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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydai lysentinel.com

Syria says Islamic
militant leader killed
in suicide attack at
wbanon-Syria border, A2

Thesday, November 28,2006

~----------------~------~,

'

Gizmos and Gadgets is created by Michael Underhill

'

Only

'

26

· day til Christmas

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,"jn ( I\IS•\ol.:;h. '\ n.Sr

SPORTS
Wall mounted for
convenience

BY BRIAN J. REED

$10.45, for senior citizens.
Rumpke submitted bids of
$13 .48 and .$12.0, and
~DDLEJ&gt;&lt;?RT
. Eblin's Garba~e Serv.ice of
Middleport VIllage Council Bidwell subnutted bids of
approved a new contract for $15.50 and "$14.50.
refuse service with Rumpke
Mayor Sandy lannarelli
of Ohio
at
Monaay · said the Marcum bid was
eve';ling's regular meeting.
rejected, although it was the
Bids were ~ned at the low bid, because it. did not
Nov. 13 meeting. Marcum meet some specifications set
and Sons · Trucking of fonh in the bid documents,
Thurman was the low bid- including
specifications
der, with bids of $11.95 per regarding the types of trucks
month, per customer; and ·used to collect refuse.

· season opener.

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTlNELCOM

SeePIIgeB1

BIO MICE TOOTHPASTE DISPENSER
Motivating cheese is exposed when button G) is
pressed. Mouse then turns roller
which
·draws in tube, which squeezes a J:&gt;recise amount of
. ' paste onto brush.

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RtJJJtpke awarded Middleport refuse bid

•lady 'Eagles fall in

~izmos &amp;~a~~eh

\\l'll'\l-.ll\,,'\()\I· \1BI-R:!l) .:!OOh

·

The current contract with
Rumpke expires on Jan . I .
Rumpke offered an alternative bid, without alley service , at a lower cost.
Residential customers pay
the cost of refuse collectiOn,
and a monthly administrative fee. Business customers
may choose their own refuse
service.
In other business, council
adopted three new ordinances, following their third
readings. The first ordinance
•

approved limits the size of ordinance also prohibits
political signs to 12 square mobile homes and any manfeet or less , and requires . ufact ured building in the
Houchins voted
their removal within 10 days CBD.
of Election Day.
against the measure. ·
The second ordinance
Council also passed a resc
approved requires a $50 olution removing inactive
deposit from those using accounts from the public
picnic
shelters
and. works department records .
Councilman
Robert
restrooms in village parks .
Houchins voted against the · Robinson asked about holiordinance.
day bonuses for village
The third reading defines employees. lannarelli said
pennitted land use in the
central business district. The
....... see Bid, AS

Plans being developed for
both new and remodeled SHS
said when OSFC developed
free plans for both a new
high school and remodeling
RACINE - The Ohio of the existing building last
School
Facilities year the costs for each ('TOCommission (OSFC) will be ject was around $7 million .
developrng plans for both a This meant the district
new
and
remodeled would be responsible for
Southern .High School · roughly $3.5 million for .a
though the entire process remodeled building and $2
remains in a preliminary million for a new facility.
stage.
.
A new facility would be
· Each year the OSFC smaller than the existing
picks five schools to ~ssist high school and would . be
m bmldmg a new facthty or connected to 'the existmg
improving an existing build- Southern
Elementary
ing . OSFC chose Southern ' School. The size of a new
last year though the distri.ct building is based on the
deferred the assistance and school's enrollment.
placed its name ~ack in the
Miller said if the school
pool for 2007 and was cho- board approved one of the
.
two new plans it would have
sen once again.
One re.astJn why the drs - until November 2008 to
trict deferred OSFC's assis- place a bond issue on the
tanoe for tlus year was the ballot to raise funds.
fact that funding for the pro- Construction would likely
ject was not I 00 percent. begin in 2009 and last
The OSFC provides basical- around three years.
The school board recently
ly 50 percent funding for a
remodel and 72 percent approved the development
funding for a new school. of another master facilities
Both options require the dis- plan(s) by the OSFC which
trict to raise the remainder doesn't cost the district any
of the money through a bond money. Miller added by
·
having the plans developed
issue.
Southern Looal Schools
Superintendent Mark Miller
Ple•se-1~ SHS, AS
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

Making Dentistry
fun since 1998

Wort&lt;s best with
Gizmos &amp; Gadgets Brand
Toothpaste

To advertise in this space call
The Daily Sentinel
992-2155

m. underhill

OBrruARIES
Page AS
• Mal'tNl Greenaway
•Tim Justis
• Caro1yn Sue 'Susie'

021
MOUTH

Heines

··~

I \\

INSIDE
.

.....,

• Gunbattle with U.S.
soldith 1eaves six dead in

Iraq - including an infant.
See Plge A2

• TOPS recognizes
.losers. See Page A3
• Open house planned.

.f\fter drawing the nose, add the "stash"
(that shape that goes under and.behind the
nose), the cheeks and lower lip.
These four shapes create the mouth, and
smile lines. Don't just draw a ho.le
for the mouth.

SeePigeA3
•Lambert honored by
Salem TownSh" VFD.
SeePigeAS
• 7 exoguaros d'larged
with ITl8RSlalqlter in boot .
.C8J11) deallh.

Note how the lip stash anti chin overlap
the cheek on the right side. This creates a
three dimensional look

Can you help Winky find the cheese, :
two flags and her car keys ?
•

SeePigeAS

lcaQed kids' trial guily of
love. See Plge M
• Mother aJreSted on
suspicion of killing baby in
· microwave. See.,. A6

WEATIIER
'

'

water piston

•"J

Each column,row and square must u~ #s 1,2,5.&amp; 8, plus the
diagonal must add up to the- shown.(diagonals can repeat ts)

INDEX
2 SECnONS -

•®®ee~o

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·eu~~e.o
i love the
holidays

®El~
'•

.

OF MUSEUM EXHIBIT
HOEFLICH4!&gt;MYOAILYSENTINE,.COM

POMEROY - A display
of nativity scenes is being
featured at the Meigs
County Museum for the
enjoyment of those attending the
19th annual
Christmas dinner Friday
evening along with other
muSeum visitors during the
holidays.
, The 6:30 p.m. dinner of
the Meigs · County Pioneer
and Historical Society will
be served in the Howard and
Geneva Nolan Annex which
provides ground level
entrance and has been extensively decorated for the season . Dinner reservations are
needed by Thursday .
Entertainment following
the dinner will be provided
by the French Chorders
quartet after which those
attending will be invited to

Staff photo

The Meigs County Community Improvement Corporation presented a gun to George Collins. left, who recently retired as
deputy director, District 10, ODOT. With Collins are Steve story,
center, who emceed the retirement party and Roscoe Mills.
Nativities in porcelain, ceramic, wood and glass fill the display cases in a downstairs.room at the Me igs Museum .
the Mus,eum for the opening nativity will be a feature of
of the nativity exhibit.
the ex hibit along wi th perA
large
decor ated
•
•
Christmas tree and wooden
Plea.e see Exhibit, AS

Authorities seeking tips in slaying

When the crank is tumed will
the sign move up@or down@

I!JUU~·

N~fiVI'fY
SCENES FEATURE
.
Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH

: • Cafaro, Wilson's son
tapped to fiR Ohio Senate
vacancies. See hge A6
• Attorney: parents in

.~

Hoelllch/photos
Mary Grace Cowdery displays a collection of nativities which her husband, Ron, brought
· back from his mission trips to Nicaragua. They will remain on display at the Meigs Museum
for the holiday season.
Charlene

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.....

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bird filling 7

BY KEviN
12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

dassifieds

83-4

Comics

B5

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

•

Sports

B Section

Weather

A6

© &amp;006 Oldo v.u..,. Publiohina eo •

..

Kw.v

KKELLY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
An
investigation into the slaying
of a Vinton man earlier this
month remains active as the
Gallia County Sheriff's
Department continues looking into possible leads and
conducting interviews, said
Capt. John Perry, the department's chief deputy.
"There is no doubt it was a
homicide," Perry said.
Details on the autopsy conducted on
54-year-old
William E. Sowers are not
being rel eased because
revealing the cause of death

CIC Jwnors retiring ODOT
district deputy director
BY CH ...RLENE HOEFLICH
MOEFLICH@)MYDAILYSENTINEL.CQM

POMEROY - In tribute
to George Co llins and in
recognition of hi' accomat this time would "negative- 1221·: the lead investigator,' pli shments as District 10
ly impact" the investigation, Detective Chad Wallace, at Deputy Director of the Ohio
he added.
446-46 (4 ; 'the sheriff's tip Department
of
As the probe progresses. I ine at 446-6555: and at the Transportation (ODOTJ, the
Perry has requested the pub- sheriff's website. www.gal- Meigs County Communi'ty
lic's assistance with any liasheriff.com . ,
Improvement Corporalion
infonnation surrounding the · The probe into the slaying honored him with a retire.
slaying of Sowers. who was - the first in Gallia County ment party.
found dead in his Mount since·· December 2004 The event for -Col lins wa'
'began when Sower5 · exheld
Monday night at the
Tabor Road residence on wife, who had attempted
Nov. 17 ·
contacting him for severa l Pomeroy Gun Club with
"We certainly believe this day,, went 1o his rc&gt;idence Steve Story a' emcee. Story.
was not a stranger-on- and found his
body. long involved on the Route
reques1ed 33 Committee with the
stranger affair," Perry said . In vestigators
" Somebody knows some- a'sislance from the slate Southea,tem Ohio Regional
acknowledged
thing and we welcome any Bureau
of
Criminal Council.
tips."
·
Identification
and Coll-ins' role in developing
Information can be relayed Please see Homicide. AS the Darwin to Athen' 'uper-2
highway project.
to the sheriff's office at 446-

Other tributes came from
Rep. Jimmy S\ewart, 92nd
District. who presented him
with a proclamation from the
Statehouse. Bernard Fultz
who spoke about his honesty.
integrity. and accessibility,
and ODOT Meigs County
Manager Brett Jones who
read a personalleuer of commendation for accomp lishments from his father.
Richard Jones , whose health
n1ade it impossible for him to
attend.
Stephanie Filson. District
I0 ODOT pub Iic information
onicer. talked aboUI what it
ha, been like to work with
Collins. KaretrSioan of Mike
De Wine'&gt; office commended him for his strides in
\Wrl--ing "With elected olfi -·

Ple•se see CIC. AS

�'

WoRLD

NATION •

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
Wednesday,nNm;«:nlher 24}, aoo6

Outreach
center
0~0 for
Chnstmas

Syria says Islamic militant leader killed in
suicide attack at Lebanon-Syria border
Bv ALBERT AJI
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

JDEIDET
YABOUS,
Svria - The Syrian leader
of an Islamic militant group
blew himself up Tuesday
after trying to cross into
Lebanon and. engaging in a
gunbattle with Syrian border forces. Two border .
guards were wounded.
The incident raises questions about the security of
.the Lebanese-Syrian frontier, which Israel contends
is a gateway for weapons to
rearm Hezbollah militants.
· 'It comes at a time of
increased
tension
in
Lebanon as the struggle
·intensifies between the antiSyria government and factions led by Hezbollah,
Syria's ally in Lebanon.
The
Syrian Interior
Ministry said in a statement
the clash began when Omar
Abdullah, 28. the leader of
the Tslamic militant group
Tawhid and Jihad, was challenged when he tried to
cross into Lebanon with
· fake documents.
A witness said Abdullah
was standing outside th1 passpolt control building when
security agents approached.
He opened ftre with a handgun, wounding two guards,
then ran toward the nearby
village of Kfeir Yabous about
500 yards away.
More security forces
arrived, started shooting and
apparently hit the gunman,
said the witness, who spoke
on condition of anonymity
out of fear of reprisals. He
said the attacker raised' one
hand in a gesture of surrender, but used the other to
detonate an explosives belt.
Blood could be seen
splattered on the rocky terrain nearby.
The Interior Ministry said
•

,.,.,......
Traffic at Jdeidet Yabous crossing into Lebanon, 56 km west of the Syrian capital Damascus on Tuesday, a few hours after
Omar Abdullah, the military commander of the (Islamic) Tawheed and Jihad organization blew himself up at the crossing.
Abdullah known also as Omar Hamra clashed with Syrian Security forces at the crossing and wounded two of them as he
was trying to cross the border with Lebanon using fake identity documents. After a clasn he ran away some 500 meters
and blew himself up with an explosive belt.
nine fake identification doc- mer's·war.
Tuesday's clash took
uments . were found on
Abdullah, who also used the ·place about seven minutes'
drive from the Lebanese
name Omar Hamra.
Syria has refused to allow border point of Masnaa, on
international forces to mon- the highway linking Beirut
itor the mountainous region with
Syria's
capital,
along its shared borderwith Damascus.
Lebanon.
Israel
says
It was not clear whether
improving border security is Abdullah intended to puTy
key
to
.preventing out a suicide bombinj!l in
Hezbollah, which is backed Lebanon or whether he amted
by Syria and Iran, from to attack the border post.
rebuilding its arsenal,
A senior official with the
depleted during last sum· U.N. Interim Force in

.

