<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4881" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/4881?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-30T02:38:48+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14809">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/57849f2b3f588a7d6db25f865a3471cb.pdf</src>
      <authentication>11f4ec7152650d8ce03df6959b387433</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="16746">
                  <text>•

•

'

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinelcom

~~waii quake damage

Thesday, October 17, 2006

Free blood pressure,

· is estimated at
$46 million-plus, A2

glucose tests at
open house, A6

•

Giz
Middleport• Pomeroy, Ohio
:;oli'\IS•\ol .)h '\ P . )I

~

ROBO DOG

The perfect pet, robo dog playfu~wobbles about the house. He even ~ys,fetch· With ..
his very own cheese bone(.!_). Realistic drool feature@adds authenticity
. ·
to this exotic pet. Mouse feed &amp; mouse
.
.
feed with caffeine sold separately.
•

BY BRIM J. R&amp;D

. • All-lVC teams

POMEROY - It seems hard to
imagine in a county with the slate's
highest unemployment figures,' but
one local employer is experiencing
a shortage of the trained workers
he needs to manufacture and ship
his product.
Jim Kessinger of Mountaineer
Metals, located in the former
Midwest Steel building on West
Main Street, is having problems
finding workers who are able to do
the work in his aluminum ·process·
ing plant - and who are willing to
stay with the job.
Kessinge~ purchased the building
and moved his business here earlier
this year from Millwood, W.Va.,
because the facilities allowed him to
expand, but he's been unimpressed
with the JJDlential workforce here.
Frankly, Kessinger is having some
second thoughts about relocating
here, because the workforce here
has proven to be less than adequate.

.® ..

NOT SUITABLE FOR HOMES WITH CATS.

·0BmJARIES

m. underhill ·

BREEO@MVOAILYSOOINEL.COM

amounood See Page 81

USED BY MICE
EVERYWHERE FOR
CAT DISTRACTION

This high energy pet uses
dual mice motors plus a
wobblematic counter weight
system that ensure.s perky
performance under
any circumstance.

. "It's terribly discouraging,"
Kessinger said. ••t .c an) operate a
buisiness without help, and l can't
seem to find good people who are
willing to work."
Kessinger pays between $8 and
12 an hour for saw operato,s, fork·
lift operators and other laborers. He
said he "should have" 25 employees
on the site. He has only 10, and of
those workers, only three are Meigs
County residents. The rest live in
surrounding counties, including
Mason and Jackson, W.Va. ·and
Gallia County.
Kessinger has experienced persistent problems with e·mployees
who hire on to work and then last
only a few days - or even a few
hours. He said the app1icants who
seek work at his plant are consistently underqualified. He said pe
has seen an excessive supply of
welders trained through Meigs
-/
High School, and feels the commuWorkers at Mountaineer Metals cut, sort, ar:~d identify scrap aluminum prodnity oould do a better job of pro-

.......

Pin

•-'*'' c.AS

--------~--~--~----~----------~----------~------------------~"

• Lougean Chancey, 80

Racine officials .
disappointed in
new water weDs

BY Bml SfRGENT
·BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

INSIDE
• U.S. population
passes 3)() mlion.
See Page 14
~ Gamgers hear about
Health Department
services. See Page A3
• Southern to open
after-school enrichment
actil(ities. See .Page A3
•DuPoni:WorkeiS
exposed to C8 show no
ii1Cle8Sed m0r1ality risk.
See Page AS

• Family Medicine.
See Page NS

WF.ATHEit

BY Bml Satau•

•

SYRACUSE - Meigs
County was well represented at the recent 2006 State
Special Olympic Track and
Field Meet in Columbus at
The Ohio State University
and Jesse Owens Track and
Field Stadi~ -A'O.
local athletes joined 3,000
athletes from across Ohio
in competition.
Ability took center stage
as. opposed· to any disability
wttl!'!leveral athletes eamuig
top honors in their events.
Individual results for
Meigs County 3lhletes who ·
competed in dle games are as
follows: Michael Batton, 50
meter run, first place, softball
throw, first place; Manhew
Bella, 50 meter run, f01111h
place, softball throw, serond
place; Bill Brewer, standing
long jump, fOUI1h place, softball throw, first plare; Don

BSERGENT@MYDA.ILYSENTINEL.COM

PI

... - "

~~-me',

,AS

Athlete Bi.ll Brewer acknowledges fhe cr:owd updn receiving his first place medal for the softball throw at the 2006 State Special Olympics.

Council on Aging receives grants

When handle iS 'PlJShad in
dirrection shoWn will~ tit

· ·Jeft@or right@?

BY Cttuui:NE ILa

1CM

HOEFl.ICHII!MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

INDEX
l2

PAGI!S

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars
Classifieds
Editorials

Obituaries

As

®B~
•

ouo~

Sports
Each cplumn. row and square must use Js 7,2,3,&amp; 6, plus the
diagonals must add up to the • shown.(diagonals can

82-4

Bs
A4

Comics

·-··
Rw.a••••

A3
A3 .

Weather

8 Section
A6

POMEROY -TWo new
funding grants, one for
$60,000 for the Wellness
Center, the other for
$7,500 for a new respite
program,
have
been
received by the Meigs
County Council on Aging.
--~-~
The announcement came 2007 officers elected at the annual meeting
of the Meigs
at the annual meeting of County Council on ~ing Tuesday were from left, Kathryn
the Council on Aging held Hart, president, Paul Reed, vice president of personnel and
Tuesday morning ' at the finance; Betty Longenette, secretary; Ben Slawter, treasurer;
Senior Citizens Center. and Alice Wolfe. vice president of program and evaluation.
The $60,000 two-year
grant was given by the time but at a Jesser figure.
program at the Center. Darla
Sisters of St. Joseph
$
Charitable
Foundation .
The · ?,500 grant COJl)eS Hawley, assistant director,
The Sisters have been pro- · from
the
Brookdale who wrote the grant, noted
that il will be for patients
viding suppon for the Foundation and will be used
Well ness Center for some- to develop a daycare respite
P11ase- APic. AS

........

a~o~oe
•

RJKI1 e, AS

URG grouridbreaking set for Friday
S!I'Aff' Ita CRl
POMEROY - Local, state, and federal officials will be'
on hand at II a.m. on friday to officially kick off the con;
struction ·Of lhe University of Rio Grande/Rio Grand(!
Community College Meigs Center.
,
The pmjected $2.3 million, 12,000 square foot school
will "serve as a catalyst for higher education and training
in Meigs County," Economic Development Director
Perry Varnadoe said.
The center wiU be built neu to Meigs Local Middle
School on· seven acres of land donated by the Meigi .
Local School District along U.S. 33. The project is a joint
effort between the Meigs County · Community
Improvement Corporation, which will build the facility,
and Rio Grande.
The Appalachian Regional Commission has committed
$400,000 to the project, Rio Grande has received a
$200,000 capitol budget allocation to assist, and Pomeroy
Attorney Bernard Fultz has contributed $200,000 to make
this facility a reality.
.
''This is a great example ofa community working togeth ~
er to fill vital community need," said CIC President Paul
Reed. "This just adds 10 the optimism we feel about the
future of Meigs County."
·
:
The project is expected to begin construction before
the end of the year, and hopes to be ready for students
late in 2007.

a

®OU8 BOD\)

·~ ®B~UU ~~00~
·~ ®BU. OOODO .• ®UII~
·• ®

PI i• -

NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

New officers
elected for 2007

'

2 SocnoNS -

RACINE To say
Racine officials are disappointed in the progress of its
new water wells is an
understatement.
.
At this week's ~ssed
. session of Racine Village
Council the hot topic was
the design on the new wens
ooming up short. The wells
were designed for 500 gallons ,per minute (GPM) but
well four has ended up with
250 GPM and the other,
well five, for 125 · GPM.
Representatives from RLM
Engineering said the data
' umples taken for both
we11s before drilling were
nearly identical though
..fine materials" were dis·
covered in well 5 after·
wards. These fine materials
include vines and the well
5I tntltkl.......,
also contains clay both of

Buffiitgton, I 00 meter walk,
· fifth place, softball throw,

•

......

ucts. rhe owner of the Pomeroy-based oompany has eKperienced significant
problems finding and retaining a qualll,y workforoe since locating here .

Page AS

One of the keys to cartooning is the ability to draw your
character's face in a complete range of angles and still have it
look like the same person. So far we've been working with the
most basic and thus most boring view, straight on.@For the next
several weeks we'll be working on how to. rotate heads.

.. . ,,

Pomeroy aluminum processor finds workforce lacking·.

SPORTS

·lzmos
C'. Gadnets
G II

'''"""!.""""'

\\111'\ l '- fl \) . l )li()IHI{ IS .:.! o &lt;lto

D.

,..

rJO@

-I
I ...
•

coo~

I

I

EACH SYMBOL StANDS FOR A LffiER

•

.,

I

•

�NATION •

.The Daily Sentinel.

PageA2

WoRLD

w~. OctGber

18, eoo'6

u.s. populatioit pa9JrS-

Community Calendar

million; next milestone, 2043
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

""""*

An unidentifjed ,man walks past the Kalahlkiola Congregational Church in Kapaau, Hawaii, after the church -w as damaged
by an earthquake Monday.
·
I

I .. ,
'

'

I
BY soon UNOLAW

stream in, Snyder said.
debris removal and other
The damage · estimate emergenc:y purposes.
included $31 million for
A Federal Emergency
KAILUA-~ONA, Hawaii schools, $!1 mill'ion at · Management Agency team
- Prelimin!!fY damage esti- Kawaihae harbor, $4.89 arrived on the island of
. mates fi:om the earthquake million to
businesses, Hawaii on Tuesday to begin
that shook Hawaii over the $650,000
to
hl'lmes, surveying damage.
weekend hit $46 million on $800,000 to roads and
Sunday's magnitude-6.7
Tuesday, lind President $750,000
to
hrid!les, earthquake
was
the
Bush declared a major dis- Snyder said.
strongest to hit the islands
aster, opening the way for
Gov. Linda Lingle said in more than two decades.
federal aid.
durin~ a news conference No
deaths or serious
Damage to seven schools that 1t was premature to injuries were reported, and
and a harbor on the island provide a statewide dam- . the damage appeared to be
of Hawaii accounted for age estimate.
scattered, allowing most
most of the preliminary fig"I think we're going to .tourists and residents to
. ure, said Janet Snyder, a see damage that we didn't resume life as normal.
spokeswoman for Hawaii see immediately," she said,
The quake struck near
County Mayor Harry Kim. noting that some homeown- Hawaii's Big Island, a
Damage to businesses, ers discovered roof leaks · 4,000-plus-square-mile ;Sie
homes, roads and bridges during Monday's rains.
with :a population cf
accounted for the rest.
The president's disaster 167,.000. Most of its -'land is
"These figures are going declaration makes federal undeveloped or agricultural
to change radically, I aid available to .the state and
By comparison, the magbelieve," because infor- local governments and non- nitude-6. 7 earthquake that
mation
continued
to profit organizatinns · for struck the Los Angeles~
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER .

I

&lt;-:. .~I,-

in 1994 caused $25. billion
in dam~~ge.
The damage estimate is
key because it could
become part of the state's
request for federal assistance.
.
The q_uake was the second maJor natural disaster
to hit Hawaii this year. In
. April, heavy rains pounded the islands, contributing to a dam break that
killed seven people. The
rain also caused a major
sewer line .to rupture, closing
_ W
'\'\aikiki beaches.
· . The state estimated that
,tiJe flood damage exceeded
$SO million. It is spending
tens of millions more .t o
replace sewer lines.

Associated
Pl'e:ss
Writers Jayme:s Song and
Audrey McAvoy contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON
Maybe there will he a bigger party when the population hits 400 million. Save
the date: 2043.
America's official population. passed the 300 million mw;k Thesday, fueled
'by a .growi~~g number of
immigrants -and ;their .children.
1be moment, recorded at
7:46 a.m. EDT, passed with
little fanfare, pel'haps dampened by a divisive debate
-over illegal immigration
and .the fact that many
experts think the populati?n
had already hit the 300 m1l - ·
lion mw:k months ago.
. 1bere were no fireworks
o0r government-spopsored
celebr.ations. Just a written
.statement from President
Bush near the end of the
wor'k day, welcoming the
milestone as "further proof
that the American Dream
remains as bright and hopeful as ever."
"It's a couple of weeks
before an election when
illegal immigration is a
high-profile issue, and they
don't want to make a big
deal out of it," said William
frey, a demographer at the
Brookings Institution, a
Washington think tank.
lt'1&gt; been 39 years since
the U.S. population reached
200 mi11ion. Since then,
about 55 perrent of the
growth has come from
immigrants, their cl;lildren
and -their grandchildren,
according to a recent report ·
by the Pew Hispanic
Center, .a
nonpartisan
research organization.
In other words, if -the U .S .
had cut off all immigiation
since 1'967, the population
would be about 245 million
- and a lot less diverse,
said Jeffrey Passel, a senior
demographer .at the center.
"We've had much more
Asian and Latino .immigration than white .and black,"
liaid Passel, the study's
author. "That has led to the
=ial and ethnic diversity
that we have today."
When the population hit
200 million in 1'967, more
than
SO percent of
Americans were white and
less than 5 percent were
Hispanic. ~s than I per-

Clubs and
organizations

cent were A-sian.
Today, Hispanics make up
nearly l.'i percent of the
population and Asians aboqt
5 percent. Wh1te nonHispanics account for about
67 percent, black'.; a little
more than 13 percent.
By 2043, white · nonHispanics are expected to
he a little more than half. '
That's the year the population is projec.Jed to hit 400
million, thot:~gh the numbers
could change signifiC8ntly
depending on immigration
and birth rates.
In
1967,
President
Johnson held a news conference at the Commerce
Department to mark the 200
million
milestone.
He
hailed .the country's past
and talked about the ·chlille~~ges ahead. Life magazine
dispatched a cadre of photographers .to find .a baby
born .at the exact moment,
anointing a boy -born :in
Atlanta as the 200 millionth
American.
This year, there's a good
chance the 300 millionih
American · walked across
the bord_er fr-om Mexico
m011ths ago.
.
Commerce
Secretary ·
Carlos &lt;Jnrierrez, himself an
immigrant from Cuba, said
the Bush administration
iim •t playing down the milestone, though no public
events were scheduled.
"I would hate to .think that
we ak going to be low key:
about this," said Gutierrez,
whose department oversees
the Census Bureau. "I
would hope that we make a ·
big deal about it."
Gutierrez said America's
growing population is good
for the economy. He noted
that Japan and some
European countries expect
to lose population in the
next few decades, raising
concerns that there won 'I be
enough young people entering the work force to support a~in~ populations.
"Th1s IS one more area
where we seem to have an
advantage," Gutierrez said.
"We should all feel good
about reaching this mile-

W~y,Oct.18

MIDDLEPORT
Special
meeting,
Middleport Lodge, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m : for work in
entered apprentice degree.
Refreshments.
POMEROY - Middleport
Litenuy Club, 2 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Lihracy. Leah Ord
to review "The March" by E
L. Doctorow. Phyllis Hackett.

hostess.
Thursday, Oct. 19

POMEROY
The
American Cancer Society
Meigs County Advisory
Boerd, annual meeting,
noon, Wild Horse Cafe.
lunch provided, RSVP at
992-6626, ext. 24.
POMEROY - AA open
discussion, 7 p.m., Sacred
Heart Church.
POMEROY Meigs

BY ROXA«&lt;A HEGEMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

"

"

·-

Essam Heggy, right. compares an image of a meteorite on
his ground-penetrating radar with the actual meteorite while
Houston Museum of Natural Science while workers Andy
Smith, left, and Chris Flis look on as they dig up the find in
a field near Greensburg, Kan. , Monday.
sentence we add to the ·hook
to understand the evolution
of the solar system," Essam
Heggy, plaitetary scientist at
the Johnson Space Center's
Lunar
and
Planetary
Institute in Houston.
Even before they had the
pallasite meteorite out of the
ground. the scientific experts
at the site were able tO
debunk prevailing wisdom
that the spectacular Brenham
m_eteorite fall occurred
20,000 years ago. Its location in the Pleistocene epoch
soi I layer puts that date closer to I 0,000 years ago.
"We know it is recent, ..
said · Carolyn Sumners,
director of Astronomy at the
Museum
of
Houston
Natural Science. as ~he surveyed progress on the dig.
"Native Americans could ·
·have seen it."
The expedition was put
together by the Hou ston
Museum of Natural Science
itpd led by meteorite hunters

Steve Arnold and Philip
Space
M ani.. Johnson
Cemer's
Lunar
and
PlanetarY l nstitute, the Rice
Space Institute at Ri~
University and .G eorge
Observatory in Houston
also sent researchers.
Fewer than I percent of the
meteorites discovered on
earth are pallasite meteorites,
known for their ctystals
embedded in iron. Mani said..
Sophisticated metal detectors at the site initially
detected what had been
thought to be the largest pallasite meteorite ever discovered. But ground-penetrating
radar showed that the object
was only a steel C&lt;tble. ·
The Brenham field was
discovered
in
1882.
Scientists have since traced
pieces uf the shower as far
away as ln.dian mounds in
Ohio, indicating the meteorites were traded as pieces
of jewelry and ceremonial
artifact,.

,

Church events

Other events

was draped for members,
Mary Easterday and Pauline
Ridenour before members
and grandchildren nf the
deceased. Pledges to the
American an Onistilm flags,
singing of the National
Anthem, and reciting the
Lord's Prayer, along with
scripture reading were includ-·
ed in the opening ceremony.
Nathan Biggs and ~
Hollon were reported Ill.
Balloting for candidates
was conducted and Grant
was escorted to the altar
111here she was presented a
gift for accepting the commission for council deputy.

Sunday, Oct. 22
ALBANY Revival
Point Rock Church of the
Nazarene. S.R. 689, Albany,
Sunday, ll a .m. and 7 p.m.,
and Oct. 23, 24 and 25, 7
p.m. nightly. 'Oct. 22-25, 7
p.m . Dave .Canfield . of
Rush, Ky. , evangelist. Rev.
Lloyd Grimm, pastor.
'WI\dnesday, Oct. 25
LANGSVILLE
.
Evangelist Gary Polard,
M uUins, W.Va., speaking 7
p.m. Oct. 25-27 at the House
of Healing Ministries, S .R.
124, Langsville. Special
singing nightly. .

Birthdays
Saturday, Oct. 21
LONG BOTTOM ~ileen Ba:hr will observe
her 81 st birthday on
SatuFday, Oct. 21. Cards
may be sent to her at 37837
Green Up Lane, 'Long
Bottom, Ohio 45743.

Smith was also give a gift
for accepting the position of
district deputy. Smith gave
the inspection repon, It was
noted that the next meeting
will be held on Oct. 31
instead of on Election Day.
Attending were Charlotte
Grant, Everett Grant, Opal
Echinger, Jean Welsh, Mary
Holter, Arden Depoy, Janet
·Depoy, lnzy Newell, Sandy
White, Thelma White, Doris
Grueser, JoAnn Ritchie, Julie
Fleming, Ruth Smith, Mary
Jo Barringer, Oplil Hollon,
Laura Mae Nice. Gary
Holter, Esther Smith, Goldie
Frederick, and Helen Wolf. ·

the Senior Center earlier
this month. Thank you notes
were read froni Opal Dyer
and Adam Philliips.
Legislative chairman Roy
Grueser talked about the use
of blue gills in New York
City and San Francisco
being used to keep drinking
water safe. The programs
3fe monitored by computers.
Members were reminded to
start bringing in canned
goods for December.
. Officers for next year
were . installed.
Opal

Grueser reported on activities of a committee to collect hooks for Tomasi
School in North Carolina.
She will he accepting both
paper and hardback books
m good condition.
Vada Hazaeton
was
reported ill. Helen Quivey
presented a program 9n
~range
procedures and
mstructions after which
members discussed various
rules . of · the Grange .
November meeting will be
preceded hy a ham dinner.

Southern to open after-school enrichment activities

Scientists find unusualllieteorite in Kansas field
using technology that rriight aid ~em on MatS
GREENSBURG, Kan. Scientists were excited
when they pulled a !54pound meteorite from deep
below a Kansas wheat field,
hut what got them most
electrified was the way they
unearthed it.
The team Monday uncovered the find 4 feet under a
meteorite-strewn field using
new
ground-penetrating
radar technology that some-.
day might be used on Mars.
It was t)lat technology
which pinpointed the site
and proved for the first time
that it could he used to find
objects buried deep in the
groufld a nd to make . an
accurate. three -di mensional
image of them.
"It validates the technique
so we can use something
similar tn that instrument
when we go to Mats," said
Patricia Reiff, director of
the Rice Space lnstihlte. · ·
Such GPR systerm had
been used in the past to
locate smaller meteorites
through
the
1ce
m
Antarcti ca : But until the
Kansas dig, the technology
had not been successfully
used for ground detection in
heavy soil;- like on Mars
- to find meteorites or
water there.
The dig' was likely the
mo;t documented excavation yet of a meteorite find,
with researchers painstakingly using brushes and hand
tools to preserve evidence of
the impact trail and to date
the event of the . meteorite
strike. Soil samples also
were bagged and tagged and
organic material preserved
for dating purpo'e'.
"When we find a piece of
meteorite. each one is a new

County Retired Teachers Fellowship.
will meet for noon luncheon
Saturday, Oct. ll
at Trinity Church, Second
POMEROY Hysell
and Lynn in Pomeroy. Ray Run Community Church, 6
Hoellar of the Ohio p.m. cookout and games for
Consumer Counci I will the kids. Call :992-5275 or
speak on "Saving on our 992-7442 for more inforUtility Dollars." A men's mation.
quarter will entertain.
Reservations to 992-3214.
Guests are welcome.
RACINE PomeroyWednesctay, Oct. 28
Racine Masonic Lodge 164,
POMEROY
-Services 7
7:30 p.m. at the .L hall.
p.m.
through
Oct.
22 at the
Refreshments.
Bible
Holiness
Pinegrove
SaiDn'lay, Oct. 21
Church, Rowlesville Road
POMEROY - AA Big
·
Book Study, 8 p.m., Sacred off Route 325. Rev. Victor
Nelson, Chauncey, speaker,
Heart Church.
Sonny and Connie Hudson,
singers. Sunday service, 6
p.m. Pastor Odell Manley,
992-7276.
1Vednesday,~.l8
Thursday, Oct. 19 .
MlDDLEPORT -Free
MIDDLEPORT -Noncommunity . dinner, chili, · denominational community
sandwich, dessen, begins 5 women's Bible study will
p.m., old American Legion he held from 6:30 to 8 p.m.
Hall on North Fourth, spon- on Thursdays at Rejoicing
sored hy Oasis Christian Life Church.

Grangers hear about Health Department services

The U.S. adds about 2.8
million pl!{lple a year, a
,growth rate of less than I
percent.
Bureau
The · Census
counts the population every
10 years.

RACINE- Jody and Ryan
Norris of Racine announce
· the birth of a daughter, Marlo
· Manhattan Norris, born Aug.
29 at Camden Clark
Memorial Hospital. She
weighed 7 pounds, 7 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Laura Hupp and Richard
Johnson of Racine. Paternal
grandparents are Darrell and
Jan Norris of Racine.
Maternal great-grandparents
are the late -Bonnie and
Charles 1beiss and Ruby and
the late Don Hupp. Paternal
great-grandparent~ are Joseph
and Earlene Stobart and the
late Fritz Norris and DOnna
and the late Dallas Hill.

Suspect a natural gas leak?
First, move your feet!

Then call
the stt eet.
. when you're down
.
~ or in, di!tteding a natural gas leak is easy. To help you 5n' 1 a leak from a gas
line or appliance, a familiar odor like rotten eggs is often added to natural gas: Or you

might• blowing dirt, bubbling water, or an IJni.ISUIII area of dead veg(rtation. A lealdng
pipeline might also make a hissing sound you ami'EAIL
Natural ges pipelines 11re the nation's safest method of transporting energy. ~ile it'S

unlikely 1hat a problem could ocrur, accidents can happen.Remember 1Xl all the Ohio
Utilities Prot8ction Service (OUPS) at 1-S00-362-2764 at least two wo~icing days before
you start tD dig for any landscaping or &lt;Xli'1SirlJ¢on project on yo\/T property-it's the

Brooks birth.
announced

law! And ~you 'eYer suspect a gas IQak-.lli: away, right away. When .P..,•re dear of tile

area, call yoor local natural gas company or 9-1-1 for emergency "'Sfl?' ISe.

,

•

ALBANY - Amanda and
• Andrew Brooks of Albany
announce the birth of a
daughter, Avery' Noelle, born
on Sept. 26 at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in Athens.

i

•
Th's safety owareness message is brought 1o I""' by the llii!Ural 98' member companies of the
.
'
Ohio Gas Associarion.

•

based requirement and
then on an as-needed
has is, according · to the
superintendent.
Any interested ·s tudents
with a need or desire to
enhance their learning
should contact district coordinator Kim Roush at
Southern Elementary as
soon as possible to sign up

'·.

For further information
contact Kim Roush at 740949-4222. Slots will be
served on a first-come, first
served basis. The program
is slated to begin the week
of October 23, so early
enrollment is essential.

