
tncluded, 1 located in city, 1
38A home- SA 554. Bidwell- approx. 1 mile outside ctty
$575fmo· sec. dep. refer- Hmlts·
.
ences, all •lee. (740)446· 2
Apartment: 2nd
Avenue, Gallipolis;
·
3644 .
- - , - - - - - - - Alsoavailableunitson State
House for rent. Pomeroy. 2 Route 160. can for details
BA, CIA, clean, new carpet, · Pet frlendy. {740}44 1 194
nice ieveJ lot, Rt 833. Small or (740)44 ,. 1184 , .
out bldg. $475 plus utHities __.:_:..______
&amp; dap. No pols. 740-843· Apt. tor rent 2 or s Br.. No
5264.
Pets. 740·992·5858.

Bedroom

-o

riG

llouimow

I

regls1., 5 wks old, $100 · - - - - - - ·
before 4pm on· Fri., $125 1998
09dge · Grand
~--llliGom;iliiliii-_.1 after Fri. Call (740)446· Carevan~ - 95,000 miles,
·
4707.
3pc Oak ent. ctr. $300; - - ' - - - - - - - Dining nn suhe tbl, 9 ch Sheltie pups, 9 lilllks, first
buflliutch $700; 9 cu . · ft. shots &amp; wormed, no papers,
1
chest
rreezer
$200. ;•50r08bh~~·;;~~~
2000 Harley Davidson 1200
(~)674-5780.
Cumom Sponster. Load8d,
-------ex1ra
chrome,
$6,900.
New recliner $200; sofa &amp; L
(304)593·t997 or [740)44t·
seat $400. MoUohan fum.
202 Cia~ Ct.pel Rd. Porter. Kiwi Fruit! Cherry and "03ii5~5;,
. ~~-~~­
Phone
(740)388-ot73. Hictcory nut size, smooth A
9ktn, 740-992-7449. VIrgil's
1·
Open 9-3 Sot only.
Berry l'atcll. St.An24, East

i
Pomeroy Nazarene
Church

on your family?
I have one opening for an
elderly or handicapped female

1-304-675-6183

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, Oct. 15th
680/22 long rifle match
12 noon

196 Mulberry Avenue
Evangelist
Major Sherman A.
Cundiff
Salvation Army
Rocky Mount, N.C.
Sunday Morning
Sunday School 9:30 am
Morning Worship 10:30 am
Sunday Evening 6:00 pm
Mon-Weds 7:00 pm

~-

RIVERSIDE
. ' AUCTION BARN
740-~56·6989

WV Jobs Foundation
LUCKY FRIDAY 13

Every Saturday Night at 6 p.m.

$4,000

Terms of Sale- Cash or
Pre-Approved Check

Coverall Progressive
(54# or less)

Early Birds
Guaranteed $50
Doors open 4 pm
Early birds 5:30pm
Reg. Session 6:30 pm

(304) 675-3877

At. 7

South 5

mile's Below the Dam

Please Call Ahead for Pre ~Approva l

Something for EveryoneTools, Christmas, Furniture
. l'urniture sells at 9

• New Homes

·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Ohio.

FOR SALE

I ~·.
·

Stop &amp; Compare

!

~

"

"10EFI'R BUILT "VALLEY

Il-l

IN\/E~TO~'&lt;,

~

ABU:ll ~(:&gt; T~£
11' L.E.C..E. !

1&gt;\~ ,&amp;,N E~,

.m

Tl4.0ii:NN&gt;I' L£ ... A ~::::;;:1::1

(I

ASK

MRS

HERE.

C!lE'STEI&gt;..,

I /1\.REAUY
TRIED

ONCE! IT
WOt.t'T t&gt;O
MN &lt;;00()'

WHI'.TEVER! &amp;oTT'OM
LINE. YOU PUI A

"NEITHER
ODES TilE

BEAT·OOWN ON HIM'

'C'OU I&gt;ON 'T HI'VE A

OTHER

LE6 TO STAND ON '

I&lt;. I D.

H,.,_ 1'4"' .

INSURED

FrMEitiiMIIII
Phanl:
(74G)441G7

STANLEY lllEE
llliMMINCi &amp;

CENERAL
CON11lACT1NC
• Prompt &amp; quality

wott

• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• free Estimates
o.clnsured"

'

We Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• HomefiU System
• Helios System
~ ...,;,.,~a"•,•g•gw:"'•

ondliine."
In tills deal, l1tore arolwo ways thaJ ·you
might got nina trlcb, but lhe aecond is
hard to spot Wyou sao ~. a flash like a
bolt ot ligttlning will run 1l1rotJgh your
brain and you will smile happily to your·
soW. Against your oon1ract ot 111ree not~. West leads lhe apade queen.
Who! would you do?
Some experts would open lhe Soulh
hand wl1lt one diamond, piltnnlng 1o
w111t a Jwo.ltoal1 bid on the eeo-