Gunbattle with U.S. soldiers leaves six
dead in Iraq - including an infant
lv '04QMAI WAGNER

spokesman, said .efforts
were under way to "coordi·
nate and offer available
BAGHDAD·, Iraq- U.S. assistance to surviving fam·
soldiers fought with sus- ily members."
pected insurgents using a
A U.S. Marine died
buildin~ as a safe house in Monday in another area of
Ramadt on Tuesday, killing An bar l?rovince, the military
one Iraqi man and five said, rat sing to at least 2,881
· females , ranging in age the number of members of
from an infant to teenagers, the American mili'ary who
the U.S. military said.
have died since the beginRamadi, 70 miles west of ning of tbe Iraq war in
Baghdad, has been the scene March 2003, according to
of some of Iraq's fiercest an Associated Press count.
Iranian supreme leader
fighting between U.S. forces
and Sunni insurgents. It is Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
the capital of Anbar blamed the United States for
·province, where many Iraqi the chaos in Iraq, saying the
insurgents are ba~ed .
answer to the violence is the
The bloodshed came on a . withdrawal of foreign forces.
day "that saw sectarian vioBut following Khamenei 's
.lence kill nine other Iraqis comments, · the
U.N.
and wound about 50, police Security Council voted
. said. The bodies of 50 tor- unanimously to extend for
ture victims also were dis- one year the mandate of the
covered, most of them in 160,000-strong multinationBaghd;u;t and the city of a! force in Iraq.
Baqouba to the nonh, police
The council actc;di.ahead of
said. Several of the corpses a key meeting in Jordan
had been dumped at a bus between President Bush and
station or outside a govern- Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri alment building.
Maliki aimed at halting escaThe battle in Ramadi lating violence in the country
began when a U.S. patrol and paving the way for a
discovered a roadside bomb reduction of American troops. ·
in the Hamaniyah section of
The Security Council
the city, and two suspected responded to a request from
insurgents fled to a house, ai-Maliki , who said a top
where they took up positions government priority is to
on the roof, the .military said. assume full responsibility
. As coalition
forces . for security and stability
removed the bomb, the mil - throughout Iraq but that it
itants fired on the sol!liers, needs more time.
who fought bac k with
The Iraqi Parliament
machine guns and tanks. the voted to extend the counstatement said:
try's state of emergency
Afte rward.
coal it ioil through December, but the
forces searched the · house U.S. military warned of
and found the six bodies,. even worse · sectarian vicranging in age from an lence after last week's deadinfant to teenagers, the mil i- ly in surgent attack on
tary said. wi thout providing Shi ites in the capital.
ages. Another female was . Citing the , insurge nt
wounded but refused treat- attack that killed at least
215 people in Baghdad's
ment, it said.
One of the gunmen may Sadr City Shiite slum on
have been wou nded and Thursday,
Maj._· Gen.
removed from ~he scene by William B. Caldwell , a U.S.
other militant,. the state- mil itary spokesman, said
ment said, adding that there ai-Qaida in Iraq is deterwere no coalition casualties. mined
to
dominate
The military quoted resi- Baghdad, weaken the Iraqi
t,ent' as saying the building government and kill as
"was a known anti- Iraqi many Shiites as possible to
deepen Iraq·, &gt;ectarian
force safe hou,e."
Marine Lt . Col. Bryan di' is ions.
Salas.
a
military
"We expect to see elevat,t,SSOCI,t,T£D PRESS Y/RITER

•

ed levels of violence as a
result of this over the · neKt
several weeks," Caldwell
told reporters in the Green
Zone, the heavily fonified
section of Baghdad where
the Iraqi government arid
the U.S .· and British
embassies are based. ·
He also said that while
re¢ent j,olling has indicated
a "·large majority of Iraqis
feel more loyalty to their
democratically .elected government than to their set:t,
ethnic group or tribe, "these
numbers by themselves do
little to counter the violence
currently
raging
on
Baghdad 's streets."
The parliamentary vote
continues the state of emergency that allows a nighttime curfew and gives the
government extra powers to
make arrests without warrants and launch police and
military operaiioris. The
measures, in place everywhere except for the nolthern autonomous Kurdi sh
region, have been renewed
every · month since they
were first authorized in
November 2004.
Meanwhile, videotape
footage obtained by AP
Television News appears to
show the wreckage of a
U.S. single-seat F-16CG jet
in the farm field where it
crashed Monday and the
remains of an American serviceman wi th a tangled
parachute nearby.
U.S. forces investigating
the crash said insurgents had
reached the site before
American forces and the
pilot is missing. AI -Jaze~ra
satell ite television broadcast
similar pictures lylonday. but
declined to show the dead
pilot. saying the footage was
too graphic to air.
The U.S. Air Force jet
crashed aboul 20 mi les
northwest of Baghdad while
supporting
ex tensive
ground combat by coalition
force' in Anbar, the Air
Ct)mbat Command 'aid.

Lebanon emphasized the
area was Rot part of its mandate. "The Lebanese-Syrian
border is out of our area of
operations," said Milos
Strugar, senior adviser to
the U.N. force commatider.
"Therefore, we ·don't know
what · happened at the
Lebanese-Syrian
border
today."
. About 10,000 U.N. troops
are
positioned
along
Lebanon's border with
Israel since the force was

beefed up after the Aug. 14
cease-fire that ended fighting between Hezbollah and
Israel .
Syria is a transit route for
Arab militants intending to
tlo to Iraq to fight in the·
msurgency. The United
States has accused Syria of
failin$ to stop fighters from
crossmg into Iraq, but
Damascus has insisted it is
doing all it can to seal the
long desert frontier with

Iraq.

....

•
A't

Syrian President Bashar
Assad has warned of an
increasing teiii'Orist threat
against his country, sayiRg
ai-Qaida militants are taking refuge in neighboring
Lebanon. Assad's Lebanese
opponents say his. regime is
sending militants . into
Lebanon and ltaQ.
Tawhid and }ihad, the
Arabic for Monotheism and
Holy War, was the name
originally uSed by al-Qaida
in Iraq. Groups linked to alQaida and . those known to
sympathize with it have
used the name, but such a
group had not been known
to be operating in Syria.
The niost prominent militant group in Syria is Jund
al-Sham, but it is sometimes
called the Jund ai-Sham for
Jihad and Tawhid. ·
Islamic militants have
battled with Syrian security ·
forces several times in
recent years.
Most of those attacks
·were linked to Jund -alSham, an ai-Qaida offshoot
group that was established
in Afghanistan by Syrians,
Palestinians and Jordanians
with links to al-Qaida in
Iraq leader Abu Musab alZarqawi, who was killed in
a U.S. airstrike this year. ·
In the latest militaht
assault, four attackers and a
Syrian guard were killed
Sept. 12 when they tried to
bomb the heavily guw::ded
U.S. Embassy in Da.n'laseus.
Sunni Muslim extremist
groups, including al-Qaida,
fiercely oppose the Assad
government because of its
secular ideology. Assad's
father, the late President
'Hafez Assad, crushed a
Muslim
fundamentalist
uprising in the city of Hama
in 1982 that left thousands
of people dead.

••

•••

••

Stlllltiiltt. . pMte

Lambert (right) is pictured receiving a special appreciation plaque for his service to the
department from Ray Midkiff, current chief of the Salem Township Volunteer Fire Department.

Lambert honored by
Salem Township ·vm
SALEM CENTER Richard Lambert, former
chief of the · Salem
Township Volunteer Fire
Department, was recently
honored for his longtime

Students make a difference

.Planned
CHESTER - A 10-foot
tree .decorated in the
Williamsburg style is a focal
point of decorations of the
Chester Counhouse for the
annual open house this
weekend.
A variety of entertainment
will take place Saturday
afternoon with Chris Kuhn
and her Eastern Hand Bell
Choir
presenting
a.
Christmas concert followed
by The River's Blend, a barbershop quartet, along with a
Christmas carol sing-along.
Sunday's program will be
S..bn~ ptooto
the Children's Christmas
As a part of "Senior Make a Difference Day" these Athens High School students assembled Funtime to be held from 2 to
more than 400 patient information notebooks for the O'Bieness Medical/Surgical Department. 4 p.m. with panicipating
From the left are Jessica Tate , Ruthie Conliffe, Kayla Shutts, Ohio University student in Health children to be accompanied
Administration Services, Ashley Comstock, Lindsay Aetcher; and Alexis McKinley.
by an adult. There will be a
story time, a holiday craft,
some music and a visit by
Santa.
Feature displays will be
artifacts spanning the years
from the early settlers, from
The group meets every the
COOLVILLE - Recent dance; LaChresia Bogardus
Civil Warto the Gulf War
weekly weight loss winners and Connie Rankin. exer- Tuesday at Torch Baptist era.
for TOPS (Take Off Pounds cise charts; Bogardus, Doris Church. . Weigh-in is from
Activities at the Chester
·· Sensibly) Chapter #OH Buchanan. Joan Cole. 5:15 to 6:15 p.m. with a Courthouse sponsored by
2013 Coolville were Pat Cindy Hyde, and Rankin meeting at 6:30. An exercise the ·
Chester-Shade
Hall and Patty Gabriel, Oct. and Robens, food chans. period will be held from 5:30.· Historical Association will
. 31; Mary Cleland, Nov. 14; Cleland
and
Patricia to 6 p.m. for those interested. be from noon to 4 ·p.m. on
:· and Billie Roberts, Nov. 21 . Richmond were named best For ·information, call Pat both Saturday and Sunday.
October contest winners monthly weight ' loss wm- Snedden at 662-2633" or Refreshments will be served
both days.
attend a !Tee meeting.
:: were Cleland, perfect atten- ners for Oclober.

'

Public
naeetings
Monday,Dec.4
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.
meeting-at Syracuse Village
hall.

•

•••• •

i•

Clubs and
.organizations
Deadline for entries is: December 8, 2006

This Unique Calendar will be inserted in the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant
Register and The Daily Sentinel Thursday, December 28, 2006

lhe winning pets will be featured in this
··~
.unique calendar.
• •.............................................
The winner will be highlighted on the cover. .
f"
I
1

Name of pet:_____
. _ __ __ _ _
Your Name:___-;-----~----

'

.

.: Address: __________ ____

I

I
I

Phone:.,...-____________

••

'
I

.j

Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to
~ ~alltpoH~ iBall!'
~oint Jlea~aut
·
I

~rtbune

l\egt~ter

Daily Sentinel

"Pet Calendar"
"Pet Calendar"
· •Pet Calendar"
.~ - 825 Third Avenue
200 Main St
.. , 1_11 Court St
CGallipolis, OH 45631 Pt Pl"easant, wv 25550 · Pomeroy, OH_45769
:

.=·· ... .... ............ •'•....... ··; ...ii

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www.mvdailvtnbune.com

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www.mvdaiiY.reaister.com

www.mydadysenttnel.com

MIDDLEPORT .
·Special
meeting
of
Middleport Lodge #363 ,
7:30 p.m., Masonic Temple
for work in the Master
Mason degree . All Master
Masons
.
invited.
Refreshments·. .
Wednesday, Nov. 29
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Literary Club, 2
p.m., Pomeroy , Library.
Norma Torres reviews "The
. Year of Magical Thinking"
: . by Joan Didion. Hostess will
: be the Associate Members. .
POMEROY - Ameri can
Legion Post 39 Au xiliary-,
will meet at 2:30p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library.
·
Friday, Dec. I
POMEROY
- PERI
Chapter 74-Chri stmas program, I p.m., Meigs Coun ty
Senior Center.
Saturday, Dec. 2
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 ,
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Members and visitors to take
nonperi shable food item.
Refreshment$ at 6:30 p.m.
Monday, Dec. 4

RACINE
RaCine following the service. '
Chapter 134, Order of Eastern
Thesday,Dec.S
·Star, will meet at 7:30 p.m.
POMEROY Team
Rob Morris Night to be Jesus Ministries weekly serobserved. All offirers a-;ked to · vice ,. 6:30 p.m. at the
attend, Potluck dinner.
Mulberry
Co111munity
Thesday, Dec. 5
Center gymnasium .
CHESTER Che ster
Council 323, Daughters of ·
America, 7 p.m. at· th e
Masonic Hall. Nomination
Saturday, Dec. 2
of officers will be held ,
MIDDLEPORT
- Straw
quarterly
birthdays
giveaway
for
pet
bedding,
observed, Chri stmas program given with a $3 gift
exchange. Dori s Grueser,
Marge Fetty and Charlotte
Grant will be hostesses.
·Saturday, Dec. 2
SALEM CENTER
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 potluck
supper at 6:30 p.m. followed by meeting at 7:30
p.m. ·Bring items for the
food bank . Subordinate
baking contest.

Other events

Church

~vents

·saturday, Dec. 2
REEDSVI LLE
Eas ~ern High School bell
chotr wt ll present a
Ch.ristmas concert at .the
Reed sville Church of
Christ, 7 p.m. The public is
invited. Refreshments will··
be served.
Sunday, Dec. 3
MIDDLEPORT - David
Stiffler of Wilkesvi lle will
present special music at the
the II a.m. service· at rhe
Middleport
F1rst
Presbyterian Church. Open
comm union will b held and
li ght refreshment s served

-~--------·--·-

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Openho~e

~ -~munity calendar

•

1

service to "that department. lives with his daughter iri
Lambert had been chief for Springfield. Those wishing
24 years and with the to write Lambert or send
depanment since 1979. him a card can contact him
Lamben retired as chief at 571 Piney Branch Drive,
after an illness and riow Springfield, 45503.