.~ HEAtT:H
'and
.
.

'

,.

'

SAFElY FAIR
.
s•turday, PctOber 21
•

.

"

"'

.

'·,

8:30 AM ~ 12 Noon

••*al .CM:luEcluctiiJon &amp;C.tliw8ftCt Centw .
•

ltolllr
•

EnterfhfWgh the ASU~ Jocafld at the..,d lhe fac;Dy on Jad&lt;sotJ PiMt in.Gallipolis.

'f« more infom::atiori, a.ll

(740) "4e5671
•

FREE SCRfiEIINGS
4Noi1J al htMRliiYl

lfl

Noir-fl a· 41 Clo 'II II 'Q' n Glucme,
fllllod P'n I I ft, ~ n.80ne»--ly.

tltlwllaua: t/eb:st or AntS ktyHOUil
Ga.,olls ._tw::tnr flN .,._,::tnt

ttnplal- Cue::•~ ~ . ...,..
... •......AMI IIIIlCh ...,.,

•

..

or request further information. All transportation will
he offered, it was reponed.

And )oJn us_ our 2iJti_Mnual

Norris birth
announced

Wednesday, October 18, 2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

CHESTER- Recognition
of national and state officers
along with deputies was a
part of the recent pro~ at
the October meetmg of
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters -o f America.
Recognized were Jo Ann
Ritchie, national ways and
means;
Doris Grueser,
national legislative committee; Mary Jo Barringer, past
state councilor; Esther Smith,
district depot}.'. and Charlotte
·Grant,oouncl! deputy.
·
A potluck ~ preceded .
the Friendship Night meeting
held at the Masonic hall with
POMEROY . - Jasmine Ritchie presiding. The charter
Br~wer who has been
involved
in
Sunburst
Beauty Pageants for several
years has been named a promoter for the pageant.
She will be traveling " POMEROY - A proaround with her mother gram on the services of the
Health
speaking about participation . Meigs County
Department
was
presented
and handing out flyers and
posters. The pageant is avail- ~y Courmey Sims and Linda
able to girls birth to 27 and ·Eastman at a recent meeting
boys birth to three years. Next of Hemlock Grange.
· They announced a flu
pageant will he beld 6 p.m. on
shot
clinic tentatively
Nov. 4 at the University Mall
scheduled
for Oct. 2 7 from
jn Athens. Details of pageant
participation and attire can be 9 to II a.m. and I to 3 p.m.
obtained at 222.sunburstbeau- at the Senior Citizens
ty.com .or hy contacting the Center, and Oct. 30 and 31
at the Health Depanment.
Brewers.
Jasmine will be returning Also discussed was "A Bee
to Atlanta, .Ga. next August R.E.A.DJ." meeting held at
to take part in international
competition. She is the
daughter of Stephanie and
Charlie Brewer, Jr.
RACINE Southern
Local School District su~­
intendent
Mark
M11ler
announced today that the district will be offering an afterschool enrichment program
for students grades 3-8.
The program, which is currently recruiting students,
was made possible by a
county-wide TANF grant
through the Athens-Meigs
Educational Service Center
and will run Monday through
Thursday 3:15 to 5:30p.m.
Students will be offered
services first pn an income

-stone." ·

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

, The Daily Sentinel

Relatives' attitude
enrages reader
BY KA11fy

MITCHEll
AND MARCY SuGAR

. l don't mind petting the
cat, but l don't feel comfortable picking it up, and my
Dear Annie: My step- son is quite allergic.
daughter is 49 and in the Thankfully, my daughter
hospital with terminal can- has been here to take it outcer. We live three hours side, hut she has now gone,
away. but tty and see her ·off to university and l am
once a week. Her hushand 's really tired of not being able
family also visits often.
to get ·into my own house
What I can't figure out is without worrying if this cat
that on my husband's side is going to sneak in.
of the family, there are three
T don't want to make ene"
aunts and four first cousins mies in my new neighborwho all live in the same city, hood , hut this situation is
hut not one of them has vi,- annoying. I have lonked
ited. These cousins played into some of the chemicals
together as children . My that are supposed to keep
husband 's twin sister feels animals away. hut l don't
fine about it because she know if they are safe. By
and the · other siblings the way. the cat does not
chipped in and sent flowers. wear a collar, and I'm pretty
Wow!. Yet I know for a fact sure it has given me fleas .
they all will he crying at the -Mostly .Just Annoyed
Dear Annoyed: Do yqu
funeral. What a hunch of
hypocrites.
know the owners? Pay a
I think -these are selfish visit and explain that your
people who can't he both- · son is te~ribly allergic and
ered with a sick person. I you're so sorry, hut you
would like to give them a . really can't have their
piece of tny mind, but my adorable cat near your
husband says, "What goes house. (The owners also
around comes around." I may he in violation of local
sure hope you print this ordinances about roaming
before my stepdaughter . pets.) If you don ' t know the
passes away. Maybe one of owners and the cat has no
them will read it and feel identification, you would
guilty. - Stepmom from not. be faulted for assuming
Canllda
the cat is a stray. Call the
Dear Canada: Even if humane society.
they did, it's no guarantee
Dear Annie: We recently
your letter will change their were invited to celebrate a
behavior. Some people sim- relative 's birthday at a local
ply cannot deal with illness restaurant, and · we all
or death, especially when it brought gifts. When we
involves someone close .. arrived, the server asked
They stick their heads in the which couples were togethsand and pretend it isn't seri- er so she could keep the
ous, hoping if they continue cheoks separate. Many of
to lead normal 1ives, every- us were surprised. We
thing will remain normal.
assumed we were guests.
Can you offer to pick up Some of us would not have
"Aunt Sue" and take her to chosen this restaurant had
the hospital with you? She we known we had to pay
might be more inclined to for our own meals.
How can we know if we
go. Regardless, your husband is right that life has a are guests or not? ....:...
way of evening out, and it Perplexed
.
won't provide any comfort
Dear Perplexed: When
if you rail against his rela- invited to a birthday party, it
tives. You are a loving step- js correct to assume you are
mother, and he surely needs a .guest unless told otheryour steadiness at this diffi- wise . However, a lot of
·
cult time.
ignorant people these days
Dear Annie: Two months think being a guest means
ago, we moved into a small. you pay for everything.
upscale
neighborhood. Sony
We've met a couple of the
Anni~ 's Mailbox is writneighbors, hut only to say ten by Kathy MitcheU and
hello. We have, however. . Marcy Sugar, longtime edimade the acquaintance of tors of the Ann lAnders
one of the neighbors· cats.
column. Please e-inail vour
This cat has made us its questions to anniesmailnew family. I don't mind if box@comcast.net, or write
it comes over for affection, to: Annie~ Mailbox, P.O.
but it sits in front of our Box 118190, Chicago, IL
door and waits for us to 60611. To find our more
come home. If it sees us about Annie's Mailbox,
inside, it scratches on the and read features by other
window and screen to be let Creators Syndicate writl!rs
in . We had the garage door and cartoonists, visit the
open the other day. and the Creators Syndicate Web
cat strolled inside.
page at www.creators.com.

�The D8ily Sentinel
.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court SIIM1• Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
-.myclliltysenttnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing.co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the free4om of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceablp to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First A~ndment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Tooay is Wednesday, Oct. 18, the 291st day of 2006.
There are 74 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 18, 1962, Dr. James D. Watson of the U.S., and
Dr. Francis Crick and Dr. Maurice Wilkins of Britain, were
named winners of the Nobel Prize for Medicine and
Physiology for their work in determining the double-helix
molecular structure of DNA.
On this date:
In 1648, Boston s!)oemakers were authorized to form a
guild to protect their interests; it's the first American labor
·
organization on record.
In !892, the first long-distance telephone line between
New York and Chicago was officially opened (it could only
handle one call at a time).
In 1898, the American flag was raised in Puerto Rico
shortly before Spain formally relinquished control of the
island to the U.S.
In 1931, inventor Thomas Alva Edison died in West
Orange, N.J., at age 84.
In 1940, Britain reopened the Burma Road linking
Myanmar with China, thnee months after closing it.
In 1982, former first lady Bess Truman died at her home
.in Independence, Mo., at age 97.
Ten years ago: Democratic Party fundraiser John Huang
was relieved of his duties following days of attacks by the
Republicans over what they called improper and possibly
illegal contributions.
Five years ago: CBS News announced that an employee
in anchorman Dan Rather's office had tested positive for ·
skin anthrax. Four disciples of Osama bin Laden were sentenced in New York to life without parole for their roles in
the deadly 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies in Africa.
One year ago: Tropical Storm Wilma strengthened into a
hurricane as it continued on a path toward Mexico's
.Yucatan Peninsula, then south Florida.
Today's Birthdays: Singer Anita O'Day is 87. Former
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., is 85. ~ock-and-roll performer
Chuck Berry is 80. Sportscaster Keith Jackson is 78. Actor
Peter Boyle is 71. Football coach ·Mike Ditka is 67. Actor
Joe Monon is 59. Actress Pam Dawber is 55. Author Terry
McMillan is 55. Gospel singer Vickie Winans is 53. Tennis
player Martina Navratilova is 50. Actor Jean-Claude Van
Damme is 46. Jazz musician Wynton Marsalis is 45.
Actress Erin Moran is 45. Actor Vincent Spano is 44. Rock
musician Tim Cross (Sponge) is 40. Tennis player Michael .
Stich is 3'8. Singer Nonchalant is 33. Rock musician Peter
Svenson (The Cardigans) is 32. Actor .Wesley Jonathan is
28. Country singer Josh Gracin is 26. Country musician
Jesse Littleton (Marshall Dyllon) is 25. Actress Joy Lauren
is 17. Actor Tyler Posey is 15.
.
Thought for Today: "The strongest are those who
renounce their own times amj becoine a living part of those
yet to come. The strongest, and the rarest." - Milovan
Djilas (I 911- I995 ), Yugoslav .author and politician.

OPINION

VVednesday,~obert8,2oo6

..

And your ~008 hopifuls are • • •

Did I miss a year or two?
she being Hillary Clinton- sniping at Romney, will vie
Did I black out? My calenPodhoretz insists Rudy with the governor for the
dar says it is 2006 but the
Giuliani is the only one who nomination. And a wjld card
political talk suggests it is
can beat Hillary. I'm not so like Newt pingrich may try
2008. I just got back from a
sure.
to spoil · the otherwise twoswank
celebration
on
Fact is, unlike political man contest. There are just
Kathryn
Capitol Hill to mark the
dorks,
most
normal over a dozen months now
Lopez
1Oth
anniversary
of
.
Americans don't even know until the Iowa Caucus.
National Review Online,
the alternatives to the celelis
But as the example of
the Web' magazine I edit.
whose names are so often George Allen demonstrates,
One of the stars of the night
floated for the White House. a lot can happen in far less
was
Mitt
Romney, live primary voters. When There's time; in other time
than that.
The
Republican .governor of the Arizona Republican words, 'for them to get to Republican senator from
Massachusetts, of whom tried impressing ·another know ·Mitt . . For what it's Virginia was long presumed .
I've long been fond and right wing talk-show host, worth, I wouldn 't even put among the 2008 favorites.
whom I have been semi- Laura Ingraham (it was a money on Rody running.
Essentially, he and Romney
shamelessly boosting for first appearance on her
l.' m a Manhattan gal and would be dueling to chaithe While House.
· show for McCain, in con- I' II admit there was · an lenge McCain for frontrunMore impartial reponers trast to Romney 's many), undeniable change when he ner status going into the
suggest that my 500-strohg- the host very obviously not was mayor: On some Republican primaries.
conservative-packed party impressed, in good hull)or imponant urban issues his
But when what was supwas a hit for Romney. As fixated on McCain's going record is clear and a success . posed to be a relatively easy
D.C.'s must-read d~ly on about the Eagles when story. Rudy, thou~h , before reelection contest for him
newsletter The Hotline her introductory · music ·for he,was "America s mayor," this year went awry th!lllks
wrote the morning after: him was actually from the · showing real leadership in .to a mix of Allen bungling
''The buzz" about the gover- Steve Miller Band:·
the wake of 9/11, was not an and old stories about racism
·
obvious
candidate for · a as a college kid, his presinor at the party "was almost
Even as Romney and
audible: McCain alterna- McCain were couning con- national Republican ticket.
dential prospects were murAs a Washington Post dered both by his own hand
tive." John McCain is a servatives, Democrat Mark
media favorite frequently Warner
reporter
has put it, "Those and by a relentlessly hostile
of
Virginia
.
described. as a "maverick," announced that he would who think that the 9111 hero media.
but he's not a favorite of not run for the Democratic would be a formidable canFew would have predictmany conservatives (~r­ nomination for president. dictate are forgetting about ed that just last spring. Still,
haps a mutual feehng, Warner was talked about as the 9110 Rudy. Meaning, as the social lives and cho·
depending on what you're a possible challenger from this. is a guy who is pro· sen company of hopefuls
reading).
the right to Hillary Clinton. choice on abonion, pro-gay makes clear, if your work is
That McCain has never
At the same time, back on rights and moved in with a getting on.e of these guys
Rush the ·right side of the political gay couple after a messy elected, the election might
once
been on
Limbaugh's popular radio spectrum, my blog col- breakup with his wife that as well be tomorrow.
(Kathryn Lopez is the edi- ·
program -· and has even league John Podhoretz and I came as he was dating
been accused of attacking relentlessly make the case another woman."
tor of National Review
In time, all will become ·Online · (www.nationalrethe conservative icon at an for our favorite presidential
off-the-record event earlier candidates. In his recent clear. Rudy Won't play in view. com). She can be conthis year - couldn 'i possi- book, '"Can She Be Stopped Peoria - and he knows it. tacted at klopez@national· ·
bly help him with conserva- ?" (Crown Forum, 2006) McCain, who is already review.com.)

IF THE ELECTIONS

I'D BE
ASLE TO

WERE HELD TODAY.,,

ENJOY
WATcHING
TELEVISION
A6AIN.

..

Obituaries

Lacking
viding more varied job
training for students.
Kessinger has. only good
things to say about the
county's economic development program, and praised
Economic
Development
Director Perry Varnadoe for
leading efforts to attract
industry here. He said a
Meigs County businessman

warned him that finding a
qualified ~d conscientous
workforce could be a problem, and he has found that
to be true, so far.
Kessinger said it is time for
Meigs County to re-evaluate
its workforce training efforts.
Without qualified workers to .
staff new industry, he said,
Meigs County's effons to
attract new businesses here
will likely be in vain.
Kessinger said he now
has an "open door" hiring
policy, interviewing appli- ·
cants on a walk-in basis.

letes were from ' Meigs
Industries and escorted to
the festivities by six· volunteers, including Carleton
from PageA1
School/Meigs
Industries
Director
Steve
Beha.
sixth place; Laura Clark, 50
meter run, fifth place, softball · In addition to the games
throw, fourth place; David athletes observed the ~pening
Karr, 50 meter run, second cct:emonies, attended the corplace, softball throw, second responding dance and went to
place; Lisa Montgomery, 50 Columbus Crew Stadium to
meter run, third place, 100 see the soccer team in action.
These local
athletes
meter walk, third place;
earned
their
trip
to
the
state
Kenny Napper, 50 meter run,
first place, softball throw, games, preparing ·for them
first place; Hugh Roush, 100 by competing at the Meigs
meter run, frrst place, shotput, High School Honor Society
second place; Man Walter, Track and Field Day and
long jump, third place, I 00 regional Special ·Olympic ·
games at Alex.ander High
meter run, first place.
The majority of the ath- School held earlier this year.

Athletes

Read it ·and·weep

a

Jim
Mullen

magazines from · my stock
broker, my banker, my big
box store, my credit card
companies, my church, my
auto dealer, my charitit;s;
my il)ternet provider; my
PBS station, my union, a
couple of museums, a few
antique malls, the Chamber
of Commerce and a winery.
There are more, but I'd
need a magazine to list
them all. When do these
people think I'm going to
do all this reading? " Honey,
let's skip "CSI" tonight, I
want to catch up on all the
new cell phone plans in
"Cellibate." the new magazine from our cell phone
company.
Loo)l, they ' ve got a
whole page of pictures of
stars who use cell phones.
We may not have their
looks or talent. but we can
sure buy the same expensive cell phone' as the
stars! Let 's throw out our

•

"

old ones and get new deals and vacation pack·
phones today'" "Look at ages.
this ' Ex.citing New
Are the same people who
News About Their New are trying to save 13 cents
Calling Plans.'
by buying a pallet of
That new John Grisham Pampers the same people
best seller wiU just have to who .are taking cruises to
wait. How often do you get Alaska? Even if it's a bara chance to read something . gain? Maybe. If they hadn't
like this? With their new taken the Alaskan Romance ·
plmi, all calls from North Cruise, they might not have
Dakota to Quebec are l)eeded all those P11mpers.
absolutely free' After midIt also runs handy and
night.
Every
other exciting feature stories like
Thursday." The magazine " Fork Lifter of the Month"
from my . union is a page- and "Fewer Customers
turner, too.
Crushed
by
Falling
Who knew that Bob Merchandise in December."
Gnustelrode
from
the
The magazine my auto
Detroit shop would be dealer sends me assures me
elected
treasurer? that 60 percent of the car 1
. Accompanying the story of purchased was made in this
Bob Gnustelrode is a color country - by immigrants. 1
photograph by .a profession- just wish the horn didn 't
al photograpl!er. How much play the . Japanese national
did that cost? Bob, Jik'c . anthem.
most of us, would look betActually, I think I read
ter in bl~ck and white. His somewhere that they were
comb-over would not look · changing that. There was a
so obvious; his liver spot' story about ·it in the magaJess frightening .
zine I get from my stockBut at least you can't say broker. In a piece called
they do nothing with our " Forget All That Advice We
union dues, they print a Gave You Last Month."
magazine. If only I were in
(Jim Mullen is the author
the printer's union , thi s of "It Takes a 'Vil/age Idiot:
might make some kind of ComplicaTing the Simple
sense. My big box store's Life " a11d " Babv 's Firsr
magazine " Cheaper by the Tattoo." You can ;.,ach him
Pallet" is heavy on cruise ar jim_mullen@m.vway.com.)

Aging
from PageA1
moderately disabled by
Alzheimer's Disease. Day
care will be offered from 9
a.m. to I p.m. Mondays and
Fridays with transponation
and lunch provided. The
program is expected to
begin in early 2007 .
, Beth Shaver, executive
director, report~ on measures taken to improve the
financial position of the
agency. She noted that several changes .made over the
past year have; resulted in
decreasing ·
monthly
expenses by 'approximately
$15 ,000, and that fund
raising projects by volunteers have . resulted in
increased revenue .
Elimination
of
the
Passpon , program contributed decided Iy to the
decrease
in
expenses,
according to Shaver, while
the increase in money from

-.mydall)iientinel.oom

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Local Briefs

'RIPLEY, W.Va. - Lougean Chancey, the eldest child of
Foster F. and Delpha G. Rhodes Morris, was born May 25,
1'926. She ·Was awarded her mansion in heaven on Oct. 17,
2006, after a long battle with cancer.
. ·Lougean's life impacted many others during her childhood .i~ St~tts M!lls, W.V~ .. and her later 40 years as a
beauttctan m Racme. When Lougean retired, she returned
to the home area she loved, and her daily life continued to
influence those amund her.
· Lo1.1gean was often described by others as being young
for her age, as her zest for life was evident in her self-suffi~!ency and the drive with which she met projects with
dtligence and perseverance. She was known to be responsible; honest and kind to those around her.
'Those who knew her best saw ber love for the Lord in the
way she always conducted her life. She studied the Bible faithfully and put into practice the lessons of humility, kindness and
Jove. She reached out to foster children in her early years and
later. to members of her community and church. Lougean was
a fruthful member of Siniaville United Methodist Church, .
where she served as secretary for many years. Her faithfulness
ta servtce and her humility was evident in the way she pre. ferred worKing behind the scenes volunteering to clean, cook
or provide support to others. She ·seldom accepted credit or
· prruse foc her hard worlc, choosing instead to remain distant
froll) any spotligh.t or personal recognition.
.·Lougean quietly gav~ and quietly served, but she did so conSistently. Her compassion for othen; including family members
and foster children and community and even to wayward animals encompassed the traits of her character that so inspired
others. Lougean will be missed by all who knew and loved her.
Tbe memories of her ~entleness as she tended her flowers and the care with wh1ch she coddled the hummingbirds
on her porch will comfort and soothe the ache that her passing has left behind. The flavor of her life will carry on, just
like the memory of her delicious coconut cakes.
Lougean is survived by her daughter, Robena (Bobbie)
Chancey of Ripley; brothers: Bernard (Ellen) and Thomas
(JoAnn) of Statts Mills, and Frederick (Elsa) .o f Ripley; sister, Patricia (Charles) Manery of Leonard, Mich.; .and sister-in-law, Madge Winter .o f Ripley.
Like daughters to Bobbie and great comforters to
Lougean during her illness are Stephanie MericaJ, Lisa
(Cam) Rhodes and Stacey (Tim) Haynes. She is survived
by many loving nieces and nephews and by Jennings
(Barbara) Beegle, an honorary family member who lived
with the family for many years.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Craten
Chancey, and her sister, Lorene Skeen.
. The funeral will be held at II a.m. on Friday, Oct. ;!0,
2006, at Siniaville United Methodist Church, Statts Mill
with Rev. Danny Cummings and Bill Holly officiating.
Burial will be in Siniaville Cemetery.
Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday
at Vail Funeral Home. in Ripley and one hour prior to the
service at the church.
Memorial contributions· may be made to the Siniaville
United Methodist Church, c/o Paul Knopp, Rt. I, Box 121,
Gay, W.Va. 25244 or Kanawha Hospice, 1143 Dunbar Ave. ,
Dunbar, W.Va. 25064.

from PageA1

Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letrers are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letrers will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addreHing issues, not personalities. Letters of
I just got a glossy magathanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- zine in the mail today,
ed for publication.
magazine to which I do not
subscribe. It's filii of ex.pensive color photographs and
interesting stories. Like
"Why Bother to Fill Out an
(USPS 213-960)
Insurance Claim When It's ·
Reader Services
Ohio Valley Publlahlng
Faster and Cheaper to Pay
Co.
Correction Polley
for Repairs Yourself?" and
Our main concem in all stories is to Pu.blished every afternoon, Monday
" You Might as Well Settle
through Friday, 111 C~urt Street,
Instead of Hiring ·an
be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class
Expensive La~er."
in a story, call the n~wsroom at (740) postage paid at Pomeroy.
Tbe magazine is from my
992-2 156.
Member: The Associated Press and·
insurance company. It con- .
the Ohio Newspaper AssociaHon.
PwtrT'IIIat.r: Send address correc·
tains
other "must reads"
Our main number Is
lions to The Dalty Sentinel. 1H Court
such
as
" Insurance ·Fraud:
(740) 992·2156.
Street, Pomeroy. qhio 45769.
How . to Turn In ·Your
Department extensions are:
Neighbors
!" and this invesSubscription Rates
tigative gem, "Insurance: A
By carrter or motor route
Bargain Qr • Just Good
News
One month
'1 0.27
Deal?''
Editor: ChaMene HoellicM, Ext. 12
One yur
'123.24
Dally
50'
It is too bad about insurReporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
ance
fraud. It must cost my
Reporter: Beth Sergent, E•t. 13
Senior Citizen · One month
'9.24
insurance company a lot of
'I 03.90
One yHr
money. Almost as much as
Advertising
5ubocrtle&lt;s should In IIIMince
it
must cost them to pro· No sub. o.Mklo Saleo: Dave HarMs. Ext. 15 direct to the o8ily duce and mail this stupid
scription by mall permitted tn areas
Outaklo ~loi: Brenda Davis, EM! 16 Where hOme carrier serviCe iS avail·
magazine that I just put in
CIMsJCirc.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext 10
able.
the recycling bin. There
could only be one story in it
Mall Subscription
that I'd ever be likely to
General Manager
Inside Uelp County
read and that would be
Cha~ene Hoeflich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
·
'32.26
"We' re
Killing
This
26 Weeks
'64.20
52
Weeks
'
127.11
We
Can
Magazine
So
E-mail:
Lower Your Monthly Bill ."
news C mydailysent1nel.com .
Outolde Melgo County
Of course, I don' t just get
13 Weeks
'53.55
magazines no one needs or
Web:
26Wee~s
' 107.10
asked
for from just ~y
52 Weeks
'214.21
WNw.myd&amp;llysentlnel com
insurance company. I get
'

•

Lougean Cllantey

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

~ednesday,Ck1obert8,2oo6

PageA4

fund raisers helped in the
of
the
improvement
Council's overall financial
statement.
As of Sept. 30, Shaver
reported that $29,500 have
been added to the program
through fund raisers conducted by volunteers and
employees·who volunteered
their time. There are still
thnee more fund raisers to
be held this year - a soup
supper Thursday night, photographs to be taken this
weekend,
and
the
November craft show.
Shaver defined her goals
as age'ncy director as beir:tg
to keep the agency fiscally
so•md, to .raise standards
and maintain a team of
skilled employees, and to
improve services to consumers.
Mick Davenport, Council
on Aging president, commended Shaver for her persistence in "implementing
fiscal efforts to make the·
agency sol vent, and for her
willingness to go the extra
mile to improve the overall

Spaghetti
dinner

test will take place on the
Peoples Bank parking lot,
with judging at 7 p.m.
Organizations are urged to
hold
fundraiser bake sales in
RACINE - A spaghetti ·
conjunction
with the celedinner benefit to help purbration,
and
all
attending are
chase a warming oven for
Southern ·High School's cafe- encouraged to wear costeria will be from 5-7 p.m. tumes. Free soft drinks, por.this Friday at the high school com and photographs wtll
before the football game. be available to all attending.
Included in the dinner are
breadsticks, dessen, dririks.

at 8 p.m. The House will be
lighted only with candles,
the corners will be dark, and
the steps will. squeak.

