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w~w.mydailysentinel.com

PAGEB8

October 19. 2006

The Puzzler inside ·
today's Sentinel

SPORTS
• Eastern wins 11th
straight sectional title.
SeePageB1

SPF
8'

10'

16'

12' . 14'

8'

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•

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8

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86

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218' $5.48 $6.88 $8.47

2x4" $2.40 $3.00 $3.60 $4.20 $4.80

$4.80 $6.00 $7.20

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Evelyn C. Brady, 64

•·

INSIDE
. • Union disputes patrol's
J'la'i'mci~ p
~W,~~
1gB 142 .

2"X4"X92 5/8''

woad Studs Promo

I

$1.89aach

• A Hunger For More.
Sei Page A6
• TOPS losers honored.
See Page A8
• Bureau aud~or:
Managers wanted to
keep coin dealer l:lappy.
$ee Page A8

WEATHER

8CC·Si

Snu:F REPORT

CiaI

St•e$45
Plus Ia
OBTU

•

51 Galvanized Roanna
29 Gauge lheavvl
26"18' $1.60 Shill
26"110' $9.50 Shill
26"112' $11AO sheet
26"114' . $13.30 Shill
26"116' $15.20 Shill

Insulation
31/2"X15"
88 st roll..$20.86
6''x23"
15 sl roll-821.86
9"x24"

80 st batts..$45.8&amp;

.,._..,,..AS

Annie's Mailbox
A3'
Buckeye Edition
88
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
84-6
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
FaitP
• Values
A6-7
•
Movies
As
NASCAR
83
Obituaries
As
Sports
B Section
Weather
AS

POMEROY
The
Meigs County
Health
Department
(MCHD)
" Bee
recently
hosted
R.E.A.D.I." (Responsible
Emergency and Disaster
Information) at the Meigs
County Senior Citizens
Center in an effort to
empower citizens to protect
and preserve their own
health.
· Approximately 40 local
residents anended to learn
how to protect themselves
and their families from
potential pandemic influenza and bird flu.
Board of Health Member
and local physician James
Witherell opened the event
by explaining the difference
between the two potential
public health threats. Health
Commissioner
Larry
Marshall conducted a panel

© aoo6 Ohio Volley Pu~ Co.

Pllue ... Au.AS

INDEX
. 2 SBCriONS- 16 PAGES

Committee
discusses
challenge
of serving
•
semors
BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - How to
meet the challenge of planning for the "baby· boomer"
generation while continuing
to meet the needs of today's
seniors wa~ the topic of discussion at a focus committee
meeting held at the Senior
Citizens Center Thursday. The focus committee
which represented several
agencies·, count)'... officials,
Council on Agihg' t!Ustees,
volunteer groups, interested
citizens, and Center staff
reviewed topics ·and services including what should
be maintained, expanded,
initiated, or changed to beiter fit the influx of retiring
"baby boomers."
Beth Shaver, executive
director of the agency,
reported that according to
the 2,000 census almost 20
percent of Meigs County 's
population is age 60 and
over, amounting ro 4,527
individuals.
The prediction is that by
2020 there will be 6,700
individuals 60 and over
here, a 48 percent increase.
Since disability i"ncreases
with age it is predicted that
27.2 percent of the 60-69
BY BEnt SERGENT
age
group will experience
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM
a severe di sability comPOMEROY - The Meigs County pared to 44 percent for
District Public Library is gearing up for those over 90. This means
fall by offering a variety of free events for that almost 500 Meig s
County citizens 60 · and
reens, the young and the young at heart.
In honor of Teen Read Week the library over will have .a severe diswill be offering a Young Adult Hemp ability, Shaver said.
Jewelry Program. The program begins at
According to a recent
I 0 a.m. this Saturday at the Pomeroy report on Meigs County
Library. Registration is required and all . from
the '
Scripp s
materials will be provided. Spiral hemp Gerontology Center 18 perbracelets or anklets will be created with cent of the 60 plus age
glass beads. Brenna Call, adult programs group was at or below the
coordinator for the library, said this jewel- poverty level, 77 percent of
ry program is for "!weens" ages 11-12, the men in that age group
teens and adults.
,
were married while only 48
Call is also in charge of the free percent of the women were
Halloween Scrapbooking Program . which married, 32.2 percent lived
begins at 10 a.m. mi Saturday, Oct. 28 at alone, and 39. 1 percent did
the Pomeroy Library.' Call said this pro- · not fini sh high school.
gram gives those who wish to become
Shaver shared informainvolved in scrapbooking a basic knmyl- tion from the final report ,
edge of how to apply buttons and embell- on last year 's White House ·
ishments and coordinate colors . .
Conference on Aging
In addition to learning several techniques which indicated that "fiscal
for scrapbooking, participants will be pro- realities of federal , stare
vided \\'Ith basic materials including a tem- and local budgets demand
plate page to work on. All mate!Jals will be thai we rethink old ways of

Pumpkin painting, teen
events planned at library

NEWSOM't'OAJLVSENTINEL.COM

rs

"Our employers are very strength, not a weaknes.s ,"
pleased with the workforce Varnadoe said.
that has been available to
Meanwhile, Kessinger
them," Varnadoe said. said Thursday · he has
"Both AEP and AMP-Ohio received over 200 applicaplan billlion-dollar invest- tions since he expressed his
merits in the community, frustration in the newspaper.
and both have said they He said he has received
would not do so if they were
"many" applications from
not confident they could
qualified workers, and has
find dependable and qualiheard from several former
fied workers."
"Our workforce is a Please see Workforce, AS

MIDDLEPORT .- The
design firm DLZ has proposed a pedestrian-oriented
streetscape plan with decorative iron elements, colorized sidewalks and other
landscaping
features
intended to compliment the
"classic Southern Ohio"
architectural style of downtown Middleport.
· Gerald Sosnowski, project
manager
with
DLZ,
$1 S,OOO
unveiled · a
streetscape
design
at
Thursday's meeting of
Middleport Development
Group, to serve as "icmg on
the Cake" for the group's
proposed downtown revitalIzation ~Ian. The streetscape
platL,re.bes h~.!lvily on-a~
posed multi-pu~ .. ~ail
and bicycle path which ·
received $200,000 in federal
B~en J. Reed/photo
funding earlier this month.
Gerald
SosnowsKi
of
DLZ
reviews
Middleport's
(lew
stnietscape
design
plan with the
The design also focuses
on "nodes," areas with Mid!lleport Development Group Thursday afternoon. ·
potential for particular
beautification efforts. Two plan includes a pavillion- building and business own- es with more contemporary
nodes in particular includ- . type shelter for pedes tri- ers to maintain the current signage to enframe their
ed in the DLZ plan are the ans and those using the · use of hanging signs per- signs or otherwise rrim
Dave Diles Park and "T" · bike path, decorative stone pendicular to their build- them with ironwork to coorarea on Mill Street and the and ironwork elements ings, which he said was an dinate with the streetscape
b()at parking area on and a public restroom in effective and attractive
design elements.
Walnut Street and its vie)~&lt; the park.
means for signage, and
of the Ohio River. The
Sosnowski encouraged encouraged .those businessPluse see Plan. AS

MCHDheads
panel on
pandemic flu

50lB

1&amp;1r

J. REED

Director Perry Varnadoe.
"I wanted to assure you
Meeting Thursday with (commissioners)
that
Meigs
·County although one emplorer
POMEROY
One Commissioners, Varnadoe . might be experiencmg
Pomeroy business owner's · said he has been in contact problem's, Meigs County
difficultY in finding depend- with Jim Kessinger, owner of has a great workforce,"
able and qualified workers Mountaineer Metals, abOut Varnadoe said.
Varnadoe said he heard
is an "isolated problem," problems he has had finding
and other local employers and retaining workers for his from several other employhave expressed confidence plant. Varnadoe said the eco- ers
after
Kessinger's
in the local workforce, nomic development office remarks · · were printed,
according to Meigs County will work with .Kessinger in expressing confidence· in
Economic
Development fmding qualified workers.
the.local workforce .
BRIAN

BY BRIAN J. REED . .

'

.

BY

BREEOOMYDAJLVSENTINELCOM

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

$3.60 $4.50 $5.40 $6.30 $7.20

'

:Varnadoe: Workforce co~plaint is 'isolated problem'

16'

2x4" $2.50 $3.29 $3.93 $4.57 $6.27
.

PVH Home Health awarded
Telemedicine grant, As

a.th S.rpnl/photo

Several free events, including pumpkin painting this Tuesday, are planned by the Meigs
County District Public Library. This little girl
got a little carried away wiih her pumpkin
painting but luckily all the paints used for the
annual event wash off with soap and water.

Please. see Ubnry, AS

Ple1se see Seniors, AS

�..

,

•

PageA2

REGIONAL

The Daily Sentinel
..

Friday, October 20,2006

Roger Cox,
father of
Chillicothe
pollee officer
Larry Cox claps
his hands after
John W. Parsons
Is taken away
after his capture
in Chillicothe
Thursday.
Cheering residents took to
the streets
Thursday as
police returned
Parsons who
escaped from
jail almost three
months ago
while being held
on charges of
killing Larry Cox.

Union dis utes
patrol's c ai1t1s·

COLUMBUS (AP) - A son is considered drunk
state trooper who authorities under Ohio Jaw.
Neither Risner's passensaid was legally drunk when
the patrol car he was driving ger, Sgt. Dale Holcomb, nQr
crashed with a pickup, killing ·the · other driver who was
himself and two others, had- killed, Lori Smith, had been
n't purchased alcohol before drinking before the crash
Sept. 28 near Gallipolis, the
the accident, his union said.
1
patrol
has sai_d. .
. :
Receipts show that Joshua
The
patrol1s
mvesugatmg
Risner did not buy alcohol
during dinner with his wife where and when Risner
before his shiti or at a gas drank alcohol.
Herschel ·Sigall, a lawyer
station while buying a sandfot
the troopers union, said
wich, the 0hio State
that the patrol should have
Trooper_s Association said.
before
In addition, the union investigated
announcing
autopsy
results.
says three troorrs and a
AP Plioto
deputy sherif do not The union claims Risner's
believe Risner was intoxi- blOOd-alcohol content may
cated when they met with be largely attributable to
alcohol created by his body
him during his last shift.
The State Highway Patrol as it decomposed.
said Cox's mother, Joy Cox, about the calls to Parsons' · had no comment on the . "There was a rush to judgwho was shopping at Wal- mother and the fact that union's assertions, Sgt. Jon ment in the absence of
acquiring facts," Sigall said.
Mart when a police officer those calls were recorded Payer said.
·
The union plans to hire a
called her with the news.
but not monitored.
The patrol said last week
"I was restless during the
Parsons also had his sym- that tests showed Risner had tmdcologist to review the
night and I just had a good pathizers, including friends
blood-alcohol level of autopsy and blood-alcohol
feeling about this day," Cox and city residents who 0.08 percent, the level a per- teSI-(CSUlts.
said.
weren't convinced he'd
. Parsons' attorney David killed Cox. Supporters crealStebbins said he knew only ed a forum about his case on
the publicly reported details MySj)ace.com, the social netwww.mydallysentlnel.com
of Parsons' capture. He sai~ working Web site, and held
a judge still has to set a new impromptu rallies across
Your online source for news
date and location for from the jail asking people
Parson's trial.
not to jump to conclusions.
Stebbins had no informa- · "There's been thousands
tiQn on possible charges of ruinors on both sides on
related to the escape and that one," · said Tim
said he planned to meet · Litzinger, 63, drinking cofwith' Parsons soon.
fee at a downtown cafe.
The owner of a downtown
Cox's mother said Parsons'
Chillicothe sewing shop escape unnecessarily delayed
said it was hard to believe his trial, originally scheduled
Parsons had stayed in town. for earlier this month.
"If I' m going to take a
"If he's innocent, let's go
chance at escaping, I'm going to court and prove it," she
to flee the country," said Rick ·· said. "If he hadn't stayed
Storts, 52, of Portsmouth, as out we could have been
he smoked a cigarette about a there and started the process
block from the county jail.
but he chose to stay on the
Documents filed with run and kear, his freedom a
search warrants issued after little longer. '
,
Parsons' escape say he
Two days after the
called his mother from jail escape, a man spotted
and told her to prel'are for P.arsons pushing a mountain
his arrival. She was mdicted bike up a hill about 12
. last month on two counts of miles from Chillicothe. For
obstruction of justice relat- the next week, officers and
ed to his disappearance and dogs searched the woods
pleaded not guilty.
around the man's small
.In transcripts of those calls, farm, with helicopters
Parsons tells his mother to . buzzing overhead.
"get what you can done" at
Last month, Parsons was
her house in the days before added to the FBI's Most
he broke out of jail.
Wanted Fugitives list, and
Nichols has faced harsh $125,000 in reward money
criticism over the escape. had been offered for inforworsened by the revelation mation leading to his capture.

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations
_ Friday, Oct. 20
SALEM CENTER Salem
Township Firebelles will meet at 7
p.m. at the firehouse to make plan~
for Election Day luncheon.
Saturday, Oct. 21
POMEROY - AA Big Book
Study, 8 p.m., Sacred Heart
Church.SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior Grange
!1878 fun night and potluck supper,
6:30 p.m. at the hall.
· Sunday, Oct. 22
POMEROY- Annual meeting of
the Meigs County Historical Society,
-2 p.m. in the Howard and Geneva
Nolari Meigs County Museum
Annex. Program includes a look back
and entertainment by the French
Chorders, members of the Sweet
Adelines. Business meeting to
include election of trustees. .
Monday, Oct. 23
POMEROY - Meigs County
Library Board, 3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library.
Southern Band
RACINE Boosters, regular meeting, 7 p.m.,
high school band room.

accused of
·By RICK ARMON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CHILLICOTHE
·Cheering residents took to
the streets Thursday as
police returned an inmate
who escaped from jail
almost three months ago
while held on- charges of
. killing a police officer.
. A tip led police to John W.
Parsons, who was found
sleeping in a green storage
shack where he apparently
had been living for a while.
Parsons, in good health, was
. arrested without incident.
.. The shack, in a wooded
_area near a lumberyard, was
less than two miles from the
~owntown county jail he
escaped from July 29.
Police, without giving
. details, Sl!id it was clear
: Parsons had a lot of help over
: the past few weeks. Ross
County Sheriff Ron Nichols
· said the investi~ation continues into those lmks.
. "He had to stay around·
: with people that was going
· to help htm," Nichols said.
: Nichols sail! Parsons had
: made himself comfortable
: in the shack and appeared
ready to stay for some time.
Steve Thornton, co-owner
. of Eastern Avenue Lumber
· with his brother, Craig, said
: he called police Thursday on
: his cell phone after checking
: on the shack and seeing
· freshly opened cans of food.
· Craig Thornton had heard
. about the shack from a hunter
: when he stopped by a grocery
: store after work Wednesday.

A caravan of police officers from several departments brought Parsons back
Thursday afternoon to the
Ross County Jail as people
poured out of nearby businesses cheering. applauding
·and waving.
Parsons was taken later to
the Correctional Reception
Center in Orient, about 20
miles south of Columbus.
In a community where
Parsons' escape had stunned
residents still reeling from
the 2005 shooting of officer
Larry Cox, many people
were overheard calling
friends on their cell· phones
simply to say, "Hey, they
caught him!"
Parsons, 35, fled from a
- rooftop recreation area by
crawling through two rolls
of razor-sharp concertina
wire, shimmying up a chain
· link fence and slipping
through a gap between the
top of the fence and the roof.
_A report on the escape
determmed that no guards
·were watching the recreation area when Parson
slipped away in the middle
of the day.
Cox, 44, a Chillicothe
officer who was off duty
and unarmed, was walking
home from visiting his parents in April 200S when he
joined a police chase .of a
bank robbery suspect in his
leafy neighborhood of
large houses. ·
He was shot in the neck
·and died three or four houses
awaf from his parents' home.
"I m just praising God,"

VISit us online at

Rock Church of the Nazarene. S.R.
. 689, Albany, Sunday, II 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.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Dayspring
Singers
at Amazing
Grace
&lt;:;ommunity Church, 10 a.m. Church
_is located on ·at 42019 Main St.,
Tuppers Plains.
SYRACUSE - Eric Tucker, sonin-law of Dan and Faith Hayman, to
speak at the Syracuse Community
Church on Second St., 6:30 p.m.
Thesday. Oct. 24
RUTLAND - Revival at the Rose
of Sharon Holiness Church, Oct. 24
to 29, 7 p.m. nightly with evangelist
Rev. Tom Bell. Pastor, Dewey King.

workers at seven DuPont
plants in other states, the
population of West Vi~inia
or the rest of the nation's ·
population. However, additional tests would be needed
because' the study found
slightly elevated cases of
kidney disease, diabetes and
heart disease.
·
The first phase looked at
1,000 workers, and the .company said those who_worked
closest with C8 showed elevated cholesterol levels.
Harry Deitzler, who represents local residents, said
DuPont's refusal to make
workers available to the·science panel bri\lgS into question the company's health
studies.· When settling 'the
case, DuPont agreed to let
the science panel establish
study .protocols and review
worker information, he said.
The company's refusal
limits the dimension of the
panel's review," Deitzlei' said
Thursday.
DuPont said Deitzler's

~'...eel~
. , ~cc: mfll.,"fl ~' v• ~

River Valley Health
&amp; VVellness Center

Other events

Church events ·

Birthdays

BY KATHY MrrCHEU
AND MARCY SuGAR

Dear Annie: My brother,
"Joey," has been married three
times (he just turned 50). Each
time, he has married the woman
he was cheating with. He has
two children with his first wife,
one with his second and raised a
stepdaughter with his third. My
mother and I have had to watch
the emotional and financial devastation he wreaked on these ·
three women. Joey shows no
remorse whatsoever.
'We stuck by him through it
all, but now he's cheated on his
. third wife and is with the new
girlfriend. I have lost all respect
for Joey and wilr have nothing
to do with his latest fling. Mom,
,however, allows the new girlfriend to stay with her on weekends when my brother visits.
1 have asked Joey to get therapy, and he refuses. His children
haven't spoken to him in over
two years, although his 17-yearold stepdaughter still .lives with
him. To top it off, he lost his job
a year ago and has not attempted to find another. He moved in
with my 80-year-old mother to
"take care of her," even though
she is in great shape. I told him
Mom does not need to clean and ·
coo).c for two extra people (three
on weekends), plus give him
free rent, and he should find his
own place immediately. He got
an apartment. but told his stepdaughter it was my fault they
had to move. Now she is angry
with me, and we us.ed to be very
close.

No More Stops

Dl.s count Phar-.nacy Located In Building

606 Washington

Stree~

Ravenswood, WV

1-304-273-1033

~··--· »

nC. ~e·rog ,.,

«ae'='•-n.... qr•• , ., ,. .,

2006

I don't understand how someDear Annie: This is in
one can go his entire life hurting response to the letter mentionin~
people. I've had enough. This is MedicAien bracelets. They ate
causing . friction· between my very important. The problem is,
mother and me. She wants me to medical people have to read the"'.
accept the new girlfriend. I canWe live in northern California.
not and will not. Am I wrong? Both of my parents have the
- Fed Up in Calirornia
bracelets. Not once have any qf
Dear Fed Up: We don't the ambulance personnel or the •
blame you for withdrawing nurses and doctors in any of til&lt;!
from this soap opera, but it will hospitals looked at the bracelet
no doubt damage your relation- or asked if they had one. LaSt
ship with Mom, creating what time, my mother had to grab th~
could be a permanent rift and medic's hand and tell him to
pushing her closer to Joey. Your look at her bracelet. 1 personally
disapproval will not make your asked an emergency tech to look
brother grow up any sooner, so at my dad's bracelet
.
decide how estranged you are
My mother has allergies, a
willing to be.
.
defibrillator and asthma. Certain
Dear Annie: I attend a · odors can send her into shock. Is
church where the priest uses there some way . we can get
incense every Sunday. I have through to these people that you
had minor lung problems all ' wear this bracelet to save your
my life, bUt as .I get older, my life?- Concerned Daughter
lungs have become more sensiDear Concerned: Most medlive to irritants. In recent ical personnel are well educated
months, the incense has trig- about MedicAiert bracelets, and
gered asthma attacks and we don't know why your parsevere coughing spells, and has ents have encountered so many
caused me to stop going to who are not. Talk to someone in
church. The priest will not stop charge at that hospital and sugusing the incense, and there- · gest a refresher course.
fore, I am obliged to leave the · Annie's Mailbox i~ written by
church I have attended for over Kathy Mitchell and Marcy
30 years. Is there any other Sugar, lpngtime editors of the
solutiqn?- Can't Breathe
Ann Landers column. Please e·
Dear Can't Breathe: Some mail your questions to annieschurches are more attuned to mailbox@comcast;net, or write
their congregants' sensitivitie~ to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. Bo'x
and withhold the incense at cer- 118190, Chicago, IL 60611. To
lain masses or set up "fra- find out more about Annie's
grance-free" areas. Try contact- Mailbox, and read features by
ing the bishop, archdiocese and other Creators Syndicate writthe American Lung Association ers and cartoonists, visit the
in your area. Maybe you can Cl'eators Syndicate Web page at ·
start something.
www.creators.com.
·
·

The Daily Sentinel
Would £ike to Recognize
Dur £ot:al Woman In
--··

SALUTIN~

·.'
•

request was without merit
and the company would
respond to science panel
requests for information.
The cqmpany said it had
shared the results of its
recent study with the panel.
Deitzler said a hearing on
the request has been scheduled for Nov. 13.

. fl(; .
,C OIDIIIUnity

Trick·Or-T_reat
:
at

:~ Rocksprings

Rehabilitation Center
Tuesday October 24 @ 7pm
Sponsored b.y:
Powell's Food Fair·
and Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center

RAFFLES, FOOD, Ci.AMSS AND
LOTI OF.CANDY &amp; PRIZES
Medicare Patients Never Pay A Deductible!

Friday, October 20,

Disapproval could create pe111Ulnent rift ·

:Lawyers seek ruling to study DuPont employees
: PARKERSBURG, W.Va. on Wednesday claiming
(AP) - A judge has been DuPont is violating the setasked to force DuPont Co. . tlement agreement because
to allow a science panel to .. it won't allow the panel to
: study workers at a West study workers at the plant.
: Virginia plant where a The judge has been asked to
• chemical used to produce prevent DuPont from block: Teflon is the subject of a ing access to the employees.
multistate health screening.
A DuPont lawyer asked the
The screening is part of a science panel to stop its study
2004 class-action settlement of plant workers in a letter
: of a lawsuit filed by West dated Oct. 6. "Such a study
: Virginia and Ohio residents was not contemplated by the
· over the contamination of Settling Parties and is not part
: their water supplies by the of the Settlement agreement,"
· chemical ammonium perflu- wrote Laurence F. Janssen.
orooctaonate, also known as
Janssen said DuPont has
C8 or PFOA. The chemical conducted it owrf'studies of
is used by the company's its workers, and any addiWashington Works plant tiona) studies should be
near Parkersburg.
conducted by the company
. The . court appointed ·a or its contractors .
. three-member science panel
Earlier this week, DuPont
: to review blood samples and released the second phase of
: health infoonation obtained a study that looked at 6,027
· from the residents to deter- · employees who worked at
mine if there is a link between the plant between 1948 and
C8 and health problems.
2002. Company officials
Lawyers representing the said current and former West
residents filed a motion in Virginia employees had
Wood County Circuit Court death rates no higher than

PageA3

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Saturday, Oct. 21
POMEROY- Antique tractor pull
at the Rocksprings Fairgrounds, l
p.m. by the Btg Bend Farm Antiques
Club. No charge for spectators. Food
on the grounds. Pull starting with
4,000 pound "class. For more information, call 742-3020.
·
-· PORTLAND - Horse fun show at
the Portland Community Center sponsored by the Ohio River Producers.
Exhibitions at I0 a.m.; show at II a.m.
...
.The .Jast event will be a horse/rider
costume contest. For more informaSaturday, Oct. 21
DANVILLE - Danville Church tion call 590-9936 or 843-5216.
of Christ weekend meeting with
:Denver Hill, speaker. Services, 7
_p.m. Saturday; 6 p.m Sunday. · ~
: POMEROY Hysell Run
Saturday, Oct. 21 .
-Community Church, 6 p.m. cookout
LONG BOTI'OM - Eileen Bahr
.and games for children. Call992-5275 will observe her 81 st birthday on
;or 992-7442 for more information.
Saturday, Oct. 21. Cards may be sent
Sunday, Oct. 22
to her at 37837 Green Up Lane, Long
ALBANY - Revival at Point Bottom, Ohio 45743.

a

'

BYTHEBEND

.The Daily Sentinel

Call 740-992-6606
For Information
Bring your kids out for
some fun!

..

Amy Carter, Sales Consultant of John Sang Ford
Lincoln, Mercury In Gallipolis
Amy Carter, Sales Consultant at John Sang Fo{d, Lincoln,
Mercury in Gallipolis ha$ been doing sales wortc since she
Jlraduated college, the last ·11 years of that career having

6een spent at John Sai)IJ. · Ford Motor Company reoendy
pn aa nted the top 3800 ~les People In the United States,

with the (PSA·Award) Prof98Sional Sales Association Award.
Amy ranked 881 out of 3800, which she_received the Silver
level Award.
.

Born and raised right hera in GaUIJkllls, Amy is a graduate of ·
GaUia Academy who also carries an Associates Degree In
Business AdministratiOn &amp; Accounting.
·
The hardest obstacle that Amy feels she's had to overcome
in lhe sales industry has been gaining the trust of not just
customers but also fellow employees. Once that trust was ·· Amy c.- a... Conaun.nt
established she wss able to gain long-la~ relationships,
'
.
one of the many rewards of har career. Meeting new people
.
and having lhem coma,back many times to do bulinass are
·
also among those many rewards.

What does Amy say to other young women looking to enter
businen? •Set realistic goals and work low'an:ls them. As
you accomplish one goal, set a new one. Be sure t9 stay
~ - Most importantly, maintain the f~~ips that you
When doing business, Amy sticks to

~er

personal motto,

"Respect &amp; kindness first and always follow through. •

You

ean benefit from Amy's long time experience by visiting._

her at John Sang Ford, Lincoln,

and Mercury in Gallipolis. ·

fjl
:;

u•co•• ...... .,

195 Upper River Road • Gallipolis, OH

740-446-9800. 1-800-272-5173

.'

Middleport Trophies &amp; Tee's
"We do it right the first time"
The Middleport Trophies &amp; Tee's has
been in business for 22 years. Bob and
Jean Gilmore started the business in the ·
Gilmore residence arid later moved to
downtown Middleport. When Bob's
regular job finished and he began having
some health problems, yet was not ready
to retire, the couple expanded their
business and Bob continued working
until his death.
Jean says the most rewarding aspect of
their business is having satisfied
customers, and their liusiness motto is
"We do it right the fhst time." As for
young women just starting out in
business she feels having good cred\t is
very important.
She also says sometimes customers come
in and want something really odd
mounted . If they raise a question about
the job, the answer sometimes comes back
if "Bob would do it, why can't you girls."
•'·•

Jean GiJmore, center, surrounded by
employees, from the left, Lisa McDonald,
Tammy Starcher, and Katie Gilmore

WOMEN'S

WEEK
Oct. 1&amp;-20

,•

�•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
111 Court Street •

-.mydallyMntlnel.com

Jim Freeland
Publisher ·
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress sh4ll malee no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
ptople peaceably to assemble, and to.petition
the Go11ernment for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the u.s. Constitution

VIEW

Help
It anivedfor this chutrh ·
Dear EdiJor:
Through my membership at the Cheshire Baptist Church,
I have seen God answer prayers, countless prayers. But the
one that sticks out in my mind the most would have to be
the time we spent dealing with a change in pastors.
It is no secret that there was some disagreement about the
leadership in our church that resulted in several long-time
members leaving the church and finding new places to
attend. Some members decided to stick around and hope
for the best. · Regardless of whether they stayed or left,
everyone was praying for something good to happen to this
·
small but strong church.
. · Because of the strong faith in our church, God answered
our prayers. A preacher was sent to us that was caring, kind
and outgoing. He went out and brought people into the
church, filling the pews every Sunday morning . .That was
something I hadn't seen for a long while. I have seen more
people accept Christ into their lives in this past year than I
have ever seen in my life.
God will help you with your struggles. All we have to do
is ask. We asked for help with our situation and He provided the answer. It is easy to see that the tiny yet faithful
Cheshire Baptist Church houses the spirit of God and I
appreciate being an active part of such a remarkable church
family.