TUPPERS PLAINS . Hearts aitd Hands Free
Clothing Pantry, an outreach of Bethel Worship
Center, will be hosting its
6th annual Christmas giveaway on Dec. 2 at the
church.
Parents are welcome to
come "shop" for their children, ages 0-17years, beginning at 9 a.m. on that
Saturday.
Bethel Worship Center is
located two miles south of
Tuppers Plains on State
. Route 7. The giveaway will
last until the toys/presents
are gone. They are ·given
away to needy families in
our community on· a first
come, first served basis.
For those who might want
to donate new or vety gently used toys, new clothes or
ariything else a child might
receive
for
like to
Christmas, contact B~thel
Worship Center at 667-6793
or Jill Holter at 949-2603.

TOPS recognizes losers

••••

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PageAa

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

I 0 a.m. to I p.m., behind
Meigs County Humane
Society-Thrift Store.

Birthdays ·

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Don't ever let this
guy back in· your life
!Jl
Bv KAntv MITCIIEU.

One of the~ ways
to get aloved one to
seek help for their
ht~ring I~ is to
being their
htaring hel~!

Richland Ave., Athens, OH 45701

daydreaming about other
women. I only initiate sex
with Sharon while we are in
bed, in the d;uic, so 1 cannot
see her.

AND MARCY $uGAR

Dear Annie: I've always
myself to be levelheaded, but somehow I've
ended up in a four-year relaI feel guilty, but haven't a
tionship with a man I sus- clue what to do. Sharon
peel is a sociopath.
doesn't complain about our
At the begmning of our lack of intimacy. Is somerelationship.
"Wilbur" thing wrong with me? bragged that he'd cheated on Richard in Phoenix
every woman he'd ever been
.with. He insisted he had
Dear Richard: You mar,changed, and I trusted him. ried Sharon because she
Of course, he hasn't looked sexy, but looks
changed at all . He's cheated change. (Haven't yours?j
on me at least three times Successful marriages rely
that I know of. He's never . on being attracted to someapologized, and has left me one' s personality, sense of
and my children (who adore humor, kindness, common
him) repeatedly without a
word of warning.
interests. shared values,
Every time Wilbur etc., and those things should
leaves, a month or two goes be at least as important as
by and he gets in touch the physical attraction. In
again. I desperately want to your case, they aren't. It ·
believe he really loves us, won't help to do ·nothing and
so I take him back. Then I'm
supposed to act like notb- be miserab1e. Suggest couning's happened. Tf I hold seling to Sharon, saying you
him accountable, he calls would like to work on some
me a lot of nasty names and issues. If she won't go, go
puts me down.
without her.
Wilbur moved in with us
Dear Annie: May 1
last Christmas, and it's been
a nightmare. The other night, respond to "Angry Father,"
Wilbur blew his top over whose son a_nd dau~hter-in­
something petty and said law have reJected h1m? We
he's had it and IS leaving at . bent over backward to
the end of the month. In the please our daughter-in-law,
!fleantime, he's been search- but" it didn't help. I finally
mg the Internet for a ne~ sex brought it up to my son, and
partn_er. He made .a pomt of we had an argument. The
rubbtng my nose m 1t:
h.
h" .d
Wilbur has paid half the t mgs e sa1 were repreutilities for the month, so he henstble, not to mentton
thinks he's entitled to stay. untrue. Now we are
He was ftred from his job, estranged and, of course, we
so while I'm at work, I have are not allowed to see our
no wa~ of protecting ~y . · grahdchildren.
"Angry" is not going to
belongmgs from bem,g
stolen or vandahzed. He s
.
.
done that before.
change hts daughter-m-law,
I'm a wreck. I don't feel regardless of what he does,
anything merits a call to the and if his son does not have
police, but I also don't feel any backbone now, he probmy home is .safe. 1. know I ably never will . We · know
got myself mto thts mess, where we stand, even if it is
.
.
bnt how d.o I get out without
things getting really ugly? wtthout them. - Restgned
-Lost in the U.S.
Mother
Dear Lost: Can.you have
Dear Resigned: How sad
someone house-sit while - · especially for your
you are at work? Can you grandchildren, who will lose
lock up your valuables? Can out on the joys of knowing
you take ttme off work at loving grandparents.
the end of the month? At the
. ,
.
.
.
very least, if Wilbur takes or
Anme s Maifb_ox IS wntruins your things, be sure to ten by Kathy MttcheU and
file a police repolt so there Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- ·
is a record. Change the tors of tire Ann lAnders
locks once he's out. And column. Please e-mail your
under no circumstances questions to anniesmailshoul~ you allow W1lbur box@comclist.net or write
back mto your hfe. Ever.
.
. ,
.'
Dear Annie· At the age to. Anme s Madbox, P.O.
of 61 , I . met ~ wonderful ~ox 1181~0, Chicago, IL
woman (also 61) I'll call 6fMll. To ' find out more
"Sharon." She was slim and about Annie's Mailbox,
shapely, and I was immedi ~ and read features by other
ately attracted to her. Etght Creators Syndicate writers
years after we mamed, and cartoonists visit the
Sharon ts no longer shm,
!
shapely or attractive. As a Creators Syndrcate Web
result. I am rarely interested page at www.creators.com.
in having sex with her and · COPYRIGHT 2006 CREspend a fair amount of time ATORS SYNDICATE INC. .,
con~idered

Saturday, Dec. 2
POMEROY Carol
McLaughlin of Pom~:roy
will celebrate her 75th
birthday on Dec. 2. Cards
may ~ sent to P.O. Box
209, Pomeroy.

Call today for a complimentary demonmtioos
of the latest booing aid ledmology.
'

Wednc.Way, November 29, 2006

Make the Holidays ~hine..
~warovshl C~stal~~~~~~jl'"'

from Acquisitions!
Pendant

Sale $42 (Was S84)
Large Selection of Colors,
gach set inSterlill!Silver

~ ilif ~toreMde
Your Choice
Earrin~s or Bracelet

Sale )32 (Was $64)
md Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 4)63I
740-446-2842
1;1

FINE jEWELRY

Hohday Houn: Mon·Thur&gt; q&lt;&gt;Jri q-•, Sal. q&lt;&gt;

'

�•

·O PINION

.-The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Wednesday, November 29, 2006

VJ!ho will prot~~t marriage in 2008(

The 2006 midterm electyranny, that is, the imposi- needs of children. not the
tions
may
be
over,
but
they
lion
of the will of those in rights of adults. In fact. as
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 1112-2157
are
worth
taking
another
power,
on the people."
Americans, I believe that we
-.mydally11nttnel.com
look at before we become
In contrast, the incoming should show an outpouring
wedded to the wrong conDemocratic governor, for- of respect and tolerance for
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
clusions.
merly an official in the Bill all people, regardless of
'K athryn
Marriage was an issue on
Clinton administration, has their differences or their difLopez
Jim Freeland
the ballot in eight states and
said, "I think the (high ferent choices. We must vigPublisher
was a winning issue in all
court) got it right." Gov.- orously reject discnminabut one. Voters in Virginia.
elect Deval ·Patrick contin- lion and bigotry. We are all
Charlene Hoeflich
Tennessee, South Carolina,
ued, " I think all they did God's children. He abhors
General Manager-News Editor
Wisconsin, Colorado, South ·eastern state, he's tried was affirm the principle that none of us."
Dakota and Idaho all voted pushing back against gay people come before their
Gay marriage isn't an
to protect marriage.
marriage. in the one state government as equals."
· issue most like to have to
Although some prom,inent where it has -- thanks to the
At the pre-1'hanksgiving talk about. Any sense that
voices have highlighted courts - become legaL
Congress shall make no law respecting an
week rally in Boston, gay- people are being deprived
as
a
distraction
marriage
As
his
term
was
winding
marriage
proponents booed rights rightfully makes
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
issue that hurt Republicans down post-Election Day, the as the Pledge Qf AUegiance many squeamish, But marfree exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of in the long run, the GOP state legislature there was said and "God Bless riage is fundamentally what
speech, or of the press; or the right of the peo- would be wise not to rush to recessed a long-promised America" was sung. It was it is _ between a man and a
constitutional convention an appropriate scene. As woman. As Romney put it in
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the divorce cowt.
Matthew Spalding ·of the until Jan. 2, the last day of Maggie Gallagher recently a letter to U.S. senators this
Governmm,t for a redress ofgrievances.
put it on 'her marriagedeHeritage ·Fpundation says: the legislative session.
bate.com
blog: "They want summer as they were taking .
"The recent elections conAt a subsequent marriage-.
up a federal marriage
- The First Amendment to the U.S. ConatttUtlon firm a strong nationwide protection rally on the their rights, do they care amendment:
"Americans are .
. yours?"
In
consensus that favors pro- Massachusetts statehouse about
'.
tecting marriage and oppos- steps, Gov. Romney voiced · Massachusetts, the issue of tolerant, generous, and kind
people. We all oppose biges its judicial redefinition. his outrage at legi slative gay marriage has not only oil)'
and disparagement, and
The challenge is to translate complicity in judicial tyran- been about the marriage
· Today is Wednesda¥, Nov. 29. the 333rd day of 2006. that political consensus into ny_ He said, "Last week, 109 issue itself, but also · about we all wish to avoid hurtful
There are 32 days left m the year.
a constitutional consensus in legislators decided to reject issues like religious tiber- disregard of the feelings of
Today's Highlight in History:
·
the face of increased con~ the law, abandon the ties: Can a Catholic group others. But the. debate over
On Nov. 29. 1963, President Johnson named a commission gressional intransigence. Constitution, and violate refuse to place children with same-sex mamage ts n~t a
, debate over tolerance. It IS a
beaded by Earl Warreri to investigate the assassination of The best way to do that is to their oath of office. For the a gay couple?
President Kennedy.
m3ke sure marriage is not Constitution plainly sta~es
And whether he finds debate ~bo_ut the pufl'?se ?_f
On this date:.
only an issue but also, a that when a qualified peti- himself about to move into the mstttutton of mamage.
In 1924, Italian composer Giacomo· Puccini died in strategic component in the tion is placed before them. the White House tw~ years
If conservatives can artieBrussels, Belgium, before he could complete his opera 2008 electoral map, which the legislature 'shall' vote. It from
now, Romney's u~ate that -- something
"Turandot." (It was finished by Franco Alfano.) ·
now includes the fact that does not say· 111ay vote, or already contributed · a great km?er and gentler th.an. the
In 1929, Navy Lt. Cmdr. Richard E. Byrd radioed that he over half of the states have vote if its procedures p¢rmit deal to the debate over mar- cancature of gay-mamage
'and co-pilot Bernt Balchen had made the first airplane flight """'""ted marriage in their a vote, or vote if there -are · riage in America with the opponents - · we may just
over the South Pole.
.-·~
enough of the members in tone of his principled . get somewhere. It's a pretty
- In 1947, the U.N. General Assembly passed a resolution constitutions."
proposal
for
'calling for the partitioning of Palestine between ArabS and
An embrace of the mar- attendance. It says 'shall ' rhetoric. At a recent evan- decent
gelical rally. the Monnon Republicans.
riage-protection issue on the vote."
Jews.
•
ld
took back some of the left's
(Kathryn Lopez is the ediHe
continued,
"A
decision
In 1956, the musical "Bells Are Ringing," starring Judy right
cou
put
Holliday, opened on Broadway.
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt not to vote is a decision to monopoly on "the children." tor of National Review
- In 1961, Enos the chimp was launched from Cape Romney in a good position usurp the Constitution, to He said, "The price of same- Online (www.nationalre·canaveral, Fla., aboard the .Mercury-Atlas 5 spacecraft, for the 2008 presidential pri- abandon democracy and sex marriage is paid by chil- ·view. com). She can be con~
maries. As Republican gov- substitute a ·form of what dren. Our fight for marriage, tacted at klopez@ national\vhich orbited earth twice before returning. ·
' In 1964, the u_s. ·Roman Catholic Church instituted emor of that liberal north- this nation's founders called then, should focus on the review.com.)
sweeping changes in the liturgy, including the use of English -----...,..~--------~--------------------,--­
instead of Latin.
Ten years ago: A-U.N. court sentenced a Bosnian Serb
army soldier (Drazen Erdemovic) to 10 years in prison for
his role in the massacre of 1,200 Muslims. John C. S;ilvi ill,
serving a life sentence for fatally shooting two abortion clinic receptionists, hanged himself in his Massachusetts prison
cell.
Five years ago: George Harrison, the "quiet Beatie," died
in los Angeles following a battle with cancer; he was 58. "A
Separate Peace" author John Knowles died in Florida at age
75. The U.N. Security Council unanimously approved a resolution extending the U.N. humanitarian program in Iraq and
setting the stage for an overl!aul of U.N. sanctions against
Baghdad the following year.
·
Today's Birthdays: Hall-of-Fame sportscaster Vm Scully
is 79. Blues singer-musician John Mayall is 73. Composermusician Chuck Mangione is 66. Pop singer Denny Doherty
(The Mamas &amp; the Papas) is 66. Country singer Jody Miller
is 65. Actress Diane Ladd is 63. Pop singer-musician Felix
Cavaliere (The Rascals) is 62. Olympic gold medal skier
Suzy Chaffee i&amp; 6()_ Comedian Garry Shandling is 57. Movie
director Joel Coen is 52. Actor~median-game show host
-Howie Mandel is 51. Actor Jeff Fahey is 49. Actress Cathy
.Moriarty is 46. Actress Kim Delaney is 45. Actor Tom
Sizemore is 45_ Actor Andrew McCarthy is 44. Actor Don
Cheadle is 42. Actor-producer Neill Barry is 41. Musician
Wallis Buchanan (Jamiroquai) is 4 L Pop singer Jc,&gt;nathan
Knight (New Kids on the Block) is 38. Rock musician
,"Martin Carr (Boo Radleys) is 38. Actress Gena Lee Nolin is
._35. Actress Anna Faris is 30. Rapper The Game is 27. Rock
~ musician Ringo Garza is 25. Actor Lucas Black is 24.
: Thought for Today: "Superstition is the religion of feeble
·minds."- Edmund Burke. British statesman (1729-1797).
; 11 Court Street. Pomeroy, Ohio