Auction
to be held

Wilcoxen from 6:30 to 7:30
p.m. Admission is $5. ·

Levy
promotional
meeting set

SALEM CENTER - An
LETART -· A blind
organizational
meeting for
man's auction will be held at
6 p.m. Saturday at the East the Salem ToWI!ship Dust
Letan Methodist Church. Busters to discuss the road
Refreshments. Proceeds will . maintenance levy . (dust
control) wi II be held Friday
go into the.building fund.
at 7:30 p.m. ~ the Salem
Township·Fire I;&gt;epaitment.
Any Salem Townshi,p resiPORTI.-AND - Tbe Ohio
.
dent
interested in helpfng
MIDDLEPORT - Tbe River Producer's Halloween
~ACINE -Big . Bend
Middleport
Community Horse Fun Show will take Farm Antiques Club will to pass the levy is encourAssociation will sponsor its place this Saturday at the sponsor an antique tractor aged to attend.
annual
"Pumpkinport" Portland Show Ring behind pull at I p.m. on Saturday at
Halloween street party from the
community center, Rocksprings Fairground ~.
6 to 8 p.m. on Oct. 30. Exhibition for the horse show Admission for spectat\)rs is
Panicipating Middleport begins at 10 a.r:n. ~ith the fnee. Food will be avai lable
merchants
will
hold show starting at II am. This on the grounds. The pqll
A
"Moonlight Madness" sales show has a special costume will start with a 4,000- , REEDSVILLE
promotions, as well.
. category for the horse and · pound class. Information is "Halloween Campout" will
Children in pre-kinder- rider. For information or pos- available at 742-3020.
take place this weekend at
garten through fifth grade are sible cancellation due to rain
Forked Run · State Park
invited to bring their carved call247-4681 or 843-5216.
with prizes awarded for the
jack o'lantems for judging.
best decorated campsites.
One winner from each cateThis Saturday activities are
gory will receive a $50 gift
open · to the public and
certificate, donated by
include: 3 p.m., games and
Peoples Bank, a $1 0 gift card
crafts for kids ; 4:30 p.m.,
donated by Family Dollar,
POMEROY - A soup chili dinner provided' free
and
a
trophy
from
supper will be served from of charge to everyone by
Middlepon Trophies andT's.
·GALLIPOLIS - Donna 5:30 to 6:30p.m. Thursday Forked Run park volunThe winner of a People's · Wilson, Middlepon story- · at the Meigs County Senior ieers: 6-7 p.m. , trick-orChoice category will win a teller, will be at the Our Citizens Center as a fund treat in the campground;
bicycle donated by Farmers . House Museum Saturday raiser for senior assistaqce 7:30p.m .. haunted hayride.
Bank and Savings Co.
night to tell scary stories. programs. Entenainment For camping reservations
Registration for the con- Her performance will begin · will be provided by Joey . call 1-866-644-6727.

. Planning

'Pumpkln)Joi1'

Halloween
.HQrse Fun
Show

Tractor pull

Halloween
Cam pout

Our House
presents
scary stories

Soup supper
to fund senior
programs

DuPont: Workers exposed to C8 show no increased mortality risk
PARKERSBURG (AP)Scientists for DuPont Co.
·will keep studying the effects
of a chemical used to make
Teflon because they can't
entirely rule out lt connection
to slightly elevated levels of
kidney cancer, heart disease
and diabetes among worlcers,
the company said Tuesday.
However, a health study
released Tuesday of about
6,000 current and former
West Virginia employees
shows death rates among
workers are no higher than
at seven DuPont plants in
other states, the population
of West Virginia or the rest
of the nation's population,
said Dr. Sol Sax, the company's chief medical officer.
The employees worked at
DuPont's
Washington
Works plant between 1948
and 2002. The plant uses

Racine
from PageA1
which may be removed with
chemicals with further
development.
Well five initiaHy had no
GPM .but was developed to
125 GPM. Representatives
from RLM Engineering
said council could have fur- ·
ther testing done to determine if the well's GPM
could be increased. Testing
would be done free of
charge but if council decided to develop the well it
was looking at another
$11,300 for ·that develop·
ment which would take a
maximum of five days.
Council· also h'a d the
option of closing well five
which would cost an addi-

ammonium perfluorooc- couldn't discount "the fact on humans are unknown.
taonate, also known as C8 of a small increase to those DuPont has long maintained ·
or PFOA, to produce the most heavily exposed."
· there are no hannful health
nonstick coating.
· . "We just don't have effects, and Sax said Tuesday
While only 12. people died enough data to say conclu- the new study supports that
of kidney cancer, Sax said ihe sively ... there is no link," he ·· conclusion.
finding couldn't be ignored.
said.
·
Yet, owners of TeflonThe 20 diabetes deaths,
There is no timetable for coated pots and pans have
however, could be attributed conducting the additional sued the Delaware-based
to living habits in West stUdies, he said.
company, claiming DuPont
V.rginia that "might not be as
The latest information will failed to disclose possible
good as neighboring states," ·be useful, though, because health risks. And a group of
he said. West V.rginia leads the results can be ex.panded scientific advisers to the
the nation in adult diabetes at to other industrial workers U.S.
Environmental
10.4 percent.
Protection .Agency voted
exposed to C8, .Sax said.
Researchers ·looked at
Richard Wiles· with the earlier this year to recomheart disease because a 2005 Environmental . Working mend that C8 be considered
study of 1,000 Washington Group in Washington, D.C., a likely carcinogen.
Works employees showed called DuPont's h~alth
DuPont also is currently
those who worked closest to announcement "more like paying for a health .study on
C8 had increased levels of spin than science." DuPont whether there is a link
total cholesterol. The latest has apparently found some between C8 and health probstudy found a slight risk of health risks and needs to lems among 70,000 West
heart disease.
study them, he said.
Virginia and Ohio residents
Sax said it could be a ranThough used since World who drank water contamidom occurrence, but DuPont War ll, C8's long-term effects nated with the chemical.
tiona!
$45,000
after
already
having
spent
· $80,000 on the well.
Council decided to pass a
motion that if the test confirms further development of
well five will increase the
GPM it will continue with
construction. Councilman
James Harmon voted against
the motion,' feeling he needed to discuss the situation
more in-depth with council.
No member of council,
Clerk Dave..- Spencer or
Mayor J. Scott Hill was
happy with the situation
and discussed a deduct
from the general contractor
Roses Excavating whose
su~ontractor Ohio Drilling
· is actually doing the work.
The deduct would be based
on Ohio Drilling not following the specifications
for well four, a claim made
by the engineers. ' The

deduct would then be
applied to expenses . for
developing well five.
The engineers also said if
the testing indicates further
development of the well at
an additional cost of $1 I,300
it was still $100,000 less
than the nearest bidder to
Roses Excavating for the
entire job.
Hill, Spencer and council
felt no one was taking
responsibility for the situation which is costing Racine
more money and more
delays on the project.
Downing Construction,
the general contractor for
the ilew water plant, recently requested a 22 I day
extensiOn on their project,
an issue which has still not
been resolved.
In other council business:
Hill announced American
Electric
Power 's

Mountaineer Plant recently
dcmated $2,000 for renovations at Star Mill Park.
Councilman ·Jason Shain
was absent from the meeting.

ARIEL
ESTABLISHED 1895

HAUNTED
ARIEL THEATRE
Oct. 20 &amp; 21,.26 • 31
Open each night at 6 pm
All new, much scarrier
3 floors of terror
$7 adults/$5 students

IFYOUDARE!
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-ARTS (2787)

operation of the program."
Kathryn
Hart
and
He complimented her on . Charlene Hoeflich were
the steps she has taken to re-elected to the Board of ·
keep the agency solvent at Trustees. Officers elected
a time when some funding for 2007 were Hart, presisources are decreasing dent; Paul Reed, vice presand thanked those senior ident of personnel and
citizens and others attend- finance ; Alice Wolfe, vice
ing the meeting for their president of program and
Betty
support and use of the evaluation,
programs. '
Longeilette, secretary, and
During the meeting Ben S Iawter, treasurer. .

Small group of
professionals seeking
100-500 acre farm to
lease for ex~sive
Hunting Purposes

1-304-541-3161

1 •

1

f 594-6333
/

or
1·800·451-9806

�PageA6

LocAL ·• STATE

The Daily Sentinel .

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

~ednesday,~obert8,aoo6

Free blood pressure, glucose tests at open house Local Weather
W~ay,

October 18, 2006
I

LocAL Sc.IIEDULE

POMEIUf -A........,,.--

liar cHild •

.te1tns
.... ~from"""""'
"'""
- O®l'ltleG.
-.g
Gallia,
Meig5- and Mason
Wet' .........

YoungatCMn•
56&lt; 151'

:h.... .

Tou....._ Vola.yboft

Gallia

Acldemy at Waverly, 6 p.m.

Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.

.

~2:'..:=-.

67' 151 ' • t._:)

Southem at Eastern, 6 p.m

South Gallia at South Webster, 6 p.m.

ISO'•~

s.x:-

Toumoment Glmo
Point Pteasant at Wintiekt, 6 p.m.

*Colurnbul .
69"151 '

Cards on
cusp of
W. Series
BY MIKE FITZMTRICK
ASSOCIATErl PflESS

CGLLege Vol~

-

Mount VerOQn at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.

ST. LOUIS .A big
swing by Albert Pujols and
another playoff gem from a
Galtia Academy at Warren, 7:30p.m.
rejuvenated Jeff Weaver put
Logan at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
South GaHia at Oak Hill, 7:30p.m.
the St. Louis Cardinals on
Matewan at Waharh&amp;, 7:30p.m.
the cusp of the World
River Valley al Chesapeake, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 7:30p.m.
Series.
.
Trlrl"'bkk at Southam, 7:30p.m.
Pujols'
homer
helped
the
Hannan at Tug Valley, 7:30p.m.
Eastern at Waterford. 7:30p.m.
Cardinals get to Tom
Glavine at last, and Weaver
0\/CS at Teays Valley, 5 p.m.
shut down the New York
&amp;r'l 9Mtll
.
Mets for a 4-2 victory
c-.
Country
Thesday night and a 3-2
OHSM DIStrict Meet (Rio Grande). 1
p.m.
lead in the NL champiT""""'ment Yolteyboll
onship
series.
River Valley at Huntigton, 6 p.m.
Toumement &lt;ilrla Soccer
"He doesn't give in too
Point Pleasant at Winfield, 6 p.m.
muclt,'' Pujols said. "I'm
CGttegts.x:just glad it went out of the
Rio Grande 11.t rrttln, 2 p.m.
CollegtWomenas.x:park. "
Tiffin at Rio Grande, 1 p.m.
Cardinals ace
Chris
CGI!egt Crou COuntry
Rio Grande at Pumpkin Run , 9 &amp;.m.
Carpenter can close it out
Wednesday night in Game 6
at Shea Stadium , which
would give St. Louis its second pennant in three years
and a date with the Detroit
Tigers in the World Series.
Rookie right-hander John
Maine is on the mound for
the Mets, who.hope to force
a Game 7 at home.
The Cardinals got timely·
hits from Preston Wilson
and Ronnie Belliard, and an
insurance homer by pinchhitter Chris Duncan. With
BLOOMINGTON, . Ind. the red-clad crowd of
- The Indiana Hoosiers 46,496 twirling white towhad one night to celebrate els, St. Louis' young
their upset of Iowa.
bullpen held on in the late
By Sunday, it was back to . innings
after
getting
work, and by Thesday, it roughed up during New
was time to go full bore at York's 12-5 victory in
their next big challenge: Game4.
Playing No. I Ohio State.
The second rainout of the
"It's rewarding any time series Monday night gave
you work hard for some- Glavine and Weaver a
thin~ and you see it pay chance to pitch on regular
off,' safety Will Meyers rest instead of only a threesaid. "But you're in Sunday day break.
morning watching film of · Making )lis 35th postseathe No. I team in the nation, son start, the most in major
so you don ' t have · much league history, Glavine got
time to enjoy it."
only 12 outs. Weaver, on the
The Hoosiers (4-3, 2-1) other. hand, earned his secmay have preferred taking ond impressive playoff vicanother week to savor the tory.
school's biggest upset since
And now, for the second
1987, butthe schedule-mak- time in the series, the clubs
ers weren't so kind.
will travel without a day off.
Instead, they're sending
Pujols' homer put St. ·
Indiana to Columbus, Ohio, Louis on the scoreboard and
this week for its biggest test snapped Glavine 's · 22of the season. Most figure it inning scoreless streak that
will take a mistake-free dated to his final regulargame just to keep it close, season start at Washington.
much less win.
on a sore right hamOhio State has a Heisman Playing
string, Pujols also went to
Trophy candidate in qQar- his knees at first base for
terback Troy_ Smith, a
defense that annually ranks Shawn Green's one-hopper
among the nation's best, and in the sixth:
The 40-year-old Glavine
a return game that includes
the always dangerous Ted threw four-hit ball for seven
sharp innings in Game I,
Ginn Jr.
Indiana must also over- beating Weaver 2-0 on
come another hurdle. In l3 Carlos Beltran's two-run
previous meetings against homer.
But Weaver got the best
top-ranked teams, Indiana
of
this match up.
ltas never won. The last
Cast
off by the · Los
time they faced a No . I
Arigeles
Angels this sumteam, Ohio State beat them
38-7 in Bloomington in mer to make roster room for
his little brother, Jered, the
1998.
St.
Louis right-hander kept .
The Hoosiers heard a simBeltran
and Carlos Delgado
ilar story line last week and
still managed to 'produce in check, yieldin~ only two
their biggest upset since runs and six htts in six
1987. Even coach Terry strong innings.
The Mets put runners at
Hoeppner tempered his
businesslike approach tem- second and third with one
porarily Thesday to reflect · out in the eighth, but Randy
on the significance of beat- Flores retired Green on a
shallow fly and rookie
. ing Iowa 31-28.
"I think it's inspiring to Adam Wainwright struck
out Jose Valentin looking to
get some confirmation of
preserve a t:-vo-run lead.
what you're doing is workWainwright struck out Jose
ing," Hoeppner said during Reyes to end the game for
frtdly'lqamtJ

Sulamttt• photo

River Valley HealtH and Wellness Center in Ravenswood, W.Va. will be holding an open house for the public from 3:30-6
p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. ·24. During this time the public will be able to tour the new faciiity, located at606 Wa!!hington Street.
Those attending will also nave the opportunity to meet staff and providers. There will be a free blood pressure clinic as
well as free blood glucose tests. Door prizes will be available and a drawing for 20 free flu shots will be held. For more
information call Amy Haskins at (304) 273-1033.

~
Thunder·~
L-:) CLouity ~
.
llo!ms

FAMILY MEDICINE
Reader needs tests of nodule to rule out thyroid cancer
Question: I had my annual
physical last week and my
doctor felt a nodule on my
thyroid gland. She said not to
worry, but she ordered other
tests. She said it probably
wasn't cancer but that had to
be ruled out. What if it is cancer? What else could it be?
Answer: Your thyroid is
located in the front of the
neck, just under the Adam 's
apple. It is shaped like a
butterfly with a lobe on
each side of your windpipe,
or trachea. A narrow band of
thyroid tissue called the
isthmus connects the two
lobes together.
The primary function of
the thyroid is to regulate
metabolism. If the gland produces too much hormone,
you have hyperthyroidism,
resulting in nervousness,
hyperactivity and weight
loss. If the gland makes too
little hormone, a oondition
cal~ hy.pothyroidism, Y&lt;?U
feel tired, and tend to gam
weight. This very energetiC
gland is a common place for
nodules. Most of the nodules
or tumors are not cancerous.
Nodules are commonly

found just as yours was, on a
routine physical. They occur
in about one in every I ,000
~ople. Statistical!Y· 90 to 95
percent of thyrotd nodules
are benign.
Frequently they are fluidfilled cysts or just enlarged
thyroid cells. Only five to 10
percent of thyroid nodules
are cancerous, and about 80
percent of these cancerous
nodules are a highly treatable
type called papillary carcinoma. This kind of cancer
develops from the thyroid
follicle cells and grows slowly. It usually affects just one
lobe of the gland. The rate of
successful treaunent of this
condition is very high and
the condition is rarely fatal .
The next most common
type of thyroid cancer is the
follicular carcinoma. It
makes up about I 0 percent of
all thyroid cancers and is
slow to spread to other .
organs. It is more common in
countries where people don't
get enough iodine in the diet.
One lethal but rare type of
thyroid cancer - accounting for less than two percent
of all cancers in Ibis gland

Local Stocks
ACI-32.13
AEP-40.58
Akzo-59.81

. Kroeer -

21.91

Ltd.- 28.82
NSC~47.69

A8IIIMid - 85.93

0811 Hill ,._ '" - 26.59

BIG- 20.10

OVB-25.20

llob ~- 33.11

ltoiiWM-- 59..36

CDIX-36.50

Cllaii¥1Dn - 7.40

Clwn I c ~- 114.76

City Hoklln&amp; - 40.33

CGI- 58.20
DG-.13.81

aar:....a.aa

"-a pill - 30.77
"af lea - 12.37
,,.... 14.45
Rocnilll - 61.13 ·
Rocky loots- ~-71
5Nrs - 189.1.8
Wai-Msrt - 48.26

Du:Paact - ·44.95

,....... MGCU1 - .41
U$8-33.24 .
GasNil - 56.87

Weridy•s - 34.57
Wotthlneton - 17.24
DaiiJ stock NpCN1s - the 4 .
p.m. clas!IIC qiiOWs of tile

u..... Electric -

35.56
GKNLY-5.40
H8l'ley DavldMn- 67.72
JPM-47.99

prerious - · · ttMIICllolll,
prowlded ..,. Smltll flLIUICill
Advllorl of ..._. Lyott~ln
Gallipolis.

Show Off Your "Pumpkin"
In The Sentinel

PuMPKIN PATCH
Pictures wiD run:
Monday,
October30

ftJ Deadline for Entry:
~

Monday,

~~n

~ $800
•
~

0

-has received a lot of publicity 'in the last few years:
This is anaplastic thyroid
carcinoma. It's the type of
aggressive thyroid cancer
that killed the late Chief
Justice William Rehnquist.
There are some new treatments being tested for this
disease that show some
promise, but they are still in
the experimental stages.
Your doctor did a very
thorough physical, and you·
are lucky she found this
nodule. She will order scans
and ultrasounds on the thyroid gland and some blood
tests as ·well. Be sure to
complete all tests that are
recommended. Chances are
this lump will require no
treatment once a proper
diagnosis is made, or it will
be an easily treated cancer.

You will fed better when
you know what it is and
what it is not.

Family Medicine® is a
weekly coi:Urrt11. To submit
questions, writ.e to Mtutlul A.
Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.,
Ohio Universily College of
Osteopathic Medicille, P.O.
Box 110, Athens, Ohio

45701, or via e-msil to readerquestions@familymedi·
cimmews.org. Mediad iliformoJion in this column is provided as an educational service o;:l
• It does not rep/lice
the j
n1 of yoUr personalpiiJSician, who should
bt rtMd 011 to diagnoSe aNI
recommend treatment for
any IIUidical condiJi.om. Past
cohllfiiiS are lll'lli1able oralim!
at wwwjamilymedicinenervs.org.

Working
or the Future

Partly

Ooudy

~

/;/,

Showers

~

~

'

'

Rlin

Aurrioo

~
•

*

~
~
.:.::

Snow

loo

~.::.:

Wealher Un&lt;to~gr&lt;lUIId • ~p

Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy. Areas of drizzle in
the morning. Widespread
dense fog in the morning.
Highs in the lower 70s .
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Wednesday night... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
50s. South winds around 5
mph .
Thursday;..Partly cloudy
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the upper
60s. West winds 5 to I 0
mph.
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. LOws in
the upper 40s. Northwest
· winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday... Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
showers. Cooler with highs
in the upper 50s.
Friday
. night... Partly

cloudy. Cooler with lows in
the mid 30s.
Saturday... Partly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance of
rain showers. Highs in the .
lower 60s.
Saturday night...Partly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the lower 40s.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy
with a 50 percent chauce
of showers. Highs around
60.
Sunday night... Mostly
cloudy with ·a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 30s.
Monday••• Mostly cloudy
with a 30 pe~nt chance of
showers. Highs in the lower

50s.
Monday
night . and
Tuesday...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 30s. Highs
in the mid 50s.
·

. '*

WithOSU
up, Hoosiers
can't waste
timefoetNng
on Iowatq:Ht

. his second save of the postseason.
In
this
postseason,
Cardinals relievers have
held opponents to 0-for-31
CoNTACT
with 2 outs and runners in
scoring position.
OVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.-t e.m.)
Weaver is 2-1 with a 2.16
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
ERA in three playoff starts.
Fax- 1-740·446·3008
He tossed five innings of
E-m~~ll- sports@mydailysentinel.com
two-hit ball io beat San
Diego 2-0 iri Game 2 of the
litlO!lJ_Stall
first
round.
Brad Shennan, Sports Edlloi
The
game was delayed for
(740) 446·2342, e&lt;l. 33
a few . minutes before the
bsherman0myd81ly1ribune.com
fourth while the grounds
Lilrry Crum, Sports Writer
crew
replaced first base, and
(740) 448·2342, e&lt;t. 33
•
Weaver
walked his next batlcrumOmydailyregister.com
ter, pitching carefully to
Alhley Shaw, Sports Writer
(74{)) 446-2342. eKt. 23
Please see NLCS, ·B&amp;
sports0myd8ilytribune.com

Please see OSU. B&amp;

Kylie Billings
"Love Ya!"
&amp;

Mail or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Child's Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
From :_·- - . , - - - - - - - - - - -- Your Name:-L----'-----------

Ads must be pre-paid

US

•

-

.

'

.

'

.

Caldwell top coach, .five
Lady Eagles make team
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE .COM

ALBANY - Eastern and
Alexander swept away every
team in their respective paths
this seasou. Fittingly, the two
state-ranked high school volleyball powers also swept top
honors when All-Tri-Valley
Confefence teams were
announced.
Both teams are currently
22~ entering the postseason.
In the Hocking Division,
Eastern middle hitter Erin
Weber was named Most
Valuable Player · and her

eTvc·

coach, Howie Caldwell,
earned Coach of the Year
honors. The Lady Eagles won
the TVC Hocking for the I Oth
straight year.
·
Eastern, ranked seventh in
the state in. Division IV, led
the way with five selections.
Joining Weber were hitters
Katie
Hayman,
Jillian
Brannon, Darcy Winebrenner
and setter Brittany Bissell.
Trimble, which finished
second in the league with a 73 record landed three on the
squad: Setter Andra Hooper,
libero Chelsie McLAughlin
and middle hitter Hannah

Harper~all

underclassmen .
Waterford and Federal
Hocking each had two play·
ers chosen. Hitter Tiffany
Wallace aod libero Bethany
Amrine represent the Lady
Wildcats while hitter Amber
Swain and setter Ryan Fieler
are represent the Lady
Lancers.
Miller and Southern each
one just one league match,
and as a result, had just one
player each on the team.
Southern junior setter/hitter
· Whitney Wolfe-Riffle and
Miller setter Katie Searles
complete the squad.
The third-ranked team in
· Division III, Alexander, had
five players selected to the
Ohio Division team, led by
Player of the Year Jamie

'
Thrrill. Alex's Bradd
Jeffers
was dubbed top coach.
. Also making All-TVC
Ohio from Alexander was
Keilee Guthrie, Lauren
Thomas, Whitney Smith and
Lauren Raines .
·
.
Nelsonville-York, runner· up in the league placed
Megan Edwards, Asti Powell
and Lisa Meade on the team.
Meigs, which finished third
in the league with a 6-4 m:irk,
is represented by junior setter
Amy Barr and sophomore
outside hitter Catie Wolfe.
Vinton County, with Kara
Reed and Allison Graves,
also had two make all-league.
Wellston and Belpre had
just one representative in Sara
Davy and Lauren Christian
respectively.

Sixth AP High School
Football Poll ·released
COLUMBUS (AP) While Cincinnati St. Xavier
was enjoying a bye week,
Colerain sneaked mto first.
Youngstown Mooney didn't
wait until Coldwater took a
break.
. Colerain and Mooney took
over the top spots in Divisions
I and IV. respectively, of the
sixth weekly Associated Press
Ohio high school football poll
release&lt;fThesday. . r
Colerain trailed St. Xavier
by 14 points a week ago, but
when St. Xavier took the week
off the Cardinals climbed past
the Bombers to take a two.point lea(! it) the media ballot-

.