Friday, October 20,

Catholic colleges lffer management
training to create dficiency, fight secrecy
BY JAY UNDSAY

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.·

READER'S

PageA4

Activities (FADICA), an
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
or~anization of Catholic
phtlanthropists and .chanSister ties. FADICA helped create
BOSTON
Julianne Hau became a nun the National Leadership
·20 years · ago because she · · Roundtable on Church
felt a call to bring God's Management, a group of
word to anyone who needed 225 prominent Catholics
it.
that are pushing the church
But these days, that's not to adopt best management
the only requirement when practices. . .
running a convent, parish or
David Clohessy, national
diocese. Managing finances director
of
Survivors
and personnel well are enor- Network of those Abused
mously important skills, by . -Priests, said he weland nol" - prodded by a comes better church mangroup of' pr~minent lay agement, but he doubts it
leaders - a handful of can touch the problems that
Roman Catholic universi- led to rampant molestation.
ties are offering manageNew- management pracment courses to lay church tices won't change church
workers and clergy.
leaders' inclination to try to
Villanova University has keep abuse cases quiet, he
a new summer training said.
course, which Hau complet"One can't overestimate
ed so she could better serve the shrewdness of and
her Baltimore-area religious determination of abusive
community. "The reli~ious priests and complicit bishfeel the call from God, ' she ops,"
Clohessy
said.
said. "They don't necessari- "Where there 's a will,
ly feel the money part."
there's a way."
Boston College is creatButler believes better
ing a graduate church man- management can make ·a big
agement degree program · difference, and said that
11nd the University of Notre bei:ame
obvious
to
Dame has long trained stu- FADICA's membership as
dents to work for non-prof- the scandal broke and
its, though not necessarily revealed the church's shaky
church-run organizations.
financial picture, including
Lay leaders say using best . big, unpaid retirement costs.
management practices in
Though many dioceses
administration and finances already have stnct accountwill mean more efficient ing and personnel rules in .
use of resources. Some place, and most parishes
claim it also strikes at the have business managers,
arcane bureaucracy and there's no requirement for
secrecy that nurtured the uniformity
in . human
clergy sex abuse scandal.
resources or financial prac"It's an area that needs an tices.
· ·
awful a lot of sunlight," said
Some churches and dioceFrances
Butler
of ses rely on clergy who learn
Foundations and Donors on the job. Others tap
Interested in Catholic retirees wtth business back- .

Friday, October 20,

2006

Deaths
'

,\

Local Briefs
Republicans to serve
POMEROY -· Free lunches will be served at the Meigs
County Republican Headquarters, Main Street, Pomeroy
(old Ben Franklin building) from II :30 to I :30 -,.m. on
Wednesday, .Oct. 25.
·

Boil advisory
. POMEROY-. Tu~pers Plains-Chester Wat~r District
has Issued a botl advtsory m Bedford Townshtp for custQmers on Rocksprings Road, Midkiff Road and St. Clair
Road. Customers are asked to boil water used for cooking and drinking for three minutes. the outage is necessary to repair a leak.
·

Trick or treat
HARRISONVILLE - Trick or treat will be held 6 to 7
p.m . Thursday in the Harrisonville and Pageville community with costume judging and . refreshments at
Harrisonville firehouse following . The siren will signal the
beginning and end.

Family weekend

I

The current antics of
North Korea and · Iran are
simply the latest develop,
ments in a process that has
been unfolding inexorably
since the first nuclear bomb
was detonated in the New
Mexico desert in July 1945 .
For about four years, the
United States was the only
nation able to produce such
supremely deadly weapons.
Reader Services
(usPs 213-860)
Then the Soviet Union SI!CComlctlon Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ceeded in doing so, followed
Our main concem in all stories is to P'ubNShed avery afternoon, Monday
quickly by Britain, France
be accurate. If you know ot ar'! 'error throUgh Friday, 111 Court Street,
and Israel. Much later lndi.a
P"""roy. Ohio. 8econd-class post&amp;~
In a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
followed suit , and soon
992·2156.
Metnbeo. The ,.,,._ated Press and
thereafter its great rival,
the Ohio rilowap- Association.
Pakistan .
Poatm..ter: Send address com~c·
Our main number Ia
In recent years, a number
tions to The Deity Senti"*, 111 Court
(740) .! m-2156.
of medium-sized nations
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio ~769.
Dllpartrnentextenalona are:
have shown an intere~ t in
Subscription Ret.s
.. acquiring such weapons.
By c:-* or motor route
News
Quite a few have developed
One month .. ... ... •. .'10.27
Editor: Cha~ne Hoeflich, Ext. 12
the nuclear technology to
One yell!' ........... .'123.24
Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext. t4
O.lty ••••..••••
.50'
generate electric power for
Rlporler: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
Senior CHIDn r81e10
their economies, but that, of
One month ...... ..... .'9.24
course; is a very different
One year ........ .. ..'103.90
Advertising
thing. Acquiring
suc h
s.blatboo. shoo.4d remt in advanoo
0 - Sale&amp;: Dave Hams, Ext. 15 chctmlle Oaly&amp;dnel. No subscripnuclear capability requires
OUtolde Sale&amp;: Brenda Davis. Ext 16 tion by mag permitted in ai'88S whefe far less skill and investment
home carrier seiVIce is avaiabte.
Clan./Cin:.: Judy Clart&lt;, Ext. to
than constructing nuclear
weapons.
Mall Subscription
General Manager
But it has been obvious
Melge County
13 Weeks . . . . . . . . . . . .'32.26
Challene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
from
the start that soo ner or
26 Weeks ............ '64.20
later various nations would
52 Weeks ....... . ....'127 .11
E-mail:
e lect 'to go that dangerous
newsO mydaitysent1nel .com
OUtjolde Melga County
route unle.\ ' &gt;tep&gt; were
13 Weeks ······ · · · · · '53.55
taken to prevent them: That
www.my~:ntinelcom
~~ ~=~~: :
::~~~~~ was the pur pose of the
L------------'--------_J 1 Nuclear Non-Proliferation

I
I

'

William
,

Rusher

-

The Daily Sentmel

0

•

•••••

:. : :

--·-·---·-- - -- - - - ----- -

PORTLAND- This Saturday visitors to . the Portland
Community Center will be treated to what's being called a
"Halloween Celebration" that includes a hog roast. music
and a pumpkin pie tasting contest at the community center.
There is no fee for pumpkin pR: entries which are currently needed. Call Mila Raymomd at 843-5358 for more
information. A hayride throu~h Portland will begin at 6
p.m. with Dixie Sayre exerctsing her Halloween storytelling abilities at 7 p.m.

. !

A world full if nukes?

Treaty, which the United
States and the other great
powers managed to persuade many, nations to sign.
But
the
·temptation
remained, and the longdreaded moment has at last
arrived when the world is
confronted with at least two
countries - North Korea
and Iran - that sh.llw every
sign of intending to "go
nuclear," whether the rest of
the world like.s it or not.
For better or worse. this
has occurred .whe n the
United States is the world's
only superpower, and thus
can not avoid making the
necessary decision: Shall
they be permitted to do so or
nor" Diplomatic pressures,
involving both carrots and
sticks, are of course bting
used by many nations to try
.10 diss uade them, but if
these fail (nnd this seems all
too likely). the only remaining recour&gt;e wi ll be to use
military force. and the only

country that could conceivably do that is the United
States.
It is therefore altogether
possible that we will soon
have to answer the unavoidable question: "Shall we use
force against North Korea
and Iran, or not?" Every
responsible political leader,
from George W. Bush to
Nancy Pelpsi, not to mentjon the horde of political
. commentators, owes the
country a clear response to
that question. For the next
two years, the decisiv~
response will be; Bush's;
thereafter, it will be his successor's. It may be possible
to delay a decision up to
some uncertain point, but
thereafter the question will
in effect have answered
itself: "No." (For the record,
my answer would be "Yes.")
If, voluntarily or by the
process of delay,."No"-is our
answer, let us at least be
clear what kind of a world
we will have opted to live in.
North Korea and Iran will
have nuclear weapons.
(Indeed,
North
Korea
already has a few.) Other
nations will assuredly follow, beginning with their
neighbors - Saudi Arabia,
Syria, Egypt, Turkey and
Jordan in the case of Iran;
Japan, Taiwan and perhaps

the Philippines, Vietnam and
Thailand in th~t of North
Korea. Then the floodgates
will open, as every country
in Europe, South America
and elsewhere that can
afford to "go nuclear" will
do so.
And then? Well, for one
thing, if a nuclear weapon
goes off in some American
city, against whom shall we
retaliate? The world will
becom~ a malignant hall of
mirrors in which we cannot
even tell who is attacking us.
And if our answer is
"Yes," and we use force
against North Korea and
Iran? The diplomatic consequences, in the case of Iran,
would be dreadful. And
North Korea, in its despotism 's dying hour, might
manage to evade our countermeasures and drop one of
its small hoard of nukes on
South Korea or Japan - a
ghastly consequence. But
not as ghastly as condemning the world to live forever
in the shadow of assured,
and aric;mymous. destruction.
Be glad you are not
President Bush.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fe/low of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosoplly.)

PVH Home Health awarded Telemedicine grant
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A .
grant of $291,280 to be utilized in
developing a home telemotoring program has been awarded to the Pleasant
Valley Home Heath Service.
The purpose of the Distance
Learning and Telemedicine (DLT)
grant is to provide fmancial assistance
to rural health care providers to develop advanced programs to assist
patients with chronic l)ledical conditions to live healthier lives.
. Pleasant Valley Home Health was
one of 225 applicants thatapplied for
the telemedicine grant nationwide. '
According to Trina Hannan, BSN,
MHA, director of the home health program, telemonitoring will assist in
early detection of disease processes,
which will allow the health care proSubmitted pboto
fessional to provide early intervenlions to assist the patient in living hap- The ceremony marking the $291,280 grant to the PVH Home Health Service was .
pier and healthier lives at home. held In Charleston, W.Va. on Oct. 2. Here, frorifleft; Trina Hannan of Home Health,
Patients suffering from congestive center, accepts the award, from Robert Steptoe, West Virginia State Director,
heart failure, coronary artery disease, Rural Development, Thomas. C. Dorr, USDA Under Secretary, Rural Development,
diabetes, cardiopulmonary dtsease and . Jacqueline Ponti, Assistant Administrator, USDA Telecom Program, Ron Mellon,
hypertension will benefit significantly General Field RepresentatiVe, USDA Rural Development Telecom Program.
from the new technology, she noted.
As explained by the home health conditions. Tlte telemonitoring-system home health office where patients can
service, the telemonitori11g program increases the patient's knowledge of be monitored for compliance and eduwill provide a combination of video their medical condition and promotes cational needs.
"This program will provide a sense
and non-video monitoring utilizing healthier li(estyles, Hannan explained.
The program includes a home med- of security to the P-atient, caregiver,
electronic scales, blood pressure
devices, pulse oximetry, blood glucose ication management system that and family members by knowing a
monitoring, and fluid impedance mon- prompts the patient with voice com- healthcare professiomil is monitoring
itoring. The patient also a[lswers ques- mands and light cues when it's time their health status everyday," said the
tions that relate to their health status. for the patient to take their medication nurse. For more information regarding
On average the telemonitoring pro- and also ·notifies them if the wrong the program area residents are asked to
gram will reduce re-hospitalizations medication is selected. This data is call Pleasant Valley Home Health at
.
by 70% for certairi chronic medical provided to a central station at the 304-675-7400.

·'

Library
from Page A1· .

Portland 'Halloween Celebration'

TODAY IN HIS.TORY

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

.RIO GRANDE- University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College will celebrate its first Parents and
Family Weekend this weekend on campus.
· Families of all Rio Grande students are invited to take
part in the Saturday event Activities will begin at 9 a.m .,
· when family members will be invited to take fart in tours
of the campus. The tours will be held until I a .m. From
9 to II, Rio Grande officials and Student Senate
President Katie Metzger will be available to answer
questions from the family members. At II a.m., brunch
will be served in the cafeteria. ·
From I to 3 p.m. a comhole tournament will be held on
campus. During the tournament, a DJ will be on hand to
. play music, prizes will be awarded and special contests will
l:i,e held. From 3 to 4 p.m., Rio Tribe will put on an interactive skit in Room 115 in Wood Hall. ·
·
' At 4 p.m., the Grande Chorale Reunion Concert will be
held in the Berry Fine and Performing Arts Center. At 6
pm., a special dinner will be held at Jimanetti's.
Parents.and family members are invited to stay overnight
on campus on Friday night, but they need to reserve space
on campus. A limited number of rooms are available for the
parents and family members, and anyone interested can
contact McLaughlm. Pizza will be served in the Red Zone
on Ft\d.ay night.

Abbey Thompson
Cheshire

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must .be
signed, and inclUde address and telephone number. No
unsigned leners will be published. Leners should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
.thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accepted fqr publication.

-.

Evelyn&lt;;. Brady, 64, Gallipolis, died Thursday, Oct. 19,
2006, at Rtverside Methodist Hospital, Columbus.
Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens
Funeral Chapel.

OUR DAD'S
GENERATION
·HAD A ClUE.

Today is Friday, Oct. 20, the 293rd day of 2006. Jbere
are 72 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 20, 1944, during World War II, Gen. Douglas
MacArthur stepped ashore at Leyte in the Philippines, 2 1/2 ·
years after he'd said, "I shl))l return."
On this date:
In 1740, Maria Theresa became ruler of Austria, Hungaiy
arid Bohemia upon the death of her father, Holy Roman
Emperor Charles VI.
.
In 1803, the U.S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase.
In 1903, a joint commission ruled in favor of the United
States in a boundary dispute between the District of Alaska
and Canada.
Thought for Today: "Cynicism is intellectual dandyism."
- George Meredith, English poet (1828-1909).
·

www.mydallysentinel.com

Evelyn C. Brady

counseling' ·
grounds or volunteers with extended
varying levels of expertise. retreats for abusive priests.
"It wouldn't have explodThat can lead to wasted
money. Boston College pro- ed into the major scandal it:
fessor Thomas Groome, was had the chUrch been·
who came up with the BC better at this 01anagement
graduate program, recalled early on, especially this
the example of a small reporting, being transparent
Southern diocese that badly in finances," Zech said.
Zech, a member of the
overpaid ·for insurance
because it didn't know it national roundtable, heads
could save money by band- the Center for the Stl!dy of
Management.
ing with other local dioce- Church
Besides the summer trainses.
"The U.S. Catholic com- ing institute, which was
munity does an estimated attended by church workers
$1 00 billion in business a ranging from chancellors to
year," said Groome, who nuns, Villanova plans to
dil:\lcts the .Institute of debut an online bu!iness
Religious . Education and · course for church workers .
Pastoral Ministry. "Is this starting next suinm~r. .
Boston . College s new
being managed according to
program,
the best practices of good management
management? I don't think which begins in January,
anybmly would say the aims to create a professional class of lay church mananswer to that is, 'Yes."'
Problems can arise when agers - thereby freeing a
lay leaders don't understand strained clergy to minister
the church's laws - and an more, Groome said.
The BC program includes
ethic that emphasizes a spir-.
a master's degree in pasimal mission over profits or when clergy and volun- toral . ministry with a conteers are ignorant of civil centration in church management
or
a , joint
law.
· Religious institutions also MBA/master's degree in
·
don't .have the same finan- pastoral ministry.
Groome,
also
a
member
ciill reporting requirements
as private businesses, and of the national roundtable,
local diocesan leaders or said adopting best managepastors can disclose what ment practices would merethey choose. The Boston ly bring Catholic parishes in
Archdiocese, for example, hne with their Protestan~
released a major financial and Jewish equivalents,
audit in April, but it was which are run by their own
congregations and have
voluntary.
Villanova
professor. long ago adopted best prac"
Chuck Zech satd open tices.
Said Groome: "It's a
financial · records would
have exposed · irregular maturing, rather than a loss;
expenses mcurred prior to . to the Catholic laity, when&lt;
and during ·the scandal that we basically grow up and
broke in 2002, such as pay- accept responsibility that
outs for .abuse victims and we are the church."

FlAGS OF OUR FATHERS

2006

•
UnmH~
Meigs County Health Commissioner Larry Marshall recently headed a panel on how to
prepare for a pandemic influenza and bird .flu during the health department 's "Bee
R.E.A.D.I. • forum.
·

Flu

Department of Natural
Resources Meigs County
representative.
A cough etiquette video
was shown by MCHD public health nurse Connie
Little to increase awareness
about and to thwart disease
transmission.
MCHD
. Director of Nursing Sherry
Wilcox used the GloGerm
(an educational tool) to
demonstrate ~roper handwashing techmques.
The MCHD and the
Retired
and
Senior
Volunteer
Program:s
Homeland Security erected
displays and disseminated
information to · educate
attendees about personal
and community preparedness efforts. The MCHD
Public Health Infrastructure
Grant awarded three emergency preparedness kits for

families and IWO appropriate for use by children as
door prizes to Cindy
Aeiker, Jack Coughenour,
Sally Sbersbach, Jan Hill,
Thelmt Jeffers.

provided though participants are asked to bnng two
to four photQs that have a
fall theme such as kids in
Halloween costumes or fall
scenery. Pre-registration is
also required for this program by calling 992-5813 .
For the young and young
at heart -the library will offer
pumpkin painting at 6 p.m.
on Tuesday, Oct. 24 at the
Pomeroy Library. Free
pumpkins and paints will be
provtded to those wishing to
~et a little creative though
n's advised participants wear
painting clothes. All paints ·
will be water soluble just in
case the creativity gets out of
hand. After the painting par- .
ticipants will have their own
pumpkin to carry home for
Halloween. Pumpkins will
be · provided by area businesses. No registration is
required to participate in
pumpkin painting.
Last year participants
painted nearly 70 pumpkins
with 130 in attendance which
included parents. This year,
Emily Sanders, children's
services.t'OOrdinator, plans to
have even more pumpkins
for the popular, annual event.·

Ohio Riv.er Bear Co. buildfrom PageA1
ing, which was built in the
late 1980's, the historiC
Masonic Temple on the cor- discussion to inform and
from PageA1
ner of North Second Avenue address public concerns
and Wanut Street, and the about l'andemic influenza
The streetsc ape pIan Citgo service ·station at the and biriJ flu which involved
presented yesterday also entrance to the target revi- local and state experts
used three existing build- talization area.
including Dr. Leab Dorman,
ings
in
downtown
The design will be made assistant state veterinarian
Middleport to demonstrate public, but the Development with the Obi() Department
HAUNTED
the effect of facade Group will first review it of Agriculture; Douglas
improvements that retain and propose final modifica- Hunter, MD, local physician
ARIEL THEATRE
· or restore the architectural tions in the next month . · and MCHD medical direcOct. 20 &amp; 21, 26 • 31
style of those storefronts.
DLZ's final report will tor; Bob . Byer, Meigs
Open each night at 6 pm
The design shows pro- include cost estimates for County
Emergency
. . · posed improvements to the each phase of the project.
All new, much scarrier
Management Agency director; Doug Fis!ter, Southeast
3 Ooors of terror
Ohio sub-region ope public
networking with other agen- liealth coordinator; Frank
$7 adult.si$5 students
cies so as not to overlap ser- Gorscak, MCHD emerIFYOUDARE!
vices, for more health and gency ~esponse coordinator;
educational programs, and Kei(h
The Ariel-Dater Hall
from PageA1
Woods,
Ohio
for · expansion of the
428 Sec:. Ave. Galli~~lis, OH
740-446-ARTS 2787,
Well ness Center.
doing business, and seek
The group discussed how
Job ·a nd Family Services
innovation , set priorities to maximize re sources ,
and Hupp Landscaping for .
and be diligent in execut- enhance referral techniques,
snow removal.
ing change."
share talents , and expand
from
PageA1
• Approved appropriation
With someone turning 60 intergenerational activllies.
adjustments for the dog and
every 7 seconds for the Mindy_Cayton, planner 'for
next 18 years, and there the Area Agency on Aging, Meigs County 'residents kennel fund .
being an expected· 48 per-' provided input on the issues who have expressed interest
• Recessed until 10 a.m.
cent increase ·in Meigs discussed and detailed the in returning here to work at on Friday for the payment
County seniors over 60 by Area Agency-on Aging pro- his Pomeroy facility.
of bills.
2020, Shave!' said the time ject
Present
were
During their business
called
Southeast
to begin thinking about Network
Sunday. October 22, ,2006 9:30am to
Mick
Commissioners
Development meeting, commissioners:
solutions to issues is now. Project, a computer source
• Approved a c.o ntract Davenport and Jim Sheets
·"We have to start getting of services for seniors.
9-.30 am Sunday School
between the Department of and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
ready now. We have to
10:30 am Worship Service
look abead to the future
today so that we'll be
THE MEIGS COUNTY ANCER 12:00 Noon Singers-Ash Street's Own-Whldlls
ready for the next generaanyone who would Uk.e to sing a song.
tion or se niors," she sai d.
INITIATIVE (MCCI)
1:00 Potluck Dinner
She talked about the cultural sense here of "taking
wishes to thank those who
2:1s pm
care of our own." the
h. Bt~
,lft41'1
11
•• •
,.
ty
• Noel Hennan
"sense . of community"
US matt'S meigS ..,oun
• Ralph
Glenn R~ .
which exists, and the
residents aware 'that October is
•
l..es
Hayman
•
Greg
Sears
necessity of serving seniors
0 ,.,.,..,,.,,. C.·a'/1ce.'f'AW.''".,..,....'$.'$ Month
today while engaging the
~;~,.,.Q~.1 "'
..,, .,,.,.
• Mark Morrow
•
Smith
next generation.
These include:
She solicited possible
Pomeroy y 1·uage Council_
2:30pm
solutions from the focu s
committee with the discusMiddleport Arts Council
sion dealing with expectaThe Daily Sentinel
lions from the senior center,
its strengths and weaknessDettwiller True Value Lumber
NOTE: All times are approximate, ,
es in progra1nming, what
.
George Harri~
*There will be NO
additional services should .:
Early Detection Saves Uves
WJOS TV
be provided, the need for L _ _:•:_~-------''--_..:________::..:..::.=.:::...;:..:..__......;___.J

Plan

Seniors

Workforce

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HOMECOMING

and Pastor Recognition Celebration

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PASTOR RECOGNITION

Qmdlff

•

Jeff

Spec.ial Singers
• Earthen Vessels

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. Friday. October 20, 2006

PageA6

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FAITH • VALUES
Amish practices spring
A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel
'

Friday, October 20,

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Let it be said here and
now that the little people in
my life (and, no, I don ' t
mean leprechauns) will
often demonstrate a mastery o f articulating what I
find myself thinking or
feeling . When having to
navigate my way through
the midst of difficult or trying times, I am sometimes ·
tempted, down deep in the
recesse s of my heart, to be
somewhat less than spiritual and get bent out of shape·
about my ci rcumstances.
There are moments when it
seems to me that there are
simply no words that can
describe the emotions
swirling around inside of
me . And then there are
moments when I am simply astounded with how
well one of my children
sum s ~p what I tend to
compli c ate in my own
thinking , muddling, as it
were, what is really a very
simple truth or fact.
My youngest son , for
example, recently encapsulated in six words the very
issue that tends ·to weaken
and wear down most of us at
some season of our lives or
maybe even many seasons
of our lives. In a moment of
brilliant imagery, he left me
feeling a bit stupefied by the
succinct way he captured
my tendency for frustration
when God doesn't answer
my prayers on MY time
table.
One afternoon, when feeling a bit impatient for his
supper. he asked my wife
when it would be time to eat.
"A couple of minutes,
honey," was the reply. He
gasped and with a distraught
look of horror, clasped his ·
face and mo&amp;ned, "Oh,
Mom! For me minutes seem
like years!" Of course, it
really was a matter of only a
few minutes, but for a 6year-ol!l, minutes do indeed
seem like years.
I'm convinced that this
really is a problem for all
of us, whether we're 6.
years old or 60. There are
times when we simply
can't understand why we
must wait and why the
Lord doesn't just" do something quick. We drum our
spiritual fingers and our
souls sigh with impatience
as we wonder what in the
world could be taking God
so long. On the one hand,
we talk about "waiting on
the Lord," while on the
other we are perhaps busily
rationalizing · our impa·
tience with soothing excuses for doubting God.
"Well, I was in a tight spot

Pastor

Thom
Mollohan

,

to perish, but everyone to
come to repentance·: (2
Peter 3:9 NIV).
Are you waiting expectantly on God? Are you facing needs in your life that
you try to give·to Him while
trying not to grab them back
because He doesn't. seem to
have noticed? As you wait
on Him, does doubt ·gnaw at
you and black thoughts of
di's couragement
seep
through your veins?
"Why do you say ... amt
complain ... 'My way is hidden from the LORD; my
cause is disregarded by my
God'? Do you not know?
Have you not heard? The
LORD is the everlasting
God, the Creator of the ends
of the earth. He will not
grow tired or weary, and His
understanding no one can
·fathom. He gives strength to
the weary and increases the
power of the weak. Even
youths grow tired and
weary, and young men
stumble and fall ; but those
who hope in the LORD will
renew their strength . They·
will soar on wings like
eagles; they will run and not
th
'II lk
· grow weary, ey wt wa
and not be faint" (lsaial)
40:27 - 31 NIV).
If you are waiting on God,
don't give up and throw in
tilt towel, taking yourself
offline for downloads of
blessing that God has
ordained fqr you. No ...
instead do what His Word
would have you do in the
cultivating of your relationship with Him. Read the
Bible, seek God's face faithfully in prayer, learn to worship Him among a community of Believers in a local
church, serve Him · in the
myriad of ways He provides
' you each day of the week,
and search your heart under
His leading so that He can
. work inside .of you ~o make
· room for Hts blessmgs for
you, in you, and thro~gh
y~u.ln the end, .s taymg
fatthfu! to the One, Wh~se
name ts synonymous wtth
faithfulness, keeps your
heart in a spiritual posture
that remams ready to . be
blesstd ,, whether the liming is only a few minutes or
even a few years.

and just HAD to do something !" "Oh; God doesn't
hear me and so I just gave
up !" " But everyone else
was doing Something and I
thought I ou~ht to do what
they were domg! "
We have a knack for try·
ing to run God 's blessing
for our lives on .a stopwatch.
But whatever we may
expect for the Lord's timing
for us, we must simply
remember . to "c .. not forget
this one thing, dear friends:
With the Lord a day is like a
thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day" (2
Peter 3:8 NIV) .
What you now do with
this
truth will have
tremendous impact on
whether or not you' ll real ly see God's power at
work in your life. Whether
it takes God 10 minutes or
I0 years, your holding fast
to an unswerving confidence in Him will dictate
to you the measure of how
much you'll experience
His workings in your life.
"Commit your way to the
LORD; trust in Him and He
will do this: He will make
your righteousness shine
like the dawn, the justice of
your cause like the noonday
sun. Be still before the
LORD and wait patienUy
for Him; do not fret when
men succeed in their ways,
when they carry out their
wicked schemes" (Psalm
37:5-7 NIV).
Wl:tat appear to be delays
in God's answers for your
life are in fact seasons of
preparation and building
that take place out of sight
so that the Lord's blessings
might be more fully realized
than you had ever hoped.
Not only that, but what may
often appear to be as a lull
in divine activity very often
turns out to be a season of
grace, as God throws open
windows of opportunity f?r
(T_Iwm Mollo~!' aNlh!s
people to tum from self-wtll family ltave muustered '"
and sin and turn instead to sOillhem Ohio the past 11
the forgiveness and cleans- years. He is the pastor of
ing that only faith in Jesus' Pathway
Community
crucifixion and resurrection Church, which meets on
offers us.
·
Sunday mornings at the
"The Lord is not slow in Ariel Theatre. Ht may be
keeping His promise, as rwu:htd for comments or
some understand.. slow- · qutstioiiS by t·lllllil at pasness. He is patie11't with torthom@pathwaygallipoyou, not Wl!nting anyone . lis;com).

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2006

10:43 a.m , Sunday Eve ning - 6·00 p.m,
Putor: Don Walker

Cloorolo .. _

Eve ning -7:30p.m.