·TODAY IN HISTORY

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GUEST VIEW

Blues .Festival: Don't miss out on agood thing
BY FREDI Po FER
Recently, I have noticed
an unsettling number of
negative letters concerning
the efforts of businessman
Jackie Welker to enhance
the cultural community of
the Mid-Ohio Valley with
the Big Bend Blues Festival
(BBBF), the summer music
series and Party in _the Park
series.
My q'uestion to the
authors of those letters ·is,
"What were you thinking?"
My advice to those same
authors is, "Get with the
new centuty and move forward."
First of all, I'd like to
address this issue from the
vantage point of a language
arts educator. I have taught
professionally for 25 years,
and it has·been my personal
mission to help expose the
children of Appalachia to as
many different cultures as
possible. There is a national
directive for teachers in the
public school system to pro-

vide this diversity educa- BBBF would rob them of
tion. I teach about the · this chance_.
Asian; Hispanic, AfricanSecondly, I understand
American, Italian; Polish that a few Pomeroy locals
cultures and many more .
have dubbed the visitors to
When our children leave the festival as "undesirthis . somewhat isolated ables. " Well , the people I
. "wcket of America" artd go know who · come to the
elsewhere to find good-pay- BBBF are Ch~i s tians. teaching jobs, they need to be ers, lawyers, dentists, busiable to understand and . ness owners, engineers and
relate to all difft•rent types other professionals. We
of' people from all different come to your town with lots
ethnic backgrounds.
of disposable income to
One huge gift from the spend in your restaurants,
African-American culture is hotels, B&amp;Bs and shops_
blues music_ It is one of the Perhaps the "undesirables"
· truest American an forms, that you write. about are
and is appreciated and bon- really your own restless
ored in the USA, Europe children who are so starved
. and across the world.
for something to do that
People come to concerts they are drinking beer in ,the
by the thousands to hear the alley and kicking over yard
same American bluesmen gnomes for excitement!
that have been to the BBBF. Open your eyes! A couple
If this many people world- of music shows on a sumwide .appreciate the blues, is mer night is not a gateway
it logical to remove it from into si n_
Pomeroy? Should the young
In conclusion . I would
people of thi ~ area lose the like to speak in defense of
chance to grow cul turally Mr. Weiker. When I first
and spiritually? Losing the visited the Coun Street
:

Grill, I found him. to · be a
gracious and friendly host. I
wem away thinking that
Pomeroy was .a relilly neat
little town and I wanted· to
tell all my . friends in
Charleston '
and
Morgantown about it.
Outing every visit back to
Pomeroy, I have found Mr.
Welker to be the same. He is
a goodwill ambassador for
your town. To speak badly
of his hours of work on the
Big Bend Blues Festival is
the town of Pomeroy shooting itself in the fOI)t.
Don 't you want tourism?
An
arts
community?
Economic growth ? How
about oppoitunities for your
children's
educational
growth ? Let's move forward, Pomeroy. The Big
Bend Blues Festival is a
positive·event for your community. Don't lose your
good thing, now.
(Fredi Pepper resides irr
Parkersburg, W.Va.)

\:Vedneaday, November, 29, 2oo6

'Ibe Daily Sentinel • Pqe As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Judge strikes President Bush s
authority to designate terrorist
groups, saying order was vague

Obituaries

POMEROY - Manha H. Greenaway, 95, of Ohio 833,
Bv UNOA DEUTSCH
Pomeroy, died on Sunday, Nov. 26, 2006, at Holzer
Olarle&amp; Miller. a spokesman
I'P SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
for the US. Department of
Justice, said, "We are currentShe was born June 22 , 19ll, in Pomeroy, daughter of
LOS
ANGELES
A
fedly reviewing the decision and
the late Earl Watson and Daisy Needs Brown. She was a
eral
judge
struck
down
we have made no detenninaretired school teacher for the Meigs Local School
District. She attended Enterprise United Methodist President Bush's authority to tion what the ~ovemment's
Church l).nd was a member of Delta Kappa Gamma and designate groups as terrorists, next step will be. '
saying his post-Sept. 11 execA White House spokesthe Ohio Retired Teachers Association .
ubve
on:ler
was
unconstituwoman
declilled to immediSurviving are her step daughter, Joan (Husted) and
.
Paul Clause; sisters, Ruth G, Tate of Hilliard and Mabel tional and vague. according to ately comment.
'lbe judge's 45-page ruling
(Howard) Bailey of Jacksonville, Fla.; nieces and a ruling released TUesday.
The Humanitarian Law was a rever.;al of her own tennephews: . Rebecca Zurcher, Manha Gallagher, David
Project
had challenged Bush's tative fi~ last July in
Tate, Donald Tate, Gloria Steinberg, Brenda Essenberg,
Chad Bailey, and Rodney Bailey; a brother, Richard Earl order, ~ch blocked all the which she indicated she would
(Maxine) Brown of Chillicothe; four grandchildren and asseti; of groups or indiViduals uphold wide pewers asserted
he named as ~'specially desig- by Bush UJJder an· lUlti-tmur
four great grandchildren.
.
nated
global terrorists" after financing law. She delayed her
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her
ruling then to allow more legal
husbands. Claud Husted and John Greenaway; sisters, the 200lte!TOrist attacks.
Edrie Pauline, Lois Corrine, and Frances Monterama; · "This law gave the president briefs to be filed.
unfettered authority to ·create
She also shuCk down the
and her brother, Earl Raymond.
blacklists,"
said
David
Cole,
a
provision
in which Bush had
Service will be held at II a.m. on Friday, Dec . I, 2006,
lawyer
for
the
Washington,
authorized
the secretary of the
at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Arland
Center for treasury to designate llllyone
King officiating. Burial will be in Rocksprings Cemetery. D.C.-based
Constitutional
Rights
that rep- who "assists, sponsors or proFriends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Thursday at the
resented
the
group.
"It was vides services to" or is "otherfuneral horne .
. ·
reminiscent
of
the
McCarthy
wise associated with" .a desigMemorial contributions may be made to the Enterprise
era."
nated group.
United Methodist Church.
The case centered on two
However, she let stand secgroups, the Liberation Tigers, . lions of the order that penalize
which seeks a separate home- those who provide "services"
land for the Tamil people in to designated terrorist groups.
SILER CITY, N.C. -Tim Justis, 42, of Siler City, Sri Lanka. and Partiya She said such services would
N.C.. formerly of Middleport, died Monday. Nov. 27. Klllkeran Kwdistan, a' politi- ' include the humanitarilUI aid
2006, at his residence .
-· ·
cal organization representing and rights training proposed
He was born Jan. 18, 1964, in Pomeroy, to the late the interests of Kurds in by the plaintiffs.
.
Raymond G. and Eileen Cunningham Justis. Tim atten.d- 1\ntey_ ·
.
The Humanitarian Law
ed Meigs Local Schools and played football for the
U.S. District Judge Audrey Project planned to appeal that
· Marauders. He played softball in the summer for various Collins enjoined the govern· part of the ruling, Cole said.
local teams. Tim was a skilled welder and worked at this ment frotl! blocking the assets
"We are pleased the court
.
· of the two groups.
trade for many years.
rejected many of the oonstituHe is survived by two brothers, Joe (Valerie) Justis of
Both groups consider the tiona! arguments raised by the
Port Comfort, Texas , and George (Cathy) Justis of Nov. 21 ruling a .victory; both plaintiffs, including their chalMiddlepOrt; two sisters, Melissa (Charles) Hoffman of had been designated by the lenge to the government's ban
Hartford, W.Va., and June (Tim) Tackett of Vinton; sev- United State&lt;; as fureign terror· on providing services to tereral nieces and nephews; and a special friend. Peggy ist organizations.
rorist organizations," Miller
Stinson.
Cole said the judge's ruling said 1\Jesday_ "However, we
A graveside service will be held at I p.m. on Thursday. does not invalidate the hun· . believe the court erred in findNov. 30, 2006, at Riverview· Cemetery in Middleport dreds of other designated ter- ing that certain other aspects
with Pastor Brian May officiating. Friends may call from rorist groups on the list but of the executive order were
6 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 29. 2006, at Acree ."calls them into question."
unconstitutional."
Funeral Home in Middleport.
The family requests memorial contributions toward
funeral expenses be made in . care of Acree Funeral
around the district is eligiHome, 244 N. Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio 45760.
ple for 75 percent funding
for a new school.
The current Southern
from PageA1
High School is around 50
vears old. Last year's
POMEROY - Carolyn Sue "Susie" Heines, 62, of again by different people r'remodel" plan suggested
Pomeroy passed away on Monday,, Nov. 27, 2006 at the district can weigh the . replacing the windows and
Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus after a brief pros and cons of each pro· heating system which
illness.
Ject with the new cornpari· would include installation
Born Dec. 27, 1943 In Athena, she was the dauahter of son. Miller added this time of air conditionina unit.
~ late Vemard and Viqinia (Tate) Bdwarda. She waa a
&lt;retired apeech lanauap palholoaial, She was affiliated
·with the United MethOdlat Churcb.
She II aurvived by her husband Larry L. Heines of
Pomeroy; dauahtert and son-In-law Krlatan (Keith)
Helnea Blackled&amp;e of Heath, Tracl Heines of Potneroy,
Molly Heines of Athena; ailter, Cheryl Shere, Midland,
Mich.; brother David Bdwarda of Pomeroy.
Services wlh be held at 2 p.m. on Friday, Dec. I · at
Ewina Funeral Home In Pomeroy with Rev. Robert
Robinson officiating. Friends may ell! for visitation from
6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Ol) Thursday, Nov. 30 at the funeral
home . Interment will be at the Meigs Memory Gardens.
In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the
American Diabetes Association.

'dm Justis

SHS

Carolyn Sue ·susie' H.elnes

an

Exhibit
from Page A1.
sonal collections of nativity
sets in several sizes and
styles arranged in display
cases. Included will be
,items
from _ Marilyn
Trussell. Joyce Davis. and
-Karen Werry, along with
miniatures from Nicaragua
brought back from there by
Ron Cowdery who ha.s
made a mi'ssion trip to that
country every November
for the past nine years.
In addition to the
porcelian, ceramic and glass
nativity sets, some in color,
others in white or clear, the
exhibit will include tree
ornaments showing etch·
ings and miniature nativity
scenes.
along
with
Christmas cards carrying
out the theme _ A banner
prominent in the display

reads "Unto you is born this
day a Savior which is
Christ the Lord."
Mary Grace Cowdery
and Maxine Whitehead,
Historical Society trustees,
collected the items and
arran~ed the Christmas
exhib1L
Always a highlight for
youngsters is the Breakfast
with Santa program staged
at the Museum_ It will be
held on Saturday. Dec. 9.
from 9 to II a.m. and
includes "all you can eat"
pancakes, sausage and
'scrambled eggs for adults.
$4, and children , $3.
Reservations are to be
· made by Friday, Dec. 8, by
calling 992-3810 . There
will also be crafts for the
children and, of course,
each child will be given an·
opportunity to sit on
Santa's knee and tell him
what they want for
Christmas.

Starr photo

Rep_ James Stewart (92nd District) presents an Ohio
Statehouse proclamation to George Collins, left, at Monday
night's party honoring the retired deputy director of District

10, OQOT_

CIC
from PageA1

Bid

Homicide

.