'

How a state panel of sports writers and
broadcasters rates Ohio high schOol toot·
ball teams In the sixth weekly Associated
Press poll o1 2006. tJy OHSAA diVIsions.
with \YOn-lost r6CO rd and total points
place votes in parentheses):

(first~

DIVISION I
t , Cin . eo~o;n (9) 8-0

· 276
274
251

2.Cin.St.Xavier(15)6-1

AP photo

Cleveland Cavaliers forward Donyell Marshall, right, puts up
a shot against Maccabi Elite Tel Aviv forward Noel Felix during the second quarter in an exhibition basketball game
Tuesday in Cleveland.
·

Cavs rock
Maccabi
.

.

.

BY ToM Wtt:HER!!
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - Drew
Gooden is shooting over 80
percent from the · fielfl.
That's absurd- in any language.
Gooden missed just two
shots and scored 21 points.
LeBron James nearly had a
triple-double in 30 minutes
and the Cleveland Cavaliers
pulled away late in the first
half for a 93-67 exhibition
win over Maccabi Tel Aviv
on Thesday night.

Gooden. who missed the
two previous games with a
strained leg muscle, finished
9-of-11 from the field as the
Cavaliers had an easy time
with one of Europe's top
hoop squads. Gooden is 17of-21 in the two games he
has played in the preseason.
"If it ain't broke, don't fix
it," Cavaliers coach Mike
Brown said. "We' ll just let .
Drew keep doing what he's
·
doing.''
Gooden spent the off-seaPlease see Cavs, 86

3. can . McKinley (5) 8-0
4, Lakewood St Edward
5. Lancas1er (1) 8.()
6, Hilliard Davidson 8-D
7, Fremont Ross 8-Q
8.Mentor7-1

7~1

9, BrunswiCk (1) 8-Q
o. Cin Sycamore (2) s-o

1

212
158
153
108

· 87
.00

7, Pici&lt;erington C&amp;ntral 7·1
8, New Philadelphia 7-1
9. Lewis Center 04entangy 7-1
10, E. Cle. Shaw 7 -o

OIVtStON IV

1. Youngs. Mooney (11) 7{)

296 -

2. Co&lt;Mater (15) 8.()

289
25.2
176
161
150 ·

3. Bellaire (4) 8·0
4, Oak Hart&gt;"' (2) 8.()
5, Mihon-Union e-o
6, Clarksville Clinton-Massie 8-D
7,-New·L8.1&lt;1ngton e-o
8,Jonathan Alder (1)7 "1
s. Wlllamspo'rt Westfall e-o
10, Martins Ferry 8-D

·

106
97

90
71

t 4.
LllVISIONV

12.

6, Kent -"""~ (2) 8.()

Ni_,. McKinley 17.

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11:
Orrville 32. 1.2 . Blanchester 30. 13.
Lemon-Monroe 17. 14. Massillon Tuslaw

126

Others rece1ving 12 or more points: 11,
Cle. Glenville 32. 12, Cle. St. Ignatius 24.
13. MassillOn Perry 17. 14. Cln. Moeller
LllVIStON II
1, Tol Cent. Cath. (25) 8.()
2, Day. Carroll (2) 8·0
3. Ashland (3) 8-0
4. Macedonia Nordonia (1) 7-1
5, Maple Hts. 7-1

ing with two -veeks remaining.
Coldwater and Mooney
have swapped the top spot in
Division lV all season, with
Coldwater holding an eightpoint lead after last week's
poll. While Coldwater was
beating Versailles . 23-14,
Mooney beat Akron St.
VIncent-St. Macy 4 7-7 and the
voters were impressed enough
to give another group of
Cardinals a seven-point
advantage.
Toledo Central Catholic,
Steubenville. Smithville and
Dola Hardin Northern concinued as the No. Is in the other
divisions.

302
253
242

170
135
t 34
123
66
51
48

1

Others receiving 12 or tnore points 11.
Olmsted Falls 47 , 12"' Alliance 40. 13,
Powell Olentangy Lberty 32 . 14. Piqua 3t·.

15, Mayfiek:t 26. 16. Trenton EdgewOOd 19
DIVISION II
1 . Steubenville (23) S-o
308
2. Kenering Alter (5) e-o
285
3. Cambridge 13) 8-0
258
4, Cin. lncllan H1U B-0
199
5, Cols. DeSales (2) 7-1
192
117
6, Dover 7·1
7, Tipp City Tippecanoe 7-1
76
70
8. Urbana 7· t
9. Walsh Jesu~ 6-2
67
tO, Sunbury 81g Walnut 6~2
42
Others r~i~Jing 12 or more points: 11 ,
Newark LicKing Valley 40. 12. Aurora 33.
13, Waver~ 31 . 14, Youngs Liberty 20 15.

1, Smithville (14) 8-0
2 , N. LimaS. Range (4)8-0

286

3. St. Henry (6) 7· 1

213

254

4 . Barnesville (4) a-o
5. Sherwoocl Fairvtew a-o
6. W Salem NW (218.(1
7, BecHord Chanel 1) 7-1
8. Hamler Patnck Henry 7:1

162
·153
152
122

9. Cols. Ready 7· 1
Warren JFK (1) 8-Q

67
67

n

'

Others receiving 12 or more points: 11 , W.
Jefferson 49. 12, Louisville Aquinas 37.
13. w. Lafayene Ridgewood 36. 14,
Manon Pleasant 33. 15. Defiance
Ayersvllle (1) 31 . 16. Amanoa-Ciearcreek
28 11. De~a 14
DMSLONVI
1, Dole Hardin Northern (23) 8-D 303
2. Bascom Hopewell-Loudon (4) 8-0
280
•
3, Cle. Cuyahog~ His (4) 7~1
207
4, Cov1ngton ( 1) 8-0
199
5. Mechanicsburg7·t
6. COlumbiana 7-1
1,Spr1ng Cath Cent.7-l ,

a, Beallsv111e (1) a-o
9, Lancaster Fisher Catn. 7-1
10. Sycamore Mohawk 7-1

.

150
136

119

, 16

108
50

Others recefVtnQ 12 or more points: 11.
Maria Sten1 Manon Local 29 1:2,
MogadOre 28. , 3, Delphos St. John's 1Q.
14, Danville 17.
·

�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

OV~F

~

W·L
PA
W-1.
Aoel&lt; Hill ........... .
.. 3-D '' . 107 '.50
'' .6-2 '' .271
. ' ' .2·1 ''' 58 '' .42 '''' .3-5 '' .198
Chesaoeake " " " ..
South~int ... .. .. .
.... .. .. 2·1 .. . 76 . .. 50 .. .. .3-5 ... 151
Coal Grove ... .... ..
. ".1·2 .. . 56 ".89 .. " .4-4 ... 197
Fairland ......... _.. .
.. 1·2 - .. 79 . .66 .. ' .. 1-7 .. 127
AiverYalley ..... ·.... . .
.. 0·3 .. ' 41 ... 120 .. " .1·7 ". 99 '
Frldly'a mulls
Friday, Oct. 20
Rook Hill 21, Chesapeake 8
River Valley at Chesapeake
SoU1h Poin141, Coal Grove 15 •
Rock Hill at Coal Grove
Fairlan&lt;l 38, River Valley 6
South POint at Fairland

PA
'. 109
.. 169
: .183
'.289

.. 329

.
,
W-1.
PF PA
Nalsonyille·Yor1&lt; .................3-0 .. .89 ...48

•

ALL
W-1. PF
.. .7·1
..4-4
...S-3
..3-4
. . ..6·2
.....2-6

Elll
WLTPct PF
New England 4 1 0 .800 108 74
N.Y.Jets
·3 3 Q 500 116 149
BuHalo
2 4 o .333 94 125

""

Miami

1 5 o .167 78

PA
.. 171
.. 161
.. 191
.. 174
'.243

PA
'.167
'.238
.. 190
.. 156
.. 208
.. 255

PA

... 271 .. 103
... 147 .. 143
... 186 .. 187
.. . 163 .. 174
_.. 238 .. 129
... 99 ... 188

V1ntonCounty . _.. ..... . .... .. . .. 2·1 ..80 .. 59
Wellston ...... ...... ... .......2·1 ... 64 ... 46
Alexaneer .....................1·2 .. .60 ... 72
t.loigs .. .'........... _......... 1·2
.57 ... sa
BelPre ........................0·3 ... 38 ... 107
Hocking Dlvlalon
TVC
ALL
W-L
Pf -1',\
W.L PF
PA
Federal Hocking ...... . ....... . .3·0
.86 ...7 .... ...7·1 ... 181 . .41 ·
Trtmbie ............ ...... .. ... 2-1
.74 ...39 ... ...5-3 ·... 188 .. 148
Waterford .......... .. ... . .... .. 2·1
.. 98 .. .39 ... . , .6-2 ... 160 .. 107
Miller ......... : .... ...... _, 1·2
.45 ...7~ ..... 1·7 ... 73 ... 186
Southern _...... .... ............ 1·2 . .51 ... 101 .- . .. .5-3 ... 186 .. 148
Eastern .. . . . . .. .. . .
.0·3
.12 ... 104 .. ...IJ-8 ... 74 ...301
Frkllir'o l'llulta
. Friday, Ocl20
Meigs 26,_Alexander 6
Ale&gt;ander at Wellston
VInton County 40, Belpre 6
Nelsonvllle·Yorl&lt; at Belpre
Nelsonville-York 21 , Wellston 14 OT
Meigs at Vinton County
Miller 19, Eastern 12
Eastern at Waterford
federal Hocking 14, Trimble 7
Federal Hockng a1 Miller
Watertord 60, Southern 0
Trimble at Southern

Independents

ALL
W·L
PF
PA
South Gallla
.. ....... .. ... 7·1
.181 .. 103
Wahama .. .. .. . ........... .. 5·2 ... 180 .. 83
Hannan .................. .. ... 1-6 ... 47 ... 222
Friday's 1110Ulb
Friday, Oci. 20
South Gallia 20, Symmes Valley 13
South Gallla a1 Oak Hill
Wahama 40 Buffalo 18
Matewan at Wahama
Bishop Donahue 44, Hannan 0
Hannan at Tug Valley
1

Cardinal Conference
CARD
ALL
W-1.
PF
PA
W-1.
PF
PA
Poca ''''' ' '.''' ' ' . '' '.'' ' ' '' .4-{) . ' ' 144 •. 55 ''' ' .6·1 . '.228 '.109
Sissonville ................. .. .. 3·1 ... 46 ... 45 ..... 5·2 ... 123 .. 96
Wayne ..... : .. ...... _....... 3·1 ... 101 .. 35 ..... 5-2 ... 175 .. 92
Logan ............ . ......... 2-2
. 95 ... 78 ..... 3-5 .. ·.142 , .195
Poin1 Pleasan1 .. .
. .. 1-2 ·. _-43 _.. 130 ..... 2·5 . : .. 133 .. 239
Herbert Hoover .. ..
.'1-3 ... 66 ... 126 ..... 4·3 . .. 167 .. 170
Winlield ..
. . ..0-5 . . 67 ... 112. . .1-6 ...86 .. .133
Friday's results
Friday, Oct.' 20
l og an 14. Sissonville 0
Hert:Jert HOQVE1r at Bluefield
Poca 27. Winlield 14
logan at Point Pleasant
Point Pleasanl37, Ravenswood 34
Poca at Wayne ·
.
Tolsia.30, Wayne 19
Shady Spring al Sissonville
Lincoln County at Winfield

1 11
1

South

WLTPel

Trl-v.t~ eontererice
OIV~ft

I

AME~ANC~RENCE

.

Ohio Valley Conference

2 .500
2 .333
0
1 .000
4 .000
0
Northweet Dlvlelon
W L Pel
2
, .667
Minnesota
1 2 .333
Seartle
1
2 .333
Ulah
Denver
0
1 .000
[ Portland . o 2 .000
Dlvtalon
W L Pet
Gotden State 2
0 1.000
Sacramen10
2
0 1.000
L.A. Clipper's 1 0 1000
L.A. Lakers
2
2 .500
1
2 .333
! Phoeni)(

NotionaiF_L_

North Olvtalon
SEOAL
ALL
W·L
PF
PA
W·L
PF
Logan .........................5-D ... 225 .33 ....6·2 ... 277
Marietta .
. .3·2 ... 104 98
...3·5 ... 139
Zanesville . .. . .. . .
.. ...3·2 ... 151 .. 86
... 4·4 ... 211
Warren .
. .1-4 .. ,57 .. .22 1 ..... 3·5 ... 104
A1hens ........................IJ-5 .. 59 .. .213 .... 1-7 ... 136
South OMolon
SEOAL
ALL
W-1.
PF
PA
W-1.
PF
Chillico1he ....
4·1
.. 177 .. 117 ....6-2 ... 229
GalliaAcademy .................3·2
.134 123 .....6·2 ... 238
Ironton ...... .........
. .3-2
146 .143 . .. S-3 ... 211
Jad&lt;son . .. . .. .. .. .. .. .
.2·3 ... 156 .133 .... .4-4 ...236
PortsmoiJih .. .
.. .... 1-4
.117 .. 159 .....2·6 ... 222
Frldly'a rosu~s
Frldly, Oct 20
Chillicothe 48, Athens 0
Jackson a1 Athens
Gallia Academy 34, Jackson 27
Chillicothe at Marietta
Ironton 49, Portsmoulh 42
Gallla •Adademy a1 Warren
Logan 65, Warren 0
...
Portsmouth a1 Logan ·
Marietta 28, Zanesville 21
Slilurcay, Oct 21
1
lrQn1on at Zanesville (Sat)

Indianapolis
Jaci(sonville
HOUston
Tenrl95See
Baltimore
Cincinnati
P.ittsburgh
aeveland

1 5

PF
0 1.000 135 100
0 .600 118 74
0 .200 72 147
0 '167 85 157

WL
• 2
3 2
2 3

T
0
0
0

5 0

-

3 2
1· 4

.,

""

Pet
.667
.600
.400

PF
110
111
106

4 0 200 ·81

W L ,T Pet PF ·
Denver
4 1 0 ,800· 62
San Diego
4 1 0 .800 151
Kansas Cily . 2 3 0 .400 87
Oakland
0 5 0 .000 50
NATIONAL CONFeRENCE
Ell1
WLTPCIPF
Phhadelphia • 2 0 .667 179
N.Y. Giants
3 2 0 .600 127
3 2 (j -.600 147
Dallas
Washington
2 4 0 .333 118

·~

Detroit 5, Oakland 1

~Qc!11

Fddty. Ocl13

37
55

I

97
126

'

Chk:ago
Minnesota
Green Bay
Detroit
Wasl

All
124
109
92

135

WLTPCI
Seattle
4 1 0 .800
St. Lous
4 2 o .667
San Francisco 2 4 0 .333
Arizona
1 5 0 .167

PF
~~

139
124
111

·

ew

vo~
11'

l!o!!!M!I
s L Oc!
ppd1§ .
at t. OUIS,
·· ram
Dtttclepy OclU

·

""

111 ·
128
194
143

Sundlft ~
De1roh 20, Buffalo 17

GB
1

,

'•

PR 8

.

flsTERN

I

1

I

PRo

I

1

I

GA
15
25
19
12
26
GA
16
15
19
14
21
GA
11
20
23
15
14

GA
9
,9
13
21'

w.dneldlly'l

Ga~

FlOrida at Washington, 7 p.m.
Nashville at N.Y. Rangers, 7 p.m.
New Jersey at Pittsburgh, 7:30p.m.·
Colorado at Toronto, 7:30p.m.
Montreal at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Detroit at Anaheim, 10 p.m.
Minnesota at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. ·

Bank as Trustee for
Equity One ABS, Inc.,
Mortgage
PISS·
Through • Certificate
Series
2004·5
Assignee of Mortgage
Electronic Registration
Systems,
Inc.
as
Nominee for Popular

Financi.al

Services,

LLC
Plaintiff
vs
Edith Barnhouse, e1 al
Defendants
Coile No. 06CV100

Unknown
Devisees,

Heirs,
Legatees,

tho Weal end of a stone exception of a portion
wall on lho South aide conveyed lo Edith
of Lot Number 161;
Thomas and with the
Thence North 4·112 exception of LoiS 159
deg. West to lhe and 160, which have
Southeast corner of been conveyed by
Lol Number 160;
deed of even date
Thence North· 89 deg. herewHh.
Wosl along lhe Soulh Subject to all legal
line o1 said Lot160 and highways. eaaemeniS,
alongtheSouthlineof right of ways, zoning
said tot 159 to the ordinances,
restrlc·
place of beginning.
Ilona end conditions of
16.()()()76.000
record.
16-DOOn.ooo
16-0007'.000
Parcel No. 3:
16-00075.000
Situated in the Village 9 Liberty Lane
of Pomeroy, County of Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Meigs and State of PARCEL NUMBER: 16·
Ohio;
00072.000,
16·
Beginning
at
lhe 00073.00,
16·
Northwest corner of' 00074.000,
16·
Lot
Number
158; 00075.000,
1&amp;·
Thence South
deg. 00076.000,
&amp;
16-

of November, 2008,
which Includes -...y.
eight (28) dllya truon
tho la111 of publi·
cation, or judgment
moy be -~ 11

1

Tlleodoy'o Sportt Tronoac:tlona
BASEBALL
Amarlcen League
BoSTON RED SOX-Signed T~eo
Epstein, general manager
Notlollll l.Hguo
ATLANTA BRAVES-Named Phillip
Wellman manager of Mississippi of the
SL
.
FOOTBALL
Netlonll Footblll Lugue
NFL- SuspendeC Green Bay WA Koren
Robinson for a minimum at one year and
Atlanta G Man lehr four games for violating the lea!iluels substance abuse poli·
cy.
ARIZONA CARDINALS-Fired Keith
Rowen, offensive coordinator. Named
quarterbacks coach Mike Kruczek offensive coordinator,
BALTIMORE
RAVENS-Fired Jim
Fassel, offensive coordinator.
DETROIT LIONs-Placed RB Shewn
Bryson on injured reserve. Signed RB
Arlen Harris. Waived WA Scon!e Vines
from the physically·unable·to·perform
list. Released OT Clint Stickdorn from the
practice squad. Signed G Stephen
Peterman to the practice squad.
HOUSTON TEXAN5-Signed DT Llonal
Dalton. Signed WR David Anderson from
the practice squad. Signed WR
Craphonso Thorpe to the practice SQUid.
IND I AN~POLIS COLTS-Acquired DT
Anthony McFarland from Tampa Bay for
a 2007 second· round draft pick.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERs-Signed
CB Phillip BuChanon .
Arena Football LMQul
SAN JOSE SABERCAT5-Signed WRDB Burl Toler and WR·DB Cleannord
Saintil.
HOCKEY
Notlono1 Hockey LHgut
MINNESOTA WILD-Recalled RW Matt
Foy and C Wyan Smith from Houston of
1he AHL.

ooon.oo

n

n

houle.

GA
10
13
17
18
17

-MOOELOCALSimS.

GA

992-2155

-MORE tOCALI«KS.

10
15

Subscribe tOllay.

Attorneys lor PllllnUfl then.,. with 1he line
600South"-''s-t belouea:o Mid Lola 14

E. IIMgle,
llelga Coun1y Sholill
.
Attorney
for
tho

740-91~

((10)11,18,2
Columbus, Ohio 43206 and 15, lOUth .26 deg. ·- - - - - - - 614·221-1662
0 1 ' - 217.78 feet lo
Public NoCice
(9)27,(10) 4, 11,18, 25, . lhepolnt of boglnnlng. - - - - - - (11) 1
Re...-vlng
however, NOnCE: Ia hereby
the coal ~ Ill alher
thai on Sai!Way, ·
rnllwlla In - . . ober 21, 2008, at
Public Notice
lying
1he
lbova · 1 :00 a.m., 1 public
_
Mc:nbld p!Opll'ty, . . . . . . bi held 11211
S1lerlfl Solla
togaltllo' wlth 1he ltght W.
Sec51.,
CaHNU-05CV110 tomlndlhe-wtth- "-of, Ohio. The
Irene Dill Plalntlffva
ou1 eACIII!IIIrlnce to Formers ll8nll end
Kimberly
Holldlly the ~. n .,.._ Sovingl COfni*IJ 'Is
Defendant&amp;
jedtolnnu-dtor Mlling lOr CMh In
Court of Common U~uage fttt. dlch or hind ar cet11Red check
Plen,
leochlng dl1c:h oa. set tho following oolblotrUetge County, Ohio.
forth du oltwd In ol:
In pu1'Siiance of an that lnatnoment - - 199IPOLARIS ATV
order of sale to me lng Ncwernber 26, 4X~XA010383
directed !rom Hid 1043, and recorded In The F - Benl11no1
court in 1he a - enti-- aalof Recorder's Olllce Sovlngs - Company,
l1e actiOn, I wllltxPM&amp; Decemboir 3, 1143, In Pomeroy,
Ollio,
lo sale Ill public aue- Deed book 151, Page r e - • 1111 rlghl ·to
lion on 1he front IIepa 178.
bid at
and to
of lho lllliga county Aet.rence Ia made to withdraw 1he court on Frklay, of Ruth E. Clrr to prtor to - ·
November H, 2006 at Irene M. Dill illt.d 7 Further, 'The Fll't!Mn
10 a.m., of said day, the Nov. 1994 and record- hnk and Savings
following
described ed In Voiu1111 15, Page Coqlal'i\' nu.-- tho
reale-e:
701 , Ofllclal Recordli, rigid to rojeclony or oil
All that certain lot Meigs
County bids submllted.
piece of pence! of land Recorder's Ofllce.
Tha above described
situate In the VIllage of RelooNnce Deed: Book collll- will be sold
Pomeroy,
Molgs 65, Page 617, Meigs "IS i•whore Ia", wHh
County, Ohio, being County
Official no
expre- · or
known and designated Records.
Implied
warranty

5

this....,

Audllor'a Parcel No.:
16-00229.000
P.-_ty AoldreiS' 166
Lincoln
Helghla,
Pomeroy, Ohio 457611
Curren!
Owner:
Kimberly Holldoy otal
Pnoperty
el: 1665
Lincoln Helghla
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PPtl~ 229.000
Prior
Deed
Ret.rencn: Volume
65, Page 617
Appraised
at
$17,500.00 Ierma of
oale: 011nnot be sold
for less than 213rds of
the opproloed voluo.
10% down on day of
sale, Clllh or certlfiecl
chock, belonce dill on
conflrmallon of aalo.
The approlaal did not
Included an Interior
examination of the

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

HlAUH SfSHM

Robert

given..
For further lnforma·
tion, or tor an appoint•
mont to inapecl colllt·
.era!, prior to sale dale
contacl Cyndle or
Randy at740-912·2136.
(10) 18, 111,20 31c

·l\egtster
(304) 675·1333

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

JOIN OUR TEAMI!
Director of Quallty/Risk Management
This position wm plan, direct·and coordinate the
hospital's initiatives in the areas of Performance
Improvement, Patient Satisfaction, Patient Safety
Initiatives and accreditation processes. The Director of
Quality /Risk Management will assume administrative .
responsibility for Infection Control, Employeee Health,
Nutrition Services, Patient Satisfaction and Utilization
Management functions. This position will report directly
to the Executive Vice President.
The successfful candidate must hold a Bachelor's degree
in Nursing or a related field. A Master's degn.&gt;e in
Nursing or a related field is preferred. A minimum of
three years proven quality management experience is
required with supervisory experience in an acute care
setting highly desirable.
Please submit a letter of intent and a complete resume to
the Human Resources Department of O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital by October 30th. Salary is
commmensurate with experience.:
Human Resources
55 Hospital Dr.
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Athens, OH 45701
www obi
·
eness.org
Phone: (740) 592-9227
Fax: (740) 592-9444
EOE

~~;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::~

Word Ads

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Moncllly-Frlday for Jn••rtlon

All Dlaplay; 1.:1 Noon ~
aualneaa D•y• Prior To

In Next Day'a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
~r1cl•v For Sundav- .Paper

Publication
,
sunday Dl•play: 1:00
Thursday for Sundaya·p,,,.,, ,j

• All ada must be prepaid'

• Start Your Adl With A Keyword • lndude Complete
Deleriptton • IMtYde A Prtce • Avotd Abbrevlllttonl
• Jndude PhOM Number And Addrlll Wft\l!n Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 D•Y•

r
~r--.~--w.~.y_.l
2 Schwlmm bicycles to giv8·
away (304)882-2715

Great Dane/Yellow Lab mix
Housetreined, great w/k:fds·
pets. Rescued from hit &amp;
run. In great he&amp;lth.
(740)367-7574.

s,;.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
.!f"1',
Borders 53.00/per ad
I!
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00for large

POLJQEB: OhiO Yatlly Publlllhlng ,.........""-right to edit, ~. or uncelanY ad at any time. Errort: muat be reported on thli llrllt day cl
Trlbune-SentiMMit..l..... wiU be ~bte fOf no mor• thin lite cotl ot the 1pace occ:upltd by the trror tnd only thelftt lnurtlon. W• thall nol
1ny ION Of lxptnH mit r..ult8 from lhe publication or Dmlnlon or an advertlaement. Correction wiM be made In the tlrat awalleble edition. • Boll
11"11 llwlya conflct.ntltl. • Current l'llll card appllea. • ~~~ raal •tala advar11..rMnts are aubjact to the Fedenl Fair Houalng Act of 1968. • Thla
accept~ only help Wflnted tda
EOE ttilnellrdt. WI . not knowingly accept any ad\lertlalng In wjoletlon ot the taw.