BY RICHARD N. OSTUNG

tenet, held by other Christian sider youths' educational
and Jewish groups, is oppo- needs. not just claims by
sition to marriage outside parents and churches.
The reaction of the Amish one's religious group.
The education limit is
community in Lancaster
A more unu sual practice unique &lt;Jmong Christian
County, Pa., after Charles is shunning ~ social isola- groups but the court deemed
Roberts gunned down inno- tion of adult members guilty it · a requirement of · Amish
.cent . young schoolgirls on of immorality. This may religion. It doesn't stem from
Oct. 2 was striking to many seem · harsh , but like Bible teaching as such but
commentators.
Jehovah 's Witnesses the fits the Amish conception of
The Amish quickly con- Amish stri ctly apply Paul' s Paul' s general admonition,
veyed friend ship and for- teaching "not to associate " Do not be conformed to this
giveness to Roberts' widow with any one who bears the world" (Romans 12:2).
and three young children, name of brother if he is
That outlook explains the
said they'd give the Robert s guilty of immorality or quaint lifestyle that has
family part of the charity greed, or is an idolater, turned
Pennsylvania's
gifts that poured in, offered reviler. drunkard or robber Amish country into a tourist
other help and provided half - not even to eat with such attraction: rejection of modthe mourners who attended a one" (I Corinthian s 5: II). ern technology, symbolized ·
the murderer's funeral.
Another distinctive tenet by horse-and-buggy transThat seemed astonishing is opposition to schooling portation and avoidance of
in an era when vengeance is beyond the eighth grade. cars, buses, tractors, elec- .
a popular entertainment The Amish believe this tricity and O)odern , applitheme. But for these distinc- exposes youth s to improper ances and communications.
tive,
ultraconservative worldly in nu ences, such as
The Amish are named for
Protestants, it was a simple compe-titive athletics, and Switzerland' s ·
Jacob
matter of biblical fidelity.
draws them away from their Amman (1644-1720), who
The Amish take the Bible · bac k-to-nature heritage.
broke ·with the Mennonites,
.literally, e specially Jesus'
In the landmark Wisconsin feeling they had drifted
admonition, "Love your vs. Yoder case (1972), the from the original strictures
enemies and pray for those · U.S.
Supreme
Court of Dutch founder Menno
who
persecute
you" endorsed Amish · religious · Simons (1496-1561). Both
(Matthew 5:44) . They also freedom claims and allowed ·of these Anabaptist groups
obey Paul' s teaching to · them to ignore compulsory are forebears of modem"live peaceably with all. school attendance laws.
da:y Baptists.
·
Beloved, never avenge
But Professor Marci
Amman's successors are
yourselves but leave it to Hamilton
of
Yeshiva coinmitted.to remanning septhe wrath of God .... No, if University 's
Cardozo arate by preserving details of
your enemy is hungry, feed School of Law in New York farming culture in 17th-ceohim" (Romans 12:18-21).
considers this the worst reli- tury Europe. Besides avoidLike Mennonites, their gion ruling in American ing technology. the Amish
modernized cousins, the annals. In last year's "God speak in a German dialect,
Amish apply such words not vs. the Gavel," she lambast- ' wear plain clothing, require
only to personal relations ed the high court's "roman- men to wear beards, and
.but civic and international tic, rose-colored depiction reject Social Security and
medical insurance.
affairs and thus refuse to of Amish life."
Liberal Jusii ce William 0 .
bear arms. Most Christians
Media coverage of the
disagree, yet respect such Dougl~s was the lone dis- tragedy avoided cl.o se-_u p
principled religious paci- senter m the 6 - 1. ruhng. He photos and vtdeo of Amtsh
fism , and so has America's said a student's ...entire life individual s because they
may . be stunted
and don 't like to be pictured,
military draft law.
Other
characteristk deprived" if he remain s believing thi s violates the
practices have raised more Amish and skips high Ten Commandments ban on
school or college. Douglas graven images of anything
questions.
One unfashionable Amish thought courts should con- on the earth.

lti\'tr Vlllley
'I •

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Octob::r .Melancholy
As the days grow shorter and the leaves turn color and fall languidly from the
. trees. there is a peculiar melancholy which we are susceptible to at lhis time of
year. October days are tinged with sadness and a sense of loss at the end of
another summer, and yet this is combined with a feeling that the beauty of a ·
crisp autumn day under a d ear blue sky somehow redeems the loss of summer.
The last monarch buuerflies wearily flapping their e&gt;&lt;hausted wings, the flocks
of geese heading south. and the vibrant colors of the leaves presage a time of
donnancy, when we will hunker OOwn for' the long, cold winter. Everyone
probably has a favorile season of lhe year, but being able '
10 enjoy each one with iiS different qualities is
a blessing. from GOO. And, petbaps
J
this October melancholy is God's
way of te11ing us to s.tilfl,
conserving our energy. If we've been
diligent all summer, and the harvest
is plentiful. then· just maybe. with the
Lord's blessing,' we'll make it through ·
the coming winter, and li ve to see
aootlter glorious Spnng.

Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m..
Thurs. 7:00 p.m., Pastor Marty R. Hllttnn

Coft . -8:.4.5-9:15 a.m... Sww Mass - 9:30
•.m.. Daily Mass - 8:30a.m.

l'agtvtt!o F....ntlllapllst Church
Pastor: Mikt !lannon . Surx:lay School
9:30 to 10:30 arJl , W011ihip service 10:30
tn 11 :00 am . Wed . pre~~Ch i n g 6 pm

c..,..,.,. Boptbt Chuod.
Sunday School - 9:3(qm, Pn!.aching
Service 10:30am, Evening Service
7:00pm, ~edltiday Bible Study 7:00 pR).
Interim Pleacher - Floyd Ross

Chesbl,. llapllst Clnm:b
· '

Pastor: Stevt Lirtle. Sunday School: 9:30
am. Morning . Worship: 10:30 am,
Wednesday Bible Study 6 :30pm: choir
pract kt 7;30; youth IU_ld Bib le Buddies
6:30p.m: Thur.;. I pm book study
Hept a..pttsl Churc:lil (South~)
570 Grant St., Middlepnn , Sunday school
- 9:30a .m., Worship - 11 a.m. a:nd 6 p.m.,
WOO.ne§day Service - 1 p.m. Paiitor: Gill)"

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democracy.
Solidarity
movement in the 1980s.
The National Bank fj
Poland's special notes have
a face value of 50 zlotys the equivalent •of $16 - · ·
and se II for 90 zloty - or
about $29.
The front of the bills fealures an image of John
Paul II holding his crocifix-topped staff again st a
background of the world
map.

11rsi Soottt.m llapllst
41872 Pomeroy Pi ke , Pastor: E. Lamar
O' Bryant, Sunday Sc hool. - 9:30 a.m .•
Wors hiP -8:1S a.m.. 9:45 am &amp; 7:00 p.m..
Wednesday Ser.riccs - 7: 00p .m.
11nt lloplltl Churdo
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St .,
Middleport , Sun41ty School- 9:15 un .,
Worship - IO:IS a .m., 7:00 p.m .,
Wednotdll Servlo&lt;- 7:00pm.

-rlnl ......

Sunda)' School • 9:)0 a.m.• Wonhlp •

__..,...

f

If

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10:48 o.m., 7:00 p.m.. Wodneoday
Sm&lt;lool·1:00 p.m.

Pa1tor: John Swan10n, Sunday School •
lOa.m., WOn.hlp • lla .m., 7:00 p.m.
,Wednelday Servlool· 7:00p.m.

On the back, John Paul is
depicted kissing the hand of
a Polish cardinal. The
design includes a quote
from the late pontiff: "There
would not be a Polish pope
at the Holy See if not for
your faith, not backing
down when faced with
prison and suffering, your
heroic hope."
.
John Paul was elected
pope Oct. . 16, 1978, and
died on April 2, 2005.

J

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MI.U-lllpllol
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Old Bdlt&lt;l Fl&lt;oe w•llapdrit Cha~&lt;h
28 601 St. Rt. 7_, Midd lepon, Sunday
Service - 10 a.m .. 6:00 p.m.. Tuesday
Services -6:00

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Blessed are the pure
in.heart; for they
shaU see God.
Matthew5:8

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

·~

Coolville, Ohio

Michelle Kenne«Jy

Located less than 30 minutes from

Dirccror of Marketing and Admissions

Athens, Pomeroy ~r Parkersburg

1-740-667-3156

"A Home Bank for
Home Poople"
uardrail, Fence &amp;
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~--...

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH '

Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

740-949-2217

740.985-3561
992·1550
Sales • Service • Parts

All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAiLES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 l'ii:'.
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Fatth Baptist Ch•n:•
Rail road St .. Mason , Sund11y School - 10
a.m., Wo rship - II a.m .. 6 p.m,
Wednesda)' Services - 7 p.m.

Forat Run Bapdsl- Pomeroy

Hours

MI. Morlallllapllst
Fourth &amp; Main St.. M1ddlepon . Pastor:
Rev. Gi lbert Crai g. Jr.. Sunday School 9:30a.m., Worstlip - 10:45 a.m.

6am - 8 pm

Atmospherr

Millie's 1(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily

~ntlqulty llapllst
Surtday School - 9:30 a.m., Wrirsliip -

Ho,., Coo/red Me•ls &amp; Doily s,.&lt;ials
Open 7 days a week

If ye abide in Me, aml My
words abide in you, y"e sltaU
ask what ye wil~ aml it sltall
be do11e unto you.
Johll/5:7 ·

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Middlepon, OH

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
olaaues !·shirts and more

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
An Accounting &amp;

Financial Services Firm
6 1RE. Main Street • Pomeroy

(740) 992· 7270

Congregational
Triolty Chol'do
Second &amp;:. Lynn. Pomeroy. Pastor: Rev.

Church of Christ

Jonathan Noble. Worship 10: 2:5 a.m.,
Sunday Schoo\ 9: I? a.m.

w...- Ch,..... oiC!riJ&lt;
33226 Childmi's Home Rd. Pomeroy, OH
Contact 740-44 1- 1296 Sunday mornin g
lO:OO, Sf"~ morni ng Bible stud y:
following wo~.hi p , Sun .
Wed bible study 1 pm

t \ "t"

Episcopal
Grt~&lt;t F.pis&lt;otlol Clnu&lt;ll
326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy. Sunday S&lt;:hool
and Hqly Euchari st 11 :00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Payne

6 :00 pm.

Hemlock ~e Chmtt.a Chun:h
M-inister: Larry Bro wn, Wors hip - 9:30
a.m. Stmday Sc hool - 10 :30 a,m., Bi ble
Study- 7 p.m.

Holiness
Commu.lty Church

Pastor: Stevt Tomek. Mai n Strttl.
Rutland . Sunday Wonhip-10:00 a.m..
Sunday ~rvice-7 p.rn

. l'ollloroy Churdo ol Cllrtsl

212 W. Main St .. Sunday School - 9 :30
a.m .• Worship- 10:30 a.m., b p.m..
Wednesday Se" 'ioes- 7 p.m.

Danville Holines!i Chlll'dl
31057 Sune Route 325~ Lmgsvlle. Pas1or
YICior Roosh. ~unday !iehool - 9:30 a.m..
Suf)day worsh ip - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m ..
Wedl)esday pnayer service - 1 p.m.

-..y

Cat_, Pi!Rrlm Chapd
Harrisonville Road, Pasior: Charles
Mc Kenzie_, Sunday School 9:30 11.m. ,
Worship - 11 a.m.. 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Service - 7:00p.m.

Middleport chum. or &lt;.-..rist
5th and Mai n, Pastor: AI Hartson .
Childrens Director; Sharon Sayre , Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan, Sunday Sch ~X-l •
-9:30 a.m.. Worship- 8:1!5. 10 :3Q a.m., 1
p.m., Wedne§day Services - 7 p.m.

RO!Je of Shai'OII HoHite!!IS Ch•l'Cit
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutland, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King, Sunday school· 9:30 a.m.,
Sunday worship -7 p.m .. Wednesday
prayer meeting- 7 p .m.

K..., Ch;,m. ol Chml
W&lt;mhip - 9:30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, I Sl and
3~ Sunday

Bearwallo.. ltlclce Cit- ol Christ
Pastor: Bruce Tetl)', Sunday School -9:30

a.m.
Woi-ship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wedne sday SerVices - 6:30 p.m.

Wesltyan Rihlt llnlinrM Chui'C'h
75 Pearl St., Middlepon . PAStor: Rick
Bourne, Sunday SclloO!- 10 a.m. Worship
- 10 : 4~ ·p.m .. Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wed~sday Service- 7:30p.m.

Zion Church o!Chtill
Pomeroy. Harri son\·ille Rd . (Rt.l •43).
Pastor: Roger Watson, Sunday School 9 :30 a.m., Wo rship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .. Wedlleiday Services· 7JI .m.
~. l'lllllctt......

~-

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.. WOI"!lhip .
10:30 w.m.

R. Worship - 9:30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m.. first Sunday of Monrtl · 7:00
p.m. service

lloppoi, l'lliM St. Pl15tOr: Jane Beattie, Sunday School. .._ 9
a.m.. Worstlip - 10 a.m., l'ue5day Services
. 7:30 p.m.

c..trotaAsbury (Syracuse), Pastor: Bob Robinson .
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m .. Worsl"lip - II
a.m .. wednesday Ser\'ices - 7:30 p.m.
Eo~

• Pastor: Arland King. Sunday School ·
~0 : 30 a.m.. Worship - 9:30 a.m .. DiMe
SUtdy Wed. 7:30 •
Pa..tor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - I0
a.m., Wnnhip - ll .a.m
FMtil Run
Pa!aor. Bob Robinson. Sunday School - JO
a.m ., Worship -9 a.m.

llyoell Ra Commoolt)' Cloun:h
Pastor: }(ev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
• 9:30 a.n1. W~hip - 1 0 : 4~ a.m.• 7 p.m.,
Thunday Sible Study and Youth • 7 p.m.

chrtot

Inttrumental , WonhiJI Service · 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m., Sundt~ School •
10:1~ a.m ., Youth- ~ : 30 pm Sunday, Biblt:
Study Wedneoday 7 ;im

Llurol Clllffl&lt;oe- Clo"""
Pallor: Olenn Rowe, Su"day ScOOol •
9 :30' a.m., Wo~hip • 10:30 1.m. and 6

p.m..Wed!"'oday s.rvt.,. . HJO p.m.

lrod..., Cb- oiCMtnl•ter: Tam Runyon, 395511 Bradbul')'
Rood. Middtopon, Sund&lt;y School • 9,30

Mi.nvi.
Pastor: Bob Robinson, StJnday School - 9
a.m .. Worship - IO~ .rn .
l'arl Chapd
Sunda)"School - 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.

--

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Worship - 9:30
a.m.. Sunday School- i0: 35 a.m.

Rod&lt; Sprinp
Pastor: Ke11h Rader. Su~ SchoQI - 9:15
a .m .. Wo rshi p - 10 a .m .• Youth
~llowship: SunGay- 6 p.m.

-

Pastor: Rick Bnllme. Sunday School 9:30a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m.. llmi"Mlly
St:rvices - 7 p.m_
SoloonC..t&lt;r
Pastor: Will iam K. Marshall, Sunday
School - 10:15 a.m., Worship · 9:15A .m..
Bible StuO,y: Monday 7:00 pm

-......,

Sunday School - 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

c.r-1 s

Worahip • 10:30 a.m.

The Chur&lt;h ol J....,
Chrfll .n..-~ Salnto

R o - C - oiChlilt
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Wor~hi p and
Communion : 10:30 a.m.• Bob J. Weny .
Min iller

Sunday School 10:20· 11 a. m., Relief
Society1Prie5t hood 11:05- 12:00 noon,
S1t nment Service 9-10 :15 a .m ..
Homemlking meeting , 1st Thun;. · 7 p.m.

Bnocllord Churdo oiChlilt
Comer of St. Rt. _1 24 &amp;. Bradbury Rd .,
Minisln: Doug Shamblin, Youth Min is1er:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m .. 10:30 a. m.. 7:00
p.m.,Wedncsday Services - 7:00 p.m.

St. J.U Lo-.o Chtll'&lt;b
Pine Grove, Worship - 9:00 .a.m., Sunday
School · 10:00 a.m. Pastor: James P.
Brady

Hlduxy RtlkCh....,boiChrlot
Tuppers Plains. Pastor Mike Moo~. Bible
class, 9 a.m . Sunday; worship 10 a.m.

Our Sniour Lutheran Cblli'C•
Wa lnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood.
\\'.Va.. Pastor: Dav id Russell. Sunda~
School - 10:00 a.m.. Wot"lihip - II a.m.

Sunday: wo rship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
class 7 pm Wed .

St. Paul Lutheran Ctnwdl
Comer Sycamore &amp; second St.. Pomeroy.
Sun . School · 9:45a .m.. Worshrp • 11 a.m

.. ~orChrist
Pastor: Philip Stunn . Sund ay School : 9:30
o.m.. Worship Se rvice: 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Study. We&lt;lnesday. 6:30 p.m .

Mn.Star
P1110r: John Oilmore, Sunday School • 11
a.m., Wonh lp • 10 a.m.

Eat Letart
Pastor: Bill, M1nhall Sunday School •
91.m., Worship - 10 a.m., 1st Sunday
every month even ing service 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

Graham United ~dhodht
Worshi p - II a.m. Pa..tor: Richard Nease
Bethkl United Methodtsl
New lb ven . R1cha.rd Nea~ . Pastor.
Sundll)" wor~ hip q:JO a.m. Tue~ . 6:30
pr11yer and Di ble Study.

Do..., Church oi Cbrist
Sunday school 9:30 a.'m.. Sunday worship
- 10:30 a. m.
Tht Chlll&lt;h ol Christ ol-....,y
lnte r ~cti on 7 and . 124 W. Evange list:
De nni ~ Sargent. Sunday Bible Study •
9:30 a.m.• Worship: 10:30 a.m. and b:W
p.m .. Wednesday Bible Stud)" - 7 p.m.

Mt. Ollw Uniled Methodlil
Off 124 behind Willesvil le , Pustor: Re\'
Ralpl1Spim. Sunday School" - 9:30 a.m..
Wo r) hip - 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.. Tiwrsday
"ServK:es- 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartfonl Church of'CIIrist in'

Christian Union
Hartford. W.Va .. P a~ t or ~ Da\id Greu,
S und a~· School - 9:30 a.m.• Worship 10 :30 a.m.. 7:00 p.m .. Wedneliday
SeP,iices - 7..00 p.m.

M.tgo; c....,.m; .. """"'

Non heast Cluster. Al fred. Pas1or: Jane
Beanie . Sunday School - 9.30 a.m ..
Worship - 11 a.m .. 6:30 t&gt;.m.

Church of G9d

Ch&lt;stft'
Pa stor: Jane 8C'attie. Worship - 9 a.m ..
Sunday School - 10 a.m. ·. Th tJrsday
Sen.ices- 1 p.m.

MLM-Ch.... .rGod
Milt Hil l Rd .. Racine , Pasmr: J amt s
Satterfield, Sunda)· School · 9:45_ a .m..

-

Services 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm

C-Uoilod-l'llrislt
Pastor: He len Kline. Coolville Church ,
Main &amp; Fifth St. . Sun . School - 10 a.m.,
Worship - 9 a.m.. Tues. Sen-·K:.es - 7 p.m.

lldhe!Clluftb
Township Rd .. 468C. Sunday School - 9
a.m. Worsh1p • 10 a.m .. Wednesday
Sen'lces - 10 a.m .

:fisbrr :funeral ,omt

1mctt , that they may see
· lgood works and gl orify
:: 11Fa~her in heaven."
Matthew 5:1

.............
. . . zm

t•

2480 Second St .. Syracuse. OH
Sun. School 10 am. Sundy night 6:.Vl pm
Under the direction of Dan &lt;\ Faitil
Hayman
~ N&lt;wllqloniag
(FBI f'~Chim:-1.1 Harri.SOn\·illc.
Pa.&lt;tton: R..Jb and Kay MII'ihall .
Sunday Service, 2 p.m

499 Richland A•enue,Athens

Calvary Ribk- C hurctl
PomerO) Pike. Co . Rd .. Pa ~ t o r : Re v.
Blacl;wood, Sundtiy School - 9 30' &lt;i.m..
Worsh1 p I O::'&gt; U a.m. 7. 30 p.m ..
_Wedntsd ay Sel'\ ice 7:30 p.m

Ouls Cltri&gt;tioo F - i p
(Non-dennminatlonal fel lowship )
Meeting in thC' ).teigs Middle School
Cafeteria Pb1or.· Orri~ Stewart
10:00 am - Noon Sunday: Informal
Worship. Ch ildren 's minis!!')'

Slinrs\"ille C ommu nil~· Apostolic
C hurch
Pastor: Wayne R. Jewel l. Sunday w{lrshlp
- b:(XJ p.m.. Wedncsda) - 6:00 p.m. Bi ble
Stud)

Com-rut, of Christ
Ponlllnd-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Ji m Proffi n.
Sunday School - 9 :10 a.m.. WMihip 10:30 a.m .• W~nesday Sl=mces · 7:00
p.m.
Relhd Wonhip Ceatrr
39782 S..R. 1. Reedsville. OH 45772. 112
mile north of Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Pull Gospel Church . PasUlr Rob Barber.
Associ11e' Pastor Karyn DaYis, Youth
Pastor Suzie Franc is, Sunday servi ces
10:00 4m worship. 6:00 pm Fami ly Lift
Classes. Wed . Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m .. Outer limits 0 11 Group at the
church 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm

Rrjoi-cing l..if~ Chun::h
500 N. ~11 d An:: .. M1ddk (XIn . Pa;;tor
Mike FnKman . Pastor Emeritu' l..a\He-nct;.
Fn~man . Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p .m '

Clifto• Tilbern• de Church '
Clifton. WVa .. Sunda} School - 10 a.m..
Worship - 7 p.m . Wednesde~y St:r,·ic~ - 7
p.m.
New Lift \ 'ktuf1 Centl'f'
3773 Gcor~~ Crcd, Road. Gallipolil&gt;. OH
Pa~tor : Bill Slaten . Sun da~ Servi ce~- 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wr=dne ,d OJ~ - 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

--Cinndo

398 Ash Sl .. Midd.lepnn-Pastnr Jdl Smith
Sunday Scttool - ? :30 .ILm . • Morn ing
Worshi p - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pm.
Wednesda)· Se rv i~ ~ 7:00 p.m., Youth
Service- 7:00p.m.
Agape Lift Cm.ter
"Pull-Gospe l Chu rch", Pa sto~ John &amp;
Patty Wade, 663 Second Ave . Masoo. 77j.
~1 7 ~ Se rvi~ time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.• :

Full Gespd Chun:h

or tht I.Jvlng Savior
RtJ38 . Amiqui1y. Pli'IOr: Jes!&gt;C'
Serv ice~: Sarurdll)' 2:00 p.m.

--Chordo
Thr&lt;b Ch"""'

Cn _ Rd. 63 , Sunday School · q :JO a.m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Salem Community Church
Back of Wt ~ t (ol ~ mbia. W.Va .om Lievi n ~
Road , Pastor : ChArles Roush (304 ) 6752288 , Sunday School 9:30am , Sun day
eve nina service 7:00 pm. Bibl}' Study
WedneMlay &amp;ervice 7:00 P'Tl

H - Chrhtlu Fdlowohlp Chul'do
Putor: Hcncchel White. Sunday School-

Dni1, Sunday service, 10 a.m..
Wednetdl.y tervice , 7 p.m.

. 10 am. Sunday Churth ICrvice - 6:30 pm

Filth N Goopol C1otordt
L..ona Bottom, Pastor: S1eve Reed , ~unday
khool • 9:30 1 .m, Wonh tp - 9:)0 a.m.
an&lt;!.7 p.m., Wedneoday - 1 p.m.. Fridoy •
fetlorilp oorvloe 1 p.m.

-·fll• c......

oJty Churdo
Pattor: Thcr~n Durham. Sunday • 4,;1 :30
a.m. and 7 p.m., WeOnelday • 7 p.m.

)Nsl' :

t Comnnndty Church

575 Pearl St ., Mlddlepon . Pastor: Sam
Anderson , Sunday School 10 a.m..
Eveni111 - 7:30 p.m. , Wednesday Ser:o•ice -

Filth Valley Tobenud• Chw&lt;b
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Re\'. Emmett
Ra wson , Sunday E\'t'n in ~ 7 p.m..
Thursday Service - 7 pJn.
SyrHOSt Mission
1411 Bridgem1111 St., Syrac u ~ . Sunday
School - 10 a.m. Evening - 6 p.m..
Wednesday Strv"ice - 7 p.m.

Hard c.......Jty Church
Off Rt. 124. Pastor: Edstl Han . Sunda)
&amp;hool - 9:30a .m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m..

Dyc:mllt COIDIIlllllity O.un:b
Sunday Sc hool - 9:30 a.m.. Worsh1 p ·
· 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m .
Mone Cbapd Cbu~h
Sunday sc hool - 10 a.m.. \'iorshi p · I I
a.m..•Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Nazarene

F-~ClnoKh

Middleport Chorril or 1M N , _
Pastor: Allen Mi dcap. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,Worship - 10:30 a.m .• 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday· Services - 1 p".m .. Pu tor:
Allen Midcap

R-F-.,
Church of the Nazarene. Pll!itor: . Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship · 10:45 a.m ..
7 p.m.. Wednesday,Services - 7 p.m.
S)TM'USf Cha~h ~the Nazarene
Pastor Mike t\dkins•.Sunda) Sctiool - 9:30

M orri~.

A..oduter-R.F.I.
923 S. Third St.. Middt.pott. Putor r....,

Long Botto m. Sun day School - q:J() a.m-.
Wo rship - 10 45 a.m.. 7: ~0 p m .
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
·
· ' MI . OH~CommuUy Chur-ch
Pa§tor: Law~nce Bush. Sunda~· School 9: 30a.m .. Eve'nmg- 6: 30p.m .. We.dllt'.d a~
Se-rvice - 7 p.m.
Fuli~Ug·-

Hiland ROCid . Pomero} . Pastor: Ro~
Hllnter, Sunday School - 10 a.m.. E ~o&lt;en i ng
7:30p.m .. TueSday &amp; Thun..- 7:3p p.m.
~3045

·

7 pm

Reot- Clltttllan F&lt;II....Jtlp
9365 Hoope r Ro•d . "-!hens, Pastor:
Lonnie Coat~. Sunduy Wriip 10:00 ~m .
Wednellday: 1 pm

"'"'" oiHeallna Mlns.. Rt,' 1:14 Lo. .\itlt, OH
Full GC?spel, Cl Posta" Robert .t Robem
"Musser. Sun d1y Sd10ol 9:30 am.
Worshtp 10 :30 11m - 7:00 pm. Wed
Service 7:00 pm

Pentecostal
PenleatSI.nl "-!18t111bl~·
St. Rt. 124. Rac1ne. Tornado Rd . Sunda~
Schoo l · 10 a.m.. En ning · 7 p m..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian.
Harrlsoo,iUe Pmib!-1eri&amp;n Chureh
Pastor Robert CrO"- . Wor~h1 p - 9 a .m
\liddleport

Pre!i b ~·leriiUI

." li .m .. "-'Or&lt;.h1p ~!"\ IL"l'

I J am .

Seventh-Day Adventist
Mu1~rr: H t~ . Rd. Po mern~ . S at il rda~
Stn ict"~ : S1.1bbluh Sch\lt1l . 2 p.m ..
Wo~h i p - 3 p m:

United Brethren
1\11. Hennon United Brelhren
in Ch r1~1 C hul'('h
Tex a~ CQmmunll y 364 11 Wid: h~ m Rd .
Pastor: Peter Man indalt, Sunda~ School ·
9 : ~ a.m.. Wor~hip - l fl : ~(l u.m,. 7:00
p.m.. We dn e~ d ay S e r,· 1Ce~ - 7:00 p.m.
Youth ~roup mel!'t ing l nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7 p.m.
Edrn l 1nitt'd Brtthmn in Christ
State Route 12J. betwren Reedsv illt' &amp;
Hockingpon . Sunda.'&gt; Schrol - !0 a.m ..
Sll nda ~ \\:or~ h 1 p · II :UO a.m. \\'ednesda~
Scmce'- - 7:00 p,m.. Pa~t or- M. Adam
Will

'

Sooth Jkothel Commulli~ Chur-ch
Sih·er Ridge - Pastor Linda Dame,•ood,

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITATION CENTER men. rha11hey may see your

._l,_.._
.........