~ of c!Ubtr, planning to ClOSS to lhe
apade 100 and roo !Ito ctubo. When tho
etulr6 4·1' lhouglt, suddenly light·
nlng has lrtclnaral8d your oon1ree1.
H !Ito etutrs are brealcing, fine; H11tey are
by Lull Campos
no1, you will need to wotlt wl1lt lhe·dl8·
CeWrity CiNr ciyptograms n aelied trom quotebons 17,' famous people . past 1111:1 present
monds. So. after 18klng tho first Irick wlllt
Each 1111tr il the ciJt1ef Slink 101111t'hr.
your apade ace and cashing !Ito club
. Todsys ouec 0 -~ J
king. lead !Ito club queen and ·O'Jertake
wtlft ~ace. H tho clubs are 3-2 all . "X PZTF YB ~THXTRT YKMY
along. play a third round. You wiN have
ltiGV· YKXGE JltiZ ~TYYTL Y· KIIG
!oat only an ...rtlicl&lt;. But wlton East d~·

cards. run the diamond nine. Wes! wins
wtlft his queen and retums a spade, bul
you- !Ito! wllh the king on the board
and play. dl81110nd to your jack. Wlten
holds and !lte•ace brings down Easfs
ltlng, sudclonly all ~ lair weather and

GBYKXGE.
ZBUTYXUTZ
-

7441=742=2293
*Leave a message

r.io

PEANUTS
WERE At« OF Tl40SE RIGf.lT,

AFRICA!
SJJ(TEEN!
SAAKf5PEAfi:E!

MA'AM 7 I COULD TELL i1ER
W14Etil' Sl4E WAKES UP A6AIN ..

ALABAMA!
TilE RIVER

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446.0007

NILE!

Cornerstone
ll ''.lii Construction
~

SUNSHINE CLUB

JOlES'

Tree Service

Jump
on
SAVINGS

Top • ~I • Trim
• Sfllnp 6rinding
• Bucket TNCI&lt;

.WATERPROOFING

STOCK TRAILERS ·L~DIIAX
•GOOSENECK,
DutiPS
•
UTILITY
•ALUMA
•ALUMINUM
TRAJLERS
GOOSE·
NECK
HITCHES.
Conmtchool
Equipment

-a..w

le

Shop

0

Classltieds!

EHTGFM '

BUSit~ESS
" OMnfiS
PAGE FOR
•
'
AS LOW,, AS
$27.00 PERMONTH!

8y8omlco-Oool
Take advantage of any opportunities that
trwolve you with wol1ftwhlle p&amp;ople
and/or organizations. You're destined to
play a Slgntflcant rote In something that
can be~ meaningful to you .
UBR/1 (5ap!. 23-0ct. 23) - There's o
good poosibillty 1hat something for which
you've been hoping oouk:l gain a clear
path and becOme a reality. Be optl·
ml8tic regamtng yoUr hopes, desires·and
·SQORPto (Oct. 24-NO'.'. 22) - You are
errterlng a fortunate success pattern
Where ~r ambitions. goalS and aspire·
tions can be fulfilled. Go all out, but take
care to keep your purposes to you!Hlt.
SAGIITAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) - If
you've got a friend who is as visionary as
you. try to spend some quality time w111t
fhls person. Collectively, you might come
up with an kiea that could be mutually
benefic:iel. ,
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- Make
it a point to tell yc)ursett not to seme for
second best because, once you are convinced, you'll take the appropriate steps
to make this a re.~~lity.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Partnership arrangemeNS can turn out
to be quite fortunate tor )IOU, espedalty if
you find· someone to team up with who
can oftftr strengths, talents or skNis that
complement yours .
PISCES [Feb. 20-Mar&lt;;h 20) - Altrlough
it might not appear so P'g In, some·
thing 01J 'Nhich you are woril;ing will be
rnofe rewarding than you can lmagine.ln
fact,_ the returns may be greater than
anybOdy thOugnt.
ARIES (Uarch 21-April 19) -Conditions
·· will be more harmonious for you where
, your friendshipS are concerned. especially If you hang out with those who
have a btt of dass abOUt them. tt'li make
for a pleasant time.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May 20) - Spend;ng
quality time witt\ the family will he~ clarify your objectives. II can put things bad!:
In prospective for you and help you know
the direction you want to take In the
future.
GEMINI {May 21-June 20) - Cnances
are you're going to be the recipient ol
some good news. The h;rPPY tiding&amp; are
likely to come through someone yoo
know socially wno uodersta:nds your

The Daily Sentinel

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Adclltion11 I
Remodeling
New Garages
Electrlcell Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding 1 Pllntlng
Pat io and Porch Deckl

WV036725

992-2155

VC YOUNG Ill
q~;

Pbr&gt;1C''

·fi::'.
,

r.

, &gt;t"n

,• Y(il" l '1"1 'I["W &gt;r'

'

(I

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION

I

~ fOil

'Service
Free Estimales &amp;
Affordable PriceS,
Call Dennis Boyd

740-992-1189
-

'

-.

si!nl)le

ATYYTL"

Ho&gt;.JRS ..

WOlD
UMI

words.