KIT .&amp; CARLYLE

~~

\\\1\ 1 \c 1 \I I \ I "

Mo~:Y

kltncerlyleftcomcest.net

Qull1ors, crahers, . sewers.
dads, moms, toddler/baby
girls... this Is your yard sale.
The finest· q'uilting fabrics.
crafts, crafting supplies,
dothes, toys, movies and
much more, all new or like
new condition. Don't miss
this huge yard sale that has
something for ewryone. Fall
and winter crafts. Went out
of business and want to sell.
Saturday th!J 21st, 1686
Lincoln Pike, Gallipolis. ,

HNOTICE••
Bonow Smart Contact
the Ohto Divisi on of
Financial
Institution's
Office of Consumer
AHairs BEFORE you refinance your hOme or
obtain a loan . BEWARE
of requests tor any large
advance payments ol
fees or insurance.. Call lhe
Office of Consumer
Affairs tol l free at 1·866278·0003 to learn il the
mortgage broker or
lende'F
FS
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
fro m the Ohio Valley
Put;)lishing Company)

r ~~~
Donation
Yard
Sale,
Perennial Cat Shelter
Saturday, OctOber ~, . At
MLuke~
1·2 year old, The •· Rutland
Fire
neutered male. Please give Department to raise money
Luke a home {740)645-7275 . for the Oasis Christian
Two Australian Shepherd Fellowship re lay tor life
pups. 1 mate, 1 female, 6 team.
·

r

~ANJID

monlhs old, biaci&lt; &amp; wMe.
(740)388·8756.
~

r

YARD SAlE

TO Buv

I

.

I.

10·14

~

IHO

IIHO

r.l'llr-------,

IIHO

11;;

·I

.

I·

,,

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIED INDEX

!Ali--liS

-

JiliffJ!IJir

@$

-r- . . . . . . . . .

rib

I

•·""''

I

..

Do

I

Loat-

I

~18

SAVINGS

I

no

lao

FIND A JOB OR A NEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

Shop
Classlfleds!

'

-·

fB(J)IIillstatus or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference: limitation or

discrimination ."
Thl• new1p1pet' wltl not
. knowingly .ccept
ldvtrttumentl tor rt•l
"tate wtrich Is In

I. vi•:::.Eo~~i"'

iliiiiiil

on

Ail reel e1tate ad¥fitl1lng
In thiA new1p1per II
subject to the Fedent
Fair Hou1lng Ac:t of 1968
which make• It lllegel to
·advertlle ·•any
preference, limitation or
· dl~erimi~ation baled on
race, color, religion, sex

TURNED DOWN DN
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582-3345

Absolute Top Ootlar: U.S.
www.eomic::a.com
C 2006 by NEA, Inc.
Silver and Gold Coins,
IH \I I "I 'I I
Prootsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
ScHooLs
t935
U.S.
Currency, !!~~------, 1'1~~------,
l'l';ll""'-":':'...~--,
Soli1aire Diamonds• M.T.S.
lfllu&gt;WANJID
lfllu&gt;WANIID
~'QRUCilON · r10
KOMI'S
-~
Coin Shop. 151 Second •
lfEu&gt; WANDD • •
. •
,
I'OR S.&lt;U£
Avenue, Galllpotis, 740-446Concealed Pistol Class L,--oiiiiiioiiiiiiioo-,1
Friday, Saturda~. 9-3pm, 2842 .
Ohio, WV, NVFWov. 4, t 996 Redman 28x60 in
2295
Mlllcreek
Ad.,
FACTS/New Alternatives· Part Time Meid needed 2006, . .$75.00.
9:00am.
1~ APP•Y
· "' wm1lfl
..... no VFW Mason WV. (740)843· Apple Grove 304·593-671 9
Gallipolis, antiques, 60's Buying Junk Caos,ltuoks &amp;
An n.-1·
....... ..-1en1 AIcoho and Lowe H0-.:n
- · ca 11
..
v1ew .
online
at
memorabilia, coins, canoe, Wrecks, Pay Cash ·J D
o1her Drug agenC')t IS
~.
5555. 740-416-3329
accepting
resumes
for
the - - - - - - - wwwforvb.com,
code 8246
tools, riding mower.
Salvage
(304)773-5343
following lull time position:
Part. time . on -site ·vending , Gallipolis C.reer College
(304)6lti·1374
3 bedroom, 21:18th, with firePrwentlon · Educetor· attendant (Cheshire area) (Careers Close To Home)
place, 40x60 barn. Rio
Se'eking an energetic lndl· Bam to 1pm (M-F) No travel· Call Today! 740·446-4367,
Want to buy new and old .
Grande area. On Bflat aces
• NO EXF'ERIEI'4CE NECESSI.RY
vidual to wo'rk with you1t1 lng, no deliveries, vacations
t·B()(}-214-0452
junk carsltruc:ksJvans. 740·
• FUU·TIWE CLASSES
$120,000.1740)709· 1166.
and adults in Gatlia and days,
holidays.
Call - .ga&amp;ipoli9cautsrrotlege.wm
'COl TRAINING
416·1594 or 740-416-1588
'RN.\NCING '-V~IL.Aa.E
Jackson
countfes. (":40)698·0008.
Awedlltut 1.41'M'11bflr. Awediemg 3 yrs. old. 3 BR, 2BA. Lg
'JOB I'I.ACEMENT.
Responsibilities
include,
but
Council for lndepeMant Coll 8l}ll~ Porch.
Heat
pump,
Wanted. cars any condition
• ENAOl.LIHG NOW
not limited to: alcohoi,tobac· Receptionist at a Vet office, and Schools 127AB
Appliances. Meadowh~l off
or fixable. (740)3118-8228.
parHime, must be able to
00 and other drug educe- muht·task. Experiences pre· Karate self-defense, profes· Sandhill Ad. was $89 .000
I \1 1' 1 tl ' \!1 '\ I
ALLIANCE
to
$79,960
sional Black. Belt instructor reduced
tion •. mentoring program, larred bu1 nol necessary
"I 1,' I I o.,
. .
4x4's For 51111 •.•:......................................... 725
TRACTOR-TRAILER
classroo.m presentations, Recipients should personal· Men, women. children (304)5253 or (304)593-5949
Annou~nt ............................................ 030
TRAINING CENTERS
trainings, lalrti, community
SpaEious fully equippeo
WYTHEVIUE. VA
eventS. development and ly_ deliver resumes to Bill gym. Bitanga·s Martial ArtS 31Jr, 2-b.ath. bas ement,
An11queo .......................................................530
Crank Veterinary Hospital.
attached garage, vinyl sid·
!or Rent ................................... 440
of grant Henderson, WV for lnfo call Center, Middleport . 740- mg . tenced yard, storag e
, -800-334-, 203 Implementation
AucUon ond Flea Morkii................. :...........OIO
prolects. etc. A minimum ol (3041675- 1270
992-5715. Open daity
building.
2919 Maple
AUla Porta &amp; Acceuorleo .......................... 780
a
~chekJrs
Degree
(3041675-2515
Auto Ropoolr .................................................. TTO
COL driver !or gort&gt;ago required. ~nd resume by
Misrn..IANIDt5
Autoo tor Sole ..............................................710
4 bedroom, 2 trath, double
route. MIJSI have IJq)lrience October 24, 2006 to :
. , _ • Motor81or Sole ............................. 750
FACTS, 45 Olive Slrea1,
garage, pool, 2 acres.
&amp;
knowledge
o1
GaMio
Co.
Building SUpplllo ........................................550
1 - Pressure Washer • H.P. Eastern School Oistric!.
Full or port time. (740)388- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or
B,.._ and Buildings ............................. 340
~ ""'""
FAX 10 (740)446·8014.
HoMe OHV 3000PSI. 3.5 740·992·3465 after 5:00PM
9886.
- . Oppootunlty.................................210
LEARN
EDE, Mlf/lol
gal. wlhose &amp; extra nozzles.
-•"••oll'olnlng ....................................... 140
SALES
E.C. $500.00 aft. 5 p.m. 4 bearoom, 2 bath, double
TO DRIVE
Certified Bus Driver
Cl1mpen &amp;
780
garage pool, 2 acres ,
74Q-992· 1575.
Applicetlons are being
FEDERAL
~lng Equlpmenl ................................... 780
Ea stern School District .
ASSOCIATES
accepted tOr 1 long term
Corda of Thanki .......................................... OIO
POSTAL JOBS
Amos and Son's Tras t-t 740-992-3465 after 5:00PM
Join the wlming team\
FULL-TIMECI.ASSES"
(and could pooslblolead too
Chlldl!lclerly Clre ....................................... IIO
$15.67-$26.19/hr.,
,_
hlr·
'COL TRAINING'
Ttalnlng- Two week ini· Service, F1rewood &amp; Extra
fuH·llme
poolllon)
lor
Ellcb1c-lgliotlon ...............................840
' FlN~NONO tiWAILABLE"
ing. FOr opplk:a11on and lree tlal &amp; orientation classes Hauling, Reasonable Rates , 4 rental hOuses 'For Sa l e~
Substitute Bus DriYir with
, JOB PLACEMENT" •
Equipment lor Ront .....................................480
govemomen1 Job ln1o, coli wlth continued ongoing Heap .Accepted (740)388· Good U'l come producing
1he Gallla Coun!Y Board of
propertres Great tocaho nl
exc.vattng ••••••••,.......................................... 830
American Assoc. of Lobor 1· 1ralnlng.
0371
MR/00.
Cuallfica11ons:
Form Equlpmon1 ..........................................610
Pnce(s) are NegoliaDie.
913·599-8042, 24111ro. omp. llanag11Mnt· The best
ALLIANCE
F_.lor Ront .............................................430
CuiTOnt bus dn"" i&gt;1&gt;/IICII. sorv.
Motivated
Seiter!
In
W"''IID
management team in the 11;
TRACTOA·TFIAIL~;R ,
,.... for Sllt ............................................. SJO
libsl~ COL with Clua B
Gallipolts. Call Wayne
To
TRAINING CENTERS
endorsement. background d -Fo...,rm,.-lng-Rocl&lt;i--m-ete_l_ba_nd-. oountry to assist you.
(404)456·3802 .
For '--········--·--····----···""""""'"''""""""""'410
~
For ........................................................_515
check and school buo certlfl·
'
Tl'lllning in Wymt¥1 1~. Virginia cation
certiUcate. Lootllng for singer. Ca!l: Bonuses, Flat ra1e, George's Porta~e Sawmill. About $3000 down 812 S.
For Boll or rra. .........................................HO
740-992-9904 or 740-4 16· health care , Disability, don1 haul your Logs to the 3rd. Ave ., Middleport. Totally
....... &amp; v.getoblla.....................................580
Applications are available It
,
-800-334·,
203
remodeled. 3 bedrooms, 1
Lpng Term Care and Mill just catl304·675·1957
Fumllhld Roomo ........................................450
1he Guiding Hand School, 1090 ·
bath.
Pertect oredlt not
more.
Qenero1 HauUng .....:.....................................ISO
L~-=·•~•-::·~•::"'~'"="'~-~~..J 8323 N. SR 7, Chashi re, ----o/tll---~
Furniture warehouse/deliv·
Drywall req uirad Payment $525.
Painting
end
~ay ......................................................040
100 WORKERS NEEDED Ohio 45620. The Gallla ery parson needed. Apply In
S&amp;rvtce. mise labor. Call tor Appraised $70.000. 740·
Hippy Ada.........................................._
..........oso
~1 John Song FordAssembleCiafts,
County Board of MR/00 18 person 10-5, Lifestyle
estimate after 6:00 pm or 367-7129.
Htoy &amp;Graln.....................- ...........................140
lincoln-Mercury
we've
wood items.
an, Equal 'Opportunity Furniture,
3rd
Ave.
leave
message. 740·985Help ................................................. 110
establiShed a 35 year
To S480ivol&lt;
Attention!
Employer.
Gallipolis. No phone calls.
3779.
-lmprowrnonts...................................810
reputation
of
honesty,
Materlals·provlded.
local company offering "NO
- l o r So1e ............................................ 310
Oriwrti, Hiring now, Mason - - - - - - - - integrity and outstanding
Free Information pkg. 24Hr. l Dlxon Lines. Van, Aat Help wanted at Darst Group
Ray &amp; Son's Complete Car DOWN PA.YM ENT~ proH a u - Gooda ....................................... 510
customer service· before
80
j -428-4649
Ctean1ng
2615 112 Ja(j(san grams f01 you to buy Your
Bed,
Heavy
Haul,
Regional
Home.
working
with
elderly,
Hau-lor Ren1 .......................................... 410
and after the sale. With
Ave. Pt. Pleasant. WV (3011) home 1nstead o; rent1ng
-------~ &amp; Ovor lhe Road. ClOss A heavy lilting Involved. 741J.
In Memoo1om ................................................ 020
1he hotteSt prcxtuc;ts on
675-7375 . we wash ny '100%financrng
lnou..,_ ..................................................... 130 An Excellent way to ea!n COl required. Good driving 992·5023. ·
the marl&lt;et and as the
hand spec1al complete was • Less tha n per1ect Cfedrr
Lawn l Ga,_ Equtpment ........................ 660
money. The New Avon.
record. Excellent compen·
fastest growing dealer·
Gall Marilyn 304·882-2645
job $4.50 oft Extenor wash accepte~
Local Employer looking to
~ock.................................................... .. 830
ship in our regoo , we're
-~~----- sation. Call M·F U0-4'30
• Paymem ecoid be tne
jobs
$2.50 off
liire
full
time
Receptionist.
Faund ........................................... O&amp;O
(304)722·2184
adding Sales Associates
AVON!
All
Areas!
To
Bu~ or
same as rent
LoiS &amp; Acruge ............................................350
Must be fast learning and
,,~ CJnLniEUJEI!L\
to better service our
l ocators
Dr1Wr5· ACCOjlilng
Mortgage
Mli~180UI ............- ................................ 170 . sen. Shirlay Spears. 304·
able to multi task and handle
customers.
675·1429.
C.•Rf:
Tralneeal
(740)367-0000
stress. Computer knowledge
· - - · Mlrchl-.......................54o
16 Day Closs A COL
Mobile._ Ropoolr....................................860
is " plus. Pay stans out at
If you are looking to start Compan1on ,anrl cBre g1ver Brick house &amp; 7·ac:res lana.
Banender: Honest reliable ,
Mobile- for Rant ............................... 420
Training
$8.00/tu. Please send
i 501 sq.ft . lrv1ng area
a new career or maybe
dependable
.
only.
Apply
a1
'No Money Down+
Mobile for So1e................................320
resume to CLA 8cDc .558 c/o you don't feel you're paid for an elderly persor'l 1n my 1203 sq.ft. unf1nrshed baseSkyline Lanes ,1 1th Frame
Mono'( to Loon .............................................220
hOme Pnvate or semr pnvate
Tuition Reimbursement!
Gallipolis Trbune, PO Bali
ot treated as well as you
Lounge.
~ &amp; 4 Whoolero ..........................740
room witl'l bath I have 20 ment . 3·oedroorn 1-bal h,
Job Placement Avall! Off
469. GallipOlis, OH -45631 .
should be and if you're
.Mus1co11natruoMnta ................................... 570
years of elCpe:nence 1!.. refer· l1vmg rd. kitchen :llng1ng rrn
WeeMnds, Must be 211
BELIEVE fTl
comb•natton. TV roorT' &amp;no
tired of workln:J lor
Pwoonolo .....................................................005
1-666-002·7035
LPNfRN's
needed
In
2-car detached garagEl
someone
who
lsnl
•SB.SOittour
- l o r 51111 ................................................ 560
Gallipolis, Ohio. Pediatric
WOft1ng tor you. g1ve
located 3-miles so.~:h on
Employment Oppoftunffies..
Plumbing &amp; Heallng....................................820
•Full and Part Time
case Days/PT. Call Primary
Pat
Hill
or
Brad
Sang
Rt·62 at the Y $125.000 for
School
Aides
and
.Progam
Po-lonal ServleM.................................230
Schedules
C'Are Nursing Services B1
BusNE&lt;\&lt;;
App1 calli304)675·2845
Substitutes
needed
to
wortt:
acalit~
AM!lo, lV &amp; CB Repair............................... f60
•Medical Benefits
800.518-2273 or 614-764Om:mruNm·
(740)445·9800 or
at
CarletOn
School.
- • E - Went.d ..................................... 380
•Paid Trainig
0960 and ask tor Jean.
1-800-272-5t79.
-elnatnoctlon ..................................... 150
E:xpenenoe and/or training
•Vacations ewry 6
Seed. Plant &amp; Fortlllmr .............................. 650
Vou may also apply 1n
.preferred. Submh appilcaMEDI HOME HEALTH
mon111s
•NOTiU•
Sllulllona Wonlld ...............................,. ... o.. 120
tion or resume to: Carlel:on
parson at
AGENCY
AndMuct&gt;Monl
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHSp..lar Ront ............................................. 480
195 Upper River Rd ..
SchOOl, 1310 Carleton ·
lNG co recommends
Sporting Gooda .. ......................................... 520
Gallipolis Ohio
Street. P.O. Box 307 ,
HAS OPENINGS FOR
CALLTODAY1
that you do ous1 nes~ w1th
SUV'alor Sole ... ...... .................................... .
Monday-Friday
Syracuse. OH •sns.
1-an-4H247
people you ~o.n o .·•. anc
'l'nocb lor Sole ............................................ 715
Overtrook Center is current·
Upholstery .........................: ......................... 870
ext.2321
Someone for plumbing. Srd· NOT 10 s~nd :11Cn£')
ly accepting applications for .,
v.na For 51111 ............ ................................... 730
ing, 1nsulabon , ocld tob"s , ref· tnrough tht nJalr until vow
S28 PER HOURI
Oietary Technician or equiV·
W.0-10 Buy ....................- ............ ,.......... 090
erences required {7-40)992- have lnveStiQ!Itf&gt;d one
Otspatchers
and/or alent for 20 hours per week.
Hou~e tO! sale m Svracuse
S42 PER VISIT
W.nllil tO Buy· Farm SUppllea .................. 620
ottenng
8862
Ambulance
drivers.
two·bedroom w1th bath,
- T o Do ..............................................
Please stQP by and fill out an
Competitive wages. Apply at
attactrao, garage and base- t o Ront ............................................ 470
application today if you 'Call VICki Reynolds, AN ,
lite Ambulance. 1770
Yon! Solo- GolllpaUa .................................... 072
ment An estate sale
have quest1ons please conClinical Manager at
Jackson Pike, GallipOlis,
Yon! Sell Pooo..,.oy/M-...........:............. 074
$70.000 Phone (740)992·
tact MIChelle Gilmore at 992- (740}441 -1799 or 1-800Ohio.
Yon! So!H'L Plolaani ................................ 076
3690
481 -6334
6472. EDE

r

nowopoioorl

floMES
FllR SAJ.E

m l.oAN

4

19

O'BLENESS

S'-!; lhencl with Plllntlff
demanded - ·
said line of Ncxtll Robet1e A. Hill
Frank &amp; ,WOOldridge SlrMI, south 68 &lt;'-g. 200 E. 2nd St
Co. LPot.
33' eall, 50.17 IMI; Pomeroy OH 45769

Administrators ,
Executors, Creditors
and Assigns of Edith West, 55 112 feeti
Barnhouse, deceased Thence 44 1/2 deg. Property Address: 9
whose last known West, 78 feet; Thence Liberty Lane, Pomeroy,
address is unknown, is Solllh 48 112 deg. West, OH 45769
hereby notified that 40 112 feel; Thence Also known as 9
JPMorgan ,Chase Bank South 112 deg. Weot, Liberty Lane, Pomeroy,
as Trustee filed a 207 feet; ThenJ;8 North Ohio 45769, and lha1
Complaln1
for 76 112 deg. Eaat, 302 there remains duelnd
For:ectosure and Other feet; Thence North 2 owing \59,241 .62 wHh
Equitable Relief on 114 deg. Wesl, 163 teet inleres1at7.75 percent
July 14, 2006, Case No. to the said Seyfried's per
annum
from
06CVtOO, on the prop- Southeest
corner; February 1, 2006, and
erty described as lot· Thence along · said cosiS lha1 the - n ·
lows.
Seyfried's Soulh line, dents nomad In the
Parcel No. 1:
Soulh 80 3/4 dog. Wesl, Complaint may have
Situe1ed in lhe Village 1.10
feet
to
the an Interest In said
of Pomeroy, Counly of Southeast corner of property,
therefOre,
Meigs and State of Mrs. Tbomas Lowden's Plalnllff demands lhat
Ohio: And known as Lot; Thence South
It be found to have a
being Lo1s No. 1 ~9 and deg. • west, 40 feel; good valid · and sub·
160 as shown on Plat Thence along alild slating lien on aatd
of Horton and Dabneys Lowden's West nne, p,.miMs,
for
the
Addition to Pomeroy.
North 112 cteg. Weal, 96 amount owing; that tho on tho map of Lincoln
The real estate lnclud· feet to the place of Defendants equity of Holghll,
made
by
ed the land on which beginning;
redemption be _ fOre· Braeco
&amp;Carper,
the garage lor the rosl· ALSO a permanent - ; that all tho per· Roglslered
Civil
dance is located.
right·of·woy 16 feet ties be required to Englneere, Huntington,
16.()()()72.000
wide acrou Lot 162 answer as to their West VIrginia, dlt•d
16.()()()73.000
from the promises intero81 in laid premia· October 17, 1942, 1
Parcel No. 2:
honoln conveyed; (oald . ea or be forever borred copy of which mop
S~uated , In the Village right being mentioned from oaaertlng any was filed In 1he office
of Pomeroy, County of in deed to Louis lntareat therein ; that all of the Recorder of
Moigl and State of Seyfried fnom Kennelh liens on sold promlsoa Meigs County, Ohio, on
Ohio:
Seyfried and Margaret be marehaled and their December 17, 1942,
And known aa being Seyfried, et al, former prlorHIII delermlned; and recorded In Plot
Lola lllumber 157 and grantore, to whlc:h ref· lhat said premises be book No.3 at Pegn 43
158as ihown on tho erence
Is
hereby sold aa upon execullon ·and 44, oa Lot No. 14
Plat of Horton ond mode).
and tho proceed• of ond more poortloulorly
Dabneya Addition to ALSO 1he following said sale be applied dll.s crlbed allallowa:
Pomeroy. Beginning at described real eatete: occordlng 10 law; and Beginning at a point In
tbe Southwest corner Excepting oil of Lots lor such other relief ao lht north line of
·of Lot No. 158 aboVe; 1511 and f60.
la the lojuot equitable .
Lincoln Road at tho
Thence South 4-1/2 Intention o1 tho former Defendant first herein· ~omer belween Lo11
deg. Eut, 22 feel to a Grantee• 10 convey all above mentioned il 14 and 15, nahown on
stake on tho South of tho real property further notified lhat said mop; !hence with
aide of a atone wall;
owned
by
Bertha they are required 1o the said line of Lincoln
Thence North 80·314 Seyfried at the time of answer sold complaln1 Rood , north 63 cteg. 51
deg . Eost, 110 faet to her decool8d wHh tho on or before 2VIh Day west 50 reel ; lhence

n

wlth 1he Hne betwlln
Lalli 13 n 14, north
26 &lt;'-g. 01' · 267.67
l8el 10 1 poln1 ., 1he
south line of Ncxtll

Websjtes:
www.mydallytribune.com
www.mypailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

Thurwday's Gamel

'

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
JP
Morgan Chase

E·m•ll
classWied@ mydailytribune.com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS·
PLUS -YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Calgary at Boston. 7 p.m.
Washington at Atlanta. 7 p.m.
Colorado at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m.
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders, 7:30p.m.
Nashville at New Jersey, 7:30p.m·.
Philadelphia at Tampa Bay, 7:30p.m.
LoS AngEiles at Phoenix. 10 p.m.
Detroit at San Jose, 10:30 p.m .