Sunda} School · q : ~1 01 .m .. Wor:.hip - 7:00
p.m .. Wed nt ~~ Bible Stud ~ . - 1:{(1 p.m.
Faith FC'tlo.,'Shtp Crusade for Christ
Pastor: Re'. FranL. li n D ic k en ~. Service:
Fri da~. 1 p.TYJ .

Pastor: Wayne Dunlap . State Rt. 681 .
Tuppers Plai ~s . S~n . Won.hip: 10 am &amp;.
6:30 pm .. Wed. Biblt- Study 7:00p.m.

Tlu e~~n yo11 deserve, ckJse to lw.,. 1 ~·~ works and glo rif\' your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in heaven."
........... , _ . . . .
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Man hew 5: 16

1-300-451 -9806

Fai..,.W.· Blbte Church
Lt'tan. W Va . Rt. 1. Pasror: Bri&amp;n May.

Aonulog Grace Com-..lty Clourch

MI-IDiMt

740-594-6333

White'll Chapel Wes&amp;eyan
Cooh·ill r Road . Pastor: Re\". Phillip
Ridenour , Sunda y School . 9: ~0 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m .. Wedne§day Stf\•ice
- 7 p.m.

~Couaaaail.+ Chu~h

' 7:30p.m.

Grand Stree~ . Sunday School - 9:30a .m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m., Pastor ~illip Btll

Wednesday Servie&lt;S • 7

your light so shine bclfon:l

Bald Knob. on Co. Rd . 3 I, Pastor: Rev.
Roger Will ford , Sunday School . 9:30
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m.

Other Churches ·

7,30 pm.

Pastor: KCIIT)' Wood, Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worsh ip - 11 a.m.Wed.nesday

United Methodist

p.m

a....
Clourdo """Sunday
-Pastor:
Jtev. Herben.Gmc..
!icOOol
·9:30a .m., Wonhip - I I a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednrsday Service's - 7 p.m.
• -Oo•n:to.r ... N.......
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:30 a.m., 6 :30 p .m., Wednesday
Service~ - 7 p.m. Rev. Mike Clart

Wc&lt;tne~ay

Study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Lutheran

Carteto• lntrrdmominlllional C1Jm.-b
K1n g ~bu r) Road. Pa..tnr- Roben Vance ,
Sun day School - Q ~0 a.m . Worship
Sc:mce 10:30 i m, E\ening Service 6

h

Carmel 6: Ba1han Reb. he ine , Ohio,
Pattor: John Gilmore, Su nday ~hool •
9:30 ••m., Wonbtp • IO :•~ 1.m. , Bible

St . Rt. 160, 44!-6247 or 446-1486,

.

,_.., a....to " " " -

PaitQr· Jan Lavender, Sund11y School ·
9:30am .. Worsh1p- 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednesday Se-rv~C%S - 7 p.m.

WodneJday7 pm

Pastor: Jotm Gilmore, Sunday School • 10
a .m., Wor~h i p • 9 a.m., Wednelday
Servicet · 10 a.m .

Latter-Day Saints

om.

(M'oddlqoort)

Pastor: Brixn Dunham, Sundxy School -,
9:30 ll.m .. Wonhip- 11:00 a.m.

Bib1t-

Pln&lt;G,...•
Clmdt
112 mile off Rt. 325. Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wednesday Service -" 7:30 p.m. ·

Sunday School- 9 a.m . Wor5hip"Gel"\ict'
10 a.m 2nd and 4th S unda ~

Pastor: Denzil, Null. Worship · 9:30a.m.
SuOO.y School- 10:30 a.m.

-

w........ Chmdl or&lt;.lu'ht
33226 Children 's Home Rd .. Sunday
School - 11 a.m .• Wnn:hip - lOa.m.. 6 p.m.
WedneW..y Sen.ices - 7 p.m.

740-992· 7713

Sizes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

The Appliance man

\'kt«y Boptbt lnd&lt;p&lt;acl&lt;ol
525 N. 2nd St . Middleport . Pastor: James
E. Keesee, Worship · 16a.m.• 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Servi ~ · 7 p.m.

Rev. Josepil Woods. Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worshi p . II :30 a.m.

\4-ilrm Friendly

740-949-2210

Hl-llapllst Church
St . Rt . 143 jllst off Rt. 7. Pa stor: Re\·.
James R, A c: ~e. Sr .. Sunday Un ified
Service , Worsh ip - 10:30 a .m., 6 p.m.:,
WMlesda) Services · 7 p.m.

(740) 992-647'21

"Still small enough to care" ·

209 Third
Racine, OH

Pastor: Denn is Weaver Sundty School·
9 : '~ a.m., E"enina • 6 :~ 0 p .m.,
Wednesday Services · 6:30p.m.
llethlobenollaptlol
Ore1t Bend, Route 124, Racine , OH,
Pastor; Ed Caner , Sundlly School - 9:30
a.m.. Sunday Worship · 10:30 . a.m.,
Wednesday Bible Stud y · 7:00 p.m.

J

ctoorch ol God of l'npbocy
OJ . White Rd. off St. Rt. 160, Pastor: PJ .
Chapman, Sunday ScOOot - 10 a.m..
Worsh}o - II a.m.. W~nesday Ser"\'ices - 7
p.m.

E lli ~

Rutt.nd First Baptbt Ch•rdt
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:45 a.m.
r ........, Fim llapllst
Pastor Jon 'srocken , East Main St. .
Sunday.Sch. 9:30am, Worship 10:30 am
'

s~ Flnl Cloorolo oiGod
Apple and 5«-ond Sts .. Pastor: Re\' , Da vid
Russell. Sunday School and Wonhip- 10
11 .m . Eveni n11 Services- 6:30 p .m .,
wednesdiy Servicei - 6:30p.m.

Catholic

Eonownod"- 'hbemackln&lt;.
LJop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutland ,

Baptist

Ratt.cl CIMtrdl ol God
Pu1or: Ron Heath. Sunday Worship - 10
~a .m .. 6 p.m.• Wedn«day Servicor-s - 1
p.m.

•

,_

p.m.

R - ...... Witlopllot
Salem St. , Pa.&lt;itor: Jamie Fonner, Sun4ay
School - 10 a.m.. E\·eninJ • 7 p.m .•
Wedntsday Sen.·ice, • 7 p.m.
S«ood ....... Chtodt
Ravenswood , WV, Sunday School 10 am. Mom inJ! worship II am·Evening - 7 pm ,
'
Wednesday 7 p.m .

· S..ftd Hcan Ca- Chardt
161 Mulberry Ave .• Pomeroy, 992 -5898.
Pastor: Rtv ~ Walter E. Hei nz, Sat . Con .
4:4S-S :I5p.m.; Mass- 5:30 p.m .. Sun .

Uberty ......blf oiGod
P.O. Box 467. Dudd ing Lane , Mason.
W.Va., Pastor: Neil Tennant. Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Polish central bank honors Pope
John Paul II with special bank notes

P.O. Box683

- R.S.V. Pro.rerbs 6:6·8

Michael Bllldford, Puror, Sunday. 10 :30
a.m. 1\les. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Bible
Study

Pt1tor: Joseph Oodwln, ,interim p~itor ,

all

Go to the ant. o sluggard:
consider her wa}'s, and be wise.
Without ha\'ing any chief, offtcer
or ruler. she prepares her food in
summer, and gathers her
~ust cnancc in harve!-.t.

River Valley Apostol ic Worship Center,
873 S. 3rd
Avr., Middlepon , Rev .

Assembly of GOO

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
.

Clloill ..........

VanZandt and Ward Rd , Pastor: James
Miller, SundaY School.
10:30 a.m..

FOR AP WEEKLYF!A11JRES

The Dally Sentinel • Paae A7

WORSIDP GOD THIS WEEK

.

from Bible literalism

WARSAW, Poland (AP)
- Poland's central bank
on Monday issued 2 million collectors' bank notes
bearing the image of the
late Pope John Paul II ,
marking the 28th anniversary of the late pontiff's
election.
·
John Paul , born Karol
Wojtyla in the Polish town
of Wadowice, is revered in
his homeland, where he
helped to inspire the pro-

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in~~~:~! words abide in you, ye shall

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ask wltat ye wiU, aml it
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992-5130

Johnl5:7

SWISHER &amp; LOHS~
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
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God so lo,•ed the world
he gave his only
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Johri 3: /6

for thee: for mY
stren!fh is made
.
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k
Per1ect 10 wea ness.

II C6 12 9

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Since 1858
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::
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.' -

.,

t74Loy.. Stn.t • PO Boxl79
Nrw Ra,.,wv l5ll&gt;l

j,..H............ U..osed F.,:U Di..ctor
lkidi S. A""""'.FOf!lhouPtFUII&lt;I'IIPionniog

Blessed are the pure "So I stri ve a lways to keep ~
• h
fi - h
my conscience clear before ~ ·u• wfomiiykfp
m eart; or t ey G
''""" ymfonuiy·
shall see God.
od and man ."
Suppres;ion • Exunguishet'!i'Spnnkle"
Acts 24.·16 7
• Secun!)
0
Matthew 5:8
I 2N . 2ndAve. Middlepon •. H
353.{JM37 Fax :

•
"

Office Service&amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

1

�LOCAl •• STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Friday...Cloudy with isolated showers. Much rooler
with highs around 5,9. West
winds 5 to 10 mph with
gusts up to 20 mph . Chance
&lt;)f rain 20 percent.
· Friday
night... Partly
cloudy in the evening ...Then
clearing . . Cooler with lows ·
in the mid. 30s. West winds
around S mph in the
evening ... Becoming light
~nd variable.
Satunlay".Partly cloudy.

/IEP-41.13

Akzo- 55.34
M!Nnd - 66.80
BIG -20.55
33.03

&amp;orzW-- 59.80

Pepsico- 62.60
,,...., - 14.40
ReekweM - 61.56
Roelcy 86ots -14.U
Setrs ~ 17o.:87
Wai-Mart -

CENX- 37.07 . '
Clla nplon - 7.1.5
CluRmlng Shops - 14.89
City HoiAC - 40.25
Col- 511.10

Lbl. -28.52
NSC-48.48
Oak Hill Fllwtelal - 26.75
OVB-25.45

OG-13.82

BBT-43.46 .

DwPont-45

~ples-31

KJegef -

Friday, October 20, 200(i

48.49

-.·Jendy's - 34.84
Woitt•cton -17.35
D4llly &amp;toe* teportS - tete
4 p.m. da aln&amp; qaotes of

21 86

I cham

fttm'l_...

Ule fllllvklua day'S ltM II~
tlons, provided by Smllll
Financial Ad¥IIOIS of
M.lld l,yOM In GUII!l ells.

" IMII
Gillie Academy ot.Wam~n, 7:30p.m.
·Logan at Point Pleasant, 7:SO .p.m.
SootMlallla at Ollk Hill, 7;30 p.m.
'M11ewan at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
' RM!r'VaKovot~. 7:30p.m.
\loigs II VInton County, 7:30 p.m.
Tnmblo at Soulhern, 7:30 p.m.
HanllOin atTug Valley, 7:!10 p.m.
Elolern ai\Vatorford, 7:30 p.m.

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OHSAA District 'Meet (l'llo~!allde)
~,'Lilf­

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·"'""'' Valley at Huntigton, 6 .p.m.
COHogosAio Grande at Tllfln. 2 p.m .

prepares
for crucial

con... wan•• SoeDer·

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01/CS at T~ Valley, 5 p.m.

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Tlttlo at f!io G111n&lt;111, 1 p.m.

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.F11o Grande at Pumpldn Aun. 9 a.m.

. tet•ra
~'ICiflajtJIIt

game with

s - Slille at Rio~.ande, 7 p.m.

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VmtonCo.

Rio G..- Ill Ohio Dominican, S p.m.

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PRESS WRITER

MCARTHUR With
Meigs
sitting
lOth
in
the
ll,lhens Ill Golllallcademy, 7:30p.m.
OHSAA
Division
IV,
Pl.~nlaiHert&gt;ert Hoowtr, 7:30·Jlm.
Soulh ·Gallla at Uncoln ·Co., 7:!10 p.m.
Region 15 standings, there
RM!r \lllley.at Cool G"""', 7:3 0p.m .
is no doubt that this Friday's
Belpre al Me4gs, 7:30p.m.
,
Big C-al Hannan, 7:30 p.m .
game
between
the
Oolllia'OfeMCDt ay
Marauders
and
Vinton
. Rio Grande Red While 1111111o, 4 p.m.
County Vlill be very important if the team from Rock
Springs has any hopes of
making the postseason .
INsiDE
After starting the season
5-0, the Marauders (6-2)
dropped two straight to
Wellston and NelsonvilleYork, but got back on track
last
week,
defeating
Alexander 26-6. Vinton
County (4-4), on the other
hand, is coming off of two
straight wins over the same
Alexander team and Belpre
after lo~ing four of six
.
.
.
.
.
8rild SlwiMn/pholo games to start the season.
Eastern's Darcy Winebfenner tips the ball over a leaping Kasey Turley (3) of Southern during a Division IV sectional chamBut the Vikings' record
pionship garne on Thursday in TuppetS Plains.
may be a little deceiving.
Even at .500 on the year. the
combined record of the
teams they have faced is 3831 as they have averaged 18
BY .... St&amp;AUW
time 25-19 in the final set, to close as 22-19 in the last five blocks and Hayman · points per game against
BSHERMANOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.cmil
capture its II th straight sec- game before suceumbing to killed the ball nine times. those teams, but have given
tiona:l title - meanwhile the seventh-ranked team in Brannon followed with the same number to opposTUPPERS PLAINS remaini11g undefeated (23-0) the state.
seven kills, Winebrenner six ing teams. ·
Meigs, on the other hand,
Eastern
ooach . Howie in matches and individual
Katie Hayman led Eastern and Holter two. Bissell and
Caldwell has said it about games
has
played much weaker
Ryan Davis each added one.
basketball many times - . Cald.well's crew advances with 18 points and Brittany
comj)Cltition.
The combined
Freshman Kasey Turley
one Gf your toughest touma- to the Southeast District Bissell, who led the way in .had an excellent game at the record of the teams the
· the firs
assists, added II points.
ment games ts
tone. :tournament .at Wellston High Jillan Brannon and Darcy net with three kills and eight Marauder~ have faced is 23' Apparently the same ho1ds School. The Lady Eagles
.
.
blocks. Cundiff, Sarah Eddy · 40, but they are averaging
true for volleyball, ioo.
will next face New Boston 6 Wmebrenner each added and Whitney Wolfe-Riffle 30 points per game against
The . Lady EagJes had p.m. on Thursday in a semi- · seve? and Kelsey ~otter stx. all had two kills. Rashell that
competition.
Enn Weber chtpped m Boso .. cQntributed
some problems putting away final match. The finals will
· team is
Defensively,
the
two
SPOR.TS
Southern on Thursday, but be next Saturoay.
three and Amanda Eason blocks.
giving up an average of 16
otherwise won the match
A young Southern team. one for the winners.
Bissell had 38 assists for points per game.
helping
the
easily in suai ght games, · meanwhile, bails out of the
Emma
Hunter
and Eastern while Southern's · And
during a Division IV sec- tourney with 6-lS overall Stephanie €undiff had nine Wolfe-Riffle and Hunter Marauders get back on track
and · pick up their first Tritiona! &lt;:hampionship game.
record. It was not before and eight points respectively each had four.
Eastern won by scores of putting up a fight, though. to pace all Southern servers.
It was Eastern's third win
P111ase see Melp. 81
25-9,
25-7
and
had
a
tougher
The
LadyTornadoes
were
.as
Weber
had
14
kills
and
over Southern this season.
!POMEROY Jacob
Well connected with Clay
. Bolin on touchdoWn passes
of 31 and 80 yards as Me\gs
defeated Alexander 34-6 in
reserve football action
Monday. Jeremy Smith
rushed for 101 yards ·on six
&lt;:atries and hit paydirt on a
63-yard touchdown run as
well as a 50-yard punt
return. Brandon Shupe
added the last Meigs score
on a 9-yard ron.
Aside from Smith's I 01
yards on the ground, Cody
Laudermilt added 39 yards
on eight tries, J. T. Evans
picked up 36 yards on six
attempts and Shupre netted
.
33 yards.
AP photo
Well completed 4-of-8
•
St. Louis Cardinals players celebrate their 3-1 win over the
passe for 159 yards and two
New York Mets to win the National League Championship,
touchdowns. Bolin had two
catches for Ill yards, Caleb
Thursday at Shea Stadium in New York.
Davis added 'two receptions
for48.
Bolin, Evans and Jake
Barnes all rerorded interceptions.

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SPORT54i&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

rrtra.,f+u

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lot

SaFF REPORT

Eastam at W&lt;lllaton Olatricl, 6 p.m .

;.

BY JOHN SEEWER

•

Fell tal Mctltl - .-u
USB-33.43
iat a:IIH - 57.23
Geae Ill 'Be tile -35.28
GIQtl\' - 5.55
.Haltey DftidMn - 67.52
IPM-46.87

ACI-34.26

Bob Evan$ -

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Bureau auditor:
Managers wanted
to keep coin ·
·dealer happy
TOLEDO - A former
investment manager for the
state's insurance fund for
injured workers was more
worried about keeping
happy a politically connect- ·
ed coin dealer than protecting a $50 million invest"
ment in rare coins, an auditor testified Thursday.
Keith Elliott, an auditor
with die Ohio Bureau of
Workers' Compensation,
said officials within the
bureau resisted when he
called for a full audit of
state investments . under
Tom Noe 's control.
Noe, once a powerful
~layer in the .Republican
Pany, is accused of stealing
from the investment and
putting the money into his
coin shop and spending it
on himself.
The investment scanda I
has the state's GOP reeling
and could help Democrats
win the governor's office in
next month's election for
the first time since 1990.
Elliott, who was one of the
~first people to raise concerns
about the investment, said he
wankld to look closely at the
arrangement with Noe six
years ago because he said
there were few safeguards.
Allowing Noe to have
·complete control over the
state's money put it at
Fater risk than other
mvestments, he said.
Elliott said when he suggested a full audit, former
investmelit manager Robert
Cowman said he didn't
want to risk his relationship
with Noe. Elliott said he
found it "highly irregular"
that Cowman was more
concerned about that than
guarding the money.
Cowman wrote in an e- ·
mail that the bureau could
lose business with its
·investors if the agency was
perceived to be too demandmg. Elliot testified.
Elliott also told his supervisors the state should end
its investment in rare coins.
He wa:. told he was overstepping his authority.
Noe has pleaded not guilty
to chart~es of !heft, money
laundenn~, forgery and corrupt activtty. He faces up to
10 years in prison on the
corrupt activity charge.
His attorneys say the deal
with the Ohio Bureau of
Workers'
Compensation
allowed him to use the
money however he wanted.
comp
The
workers '
agency· gave Noe $25 million to invest in rare coins in
1998; followed by another
$25 million ·in 200 I.

Highs in the upper 50s.
South winds 5 to I 0 mph.
Saturday nig'h t..• Partly
cloudy. Not as cQOI with
lows in the mid 40s. South
winds around 5 mph.
Sunday and Sunday
nigbt... Mostly cloudy with
a 50 percent chance of min
sho~ers. Highs in the upper
50s. Lows in the mid 30s.
Monday".Most1y cloudy.
Cooler with highs in the
upper40s.

Bl

The Daily 'Sentinel

s--

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ASSOCI~TED

Friday, October 20, 2oo6

Local Stocks

TOPS losers Local Weather
honored
COOLVITLE- Sharon
Powell was named weekly
best weight-loss winner and
Joan Cole runner-up at
Tuesday's meeting ofTOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensib1y)
#OH
2013.
' Chapter
Coolville. There were 24
members present for the
open house.
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Sensibly)
members
LaChresia Bogardus and
Roberta Henderson were in
leeway. New members Carol
Lucas and Cindy Frost were
welcomed. Connie Rankin
was recognized for · her
upooming birthday and
Sandi Wrildlt for being the
Olapter KOPS Queen.
.
Becky Schirtzinger won
the door prize donated by the
Village Charm Aower and
Gift Shop in Coolville.
IUnkin announced that she
will be holding a 4-mile walk
exercise class on Sunday and
Wednesday from 7to 8 p.m.
at the Methodist church in
Tuppers Plains.
There will be no meeting
on Nov. 7 due to Election
Day.
· The group meets· every
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Church. Weigh-in is from
S: IS to 6: IS p.m. with a
~ng at 6:30. An exercise
period will be held from
5:30to6p.m. for those interested. For information, call
· Pat Snedden at 662-2633 or
attend a free meeting.

Page AS

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.Eastern.wins llth straight sectional title

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Meigs defeats
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OVP Scorel.lne (5 p.m.· I a.m.)
1-740-446·2342 ext. 33

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Fu..:. 1·7-·3008
E-rNII-:- sportsOmydaltysentinel.com

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446-2342. 81&lt;1. 33
bshermanOmydailytribune.com

(7~1

Lllny CNm, Spotts Writer
(7~1 446-23&lt;42, 81&lt;1. 33
k:rumO mydailyregister.oom

Aeht.y Slww, Sports Writer
(7~1

""'2S.2. 81&lt;1. 23 '
aponsO mydallytrlbune.com

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Athletic SoosteiS at a home football game. Also pictured are Sydney's grandfather, Craig
Harrison (rear left), and Richard Hill (rear right) of Hometown Market, who donated the foot·
balls.

Football drawing set tonight

'

8nld Stterm.l, Spotts.Editor
,.,'!j ·· '

Sill! mlllld pllolo
Sydney Diddle, front, was a winner of an autographed football given away by the Southern

SPORTSOM'IOAILVSENTINEI..COM

RACINE -

Southern Athletic Boosters

will have a drawing for a football auto-

graphed by Philadelphia Eagles quarterback
Donavan McNabb, and long snapper and
Meigs County native Mike Bartrum, during
Friday 'night's home football game.
• This is the ·fiftlt and final football to be
t

~"en away. with the previous footballs
thcluding the signatures of Philadelphia
Eagles players Michael Westbrook. Brian
Dawkins and David Aikers.
Any fan that purchases a game program
for Friday night's contest between the
Trimble Tomcats and Southern Tornadoes
will be entered into the drawing for the
autographed football .

Cardinals move
on to World Series
BY MIKE FITZNT111CK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

victory over the New York
Mets on Thursday night for
the NL championship. ,
Adam Wainwright wriggled out of a bases-loaded
jam in the bottom of the
ninth, striking out St. Loui s
nemesis Carlos Beltran to
end it and leaving a stunned
crowd in deOated silence
just moments after it had
Shea Stadium shaking.
And with tMat. the
Cardinals earned their second pennant in three years

NEW YORK - No way
anybody was catching
Yadier Molina's ninthinning shot. And by .the time
it landed beyond the leftfield fence, the St. Louis
Cardinals were headed to
the World Series.
Molina's.
tiebreaking
homer and another Game 7
gem by Jeff Suppan helped
St. Louis overcorne Endy
Chavez's astounding grab,
giving the Cardinals a 3-1 , .... Mtc.tdiOtlli, 81

�•

P-.e Ba • 1he Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, October 20,

MILWAUKEE (AP) - the Milwaukee man's comCOLUMBUS
If
Internet threats of "dirty puter, the official added .
Indiana has any chance to
bomb" attacks at Cleveland
No decision has been made
upset top-ranked Ohio State,
and
other
yet
on whether charges will
Browns
Stadium
quarterback Kellen Lewis
NFL stadiums this weekend be filed, the official said . In
must have the game of his
were a hoax inspired by a Houston, FBI spokeswoman
life.
writing
competition between Shauna Dunlap said officials
,That's not saying all that
two men trying to come up are not investigating any
much, since the redshirt
with scary threats. a law connections to the NFL scare
freshman is just I 9.
enforcement
official said in that jurisdiction.
Lewis, out of Jacksonville,
Thursday.
Milwaukee police contactFla., already has led three
The threats , which were ed the FBI about the 20-year'
game-winning fourth-quarposted
on a Web' site last old man Wednesday night.
ter drives this season and has
week: and mentioned stadi "From the information we
brought the Hoosiers back
urns in seven U.S. cities. have, we believe he was
from deficits of 14 jx&gt;ints or
were deemed to 9e false by involved to some extent, but
more on three occasions.
the FBI on Thursday after we don 't know at what
Indiana (4-3, 2-1 Big Ten)
has won its last two games,
agents questioned a 20-year- level," said FBI agent
including a big upsei of
old Milwaukee man.
Douglas E. Porrini . . He
then-No. 15 Iowa last week.
"This is a hoax ," said · added·, "That person was
"He's reduced the negaSpecial A:gent Richard released, but we're not saytive plays, the mistakes,"
Kolko, a spokesp1an at the ing 'that he won 't be ·
coach Terry Hoeppner said
fBI's Washington headquar- charged ."
of the comparisons between
tf!I:S. A joint statement from
The threat. dated Oct. 12,
Lewis in August and what
·the FBI and Homeland appeared on a Web site, The
he's done so far this season.
Security said fans "should be Friend Society, that liriks to
"All of a. sudden the things
·reassured of their security as various online forums and
that were a blur to him, you
they continue to attend sport- off-color cartoons . Its author,
feel as if they have slowed
ing events this weekend."
identified in the message as
down."
AP~
An FBI official in "javness," Said trucks would
What he 'II face on Ohio State defensive line Joel Penton (98) and defensive end Jay Richardson (99) sacks Washington, who spoke on deliver radiological bombs
Saturday, however, will test Penn State quarterback Anthony Morelli (14) in this Sept. 23 file photo at Ohio Stadium condition of anonymity Sunday to stadiums in New .
any rookie's resolve. He'll during the third quarter of a football game in Columbus. If Indiana has any chance to upset 'because the case is still under York, Miami, Atlanta,
only be facing one of the .top-ranked Ohio State, quartel'back Kellen Lewis must have thfi! game of his life. That's not investigation, said the Seattle, Houston, Cleveland
nation's stintest o;iefenses. saying all that much, since the tedshirt freshman is just 19.
Mil'faukee. man acknowl- and Oj!kland, Calif., and that
before
105,000
parti- to the defensive staff, you r-,;~;;;;i\;;;;;;iij:"t;:i;i;;;:i;tn;ri;-71 edged posting the phony sta- Osama bin Laden would
san
fansaroun
who will
be cheer~urn lbreat as ,patt ofa "writ- claim responsibility.
ing for the No.' I team in the can see him getting belter
ing duel" with a man from
"The information posted
and better."
land. Gulp.
.
Le . h
I ed 53
the Brownsville, Thxas, area on this Web site we viewed
To make Lewis • job even
· WIS as comp et
to see who could post the with strong skepticism and
harder, the Hoosiers have percent of his passes for
~est
threat.
there was no credible intellithe Buckeyes attention. That I, 138 yards and five touchThe Texa&lt;; man corroborat- gence to suggest there was a
came with last week's 31 -28 downs with three. interoeped
the story during question- threat," said Russ Knocke, a
upset over the Hawkeyes.
lions. He also has scrambled
ing
Thursday by ~I agents, spokesman
at
the
"They seem like they're for 193 yards and three
the
official
said. Department of Homeland
very well coached, a hard- ~s. ,
Investiglltot'S
.\I
so
searched
Security.
working team that's going to ·
They ve ,got a good
fight 10 the end of the fte~hman
qu~rterback,"
game," Ohio State line- O~Io State def~ns.~ve ~nd Jay
injury as ·he also broke free
backer Curtis Terry said. Richardson ~Id. He s got a
for 168 yards on the ground.
"They won a couple of very ImpresSIV~ arm, ·eve,n
And it will take English
games at the end on field more so than his legs. He s
Poole ~his week: to get
and
from~Bl
goals and they beat a very :good. at scrainbhng out of
past a deceiving Vinton
good Iowa team. So obvi- .the pocket,, the~ ~? a lot of
Valky Conference win of County team ..With losses to
ously they can play and they bootlegs With him.
the year last week was the teams like Gallia Academy,
can sneak up on you if
Some have even compared
return to form of running. · Jackson and Waverly, the
him to . Ohio State's own
you're not prepared."
back Cornelius English. team knows ·how to play
The Buckeyes are prepar- Heisman Trophy contender,
After struggling agl!inst against tough competition
ing to harass Lewis all day. T~oy Smith. That might be a
Wellston
and Nelsonville- and for Meigs, the game
They'lllikely stack blitzers bit premature.
York,
English
took: out his could be the diffe~ce
against him and bull rush the
Smith , who graduated
frustrations on the Spanans between making the postHoosiers line, hoping to from college this spring and
Smith, the same height (6: last week while rushing for seison or nol, depending on
hurry him into making errors · is pursuing a second degree, touchdown pass. Against
in judgment.
has had a highlight-reel of a Penn State, Smith reversed I ) but 40 pounds heavier 182 yards toJ'ut him over how other teams . in t:IM;ir
"You can see he's a red- season. In last week's victo- field while escaping two than Lewis at 215, has com- the I ,000 yar mark on the region fare over the ·next
two weeks.
shirted kid who has learned ry at Michigan State, he was defenders and launched a pleted 68 percent of · his season.
55-yard
bomb
that
Brian
Senior
David
Poole
also
Game time for Friday's
passes
for
I
,495
yards
and
his lessons well," Ohio State spun around by a tackler
Robiskie
caught
for
a
touch-.
17 touchdowns with just two looked back to top form contest is slated for 7:30
coach Jim Tressel said. who remained latched onto
after an early season knee p.m.
Interceptions.
·
"And every game, as I listen his leg~ while he tossed a down.