POXESE

I' I l I I

I

I I I' I 1·
REVVE

I

1---.=-IE. .:;JI.-1=--Ir.~..:;Ci6r::--4le_'

1
.

•

I

.

.

•

iTS pI L

•o

I ovemeard a fellow in a res· .
laur!mllell his date that lobster
can be eaten for flavor, nour·
llshmenlor---- ·--·

~-TI-"I:r-r-1-illl'!.:..,l,..-

O

(o,.,plere rho chuckle oooted
by l1lli ng in the '"'')ing wotdl
L-1-._J_L..J.e--1.--1.-- vou develoo
from sttP No. 3 below.

e ~~~~R~\:ia~~m I' I' I' I' I' 1· I' ·j' I
~;~M8lEfO« I I I I I I I I I

.,

5~-UTS

ANSWERS 10/11'06

Safety - Tease - Youth · Cereal - CLOSE your EYES
A fellow says you can find out hOw you look while
sleeping. AU you have to do is stand tn front of a mrror
and CLOSE your EYES

ARLO&amp;JANIS
YOU KllOiol) HUG: II~D Kl~~ Oil
YOU A LOT M()IIE: THA~ YOU
fiUC. AIJD Ki5~ ru &gt;IE- .'

~~..
~

if

ambitionS and dMirea.

H~~~~ lil&lt;e 1HIS I C4n ltE
Helie atiD Galle aT.k

Roofing - Siding •
Painting
G11tters • Decks- Elt.
Remodeling
For Fast Coort&lt;OWi

XZ

OltiSWZBG

loor

low 10 form ·four

CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - Vour
tinanciBI picture could ·be a bit bener lor
you a( this time and brighten your spirits.
The ImpOrtant thing, however, is nor to
use 1t:Ms as a signal lo go on a spending

SOUPTONUTZ
YOUNG'S

GBYKXGE

YKIIY

too•roogo le!!tr" of tho
Krombltrd ...,do bo· ·

•

Sllturdlr), Oct. 14, 2006

LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22) - Conditions Will
begin to lavor you once agefn where your
personal enterprises are concerned .
Considerabte strides can be made at lhls
time in promoting your self-interests.
VIRGO (""g. 23-Sept. 22) - Lae!y Lud&lt;
is In yoOr comer regarding your secret.
personal affairs. So don't hesitate to take
the s,teps io satisfy your needs. You 'll be
able to do so without drawing attention to
yourself.

'

WGBJ

~~::.~' S@\\.j}lA-~t.trs·
t411o4 J.y ClAY l . POllAN

\1/C:U., YOU WO~'r~tOP IAIJGr

E.IJOUGtH FOR M'i. 1ll HU&amp; .
AU0 Ki% 01J YOU Fl~i.'

spree.

J1 E·YOUR

x·

GSJ

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "An lor the sake ollruth, for the sake of what is
beaulitul and good- thai ~ the cteed I seel&lt; " - George Sand
·

clnolrns.

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Call Gary Stanley

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. locel references fur·
n~hod . Established t975
Coil 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870 , Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
_ _ _ __.:__ __
. (740)446--2412
Painting
and
Drywall
' - - ' - - - - - - - Service, m1sc.labor. Call tor
John Deere 10 fl. No Til Drill estimate after 6:00 pm or
for
rent.
Carmicnael leave message. 740·985Equipment (740)446-2412 . 3n9.

Willie Ty!or said, "Tho reison lightning
doesn1 s!ii&lt;e twice In the some place Is
!Ito! the same place isn1there the i8C"

G
b
_r:r~.,

BASEMENT

"*BISON "HORSE &amp; LIVE·

Finding a winning
backup chance

O.

20 Y•ra Exptritnct

L....;.;;;;;;.:;;;;;:.;:;::=:......l

~w~
42 Some

ll4iti.....

n

~'&lt;OU?

t~:t..."::.;":owr:

'-I 1. 1 I• I ..

...

fo\l~T~

en... ...,.,.,..~-

I&gt; ~

''

'

WlW. f&lt;\'( LIT\U"- ~~q;:-

: ClE!I.WICt&lt;.t
TO L .E T
ME OlJT OF

.

'

'"'c~lE.F, '(OU'{C:£ t'-\OT UPSE:T""' ,.EVERY~E.I!:&gt; ffillTl.ECTO' "'tT'=&gt; JU!&gt;HAAT YOU t&lt;f.EP..,.

HEY. GO

1969 AJ""ream (ragalong)
HOME
good cond~lon, 4/oow ~
IMPRovE!III'NfS
ll&lt;sldentloi•Com-.doi•~C..bldial
tires, AJC, new hot water
Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
'
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
tank.
new
plumbing. Decks. siding. roofing, floor·
Commercial building •For $~ 0,500 (304)675-44 75
• Plumbing • Elecuical no-387-0IM
ing , and all remodeling , WV Ollt92
OH 382"
• Accoustic Ceiling
7~12
Sate• 1600 square feet, oil
needs. No job too b,ig or
street pal1dng. Great IOca- 1999 Jayco Eagle 5th wheel small. . 10+ years experi·
tlonl 749 Third Avenue in 24' with slide. Mint condition, ence. Pomeroy and ,sur·
included,
extraS. roundln\l areas. Free estiGalli~s. Price "Negotilble" hitch
New roof! Motivated Seller! $7,999 . Localty located mates. 1·740-416-1471 .
[304)965·1513.
.
CoiiW
'

THE BORN LOSER ·

BIG NATE

.