'

•

•

learned of the decision to
charge his client from The
Associated Press .
PENSACOLA, Fla. "I didn't anticipate it. I
Seven former juvenile boot was hoping cooler heads .
camp guards were charged would prevail," he-said. ·
with aggravated manslaughBush appointed Ober,
ter 1\Jesday for their video- Hillsborou~h County's state
taped manhandling of a 14- attorney, m February to
year-old boy who later died, investi~ate the death.
a case that led to the disman"We II obviously follow
tling of the state's military- the developments of this
style detention system for case clo~ly and hope at the
young offenders.
end of the day that justice
Also charged was a nurse will be served," Bush said.
that can be seen watching on "We also hope that once the
the tape as the men repeated- process. is completed that
ly kneed arid hit Martin Lee Martin Lee Anderson's faroAnderson. He had collapsed ily will have the answers to
while doing group exercises the questions that they legitat the Bay County sheriff's imately have."
camp in Panama City on Jan.
An initial autopsy found
S. Guards said he was unco- Anderson died of natural
operative and ·had refused to complications of sickle cell
participate. He died the next trait, a usually benign blood
day.
disorder . .But after an uproar
Special prosecutor Mark and cries of a cover-up, a
Ober's announcement of second autopsy was concharges ·
came
after ducted by another medical
Anderson's parents had long examiner, and it concluded
demanded the arrest of the Anderson
suffocated ·
guards they accused of mur- because of the actions of the
der. · ·
guards.
"Today is a good day for
Dr. Vernard Adams, the
me. I'm finally ~ettingd-us- medical · ·e·xaminer for
lice for my baby,' said ina Hillsborough County, ruled
· Jones, Anderson's mother.
the guards' hands blocked
Benjamin Crump. the the boy's mouth, and the
lawyer for Jones and Robert · "forced inhalation of ammo, Anderson, · Anderson's nia fumes" caused his vocal
father, said there is no doubt cords to spasm.
the guards are guilty after
The guards had said in an
watching the videotape.
incident report that they used
"You wouldn't do this to ammonia capsules five times
your dog. Stuffing ammonia . to gain cooperation from the
tablets up his nose, pulling boy· who was in custody for
his neck back, covenn,g his a probation violation for
mouth," he said at a news trespassing at a school.
conference.
The death gained national
Robert Anderson said he headlines in April when colwas relieved by the lege students staged a twoannouncement.
day protest in Bush's office.
"I feel like a brick has The Revs. Jesse Jackson and
~ lifted off my shoul- AI Sharpton joined the stu·
ders," he said.
dents and Anderson's parThe death sparked protests ents for a march on the
at the state Capitol and led to state's Capitol.
,
the elimination of the state's
Florida Department of
military-style boot camp Law Enforcement chief Guy
system
the resianatlon Tunnell, who stanecl Bay
of Florida's top law enforce· CoiUity's boot camp when
ment officer.
he wu aherll't there, then
The eljht fonner employ- realaned under criticism
ees of the now-c!(lsed camp aftei he compared Jackson
were belq arrested Tuesday to outlaw Jesse James and
afternoon. The seven auws U.S. Sen. BII'ICk Obama, D·
reported to court for initial Ill., to terrorist Osama Bin
appearances where bond Laden in an agency meetina,
was set for $25,000 each.
Tunnell was already under
They face up to 30 years in ftre after being scolded by
prison if convicted of the Bush for exchanging e-mails
first-degree felon~.
with current Sheriff Frank
Nurse Kristtn' · Anne McKeithen criticizing those
Schmidt did not show up for who questioned the effec·
an
initial
appearance tiveness of the boot camp
Thesday and her attorney did concept.
not rettim a phone call left
by The Assoctated Press,
Waylon Graham, attorney
for Lt. Charles Helms, the
highest ranking officer
charged, said he had long
anticipated criminal charges.
The Ohio Valley
Grnham said Helms' farni ·
Symphony
ly has money saved to pay
Holiday Pops Concert
for bail to get him released
"Jingle"
pending trial. He said officials had assured him that
Sat;, Dec.l at 8 pm
his client and the other
Piano Recital 12/3 at 2 pm
guards would be segregated
Jingle Bell Follies
from the general jail popula12/8. 12/10
tion for their own safety if
Holiday Classic Movie
they had to spend a ,night in
Sin_g-A-Lo~~g 12/ll
jail.
Bob Pel), an attorney who
The Ariel-Dater Hall
represents former guard . 428 Sec. Ave. GaUipolis,~H
· Joseph Walsh II, said he
740-446-ARTS_l_2787 .

BY MEUSSA NELSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ana

AEL
EST!ED1895

cials to get things done, and
OI:&gt;OT Director Gordon
Proctor commended him for
his dedication and service to
ODOT.
.
Others ODOT representatives there were Saleh
Eldabaja, OOOT Production
Administrator, and Cary
Betzing, ODOT Acting .
Highway
Management
Administrator.
The Meigs CIC presented
hiring Jim Brewer as a parttime police dispatcher, with Collins with a gun and proHouchins votmg no , and vided refreshments for · the
Alan Durst as a part-time more than 50 of his business
. from Page A1
associates and friends.
police dispatcher.
• Approved appropriathe finance committee had tions adjustments and paydiscussed the issue at its ment of bills in the amount
meeting on Monday, and of$17 ,010.95 .
• Authorized
Fi scal
would discuss bonuses at
from PageA1
Susan
Baker
to
seek
Officer
the Dec. II meeting .
permission from the Ohio
Council also:
• Excused Sandra Brown Auditor of State to establish Investigation (BCI&amp;I) and
and Jeff Peckham from the a special revenue fund for from Gallia Cot~nty Coroner
the freight depot .
· Dr. Daniel H_ Whiteley, who
meeting .
Present were Iannarelli, . directed that an autopsy be
• Accepted the resignaby
the
tion of Mary · Klem . as Baker. · and Houchins, conducted
County
Montgomery
mayor's clerk and part-time Robert Robinson , Jean
Coroner 's Office _
dispatcher, and approved Craig and Ferman ~oore .
Gallipolis City Police and
the Rio Grande Volunteer
Fire Department provided
manpower and lighting for
the search of the crime scene ,
which began after darkness
Subscribe today • 992-2tSS
had fall en_ The Vinton
Volunteer Fire Department

Proud to bt aport ofyour life.

7 ex-guards charged
with manslaughter in
boot camp death

Collins retired in late
October after serving as top
district administrator since
1999. overseeing the strategic planning and day-to-day
operation of the district's
nme-county area .
During his tenure . as
deputy director, District 10,
he has seen more than $300
million in major new construction including the U.S . .
33 RavenswOod Connector, ·
theU.S .33AthenstoDarwin '
Connector,.and construction
still underway of the new
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge and
the Rocksprings Interchange
in Meigs County as well as
the new U.S. 50 four-lane
from Athens to Coolville in
Athens County.

r-

assisted deputies in searching the exterior .of Sowers'
home. ·
Se_rvices for the victim
were held Nov. 22 in
Wellston .

Sutton Township

Thanks For Your
Support of Our
Levy for
Operation and
Maintaining
Cemeteries
Sutton Twp . Trustees

~Wfkport Cfw.rr.n of Cfuist

CIWi.r Presents

Jesus, tifitre~s smnethtn.lll
~6out fJ!iat 9{_ame
~'l'iii4!J,

'Dtc.e.m!Ju 8
Saturtfay, 'December 9
'Dinne.r ~roetf at 6:00 p.m.
!Music 6t-gins at 7:00p.m. ,
at tlie MWfkport Cfwrcfr. of Clirist

!Famil!f Life Ce.nttr
l'lk~ts are- $5 ani ltUUJ 6e o6taind at.
M~~=:!:~~' af Clirist, Mi!ikp_ort

il

Swre, :fDnnLrs '11&lt;111(

Core &amp;!Mud

prwiatifor cMirrn
5 t!r wuhr

�'

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 29, 20o6

.Mother arrested·on suspicion
'caged kids' trial guilty of love of killing baby in microwave
. .Attorney: parents in

BY

JOE

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

BY JAMES HANNAH '

~lUCIA

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

c&lt;-- Vikings trip Lady Eagles in second half

locAL ScHEDULE

NORWALK- A cou.ple
on trial for putting some. of
their II adopted, spectalneeds children in cages are
guilty only of loving them .. a
defense
attorney
satd
Tuesday in his opening
statement.
,
"Eleven is a strain, a huge
strain, but they did it for the
right reason," said Ken
Myers, attorney for Sharen
Gravelle who, along with
her husband, Michael
Gravelle, are charged with
16 counts of felony child
endangering and eight mis'AP photo
demeanor child endangering Attorney Ken Myers, left to right, Sharon Gravelle, Michael
charges.
Gravelle and attorney Richard Drucker walk toward the courtThe children ranged in age house, Tuesday, in Norwalk. Opening statements began
from 1 to 14 when authori- Tuesday for the Gravelles, who are charged with 16 counts of
ties removed them in felony child endangertng and eight misdemeanor child endanSeptember 2005 from · the
Grave lies' home in rural gering charges. The Gravelles are accused of locking some of
Wakeman about 60 miles their 11 adopted special-needs children in cages.
west of Clevelimd. The because it felt like being in a more children.
youngsters were placed in fortress," Myers said.
Lefler told jurors 'that he
foster care last fall.
Myers told jurors that the would show during the trial
The couple, who lost cus- day the children were that Michael Gravelle once
tody in March, have repeat- removed from the Gravelle commented that there was
edly said the enclosures were home, sheriff's Lt. Randy good money in adopting spenecessary to keep the chi!- Sommers reponed that he cial-needs children and that
dren from harming them- saw no signs of physical or he thought about opening an
selves or one another. The emotional abuse.
orphanag~. saying he was
children have problems such
"The children were taken Moses, Rtchard Drucker, the
as fetal alcohol syndrome because he doesn't like the attorney
for
Michael
and a disorder that involves way the beds looked," Gravelle was scheduled to
eating nonfood items.
Myers said.
give his opening statement
Huron County Prosecutor
Myers told 1urors that the later on Tuesday. ·
Russell Lefler told jurors not · children were in poor shape
The prosecutor told the
to get hung up on semantics. when Michael, 57, and jurors that the childnen were
"It's about chicken wire Sharen Gravelle, 58, adopted rescued from the home after·
and wOO&lt;if,n boards, being them and that Huron County a visit from social worker Jo
literally COOI'fd up, hotter knew about the cages for Johnson, who described the
than blazes m summer, an years but did nothing. ·
cages as "slave quarters."
amazingly shrill alarm and
"They did what was yeoTwo of the children have
little fingers trying to tear man's work, what they blossomed since being
wire," Lefler said.
thought was God's work and · removed from the Gravelle
Lefler described punish- this is what they get for it," home and · the others also
ments .that · the children Myers said a&lt; he.entered the have impro.ved, Lefler said.
allegedly received, including courthouse.
The
Gravelles,
who
being confined to the cages,
Myers has said Huron, acknowledge spanking the
being forced to eat peanut County authorities have children, also are accused by
butter for weeks and having fueled a media bias in the the prosecution of leaving the
their heads dunked in a toilet. case by calling the structures children outside in the cold,
Myers defended the use of cages instead of enclosed hosing the children down and
the enclosed beds, whiCh he beds.
.
forcing one boy to live in the .
said were no smaller than an
Lefler detailed how each bathroom for nearly three
average bunk bed. He said child joined the Gravelles. months. They den)' those allethey were necessary .to pro- He told the jury that Michael gations, Myers S31d.
If convicted, the)' face one
teet the children frollJ get- Gravelle acknowledged to
to
five years in pnson and a
ting into trouble at night.
relatives in 2001 that things
maximum
fine of $10,000
"Some of the kids thought were gettin~ out of control
tbey (the cages) were cool but that hts .wife wanted for each ·felony count.

POMEROY-·-~

..oy"""""" ..... -

ond h9&gt; """" ..
IMma fran tlallia, MeiQs and Muon countlea.

Tburlday'l 9'rDI'

Glrla Booketboll
Miller at Southern, 6 p.m.
Nolson•lllo·York at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Eastem, 6 p.m.
Chesapeake at OVCS, 8 p.m.

BY ASHLEY SHAW
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Salurdly'• 9""''

lloyo Bllk-11
Grove City Christian al Southam, 6:30

p.m ..
South Galli&amp; a.t Eastern , 6:30p.m.

Rjver Valle~ at Beaver Eastern, 6 p.m.
OVCS Tournament. TBA
Glrlalnk-U
Elelj.re at Rl•er Vallay, 1 p.m.
OVCS Tournament. TBA
w...Htng
Gallla Acadmey at Shady Springs
Imina, TBA
River Valley at VInton County, 6 p.m.
Coltogo Bllloelbllll
Rio Grande at Walsh, 4 p.m.

Women'o Cottogo 8Mioetb.lll
·Walsh at Rio Grande , 2 p.m .

River VaUoy al Gallla Academy, 5:30

p.m.

•Meigs at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Eaatem at Wellston, 6 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at South Gallla, 6:30 .

p.nl. .

ovcs at Fairland, 6 p.m.
Jut. .;,. D

ublr 5

Boyolll-11
Southern at Aaexander, 6:30p.m.
Waleriord at Meigs, 6:30p.m.
South Gallla at Symmes Valley, 6 p.m.
Rose Hm Christian at River Valley, 6 p.m.
-&lt;:ovenent at OVCS, 6 p.m.
GlrtoBiok-1
Gellla Academy 11 Jackson, 5:30p.m .
College BaokelbaH
Rio Grande II WVU-Toc11 , 7:30p.m.

Wld-y,o-mbofe
-!ling
Gallla Academy at Warren Trl-match

.