Me~

Cardinals
fromPageBl
and a date with the Detroit
Tigers on Saturday night in
Game I of the World Series.
Hey Motown, here come
the Cards.
Molina, a .216 career hit- ·
ter :With only s1x home runs
dunng the regular season,
drove ~e first p1tch he saw
from reliever A:rron Hellman
mto New York s ~ullpen for
a 3-1 lead m the mnth.
Chavez, who made one of
the most memo~le post~ catc.hes JUS! 1.hree
mnmgs earher, could only
stand and w~h at the fe~
as the Mets World Senes
hopes were dashed.
Scott Rolen, robbed of a
homer by Chavez ~n ·the
si.Xth, got. the S_t. Loms rally
started With a single. . .
But the M~ts •. ~sihent
throughout !herr stJmng seaS?n, nearly came back m the
mnth.
.
Jose Val~t:m. ~ ~a-:ez
opened ~ mnmg ~th smgles before pmch-hitter Chff
Aoyd struck out lookmg.
Jose Reyes hned out to center for the second out, but
Paul· Lo Duca drew a walk
tbatloaded the bases .
That brought up Beltran,
who homered three _times in
the senes after hitting .417
with four home runs for
Houston m the. 2004 NLCS
~st St. Louis.
Wainwright, a rookie filling in for injured closer
Jason lsringhausen. got
. ajlead in the count immediately and ·froze Beltran with
a breaking ball for strike
three.
· The Cardinals, with their
17th pennant in hand ,
charged out of the dugout
and mobbed Wainwright in
front of the moun&lt;!.
Suppan won the MVP
award for two outstanding
starts . He limited the Mets to
one TUQ and five hits in 15
innings, and once again was
at his best in a big game.
Suppan , who won Game
3, is 106- IOllifetime, but 21 with a 1.69 in five NLCS

starts. In 2004. he outpitched
Roger Clemens in Game 7 of
the NLCS to lead St. Loui s
over.Houston.
With a runner on in the
sixth and Rolen coming up.
Mets
manager
Wilhe
Randolph went to the mound
for a chat with Perez, who
was 3-13 with a 6.55 ERA
this season
But Randolph . who often
talks about how he likes to
challenge his young players,
stuck with the kid even
though a ·reliever was warming up - and it nearly cost
the Mets.
Rolen pulled the next pitch
deep to left and Chavez, a
defensive whiz starting
because Floyd has an injured
Achilles' tendon, raced back
to the fence as fast as he
could .
In one motion, the 6- foot
Chavez jumped with all his
might and reached his right
arm up and over the 8-foot
wall as far as it would
stretch . His mouth wide
open, he snagged the drive in
.the tip-top of his glove the white of the ball.showing
atop the webbing like a
~of vanilla ice cream.
Chavez banged into the
padded blue wall , buckling a
couple of panels. but landed
on his feet and came up firing back into the infield.
Jim Edmonds who' had
walked·, had alre~dy rounded
second so second baseman
Valenti~ relayed to first for a
spectacular double play that
·

ended the inning with Albert
.Pujols and the bewildered
Cardinals watching from the
top step of the du~out in
amazement.
A few Mets raised their
arms high as they came off
the field, jnd Perez waited
near first base to give a
hearty greeting to Chavez,
who got more hugs by th~
bench.
Fans chanted "En-dy Chavez!"
an.,
roared
"Whooaaa 1" over and over
again as the replay was
shown several times on ··the
big video board in left-center.
Chavez watched, too, and
finally came out fot a curtain
call - quite a ·rarity for a
defensive play.
'Perhaps still thinking
about his near-miss but more
likely bothered by a slick
ball , Rolen, .a .Gold Glove
third baseman , threw away
David
Wright's
slow
grounder for a potentially
costly error in the bottom of
the SIXth .
.
That helped the Met~ load
the bases with one out, but
Suppan struck out Valentin .
The light-hining Chavez
then had a chance to deliver
with his bat, but he flied out,
leaving him 0-for- 12 with
runners in scoring position .
duri.ng the series.
A boisterous crowd of
56,357 settled in as the
starter:s matched zeros
through the middle innings
- until Chavez's incredible

I Will Pay To Hunt

•

· Friday, October ao, aoo6

catch left them roaring.
Perez, often leaping over
the foul line on his way to
the dugout,pitched the game
of his fife on only three days'
rest. Picked for an unlikely
start in the most crucial situation because of New York's
depleted staff, he gave up
one run and four hits in six
innings.
This from a guy who was
demoted to the minors by
lowly Pitt~burgh in June. In
fact, he was barely an afterthou~ht when the Mets
acqutred him with reliever
Roberto Hernandez at the
July 31 trade deadline.
Perez, howev-e r, won
Game 4 in St. Louis and
gave the Mets all they could
have hoped for Thursday.
Randolph also stayed with
the 25-year-&lt;~ld lefty after a

visit to the mound with two
on in the fifth. Perez promptly struck out Preston Wilson ,
then went right after Pujols.
And when the big slugger
popped up to end the inning,
Perez pointed toward the sky
as the Mets charged off the
field .
New York took the lead
with a two-out rally in the
first. Beltran beat out.11 double, Carlos Delgado walked
and Wright blooped an RBI
single to '3,~ .
But~e
dinals respond:
ed to '-New York runs all
series , and they did it again
in the second .
Molina dunked a "SOft single into short left, putting
runners at the corners and
· setting up Ronnie Belliard's
.run-scoring sacrifice bunt.
Pujols was intentionally

walked in the .third before
Pe~z , got ·cleanup baner
Juan Encarnacion to ground
into an inning-endin£ double
play.
With
shards
of
Encarnacion's shattered bat
lying on the grass in front ef
horne plate, Perez pumped
his fist and pounded his
glove before receiving an
enthusiastic high -five from a
fired-up Randolph when he
reached the dugout.
Notes: The Cardinals lost
their previous two Game 7s
· on the road by a combined
score of 26-0 (the 1996
NLCS· in Atlanta and the
1985 Wofld Series at Kansas
City). ... In the fourth.
Suppan bounced a curveball
far m front of the plate that
kicked up and hit Valentin on
the chin .
·

And,JOin us for,our.2nd Annual·

.HEALTH and. ,_
S~E. ETY ·FAIR
21:
,'kl"'
.

'

~

'

.

•
•

~~ 'flltlof the lOp tlil ~
&gt;1, ftt.-roe~s...,. in llleCt.e, ln-

F' &lt;:tudin« lhe ~ fO!;w. :ct.ae &lt;Orl•·
W&lt;ers ' -'wan ltll$t!'t&gt;f the '"""

r IIC&amp;s since K sl&amp;rted.
. •Sbl"' ~ Kllllne'S -

&lt;:8-

-vtctm1es MY!! oceuned this

bOa! rete$ • Lowe'S Motor
~' 111 three years In a 'row.
Jimmie Johnson did K 1n 20040!lll&gt;d finlslled seeona in both
U1ls year.
• ·tlllhne has six ottlodge's sev-

E
R

s

u
MMtln

Yeler

case you missed it, Bobby
taoonte , Who finished fifth at
I.MS, has finished 111 the top 10
In three of the past four races.

did anything wrong. Martin said, " ...

from 10)1 viewpoint. he let the '17'
(Man Kenseth ) pass him on -the in. side. and I was coming, too. and I didn't knOw he was going to pit ... and
.he was up in 'the middle of the tra ck .~

• Four of the drillers now in the
•Olase - Melt Ken seth, Jeff
Burton, ·Kanne and Oenny Ham·
lin- finished 24th or worse In
the first Martinsville race.

NUCAR This Week's Monte

.,_ iJW1 hlltolco : "It's a good

• Kahne picked up 88 points on
Jeff Burton at Talladega.
and his lMS Yictory enaoled
him to pin another 25, e.en
thoiCh Burton fin ished third .
Kahne ted the most laps. and
Burton dldn~ lead any.

••ample of how a relati.ely simple
misunderstanding can have a relatively complex effect on the Cha se. ~

John C1ar1&lt;/NASCAR This w.'ek

KaS11J KHne's CIIIW Clilelnlllsllls will lit lit&amp; llllk of~ 500 at LIR's MOIIIr SpeedM!j In Cltaulotte 011 Satuudly nl&amp;hl .

• Burton'S the points. leader. but
he'S far down the list In money
""nnlrcs. Jimmie Johnson, wM
.., !lOth tile Daytona soo and
the IIIISIII!e 400 at the Brlck)'llrO, has totaled $7,769 ,138.
-Eight othelli, Including CaSey
Mears, ha!ie alSo earned more
thin Bur'ton'S total of
$4,472,347.

N•••

Kahne's win means shuffle in The Chase . .;_ at the bottom
Wben this Chase began, the notion,
often cited, was that each driver
could withstand one bad race. The
popular term in the garage is "mulligan." Kahne has taken three of them,
and yet his hopes remain alive. Even
Burton has taken one. This championship fight has featured more ·
knockdowns than most would have
imagined.
.
"Whatever team it happens to be, if
you can finish second, fifth, seventh
- if you can do those things - you
will be really hard to beat," said Burton. "Our luck hasn't been as bad as
Jimmie's or Kasey's or a few others'.
•so we're one raee away, in my
opinion. We've had at least one less
bad-luck race than Jimmie and Kasey
and those guys. If we have another
one and they don't, then they'll be
right there with us."

By MOnte Dutton

. Kasey Kahne, 1re prese'ntly seventh
and eighth. Johnson, who has proved
NASCAR This week
he could rally before, trails Burton by
The Chase is halfway over, and per- 146 points. Kahne, the leader in victohaps it's time we looked for dis- ries this year with six, is 160 back.
cernible patterns in the mystery conJohnson took a hit at Talladega on
cerning just who will be the Nextel Oct. 8, when he was hit from behind
Cup champion.
while trying to take the lead on the fiAt the top are two seasoned :Veter- nal lap, but be rebounded to finish
ans, Jeff Burton and former champion second at Lowe's Motor Speedway.
Matt Kenseth. Next is the driver, Kahne finished second at Talladega,
Kevin Harvick, who has already picking up 88 points on Burton, and
clinched the Busch Series title and is won at LMS, chipping 25 more away.
bidding to become the first driver to
It's just halfway. As they try to beat
wjn both championships in the same the odds, Johnson and Kahne can take
some comfort in the reality that -they
year.
It really does change week to week.
are performing well. They have cars
The results at the Bank of America that can reliably be depended on to at
500 at Lowe's Motor Speedway pro- least compete for the checkered flag.
duced changes in eight of the 10 posi- Fate may intervene - and already has
tions . Burton, however, has been the - but the potential is there.
Of Burton, Kahne observed, 'IHe
leader four weeks in a row.
ran
another grellt race . If he keeps
What's notable? The upward movement is coming from the bottom. The . running great raees, you're not going
hottest drivers, Jimmie Johnson and to be able to catch him."

-llney

theS.nl&lt; of

l'llllellal500
'Wld led till
II\OIIt.leps
{~).

... Jim·
milt Jon,_,

flnllhed-&gt;Ond4!1CIIed

, . _ _ laps (7.2).

• .-.-~-(Jeff
- - - - - 'l'welrt)'{ourth
· · -81Jit110n 1111ee po$ltiOnS In the
&gt;01111!.'He now lrlliiS the field.
... :sot111 fiWp ill8n&amp;d on the
~' 'llllle.tMA wounchJP '&amp;ettl~ for ·

r t7tll.

.,

5,763
- 89
- 102
· 106
· 197 .

· 146

. -160
· 195
. 216

DIW!d Reutimann

where they're stationed, follow
NASCAR,' !'Old Nemechek. "In many
countries, thay're ~P in the middle of
the night watch I~ the race:
Guentanamo Bay is on the southeaster!\, side of Cuba and has been
the site of an American base since
shortly after the end of the SpaniSh·
American war. It Is currently a deten·
tion site for enemy combatants.

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

""-·--

...

Your comment (In ~Burning ·Issues' ) ai&gt;Out Jeff Gordon is touilly un·
true. He Is not OYerlooked. All I ever
read abOut is this brat racer 'W'ho

cries and whines after evel)l race he
doesn't win . I highly doubt he is the
greatest driver in history. He does not
comllllre to all the past winners who
were not whiners ... .

--

hmduttonSO@aol.cdm

That's why we call them "Bur'ning Issues.• Thanks for lettfng us know Mw
you feel.

Ragan will replace Martin at Roush Racing next year
- 45

. .. 'l!enrW HMI!In

"One thing I learned drivtng·the
J\rn1)o car is that the troops, no matter

Pardeeville, Wis.

Contact Monte Dutton at

'

NffBunll!t

...........

his mother, Martha .

i&lt;lllllll won

!L

bani• t.1

Following the running of the Bank
of America 500. driver Joe Nemechek
was off to vis.lt the nava l base at
Guantanamo Bay.Nemechek, whose
NASCAR sponsor is the Army. visited
the installation on a.trip sponsored
by Goodyear. He was a&lt;;compan ied by

.......

1 tlsa011i

~It III

... lt.

.. 1WIOe11:11S)'NI''Carl EdWards .
. _ _ - wt&gt;lte leading
· alluiCh Series 11100 In the final
. • · ~ -lncldent,lnvolv·
lrelllelrs, led'IO DaYe Blaney's
Ulllitl Ylclory In the Dollar Gena300atlMS.
·

.

Veley

Martin took a devastating hit in
the Chase standings on lap 242 of
the Bank of America 500. His Ford
slammed into the back of Veley's
Chfl\y. which had slowed suddenly to
go down pit road . Veley didn'tthink he

• 11'1

'

s

.-.u.
..........

3,076
· 113
· 255

· 281

· 368
· 411
· 432
. 495

· 499
· 502

•

By ·Monte DuttDut

NASCAR This week

of his actions, he is the young
CONCORD, N.C.- The driv- man I selected to fill the sea:t,"
er of Roush Racing's No.6 Ford said Roush. "The No. 6 is obvinext year will be ... David Ra- ously a special car to me per·
sonally and this organization,
gan.
Mark Martin, of course, is and we are confident in David's
beaded to MB2 , which will by ability to step up and get the
then be Ginn Motorsports, for a job done."
limited schedule. That left the
No. 6, Jack Roush'~ flagship ,
• .
for a driver eventually deterDouble time - How many
. mined to be Ragan.
Cup drivers will double up in
It was quite the comeback . the Busch Series next year refor Ragan, whom Roush pulled · mains speCulative, in most casout of the Craftsman Truck Se· es, but Michael Waltrip has an_ries a couple of times this year. nouneed that David Reutimann
"I think that was a big wake- will attempt to be Raybestos
up call for me," conceded Ra· Rookie of the Year - i.e., he'll
gan. "I needed to go about things be competing full time - in
a little differently. I think I had both series next year.
just a one-track mind. I was
wide-open every lap, all the
time. I had to scale back a little
Blllfway llome - Kevin Harbit, and I hated to sit out those
raees, but I think, all in all, in vick wrapped up the Busch Sethe long term of things, that it ries championship at LMS. No
probably helped me out. I know one has ever won the champiit's helped me from that point onship in both series in the
same year. In 2001 , Harvick
forward this year."
"David is a driver with out· coupled a Busch championship
standing talent and, as a result with rookie-of the year in Cup.

•

'
\

--.-

v

year,

1.1. Mille Bliss

---------

Q••••

'finiShed -second to Tony Stewart
In the flrst race at lhe tract&lt; this

a.

-

Green, Chevrolet.
120.267 mph , Oct. 28,
2000 .
.
• - -:Kevin
Harvlck, Chevrolet,
92.352 mph, Oct. 29,
2000 .
• 1.-t : DaYe
Bianey, driving a Dodge,
captured the Dollar General300 at Lowe's Motor Speedway.

..

0:22

don. bot It might be nhe does
n' do ...tl at MartinsYille, where
he won bott1 races In 2005 and

, 4. Ted Mutrerave
I. Rick c.1. flon Holl!llda)l
T. o.vld Stall
J. Terry Cook
' '- Dennis Setzer ·

J

Clint Bowyer

• QuJI.,.. recerd: Jeff

?'

'Busch notChed the Otl1eT.
• tt's not too late for Jeff Gor-

1. ToCid Bodine

I

•tat ,...._,

• " - ' Kroger 200
• : MartinsYille
·(V8 .) Spee&lt;1wey (.526
mile), .500 laps/ 263
miles.
• - : Saturday, Oct.
21
• L81t_.. .......,,
Ricky Crayen
· •
MDOJCI: Rick
Crawford. Ford, 95.966
mph, Oct. 21 , 2005.
• " - JeCord: Jon
Wood, Ford , 72.069
mph, Oct. 18. 2003 .
R UOinioo: MArl&lt; Mar·
tin, in a Ford. won for
tile fifth time this season , captunng the lnauguraltruck race at Talljldega Superspeedway.

. •n •viot&lt;lll!!s this year. 'Kurt

J. Jolm!ll' Benson

1~304-541-3161

MA!lTlNSVtU:E tJIITA
• " - ' Sam's Town 250
• : Memphis
(Tenn .) Motorsports Park
(.75 mile) , 250
laps/ 187.5 miles .
• : Saturday. Oct.
28

HALFWAY lHROUG~ THE CHASE

.., The llame dri'ier has Swept

C.s ; ... r - s-s

lease for exduslve
Hunting Purposes

Bank of ·Amerlca 500 at Lowe's
• -:Martinsville (Va,) Spbed-. Motor Spee&lt;Mey, his sixth win of
wey (.526 mile), 500 laps/ 263
the season. He completed a sweep
miles.
at tMS. Kahne was ci&gt;mlng off a
runner-op finish at Talladega . He's
• : Sunday, Oct. 22
the hOttest dr!Yer In NASCAR once
• 1.811,.... : Jeff Gordon
~ • QullfJl~ll .....,., Tony Stewart.
aga in. This lime ·rOte conspired
Chevrolet, 98.083 mph, Oct. 21,
aga iost none of the Chase's early
2005.
underachievers. Kahne won, and
both runner-up Jimmie Johnson
• R- ...,ord: Jeff· Gordon,
Chevrolet, 82.223 mph, Sept. 22 , and Kyle Busch (sixth) finished In
1996.
the top 10. Jeff Gordon'S woes
·continued. Marl&lt; Martin's began .
• 1.811-: E.ery week. someone in tile Chase for the Nextel
· After a final pit stop on .lap 303,
Gup is allegedly ' done: And the
Johnson, Who had won five of the
next week, everyth l ~ cnanges.
preyious seven races at LMS. took
Kasey Kahne once counted himself the lead IJo,l plttl~ for fuel on~. It
:"I out - Incorrectly, as it tumed out.
took Kaime. wnose Dodge also opt·
Count Kanne ln .'That'S (a.) VIctory · ed not to change !Ires, only two
Lane and (b.) the Chase for the
' laps to roar past Johnson on the
Nextel Cup, If you're keeping a
outside. His ma'l!in at the check·
scorecard at hOme. Kahne won the ered flag was 1.624 seconds.

l!MIIIiate ltllct&lt;S.

lfl clly,on Jldcson Pillrt _, Ga~.

Small group of ,
professionals seeking
100-500 acre farm to

Rl-: Subw.,Y 500

· ,... HlsftrstvimcryMSo•u
1hoit track, but al ~ this year
'liM occuned on so-called inter·

Noori
l!alan Mtdlcll Cantu Edur: lll:loh • Conha- t•••w:
.6
. ..ASUL.obby, klca•adat,_,_.

d,.

'l1le O.ily Sentinel • Page 83

... If you 118ft a fiLIItloll 411' a etltiR&amp;IIt, wrtt.: NASCAR This Week, r:/0 The Gaston Gazette,

.

fsr~

SS Your Land SS

www.mydallysentinel.com

'

..

~- , 12

. 8:30

ioo6

.,..,_,...,..
·~ ----·

•

.......-----~ -·----·- ----· -

--

--

---·--

--

_____

'You're looking live' - Could
you im!lgine Brent Musburger
hosting a NASCAR race?
It's going to happen . Musburger will be the host oflhe
ABC Cup telecasts beginning
next year. Jerry Punch, prominently featured the last time
ESPN televised NASCAR
events, will be the play-by-play
man, and Rusty Wallaee and
Andy Petree will be the analysts
for all ABC and ESPN telecasts.
'The pit-road reporters will
be Allen Bestwick, Dave
Burns, Mike Massaro and
Jamie Little. Dale Jarrett will
work with ESPN2 and ABC on
select Busch Series races.
Among those involved in oth·
er shows - most notably, the'
ESPN2 daily show "NASCAR
Now" - are Brad Daugherty,
Frank Stoddard and Shannon
Spake.

•

in time for Raines' best finish
of the season to date. Philippe
Lopez is concentrating on his
duties as Hall of Fame Racing's
competition director.
Bill Saunders, who manages
the team for partners Troy Aikman and Roger Staubach, said
Thomas's promotion was the
plan all along.
"At some point in the near
future, we want to expand to
two cars, move into a bigger
shop and continue to put together an elite Nextel Cup
team," said Saunders. "Philippe
was doing a fantastic job, not
only serving as crew chief, but
also as competition director.
We're excited to bring Brandon
in so that he can concentrate
fully on being a crew chief and
Philippe can coneentrate solely
on being competition director
to further Hall of Fame Racing"s growth."

•

Hope he doesn't dci too many
That's tbe plan - Brandon jumps - Less than a week afThomas took over as Tony ter acquiring Mark Martin for
Raines' crew chief at LMS, just a limited Nextel Cup schedule
\

in 2007 , the MB2 team (to be
renamed Ginn Motorsports
next year) announced the signing of Ricky Carmichael to a
development contract.
Carmichael ~s a motocross
rider of international renown .
How that translates into stock·
car racing remains to be seen.
The future is indefinite, though
Carmichael, while still running
a limited Supercross schedule,
intends to compete in some
short·track events. perhaps jlet
some in struction from Martin
and perhaps enter some ARCA .
raees next year.
MB2's general manager, Jay ..
Frye, called Carmichael "the
Michael Jordan of motocross"
and predicted he would be "a
huge, huge part of MB2's future."
. In the 1950s, '60s and '70s, it
was not uncommon to find mo·
torcycle racers - Joe Weather·
ly, Roger McCluskey, even the
Grand Prix driver John Surtees - to switch from two to
four wheels, a changeoi,er
from the jumps and slides of
motocross has not historically
produced man y auto!"obile ·
racers.

.

...;...___:··--------------------~·

�'

SCOREBOARD
-r=c::L&amp; --4,

The Daily Sentinel
PREP FOOTBALL STANDINGS
SouthNitlm Ohio Allllac L11g~
fiDrlll DM1 ·n

SEOIIL
W-l
PF M
W-l
Logon ....................... -~ ...225 . .33 .....&amp;2
Mariotti .......................3-2 .. .104 .. 98 ......3-5
ZlnosYillo ............. ... ....3-2 ... 151 . .86 .....+-!
Warren ....................... 1-4 ...57 .. .221.. ... 3-5
............ . .. .. .... .. .().5 ...59 .. .213 ..... 1-7

loull Dlul I

PRoFoomALL

ALL
PF
.. 277
... 139
.. .211
...104
... 136

1

IECML
PF
W-l
ChiHicolhe . . .' .... .. .. . .. .. .....4·1 " .. 177
Gallla o\cademy .. .. .............3-2 ... 134
Ironton .......................3-2 ... 146
......................2-ll ... 156
Porlsmoutl'l ......... . ....... .. .1-4 .. .117

ALL
M
W-l PF
.. 117 .....6.2 .. 229
.. 123 .....&amp;2 .. 238
.. 143 . , ... 5-3 ... 211
.. 133 ..... +-! .. .236
.. 159 . . .. .2~ . . 222
FttdiJ, Ocllllllo27
...!lleno at GaHia~

fllclly'w ..... '
Jacicllon at ...thens

Chillicothe at Marietta
Gallla o\cademy at Warren
Porlsmoutl'l at Logan
Ironton at ZllneNito

~

M
.. 109
.. 169
.. 183
. .289
..329

ZlnesYIIIt at Chlllcotho

.

TVC

W-l ' PF

M

84
,09

DanYor
San Olooo

WLTPCI
4 , 0 .800
4 t 0 .800
2 3 o .400

PA
37
55
97
126

PF
B2
151
87

Philadolphlo

N.Y. Giants
Oollas
Wllhlngton

W-l
.... .7·1
.... .4-4
.....5-3
... '.3-4
.....6.2
... .. 2~

PF
M
' .. 271 ..103
... 147 ..143
... 166 ..187
... 163 .. 174
... 238 .. 129
.. .99 ... 188

ALL

W-l

PF

M

.. :74 ... 39 ...... 5-3
. ..98 . .. 39 .. . ... 6·2
.. .45 . . .76 ...... 1-7
, .. 51 ...101 .. ... 5-3
. .. t2 . ..104 . . .. .~

... 188 .. 146

. . .tao .. 101
.. .73 . .. 188
. . .166 · .. 146
. . .74 . .. 301
FttdiJ,~ 27
··
...- . It Nelaonvtlle-'lbri&lt;
Bolpre at IAtlgs
VInton County at .Wellston
Waterlore at Fecleral Hocldrtg
Trimble at Miller
Salt :dloj, Oct :lilt 21
Southern at Eaetem
AU.

W-l
PF
M
South Gallla .. ........ .. ...... .7·1 .. .t8t .. .103
Wlhama .... .. ......... .... .. .5..2 ... t80 . .83
Haman ... ... , ........ . ... . , . .t~ .. .47 . . 222
Fttdly'l ..,_
FtiCIIJ, Oclollli' 27
South Galli&amp; at Oak Hill
South Gallla at Uncoln County
Ma,_n al Wal1ama
Big Creek at Hannan
Hannan'8t Tug Valley
Wahama at Pa-:g Ca111otic (Sat.)

Clrcllnal Conlltence

CARD
ALL
W-l
PF M
W-l
PF
M
Poca .... . . . . .. .... .. .. .. . . , .. 4-ll ... 144 ..55 . ... .&amp;-1 ..•228 .. t09
Sissonville . ' .. .. .. .... . .. ' ... ' .3-1 .. ' 46 ...45 .. ... 5-2 . ...123 .. 96
Wayne ............. : . .. ...... 3-1 ... tOt .. 35 ..... 5..2 .. .175 .. 92
logan .... .. ... .. .. ....... ... .. 2..2 .. . 95 .. .78 .... .3-5 ... 142 .. t95
Point Pleasant ..... " .. ' .... .. ' .t-.2 ... 43 .. .too .....2·5 . .. 133 ..239
HartJe~-· . .. .. . ........... t-3 ... 88 ... 126 ..... 4-3 .. .167 .. 170
Winfield ....... ........ .. . ..... O.S .. . 67 ... tt2 .... . H . . .88 .. . t33
Frtdlir'l SlfMI
FtiCIIJ, Oct- 27
Hert&gt;ert Hoowr at Bluefield
Point Pleaaant at Hetbert HoOIII!r
Logan at Point Pleasant
Sls9onville at Poco
Pooa at Wayne
Winfield at Tolsla
Shady Spring at SissOnville
Wayne at Chapmanville
lincoln Cou:ity at Winfield

results~

-

1 4 0 .:!00 62

Ootro~ 3,

Arizona

1

I Colorado 4, Tomnto 1
Anaheim 4, Doftrolt 1

I Mlnnnota 2. loa Mgolea 1, OT
I
n.u..ct.r'e Qo-

Ookland 0

1

_,_

New 'lb:t&lt; 2, St. LOuis 0
1

Or' 14

New York 12, St.louis 5

Mort

. .