~23 We:! oKe

CELEBRITY CIPHER

A\·ailable

Top•1rim•c.blt.-

DOWN

tome

TriiMde

24 Sug.lotlf
apoum
I OVeralls
':! Denictc or
216 Wlllrlng
Iron!
25 Chal
crane
.,._
2 llllltallllan 27 It may be
45 Very,_
28 Ealraly
3 Come
oplft
.
peopli
28 lniiiCI
' ungluod
2t Jun Auel 46 S.nlltrll
30 Loll,..
4 " ... ~
heroine
34 'WIIUng
11m
31 -de plume 48 ~--·
1110111
5 Type al
32 Wlnefy
gl~
36 flolln•y
eJ!!*iellce
eMit
49 Folilge
ahipoMnt
(hwh.)
33 Mr.~
50 flalae one's
38 Nal IIIII my 11
~
voice
3t c....lldlt
7 On the way 35 Mixes
54 Columbus
41 All, In
out
· together
sch.
COIItbos
8 8MWy post 37 Forces I .
42 8noltd
• Studlel
bill through
~
12 Dayal films 40 Library

Astro-

ComDieleTreeCore

Pollle word
11 Tor's reply 41

~~~
piCIIn
23 Sllvltgly
ldviM

tltJIIShlne.

r._~-oiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii-'· :;:::~;:==~

s,.

•n2-1m

"'te

plaint

ond round. Tho! is rN80111bie, aM ltore
would probably roauft In three no-trunlp
being played by Nonlt. But tt Is also ...,.·
slble to s!ari wlllt two no-trump.
There Is a strong 1ernpta!lon to win lhe
first !ria&lt; 1n hand and play of! the king·

,_,,,_

A tee of $20.00 will be
charged for earfy arrival.
late arrival , early removal,
late-removal, or anytime
access is wanted to
fairgrounds other than
slated dates. Building
space is first come
tirs1: serve.
"
Inside Storage; $4.00m
Open Span: $2 OOnf
Inside Fence: $1 .00i1t
COli 985-4372
for more intormatK&gt;n

opprovll

West-· Eul
Pass 3NT Allpus

-

I GOTTA QUIT
WALI&lt;IN' FIVE
MILE$ EVER'DA'f

_ , April21, 200~

:::;~1-~7~40~-~99~2~-6;1;96~~
ACE TREE SERVICE

'--IIi

of

HOW'S 'fORe
'DIET, LOWEEZ'f

WINTER ~ORME

Daily, Weekly, or
Monthly Plans

&amp;woiii!loi

~HoMES&amp;

-·

Affordable
Dependable
t-Ully Insured
&amp; Bonded

FOR SAl.£

Ful· blooded Borcem. NCT

Tt4t

Meigs County Fal=ndS
ArriYIII: Oc:l. 21,

Service

~~.R:'c~~be
. gar.~~~

-Mobile-.-ho-.,.--lot-wl_l_l--- (740)388·9325.
. Box
· fo
$2
...,.,......
~
er 1JUPP10S r sale 00 main1alned. $13,000, part2br. Apl. tor Rent downtown 16's, 14~, 12's wide. $125
3 • 4 Sr. house, 2 lull bath,
trade surprise me Info.
PI Ploasant, $350 a month month, dep &amp; ref. (740)367- per dog. (~)593-0898
garage. and basement. AIC
7995.
CKC
Jack
Russell
Terrier
304 882·3454
call Don (304)593-1994
and very clean . 740-949APARTMENTS
NOW
puppies. Call (740)256-1652
VAIII'i ~
2303.

. A~f

...11

CJean..ing

(740~~-

a 500pm.

AVAILABLE.

HaNwod cometrr And Filii• e

..6QI·a

I. .

Pole
Barns
30x50x10
$6,995. Painted metal, slider, free delivery. (937)718·
1471 ,
WwW.netionwide·
barns.com.

OLI&gt; Wfl(if4$

· BARNEY

LocaII

Ir

•

--

740-794-{1751
7411-."7-7442

~':!~
15~·
~1 . ·---~iiiiiiiiloo_.l
~
"--lllioiiiiiiiilili_... _______c._
2002 Olevy Cavalier, looks

1BA furnished apt, 1BA fur·
I'Uft
nlshed mobile home. No
pets. Ref!dep. required.
(
~ GalliPolis. Commercial building Mfor
Rent" 1600 sqUare feet, off
OH.
street parking. GreB1 loca-.
bedrms.,laundryrm.,rg&amp;
lion!
749 Third Avenue in
2
ref. furnished, Tst fl . clean, in Gallipolis. R~ "Negotiable·
city. (7 40)« 1·0596.
COli wayne (404)456-3802

~·ve GAitlfl&gt; Wf1Gt4T ••• IT'S
T~Vf WIMT TtteY SAY, "Tt¥ ·

Outlet

~ndl·

611 Wlnlor tom· 13

t K 7!

Opening lead: • Q

Se'll· II UW hrniiUrt ,.

~97 L1ncoln suut M1dtlk:pon. OH

H1ll s Self
Storace

Kohl~r

211 Word ol

2NT

NOW OPEN

Braided
Rug 8'x11' $50 196, Cadillac convertible . •
(304)675-6563
very good condition, ieather
JET
Interior, classic . (740)245AERATfON MOTOfiS
9142
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In --'-~----c-......... Gall A E
· 1 1990 Ch
oiUI.il\.
on vans, •
&amp;tl'f ·pick up 403
800-537·9528.
automatic, runs good , good
- - - - - - - - shape; 1988 Dodge Shadow
AND USED STEE runs good, air works good.
L Call (740)256·1.467.
Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar - - ' - - - - - - For
Concrete.
Angle, 1992 Honda Accord, one
Channel, flat Bar, Steel owner,
mint
condition,
Grating
For
Drains, $2,500. Call after Spm