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Help Want8d

OH

TRANSACTIONS

PRo

I

Tuesday'a Gamel

Montreal 5, Catgary 4
Phoenix 5, St. Louis 2
Edmonton 2, ,N'ancouver 1
, ·san Jose 2. Dallas 0

'

DaiiBs 34, Houston 6
N.Y. GianiS 27 , AUan1a 14
Seattle 30, St Louis 26
Wld'Ud'* Oct. 21
Tennessee 26, Washington 22
Delr011 01 St. Louis or N.Y. Mo1a, (n)
Not1ono1 Hockey l.Hgua
Carolina 23, Bahlmore 21
.
Tbu!ldll¥ Qct 20
•
EASTERN CONFERENCE
New Orleans 27, Ptl!ladtlphta 24
Detroit at St. Loula or N.Y. Mets, ~nee· 1
Attantlc Dlvlalon
T._ Bay 14, Clnclnnatl13
....ry, (n)
w L OT P1s GF
N.Y. Jets20,Miaml17
SltunteOctu
~- NewJersey
3 2 o 6 1-1
Pittsburgh 45. Kar-.as Cl1v 7
Sl. Louis or N.Y. Me1s a1 De1rol1, 11 nee· ~- Y. Rangers 3 3 0 6 25
SanDiego48,SanFranclsco19
essary (n)
N.Y. Islanders 2 3 1 5 15
De~r 1~· Oakland 3
·
'
SyndG Oet 21
Pittsburgh
2 2 0 4 11
Open .. Indianapolis, New England, Green 1 St.louis or N.Y. Mets at Detroit. if nee· j Philadelphia
1 4 1 3 12
Say. M1nnesota. Jacksonville, Cleveland
essary (n)
Northlalt Dlvillon
Monday'tGMN
1
'
.'
w· L OTP1s GF
1 Buffalo
Chicago 24, Arizona 23
6 o o 12 31
Sunday, Oc!. 22
0 ASKETBALL
Mon1real
3 o 2 8 17
Detrott at N.Y. J~ts. .1 p.m.
Toronto
3 1 2 8 22
Green Bay al Mi8mo, 1 p.m.
Notlonol Bu-n A-.:tlllon
Ottawa
2 3 0 4 10
Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
Pr.HaOn Glence
I Boston
1 3 1 3 1o
Jacksonville a1 HouSlon, 1 p.m.
CQNFIRENCE
I
Sout-t Dtvlolon
New England a! Buffalo, 1 p.m.
Aflondc Dlvlolon
·
W L OT Pis GF
Carollr:'B at C1nc1nnat1, 1 p.m.
w L Pet
GB
A1
4 . 1 1 9 20
San D1ego at Kansas City. 1 p.m.
1.000
t
a!"&amp;
'
0
3
Philadelphia .ar Tampa Bay, 1 p.m.
i New York
Florida
3 2 1 7 19
Denver at Cleveland, -4:05p.m.
j Toronto
3
0 r.ooo
Carolina
3 3 1 7 21
Minnesota at seattle, 4:15 p.m.
Philadelphia
1
1 .500
1h
Tamp~ Bay
2 4 0 4 12
Washington at Indianapolis, 4:15p.m.
Boston
1
3 .250
2;,
Washington
1 1 2 4 12
Arizona a1 Oaklan&lt;l, 4,15 p.m.
New Jersey
0
3 .000
3
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Open; Chicago, St Louis, New Orleans, 1
SOUI~It lotv~~lon-..
~
centrll Dlvl1ton
San Francisco, Baltimore, Tennessee
1
.
.
· GB
W l OT ~s GF.
Monday,Oct.23
A11an1a
3
1 .750
. Detroi1
3 1 1 7 17
N.Y. Gja"lS at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Orlando
3
1 .750
Chicago
3 2 o 6 23
Washlnglon
3
2 .600
'1
1 COium~s
2 1 1 5 12
Miami'
1
2
.333
1'1
St.
Louis
2
3 1 5 14
BASEBALL
Charlotte
0
4 .000
·3
Nashville
2 3 0 4 ,8
Central Otvlllon
Norlhwe•t Dfvlaion
PootHIIaon-ll
W L Pel
GB
W L OT Pis GF
Dl\ltSION SERIES
,
Chicago
3
0
1.000
Mirtnesota
5
o 0 10 19
Amertconl.aog..
j" Detroit
3
1 .750
'•
Edmonton
4 2 o 8 · 11
llltmlt 3 Nlw \'or1!; 1 .
· Milwaukee · 2
1 ,667
1
Vancouver
3 3 1 1 16
New York 8. Detroit 4
i Cleveland
1
2 333
2
Ga!gary
2 . 3 1 5 13
Detroit 4, New York 3
. Indiana
1
2 333
2
Colorado
1 2 2 4 13
Detroit 6, New York 0
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Poclflc Dlvialon
Oeirolt 8, New York 3
SOuthW.It DMalon
W l OT Pts GF
j
W L Pet
GB
Dallas
5 1 0 10 18
,
Olkllnd 3. Mln0119t1 0
Houston
2
1 .667
i San Jose
5 1 o 10 23
Oakland 3, Minnesota 2

Galli a
County

Chicago 5, Colorado 3
Vancouver 2, Edmonton 1
Detroit 3, Los Angeles 1
Buffalo 9, Philadelphia 1

1
1 '.,

.

I

CLASSIFIED

15 13
14 18
16 25

Nashville 2, N.Y. Islanders 1. SO

I
I·

59
82
138
158

3 0 2 8
2 4 0 4
2 4 0 4

Monday's Gllmn
N.Y. Rangers 4. New Jersey 2
Carolina 5, Tampa Bay 1

St: Louis 4,·New York 2, St. louis leads NMT~~~~~·:·Houston, 8:30p.m.
senes 3~2
Thuraday'l G1me1
Wtd•WV OcL 11·
Char1otte at Indiana, 1 p.m.
St Louis (Ca~enter 15·8) at New York 1 ~New Orleans vs. Golden State at Los
(Maine 6·5), 8.19 p.m.
Angeles, 7 p.m.
. Dyradly. Qct 11
Maccabl Elite Tel Aviv at Toronto, 7 p.m.
StLOUIS at New York. 8:19.p.m., If neeOrlando vs. Atlanta at Birmingham, Ala ..
essary
8 p.m.
.
Chicago at San Antonio, 8 p.m.
WORLD SERIES
Milwaukee at Dallas, 8:30 p.m.
lllyrrlly. Oct, 11
Portland at Utah. 9 p.m.
Sl. Louis or N.Y. Mo1a ot-Do1roft, (n)
Sacramento at Phoenix, 10 p.m.
Suncle ·O pt ·g
L.A. Clippers at L.A. Lakers, 1o p.m.
Sl. Louis or N.Y. Mate It Dotroft, (n)
" • tn oct 14
HocKEY
Delroi1a1 St Loul.. or N,Y. Mefs, (n)
I

PA

m:rtbune .- Sentinel - ·l\e

Two points for a win, one point for over~
t1me loss or shootout loss.

GB

Houston 72, Dallas 69
LA. Clippers 107, Ptloenlx 96
Sacramento 96, LA Lakers 91
Golden State 124, Porttand 120, OT
wedneiadty'a Gemea
Minnesota vs. Detroit at Grand Rapids,
Mich., 7p.m .
Indiana vs. Denver at Cincinnati, 7 p.m.
New Jersey at Bos.ton, 7:30 p.m.
Toronto vs Cleveland a1 Aochesler

Sundly. Oct. 15
~
S1 L New vr0 1
"' 12• · OUIS 5

·N

Anaheim
·· Los Angeles
Phoeni?C

~·

New York 2, St. Louis 0
Oet 13
Fddft
St.Louis 9, New York 6
Sttun;l«y. Oct. 14
'St. Louls 5, New York 0

""

Pet PF_
1.000 180
.80089
.200 87
.167 108

Oct. 11

St. Louis a~ New York, ppd., rain
Jhyraday. Oc:t. 12

WLTPCI PF
5 1 0 .833 145 110
4 2 0 .667 109 111
3 2 0 .600 83 69
140 .20062 104
WL T
6 0 0
320
1 4 0
1 5 0

National LMgue
Wtdnttdly

'"

Monday'8 Gamea
Washington 100, Chark)na 91
Minnesota 103, Indiana 87
Detroit 90, Utah 85
Chicago 87, Memphis 78
Tueaday'a Games
Atlanta 100, Orlando 96
Cleveland 93, Maccabl Elite Tel Aviv 52
New Yon.: 116, ioston 108
Miami 109, New Orleans 105
Washinnton 100. Charlotte 84
I

Detroit 8, Oakland 5

South

New Orleans
Carolina
Atlanta
Tampa Bay
Norltl

I

Detroit 3, Oakland 0
Sttuntey. Oct. 14
Detroit 6. Oakland 3, Detroit wins series
I 4-Q

PA

2
1

-lite

LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
AmerlconL-

All
69
99
84
109

~
St. Louis 5, San Diego 1
St. Louis 2. San Diego 0
San Diego 3, St. Louis 1
St Louis 6, San Diego 2

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, October 18, 2006
MemphiS
New Orleans
San Antonio
Dallas

Oakland 5, Minnesota 2
Oakland 8. Minnesota 3 ·

PRo FooTBALL

PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS

Dh

PageB2

~nesda~October18,2006

•

dwelling• ad~terdsed In
this newspaper are
avtllabte on an equal

opportunity b11e1.
House and 10.77 acres at
Mt. Alto. Private with great
view, $155.000 (304)895·
3722

--------House with large lot. 2 car
garage, wood floors, maple
~ itchen .
gas fireplace
$82.500 (304)675·2364
tn Patriot. l bedroom , new
kitchen cabinets. new fu r·
nace, .AC, new plumbing,
large lot. Call (740)446·0761
or (304)675·2329. •

TIIIIIG ..
a Bedroom- 2 Bath

S4UJl

-mymidwnthome.com

(740)828-2750

Bedroom ,
Tw o
Three
Batl'1room , oll8rsized two car
garage, storage buildrng. 1/2
acre level lot. Well mainReduced
tained home .
$89,900 . 740-949-8010 .
Vine Street . Racine.
Two Srory hOuse/1 acre
48d , 1 112 ea., O.R. .
kitchen , u11tity room. fi re
place,ges logs, 11ving room
plus family roo m. 2 car
garage , front porCh , basemen!, st orage buildings .
TPC water. heat pump.
paved dnveway. Letart. Falls.
740·247·2532
'

r M&lt;iu~s~ns I
14x55 two bedroom mo~le
home wllot in Middleport .
$15,500, 740-416-1354
2003 t6xBD mobile home lor

sale (740)446·0527
--.,-----3 bd.. · 2 Dati". 1990 M .H ..
2~teres. 10 X 12 buildmg.
pool
Off New Lima m
Rlltland $63.500. 7 4(}.711~·
1080
Fo r sale· all electr1c 2 bed·
room mobile home Address
1322 Jack.son Prke. extlas
lot also Call (i4014 46·347S
Mobile home rented for
$40&lt;J'mo
Greal used 3BR horne only
$9.995 Will rerp with deliv·
ery Cal (740)385·7571 •
New 2006 Cla 11on sin glewldes starting at $199 .84
per month . Trade-i ns welcomes Call {7 40)385-2434.

r

Lms&amp;
Anu:\1;£

3 2 Acres 1n Mom1ng S1a•
Area w nght-A.·Way 740949-2544
Almost 1 ·acre 1n Galiipolrs
Ferry area S6.850 on land
contract {304)576-2934
Mobile Home Lot tor rent

near Vrnton Call {740}441 ·
11 1 1

�. Wednesday, October 18,2006

www.mydllllyaentlriel.com

Page 84 • The D.aily Sentinel
AooiiMmrs
FOR RliNr

Wednesday, October 18, 2006
ALLEYOOP

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85
NEA Croaaword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Commtrda.t
Molliie Home Lot In Johnaon 1 BR apt In Spring Valley. Downtown
Mobil&amp; Home Park in HUOIPRC vouchers accept· Retail apace for Rent. $4001

ACROSS

Phone ed. WID . hookups. Call month.
Upstairs Office
(740)~·2003 or (740)o&lt;e&amp; (740)446-0834 or (740)6&lt;15· Suhes for Rent $t251 month
1409.
4846 (cell)
you pay ihe UtilhiH. Call
(703)528.()617
tBR furnished apt, tBR fur· .:___:__ _ _ _ __
nlshed mobile home. No Mobile home lot will take
pets. Refldep. required. 16'&amp;, 14's, 12'a iMdl. $125
(740)446-4782. Gallipolis, month, dep &amp; ret. (740)367NHCI to sell your home? 0H.
7995.
Late on paymems, diVorce,
job tra-r or o doalh? 1 2 bed rms.. laundfy rm., rg &amp;
can buy your home. All cash ref. furnished, 1st fl. dean, in
lind quick closing. 74()-416- city. (740)441-()596.
rto .• H~
3130.
2 bedroom upstairs apt. ..,
1.: I \. I \ I "
Water, trash, stove refrlgera· . 3pc Oak ant. ctr. $300;
tor included. $325 rent, $325 Dining rm suite tbl, 9 ch
deposit.
(740)U6·7620, but/hutch' $700; 9 cu. ft .
HOUSES
{740)441 79872.
chest
freezer
$200.
FOR RENT
(304)614-5780.
A Hidden Treasure. Largast
apartments in the area.
$,~, 4 Bedroom HUDI Newly reno~~aled, brand new - - - - - - - 4% down, 30 years @ 8%. · everything, staning at $425.
For listings 800-391-5228 Call today before they are all

GaHipolis,

Pauline}.
Tdlis

t

Dtc.I3,1913
(kt. 18, 2001

;;:;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"i

limt~

3644

2 Bedroom Apartment, 2nd
3 - 4 Br. house, 2 lull bath. Avenue, Ga~ipolis;
garage, and basement. AIC Also avallal&gt;e unrts on State
and very clean. 740-949· Route 160. Call for details
2303.
Pet friendly. (740)441 -0t94
.

God took home
onto/his
favorite angels,

'"lllko !he podn out
.palntlll(l·lel us do It
roryou"
Interior On!y

retirement.

740-985-4180
message
berore6PM

Leave

w...houstl

j

in Henderson, wv. PreFORSAu:
owned
A!Jpliances
startlrg
L~------at $75 &amp; up all under ..,
F 11
Lb
ppies
warranty, also have reconu
a pu
$100. Choc.,yellow&amp;blacl&lt;.
dit ioned Big Screen TV's (740)o'4 1 931 .
by Ron's TV (304)675- - - - - - - - 7ftllol!o
'
wel......t
1 W Ike
,_.
a r pups
..-vu
- - - - - - - - Treeng
912106• proven cross (2nd)
New recliner $200; sofa &amp; I. 740 -367•7482 .
seat $400. Mollohan Furn.

blooded
-o

r

v~~D~~

S&amp;S Auto Sales
320 S. Pennsylvania Av8
Wellston, Ohio
Hog ready for 1
breeding or
(740)384-Q473
butchering, (740 742·20t4
otter hours: (740)669-0302 '
0p M da Wed da
HAGKAINY&amp;
en on y,
nes y
&amp;Friday 10am-Spm
1994 Mustang GT, 5.0 6
speed, blacM. with black inteClean
straw
$2 ·50 · rlor,• e&lt;tra c1aan, $4750
• :
(740)446-3800, (740)645 • 2000 Dodge Caravan, 4
0645.
· door, tOS,OOO miles $3,900;

5 yr old whtte short horn bull
full stock. (740)256-6574.

PKrs

r

IF

r

r . . .-

.,

.._ .

I

Ho~

~-

riO
~

• __

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and untur~
nished, security deposit
required, no pets, 74Q-992221B.
-------Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp;
bath, upstairs, clean. no
pets. Ref/deposH required.
(740)446-15t9.

50'x100' mobile home lot for
rent in Middlepon. $125 per
month, 74;0-4 16-1354
Commercial building "For
Rent" 1600 square feet, ofl
street pariw;ing. Great loca·
tion1 749 Third Avenue In
Gallipolis. Rent "Negotiable~
Call Wayne (4041456·3802

BARNEY
THAR'S SNUFFY YONDER, SUT
I THOUGHT DOC PUT SNUFF'(

WINTER STORAGE
.

L ocaIIy

i

I

$6,995. Pelmed metal,

slid'

er, !rae delivery. (937)7181471 ,
www.nationwide-

;__.J
AKC Siberian Husi&lt;y puppies. Blue eyes, $250. Full
registration, $200, limited
papers, calm , intelligent
(74())446-8627.

r

9:001m-11 :00pm

Roleooo:April21,2007
A fee &lt;&gt;! $20.00 will be
charged for ear1y arrival,
late arrival , earty remcwal,
tate removal. or anytime
access is wanted to
fairgrounds other than
slated dates. Building
space Is first come
first serve.
Inside Storage: $4.00/lf
Open Span: $2.00111
Inside Fer'ICe: $1 .00/lf
Gail985-4372
for more Information

·New Homes
• Garages
· • Complete
Remodeling

J41·992~1m
Stop &amp; Compare

r

L.------·
L1vEsroac.

THE
I""[ W~':&gt; 1\11.1/IKG. TlitDUBL£. Wl\!l.""q
IN:&gt;Oio\!ot\~
;.~...__,.,._

III&gt;ID N0\\1.\t~G
~TO 1\W.. ,

E:'4£R IR\E.[) IT ?

Thursday, October 19th
Serving from 5:30 • 6:30

Entertainment by
Joey Wilcoxon

6:30. 7:30
$5.00 admission
For info call
740-992·2161

Aral
11 Pellovers'

BeowuH'a
drink

grp.

Your leM·hand opponent opens one
spade, your partner passes, your nghlhand opponent lumps to four spades,
and you overcall four no-trump. What
message are you transmitting to partner
about your hand?
Sorry, but not oil four-no-1rull'jl bids are
Blad&lt;wood. The most oommon axample
occurs after partner opens one no-trump
or two no-1rull'jl. If you jull'jl to four notrump, ni.s quantitative, asking panner to
,pass with o minimum, to )ump to slam
with a maximum, and to guess well with
a mlddHng hand. To ask for acaa,
respond four clubs, t~e Garbe&lt; convention.
Four no-trump ~ Slact&lt;wood when \hera
is a clea~y agreed suit. For axample,
one spade - three spades - four nOtrull'jl. Or four no-trtJr!1l Is a wild IMp
info the stralosphora aftar partner has
l&gt;ld a suit. For axample, one spade - two
hlllrts - four no-trull'jl. ·
The given doal occurred during a privata
game In St. Louis. Wltan South bid four

CDUI~\\t~~'(~~T

fOit 1-'.f. !

overcall showed o two-suHod hand: at
least 5-5 In two of the three unbid suits.
After West compated to five spades,
North know to sacriflca, bidding flva notrump to ask his partner to show his
lower-ranking slit, and siK dubs doubled
became the final contract. Th~ was tha
par restAi because five spades would
have made for plus 450, and six clubs
doubled went ddwn two lor oinus :)00.
In hlgh-IM compe1i1ive auctions, four
no-trull'jl· ~ usual~ best reserved
show a two-suHed hand, not to ask for

AstroGraph
-~=

Thureca.y, OCt. 111, 2008
By llemlco Ooof
Your circle Of friends and relationships
will be subslanlially advanced . Each new
group you meet, Place vou go or activity
in which you engage could serve as a
contributor toward furthering your popu·

IIPim

37 C&lt;lnlrola 747

12 Not often
""""

39 Force
41 Diet

16 Soflllgh!-

lng (2 wds.) 43 Untrue!·
18 Monic unit
worthy SOli
20 Scondln- 114 Make lleel
avian city
from Iron
21

Egyptian

45 Exec. aide

30 " Ettu" lime
31 NASA •
counlerpart

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos

.

c.trty ~~ cryplOgflft'll n create&lt;l trom QLMIII•ons t1t fiii'ICIJII p!!Dille. pa91 w ilfQelll
EIC!'IIIIIttr 1'1 1htl djQ~r Nntls tor II\OUiel
Todsy's clus; Wequals U

"VL. JM AC liLAC PAYG AV, VWPP NV

..

K J H.G , I V G L J I G R N M A 0 G M N

CIIJRX JRX CMJ .HG? " -

V.L.

XJIAGC

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'In a dream you are never aighly.' - Anne Sexton
' AII1he things one has forgonen scream lor help in dreams.' - Elias Canetti ·

IllI
':~:~' S©~&lt;illA-~r.~s·
l4ilo4 loJ tiAY l , POllAN

IIOlt

G

•law ~:":.':"!..~.
::
to """'
words
four linlplt

TRI V0 C

I

larity.

We Deliver To You I
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

~A NUTS

~ ......t)":"il!'l"d"""'4":...

I THINK SOUNDS ARE
INTERESTI"16,DON'T YOU?

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT .

WI-IAT 15
'(OUR I=AVOIUTE
SOUND?

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

446.0007

740.742·2193
• Leave a message

•' KLVNK"? 't"ES,
•'KLUNK' IS A
VERI( INTCRESTIN6
SOVND ..

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23}- lnlerestingty,
today' could produce a brief cyde where
yoU may be fonunate financially withOut
having to eKJ)end much effort at all. But
woOOng for $011lething will hurry thingS
along.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24· Nov. 22) Conditions that influence the nice things
you would like 10 have are taking a tum
toward granting your wishes. Some lovely things may be given to you from lhose
who like you.
SACjiTTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) -

Retationships could take on a grealer

significance When a couple o1 associates
actively play a part to make life much
nicer for you, either at wo11&lt; or in your
social sphere.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - The
possibilities for achieving Your private or
secret ambitions are quhe good. Others
are more willing now to help you realjze
your aims and might even go out o1 their

Cornerstone
l!il ;&gt; &amp; Construction
~

way to do so.

R&lt;stdeallol• Conunerdat • ~ C....tnotlq

(Jan,; 20-Feb. 1 9 ) - This iS
day to share 11ctivities with
friends becaUse you should be feeling
mara friendly than usual loward almost
everybody. In return, they will vaslly
enjoy your COR'f&gt;S"Y·
AQUARIUS

Painting • Doors • Windows • Docks

an

• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
WV 031H2 . • Plumbing • Electrical 7«)-317..,....
OH 312U
• Accoustic Ceiling
740431-1412

SUNSHINE CLUB

~cel69nt

PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)- You co uld

do quite well where joint ventures are
cOncemect. They may ewn be instrumental in aaraCiing rr.oney to you without
wanting anything back in relurn.
ARIES (March 2, ·April 19) - Alhances
or agreements into Which you enk.r are
likely to be basGd upon more sensitivity
to one anolhe r's circumslallC8s than ·
usual. Consequently, they wit have more

•

Top • Rancrlal ·• Tritn
• 5111np Grinding
• BuCket TNCk

F HE I C !

' Love is hard to clefine." a
mother told her newly engaged
!S
a son. 'I think it's when two
~::::::::::_~.., people are lo_c&gt;ll ing in \he same
h-..-.,......-...---1~

I I' I

I ~~
~

7

.

II : IN El : ,.
•

.:. PIINT

"

"

NU'o\eflfD

V Lf111RS

•

II_

. , UNSWMSlE FORI
ANSW!l

_

I~- ~~;,:,~
by Ml1ng

lht

&lt;hu&lt;l ie quottd
mr.sJJng wlrords

1" the

1011 d.....,top hom llep No J below

I I I II I I I I

SCRAM-LEtS ANSWEIS I0/17106
Hinder- Creak · Woman- Jester- V',ERE in IT
An old timer silting on the dock gnnned and said.
' There are more fiSh taken out of this river than ever

WERE in ITI'

ARLO&amp;JANIS
'1'00 !&lt;IJOlil, I U&amp;.D TO ~~'!'
YOU'D c.f.T TIIZW OF /I.E.'

staying power.
TAURUS {April 20-May 20) - If you share
your conoerns with others, something

St., Pl. Pleasant. WV

Sue Unclerwootl
Special
11)01. OFF perm, color cap hilts

GARAELD

you\'8 been keeping Ia yourself can be
more easily taken care of. TI-!ey'tl have
suggestions you hadn't thOught of that
' will wortl well.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - When it
comes to friends and tarT,iiy, you'll be willing to put your needs eaoond lo their.:; ,
and as a resutl expsrience great sat1S·
faction from their happiness. It'll be a big

lifi: to you .

Adkins, Licsnsed Mssssge Therapy

CANCER (June 21 -J~o~ly 22) - Tast&lt;s
you'\18 been putting off because you view
them as arduous or Irksome could turn
out to be labors o11ov9 once you get into

20%0FF

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

...__ __.........

1

-·---·----

NOTICE

Paul Davies
.Jewelers

Check 9ur Large
Inventory Of
New &amp; Used Vehicles
smithsuperstore.com

r~,c;rum'&lt;,I AA\IE. FOONC&gt;TI\f?

BIG NATE

304-675·1411

Soup Supper

c.uw£"

'UNI\l.l Ti!JE.D 1\\E.~
C.OUNm~u ~W'-IT RUlJ.'(
~'-•~"'t.... WOF.K£[)! W..~ YOU

All About You

will be closed tomorrow
in order to prepare for
their incredible 60th
Anniversary Sale
Friday, Oct. 20
&amp; Sat, Oct. 21

Four no-trump 36 continent
not for aces ·· · ·

aces.

n~n ·

Sixltl and Main

NEA

17 Basilica
56 Attack on
part
·
all sides
18 Railroad
track part
DOWN
19 Zen riddle
23 Mike tutl&gt;ld 1 Tweet
2 WMbltl
26 llolel room 3 Shingle
fixtures
specialist
291lngon
4 Bronzecoln
5 Wob alta

no-trump, there was no agreed suit. His

ACE TREE SERVICE

"KJEFER IUILT 'VALLEY
"8tSON "HHRSE ' UVE·
STOCK TRAILERS 'LOADIIAX
•GOOSENECK.
DUIIPS
•
liTlUTY .
'ALUMA
'ALUMINUM
TRAILERS "BAW ~NECK
HnCHES.
C.rmlchal
EquipMent
(740)441-2412

4•

to

Also Foil 1:11/le
Prioss vary d8pending anlengttl of hair

Senior Center
will be having a

TMING II

Meigs County Fal=nds
Anlvol: OCt. 28,

CIISIIIC1111

New Helix Cuts Cud

Meigs County
Council on Aging

THAT'S PRETT'(
MUCH TH' SAME

ON BEl) REST I!