Qd11

r=Od

PA
110
,,,
69
104

• WM!r CAJI· Oql 11

llHntt

11
St. Louis 3, New 'lb:t&lt; 1, St Louis wlns
Qc;f

series 4~

WORLD SENES

,,,

PF PA
I 0 .800 106
2 0 .667 139 128
4 0 .333 124 194
5 0 .167 ,, 1 143

=Oc!U .
Detro~.

8:03p.m.

N.Y. Gllnta.27. Atlanta 14
Saattle 30, St. I.OoJis 28
Ten- 25, Waahlillllon 22

':"n:-t'~f.7c 1:;)~3"' 24
N.Y. .1o1s :10. Miami 11
Ptttaburgh 45, Kansas City 7 ·

.

PRo HOCKEY

1

San 01ooo 48, San Francisco 19
DerMr f3. Oaldand 3
Open : Indianapolis, New England, Grean
Bey. MIIYlOOOia. Jacl&lt;oonylle, C-.nd

II

Mc:ndar'o~rlzona 23
Sundltr. Oct. 22

Dalrolt at N.Y. Jots. 1 p.m.
G""'" Bay at Miami, 1 p.m.
Ptttaburgh at Ahnta, I p.m.
.lod&lt;BonYIIto at Houston, 1 p.m.
Now England at Buflalo. 1 p.m.
Carolina at Cincinnati, 1 p.m.
San Diego at Kanat11 City, 1 p.m.
Ph~ at 18rnoa Bev. 1 p.m.
DerMr al C-.nd. 4:0S p.m.
Mlni'&lt;IOOII .at Seanto, 4:15p.m.
Wlahlnglon at Indianapolis, 4:15p.m.
Arlmna al Ookland. 4:15p.m.
Open:
St. Louis, Now Orleans,
San Franclsoo, Baltimore, T Mo; dt;, Oct. 23
N.Y. Giani&amp; at ~. 8:30p.m.

I

Ch"'-

PRo BASEBALL

wneoaaaary, 8 p.m.

-

_,_

Hoctooy , _

9rlando

Atlanta

Pm&amp;burgn
3 3 0 6 16 17
N.Y. Rangers 3 4 0 6 25 28
N.Y. Islanders 2 3 2 6 18 23
Pnlladelphla
1 5 t 3 13 30
Norltlr.-t DtYIIIon
W l OT Pta GF Go\
6 0 0 12 31 16
Butlato
3 , 2 8 18 17
Montreal
Toronto
32282323
2 3 1 5 13 23
BoSton
.2 4 0 4 ,, 16
Ottawa
Soulh-1 Dlvlalon
WLOTPIIGFGA
Atlanta
5 1 1 11 24 14
Carolina
3 3 1 7 21' 23
Florida
3 3 1 7 21 25
Washln5n
2 1 3 · 7 .20 20
Tampa
3 4 a 6 16 16
WLOTPtsGFGA

.

:~~:~~

I Detroit
j Columbus
1 St. Louis

3 3 1
2 1 1
2 3 ·1

7
5
5

North- Dlvlolon

net-' !CIS. ... tr4!0
oakland 3, Minnesota 2
Ookland 5, Minnesota 2
Ookland 8, Minnesota 3

I

19 18
12 13
14 21

W l OT Pts GF
6 0 0 12 21
4 2 0 8 17
3 2 2 8 19
Colorado
3 3 , 7 16
Vancouver
Calgary
2 4 1 5 IS
-01¥111on
Minnesota
Edmonton

Jlltl llll.wgue

Torqnto
Naw'lb:t&lt;
Philadelphia
Bos1on
2 3 .400 2~
Now Jersey
0 Dlvtllon
4 .000 4
_.,