Drlwweys &amp; Well&lt;weys. l&amp;L (740)446·8997.
Scrap Me18~ Open Monday, '--=-'-'=-'---Hours
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp; 1999 Chrysler Cirrus LXI,
"-'•-· 8a -4
C
loaded , low miles. clean,
7:00AM· 8:00PM
' nuay, m :30pm. losed
PG
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Thursda",
Saturda"
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(7
0)
2
3020
SUnday. (740)44&amp;-7300
wee ays,
4 74 •
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evenings/weekends.
New Marble Garden Tub, _ _: . . _ _ _ _ _ _
Exercise Health Aider Stiver ' 2000
Mercury
Grand
Fox fur Jacket,
tub Marquis, very gootJ
A
enclosure (304)875-7961
liOn.
76,000/mlles,
IYf.
AC,CD,PW seats, mirrors &amp;
304 75
$5,800 (
l6, •

One block from GAHS.
1 bdrm apt with stove, refrig Washer &amp; dryer hookup. for
$350. Water, sewer &amp; trash an application call (740}446pd.
(740)388-0173, 4639.
(74())367-7015."
.
Taking applications Modern
1 BR apt in Spring VaUey. 1 BA, no pe1s, $275/mo
HUO/PAC vouchers accept- lnctudes water &amp; sewer,
ed. W/0 hookups. Call $200/dep. Call (740)446•
(740)446-0834
[740)645
or
• 3817.
4°".o
(-II)
~ ~
·
Twirl Rivers Tower is accept·
1·br ~.&amp; 2 b_r _Ap~. near ing applicatiOns for wattlng
downtown afl uttltHMi lnctud- list for Hud-subsized 1- br
ed Security deposit and ref· apartment, Call 675-6679
erence required . no pets Equal Houelng Opportunity
(304)360-0163

19 FiniiM

-

'~ST!'

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1a~ng

Now
applications"'
one bed apartments at
Spring Valley, Green and
BrOOkside apartments. Call
(740)446·1599 for informati
~on_.- - - - - One bedroom apartment.
location: 403 112 Third Ave.

KJIOI83

Dealer: Soulh
Vulnerable; Both

K!mmy's Furniture

rt0

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month.

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Self-Storap"

c()pport--'-_un_H_ies_.____ bag N.B. coats, all $70. Ad.
740 256 6488
Nice 1 BR stove &amp; refr"'
· ___
·w rur-1-·_ _c&gt;__ _ _
Gallipolis,
OH
Phone Mobite Home sites tor up to · nished,
washer/dryer Burgandy litl Chair in excel.A• nno..~
(740)446·2003 or (740)446· 16x80 In Country Homes. hool&lt;up. Close lo hospital. lent
condition,
$250.
u ·~
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. [740)385-«119.
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Shades of green Oval ·--RllllliiiiiiSiliAill.£ii._.,J

•
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problem

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t A J 10 8 6

$108 per

992·3194
Or
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Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments a1 VINage
HAY &amp;
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and
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From $295·$444. Call 74Cl- Boy's clothee Size 4 &amp; 5· $2.00 e square bale. Call
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6
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17

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Sooillo

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12 bedroom, AIC, porch &amp;
awning. Very, very nice, no
pets. In Galllpolis.(740)4'6·
Thla n.wepaper will not
2003, (740)446·t409 or
know&lt;ngtyoc3.2 Acres in Morning Star (740)440-2692
'
tlehterti8el'l'lents for reel
Area wfright·A·Way. 740·
....w which Ia In
949-2544
3 bedroom trailer for rent
Yio41tion ot the law. Our
No pets. Trailer lot for rent.
r.ders ere hereby
9 Acres for sale at . 740-949-2237.
Informed thlt all
K1ngsbury. $35,000 OBO.
dwelling~ adverttaed In
Call 740-843·1047.
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1hll ,....,..,.... ...
Ferry call (304)674-4633
available on an equal
Almost 1 acre In Gallipolis
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Ferry area $6,850 on land 3Br. Aefridg &amp; Stove,Washer
contret:t (304)576-2934
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House and 10.77 acres "at
Mobile Home Lot for -rent