Tree Service

1·304-675·61 83

MUGti
. Of A

GOINC/l&gt;fNGf!

JOlES'

Don't Want to be a Burden
on your family?
I have one opening for an
elclerly or hanclicappecl female

roo

FlfTffN.....

"-'"'"'"'''"-"'""""
....._
"'~=­

SPACE
FOR RliNr

tiAill&gt;t..Y, S'llt, THAT
WOULI&gt; rt

AGTVAt..L Y MAI&gt;f

wark

Ii

~, .../

&gt;Mn&lt;V•~·~,.,

tor

FOR RENT

ON ONf! ON TVJO YOIJ l&gt;ll&gt;I'I'T ·.
FIX MY l&gt;IVOTS Of'/ Ttlf
'
PUTTING 6/tffN! ANI&gt; ·
ON Ttlf Ttl/Ill&gt; tiOLt
YOU W#tOTf I&gt;Owl'l

.... YOV MV5T If T!-lf wOitLI&gt;'S
IN0!5T C.Ar&gt;l&gt;Y!

SlXTtfN INtlfN .I

~===='I:W~•:m:'·:pd~

Cleaning

(304)882-3017

APt.KiMEMs

YOV l&gt;II&gt;N'T FINI&gt; TttE Ttl~ff
rALI.$ .I tilT INTO Tttf viOOI&gt;S

All C,aJJ.ts Returned
~=:Se:H;·;S;to;r·~=-=::: ~==-~~~g~~~~~~==~

I

ADVERTISE
YOUR .
BUSINESS
·INTHE
CLASSIFIEDS
L...::.::::..._ _ __.

C

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

,

BISSELL·

Obi.

54 Dlarespeet
55 Held Utle to

32r:

North Eosl
Pass
SNT
Pass
Allpass

Opening lead: • K

"Middleporfs only

Ma,·a

Ellm View
Apartments

cc.e -

s·•

740
99·"'L- 5458
.
lea"e
M essage
,

RIBERT

s•1•

4NT

beard

16 PTA and

sun god
47 Zipped
22 Pen points
along
clutter
24 - -Ia-Ia!
48 E•ll!lreen
33Tole
6 Salecrackt&lt; 26 Stagecoach
scent
~ 7 Juneau's
pullers
49 Vanity
34 River .
stile
'rT Container 50 Currently
sources
8 Thallample
for a flonll 51 Rushed off
35 SwHch
9 Highest
dlspley
52 Family
degrM ·
posHions
28 Mix
mem.
36 Paklllan'a 10 Caspian or
-Ingredients

Vulnerable: Neither

v.,,..

t.-.-...if:iliOR-SiiiAIL--·

~ '~

I

Dealer: West
West

dollghl

52 Long ~U1s
53 Pointy

25-.....-

.AKQIOB

i

10.----..,....

n'!~

•••

South

46 Teen tvenll
48 FUied with

trade

.AJ J062
• 5

Hill"s Self
Storage

til

Free Rent

r

FOR

13 Climbing
11M'
14 Chrlllle of
whodunits
1s· Manuel

tD ·I&amp;-06

South

iL.------....1

i

bldg.

I

... 7 3

"'001)
l i V ' A .Ti.'O'N
17'
r•
IN MIDDlEPORT
V'

3BR home- SR 554, Bidwenor
__:.__:
(74())44t-t184.
_ _ _ _--:-~ Phone
202 Clerk Chapel
(740)388-0t73.
Rd. Porter.
""""~
·10
$2
2000
900Esoort ZX2, auto, nice
$575/mo- sec. dep. refer· Apt. for rent 2 or 3 Br.. No
Sa onl
3
ences, all elec. (740)446· Pels. 74D-992·5858.
_epe:__n_s-__t_Y_
·-d
FOR SAu:
4x4
NOW OPEN
3644.
-BE_A_U_T-IF_U_L--A-PA_R_T__ Thompsons Appliance &amp; Kl· ~- Fruit! cl harry ·~h
SALE
Klmmy's Furniture
Repair~75-7388. For- sale, Ho-ry nut s za, smoo
·
AttenHonl
MENTS
AT
BUDGET re-conditioned automatic skin, 740-992·7449. Virgil's 03 Chevy CS; 04 Honda
Outlet
Local company offering MNO PRICES AT JACKSON washers &amp; dryers, refrigera· Berry Patch, St.Rt. 124, Eas1 Civic. {740)256·1526.
02 Jeep RoCkclimber, -4-cyl.,
N~w &amp;: Used Furnlta"'
DOWN PAYMENI pro· ~STATES, 52 Westwood tors, gas and eleclric · of Syracuse, Ohio.
S·speed, air, CD. garaged 297 Lmcoln Screet M1ddkrort. OH
grams tor you to buy your ·Drive from $349 to $448.
1961 Cadillac convertible. maintained. StJ,OOO, part7.0.79+0751
home instead of renting.
WalK to shop &amp; movies. Call ranges, air conditioners. and
FOR s~
Very good 'condition, leather trade surprise me Into.
,.367-7442
• 100% financing
740-446·2568.
Equal wringer washers. Will do
inter·ior, classic. (740)245· (304 )882•3454
'-;;;;;;;;;;;;•;im;B;i•~;·O.:;·;
"''i;;;;;;;;;;:
• Less tt1an pertec1 credit Housing Opportunity.
repairs on ,major· brands in
9142
.:__:__-,-_ _ _ _ •
accepted
shop or at your home.
Commercial building ~For
~Gep
wrangler
1997
• Paymenl could be the CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
SPolmNG
Sale" tBOO square feel, oft t995 Chry~ar NY $2,800
108,000 miles 4 yl 5 spd
same as rent
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
·
s1reet parking. Great loca· 1999 Dodge Dakota Tr. black, lift, $S900 645 -4717
Mortgage ,
Locator s. Townhouse
apartments ,
~
tion! 749 Third Avenue in $4,100
~
(740)367.(}{)()()
anQ'or small houses FOR
Gallipolis. Prtce "tiiegotiable" 1997 Mercury GM $4,250
91 Chevy Blaze/2 dr., 4.3
RENT. Call (740)441 -1 111 SportiM Goods 1 Rem. New roof! Motivated SaUer! 2001 Chevy Cavalier $3,800 auto. 4WO, high miles $700.
29670 Bashan Road
House for rent. Pomeroy, 2 for application &amp; information. 1100 (12 ga.)$600.00, 1 - Call Wayne (4&lt;M}456-3802. 2001 Dodge lntrep $3,100
Phone 304-550-3036.
Racine, Ohio
BR. CIA, clean, new carpet. _.:.;._ _ _ _ _ _ Springfleld-87F (20 ~-1
2002 Ford Focus SE 54,800
"··~
45771
nice level lot, Rl833. Small ~~
$275.00. 1 - Stevens2003 Ford Taurus LX $7,500
.,._....,
740-949-2217
OIJt
$475 plus utilities
•
820S(t2 ga.)$300.00, 1Phone (304)675-4452 or
. &amp; dep. No pets. 740-843Kimber-Pistol(45
caL) jjrp,
-_-,-~ (304)675-1252
""
5264 .
$900.00, 1 - llenelli-Pist&lt;&gt;
r~
1998 Dodge caravan, A/C.
MP95(22 cal.)$800.00, lifter t.-.--~iliiliiiiiiiiiiro_.l 2000
Mercury
Grand auto. V6, Call (740)44t·
Ta~lng applications fo&lt; small
Marquis, very good condit bedroom home on Lincoln
r .m. 74G-992- 1575·
, 025 ·
Houri
'KIEFER BUI.T 'VAUEY tion,
76,000/miles,
&amp;
St. in Middleport. can 304·s pecial
"~,::.~ 'BISON 'HORSE • UVE- AC,CD,PW seats, mi•ois &amp;
'-""...,.....
7:110 AM .· 8:110 PM
57 2000
2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt
6·
• STOCK TRAilERS 'LOAD- windows, $5,800 (304)675 MaroR
Very nice 2 bedroom house
Starting at $385 and up
MAX
•GOOSENECK, 1534
r
wUh garage in Crown City.
Central heat &amp; air, WID
2 lots- Ohio Valley Memory DUMPS
a
UTILITY 2000 Neon 4 door, air, auto- 1969 Airstream (Tagalong)
$500 plus utilities. Security
t.ookup. Cciin operated
Gardens. Call (740)441- •ALUMA
•ALUIIIINUM
.
$2100
080 32', good condition, 41new
deposit and references
''laundry, owner pays
0754 or (740)245-5003 TRAILI:RS -a&amp;w GOOSE- m( attcl,
ss2
.· tires. AJC, new ·hot water
740 256 1
required . No pets. Call
water, sewer &amp; trash.
leave me&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;gN[o.
......_
NECK'
HITCHES. -• _ ::.::.::.'__ _ _ _ _ tank,
new
plumbing,
(740)446-8571 .
COtmlchHl
Equipment 2002 Chevy Cavalier, lOOks ~
BowfleMPowerProXLTwlth (740)446-2c12
and runs great, ,,7,000 MoiiJLEFOR
ieg &amp; iat attachment,
miles, automatic, $4,500
C - - .I
~
......,,
.
Cali (740)446-QSOO.
•-~~~
~ v1ce
490 D Excavator 79 Ford 080. Call (740)256-t 253.
Firewood lor sale, CherTy &amp; 9000 . Roger's Lowboy. 98 Sebring, runs great,
Affordable
(2) 14x70 mobile homes tor
Walnut Call (740)446-2948. (740)4468044, (740)44t- · sharp. 740-446-7278.
ftependable
Gracious
living.
1
and
2
bedrent. (740)446-4060 or
7514.
BASEMENT
FuUy Insured
room apartments at ViiiJge
(740)367-7762.
JET
WATERPROOANG
&amp; Bonded
Manor
and
Riverside
97 John Deere 310C 8,000
AERATION MOTORS
UncondKional
lrte~me
guarDaily,
Weekly, or
2 bedroom,. 2 bath, private Apartments In Middleport.
Repaired, New &amp; RebuiH In hrs. for sale or hire .
antee. Local references furMonthly Plans
set1ing, no inside petS, close From $295·$444. Call 740Stock. Gal . Ron Evans. 1- (74()):J68.6228 or (740)446nished. Established t975.
Available
to town. Deposit required . 992-5064. Equal Housing
7278.
BOD-537-9528.
(740)446-6890.
Opportun~ies .
Call ·24 Hrs. (740) 446·
1-740·'192·6196
,
.
0870, Rogers Basement ':~~;:;;~~;;;;;~
2 bedroom, A/C, porch &amp; Now taking applications for - - - - - - - - John Deere 1oft. No Til Drill
tor
rent
Carmichael
Waterproofing .
one
bed
apartments
at
NEW
AND
~SED
STEEL
awning. Very, very nice, no
Equipment (740)446-2412.
pets. In Gallipolis. (740)446- Spring Valley, Green and Steel Beam~ . Pipe Rebar
ComDiele Tree care
Concrete, · Angle,
2003, (740)446-1409 or Brookside apartments. Call For
Top •"frim • Clble Ano¥11
John
oeGre
Mini
Excavator/
(740)44S- 1599
informa- Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
(740)o&lt;46-2692
· 17! RMd Shit • Qllijpolla, Off
Grating
For
Drains, Tractor Loader Baddtoe/
Ride: JohniOft Jr.- Owner
2 bedroom. an electric trailer _tion_
. - - - - - - Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Skid Steers. Carmichael
·tor rent, (740}742-2014
One bedroom apartment. SCrap Metals Open Monday, Equipment (740)446-24 t2
Location: 403 112 Third Aile. Tuesday, ,Wednesday &amp;
PhoN: (74D) 441.f311
2 bedroom, private lot.. One block from GAHS. Friday, 8am-4:~m. Closed New John Deere Compacts
and
5000
Series
Utility
1lllcstove -refrigator-washer - Washer &amp; dryer hookup. For Thur9day, Saturday
&amp;
tors CO% Fl•od for 38
dryer.
$47S.OO month an application call (740)446- Sunday. (740)446-7300
STANLEY TREE
dopostt raquored. 740-992months through John
4639 _
TRIMMING &amp;
0031.
- - - - - - - - STEEL BUILDING: MeN- Deere Credit. Carmichael
GENERAL
.
. . Taking applications Moctern lNG- MuSt sell quanze1 style Equipment (740)446-2412
3br M-Home m Galltpohs 1BR . no pets. $275/mo steel building. 25x34 paid
CONTRACTING
Farry call (30-4~ 74 -46 33
includes water &amp; sewer. $8,770 will sacrifice tor quick Quality JoiVI DMrll Hay
• Prompt &amp;quality
3BR, 2ba, dblwide, no pats $200/dep. Call (740)446- sale $6,440- brand new, ~II Equfptl*tt lor less-round
, ret. requ!red. Close to 3617.
on pellet. CAll 1-800-352- balers, square balers &amp;
• Affordable Rates ·
mower· conaltloners 04.7%
R.V.H.S. $475 month, $475 ~ . R.
,
·s 0 pi 0469
F
nth th-·'""
• References
dep. (740)367 _7025 .
..wtn 1~rs .~ower 1
bead for 48 mo s '"""""''
Available
mg applicatiOns for waiting
1UJBNG
John
Deere
Credit.
Mobile home tor rent. list for Hud-subsized. 1· br,
S1.JJ1111Jm;
Carmtchaal
Equipment
• Free Estimates
(740)«6-4234, (740)208- apartment, call 675-6679 ~
(740)446-2412.
"Insured"
7861 .
Equal Housing Opportunity Pole Barns 30x50x,O
Call Gary Stanley

I '·

K 8

70 Pine Street • GaHipolis
7 40-446-0007 Toll Free 877 ·6611-0007

10x10x10X20
3194
992992
_O f
- 6635
.

bou
dllewlll
41 HI-ll recorda
6 Loob
42 IIMr con·
aloopy
llolllllon
11 Oro....II)' 46 Osiris'
12 ._rapport
belov.d

East
. A 7653
• Q75
• Q tO 6 3
• 4

• A KJ 4

~co:i'@M•

Middleport, OH

I

Auros

•

FOR SALE
Mlllm
B u I"ldl. ng W"th
ar·
SElF STIRIIE
I
.. '
W1"thout BUS I" neSS
97 Beech Street

._.,..,,..,.....

West
.KQJI08

Piland

· 1 About,

. J t a 52

MONTY

&amp; MEDICAL EQU(IPMENT

r .-~: "Ir_,a_..,;r:IRAiiiurosll~--· p.~.~.:I:.L.I.I.J~~~~
y

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

Ntrdt
• 2
• 9I 3
• 9 8 72

I

Send resumes to: Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Resources, 2520 Valley Drive,
Point Ploasanl, WV 25550 (304) 675-4340,
fax to (304) 67~975 , or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

Appllsnce

"'"F254
gone.
Laurel
Commons
·
Apartments
(304)273-3344
2 bed , 1 bath , "'
Nl ch an, ;·IVIng,
dining, bsmt. Hardwood APARTMENTS
NOW
flooOI
$500
month. AVAILABLE.
Excellent condition. Call tor Brand new 2 Bedroom
Application (304)615-7902
Apartments washer/dryer
.
28R home- Vinton Ave. 'hookup, stove/refrigerator
pay · included, t located in city, t
$375 mo.+ sec. d.p. "ou
,,
utllltiaa. Gasheat(740)446· appro&lt;. t mile outside city

Medical Aaalelant/Mtdlcal Rect!pllonlat
Pleasant Valley Hospital Is currently
recrulllng lor a Medical Roceplionis!Modlcal
AIISletant for Its physician offices. Tho
individual should posaesa prior physician
otfic:e experience
with knowledge of
CPT/1C0-9 coding, front office rece~tlonlst
procedures and clinical experlenc&amp; a ~Ius.
Excellent salary; holidays, health Insurance
single/1amlly
plan,
dental
plan,
IHo
lnlllJrance, vacation, long-term disability and

4D

Vanne'a

Phillip
Alder

OH .

....
------

!hem. Things will come together easter
than you thought.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) - You may
indulge yourself intd lOOking at your pals
through rose-colored glasses, which
won't necessarily be all bad. we all ne&amp;d
to look past the flaws of others occasion-

...... ldlll.

ally.

~~-·

•

•

.,

·The Dai1y Sentinet

SEAl IT

CARPENTER
SERVICE

CONS-TRUCTION

New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing

'992·21.55

Roofing &amp; Guner•
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
P1tlo and Porch Deckl:

WV036725

•

Roormg - Sid,iog Painting

Gutters - Decks- Ell:.
Remodeling
t'or Fas1 Cooi'U('Us
Service )
Free Estimates

&amp;

V.C YOUNG Il l
9~:: Drs

Affordable Prices,

Pt,rnrre&gt;\ [J• ,,

Call Dennis Boyd

-~~(',l'~~O'&lt;i
'

GRIZZWELLS

YOUNG 'S

Room Addlttona &amp;
Remodeli ng

'

E'f''

I

• \

.

VIFiGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) -You're in a
happ; cycle wtlere lhings oauld go In
ways that will advance you r personal

740-992-1189

~! 1 L~ \0 ~ie\ol v.ot.\t.~

.

~c;r~5/l

·desires. be they aesthetic or material.
You won'l ';-ve lo do anyth~ng dlfferenl,
just be yourM" .

SOUPTONUTZ
l1olo1

&lt;lt).l8'f.l TeL~ VS

10 ~ T - MoNeY
~ S\f"etiGERS. ..

YE.AH,

,4\li. TOO !

I'&gt;UT l'Vt&gt; BUoiJ

Pl£,M&gt;At..&gt;T~'T'

5011PIMW!

..

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Prep Football Computer Ratings
f'cKirth OHSAA computer ..Ungo
COLUMBIJS (AP)- Hero are the fifth
weekly football computer ratings from

the

Ohio

High School Athletic
Auociation . Ratings are by division
•nd region with record and average blpolnJS par game (top eighlleams
in each region advance to regional
querterlinals);
DIVISION 1
Region 1-t , Montor (7-t) 24.2275. 2,
Solon (8-2) 20.0750. 3, BrecksvilleBroedvlow HIS (7-1) 19.9875. 4, Cleve.
St. lgnaUus (6-2) t9.0780. 5, Cia.
Glenville (7-1) t8.9750. 6, Lakewood
St. Edward (7-1) 16.8220. 7,. Warren
Harding (6-2) t6 .3930. 8, Strongsville
(5-3) t5.1~75 . 9, Peinasville Riverside
(6-2) 14.9475. 10, Cleve. South (7, 1)
13.7610.
Region 2-t , Cant. McKinley (8-0I
24.2770. 2, Fromon1 Ross (8-Q)
22.9875. 3, Brunswick (8-0) 20.7750. 4,
Mass. Perry '7-1' 17.9500. 5, Tol.
'
'
· , )
Whitmer (6-2) 15.5375. 6, Med1na ,5-3
t5.4875. 7, Wadsworth (7-1) t4.4t25.
8, Perrysburg (6-2) 13.8250. 9; Elyria
'6-2' t3.6125. tO. N. Canton Hoover (6'
'
21 3285
R
· 1, H,.11 ·,ard Davidson ,8 _0)
10 n 3.
·•
• 3,
•
.4725.
2,
Lancaster (8-Q) 22.5920.
2
•
. Westerville South (7-1) 19.4375. 4,
· Upper Arlington (7-1 I t9.26 75 · 5 •

!:

Galloway Woslland (6-2) 15 6875. 6,
Dublin Cottman (5-3) 14 ·4625 · 7·
Gahanna. Lincoln (6-21 13.6250 .. 8,
M
Harnl
Logan (6-2) 12.7500. 9• arion
ng
·(4-4) t2.0375. tO, Cols. Brookhaven (S10 7
3) ·08 5.
RoOion 4- 1· Cin. Sycamore (B-o)
25.7250. 2. Cln. 51 . Xavier -(6-1)
24 .6620 . 3, Gin. Colerain (8 _01 2 1.4590 _

4, Gin. Glen Esla (7- 1) 21.1 000 · 5,
CCiaytoMn Nlolrthm(5on2', (61·72)8}077.99875. W6,
ln. 00 er
- '
· • · •
·
Chaster Lakota W. (6-2) t6.2045 . 8,
'6 2) 15 sooo 9
Cin . Anderson
' · ·
C
Ill '6 2) t3 8680 10 c· Eld
enterv e' ·
· ' ln.
er
2805
(4-4) 13.
·
DIVISION II
E
Reglon 5-1 , · levo. haw •7·0
19.7832. 2, Macedonia Nordonia (7-1)
•
t9.0625. 3, Kent Roosevell (8-0)
t.8.7750. 4. May fi eld (7-1) 18.2875 · 5,
16 3330. 6,
Maple His . (7-1)
h
G
(7 1) 16 2125
C esterland W. eauga •
·
·
7, Olmsted Falls {7-1) 16.1375. B,
'7
1)
t4
6250
•
9
Willoug hbY Sou lh ' ·
· •
T 11
oa madgo '6
' -2) t3 ·9875 · 10 · Parma
Padua (5-3) t2.58t0.
Region 6-t . Ashland (8-Q) 23.3500.
22 ·5555 · 3•
2• T~
·~· c en t. Catn . '8-o)
'
Lewis Center Cllentangy (7-1) 21 .6375.
4, Olontangy Liberty (7-1) t9.8000. 5.
Wapakoneta (7-t) 16.7125. 6, Tiffin
Columbian (7·1} 15.0375. 7, Piqua (7·
1) 14.7000. 8. Sylvania Southview (S-3)
11 .6250. 9, Whitehouse Anthony
Wayne (5-3)1t .2750. 10, Avon Lake (53) 10.7000.
Region 7-t, Alliance (7-1) 16.7095.
2, Chillicothe (6-21 t6.5750. 3. Cols.
Marion Franklin (7-1) 16.3500. 4,
Pickerington Central (7-t) t5.8500. 5,
Cols. St. Charles (7-1) t5.3750. 6, Cols.
Watterson (6-2) 15.2000. 7,' Cenfiekl
{6-2) 14.67&amp;0. 8, New Philadelphia (7·
1) 13.6625 . 9, Pataskala Watkins
Memorial (7-1) 13.5625. 10, Young.
Rayon (7-t ) t1.53t5.
'
Region 1-1 , Cin. Winton Woods (53) 19.3580.' 2, Trenton Edgewood (7-1)
18.6250. 3, Harrison (6-2) t8. 3000. 4,

c

s

Oay. Carroll (8-0) 17.8125. 5, Day. Col.
While (7-1) 17.0750. B, Cln. Turpin (7-t)

osu
fromPageBl
his weekly news conference. "It's tangible. You can
see it, you can feel it with
the team."
But Iowa is not Ohio
State, and the Hoosiers need
every advantage they can
get to extend their · twogame winning streak
They've already shown

Flnneytown (5-3) 9.8125 . 9, Dayton
Oakwood (5·3) 9.5750. 10, Ham. Badin

15.2875. 7, New Carlisle Tecumseh (6- · (5-3) ~.4500.

2) t5.0875. 8, Trotwood-Medison (6-2)
1~ . 5530. 9, Kings Mills Kings (6-2)
12.2875. 10, Mt. Orab Western Brown
(6-2) 11.'1875.
DIVISION HI
~eglon t--1, Aurora (7-t) 17.8750. 2.
ROCI&lt;y River (7-1) 1&lt;.1750. 3, Hubbarn
(7-t) 13.8875. 4, Cuya. Mills Walsh
Josuil (6-2) t2.6745. 5, Young. Liberty
(8-Q) 12.6000. 6, Niles Me Kinley (7• 1)
t2.3000. 7, Mentor Lake Calh. (4-4)
11 .4630 · 8 • Akron Coventry (6 •2)
11. 2875 · 9 · Mantua Crestwood (S·3)
11. 0750 · 10• Richfield Revere (4 •4)
6·6875 ·
.
Raglon 1D-J. Archbishop Allor (8-Q)
20 ·8125 · 2 • Sunbury Big Walnut (fi-2)
2 ·4250· 3; TiEPP City,Ji\'!"':"'';"' ( 7• t)
1
18 0500
5 500 5
·
· • · a on ' • '
·
· '
7
1
15
3250
6
Urbana ( • ) ·
· • Napoleon (62) 14.4125. 7, St. Marys Memorial (6-2)
13.4125 . 8, Lima Shawnee (6-2)
. 12.7625 . 9, Sandusky Perkins (7·t)
12.4625 . tO, Clyde (6-2 ) 11 .2675 .