OVP File ·

Vinton County's Rebecca Puckett drives to the bucket during' a non-league high school girls basketball game on· Tuesday ·
in Tupper's Plains. The Lady Vikings rallied from a halftime deficit to win 55-50. .

than $1 million of her own
money running for Congress.
She was the Democratic nominee in .the 14th District in
2004 and lost to Republican
U.S. Rep. Steven LaToUrette,
then came back in 2006 and
finished second to Betty
Sutton in a crowded .13th
District primary.
Cafaro's attempts to tout
her lofty education - · she
graduated from Slanford
University at 19 - and vjgorous health and . senior
advocacy
were
often
drowned out by her and her
father's roles in the federal
bribery· conviction.of former
U.S. Rep. James Traficant.
Her father, J J . Cafaro, was
sentenced to probation in 2002

for bribing Traficant, who was
convicted of taking gifts llll(l
kicked out of Congress. Capri
Cafaro invoked her fifth
Amendment right not ·to
incriminate herself during a
grand jucy appearance and
teeeived immunity for her testimony.
Jason .Wilson's political
experience has also been tied
negatively to his father. He
was removed as Charlie
Wilson's congressional campaign manager when too
many petition signatures
carne from voters in a neigh. boring district and cost the
elder Wilson a spot on the
· Democratic primary ballot.

Local Weather

Jets' Nugent kicks away
questions about his abilities
BY DENNIS W"S,ZAK JR.
ASSOCIAT£0 PRESS

Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy with scattered showers. Flighs in the upper 60s.
South winds 5 to 10 mph .
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Wednesday night..Mostly
cloudy. A slight chance of
in
the
showers
evening ... Then a chance of
showers after midnight.
Lows . in the lower 50s.
South winds 5 to I0 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy with .a 40 percent
chance of showers. Highs

around 70. South winds 5 to
lOmph.
Thursday night...Cioudy
with showers likely. Lows
in the mid 40s. South winds
10 to 15 mph with gusts up
to 30 mph. Chance of rain
70 percent.
Friday ... Cloudy
with
showers. Breezy and much
cooler with highs in the mid
40s. Temperature falling to
around 40 in the afternoon.
Chance of rain 80. percent.
Friday night...Mostly
cloudy with a chance of rain

and snow showers. Cooler
with lows in the lower 30s.
Chance of precipitation 30
percent.
Saturday
through
Sunday
ilight...Partly
cloudy. Highs in the mid
40s. Lows in the mid 20s.
Monday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs in the upper 30s.
Monday night and
Tuesday ... Mostly
clear.
Lows in the upper 20s.
Highs in the mid 40s.

Federal Mogul USB- 33.39

Akzo- 55.24
Aahland- 66.51
BIG- 22.33
Bob Evina - 34.os

Gannett- 58.74 .

39.50 .

Champion - 7.63
Channllll Shops - 13.79
City Holding Col- 59.82

39.65

DG -16.71
DuPont - 48.20

',,

.

'~

..,.

HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. Mike Nugent measured his
sleps and gazed at his target
54 yards away. He knew he
was going to make the field
goal.
The New York Jets ' second-year kickiEr high-fived
holder Ben Graham as the
ball sailed through the
uprights easily for a careerlong field goal, just as he.
imagined seconds earlier.
''If you don't have confidence in yourself, you
might as well not even be
· out on the field," said the
soft-spoken and mild-mannered Nu~;ent, a Centerville,
Ohio, native who played at
Ohio State. "If you're the
only one in the whole stadium that has confidence in
yourself, well, that's the

-

We ·remember those who ha¥e passed.:away
and are especially dear to,.us:' · ,·
On Friday, December 22, we will publish a special page devoted to thOse ~ are gpn~ but not
'

'

'

.41

G-rat Electric - 35.20
GKNLY- 5.75
Harley Daivlfton -

72.85

JPM-46.20
Kneer - 21.63
UCI.- 30.68
NSC-48.56
Oak Hill Financial - 27.87

OVB-25.15
BBT-42.61
Peoples -

28. 77

Pep!llco - 61.82
Premier - 14.23
Rockwell - .63.04
Rocky Boots - 14.26

-David c. Aadmrs
~.., 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

lamil1

wish, select one or tbe following FREE verses bdow to
laaoot!IIIIY yoor tribute.
1•.-We hold you in our thoughts and memories forever.
2. May God crndle you in His anns, now and forever.
3. Forever missed, never forgollen. May God hold you in the palm of
His hand.
4. Thank you for the wonderful days we shared together. My Jn)'t!S
· will be wilh you until we meel again.
5. The days we share&lt;!' were sweet. I long to see you again in God's
heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all, and the memory of your
smile fills us wilh joy and laughter.
7. Though out of!ight, you'll forever be iu my hean and mind.
8. The days may come and go, hut the times we shared will always remain.
9. May the lighl of peace shine on your face for eternity.
10. May God's angels guide you and prote&lt;.1 you tluuughout time.
II . You were alight in our life that burns forever in our hearts.
12. May God's graces shine over you for all time.
I 3. You are in our thoughts and llf11Y"' from morning 10 night and from
year to year.
14. We send lhis ""'sage with a loving kiss for eternal res1 and happiness.
15. May the Lord bless you with His graces and Wlifl!l, loving hean.

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.00 PER IJSTING • $\2 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to:
The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest )lemories ·
lll Court Street, Pomeroy, OH 45769

DEADLINE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 15, NOON .

Name of d e c e a s e d - - - - - - - - - . , . - , - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - -

Relationship 10 me _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Number'of selected verse _ __
Date ofbinh _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Dateofpassin•I;------

Sears -169.99
Wal-ll(lart - 46.71
Wendy's - 33.25
Worthington - 18.18
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Ananclal Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

..,.,...
: • AI-Ohio foolball teams.
SeePageB6
'

forgotten. They will be simHar to _\he sample below:

Please publish my tribute in the special Memory Page on Friday, December 22.

ACl r- 34.75
AEP- 41.44 ·

CENX -

'

r----------------------------··--·--·-·--·-·.,

Local Stocks

BorgWamer- 57.73

.

' '·

Always ill oar lleat1s,
John aDd MOM Aadmrs and

"

Pieese see Eagles, Bl

INSIDE

Cafaro, Wilson's son tapped to till Ohio Senate vacancies
COLUMBUS - . Capri
·Cafaro and Jason Wilson; two
casualties of contentious and
expensive Democratic congressional primaries last
spring, have been tapped to filL
state Senate seats.
Ohio · Senate Democrats
· announced Tuesday that they
have chosen Cafaro, 29, of
Youngstown, to replace Marc
Dann, who was elected the
state's next attorney general
on Nov. 7. Wilson, 38, of
Sunset Heights, was picked
to replace his father, Charlie
Wilson, who becomes a congressman on Jan. 4.
Both will serve the final
two years of four-year terms.
Cafaro is a,shopping mall
heiress who twice spent more

TUPPERS PLAINS You win some, you lose
s01i!e.
In the case of the Vinton
County Lady Vikings they lost every quarter,
except the third, which they
won in a big way.
Vinton County, by effectively applying a full-court
pres s during the pivotal
period, was able. to overtake
the .Eastern Lady Eagles'
first half lead to win a high
school girls basketball contest Tuesday night by a
score of 55-50. ·
Facing off against a
Division II school on opening night, much smaller
Eastern didn't put its fust
game in the win column.
However, by playing tC)e-totoe with a bigger. Vinton
County schooL· made a
strong statement of what is
to come this ·season from
the Eastern girls basketball
team.
"They are a good team,
they're going to win some
game," said Vinton County
coach Jeremy Ward.
The Lady Eagles lead
most of the first half and
entered the third quarter
leading 24-20. After scoring
the opening basket in the
second half, which made the
score 26-20, the Lady
Vikings scored 14 unan-

Frldl!y'a fMIMI
acr,-. Bolk-11
. Meigs at Gallla Academy, 6 p.m.
J'astem at Vinton County, 6:30p.m.
Cross Lafles at South Galla, 7:30 p.m,
OVCS Tournament
.
Glrto BllkotboU
Cross Lanes at South Galia, 6 p.m.
OVCS Tournament

Print your name h e r e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.;...._ _ _ Phone number.'-------

Ci1y1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - State---- ZioJ)---

. Make Check Payable to THE DAILY SENTINEL
L---------------------~---------------J
•

'

.

'

Judge throws
out breath
test against·
WRHenry

APphoto

Ohio State quarterback Troy Smith rolls out looking to pass
during a football game against Michigan, Saturday, Nov. 18
in Columbus.

(Ulho JMznts To Be
A Title Contender?'

· AP photo
Move over the Bachelor,
New York Jets kicker Mike Nugent reacts after kicking a 54look out Survivor - there is ·
yard field goal during second-quarter NFL football against the
a new reality show in town. ·
Houston Texans at &lt;liants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.
Please see Nugent. B6
Using real athletes from
BATAVIA (AP) - A
judge has thrown out the across the country, the new
results of a breath test in a show, appropriately named
drunken
driving case "Who wants to be a title
against Cincinnati Bengals contender" hosted by the
BCS, is sweeping across the
receiver Chris Henry.
land
and has more drama
Carol Rowe, assistant
than
those
shows could have
Clermont County prosecuWhile the Buckeyes have
tor, told Municipal Court ever dreamed of.
For weeks now, title con- not seen the toughest schedJudge Victor Haddad that
tenders
from sea to sllining ule outside of Texas, whose
she had concluded the
sea
have
risen and each No. 2 ranking was preseason
results were unreliable.
After discussions with week another one falls, nar- and has proven not to be as
Henry 's lawyer, she said she rowing the list of poteniial
Please see Crum. B6
agreed the equipment used title contenders down to the
to perform the test did not elite - or maybe just the big a win, and Michigan,
they have still done what has
comply with state require- lucky.
ments.
While Ohio State stamped been asked of tHem and are
Haddad signed off on its ticket to the big game the only BCS · ,onference
uropping
the
results with a 42-39 win over s~;hool still undefeated. '
So
who · is
left?
Michigan two weeks ago,
Pluse see Hellry, B6
the remaining spot is still Contesrnnts, come on down.
Our first contestant hails
available and each week
2520 Valley Drive
Building •2
out
of California and curanother probable spot filler
rently
sits
as
the
second
falls from contention and the
Pinnell Street
Suite 214
Buckeyes look even thai ranked team in the nation.
CoNTAcrUs
Ripley, WV
Point Pleasant, WV
much more deserving of the Playing in the unpredictable
PAC-10, the team has surOVP ScoreLine (5 p.m,-1 o.m.) SIJOt.
'But with one week vived the season with an 101-74()-446-2342 ext. 33
remaining and other top 1 record, with a game
.F u - 1-740-446·30013
contestants Auburn, against UCLA still to be
played Saturday, with the '
E-mail - Aparts Omydailysentinel.com
Notre Dame, Rutgers. only
loss of !he season com,
Soorta staff
Arkansas Lousivlle, West ing to 8-4 Oregon St.ate.
'
Bred Shennan, Sports Editor Vuginia and Texas to name
Statistically
speaking,
(740) «6-2342, ext. 33
a few - already sitting a1 USC has had the toughest
bshermanOmydaJtytrlbune.oom
home and watching from the road to get to where they are
sideline,
it has left a select now, facing only four teams
Larry Crum, Spor11 Writer
few fighting for that coveted with a record .500 and under
(740) «6-2342, ext. 33
lcrumOmydallyrogiste&lt;.com
spot alongside Ohio State in and a combined opponent
BCS
National
Mhirt SMw, Sports Wr!Wr the
Championship game 111
' (740) «6-2342, ext. 23
Please see Crum, B6
aportsOmydallylrtbune .com
Glendale in January.

.• Polat Pleasaat Oftke:

• Ripley Oftke:

304-675-4839

304-372-5756

Now aecepdnaappolntments &amp; new patieats!

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Tk f(JJ!(tft of P~{e-ttio~olt

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Wednesday, November 29, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

ter

{!Crtbune - Sentinel - l\e

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Wednesday, November 29, 2006

www.mydallysentlnel.com

1

C lAS S I F I E D.

It

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2750.

.. E-mail

classified@ mydailytribune.com

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

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Fax

Word Ads

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Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monda'y•Prld•y for Jn•ertlon
In Next Day'• P•per
Sund•v In-column: 1:00 p.m.
~ric1ilv Por Sund8ya Paper

·Monday thru Friday
:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AM
Succesllful

~

• All ada muat be prepaid*·

Ada

Now you CCIII have borders ond Qrophlcs
~
added to your classified ads
(.;iL
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Grophlcs SOC for small
S1.00 for larQe

RFALEmtE
WANI'ID

•

,r--~---..,

51'76/mo.l Buy 3 bedrt&gt;f/'1'. 2
bath HUDI ~~~ dn, 30 y~ 0
8%. For listings 800·559-

4109ext. 1709
' -------S1821mol 4 Bedroom, 2.!5
bath HUDI 4% down, 30
years 0 8%. For llstlngs
B00-55S...109 ex1 F254
·c 1 bedroom $275/mo piuo

*POLICIES*

~· r_~--AND__.I

\\\( JI \.(I \I I '- I "

r

deposit &amp; utilities, in
Galllpolle. Call (740)256·
•••

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

U~JV1 .

ANNolJN&lt;:EMtM's ..

Bedroom
Furnished
House
In
Gallipolis,
Convlenent Location, No
Pets. (740)446-1162

~

• Lost In Rodney. Very Largo
male !ger slnped cat Very
Alligator Jack'a Flea mari&lt;et friendly. Oeclawed on front.
holiday houre·Frlday 10.5, Responds
to ·
name
Saturday 9·6, Sunday i-5. Pumpkin. (740)245-5146
Several new vandora.
Lost Male Shepherd. Frank
Christmas Wreaths &amp; Grave Road, . VInton are•. $200
Blanlets, $5-$25, (740)949- Reward for safe return. Call
2115, Sue'e Oreanhouoo.
(740)368·9924, (740)368·
0654.

rL""""""""""""""""""-'
GIVEAWAY

1'ii Coll'll&gt; fo

~

All
Roll
Eolllt
dvertlsements •
ub)ec1 to the Fodera

1lr Housing Act o
1966.