Mt. -Alto. Private with great
near Vinton. Call (740)441· For rent: Nice 2 bedroom
view, $r55,000 (304)895· 1111
mobile home in Country
3722
.
Mobile Home Lot In Johnson Homes. $:l25 + deposit.
Mobile Home Park In 1740)385-40 19· .
dl8crlm1Mt\on."

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1*1
....
51 e...,
10Wyo.
52~.

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Drive from $3ol9 to $448.
wa~ to ohap ·, tnoYioa. Clll
7-40~·2568 .
Equal

room mobile home. Address bath, large YJrd, No pets,
,322 JaCkson Ptka . eKtras $400 deposit, ~ per

1 1ngal

44 In

•

�Pllge BS • The Daily Sentine!

www .mydailysentinel.oom

Friday, October 13, 2006

An inside _look at this week's
game
.
.

Buckeyes have .ahistory with the Spartans
84g Ten
1IMms
W L Pet.
Michigan
3 0 1.000
Olio State 2 0 1.000
Iowa
2 1 .667
.. WisconsJn 2 1 .667
Penn State 2 1 .667
Purdue
1 1 .500
Indiana
1 1 .500
IllinoiS
1 2 .333
Mich. State 0 2 .000
N'l\llS!em 0 2 .000
Minnesota 0 3 .000

(),oerall

Wl
60
60
5 '1
51
42
42
33
24
33
24
24

Pet.
1.000
1.000
.833
.833
.667
.667
.500
.333
.500
.333
.333

-,. . "''"' - -.,.E''· ;:.

~, .. , L ""' ~~- .., ~ u,-o~

Minnesota at Wisconsin, noon
·Purdue at Northwestern, noon
Iowa at Indiana, noon
Ohio State at MiCh. State, 3:30 p.m.
Ohio Universitv at llliniOis, 7 p.m.
Michigan at Penn State, 8 p.m.

COLUMBUS- History
seems to be on a lot qf people's minds tlris week with
No. 1 Ohio State playing
Mlclrigan State..
Even some of the players
are doing it.
"History is always repeated
. and you don't want it to be
repeated on your watch," the
Buckeyes center Doug Datish
said, when asked if all this
talk of Olrio State football
history made much diff'erence
to modem-day players.
The first reference to his-

Pitwck said he wasn't watching
in 1998 when Olrio State
Jim
fell28-24 to Michigan State.
Naveau
"I didn't watch it as a kid. I ·
The UmaNews
guess I was riding my bike or
something," he said.
jnaveau@limanews.com
While 1998 goets most of the
419-993-2087
attention, the Spartans' 16tory most people go to iS; of
13 upset of No. 1 OSU in
course, the Spartans' stun1974 was nearly as stunning
ning upset of a No. 1-ranked and definitely weitder.
OlrioStateteam in 1998.
Ohio State went into that
Not all ofOhio State playgame with an !HJ record and
ers lived through that lristory Michigan State was 4-3-1.
the first time around, though. The Buckeyes led 13-3 early
Defensive lineman Quinn
in the fourth quartet; liut

center snap skipped past
quarterback Cornelius
Greene and running back
Brian Baschnagel picked it
up and ran into the end
Jackson.
zone.
Ohio State had one last
One official signaled touchchance. Fullback Champ ,
down buf another said time
Henson carried the ball to
just short of the goal line with bad run out before the snap.
29 seconds to go. Some say he
Then it got weird. It wasn't
until46 minutes after the
gut acroSs the goal !joe.
With no timeouts left,
final snap that Michigan
Ohio State was scrambling
State was declared the'winand Michigan State was tak- ner, an Qpinion delivered by
ing all the time it could. On Big Ten commissioner
the Buckeye5' final play, the Wayne Duke.
Michigan State eoored twice
in the final minutes. The goahead touchdown came on an
88-yard run by fullback Levi

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: MICHIGAN STATE (3-3, 0-2 BIG TEN}

•

I

Total Offense
Purdue .................:............. .465.3
Michigan State ................... .413.0
Penn State ....................... .. .406. 7

A look at 1he key matchup5 in Saturthe bulk of the runniJlg game to a
his weekly news conference about deday's ~ belY.een No. 1 ()lie Slate
pla)er of considerable bulk, 260-pound fensive tackle David Patterson haviflg
(6-0, 2{) Big Tel) &lt;nJ ~Slate Jehuu Caulcrick. He has 289 yams
arthroscopic knee surgery. But Patter(3.3, 0-2 ~Tel):
rushirg and six touchdowns.
son's mom revealed t1e had 1he
RirJIII!r's speed could be missed.
surgery and might be out until the
lai"Cl
Michigan, 1he Big Ten's be$t team