°

DIVISIOH V
Region 17-1, Barnesville (8-0)
18.4555. 2, Smithville (8-Q} 18.3625. 3,
N. Lima S. Range (8-o) tH250. 4,
Warren Kennedy (8-Q) 15.2795. 5, W.
Salem NW (8-0)
U .4500. 6,
Columbiana Crestview (6-2) 13.7375.
7, W. Lafayene Ridgewood '(8-0)
13.2500. 8, Louisville Aquinas (7-t)
t,2.0500. 9, Croston Norwayne (6-21
10.2625. 10, Kirtland (6·2) 10.2500.
Region 111-1, Bedford Chanol (7-1)
15.0250. 2, Sherwood Fairview (8..0)
14.4250. 3, Bucyrus Wynford (7-t)
t3,7125. 4, Del. Ayersville (6-0)
t3.5500. 5, Hamler Patrick Henry (7-1)
12.6250. 6, Metamora Evergreen (6-2)
t2.0000. 7, Delta (7-1) 10.6875 . a, Oef.
Tlnora (6-2) 10.5875. 9, Findlay
Liberty-Benton (7-l) 10.4t25. tO,
8100mdal El · - • '7 1) 9 8875
e m~' ·
Region 1t-t, West Joftarsdn (7-Q) ·
18.22t5. 2, Amanda-Giearcreek (7-1)
15.5875 . 3, Nelsonville-York (7-1)

Region H-1 , Steubenville (8-0)
20.8750. 2, Cambridge (8-0) 20.7810. t3.237~ . 4, Cols. Ready (7-1112.7250.
3, Newark Licking Vallay (7•1) t7.5750. 5, Johnstown-Monroe (6-2) 11 .2000. 6,
• 0 over '7
....
\ • t) 161875
·
· s• Naw Stewart Feijeral Hod&lt;ing (7-1) 10.7990.
Conco rd J0hn Glenn '8
2)
13
\ •
·1625 · 6• 7, Franklort Adena (5·3) 9.8500&gt; a;
Cant South (5-3) t2.8t25. 7, Fredericktown (5-3)
9.7625. 9,
Millersburg w. Holmes (6-2) 12.3375. 8, Woodslleld Monroe Central (5-3)
Shelby (6-2) t2.t500. 9, Dresden Tri' 9 0580. 10, .Centerburg (4-4) 9.0250.
v 11
(7 t) 11 7375 tO P0 1 d
R.,..lon 2~1. Ma·rion Pleasant '7-1.)
• ey
·
•
an
·•
'
Seminary (6-2) t1.3750.
. t4 .1i375, 2, St Henry (7-t) t4.8500. 3,
Region 12-1, Colo. OeSales (7-t) Lafayette Allen East (7-t) 12.9625. 4,
22.8250. 2, Cin. Indian Hill (8-0) Reading (6-2) t2.4500. 5, Lima Cent
19.2750. 3, Waverly (8-Q) t7.9875. 4, Calh. (7-1) t2.0250. 6, Waynesville (6Lane Fairfield Union '7 t) t6 7500 5 2) t0.6t25: 7, Wos1 Liberty-Salem '6-2)
·
·
' ·
· ' ·
'
Goll. Golllo Aced. (&amp;-2) 13.1270. 6, t0 .3250. B. Tipp Cl1y Bethel (7-t)
New Albany (6·2) 13.6250. 7, Jackson 9.6375. 9, Galion Northmor (6-2)
(4-4) 10.7000. 8, Circleville (6-2) 9.5625. tO, Lewisburg Tri-County N. (7t0.0375. 9, Bexley (7-1) 9.9750. 10, 1) 9.0875 .
Gin . Taft (6-2) 9.8t25.
DIVISION VI
DIVlSION IV
·
·
Region 21-1 , Cleve. Cuya. Hts. (7-t)
R-lon
1"1,
You~.
'
) t3 .8500 .
-•
~
... Moon-, '7-Q)
'
t5.5750 · 2, Col umb.'ana ,7-1
20.7752. 2, Orrville (6·2) 17.t875. 3, 3, Mogadore (6-2) t2.8000. 4,
Trinity (6-2) 15·.2555. 4, Mass. Tuslaw Thot1lpsOn Ledgemont (7-1) t0.7125.
'7-t) 12.7625. 5, Perry '7-t) 12.3000.
5, McDonald (6-2) 9.6250. 6, Lucas (76, Zoarville Tusc. Valley (4-4) 9.9500.7, t) 9.3625. 7, Salineville Southern (6-2)
t
h '4 •1 9 4725 a
an. ant at . , ~
.
. , 8.7875. B, Windham (6-2) 7.8250. 9,
·Brookfield '5-3) ·8.0125. 9, Akron
leetonil!t (4-4) 7.6000 . 10, Min,·ral
'
Manchester (8-2) . 7.9375. tO, Cuya. Ridge (5-3) 7.4500.
Falls Cu.ya. Valley Chrislian '6-2).
'
Region
22-1
(tie) ,
Bascom
7.8000.
.
Hopewell-Loudon (8-0), Sycamore
._lon 14-1, w. Mihan Millon-Union
._,
Mohawk (7-t) 14.6125. 3; Mpnroevllle
'6-0) 20.2125. 2, Coldwater (8-0)
'16.5375. 3, Oak Harbor (8-0) t4.4625. (6-2) 13.4000. 4, Me Comb (6-2)
4 • Tontogany Otsego 16 _2) 14.0750 . S, 9.2750. 5, Oregon S1rilch (6-2) 8.8875.
Bellville Clear Fork (6_21 ti. 3000. 6 , 8, Tol. Christian (7-1) 8.7165. 7,
Elyria Calholic (6-2) 10.9375. 7, Norwalk St. Paul (5-3) 8.2t25. 8,
Highland (6 _21 10.3250 . 8, Huron (7·t) Columbus Grove (4-4) 7.6500. 9,
t0.0875 . 9 , Lorain Clearview (6 _21 . Liberty Ctr. (4-4) 6.7200. 10, PandoroGilboa (5-3) 6.2375.
9 .8500 . 10 , Wauseon (5-3) 9.1750.
Region 1s-: 1, Bellaire (B..O) 20 _9860 _ Region 23-1, Beallsville {B-0)
2 , ·Martins Ferry (B-O} 17_6255 _3, New 14.5100. 2, Lane. Fisher Cath . (7-1)
Lexington
(8 ·0)
17. 2500 _ t. t2 .6410. 3, Danville (7-1) 11.8t25. 4 ,
WilliamsportiVesdall (8-0) t7. 1125 . 5, Old Wash. Buckeye T!Bil (6-2) tO.t8t5.
Ironton (5-3) t2.0940. 6, st. Clairsville 5, Shadyeide (6-2) 9.6970. 6, Crown
(6-2) 11.6750. 7, Wellston (5-3) City S. Golllo (7·1) 8.0825 . 7, Newark
1t .5t30: 8, Cola. Easlmoor Acad. (5-3) Cath . (5-31 8.0t25. 8, Water1ord (6-2)
10.5t2.5 9, Ironton Rock Hill (6-2) 7.3295. t, Roclne SouiiMim (5-3)
8.7250. 10, Pomoroy Malgo (&amp;-2) 6.2175. 10, Caldwell (4-4) 6.0660.
8.0135.
'
Region 24-1 , Spring. Cath. Cent (7Region 1t-t, Plain City Jonathon 1) 15.5750. 2, Mechanicsburg (7-1)
Alder (7-1.) 16.2125. 2. Clarksville 14.6495. 3, Oola Hardin Northern {8-0)
Clln1on-Massie (8-0) 15.0875 . 3, 13.2000. 4, Covington (8-0) 12.6125. 5,
Blanchester (8-Q) t4.8000. 4, Gin. N. Ada (6-2) 1t .Ot75. 6, N. Lewisburg
College Hill (7-1) 11.5945. 5, Cin. Triad (6-2) t0.4000. 7, Maria Stein
Wyoming (6-2) 11 .1000. 6, Monroe Marion Local (6·2) 9.2500. 8, Sidney
Lemon-Monroe (7-1) t0.7875. 7, Gin. Lehman (5-3) 8.3850. 9, Fort Loramie
Doer Park (6-2) 10.5125. 8, Gin. (6-2) 7.4700. tO , Ansonia (4-417.3750.

' ) '
c

c

c

•

they can defy the odds: . ·
In the last two weeks,
Indiana has ended a a Big
Ten road losing streak that
dated to 200 I, and won
back-to-back conference
games for the first time in .
· five years. Now they face a
Buckeyes team they haven't
beaten since 1988 and for
the second straight week
enter the game as a major
underdog.
J&gt;layers and coaches don't
seem to care what outsiders

think. -.J
Saturday's upset gave the
Hoosiers a boost of confidence and energized ·the .
team to the point they're not
·dreading
this
week's
matchup but instead looking
forwan:l tD it
"The way I look at it, it's
fun," said Meyers, a senior.
"I don't think I've ever
played the No. I team in the
nation. I think all eyes will
be on us to see how we
.respond after Saturday."

Cavs

ons to just nine points in the
Tied at 32, Hughes
third and 27 after halftime.
drained a 3-pointer and the
Hughes played in only 36 Cavaliers went on a 23-8
fromPageBl
games last season because spurt over the final 8:18 of
of an injured middle finger the second quarter to open a
halftime
lead.
son refining his jumper .and on his right hand, wh1ch 55-40
required
two
sllllleries
and
3-pointHughes
hit
another
working on his game, and
the extra time in the gym is caused him to !Dlss routine er in the third to put the
layups and shon jumpers. Cavaliers up 69-47. ·
paying off.
The
finger still isn't fully
James, whose minutes are
"I'm in a good rhythm'
healed, and when -training being closely monitored by
right now," said Gooden,
camp opened, Hughes
who signed a three-year, revealed 1t may never be coach Mike Brown, added
three blocks before siniog
$23 million extension with I00 percent.
the entire founh :tuarter.
Cleveland this summer.
But it's gening better, and
Maccabi dropped to 0-4
"My off-season program is so is Hughes' much. So far, in its preseason with three
helping me out I'm feeling he has shown signs of of the losses against San
.it, I guess."
becoming the kind ·of Antonio, Phoenix and
James had 13 points, eight dependable scorer the Cleveland.
Last
year,
rebounds and eight assists, Cavaliers had hoped when Maccabi defeated Toronto
Donyell Marshall had 19 they invested $60 million in I 05-103 at the Air Canada
points and Larry Hughes 12 him as a free agent in the Centre, only the second Joss
for
Cleveland,
which summer of 2005 .
by an NBA team since the
outscored Maccabi 29-18 in
"I'm getting better every league sanctioned competithe second quarter and held . day," Hughes said. "I' m tion against international
the reigning Israeli champi- ready to play."
teams i11 1987 _

NLCS
from PageBl
Delgado. ·(ireen 's one-out
double kicked up chalk on
the right-field line, and
Valentin hit the next pitch
just over a leaping Pujols at
first base for a two-run dou ble that put New York
- ahead.
Glavine, however, couldn -t hold the lead.
Pujols pulled a 2-2 pitch
barely over the left -fie ld
fence ,in the bottom half, his
first home run since Game I
against the Padres and his
12th overall ih the postseason.
"I don ·t care about my
start," Pujols .•aid. ·-rm hitting the ball hard. r m seeing
the
ball
good.
Sometimes you're gonna
get it, sometime• you
don ,t."

'

. Wednesday, October 18, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Scott Rolen walked with
two outs, Jim Edmonds sfngled and Belliard bounced a
tying single through the
nght side as Delgado broke
for first base instead · of
toward the baiL
The Mets have scored in
I 0 innings during the.series,
and seven times St. Louis
has responded with at least
one run in its next at-bat.
Glavine retired Weaver
with the bases loaded to end
the inning, but the Cardinals
'chased ,Glavine in the fifth
and took a 3-2 lead.
David Eckstein blooped a
leadoff single and scored
from first on a double to
right-center by Wilson, who
began hi s career with the
Mets in 1998 and . is the
stepson of former New York
outfielder Mookie Wilson. •
Glavine wifs lifted after
an intentional walk to
Pujols. The left-hander
allowed three runs and

Homecoming queens, ·awkward
moments·and new SUVs in Ohio
BY RusTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

It's campaign season in high school football?
The Orrville Red Riders
are touting senior Kyle
Simmons as the lntest in
their long line of standout
quanerbacks.
The 6 -foot-l, 165 -pound undefeated Olmsted Falls
Simmons threw for two
TDs and ran for another in 15-14. '
28-0
win
over
UH,
SORRY,
MR.
a
Millersburg West Holmes PARK: J.J_ Mihoci gained
IY h243 yards on 16 carries and
last week , I tmg IS season scored three TDs while
passing slats to 2,213 yards
and 16 TDs while picking becoming · the
11th
Ashtabula Countian to top
up his lith rushing TD.
"I'
be b- d 3,000 career rushing yards
lase ' in Jefferson Area's 37-6
m gomg to
but I know he can . be a
Division 1 quarterback," victory
over
Geneva:
said Orrville first-year head Mihoci also broke the
coach Doud Davault, previ- school career rushing
ously an as.sistant · when record of 3,010 yards set in
Tim
Hiller
(Western 1976 b~ Rand~ Park.
lmagme th1s awk":ard
.Michigan)
and
Justin
Zwick (Ohio State) played. momen! later _that evemng:
Copley
coach- Dan · M1h?c1 s gulfne,n~
is
Boarman also is a big fan. Park s daughter, Knsu.
·"If they don't say he's
GAUDY NUMBEI_{S:
better than (Justin) Zwick Cody Huff ·of Byesv11le
and (Tim) Hiller, some- Meado":'brook ran for a
body's nuts," Boarman said career-ht~h 278 yards and
after Orrville beat his team four TDs m a 41-27 setback
41-19 in Week 2. "I'm to
Dover;
Ashlanil
probably going to get in Crestview's Hu.nter Re~ll
trouble for that statement. rushed for 262 yards and
But, I'll tel! you what. I four TDs and _caught a 3?played against both of them yard TD pass 1~ a 41-6 wm
and Simmons is as good as over · Greenw1ch South
I've seen."
Central while becoming the
QUEEN
FOR
· A school's career leader in
NIGHT:
Middletown rushing and points scored
placekicker
Megan and in points scored in a
McCullough was crowned season; Cameron Brant
homecoming queen during ~shed for 256 yard~ a~d
halftime of a 61-27 win f1ve TDs on 35 cames m
over
Fairfield. the Ashland Mapleton's 50McCullough, · who also 6 win over Plymouth;
J.P. · Krill
plays soccer, has kicked 29 Vermilion's
extra points since stepping ~shed for 253 yards - on
onto the field in a Week 3 JUSt I 0 cames - and had
four TDs in a 4 7-0 win over
win at Lima Senior.
LATE
TURN- Fairview;
AROUNDS:
Coldwater
Cambridge's
Stephen
had to score the final 23 Ford rushed for 250 yards
points after trailing )4-0 and three TDs in a 43-7 vicearly in the third quarte{ to tory
over
previously
New
beat Versai lies 23- 14 and unbeaten
stay perfect on the season. Philadelphia;
John
Sophomore kicker Mario McGraw rushed for 239
de Ia Rosa put the Cavaliers yards on 33 · carries and
up for good with 2:45 left scored four touchdowns to
to go with a 23-yard field · lead North Ridgeville. over
goal. Linebacker Adam Avon, 33-19; Devin Favors
Hoying then recovered a carried 20 times for 207
fumble on Versailles' next yards and three TDs as
possession, allowing Tony Lakota West beat Milford
Harlamen to score on a 39- 56-14; Ryan Harvey rushed
yard run with 2:09 left in for 207 yards on 27 carries
a9d scored four TDs,
the game for insurance.
The battle for control of caught six passes for 81
the
Southwestern yards and intercepted a
Conference came down to pass but previously unbeatthe end as Brecksville's en Perry still lost 38-30 to
Steve Wirkus connected on Chesterland West Geauga;
a 14-yard TD pass with one · and Andover Pymatuning
second to play to Brad. Valley's Josh Brafford ran
Pollock to beat previously for 206. yards on 27 carries

scored three touchdowns in a 32-16 victory
over Southington Chalker.
DEFENSIVE
POS·
TURE: Bellville Clear
Fork recorded its third
shutout of the season, beat. ing Wooster 23-0; and
Tiffin Columbian sacked
Galion quarterbacks -12
times for 71 yards of losi~s
and limited the Tigers · to
minus 30 yards rushing (25
attempts) in a 63-0 victory:
AIR LIFI'ED: Alliance's
Charles Babb . threw four
touchdown passes in the .
win ovet Carrollton, lifting
his season's total to 26 and
career mark to 69, a new
Stark
County
record;
Tyler
Lemon-Monroe's
Osterman threw for 209
yards and five TDs in a 46'0 win over New Lebanon
Dixie; and Skylar Jones hit
19-of-28 passes for 314
yards and five TDs to lead
Middletown pjlst Fairfield
61-27.
NOTEWORTHY:
'Alliance beat Carrollton
40-14 for its 500th win in
school history; Massillon
Tuslaw downed Akron
Manchester 23-19, marking
the first time the Mustangs
defeated the Panthers after
17 straight losses; when
unbeatens Smithville and
West Salem Northwestern ,
meet Friday, it will pit the
best offense (Smithville's
311 points) against the best
defense (the Huskies' 30
points allowed) in the
Wayne County Athletic
League;
Salineville
Southern (6-2) guaranteed
its first winning season
since· 1978 with a 29-20
win
over
Wellsville;
Leonard Riston scored on a
4-yard run with 52 seconds
left to allow Cincinnati
Indian Hill to extend its
regular-season
winning
streak to 24 games with a
28-27 win over Deer Park;
and Jesse Gifford hit a 42yard field .goal, ·the first of
his career, into a swirling
wind with 5 seconds
remaining
to
give
Painesville Riverside a 107 victory over Chardon.
Finally, Bellaire's John
Magistro coached in his
final regular-season home
game on Saturday afternoon. The Big Reds
improved to 8-0 with a 4410
victoFy
over
Steubenville Catholic.
After the game, Bellaire
High graduate. and current
Tampa Bay Buccaneer Joey
Galloway's family presented Magistro with a 2007
Chevrolet Suburban.

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.) II (

I '-IS • \ 11L :;h. " "·

Business Included...

~

• High school football
previews. See ~ge 81

4jallipolt~

(740)

llll .RSll \\ . OCT OBLR

BY

BRIAN

J. REED

BREE[){IMVDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY A statewide
issue mi the Nov. 7 ballot propos-'
ing an increase in the minimum
wage should be carefully considered because of privacy issues it
raises, a state trustee with the Ohio
Farm Bureau said Tuesday.
At the annual meeting of Meigs
County Farm Bureau, Trustee Patty
DeBruin told Farm Bureau members that the statewide agriculture
or~nization opposes State Issue 2
because "fine print" in the 31Tlen&lt;lment gives employees or anyone
acting on their behalf the right to
demand private information about
employees and employers.
·
The proposed constitutional
amendment would raise the state

"'"'-m~da i l"•·ntnu I,""'

1&lt;). :! OOb

'

minimum wage from $5.1,5 to
$6.85, and would provide for an
annual cost of living increase for
.hourly employees receiving the
minimum wage. It .also would ·
provide access ·tO private salary
information, home addresses and
other personal data which,
according to . opponents of the ,
amendment, would put workers at
· risk of identity theft. That information would be available to virtually any~me requesting it.
Reviewing Farm Bureau stands
on the state ballot issues, DeBruin
also discussed the organization's
opposition to Referendum I, which
would make changes in the Ohio .
Workers' Compensation Law.
The 85th annual meeting of
members of the Meigs County

.

State Trustee
Patty DeBruin
presented
Meigs County
Farm Bureau
President David
King with a certificate honoring
the organization
for meeting its
2006 membership quota. The
Farm · Bureau
has 468 members this year.
iiMn J. R-/pllolo

Pluse see Bare•u. AS

Weekend.
fundraisers
to benefit
Southern
students

1;;; r# -;;~-;:.r:;~ ;J\,.~;..,.
~-~-

.
OBITUARIES.

. . - '6' -"""···~--~--""-

r cr.~
~

~l

ii1

- Page AS
• Jessie Jo and
: Aubree Quinn Jarrell

BY BETH

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
• French Chorders
quartet to entertain
'
Sul')d~Y- See Page A3
;,f;c;kes donation.
'
A3
.
• Deputy stopping
traffic killed by vehicle.
See Page AB.
• OUr House-hosts
-storytelling Saturday
night. See P* A8

WEATHER

Editorials
Obituaries
Places to go

RACINE - Although the
financial picture in the
Southern Local School
District is improving it hasn't improved enough, causing some to take matters into
their own hands to raise
money .for an archery program at the elementary
school and a warming oven
for the high school cafeteria.
The high school will
hold a s paghetti dinner
benefit from 5-7 p.m: this
Friday before the football
game in the cafeteria while
a three-on-three basketball
Cillo- Hoelllcll(plloto tournament will be held at
The Main Street buildillg between Swisher-lohse and Young's Party Store in downtown Pomeroy which has ~ad its win- I p.m. this Sunday at the
. dows boarded up for many years .is taking on a new look. Owner Bob Mash is now restoring the front of the 1891 two- elementary
and
high
story structure and then will begin renovation of the interior.
school to raise money for
an archery program.
The high school is ll)'ing
raise $1 ,100 to buy a food
wanner. Currently the high
BY CHARI£NE HOEFUCN
Some years back the SOx 100 foot improvement is already striking.
school has to keep food wann
HOEFUCH~MVDAILYSENTINEL COM
building had been sold and its new
In bold letters across the top of the in its ovens or in hot water in
owner had intentions of renovating it building it reads simply, "18 Jeweler the sinks. Obviously if it gets
POMEROY - For many years one and using it for his business. That . 91." That top section has now been
a commercial warmer oven
of Pomeroy 's 19th century buildings of never materialized and there was a cleaned, restored and painted in ivory,
ornate period architectural design has succession of owners until Bob Mash burgundy and teaL The · change in the prepared food can be kept
nicer. longer which benefits
been an eyesore along M~in Street.
' purchased it four years ago.
appearance is striking. The four win- the students.
But things are changmg and the
Mash, who has been in the construc- dows across the front of the second
Besides spaghetti, being
front.of that building is currently being tion business fpr 32 years, said he floor and a center door opening onto a
served at Friday 's benefit
restored to its 1891 beauty, a first step always planned to get around to "turn - balcony surrounded with a wrought
dinner are breadsticks,
in total renovation of the two-story ing it into income producing" and now
iron fence are being replaced.
desserts. drinks.
building gutted anil boarded up so seemed to be the right time. Work
many years ago.
PINse see Sovthem. AS
began a few weeks ago and the
Please see Baildinc. AS

1891 Pomeroy building being restored

J6 PAGI'S

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
Bs-6
Comics
B7

Sports
Weather

joint l)ka~ant ~tglmer
(304) 675-1333

:i"

Farm Bu~u discusses state issues, recognizes members

SPORTS

2SticnONS-

To nave l'our

Haunted maze
offered in
Mason County, A7

RVClub,A3

~d

'

seven hits m four-plus
innings, failing to tie fonner
Atlanta teammate ·John
Smoltz for the most wins in
postse~son history at 15.
Glavine threw only 40 of
his 80 pitches for strikes.
Pedro
Left -bander
Feliciano escaped a basesloaded jam in the fifth,
keeping the score 3-2. But
Cardinals manager Tony La ·
Ru ssa sent the left-handed
hitting Duncan up for
Weaver in the sixtli again_st
Feliciano, and Duncan
drove a 3-2 delivery down
the right-field line to make
it 4--2.
Notes: Eckstein appeared
to hurt himself on a diving
stop in the first. He was
checked by La Russa and a
trainer. but . stayed in · the
game .... Ex-Cardinal s manager Whitey Herzog. who
led the team to its last World
Series title in J982. threw
out the first pitch.

Special Olympics
gets boost from

A4
As
A7
B Section

AB

© 2oo6 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

'

Breast cancer survivors
honored, awareness raised

Members of the
Meigs County Cancer
Initiative recently
raised breast cancer
awareness during a
special ceremony
where survivors of
the disease and
those that lost the
battle were honored
by their names being
written on the pink
wall of the old
Pomeroy Junior High
School which is now a
temporary memoriaL

BY BETH SERGENT .
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.Cq M

Pd MEROY .- October is
Breast Cancer Awareness
Month and the Meigs County
Cancer Initiative (MCCI)
recently honored breast cancer survi vors and those that
los! the battle with the disease
with a unique ceremony.
MCCJ · members and survivors recently painted a sec-

Sullmltted phDiv

Jlail!' ~ribunt
44~2342

1 ue Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2156

••

••

tion of the old Pomeroy .
Junior High School pink to
draw attentio n to Breast
Cancer Awareness Month .
After painting the wall nam~s
of breast cancer silrvi vors and
those that died fro m the disease were written onto, the
pink blocks by survivors and
family members of those that
have passed away. There are

P!Mse see HoMred, AS

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="522">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9973">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="16748">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="16747">
              <text>October 18, 2006</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4089">
      <name>chancey</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