&gt;This
ccepts

newspape

qnly hel
anted ads meetin

OE standards.

&gt;We will not kriowlng
accept any adver
lsement In vlo!atlo

1the law.

I

LosT AJ'jJ)

FOUND

.

r

or (740)794.()979.

~~f1'0V.~~, A~ ~!i&lt;'
f'l\1\Jo~ F'oa:&gt;
~12-o~pS.

2·3

Bedroom
OupleJC,
$420/moplusdeposlt&amp;utill·
ties in Downtown Gal~polis.
No Pats. (740)446·0332
• 6am·5pm Mon·Sat.
--'-----"'---- 3 Bedroom HOU$8 at 2004
112 Chatham Avenue .
$525/mo, plus utilities. HUO
approved, Full Basement,
Carport. (740)446-4543

0
0

"
D

.liiNOI- odworttolng
In ttdt M1 1p1p1r It
oubloctto tho Fodoret
FolrHouolngActol 1111
whlah mokoolt llopl to
ldverlf11 "eny
Dprroolefor&lt;1oo"'ce1 llmftlltlon or
cltcrhnlnlllon biNd on
'*-1 ColOr, rtllglon, H.l:

YARDSME

,.,

awning.
No
pets. In bedroom, 2bath,S 1551mo.4
Gallipolis. (7 40)446·2003,
bedroom. $225/mo. 4% dn.
v40)446-1409 or (740)446- 30 yrs o 6%. For ns~ngs
2592
800·659'4'109 ext. F144.
3B Rei idg &amp; St
W0.he
r.
r
ove.
r BEAUTIFUL
APART·
&amp; Cryer Included. Section 6 MENTS
AT
BUDGET
approved (304)576' 2934
PRICES AT JACKSON
For Rent (1) 2 Bedroom and ESTATES, 52 Westwood
(1) 3 Bedroom Mobile Drive from $849 to $448.
Home. S400/mo. No Pets. Walk to shop &amp; mJvies. Call
(740)388·9905
740·446·2568.
.Equal
.:.___:..:. : _ _ _ _ _ _ Housing Opportoolty.
Mobile Home for Rent In
Cheshire area. (740)446-- CONVENIENTLY LOCAT•
4234 or (740)208·7861
ED 6 AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apar1monts,
MobUe Home for Rent local· and/or small houses FOR
-"h'll
ed off SI&lt;Q
1 Rd ·• Pt · RENT. Call (740)441-1 1 11
Pleasant oe~•;1 ·roqul·red
,.......
tor eppKcation &amp; lnlormeti()f).
call (304)875--3423
Downtown Pt . Pl . 4th Street
Moble Home tor Rent on Rental space avalleble now.
State Route 7, Middleport, Gas heat &amp; Air call after 5pm
Ohio, across lrom sewm;n (304)675-378 8
behind KC Auto Sales. :.:.:_:..:_;_:.__:..:____
$250/mo pius deposit. Free Downtown Pt. PL Large 1
phone &amp; tree water. BA Apt. all electric Adults
(740)446·8172, (740)256· only, no pets cell after 5pm
6251
(304)675-3786

:.::.====='--

...... or"" t -

floor kitChen. Jenn Air Appl ..
Sun Aoom. 1 acre, Ntce
Neighborhood, Close to
hospital. $850/mo. (7'40)4467443

10

p;•••oe,ltmftdon or
«eorlmlnltlon."

~

-ngly-

3 Be&lt;toom, 2105 N. Main,
No Pats, 0ep &amp; Rei S450
month (304)675-2749

--·In

...·- 2 2

C 2006 by NEA, Inc.

EII m View
Apartments

wtll not

r·

....,.. 1

DIIMIIw. our
... horeby
' -thltetl

-

......lnpldvM111dln

r.,.
.....................

Found: Female Blade lab &amp;
Male Walker Coonhound, on
Rt 7 in Addison . (740)367·
0938

ii'!llhopr-ior~ot.;you.;;.r.h.;.,om,.•,.·-..,

~

MlsmlANrovs .

MERqwWsE 1 -------,.• AKC Yollow Lab pups.

27" Sonyo T.V.. $75; enter·
talnmon1
con1er,
$50;
Kenmore Washer &amp; dryer.
Stso; exe rcise Gazelle. S50;
Antique Oak Singer Sewing
machine
from
Morris
Haskins Estate,
$250;
Antique Oak 3 drawer chest
of drawers, $50; Antique
rock.ing chair, $50; Antique
dre§ser· with new mirror,
575 . Call (740) 446 _1721 ·

thlt l•ut pIf

rUvooocx

Ready December 16th. Horse Boarding, 12x12
$400. (740)441·0130 or S1alls, Indoor arena, lull
.(740 )441 •7251 .
·
care, $375/mo. (740)645·

4334.
AKC, 1 female Yorkshire
Te rrier pupp;;; AKC , 2 male
Dachshund puppies; AKC
Miniatu re Pinscher~ 1 male
bleckltan; CKC Chihuahua
puppies. 2 males, small; al l
vet checked., and some
shots, {740)696-1085

- - - - - : - - - - - Female Boxer Pup for Sale ·

Keifer Buih.· Valley· Bison..
Horse
and
Livestock
TrllleraLoadmax·
Gooseneck,
Dumps, &amp;
·Utility· Aluma Aluminum
l'rllllara· B&amp;W Goosenectc:
Hitches.
Carmichael
Equipment (·740,"6·24 12

~

I \ li t 1'\
Computer Oesk with butch (304)593·0678
-,--'-----and roll-out printer shelf, ~
AUJ'(!;
$25. Call .(740)446·3988
Himalayan P'erslan Kittens,
----~--- No
Papers. .
Father
Ear corn for Sale $3.25 a Registered , $100 each.
bushel 304 _743 •0517 call (740)256·6684 leave mes· 1989 Honds Accord DX, 4
after Gpm
sage- will return calL
door, automatic, fair condl·
tlon. KBB- $1 180. Sell-$800
- - - - - - - - Pets for sale Beautilul Choc. OBO. (740)794.0231 .
Hobart dishwasher w/stain·
lab pups 7 weeks old.
less stee-l tables &amp; sinks. $ 150.00 each. ..
Make· great
Walk·in-cooler
7'xS'x10, Christmas gitt. 740·992·
Hobart 80·quart mi•er &amp; 6227..
more (304)675-4235

I I{\ \"' l 't

II~

jib

L.,--iiJORiiiiiSAuiiiili·-o-'

-----:=----

~·10

304 ....

four door aodan, good tlroo,
no rust, Interior in good oond~ion. 111 ,665 mioo. Very
Good Condition. lotS of new
porto. Not ,..ny le~ In this
condition. Asking price

~

r4~=rus'

s

~~·

1•

Commercial · bu ilding "For
Sale• 1600 square feet, off
street parking. Great loca·
Apartmants in Middleport. STEEL BUILDING: MOll· tiont 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Plicv "Nogotiabie"
From $295--$444. Call 740lNG· Must sell Quanzet style New roofl Motival:ed Seller!
992·5064 . Equal Housing
steel building. 25x34 paid Cal! Wayne (404)456-3602 .
Opportunities.
$8,770 will sacrifice for quick
sale $6,4-40· brand new, siMI Kozy· World vent free wall·
on pallet Call 1·800·352· propane heater 30,000 BTU
0469
asldng $75. (740)446-6747.

Childbirth Preparation
Classes
Sunday, December 3
2:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Holzer Medical Center
Education &amp; Conference
Center

Call 446·5030

aso
oso

oos.

Space for Aent ............................................. 410
Sporting Ooocla ................. .......................... 520
SUV'o for 5aia.............................................. 720
Truckl for Sole ............................................ 715
U~holotery ............... :................................... 870

V•n• For 1111 ............................................... 730
Wenled to Buy ........... .................................. 010
Wented to Buy· Ferm Su~~lleo .................. 820
Wented To Do .............................................. 180
Wented to Rent ............................................470
Yard Sale· Gelllpollo ........................: ...........072
Yerd Sela.Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yerd Sai~· Pt . Ploatant .............................. ,. 076

Holzer Clinic Meigs
Please bring your
insurance cards
'

'

New Items
AMVETS BLDG
Thursday 11/30/06
C::hr•n

I{ I \ I I "' I \ I I

no

Business Training ...................:................... 140

Flu Shot Clinic
Sat. Dec. 2nd
9-10:30 am

I \In I 'l 1' 1'1 II"'
,\ I I\ I .., I (&gt;I h

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Cam pars &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 710
Cards of Thanks ....................:..................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ......................... .............. 190
ElectricaiiRelrigeratlon ............................... 840
Equipment for Rent .....................................480
Excavaling ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment... ....................................... 610
Farms lor Rent... ..........................................430
Farms lor Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade .........................................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetsblaa .: ................................... 580
Fumlahecl Rooms...................... : ................. 4SO
General Haullng ................................. , .........
Glveaway ......................................................040
Heppy Ads ....................................................
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................640
Help WW11ad .................................................110
Home lmprovernents ................................ ... 810
~tom!!~ for Sale ........................................ .... 310
Household Goode ....................................... 510
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memoriam ...................; ............................020
Insurance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Livestock ..................................., ..................630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
lots &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlscellaneous .............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse .......................540
Mobile Home Repair....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent... ............................ 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale ................................320 ·
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................7~
Muslcailnstruments ................................... 570
Pereonara ................................... ..................
Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing 6 Hutlng ............. ,,. ....................820
Proleaalonel Sarvlcea .................................230
Radio, TV 6 CB Rept~lr ............................... 160
Reel Eatele Wantad ..................................... 360
Schoole 1natrue11on..................................... 1SO
Seed , Plant 6 Fertlllter ..................... ,........ 850
S~uetlona Wentad ................ : ...................... 120

ADVER
· YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIED$

Maple Piano with bench
$800. Call (740)446-7219 or

-"""'Y-

4x4's For Sale ...... : .......................................725
• Announcement ....., .........: ............................030
Antlques ................... : ................................: ••s30
Apartments for .Rent ..................................:440
Auction and Flea Market.............................OBO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ..... , .................... 760
Auto Repalr ..................................................
Autos for Sale ....................................·.......... 710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplies ........................................ S50

o

'--oioiiiii

zxs.

Hound. Bidwell-Porter area.
Reward. (7 40)366·9871

Business Opportunity ................................. 21

2002 Chevy cBvaller, 2

door, Sport paclcage. bnght

51995.00. Call (740)506· yellow with A.R.. wheels,
0366 for more details ttnd e ground effects. spoiler, auto· 2002 · Jeep Uber~ 4x4
25,000 miles. CO/cassatte
teet drive.
malic, Asking $3600. Phone
$8,950. (740)256·
(740)256·1253
1991 Volvo, ~.0 SE TurbO. 4 - - - - - - - dr., aula, aU power, sunroof, 2003 Ford Focus
red,
ell teaiher, good· condiUon, 4dr hatctlbadt, 58,000 miles
166,000
miles.
wh Jte . $9,000. Greet cond . Call · - (740)992-5181 after 5pm
Brooke (740)416-601 3.
2001 Gt.AC Conversion Van,
loaded. good cond't. $5900
,993 Serena, Red! $1495 or 2003 Ford Taurus , CD,
OBO Phone 740-99Nl309.
$650 down; 1983 VW Rabbit 75,000 miles. 55900 OBO.
trucl&lt;, diesel. 50MPG, $999 17401256 . 1618
or $600 down ; 1993 Ford - - - - -- - 1
Ranger Splash, 4x4, Red , 97 Gr. Cherokee Limited
$2799 or $1500 down; 1996
2001 Yamaha · Wolverine
12868
Oodgo Ram, El11. Cab, 4x4, 99 Daowoo 12295
4x4, looks -and runs good.
$5495 or $3000 down; 1997 .OO Neon 12995
Still has original tires on it
Kla Cor, Red, 5 speed, Gas 03 Neon $3995
with good tread, Asking
Saver, $1699 or $600 down; 94 Mustang Conv LQ.w $2900. Phone (740)256·
1996 Cavalier. 5 speed, mllnl 55388
1253
$1495 or $750 down: 2000 92 Clrend Am $1488
" I R\ It I "
Chry&amp;Mtr 300M, 93K, sharp, 94 Grand Am GT $1650
$74 95 or $3500 down; 19 98 94 Taurus $1588
·Dodge Durango, 4 ' 4 · Bleck. 98 Cavalier $3066
Sharp, $5695 or $3000 97 Cavalier Z·24 $2986
down ; 1994 S· 10 4x4, V6, 06 Eclipse 55899
BASEMENT
Auto, $2900 or $ 1500 down; 95 Eclipse $2468
WATERPROOFING
1999 Chevy Monts Cano, 98 Wlndstor $1499
Unconditional lifetime guar·
Bleck, Auto, V6 , $3500 or 98 Winds1ar S.'l499
entee.
Local references fur$2000 down. (740)446-8172 00 Wlndstar $4368
nished. Established 1975.
01'(740)709·1124
F_
93 15051999
Cell 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
1996 Chevy Cavalier Z24. 90 F· 150 Low mjjes $2399 0870, Rogers Basement
97 F· 150 4•4 54395
Power
windowsllocks,
Waterproofing.
92 F-250 $3486
Sunrool, CD player. Good
95 Dakota 4•4 $ t 999
1.800. Call
condition.
05 Ram 2500 4x4, 4 door.
(740)367-0122
5:30pm·
diesel $29388
9:00pm.
00 F-350 quad cab, 4x4,
1997 Cutlass, White, Good diesel $22499
Condition . 97,000 miles, 91 D-2500 Cargo van $2344
Rome Auto Sales
PW. PL. $2300 OBO.
(740)446-6200 leave mes· (740)441 ·9544 or (740)794·
0052
sage.