Minnesota game on Oct. 28.
Michigan State'sDrew Stanagainst !he run, helP caulcrick to 29
Joel Penton, Toed Denlinger.and
ton threw for career-best 340
yards last Saturday.
Doug Worthington will fill in fdl- Patteryaltts against Ohio Slate last
OSU's AntoniQ Pittman had his lowson until he returns.
season in a 35-24 OSU win
est rushing total of 1he season (61
Both teams' sack leaders are defendespite the Buckeyes getting a yards) 1\flen the Bucl&lt;eyes spread the
si\.e tackles, usually the province of 1he
school-record 12 sacks.
carries around in a 35-7 win over Bowl- .defensive ends. Pitcock leads OSU with
Stanton, like Ohio State's ing Green last 5a11Jrday. Backups Mau· · five and Clifton Ryan is Michigan
Troy Smith, is a threat to run rice Wells and Chris Wells got 12 of the Slate's leader with three. Otiio State
and pass. He is Michigan
25 carries by Ohio State 'runningbacks. has 20 sac~. best in the Big Ten. and
State's second-leading
AlhaA 41 :Ohio Slate
Michigan State is last with seven. ·
rusher With 302 yards. He
DAcl\lantaee:
a
I Ohio State
has completed 62 percent laulsas
Ted Ginn Jr. has nine career catches!f! I lie tlacks
of his passes for 1,187 .
yalds and 8 touchdowns,
for 50 yards or more the last three
MiChigan St;ite has given up more
but has been intercepted
seaSOIIS, with 1he most recent coming touchdown passes (15) than any Big
six limes.
on a 57-yard scoring play against
Ten team and more passing yards
Smith is first in the Big Ten
Bot.Wng Gleen. He had a career-best
_tharlliU but three league teams. Ohio
in pass efficiency and is 10th
10 catches in that game. Roy Hall
Slate has allowed only five TO passes
nationally. He is on pace to beriallltttfour passes against BGSU and all season. The Buckeyes~nkseoond
come the aiHime -Sjg Ten leader Ray Small got liis first career ID catch, in the Big Ten ·in passiflg yards allowed
Wide receiver f{eny Reed (26
and have 12 interceptions, compared
in that cale3JY. He leads Big Ten
catches, 334 yards, 4 TDs) leads
to five for the Spartans.
quarter!JadG with 15100chMich.111811 "'-- Matt li
.....0
Comertlack Demond Williams leads
'*- passes. He has not
""'"'·
rannon,
w•
'
MSU
with two interreptions. Free safely
thrown an illteroeption in five of
11
Otis
Wilson
is one of a loJ1g list of Sp!l'()lie State's six games.
coold
be
sidelined
because
of
an
tans
v.tlo
are
battling ir]jtres. Defensive
Stanton 'has not been as
·
·
Je
Scott
has
1"'
bacl&lt;s
~"liM'!
acmunted
for only 1ive of
productive or consistent as
ankle •llJury. namy
"
OSU's interceptions. Comerback MalSmith, He has not thrown
catches. MSU will be without its two
com Jenkins (•·~ ...,.""""'"""') is the
a touchdown pass in his top ~ends. v.no'were suspended
·~ "·~"""""" ~
for unspecified reasons.
only clefeRsil.e back with more than one.
last 10 quaners in a
""-• 7 ,,. Ohio Stale
AIM!• 1'1 :Ohio SUllie
40·3 7 loss to Notre
Dame, a 23-20 loss to
lhe..
s,.cillteu-·
Illinois and a 31-13
Here's a puzzle to ponder: Ohio
Michif1Pn State had kicking troubles
loss to Mictligan. He
all last season but never more so ltlan
has thrown for feoor State's offensive line is generally reat 1he end of the first ha~ at Ohio State
than 150 yards in
garded as one of the best in the Big
1\flen half the team thought it was kicktwo of the~
Ten. Only three Big len teams have al- inga field ,..,.1, halfthou""t it was sp~·klov.OO rewer sacks. But the Buckeyes
,......
"' •
three games.
rank 10th in 1he Big Ten in rushing
ingthe ball'and OSU gotthe last ~ugh
.-... 7 ••
yards, one spot ahead of Indiana and when Ashton Youboty blocked the kick
Olllos.t
and returned it for a touchdown.
I
I
one spot behind pass-happy Purdue.
The Spartans' kicking f1Pme isn1 a
Michi!llln Slate is averaging a Big ·
~ughiflg matter this year, though .
Ten-best 5.2 yards a cany when it
Kicker Brett Sv-enson is 7 of 9 on field
A knee inruns the ball but is two spots from 1he goals, with a long kick of 43 yards.
jury has side- bottom of 1he league in quarterbilck