..._Divtelon
W L OT Pta GF Go\
NawJersoy
4 2 I 9 22 20

~~~:

lllln!l! 3, NlwYod&lt; 1

New Yot1&lt; 8, Detroit 4
Detroit 4, l'lew Vorl&lt; 3
Detroit 6, N&lt;!WYorl&lt; 0
Detroit 8, New Vorl&lt; 3

WLPCIGB
4 0 1.000 3 o t.OOO ~·
t 1 .500 2

GA
11
13
19
17
21

4
3

Wllhtngton
Miami
Charlotte
I

Chicago

,
2

.800
.800
.800
.333
.000

1

3 2
1
t 2
2
0 5
4
Cantral OMolon
WLPctGB

Delrolt

4
4

0
,

, .000 .800 ~

Indiana

2

3
3

.400
.400

2'1r

Milwllukae
2
2~
CMiand
1 3 .250 3
WIS'TEIIN CONFillENCE
Sou'lt1w•t Olvllton
WLPctGB
Houaron ·
. 3 1 .750 Memphis
2 2 .500 1
New Ortoans
1 3 .250 2
Dallas
t
4 .200 • 2&gt;
San Anlonto
0 2 .000 2
Noitllh- Olvlllon

Minnesota
Utah
Donwr
Seame
Portland

WLPciGB
.500
2 2 .500
1 1 .500
1 2 .333 ),
0 3 .000 1l.
Pacffi&lt;:Divtllon

State
I Golden
L.A. Clippers
Sacramento
Phoenix
L.A. lakero

2

2

WLPctGB
3 0 1.000 2

2
2

2

0

1.000 'o

1 .667 t
.500 11
.400 2

2
3

--.y'IGamoa

Denver I I 4, Indiana 102

Detroit 112, Mlmeaota 103

..

~

and-oporatlono.
SE...TTLE MARINERs-Named John .

Should lnducte TheM hlml
To HelpGtlt

• All •

HOUSTON~~ 1 :t'n~nced

Famln Coorch Repairs only
1-740-418·5062.
Drywall ropalr, calling, floor
tile, actd or remove walls,

Loot RIC! &amp; White QIIW 300
Ills on Sltdlng Hill Creak Rcl

DETROIT PISTON$-Walved F Rick
R-rt and G Rob Grtrfln.
HOUSTON AOCKETS-Wllwld F Matt,
Ha:yaaz.
.
NEW JERSEY NET$-Walved F
Brandon Bowman.
F00111ALL

spotted Dalmatian puppies.
6 months old. (740)446· ·

7484 Of (740)441·7411 .
Fraa puppies, 6 wks Old.
short hair, :ned. slzo. mixed

LMgue

CAROLINA 1'1\NTHERS-Announoe&lt;l .
CB Reggie Howard hu ~ tho team ror
pefsonalreason1.
HOCICEY

breed, (740)992·5275, 740416·5653

-IIOCioly , _

I

r

•r

painting,

.H you . . lntereetod In
joining our Resident
Centered Nursing Taam
we have a ful l time
opening for an AN .

Y·-"·•ri
~,.....,.

"~:::::;::~

•$1 ,5QO sign oil bonus ·
•12 hOur Sl'llfts available

VAliD s.w:GAIJJI'OCl'i
Lo~------

Country to asalst you.

cars &amp; Iota ·more. 3154

•Health/OentaVLifa Ins.

(740)367·7~74.

Friday, Saturday, 9·3pm,

•Disabllty Insurance

401k (alter 1 year)

2295
Millcreek
Rd.,
Kittens 6 'Mcs old, litter Gallipolis, antiques, So's
trained.
(304)67H207 momorabitta . coins, canoo,
leave message. Located in t~.
-u. rtdl
ngmower.

Mason.

--'--'---Quilters. cratters. sewers,
dads, moms, toddterA&gt;aby
girts. .. :nJs is your yard sale.
The finest qumtng fabrics,
crafts, crafting supplies,
clothes, toys ," mo111es and
much more, all fle¥.1 or like
new condltton. Don't miss

Drive, Bidwsll , Ohkl or
give Mary Shuler, RN

www.Comics.cam

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

u S D :1o R u r • I
O..lltjAollttl, fllecl Ill
Complelnt
In
Forecloau:.
•nd
. . ltllltlllng ol Lllnlln
the Common Plea
c-t ol.._.. Counly,
Thl Ohio, bllng C.. No.

PlaJC N011CE
NOTICE: I• heNby
..._ lhltt on SM:
Octot.r 21. 2001 11
10:00 •·"'·· • public
111e w11 ... lllld .. 211
W.
Saooncl
St.,

•w.

Pomeroy.OIIIO.

F111111N IIMk lllld 01cv M
. llplllll
S.VIngo: Co... eny II JDIIwiiFelgultlft pn:ytilling tor Clllh In IIIII tor ·~ldglllllllln the

11MC1 or wtlflrld C11111C1C _ . . . of ...,155,11
the toiiDwl:. wlllll with 1"*-1 lhiNon

-~~~-·to

S.ld i:Miendl:nt Ia
directed
to
the
Complaint
wt..ln
nottoe under the t.lr'
dlllt colllcllon pnclice IICI .. .......
S.ld D•uclotnta •:.
NqUINCI to • within
-ty•lglll
dly8
the ldllk»lion. 8IIICI D""'Miu""
will ..._ natlcl 11111
.YOU - :.quiNCI to

.n.r

R..lllh .. tc:-

.-c:: ......_...

"W&gt;&lt;ell ..... e:.---11 . . . . . . . .

·~

Lot; thenee.
South 58 dl:g. W•lt
32.5 fwt to •n Iron
p i p e ; - South 18
dl:g. &amp;It 33.5 fMt to
•n Iron pipe; the1101t
Sou111 78 dl:g. 30' &amp;II
323 fMI to •n Iron pipe
·on the W..hkii·OI the
lluiiMd "-!; Mng the w..i llda of
Mid d'Did North 11 deg.

lied •ctlon, I will
expoae to Mit 11 J111blie
on the 1ront
Mlpl of the Mllga
County Coun HOUM
on Frldlty, Novltnber
17, 2008 II 10
of
Mid dly, the IOIIOwtng
dllcrlbed - 1 - :
Llgll o..crtpllon

.....uon

•.m.

Elllllblt A

Sltullecl

In

dMcrlbed In VolurM
261, Page 23, *~11•
Counl)' Deed RwcGdl:.
llelrtngt •:. . . _ .
•nd IN tor •nglt
mnu•:e.ll only.
The 8cM: d~Krtpllon
11 Neld on
In
July 2002 br E IE
llordl:l11he Sumylng,

•aurwr

s..

n. ,., - • •

A~

s.

orsa·w..•

e.

leg-.

v ........... ..., __ .....

Cham R. Masll Jr.

:rown

(

lion of Nil.
The ltflll'llllll dlcl nat
Include 1111 Interior
ex•llllnltlon of the
hOull.

lloblrt E. lllgll,
llelp County 81111'111

Attorney
tor
the
Pll:lntttf
Cllrlltopher M. Hill
ltoM1 R. &amp;lion, 01110 P.O. Box 4llt
the P.S. No. 70SS. ·
F11nlclor1, KY 40804·

11:
thellnM
I comptlllnt
57.5 fMt to
.., TOWIIIhlp
Rutllncl,
of Property:
1"' Pollln. ATll ol . . IICM from
*r I, ·on- I I·orI IIIIIOre
the WMt
111111 pipe;"*North
County of of
~hlp,
•nd 37163 LIHing
c:r.k
4XACtii31:U:\01011S 2001,1111111 peiUncl tor Noillilller dlty o1 24, 78 deg. 30' WMt 217
t• of Ohio •nd Ro.d,
Middleport,
'The Ft:ln- Ill* n tor1c1o•:n of Mid 2001 or judgiMnl will fwt to the pi- of •lng In Section II, OhiO, 45780
S.VIngo:
Co:rptTlJ,
· Deed on the .,. Nncllrld iocorct- IIIJinnlng, conllllnlng T-nahlp 5 North, "-1111.()0411.003
PonlltOf,
Olllo,
dMcrlllld lngly.
311100 - ·
Rl:nge 14 Met of the Prior
lnltru,.,.nt
' " ' , _ the i'tglll• to N111
of which UIOA
Rulli Pmporty Add-: 311 Ohio
CornpilnW'I RelerenCIII
Oftlcl•l
bid 11 11M Nil, n1 to Nld
Dltllopnlli:t
Rutl•nd
StiMI, Pu~ •nd being "-""11oM t51,.....
wlthdrn the triiD¥I Joll- Flrgu~
Pllllntlll
Mlddllport, Olllo 41780 .d mrlbld • followa: Ill.
OOiiiiWIII prior to . . . . . . . _DI:
II pi•: D.IIIIM
1'11,..1 No.: 1W1211-' lllglnnlngllll point In Cui'l'lnl OwNr: Cindy
Furtt.;
furlhllr dn crlh d In lltornly lor "'-lntttf
000
the
oenterti:M
of
c-.ntut 111
link llftd S.w~ . . Pll:lntlll'e morte11111 11
w. Monument Current
Ow-: County RoH 3, Mid 37tl3 Lllldlng Crwk
ContpettW 1111rw. . . - d i d on July 1, A ·
........ K.llunch II •I point bllng S ... dl:g. Rd.
rtghlto!WJicl..,arllll 1111 In Volutr11 ta ~Ohlo414111
Property
Dl: 311
d~ol Mlddllport,OH41780,
llldurlll:..-.
Pill 1111 of the (t)21,8,(10)e,13,20, RutlandSt.Midclllport, 35CI.48 fMI frOm the PPtt1.()()4101.003
'The..,_ diUtlrrd 'ti1J 111 Floor dl: Dl . 27
OH45780
SW COI'Mr of the Prior Deed LIIMM-:
OOIIolllililll will Ill 111111 IWgl County, Ohio.
Prior Dlld ~: Tu::lclr
2.00 Ac:. Volullll151, f111111 Ill
.... II.,_ 11", will Alto lmOWn •a: 748
~ 320, P1tgl 111
p81d'Cell dlecrl- In Appn:IMCI II $11,000
no expiMIICI or High
IINDI,
Public Notice
Appn:IHcl II Mo,OOO ttt. Mllp County l8rml ol aall: CMIImplied
wat'l'llllly Mlddllport, OH 45780
·
T - ol aall: Cannot Oftlcl•l
Recorde Ill lOki tor 1111 t111n
D'*'·
•ncl 11111 o.tendlnt, Slllrtfl.....
Ill IOid lor lllln VoiUITII 8, P1tgl351; . 2/3rd of the ltppt'81Hd
For further lnflmnll· John Doe, Unknown C.. Numlrlr 05CV017 2l'3oW of the •ppt'IIHcl Thence, S. 30 dig. v1lue. 10% down on
lion, or for .., ttppOint· Spou" of Jo.nn• USDA
Rur•l v•tue. 10% down of 38'35"
a d l - of dly of e•. ceah or
1111t11 to 1napec1 0011111· Flflulon;
lllld , If 0..111apment
· d.y of aale, cnh or 344.24 fM1 to •n Iron certln.d chick, b•t·
.,.,, prfDr to •II ..... d1c1•1d, •II helll, Pt.lnlll1
certified check, bal· pin 1101, p81aing •n Iron
con!KI Cyndll or Clivi-,
ltfllit 111, VI
,
111101 dill on confl.,.... pin aat II 1!1116 fM1 for
Rl:ndyll7~1311. -IIO'S,-*1-, BariiiiiiK.BunchDI•I tlonofaalt.
1efe11nce;
(10) 11, 11,20 3tc
eclrnlhllllnoto,.., edmln- ~
The 1ppral1al . did 'Therlcl, N. 78 cleg. 25'
latr8trl1ncl Court of Common Include •n Interior 50" W., 1 dlaittnce of
Public Notice
111 1 Ill :.qulred Plea, lhlp County, ex•mlnatlon of the 244.83 fM1 to .., Iron
to ,eM up .., kDtllll Ohio
l':ouM.
pin HI;
NOTICE OF PUIUCA· theW iMY , _ In Uld In pui'IIIIIRCI of en Robert E. BNgll, Thence, N. 22 deg. 24'
TION
p:wml
ar biiD:ftw on11r of ult to ,.,. Mllgl County She:tfl 4r w., • dilllnce of
IN THE COMMON blrNII, lhltt upon d l , _ from uld Altomly for the plain- 159.55 !MilO 1 point In
PLEAS COURT
111'1 o1 Mid D11Midl:nll Court In the . . , _ !Iff
tho
centerline
of
OF MEIGS COUNTY, to .-y or to - t o Ill entitled Ktlon, I wHI Sllpo'lln D. Mllu
County ROIId 3, pue01110
p811d uljl judgment lliPOII to Nil II pub- 18 W. Monument "'"·
lng an Iron pin _,. 11
Melp County Citt11 C11 within thrll dlya from He ..alon on the front o.yton, OH 45402
140.28 for twlerCourll
111 nnclltlon thll •n illlpl of the Mllga 437-461-1100
ence;
P.O.IIotlt51
Ordlr of S.ll Ill County Coun Houu (tO) t3, 20,27
Tlwlce, N. 50 cleg. 57'
tOO E, 2nd 5\. I'Dmlray, - t o the .m.ttr of on Frtdly, Nov. 17, 2006
55" E., 1 dlatance .o f .
Ohio 4578t
~hlp County, Ohio, to II 10 •.m. of Nld d.y,
132.55 fM1 elcing the
U S 0 A A u r 1 1 ltflll'lllll, .cheftlll In the
foll~lng
Public Notice
centerline of 11id
Dlnlapmll'dl vs
the o.lly So:::ll:wl •nd ~II ::liNd _ , _ ,
·County Road 3 to 1
Jollllne ~.Ill II eilll Mid· -1 ...... Dellcrlpllon of 1111:1 SHERIFF SALES
point;
Clu No. OlcvOII·
thM 1111 · ptlilillr II ... Prop rrtv
CASE
NUMBER Tlwlce, N. 54 dig. 01'
John Dol, Unknown IIDkl frM nl ell.- Cll SllUiilld In the Vllllgl 06CVOt3
03" E., a dlatlnce of
Spouu of Joenne •II clltlml, 111111: •nd ol MldtlllpD;'".. e-ly VANDERBITT MORT· 27.37 fHt along the
Fll'guiOII,
end , If · - of M1J of the of llelp Stata of GAGE &amp;FINANCE INC. centerline of 11id
dlound, •II lwl11, pertlu hlnln, lhlt the Olllo
PLAINTIFF VS.
County ROIId 3 to the
de¥1-.
poocm !rom till Mil lnt0011CNLotNo. 301, CINDY S. CLEMENTE POINT OFBEGINNING,
. - , IUCutrl- of Mid p:.m'- ... AMp 13,
2, of ET ALL OEFENO... NTS uld described trect
admlroillllllloil, ICI:nln- •ppllecl
to
the the Ohio Compeny'l COURT OF COMMON- containing 1.00 acrea,
iltretrl•nd Ptllntlft'l Judgment Purch-. •nd more PLE:IoS,
more or leaa, except·
Illig..
end for auch other p81rllcullrty bounded MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO. lng 111 legal utility
lddrHI II unknown, .... , to which USOA end ducrlbed - to~ In puraulnCe of' en 18Mmento end right•
' will heNby t.kl notice Run:l OIYIIopment II kiWI: ·Beginning II en order of aale to me of Wll'f.
11111 on July 14, 2006, Mlllllld.
Iron pipe II .t he ~· dlracttd from ' sold Reference Deed: being

41111
·
50M2W100
(10) t3, 20,27

Public Nollct

.-

In loving memory of my husband

w.t cornir of Ht:rry W. court In the •bow ent~ Pllrt of the I'NI Willi •nee clue on conllnM~·1

Memory

.

who passed away October 21, 1982
If I had the world to give,
I'd give it yes 8lld more,
to bear your voice,
To see your smile and greet
you at the door.
It broke our hearts to lose you
But you dido 't go alone.
For pan of us weqt wilh you
the day God called you home
Sadly missed by
wife Ann children &amp;
hildren

;;~~~~~~~~~;~~;~~~~~~
Help Wlntlcl
Help WIIIIICI
'

$$STNA's$$
NeW Wage SCale!!

::-:·::-:::::-::::::::::::~PU8UC.NOT1CE
In compl•noe with
lllectlon 1711.01 o! the
Arcadia Narslng Center Is nqw
Ohio Al:viMCI Code,
hiring
STNA's for lftei'IIOOIIS lllcl
the 1111p Counly
IIOIIid ol Rwlllon will
night &amp;hlfts.
10 IWIIw the 111X
Full and part time positions
,_. 2001 . - 1VIiiable.
-.triiCt on Oetoblr
Come join our dlrlng team!!
24,200I,III:OO•.m. ln
the Mllp County
Please apply In penon or call
:loudltor'l
Olllcl,
.
7~7-3156
Second Floor, Mllgl
Ask for J~~~e Ami C..y
County CourtltouM.
Ml:ry T. S,.Mtlll
8o.rd of Revlelon - - - - - - ....,...IY
HelpWIIIIM
Hllp Wanllrd
(10) 20

I.

r

,tQ
1

NURSING SUPERVISOR

Flexible scheduling. excellent salary, holiday.
health insurance single/family ·. plan, dental
plan. life insurance, vacation, long-term dis·
ability and retirement.
Send resumes to:
Pleaant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
'
2520 Valley
Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(304) 675-4340
Fax to:.(304) 675-6975
or apply on-line at
www.pvalley.org'
AAIEOE

•

11110

$

c.m.,...-- . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

"""'Y

\'=•·················
....................110
........ .,••. ., .........................410

llnlltll
Furntlhecl

......, Hltullng...........................................l50

ot. . ..,......................................................040

Hl:ppy Adll. ...................................................0150
tl8y Gr.ln.......................................·...........MO
1t0
HOlM llnprovern.nts...................................l10
HotnH for .. .;.................... ....................310
tfo\~Mhold Qoocla ....................................... 510
Hou- tor Alnt ........ ................. " ............... 410
In Memoriam ...........:....................................020
1h111rance .....................................- .............. 130

a
"""Wlinlld
............................................_. .

uwn &amp; ~ Equlpment ........................eeo

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently accepting
resumes for a NIIISing Supervisor. Must have a
minimum of three to five year.; of experience
in an acure care setting. Two year.; of manage·
ment experience preferred. Critical care experi·
ence preferred, but not required. Current WV
License.

11oJt WAN'I1ill

I

""'*tor .....................................

Llvatock. .......................................,............. 830
Loll and Found ........................................... 0150
Lot. &amp; Act'111111 ............................................ 350

r

Ali...,_,

....,_.,..and

~

~~

1-87_s._,_m_.:-:----:-:- -Syrecuoo---·-OH--45-77_9_.- : -

Bartender: Honaat, retllblo,
~ only. foW.y at
CIOIS Creak Auction Bu111to Skyline Lanea I tth Frame
Auction 5alurday 8 PM lounga
Estate ~ems. Cedar Cheal. r-..:.-·- - - - - "-le Secretory dotlk, lBV·
;;'i' Items. of Furniture,
approJ&lt;. 200+ Avon. Loto &amp;
~IC)Il.
Lots ot • mall COiectlblao. :i!
n'•ht"'caahdoorprlzn.
tot
"' ,,
u I.Nliol. IJI',,UIJ'J~
""m
Bulldf~ Is full ·
..,
·~
~~ for 200
' WI .,....
"'""ly
Sa ""·
~
accept Visa · and Master ·,., EXPER IENCENECE:SSAFW
Card
or
'~~~s

"'""llll"""""""

care we ha\18llrMICI
opanlnga fof tho loltowlng poohtons:

740--446-5001 .

or·- '"" ·

•.K)8Pt..ACa:ENT

Mlaclll'- - n c l l l l....................... 540
Mobile- Repllr .................................... ll60
llobllt HomH for Rant ............................... 420
(lioblle HomH for ....................................320
Money to LOin ............................................. 220
4 -ltra.......................... 740

• ENMU.JNG NOW

resume to: Carieton School,
1910 Gartaton Streit, P.O.
307. Syracuae, OH 45n9.

ALUANCE

FACTS/New

-orcy-.

lk:atcallnatru-................................... 570

,.,_n1111 ....... ... .,.,. .............................. ........ 005
I'DI1: f011S.Ie ... ............................................. 58Q
~lullllllnt a ._lng .................................... 820
l'roteulonel ~ ........................... ...... 230
ftldlo, TV 6 CB A~pelr............................... 180
Rlill E - Wolnllld ..................................... 36q
~ ........-.................. ...................150
Sled. Pll:nt. Fertilizer .............................. 650
- . . - a Wlnlld .......................................120 .
SpiCe tor Rlnt .....................................;, ...... 480
Sporting Goocla ...........................................520

suv·a for ..................................................720

Trucka for Sill ............................................ 715
UpiiO.-y ................ ................................... 870
For 11:11...............................................730
Wlntld to Buy ........,... ............................. .... 080
Wotnlld to Buy· Firm SUppllu ..................820
Wanlld To 00 .............................................. 1110
W.med to Rent .....................;...................... 470
Tlrd Sill- Odtpollo.................................... 072
Y•rd S.ll Pornltoy/Middle ......................... 074
Ylrd S.le.f'l.
076

v-

-ni. . . . . . . . . . .

Absolute Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver and

Gold Coins.

Pr-eis. Gold Rings, Pre·
1935

Currency.

U.S.

Sct~alm Diamond&amp;· M!r.s .
Coin Shop, 15 I Sotond

Avenue, GBIIIpOIIa, 740-446-

2642 .

.

Buying Juni&lt; Cars,TruckS &amp;
Wracks, Pay Caah J 0
Salva~o
(304)773-5343
(304)674·1374

Want to

buy new and old
junk cai'IJlruckllvans. 7.0.
416-1594 or 740-416-1588

Wanted cars any conDition

or IIMabll. (740)388-6228.

SHOP
CLASSI EDS

TRAClOfHRAIL£R

TRAINING CENTERS
W"f"ll4EV1u.E. VA

1-800·334-1203

====nt

Emplqymont opportunity..
Early 'lnlorvontion SpoclaNst
naadad to wot1&lt; with ci111dron
blrtn through two with
-topmentat
dalayo
and/or disabilities and thllr
flmlllas. 20 • 30 hooro por
week. Minimum quallflca·
I •- bachol0' or
1tons Incu~
_ ......... ..w.r.a In ..... uca
g.-~ _,_
•
lion •··- aoclal "'~·v
•
•-ru•,
·
1ora1 -~
-'·tad ·~d-nee
Submit
applicltton or

Mtacellllneoua .............................................. 170

• FlNAN::ING AYAII..ABLE

at

C&gt; 2006

this huge yard
sale that has
Parennlal Cli'Shonor
somothlng
tor """'Y'""·
Fall ~rilliOI""'------,~ ' - - - - - - - · " - - - - - - ·
and
wlntsr
crstts.
went
out
1fw&gt; WANJDJ
FEDERAL
·~ut&lt;o" 1-2 year odd , ot .,.,.._and want to selL
Clrtlfted Bus ~un~r
~ ma1e· ~--·
""m
neutervu
r~ "'
. . . .Saturday- the 21st, 1686 ~~~:;=~~~ Applications 0are being ftl'\e.oaL
r..,.,..,, JOBS
Lulola home (740}645-7275 L~~PI~
.
Gallipolis.
8008p10d
tor
tong
term
$15
•- - 19Alr.,now hir"IINII' "v
(andcouldposslbleleadtoa
.67~
~0 """" home Mate
ing. For application and ne
'
V"""'
:
r4 YARDS.U.&amp;
1ull..flme
position)
for
Chocolate Lab. 6 yean; Old,
~IMDJU 1
Substitute Buo Driver with govamoment JOI&gt; ln1o, ~II
Cald (740)441·1014
tho Golla County Board ot AmoricanAssoc.oflabor1·
913-599-804.2, 24nlrs. amp.
Q HH ton
Two Australian Shepherd Donation
MR/0 D.
ua ~t s: serv
Yard
Sale,
' pups, , male. 1 le:nale, 6 Saturday, October 21 . AI
LEARN
Current bus
· :---:--:-:-:---:--:c driver pilysical,
c
B :months old, blacl( &amp; wMe. The • Rutland
TO DRIVE
abatract, Dl. with •
Forming - 1 band.
Fire
(740)388-11756.
endoroement, bacl&lt;gr~d Looking tor Singer. Clll :
Department to raise money
chock ond ochood bus~··· 740-992·9904 or 740-416for the Oasis Christian
WI
'FULL-TtMEClASSI:S'
CIUon
cert cate. 1090.
Fellowship relay for life
CLASSIFIED INDEX
• Cll. TRAINING"
Appflcatjorw are available at ----..,----:-'team.
• FINANCING ~L..ABLE'
the Guiding · Hand SChool, Furniture warehOuaa/dlill\14114'1 For .......... - ...................................... 725
A _ . ............................................oso Friday 10/20/06. Satureay
'JOO I'I.ACEM""' •
8323 N. SR 7, Cheshl:o, ery parson Apply In
AnllqUII........- ............................................. 530
10/21/06, 828 Eaat Main
Ohio 45820. The Gallla ~rson IO.S, Llfaotyle
API""*"' for Rent ...................................440 Streat, "·-•w•NCE
County Board ot MR/00 " Galt
Furnnure, No pho
3rd -•~~....
~·~roy. Banjo. •·~~
,.
,.
A . - - FIIIMI-.............................080
Gun,
Guitar,
BookS,
fRACroA·TAAilfA
an Equal Opportunity
lpotla.
no~.
AutoP-6 :locaau~lu .......................... 780
Furniture, Misc. Rain Date:
TRAINING CENTERS
Employer.
H., war}ted at Darst Group
Auto Repllr ........................ ;.........................770
nM7f06 ' 10/2S/06.
1~&lt;
--~~--:-:-'- Homo. wo:tctng with etdlrly,
A-torS.II........- ................................ ...710
~
~:n-.v:&gt;v~oto Drlvero, Hlnng ,_, Maoon r-y lltlng 1 -. 740Ioiii • - f o r ' ................................. 780
n. n..........,,
334 1203 • Dixon. u..... Von, Fill . 1191Hi023.
lulldlng••ptlu ...........:............................sso
1-800· •
818o, Haavy Haul, Floglonal ----::::=--::....~ -lulldlngl ............................. 340
the Road. ClaM A Here we GROW •galnl
L...:-=::l!...,!!!!i!!'"'!!!!-!!!i!!'i!!•i!l""'a.J &amp; ""--r
~
~ Opportuntty ................................ .210
Hugo Sale Oct 20.21·22, 9·
.COL raqullld. Good driVIng Friendly, E1ffcfont Olffoo
Bl•ln I I Training ... ,,..,, ..,,........................ 140
7 ot Alhton Rd. &amp; At. 2 100 WOFIKEIII -DID :woord. Elcooliont oompon· Stall Naoclod for Buoy
710
Applagrovo. Lots ot bulknaa
AIMmblo cra111,
aatfon. Cal' M·F 8:30-4:30 Chiropractic Otftcti. Ploaaa
c.nplng EqulprnM'It ••••••••••.•••••.••••••.••••.••.... 7'10
Mkt ltemo, furn~ure, toola,
wood Items.
(304)722·2184
H~ND·DELIVER roaum11
Qllrdl ofl'hlnlca .............................. ... - .......010 HaHoween ouppllea, making
To
$480/wk
to
Bock
to • Haalth
ChlkiiE..,., c.r. ......................................."110
room for Chrtttma ttema,
Materiall provided.
-Em_pl_oymont
_ _ _Oppo
_ _rt_un-~-181.-. Chiropractic,
10A Old
I~IIRDII 'Cion ............................... 840 •
24Hr. School new
stuff
arriving
.weakly,
FtM
lntormatton
pt&lt;g.
and
Progom
AJrport
Ad,
Glillpotlo.
Cllt
. . .lp..... ;t for . •............................~......410
open
weekend
80t-428-464&amp;
Subotttuteo . - t o wor1&lt; (740)448·7480 for ·more
IICCI u.Ung .,••,.............................,.........,. ..... DO
11
Carillon
School. ~lnfor~mo!!lfon~.~~~~
P.m lqulc;w••••••••••••oooooonooooooo•••••••••••••••l10 Prtl8o:l/lun.
1
- - - - - - - - An El&lt;Oillant wr:y to aam Elcperllnoo and/or training
~ tor
............................................. 430
Satureay 8-noon, 504 monoy. lbeNiwAvon. .
o.~•--•~
HoizorSantorCare
~···········330
Clll Marilyn 304-882-2&amp;45 p:olorT*I. ~,. -~·
Clntor
... LeeM .......................,..............................410
MCNoHI Avo, Pl. PI-nt. -=~~-:-::-::-- tton or raau:nt tn: ear-&gt;
l'or .....................................................,•..... •
Cootumaa, toolo, fumfture , AVONI
To Buy or School, 1310 Cirlaton
Por 1111 or T'redll ••• ,............,.-.....................110
moro.
Sell. Shlrloy Spears, 304- Streat, P.O. Bcx 307,
"you arelnta18111dln

J.ARD
.....

DON a call
(740)446-5001

STNA

Housekeeping
Laundry
Pl-atopbyand..O
us at 380 Colonial
Orl·-, Bidwell, Ohio or
...
gMt BDI.Lamben.
Payroll Clerke call at

follOwing tun time

poemon:

Prwwrttton
lciUCIItor.__.llllo.....,acbtr• oom
Seeking an lnOfVItlc lndi·
vidual to .wot1&lt; with youth
Security 01flcit:s
and adults In Clollla and
Full time position available Jackson
countlas.
in GaDtpolls
Raaponslblllllos Include, but
Man-Tuoo·Set·Sun
notllmnadto:alcohol,tobacThird ahllt· Midrllght to Bam co and other drug eduol$8.00 ~r hOu r
montorlng program,
Must be 18 )'Oil" or oldsr lion,
clasaroo.m preoentattons,
Mull ha\18 vai l ~ drivers
lty
Ill
trolnlngs. rs. cornmun
liCenSe and own vehicte
events, development and
Must haw clean criminal lmptomentlllon ot grant
record &amp; be drug 1roe
projoctl. otc. A mlnf:oom ot
Ptaaso call
a
Bachelors
Degree
Contlnantal Secrel Sarvlco
req\Jirad . Sind """'"" by
.Bureau.lnc
October 24 , 2006 to :
~am-3pm· Mon. Thru Fri.
FACTS, 45 Olive Street ,
1.8Q0.869-8975
Gadllpolls, Ohio 45831 or
Drug Free Wortcplace
Ffo.K to (7~0)446 · 8014.
EDE
e'oe. MIFIH

qua

t

Bonuses, commislon,
~-·
health care, Disability,

Equal Opportunity
Emplover .

more.

, Companion and care giver
for an elderty person in my
home Private or.semi prt'l8te
room with bath. I have 20
years of experience &amp; refer- ·

At Jolin Sang FoniLincotn-lhri:UI'J we'\18
establiShed a 35 year
reputalion ot honesty,

tniegrtty and outstanding
customer service· l)"efore
and after the sale. W~h
the hottest products on
the ma~ket and as the
fastest growtng dealership In our region. We're

eNOTICEe
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recOmmends
tnal you qo business with

adding 'Sales Associatn
to bener service our
oostom8fS.

local ·En'IJ)k:¥er Jooking to
hire lull time R-...,..ist.
_,..,.........

Must be

faSt

learning and

able to mu~ tasl&lt; and handle
stress. Computer knowledge

01 I plus. Pay starts out at

$8.00h1r. Please send
-·"me to CLA Box lltiA'.
'"" c;Jo
,._.,

Gaiitpot~ Tribune, PO Box
469, Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

Local Insurance &amp;gency
seeking pan tine receptionlat.

Weekday hours only.

Insurance OMparience helplui, but not required. Send
-·-.. mo to Box TSC t9 c;Jo
·
Point Plaaaant Rogisttr 200

people · you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mall until you
have investigated the

1r you are I()Qt(ing to start

anewcareerorm..-",. .....
you don1 feel you're nakJ
t""'
or treated 88 well as you
shooddboandHyou'ra
hrOd of working lor

onanng.

r

someone who iSn't

"·
working fo r you, g.ve

Pat Hill or Bred S.ng
8 caN today
(740)446·9600 or

1.aoo-272 _5179 .
You may also apply in
Borrow Smart. Contact

I 95 u:O":"~I:r Rd.,
Gallipolis, Ohio
Monday·Friday

the OhiO Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office ot Consumer
Affairs II!FORE you refi·

ll;;;;;iiilim,;;;;&amp;..,.oll

Mliln St. Pt. Pleaaant, WV

nence your home or

25550
1i I - - - - - - - : - "'""'

Obtain • loan. BEWARE

LPN/RN's needed
In
Gallipolis, Ohio. Podiatric
cua n~"'t Cait PrimaN
..,.,....
.,
Care Nurs~g S.rvlcu at
800·518-2273 or 614·764 ·
0980 and ui&lt; fof Joan.
Man to worf&lt; on dairy · ~arm,
740 •1149•21123, 17401949 .

2578

~d=:stsp~;m"~,~~~

Are you Interested In a
rewatdlng position? PAIS~
, ..... ntlyaaakl""'apantlme
_,.
·•
otaff for Maoon COunty, WV
providing reeldentlal!com·
munlty oklll
training with lndivfduato with
MRIOD. High ochool dlpto·

te.. or Insurance. Cell tho
Office

me or GEO required. No

of

Opportu 1ty

n

Emplo'fer

experience
noceesary.
Part Time Maid neiCied Criminal boci&lt;ground chock
Lowe
Hotel Apply w~tn no requtrad. Must ha\10 rellabio :~:;~~;;;;~
oa11 •.
transportation and valid auto
-~...
1
o Paid trol nl~
~~
Pan tlmo on-sne l'ltndlng neurone ·
·~ ·
.,...,....,..
attendant (Choohlro area) Houny rate stanlng at $6 50·
Sam to tpm (M·F) No travel· $8.00/tlour. Pl..se coli 1
lng, no dollvortoo, vacaltons 304·373-101 1 or roil tree at New He~x Cuts Curl also
Folt Hl~a. pnce vary depending on length of heir.
Call t-877·373·1011 .
"Whore• All About Ybu , ollth
and Moln St .. Pt. Ploosant,
Tho
Athens·Meigo
WVA. 304-675-1C 11
Educatlonol Cantor has o
position opening .for 1 Concealed Pistol Class Sue Underwood Special
Psyci1olog~fs Assistant to 0 hio, wv, Nov. 4, 2006 " 10%-off perm. color. cap
hlna.
work In Meigs County ·$75.00 .
9:00am. VFW Debi
Adkins
Ucense
Schoole fo: :no 2000·2007 Mason WV. (740)843·5555 , Masaage Therapy 20%-off
School Year. A.pplie&amp;nts 740·416.J329
must haiJe a Bachelors
TURNED DOWN ON
Degree, with experience in
- -- - -- - - SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
o&lt;tucation. psycnotogy, or Galllpotto CaiMI' Collogo
No Fee Unless We Wlnl
related field&amp;. Excellent writ·
(Careers Close To Home)
1·888·582·3345
lng, organizational and Inter· Call Todayl 740...446-4367
1, I \ I I " I \ I I
personal . communicalton
1-800-214~52

r

~1;)eee~dayo

MEOI HOME HEALTH
AGENCY
Ho\3 OPENINGS FOR

- - ·-PRN RW.......
$28 PER I'IOUR/
$42 PER VISIT
Call Vk:lci Reynolds. RN,
Cttnicol Managar a: l
(740)441 ·1799 Of 1-800.
481-6334.

_ _ __.c.____
Someone tor plumbing, sdding, Insulation, odd jobo, rei·
orences required, (740)992·

'

I

r:~~;~~=

Interest to JaM D. Karate sen-defense, protesview
onli ne
at
Costanzo, Superintendent, 8lonal Black Belt Instructor. www/orvb.com. cooe 82..S
Athens·Meigli Educational Men. women, children.
Center. 320 112 Spacious fully eQuipped 2 91ory House

lli•lliiiiiiiii!ll!liiBIIJ Sar~Jice

8862

Consumer

Affairs toll ''" at 1-888·
278-0003 to team ~ the
mortgage broke! . or
londer
Is
properly
llcanaad. (Th~ Is 1 public
service · announcement
trom tho Ohio Valley
Publlahlng Company)

ri.O

An OUtpatient Alcohol and

E

management team In the

skills are requ ired. This WW.W.QI~~com
Hor.m;
position IS 8 10 month con- Accredited Memttr Accred~1ng
u. S., r
0
tract with Board approved Council lor 1~nr College$ L.._-o:::i:·liii:~iii~iiii:-pl
benefits. Salary will be 1nd Stt":OOII12748
,
baaed on training and e~q&gt;e1996 Redma n 28M60 in
rlence. Submit letter .of - - - -- - - - Apple GrOYe 30&lt;1·593-6719

Alternatives·

other . Oru~ agency Is
accepting resumn for the

AB'i &amp; SOn's Complete Car

Claanlng 2615 112 JackSon
Ave. Pt. Pi&amp;asant, WV (304)
675·7375. We wash by
hand special .complete was
job $4.00 oft. &amp;terior wash .
jobs $2.50 off

Long Term care, and

Pill!'Se stop by and us at 380 Colonial
IO·'lo

times.

Join tho winning loami

• Regular 11rte Increase
•Uniform Altowance

--------

35 years ~rience . Free
est. With God In mind at ali

ll'llnlng. 1Wc waak lnl·
tial &amp; orientation classes

20·21, 8·? TV'S, guns. toolo,
car parts, recliners. clothes,

Kriner o11218.

"sidewalk, plumbing repairs.

SALES
ASSOCIATES
with cOntinued ongoing
training.
...._....,.. Tho boat

-"'---..,----'-Groat Dana!Yeltow Lab ml•
Housetrained, great wfkld&amp;,
paiS.. RasouiCI tram M &amp;
run. In great health .

carpentry,

handrolts, handicap ramps,

•Competttlve waoas
•EJCpArienca pay

@)

Naot:leea IS11 N e _ , . p • p . e r • .

. WANJDJ

2 Scl1wlmm bl&lt;:yeles to gMt- 304-882·2583
owoy (304)882·2115 .
------loot: Calico Kltton, 4 ldttens to Qlvetlway. Clll boll)', orongo &amp; blad&lt; patch·
(740)379-2981 .
es down bact&lt;. COntact
Dalmatlanol 2 female IM!r (304)675-4905 10 relurn

advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
~bile

mull be JINPIId'

1bDo
Glvuw~Y

son.

In

All Dlepl8y: 1.2 Noon 2
•ue~._.. O.p ~rlor To
Publication
Sunday Dlepley: 1.:00
Thureclely for Sundays

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

lilt-.
mlgnatton ot LIN R l - r . aaalo·;
tant director ot medla relatlonl. Named :.
S.lly Gunter and ltavll lolorin medii•
relations ma"-.
•
IIAII&lt;I1IAU.
tlttio.• 811' 11 r· * t CIMIDft
IW.LAS Mo\VERICKs--..Agreod to terma,
wlt11 F Joah Howlrd on a l&gt;ur")'ll\r ocn-·
tractoxtenaton tlVOugh tho2010.11 - ·

In M1mory

Now you can have borders and Qraphlcs
"-'
adclecltoyourclasslfleclads · (.~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for tarQe

luCCIIIfilof :\da

Mcl.lren benCh ()()l()tl ,

ATLANTA THAASHERs-Aaalgned 0.'
PIN ~dam Smyth to Muskegon ot tho
UHL
CAROLINA HURRICANE$-I'taood C·
Keith Auocln on lnju,_., · ~lod'
C Oa\18 GoYe from Alblny of AHL. ,
.
DETROIT REO WING$-Rocatted C
Yaltteri Fllppula from Grand Rap.._ ot
the AHL.
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS-Aulgnod F.
Piltr NodYed and F Nli&lt;o Dlmltnalool 1c&gt;
Phl-lpllla ol tho ...HI.: Rocallod F
S1o1on R..-. 0 Ale&gt;candre Plcare a00:
F Ben Eager tram Phl:.dodphla ot tho.
AHL
eou.EOI
TEJW&gt; TECH-Agreed to terlno with
Boll Knight, men'S -ibaH ooacll, on -,
contract ei&lt;tenslon through 20t2.

(304) 675-1333
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Dlaplay Ada

Mondely-Prtclay tor lnaet'tlon
Jn Next a.y~a PeitNr
Sunday In-column: 1.:00 p.m.
~ Sundap ~taper

Monday·thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00
HOW IQ WRUE Aft AD

.._1

. ·l\egister

Ourltiru

Dally ln..Cotumn: l:OO _..m.

•

vane opan:t~on~ aealltant and
Jell Oowlport dlrootor ot team , _

-:at

Sentinel

Qtribune

Worcl Ads

=~,roc~~AL$-Namod K~

Allanllc Dlvlolon

Websjte$:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydallysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

c.:;,..-:;....(7!~~To44~;~!42 (7~1To992!~56

AIMitoln L.IJIIul

·

In One Week With Us
REAC~ · OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS· YOUR AD
ONLINE

To Place

.

IAIEIALL

WLPctGB

WE TERN CONfERENCE .
Cantral OMolon

Poet non BIIMball
lliVISION SERIES

Prnnu n &amp;~~fa

EAS'IeRN CONnRENCE

E=D!III
classified@ mydallytribune.com

BALTIMORE ORIOLE$-Namod NIOalt

IEASTE1III COU'EMNCE

. . . . . Oct. n

St.LouiS at Detro~.

~'a 8poltl 'nwltt:gone

NlllloNIIB , I 1M Arra:I..Dn

7:57

St. Louis
·p.m.

Carolina 23, Ba~more 21

wneceaaary, 8:27

'

•

'fRANsACI10NS

PRo BASKE1BALL

J'W"t·· OM 21

Doiron at St. Louis,
p.m.

Tanipa Bay at Wlahlngton, 7 p.m.
Carolina at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.
COlumbus at Plttaburgll, 7:30p.m.

......... Qomo

Detron at St. LouiS, 8:27p.m.

Detroit 20, Buffalo , 7
Dallas 34, Houston 6

N.Y. AI!'IQ8r&amp; at Toronto, 7 p.m.

Anaheim II Los Angeloo, 6 p.m.

1 I!LOd 21

OH

Sundltr'e-

at Edmonton, 10 p.m.
Minnesota at San Jose, 10:30 p.m.

D=d• N 24
Oetrott at St. Louis•. 8:33p.m.

'

C-Iand at Toronto, 1 p.m.
DerMr ll Detroit, 8 p.m.
;
. Now ot1Nns .... Sacramemo at Rlno, ·
Nev.,8p.m.
San Antonio at Houston, 8:30p.m.
PhOenix Va. L.A. Lal&lt;aro II San Diego,
9:30p.m.

Detro~

St. Louis at~ 8:23p.m.
...

e.tunlo¥'1-

vancouver at Naahvllfe. 8 p.m.
St. Uluto at Chicago, 8:30pm.
Oaiias at Phoenix, 10 p.m.

Sltunlly. Oct. 21

St. Louis at

p.m.
Mlamlll San MlonlO, 8 p.m.
DerMr at MllwllukM, 8:30p.m.
Waehlngton II Dallaa, 8:30 p.m.
Saanto at LA. Clippers, 10:30 p.m.

Florida at Atlanta, 7 p.m.
N.., JerMy at Ott-. 7 p.m.
COlorado at lolontreal, 7 p.m.

Now Yo:t&lt; 4 , St. Loud&amp; 2

Gallla
County

Ottto. 7:30 p.m.
:
Indiana vo. Mlnneoota at Molino, Ill., &amp;

Bolfato at Beaton, 1 p.m.

New'lbrl&lt; at St. Louis, ppd., rain
D
17
St. Louis 4, New 'lb&lt;k 2

'

COnn., 7:30p.m.
Atlanta vs. Cleveland at COiumbua,·

Vancouver at St. louis, 8 pm.
Chicago at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
MlnnettOta at Maholm, tO p.m.

15

••

SR a;'aa.n.
~
Mamp111s at Ortondo, 7 p.m.
.
New 'lb:t&lt; vs. Beaton at Uncaovillo,

i Garoltna at Buftato, 8 pm.

St. Louis 5, New 'lb&lt;k o

Sundt Or;t

Boston 3, C.lglry 2
Atlanta 4, WUhlngton 3, SO
COtorodO 2, Ottawa 1
Tampa Bay 4, Pni-dphil I
Pittsburgh 4 , NY Islanders 3, OT
Naanvtlle 4, Now J«1ey 3, SO
Los Angoleo 4, _ , . , 0
San Jooe 5. Dotrolt 1

Toronto at Columbus, 7 p.m.
Pnltadoipills at Flortdl, 7:30p.m.

St.louis 9, Now 'lb&lt;k 6

Or1aAdo 109, Atlanta 88
Chicago 88, San M1onlo 67
Dailu 88, - . - 71
Utah 104, POrtland 80
- 1 1 1 , SaciWTl0111o94
LA. ClipperS 91, L.A. ~ 110

Min.- at Chicago, 8:30 p.m.
Goldon 511ate at L.A. ClipperS, 9 p.m.
Utah at Sacramento, 10 p.m.
Portland at Saanto, 10:30 p.m.

fttdiJ'I-

e · 'e 0c;1. u

1111."1

'l'huNdttJ'a-

indiana 109, ~ 96
118, MlOCIIII Elllo ~ lw'N 84
Sta1o , , 2, Orkaano 103

New 0rteana at L.A. lailtll, TBA
Pnladolphla at New Jeroly, 7:30 p.m.
Miami at Metnpi11o, 8 p.m.
·

C~2.Montreal 1

11

nt tr,OC',
St. Louis at New York, ppd., rain
nwnt· Qc;! 12

&amp;undly'aGamoe

Chlcago ~.

New Jeraev 2, Plftlbu9' 1

Qtribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

Boston 114. Je- 110
Toronto 103, Cle'ual•td 81
Houston 111 ' Mlh ..... 87

......,. .._

NuhYttle 3, N.Y. Rangers 0

Wurjz Oc;t. 14
Detroit 6, Oakland 3, Detroit wins series

I 4 0 .200 87 138
I 5 0 .167 106 158

Saattte
4
St. Lou~
4
San Franctaoo 2

1 II"Or:!

Wlahl..;:: F = r 2 -

II

N'm Oct u

4-{)

WLOTPIIGFGA
6 t 0 12 28 16
5 1 0 10 18 10
4 0 2 to-· It 14
34171920
25041628

points l&gt;r a wtn, one point tor owr·
1 Two
time lois or ohootout lois.

Detron 8. Daldand 5

320 .8008962

WLTPct

PhoeniX

1 0rt 10

W..

WL TPct PF . PA
6 0 0 1.000 180 59

-

1

Detroit 5, Oaldand 1

PF PA
179 124
127 109
147 92
118 135

W LTPCI PF
5 , 0 833 145
4 2 0 .667 109
320 .80083 .

Mlnne&amp;OIJ
G.-, Bay
Detroit

AU.

WLTPCI
4 2 0 .887
3 2 0 .800
3 2 0 .800
2 4 0 .333

1\

119

, 4 0 .200 81

m"'1..J..Jia n F

LU.OIIE CHAIIJIIIOU81 .. An•lcel• ...._..

PA
69

C-nd

Chicago

lndlpendlntl

For fast

l!altimora

Cincinnati

.PF
110
111
' 106

~

Federal Hacking ' .. .. ' •• "" .. ': .3.() .. .88 .. .7 .. ' : ... 7·1 .. .181 ..41

'TIIrrtllt .... .... ....... .. ......2·1
watert&gt;re ... . .... . .. ...... . ...2·1
Miler .... . . ... .. . ......... . .. .t-2
Southemc . ... . .. . ......... ·.... t-2
Eutem .. . ............ . .......IJ.3
FrtdliJ'atllftlie
-nder It wet1ston
Ntlaonvtlle-'lbrt&lt;at !lelpre
IAtlgs at VInton County
Eutem at w.terford
Fecitlal HoCking at MHior
Trimble at Soothem

W LTPct
4 2 0 .667
3 2 ·o .800
230 .400

AU.

Trt-'111~~

' Hooldl.
·

Houston

Teunnua

San Jooo
Oalleo
Anaheim
Los Angoleil

. San Diego 3, St. I.OoJis 1
St. Louis 6. San Diego 2

W LTPot PF PA
5 0 0 1.000 135 100
3 2 0 .800 118 74
140 .20072 147
, 5 0 .187 85 157

0 5 0 .000 50
.....- . CONf'ERBICE

W-l .. .271
"' ...
.
AockHBI ...... . .... ... ....... .W-l
~ . .. "'
107 .. ""
50 .. ...&amp;2
167
Cl.....,..... ' ' ..... ... ......... 2·1 .. '58 ... 42 .... .3-5 . .. 198 ..238
~Jiolnt .. ' .... ..... ' ..... ' .2·1 .. ' ~ ... 50 .... .3-5 ... 151 ..190
CoaiGilM! .. .. .. ....... .. .. .. .1..2 . .. 56 .. .89 .. .. .+-! .. .197 .. 156
Fairland .. . . . . .... .. . .. .. . ..... 1·2 ... 79 ...66 ... . .1·7 . ·.. 127 . .209
RNei'Yalley . ... .. ..............IJ.3 .. . 41 ... 120 .. ... 1-7 ... 99 ...255
F.W.,'a..flldor,Oclabu27
Rl1111 valley at Cheoapeake
Fairland at Cheoapeate
Rock Hllll Colli GllM!
River Valley at Colli GllM!
South l'olnlat Fallland
Rocl&lt; HHiat South Pt&gt;lnt

.

Uiaml

Ooidand

ave

W-l
PF M
Neloonvlle-Vo!tt ... ... . .. .. ... . ' .~ ...89 ...46
VInton County .......... .. ......2·1 ...80 ...59
Wetlllon ......................2·1 ... 64 ...46
Alel&lt;andar ' . . ' ..... ' .... . ......1·2 . :.80 ... 72
~ .... . .............. .. ... 1·2 ... 57 ... 56
BelPre .... ' ' .. ... ... ... . . .. . ..IJ.3 ' ..38 . .. , 07
Dlvlalon

e..-

t&lt;anauCit;

Ohio v...y ConfiNnce

9t. I

St. louis 5, s.t:Oii;01
St. Louts 2, San Diego 0

PF PA
BOO 10!! 74
.500 116 149
.33394 125
.167 78 111

- 3 3 0
240
, 5 0

Pltlborgh

.Logan at Ironton
Mariotti at Jac:bon
Wl""" at l'llltlmoutl1

TVC

Now England 4 1 0

lndlonapolto

M
.. 171
.. 161
.. 191
.. 174
.. 243

0

WLTPot
NY Jots

Friday, October ao, aoo6·

- - 6, loa Mgeloo 5
Los Mgeloo,
New'lbrl&lt; e. Loo Mgeloo 5

CAN

A'

Ft1day, Odober 20, 2006

PageB4

East M~n Siroet, Pomeroy, gym . Bitanga's Martial Aris
OH 45769. Application Center, Middleport. 740·
Oaadllne: OctOber 27. 2006. 992-571 5. Open dally.
The AMESC is an Equal 11'76
o p p o r t u n 1t y'
~

I

EmployeriProvide r.

FIND AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSifiEDS

For Sale

(3041675-3 15 I
3 bedroom hOuse · in
Pomeroy. River view. Off
main road. 526,000. La'nct
Contract possible With down

payment. 1-740·992·2593.
Amos

and Son's Tru h
Service, Firewood &amp; EKtra 3 bedroom. 2 bath witt1 f1re·
place, .coxso barn. A10
Hauling. Reasonable Rates,
Grande area On e flat aces

Heap !locoptild. (740)388·

0371

WA.'mll

To Do

$120,000. (740)709·1 166.
3 yrs. old, 3 BA , 2BA. Lg.
Heat
pump.
Appflanoas. Meodowhill ol1
S.ndhiR Rd. was $89 .000

Porch,

George's Portable Sawmill, reduced
to
$79.900
don't haul your logs to the
(3041675·5253 or (304)593·
MMI just coil 304-675·1 957.
5949

�'
'

Friday, October 20, 2006
ALLEYOOP

.

Friday, October 20, 2006

www.mydallysentlnel,com

www.mydallysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page B7
BRIDGE

Good
to the

ACROSS

. Phillip
Alder

Last
Word

North

That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

"Take tile pain out
painting-let us do It
for you"
Interior Only

•
•

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

• J 5 42

•

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007
'

(:j \;J

• Payment could be the

l.'M l&gt;OING A
l&gt;OIJBt.E MAJO~ IN

AllT ANI&gt; LOG"···
/
I. WANT TO
PllAW MY OvJN

same as rent.
Locators.

(740)367{)000

co

CONCLI.JSIONS!

'

~~
~~

~
~

BARNEY

tires, IVC, new hot water

tank,

ortQin, or 1ny lnMntton to

1~n~e:w~,.,/1:':',/'ing,

1Mb 1ny IUCh
llmlldonOf
dlecrtmll\ltion."

Hi ll's Self
Storage
740-949-2217

knowlnglyMilMI'tlwnenlw for t'MI
.,..whtd'lllln
vlolllon at the .... Our

WINTER STORAGE

lOBEil
BISSEU

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

Meigs County Fairgrounds
Arrlvll: Oct. 21, 20011
•

9:00om-11:00pm
- H: Apl1128, 200~

CI.TIICTIII

lnformlcl thlt ••
ctw.lllnSJ- .tv.rtilld In
thl• INA FIF I .,.
IVilllble Oft
tqual

-tty-.

A tee of $20.00 will be

. charged for eal1y arrival,
late arrival, early removal,
late remo11al, or anytime

• New Homes

•n

• Garages

access is wanted to
· fairgrounds other than
staled dates. Building
space is flrst come
first serv&amp;. ~ ·
Inside Storage: $4.00111
Open Span: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence: $1 .00111
Call985-4372
or more information

• Complete
Remodeling

148-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

1:

.

West
Pass

Nortb
3•

East
Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Pass

HAS

1nd Spa Included.
$83,500,
Call 740.992·
4001.

SOMETHING
FOR YOIJ!!

O&gt;IEI

IT'LL INSPIRE
EVER't'ONE

F16~T. i=I6~T. F16~T WITH
YOUR MIGHT,AND 60 ON

TO 60

TO A 1-IIG14ER 14EIGHT! "

~OME ..

446-0007

Johann Wolfgang
Goethe wrote,
"When ideas !all, words come In very
handy.'
At the bridge table, those wordS musl be
kept inside your mind. II you hal/9 no
idea how to play your oonlract, talking
aloud will not halp - or even be penmlt·
ted by most opt)OI\ents. You must oontin·
ue talking to yourselllnside' your head,
hoping thai an insighdul idaa will fonm.
In this deal, you are in four hearts. Wesl .
leads 1he spade jack to your ace. What
· would be your line ot play?

takes.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20~Feb. 19) - ThOse
beliefs or ideas you've been . holding
Inside, tearful they't might be rejected,
shOuld be expressed to pertinent people
who can make things happen. Don't hold

Cornerstone
Construction

yourself back.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -You could
mttet someone who may help you
r::hange how you think or do things . It
could actually Influence yoo to re-examine a number ot values you share with

:SUNSHINE CLUB

others .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) • Today is an
especially good day to find a way to rectify a situation that needs consolidation.

IIIII'

Tree Service

If you make cooperation your primary
consideratiOn. the results should be gratifying for aiL
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - A number
of odd jobs you have'n't been able to get
to for the past few weeks could be taken
care of very nicely. Put them on your list
ot objectNes and *ar mem up once and

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump 6rindi~

1999 14x70 Mobile Home, a

• Bucket Tn~ek

Bedroom. 2 Bath, Local&amp;d In

Cheshire. $18,000 080.
(740)416-4911

APARTBUDGET
PR1CES AT JACKSON
ery. Call (740)385-7671.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
New 2006 Clayton sin- Drive from $349 to S«S.
gl!!wldeS starting,at $199.84 Walk to M'lop &amp; movies. Call
per month. Trede·lns wei· 740·446·2568. · .
Equal
comes. Coli {740)385-2434. Housing Opportunity.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse

apartments,

Commercial building ~For
Sate• 1600 square teet, off

New roofl Motlvaled Sellerl

-...........
...,..__

lm~;,;;~F.~ARM;,;;;,;;;;;;;;;
.

:===

·-·=iiliiiiiiiliiiii.-"
'

Mobile Home Park 1n bath , upstairs. clean, . no DUMPS
OH.
Phone pet&amp;. Ref/deposit required . •ALUIIA
Gallipoli s.

......... LIB.
'

•A.LUIIINUM

(740)446·2003 or (740)446- :_
{7_40.,:)446
__
·1-51_9_ _ _ _ TRAILERS 'B&amp;W GOOSE-

Il:::O
r9.~~~--"""" Gracious living. 1 ard 2 bad-

'-------,J
RFAI. FsrATE

WANJlll

NECK
HITCHES.
room apa11ments at Vllago COrmlchool Equlpmont
Manor and
Alverolda (14014*2412

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Apartments in Middleport. 490 0 Excavator 79 Ford

cen buy you1 home. AUcash New 28A epartments.
and quick closng. 740-416· Washer/dryer
hookup, hrs. 1or

sate

or

2BR

Apartmen1s. Wa1e1. tors 00% Fired 'for 31

Trast'1 . Sewer paid. $425/mo montht througt'1 John
plu s deposit
1740)682 - Deere Credit Carmichae l

9243 1740)988·6130

•

Equ•pme~t (7 40)446 -24 12

Et.ctricll&amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters
VInyl Sieling &amp; Painrlng

Patio and Porc:h O.Ckl
WV036725

vour~G
4~2 fl~'

\I

•'

,

,1

111

~

P('"''£"~1
,

, . ..,
&gt;

l

o•

'

'GRIZZWELLS
·~IT 19!-I'T tt\'t\1'\.lt'Ai~l;l. P\El$:1(1('('•. I ~

::~"'~~
::ul' 1b •• ,...----"'

.

prwvlously

•. .t!Dttm~ '*\AI ~E
~1&lt;\t "'1'\1-\E ·r--....~

22 Sir'

llt8s

1 CNmoun1
2 Egnll kin
3 Olpn

cry

4 Fountain

people .

26 w.ddlng

-~

23 Cloao
friend

te81urea

24 Saba au -

· 42 Ragamuffin
44Monks'
quartet·s
&lt;15 Verdi opus

46 Pori&lt; cut

25 Smoo1h the
way O.arhltng
treats .
VIetnam
5 Bron., and 26 Declare
neighbor
Iron
frankly
Uke 111in
6 Fair g1'11de 27 Talks 1o a
heal
1o1eeta
7 "llu~
Highland
Show holt 28 Grime
·
8 Neutrtd or 31 Lotion
Luau lire
flrat
addRive
01'11811' .,.. 9 Jean Auel · 33 Serena to
Removes
heroine .
Venue
lrom power 10 Talk up
35 Strong and

30
32
34

36
41

47 Technl..l
sch.
48 Hum
49 Take on

50 Wleaol of
tnorlllft

51 Soap 1*1
b11tnd
54 VeiYIIy

. aurflce

1..-+-+--

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetdy ~ ~!IJI!i are aea!8i trom qlllllatlons by IIWTIOUS peoJM, pest !nd lfeMnl
EICtllenelln the ~ slaMs !of anoller

TO/Ia'(Sclue: 0 equal.! C

'YGI YE LVI OVOGIOZLYGIZ YE YXD
FGCXZLDN,
K IE L."

-

TGC

LVIOI

Z V F 0 KIN

•

TOIG ' L BTGN

MY G I Z,

Y E S K I•G G

EYDC
PREVIOUS SOLUTKlN - ' lam in love wilh Mozart ... Ihave {him) lo !hank
that I did not die wtlhout haVIng lOlled." - Soren Ki~rl&lt;egaard

Ulll
'::~:~~,
S@"\\ct\~-L&amp;t-~s·
'
Ct.AT l I'OlWI.....;_ _ __

WOIO

.

Eolitt~ ~~

QlearrDIIQI

'-tlort of lite
lour Kt'omS~ words bo·
low •o l01m foor simple -dt.

I .GR I F T H
2

I

I 1 I I I
BAJ T0

I

I

l

~

NI P 0 E

•Acynic," my optimistic siso ter said, ' is someone who
~
- doesn't believe in anything, and
. - - - - - - - - - . .vants everyone to share in that

1-.,.;i~,:_:;..Ei. .:l:.,I,.: L. .:A~ . :.T. ,IG,. .-l 0~:~~~. . "'• 'h"'"• quo,;d
.

•

•

_

.

bv Mlrng ir~ the

_

m15s.n9

word1

L.....L....J-...1......1-.I....J you develop from step Nq. J befo-.

e ":~U:i~sl!III'S I' I' l r I' ,. I
IN

6 UN5CIAM8l( AIOV( l(ll!RS 1111111
10 G!T ANSWII

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS IIVI'IJ()(,

Addict- Gravy- Prnch ·Marshy· PAY CASH
Shaking his head the husband stghed to h1s w1fe. "In
thi~ dav and aoe vou nPed a credit card to PAY CASH "

ARLO&amp; JANIS
W£'R£ WAITIIJtl WHII£

THE

THE PEIJALTY 15 ~EVIEWE.D
0~ TAPW REJ'tA'(

~EPLAY

OFFICIAL

HAf&gt; OV£~TURIJW

THE. CALL Oill'T\iE. FIE.t.D.'!

j

j

'

740-992·1189

-------

'

WE.'~ G:DIIJG TO HAVE

!?&gt;liT WAIT-1HAT RULitJG

If~ ~IIJG CHALLUlCIE.Ot

/

'

,.

ARE.PLA'f Df1HE RE.PI.AY...

J

oon~lder«&lt;.

SOUPTONUTZ
I keeP 141&amp;1&lt;iN G
INTo R:iL.eS .

Painting
Gutters - Decks- Etc.
Remooltliq
ForFostC....,_.
Service
Free Estimates &amp;
Affordable Prices,
Call Dennis Boyd

llom&lt;&gt;dol.,g
-Gantgeo

v c.

SEAL IT
CONSTRUCTION

.

Rooling-Sidlna·

Room Addition• &amp;

h1re .

st"""""trogarator Included. {740)388·8228 "' (7 40)44&amp;
Also. uM! on SA 160. Pets 7278.
•
Woloomel {740)441 ·0194
New ...1ot1n Deere Compacts
Now taking OllPlioationi ror and 5000 Series lltility tree-

'

YOUNG'S

From S295·S44&lt;. C.H 740· 9000 Aogers Lovmoy.
Need to sell your hOme?
992·5064.
Equal Houolng (740)«68044, {740)441·
Late on payments. diVOfe&amp;,
Opponunltles.
7514.
)OD transfer or a OO&amp;tn" 1
3130

GEMINI {May 21-June 20) - An interesting shift in conditions In the romance
· department could be &amp;waiting you . If you
haven't been too lucky in this area lately,
this could be the very day things will turn
around .
•
'CANCER {June 21. -July 22) Obstacles that seemeC!. impossible to get
past and that have Impeded your
progress for achieving the types of
rnults you've wanted may finally be lift·
ed. There 's light at the end ol the tunnel.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - The more
numerous your Involvements, the happl·
er you're likely to be . Your mental tacu l·
tin ·~ active and alive right now. and
they need loti of variety In order to be
fully uttafled.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Because
you're not likely to put llmlti.Uon&amp; Oil
choices you have When shopping, ~ou ' ll
be open to •potting better aources and
oUUeta tor acquisition that you hadn't

GARFIELD

atre8t par1&lt;ing. Great location! 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Price "Negotiable"

and/or smoll housM FOA
Mobllo Homo Lot lor nea1 Vin1on. Call {740~ 1· RENT. Coli {740)441 -1111 'KIEFER BUILT "VAUEV
for applmion &amp; lnfomlo!ion. 'BISON '110RSE &amp; LIVE·
1111.
S10CK TRAILERS 'LDAO.
Mobile Home Lol ;:-~Johnson Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp; IIAX

i

60 Oeckln
11 Insect rosin
tttanh~
37 "Road pic·
81 Onca-- 11 Pedestal
20 Eunoalan
lures name
range
. 40 Ganarllor
DOWN

for all

Great used 3BA home only BEAUTIFUL
$9,995. Will help wttl\ deliv- IIENT$. AT

r

Orch~lka

now.r

59 Hill bllllder

23 New1p1per

Get the opponents .
· to give you a hand

new ml!ly awaken within you, making vou
more assertive than usual in promoting
your personal interests. You'll do so wtthout being pushy or offensive to anyone.
SCORPIO {Oct 24·N011. 22) -Take the
time to get in touch with your Innermost
feelings, and ,you'll lind just what you're
looking for to resolve something that's
been disturbing you. The truth is in ft'lere.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -This
is an opportune day where many posSibilities tor meeting new. tun people exist.
Be sure to get out and mingle, because
the door is open lor dewloping many
good relatiOnships.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - The
odds are greater than usual tor you when
it comes to activities or situations that
contain competitive elements. Believing
yoo have a chance to be a winner is all it

PEANUTS
11

57 Shopping

21 ..:. V~g~~

39

actlvata your desires to lead I~ situations .
where you once were content to follow.

70 Pine Street • Galllpolls

• Plumbing • Elecoical 7.to-317..oloM
• Accoustic Ceiling
740-S31441i

56

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ot. 23) - Somelhlng

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

WV 031112
OH 31244

17 G.-Ish
malonl
19 Wall
decoflllon

36

!loturdoy, Oct. 21, 2006
By Bernice 8ede O.ol
A new strengthening of who you are and
where you want to go in life may occur. t1
oould give you greater Independence to

THISH

r]amihJ_ c.J:Hri:t:• "

Reoldentlol• Commerdol • General Coob'odi"l
Painting • Doors • Windows • Docb
• Sir;Jing • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodelin&amp;

56 Bad-mouth

Opening lead: • J

'lbur'llrlhdlw:

We Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
•·Helios System .

....

Kilauea

15 Vanillin
16 More thin

2t Detective's

Astro-.
Graph
X'l1
ALfi.E.AI:&gt;Y
FAMILIAR
loltTH

Ranch Style Home, Yost
Aoad wl1h 2 Acres. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage,
enclolled breezeway. Pool

Q4

South
l •

~IG NATE

IIPIITS
Athena

55 POll near

n~q~~lrement

spades. one hean, three diamonds and
lwo clubs) and 10·12 · suppon points
(here, 10 in high cards and one lor the
.doubleton spade) . South has too many
losem1o' contemplate a slam.
You have nine top tricks: three spades,
five hearts and one club. You could try for
two club tricks by leading toward your
queen. Yoo could also hope 10 get a dia·
mond trick. But ~you have to play on diamonds, you will nonmall)' lose three
tricks In 1he sui!. Instead, cell on those
friendly opponents to halp )IOU.
Draw trumps, cash the other lwo lop
spades, discarding a club from the
board, then play a club to the ace ard
another club. Whoever wins the trick will
be endplayed. If he leads.a spade or a
club, you ruft on the board lor your extra
trick, discarding a diamond loser from
your hend . II he braaks open diamonds,
you play sooond hand low Bnd must
scora a trick In 1h&lt;i suit.
When9\'8r you have O·x-x opposlle J-xx, try to force an oppooent to lead 1he
suit .

Racine, Ohio
45771

11Nt .... papr wfll not

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1969 Airstream (Tagalong)
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South

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NEA Crossword Puzzle

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•

- ·---- -------.,--- - - - - - - - - ---'

�•

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 20, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

An inside look at this week's game

• The Lima Nrws jlboto8

BCS playing more prominent role for OSU?.
As anyone who has watched
. . Ten
. Overall
WL Pet. WL Pet.
4 0 1.000 7 0 1.000

'-"'
Michigjln

Ohio.....
WISOOOSin 3 1

3 0 1.000 7 0 1.000

Purdue

21
21
22
22
12
Mich. State 0 3
N'westem 0 3
Minnesota 0 4
Indiana
IOMI
Fenn State
INinois

.750 · 6 1
.667 5 2
.667 4 3
.500 5 2
.500 4 3
.333 2 5
.000 3 4
.000 2 5
.000 2 5

• II III!IH\

.857
.714
.571
.714
.571
.286
.429
.286
.286

. • ii\11 '•

Indiana at Ohio State, noon
Wlsoonsin at Purdue; noon
Micllieln State at N'westem, noon
Illinois at Penn State, noon
Iowa at Michigan, 3:30 p.m.
N. DBIClla St. at Mi 111SJ1a, 3:30 p.m.
It ·lilt I I 1111 1!'.

Purdue ................................471.7
lowa .................................... 409.0
WisconSin ............................392.0
Ohio State ..........................391.6
Michigan State .................... 382.3

Rushing Ol'rense
WISCOnSin ............................ 189.9
Illinois ..................................187. 7
Michigan ........................... :.. 184.3
Michigan State .................... 175.3
Minnesota .......................... 169.9

Palla Olr&amp;.-.e
Pun:lue ................................327.1
lowa ................................... -244.3
Ohio State ..........................235. 7
llldiln8 ................................ 216.6
Penn State ..........................213.1

Tollll DefeiiSe
Wisconsin ............................240.0
Michigan ............... ::.............241.3
Ohio State .......................... 286.0,
. Penn State ..........................289.1
1Uinois ...................................314.7

lUll Dafflnse
Michigan ................................32.6
Penn State ............................84.7
Ohio State .......................... 110.1
Wi$00n5in ..........'.................. 116.9
, Michigan State.....................132.6

Pass Defense
WISCOnSin ............................123.1
Ulinois .............. ,................... 174.3
Ohio State .......................... 175.9
lowa .................................... 197.9
Penn State ..........................204.4
INIII\11111 1\1 II /IIIII!',

Rushing Yards
PJ. HiH, Wisconsin ................ 1,011
Mike Hart, Michigan ................906
Tony Hunt, Penn St. .. .............. 702
Antonio Pittman, Ohio 6t ........ 673
Amir Pinnix, Minnesota ............ 650
Dassh~Yards

Curtis Painter, Purdue .......... 2,218
Troy Smith, Ohio State .......... 1,495
OrewTate,lowa ....................1,481
Blyan Cupito .... ;................... 1,398
John Stocco, Wisconsin ........ 1,389

Aile a~ Yards
Darien Blyant, Purdue .............. 545
Mario~. Michigan.... 527
Anlhony Gonmlez, Ohio St. ........ 522
Dustin 1'4!1er, Purdue ................ 520
Ted Ginn Jr., Ohio St. ................ 517

S.. 2
$ept.9
Sept: 16
Sept 23
Sept 30
Oct 7
Oct 14

N. lllinois
@Texas

W 35-12

W24-7
w37.7

Cindmati

Penn State
@ kMe
Bov.iif'C Green
@ Mich. State ·

W 28-6

w38·17

w35-7

W 38-7

SA1'UIDIIY ......
Oct 28

M~

Nooi. 4
Nooi. 11
Nooi. 18

@ Illinois
@ Northwesll!rrr

Micl9n

.

-

Jim
Naveau
The Uma News
jnaveau@limanews.com

419-993-2087
The conclusion is inescapable. Tressel must have
decided the BCS is his
friend. He must hav~decided
that there is some advantage
in allowing the players.to
talk just a little bit about getting to the national championship game.

SATURDAY'S
OPPONENT: INDIANA
.
'

·~-

~...,

(4 ~ 3, 2 ~ 1 BIG

-

-

1BA
1BA
3:30p.m.

Con1ent CO! I !piled by Jin) ,.,.._.. and
desijJl by Jeff Brao.xl • 11-e Uma Ne¥.5
~ c 200611-e Uma News. Reproduction cl all or lll'tf portion cl this material
is pmhibiled v.llhout 8ipleSS consent

-

TEN)

•

-

A look at some of the key matchups in the · redshlrt or 11\Je freshmen on the Hoosiets
Ohio State also has room fur improve· defi!me and 10th in quartelback sac1&lt;s wili,
game between No. 1 Ohio State (7-0, 3-0
roster, has 22 catches fur 240 yards. Ray
ment It ranks ninth in the Big Ten in rushing 10, compared to Ohio State's 24 sacks.
Big Ten) and Indiana (4-3, 2-1 Big Ten):
FISher, a truefieshmanfrom Cleveland
yards per game.
OSU is third in~ lea@Je in rushing~·
Advantage: Ohio State
Advantage: Ohio State
QulrtertNM:ks
GlerMIIe ~ School, has caugtt 16 passes.
Ohio State.'s Anthony Gonzalez is a rarity Defensive line
Unebackers
When Indiana's ltellen LeMs was a senior among receivers. He likes to go over the
Tackle QJiim Pitcock has 7* quarterback
Ohio State's linebackers make plays :
in hilfl school, Indiana and """""" Michi!Jin middle on pass. routes: Gonzalez and Ted were the onty NCAA DMsioo~to &lt;tfer Ginn Jr. each have had two games of more sacks. His teammates on the offensi\E line
against the running game and the passing
game. Indiana is more one dimensional.
him a scholarship to play quarterback.
than 100 yards receMng. The Penn State say they hate to block against him in praclice.. Facing Indiana's }OJilg offensil.e line, he OSU's James l.aurinaitis, Marcus Freeman
Mer ttl~ fur 255 yards and three
game is the only one on the Buckeyes'
&lt;wid have the same look in his E¥lS as
and John l'err have combined for 115
tou&lt;:lldow'1s in a 31-28 upset of laNa last
.schedule where at least one of them has
~ 'NCIIkir'€ into a stea141ouse fur the
.tackles, four sacks and six pass intertepSaturday, he probably has a few more believ- not caught a touchdovn'l pass. Three of
first time &lt;!fterthey just gave up a llief attions. Indiana's top three linebackers e!S. leY.is, a redshirt freshman, has started
Brian Robiskie's 16 catches have
temptatberlga~.
Geno Johnson, Josh Bailey and Adam Mcfw ~ silce taking !M!I' fur the iflured
been for touchdowns.
__....~;.._
OSU's other starting defensive
Clurg have combined for 107 tackles,
Blake R:lwels,last yea-'s starter.
Advant ' : Ohio State
tackle llavid Patterson missed
three sacks and no interceptions.
R:lwels 1hrew for 221IlUchc:lc1Mls and
Off-.he lllle
last week's ~me because of
Laurinaitis had a 16-yard sack on Michi2,305 yards last season but hasn't been
arthroscopic
knee
surgeiY.
His
gan
Stijte quarterback Drew Stanton and
able to~ his job. l..eMs has 1,138 yards
Ohio State tackle~
status
for
Saturday
is
uncerFreeman
got his seeond interception of
passing and five TO passes.
Barton says he feels
tain but he will probably be
the year in that game.
·TIUf Smith p!t:Ned his arm isn't the only
like "a newman"
area where he possesses much al:l!Ml aver- after a laser proceheld out another week. If~
Allvantage: Ohio State
age stren@l Vvt1en he threw a touchdoY.fl.
dure on his foot tv.Q
is, Joel Penton could get h1s
Defensive backs
pass to Brian Robiskie with a Mich~ State weeks li3J. Indiana,.
second strai!tlt start. .
Indiana has allowed 15 touchdown
defender v.mpped around his leg; last Satur- on the other hand,
The Hoosiers rank last in the passes, the second-hi.-..,. total in the Bi"
day. Smith, v.ro has completed 68 percent
has plenty of new men
.
Big Ten in
Ten after Michigan Sta'f'e~~iana coach ""
of his passes, continues to hold the unofficial on its offensil.e front
rushing
Teny Hoeppner called pass defense the
lead in the race fur the Heisman Trophy.
T\\0 true fieshmen,
most disappointing part of the defense
Advantage: Ohio state
tackleRo®l'
after Wisconsin's John Stocco completed
Stafford (four ca15 of 17 passes fur 304 yards and three
Running backs
reer starts) and
touchdowns
ear1ier this season.
Onio State's Antonio Pittman (673 ycrds)
@.lard ~Saxon
Tracy
Porter
has three interoeptions for
suffered a sprained ankle ear1y but returned
(one career start)
the
Hoosiers.
Safety
WiH Meyers has tv.o
to action in a 38-7 win CM!I' Michigan State
could start
interceptions and is the team's leading
last Saturday. Coach Jim Tressel said he
Fifth-year setackler with 46.
should be OK this week. Pittman has scored nior Justin Frye at
Ohio State's secondary has survived the
in 12 strai~ games after ~ng only one
center is the only
departure of all four of last year's starters
TO the first 17 games he played in col~.
experienced offenand a season-ending knee injury to startIndiana's top running back v.oold Plllba·
sive linemen for the
ing safety Anderson Russell. The BuckIllY be No. 4 on Ohio State's depth chart
Hoosiers, which helps
eyes have allowed only five passing
behind Pittman, Chris VI/ells and Maurice
scores this season.
explain v-lny IU is last in
Wells. Marcus Thigpen, a converted reAdvantage: Ohio State
the Big Ten in rushing ofceiver, has the most carries, 58, but has
fense and ei!tlth in quarSpecill Teams
gained only 202 yards, with 44 of those
terback sacks aii&lt;J'M!d.
Indiana kicker Austin Starr has
coming on one carry. Josiat) Sears, a 238hit 7 of 9 field goal attempts.
pound fullback, has 225 yards on 36 carOhio State's Aaron Pettrey is 5 of
ries. Sophomore Demetrius McCray gained
8. Thigpen has returned three
Ohio
84 yards on13 canies against Iowa Vvt1en
kickoffs for touchdowns and teamThigpen sat out because of an ankle injury.
receiver Ted
mate
Tracy Porter has taken a punt
Advantage: Ohio state
GimJr.
backforam. .
.
Receivers
Michigan State kicked to ~inn and
Indiana's James Hardy missed the first tv.o
paid the price tast week when he regames of the season because of a May arturned a punt 60 yards for a touchdown.
rest for domestic battery. He had three
His six career punt returns for TDs are a
touch&lt;:tcfM1 catches last Saturday against
Big Ten record and he is tWo off the
Iowa and has four lP rereptions among his
national record .
21 catches this season. Nick Polk, one of 49
Advantage: Ohio Stale

state

Jim Naveau's
Player of 'the Week.
WR -Ted Ginn Jr.
Ginn broke the Big Ten .record by returning a
punt for a touchdown for the sixth time in his
career in a 38-7 win over Michigan State.

"-'
3:30p.m.

-

'

oos1ers

.

.
Tollll OlliaiiM

~

th~ transformation of Troy
Smith into a clone of Jim
TresSel when he talks with
the media knows, Ohio
State's football team speaks
with many vocal cords but
only one voice.
And that voice belongs to
their coach.
SQ, it is interesting to see
that this year's Buckeyes
seem more willing to discuss
the Bowl Championship Series standings than their former teammates were in 2002
and2003.

Ohio State was at the top of ''We know where we are, we've was talking abOut it.
"I look at it like this: As long
the first BCS standings of the been there since Day 1. We just
have to take care of business." as we keep winning and stay • ·
season, which were anNo. 1 in the BCS, it doesn't
In 2002, there were weeks
. nounced on Sunday.
OSU has been a serious con- Tressel simply refused to dis- matter who is No. 2. I kind of
cuss the BCS. One time at his like it when all the nation iS
tender to get to the BCS naweekly news conference on a watching. I think this team
tional championship game
performs pretty well in big • ·
Tuesday he said he hadn't
three times in the last five
years- when it won the title in even seen the BCS standings, games. We've always stepped
up to the challenge," the se- ,
2002, in 2003 and this season. which hl!d been announced
nior defensive back said.
.
Time travel back to 2003 and 24 hours earlier.
In the past, Tressel seemed
In 2003, he said fans talkhere's what A.J. Hawk said
to have directed his players to
when asked when he would
ing about the BCS was good
use a 23-letter alphabet, subthink about the BCS: "Maybe but added, "It's just no~ a
after the Michigan game."
good thing if our players are . tractingthe "B," the "C," and
the "S". This year, it looks like
But earlier this week, offentalking about it."
Tuesday, Brandon Mitchell he's letting them use all 26.
sive t:acJde Kirk Barton said,

Say what?
"Third and long is
third and Gonzo."
-Ohio State receiver Brian Hartline, about
the fact 29 of teammate Anthony Gonzalez 's
34 catches have been for fi rst downs or TDs .

Ohio State Leade1 s
Toudlclowns .
11 C·Yards
Troy Smith .......... 1,495 Ted Ginn Jr. .. .............. 7

P

James Laurinaitis ....... .4
Tllclcles
Sacks
Antonio Pittman ...... 673 James l.aurinaitis ...... 59 Quinn Pitcock .............. 7
Ale ituiiiC 'illnll
PuntrelumafurlD
Field . . .
Anthony Gonzalez .... 522 Ted Ginn Jr. ................ 1 Aaron Pettiey .............. 5

RuiNrC Yards

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: Who holds the
Ohio State record
for most canies
ina game?

2: How many hi!tl school
state wrestling titles
did former Buckeyes
defensive lineman
Tim Anderson win?

3: How many hi!tl
school state v.restling
titles did Ohio State
assistant coach
Luke FICkell win?

" ' - : 1. Champ Henson, 44 against Nortllwestem in 1972

2. Two

3. Three

days until kickoff

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Th~ Dai,ly S~nti~el

I

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