Punter Brandon Relds averages 46.1
lined Michisacks given up.
yards a kick.
gan Slate's
Alita 1 I'll: Olllo SUllie
Ohio State kicker Aaron f'ettreiy is 4
bestrunn~
Del I I lue . .
of 7 on field {Pals. Punter AJ. Traback .laWn
When in doubt, ask Mom. Coach
passo averages 42.4 yards a kick.
Ri~. lealliflg
Jim Tressel didn't mention anything in
Mllai•'E41B: Michigan Sbllll

Minnesota .......•.................. 404.5
. Iowa .................................... 399.3

Rushillg Olfense
Mi:higan ...... ........................ 195.7
MiChigan State .................... 194.0
Penn State .................... ... 191.3
Wisconsin .........:..................186.8

llinols .................... .... .. ........ 183 .8

Pass Offense
Purdue ............................ :.307.0 .
lowa •..••.•• ............................ 236.3
Ohio State ..... .. . ...........235.2

11

OtlioSt.Me
d ereuatooe end
VaiiOII GhcJI..

sonlellds•
tum in tllddes

forloss.9.

Minnesota ... ...................... 224.0
Michiflan State .................... 219.0

Total Defense
WISCIOOSin ............................246. 7
Michjpn .............................. 250.3
fllem Stille •.••......................285.3
Ohio S1ale ••..•....................•300.7
lowa •.••••••••••.•......................319,7

RIIIIIIDefal&amp;e

=:r

:1: 2~;:~~

on .

PJ. Hll, Wisconsin .............. 847
Mile Hart, Mieh1gan .. ... .. :...... .

Tonv Hunt, Penn St.

............... . .. oc,

An!onio Pittman, Oh10 St...... ...628

. "'

Arnlr Pinnix, Minnesota ........... 553

a

PruingYards
Cutis Painter. Purdue .......... 1. 787
Blyan Cupito, Minnesota ...... 1.304
Trtl\l Smith, Ohio State .......... 1,261
~Morelli; Penn State .. 1.224
John Stocco, WISCOnSin ........ 1.196
Receiving Yards
Mano Manmng}lam. Miehigan .... 527
Donen Bryant, Purdue ... :......... .488
Ted Ginn Jr., OhiO St. .............. ..459
Logan Payne, Minnesota .......... 443
· OustJn Keller, Purdue ..... ... ... .429

.-Naw_.s
Platw of the YJaek

2006 OSU SCHEDULE
Sept. 2
Sept. 9

W 35·12

N. lllms

·w24 -7

@ Te&gt;as

WR -Ted Ginn Jr.

Conc•nnau
w 37 .7
Penn State
W 28-6
@ Iowa
w38·17
Oct. 7
Bov.11ng G""'n
W 35·7
SAI\JROAY @ Mk:ll. State 3:30 p.m.
~pt. 16

Sept 23
Sept. 30

Oct. 21
Oct. 28

lnd&gt;ana
MonrMlSOta

Nov. 4
Nov. 11
NOll. 18

@ llhno1s
@ Northweslem
MICh~n

P

'

c Vsds

Toudtdowus

-lie!•

pilli!IS

Troy Smitl1 .......... 1,26i

Aritonio Pittman ••. •.•.••. 7

... · -Vsds
Antonio Pittman ......628

SliCks
Tlldde&amp;
James l.aulinaitis ...... 50 Quinn Pitcock .............. s

RloM I ,..._.
Tac?lu for Loss
Ted G1nn Jr. •••••.••... .459 Vernon Gholston •........•9

James l.aurinaitis ........4

Field . . .
Aaron f'ettreY ............. .4

Ncion
3:30 p.m.
TBA
TBA
3:30 p.m.

Content com~led by J1m Naveau and
desi~ by Jeff Braun • The lJma New.;

Q;p;;;~ © 2o00 lJma N;;,:;;: Repro. ductiOn of all or any l))rtlon of tt11s matenal
is proh10ned wllhout ewpress consent.

Tee

Ginn caugllt a career-best 10 passes
for 122 yards and a touchdown in a 35-7
win owr Bowling Green.

·Ohio State leadecs ·

Say what?
"•I bring down I pj
thlt big as 1 team."
- Ohio ~ ta r e

dc·fen~ive

1: What is the Ohio
State season record
for interceptions?

2: What Ohio State
player has the season
recmd and career
record for sacks?

Michigan J$.

-ioState

3: Who was the last
Ohio State player to
intercept three
passes in a f1Pme?

end jay RichardsOn,

descrihin~ how to tackle
\1irhi~an S1a1e r unning hack

260-pound ,
jehuu Caulnck

"'-s: 1. 9 by Mike Sensibaugh a'nd Cra1g Cassady:
2. Mike Vrabel (12 and 36); 3. Damon MOore 1n 1996

days until kickoff

•
CHEYROL.ET • CADILLAC • PONTIAC • BUIC.K • GMC
218 ~ast Ma.n • 1-740-992-6614 or 1·810-837-1094 • Pon~eroy, OH
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-6; Sat. 9·4· Sun. 12-4 • www.mark orte m.com

'

October 13, 2006
A Special Supplement To The Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Poillt Pleasant Regi!iter and The Daily SentiiH:l

•

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