Lost about 2 weeks ago. Tall,
thin, Red colored Aedbone

Business anct Buildings .... .-..... :.................. 340

1652.

Teacup &amp; Toy Poodles,
Apple Hoed Chihuahua,
Registered . Snuggle lap
baby into the Holidays.
(740)446-9428

------- r

ldvert' IT llntl for reel

. FOUND : 2 Horses in Letart
area, 3 weeks ago. phone
(304)695·~1 15

r

Tlo-· B&amp;W Goooenocl&lt;
AKC German Shepherd. Hitches.
Carmichael
pups. Top bloodline, both Equipment (740)«8·2412
parents on prem ises • ready
1
h· t
(304)675 Now John Deere Compacta
or c ns mas
and 5000 Series Lltitlty trac_572_4_ _ _ _ _ __ tors 0011 Fixed for 36
KC
Cl
months through John Deere
A
Registered
olden
Carmichael
Retrievers, Parents has had Credh.
DNN
OFA
approved. Equipment (740)446·24 12
F
I $450 t.A I $400
ema e,
• a e, ·
·
(740)368·8965

Mobile Home Lot in Johnson
Mobile Home Pa"rk in
Phone
Gallipolis.
OH.
(740)446·2003 or (740)446· • 233 bedroom apartments
JET
1409
· AERATION MOTORS
· - - - -- - •Central heat &amp; AJC
-Repaired. New &amp; Rebuilt In
Newly remodeled 14x70 •Washer/dryer hookup
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1·
290, · 2 bath mobile home • All electric· averag ing
•600·537-9528.
$425 month + deposit. Also . $50·$60/month
for sale a 30ft Nomad ,•owner pays water. sewer,
NEW AND USED STEEL
camper, sleeps 10. great
trash
Steel Beams, Pipe ' Rebar
cond~ion. $4,200. Cell
(
)
Concrete,
Ar:~gle,
For
Channel, Flet Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Nice 14x70 3 Bedroom. 2
Driveways &amp; Walkwavs. l&amp;L
Bath
home.
Located
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
between
Athens
and
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Pomeroy. $365 .00
par - - - - - - - - Fnday, 8am-4:30pm . Cloaod
month. Call (740)385-9948. Gracious living . 1 end 2 bed- Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
room apartments at Villag e Sunday. (740)446--1300
AllFOR~
Manor
and
Riverside

:':'";'~= r.~"·· ,.,.,.

--_...,_..-

1\ · l~

www.comlet.com

I

tion.

.

Found ·25th· young male - dog mostl~ black w/whlte
and
brown.
Pratts
FOI'kiBurlington area. 74(}.
696-1182.

1 .bedroom In GalliPolis.
$225 monthl$100 deposit.
No pets. Call Wayne
(404)456-3602 lor informs.

Coll (Nt)m-44M

r;r '1'M

2 malo hall bred Hounds to VInton, OH , ar"ea. Reward
giveaway. "Call (740)367- Offered. Call740·366·8514,
7291,
740·646-4662.
740-645·
6510, 740-645·1870
Frigidaire Ret. 3 door side~
by-side almond color.. ·740· VERY LARGE REWARD.
742-2025.
Lost: Female Rottweiler on
Johnson Ridge Road. Goes
Outdoor cats to gOOd home. by the name Harley, If found
Call (740)256·6684
please call (740)441-9035

r

ClllllpaiiiBy oppoi-

Cot1C~~(;I6&gt;l 1't;A( '/~Ct&lt;f

Lost·She~la dog, 16' tall,
wlwhlte paws. Last seen In

..,

. . llo!llng • Training lor
w.lgllt Loll, Dec. I In

fn;

i

1990 Mercury t.Aarqulo GS· 2000 Chrysler Cirrus 4 doOr, 2000 Dodge Dakota Club
leather seats, air. · auto, Cab Sport. Automatic. AC.
$2 ,100 OBO. (740)256- THt, Crulte, CO, New Tires,

5 montl1 otd CKC Registered
Miniature Dachshund, 2
males, 1 red, &amp; 1 blaclc &amp;
tan. osl&lt;ing $200 (304)593·
3620
.

HotmtOlD

-1

"

Mwrt...,_,.

•d•

I

. · 3130.
~

POLICIES: Ohio V.lley Publ .. hlng rwM1'YM the l1fhl to edit, l'lflcl. or Clncel 11ny HIt ~tty thM. lftooN mull bt fiPOitld on 1M ftm dly of
Trbl,..s.ntl,........._.. will be rMPOn•IIMior no rnofe tt.n lhe C10111 of the 11f** OOCUIMd by tM .,.lnCI only the flnt_lntlnlon. WI lhltl
..,, lou« ••~ thlt ,..u!W from the pubUcetlon or omlulon of 11n IICh'MtiMmlnt. CorNollon will lle ,...... In 1M ftflt ilvllllble Mttton. • ...
.,.
I • Current me cert6 • All Ntl .ate
n
to 1M ........ ...., Houelng Aol ol 11&amp; • 11'111
w.
... .,......,olthtft.

• Stlirt Your Ade Wtth A Keyword • Include Complete
Delc:rfptlon • Jndude A Price • Avoid AbbN¥11tfont
• Include Phone Number And AddNH When NMdecl
• Adt Should Run 7 Dlyt

Should Include .TheH Item a
To Help Get R•ponH...

All Dlapl•y: 13. N.oon 2
aualnea• Dllliya Prior To
Publlc•tlon
sunday D;lapl•yl 1:00
Thurect•v for Sund•v•

.

·
Need to sell your home?
. La1e on payments. divorce,
• "Job transfer or a death?' 1
~ -can buy your home. All caSh
• .•and quick cl""ng. 740-4 16•

:'

Display Ads

AawGE

near Vinton. Call (740)441·
1111.

Fax

[JearllfirM

LO'rs&amp;

llolllle Home Lot lor rent

www.mydailyregistor.ccim

To Place
{!Crthune
Sentinel
l\egister ·
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 ·(304) 675-1333
Call Today... or To 446·3008
or
To
992·2157
.
Or
l;,;;o~;!.::.6::..:75:.:-5::2::.34::...__ _ _ _ _..,..
Fax

Financing as low u 0%- 36
Mos. on John Detre 7
Series 4x4, 4x5 &amp; !5x4
Round Batorl/500 Str1os
MoCoo/Squoro
Batora.
Also avai lable 5.8% on
6 week old Grea1 Pyrenees UNCI Hay Equipment. All
puppies, FemaleS only, rates thru John De.ere
$200. (740)24[&gt;.9142
Credit.
Carmichael
Equipment (740)446-2412.
AKC Boxer puppies, born
10/1Bl06, 3 reverse Brindle, Keifer Built· Vallay- Bisonand
livestock
1 female, 2 male, 2 Brindle 1 Horse
Loadmax female, 1 male, $..50, Trlllera·
(740)992-0805, 740·416- Gooseneck, Oumps, &amp;
1453, No calls after 9:30pm Uimty· Alums Aluminum

2br, Apt. In Pt. PJeaaant. Commercial . building -For
Newly refnodeled, utillti81 Ranr 1600 square teet, -ott
paid, downstairs.
$47!5 stree( pal'tdng. Great loca·
(304)675·8635
tionl 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Ra/11 ' Negotiable'
3 rooni's &amp; bath, stove,
I
refrigerator. utlllltes paid.
Pretty 3BR House lbr Rent Downstairs, 46 Olive St. =;:r;;;~~;.;.;;;;;.;;.;;..,
Cedar Str. Central Heatlalr, $4!50 monlh, no pets. I!
FP. $695+!.Jtil and dep, Call(,7..:4,::,0)..:446__:__:·3..:94__:5::_
. ___
,.. ~~
(740)446-ol639.
UVULI&gt;
A Hidden Treasure. Largest ·--lliiiiiiiiii-_..1
Small one bedroom hau~ In apartments In the area . Mollohan Carpet, 76 VIne
Middleport.
References Newly renovated, brand new
Street , Gallip olis. Berb,r,
required. 301·576·2000.
everything, SUirtlng a1 $425. $5'.95/yd, Call fclr free quote
Call today before they are all (740)4 46·7444
MOBILEiloMPs gone.' Laurel Commons
~
FOR IbM
. Apartments (Ja.)273-3344 Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Apartment for rent, 1-2 Repelr-675· 7388. For sale,
1 br Trailer in Letart fur~·
Bdrm., remodeled, new car- ·re-conditioned automatic
nished, utllffies paid, $350
el, stove &amp; frig ., water, washers &amp; dryers, refrigera·
a month 7 miles !rom P
Mountaineer
Plant sewer, trash pd! Middleport. tors . gas and electric
(304)882-2858
$425.00. No pets. Rei. ranges, air conditioners, and
- - - -- - - - required. 74():.843·5264.
wringer washers. Will do
.
. b ds 1
2 bedroom. NC. porott &amp; ~ANK FORECLOSURES! 3 rop&amp;lri; on motor ran
n

Mce 38R, 1 beth, central air,
bed. D/Widei
$49,179 . Scott (740)628· 61oV8/refTig turn.. 1 yr tease,
$600/mo + deposit, refer··
2750
ences. no smOking inside,
- L i k e new 312 OWner no pota. t05 Bastian! ,
' financing . Soon (74o)628· (740 )446-3667·

Galli a
County
OH l\.....o~

It'

Ab~olute

Top Dollar: U.S.
Silver and GOld Coins,
Proofsets, Gold Rtngs, Pre1935
U.S.
Currency,
Solilaire Diamonds- t.A.T.S.
C.o~n Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 7 40-4462842.
Buying Junk Cars, Trucks &amp;
Wrecks, Pay Cash J D
Salvage
(304)773·5343
(304)674· 1374
YOUNG FARM FAMILY
WITH 14YRS GRAZING
EXPERIENCE wanting to
buy 150+ acres of op9n

r-------,

' NO EKPERIEHCE NECESSARY
• fULL-TIME ClASSES
" COl TRAINING.

' FINANCING ,t,VAILABLE
' J08 PLACEMENT
' ENROLLING tOY

-

New Wage
Scale!! Arcadia Nursing
Center 1s now hiring STNAs
fo1 afternoons and night
shifts. Full and part lime
positions available. Come
join our caring team!!
Please apply in person or
call 740-667·3156. Ask for
Jane Ann Casey 25675
East Main, Coolville, Ohio
45723
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Astemble crafts,
wood Items.
To $480/wk
Materiel s provided.
Fre Information pl&lt;g. 24Hr.
801-428-4849

Concealed Pistol Class Dec.
9, 2006, Christmas Special.
$50.00.
9:00am. VFW
Mason WV. (740)843-5555,
740-416-3329

ALLIANCE
FEDERAL

TRACTO~- TRAILER

TRAINING CENTERS

ciaVoperational references Coding Analys1
available. flteas contad Bill Medical Racords Degree
Required .
Full-time,
Krusllng (740)634-2732.
Competitive
Salary
, \ 11'1 1n \ II ' '
Excellent Benefit Package.
"' I I ~\ II I "
Interested
Candidates
rilti\;
r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l·
should
ean
1304
)424-2 18o
10
.or send resume to

S STNAa

ot:
2150-Ave
Golllpollo, OH

..

Lw------_.1

1 112 story Cape Cod 4
years old. 3 bedrooms, 2
112 b:31hs large front porch
approx. 5 acres located on
Flatwoods Rd., Pomeroy,
Ohio. Asking $160.000.
740-992-4196.

SfSTNdc-

WYTHEVILLE , VA
ground to continue a grazing
livestock operation, preler·
1-800-334·1203
ably in the athen!ll'meigs oo.
area. House &amp; buildings not 1....:-=·""""=::--=="""'·~=..
necessary. Excellent finan·

HaP WANnD

Wolders nHCIICI lor
locel menufecturer.·
lluot llfiPIY In porOon

POSTAL JOBS
$15.67·$26.19/hr., now hir·
ing. For application and free
governement job Info, call
American Assoc. of labor 1·
913-599-8042. 24/hrs. emp.

sorv.

Pomero~.

River· view. OH

c.r-

Goltlpollo
CGI.
contract possible with down
(Careers Close To Homo) payment, (740)992-2593
Call Todayl740-446-4367.
3 Bedroom, 2 . Bath,
1-800-2 14.()452
www.p~.oorn
Basement, Large Dect,
Ollio Valley Home Health, Accredited. M•mber A«:reditiltQ Double Garage. $63,000
Inc. hiring AN 's, CNA. Council .b.. 1111111i'61111tii 11 CollegM Firm. (740)992-2571
•nd Schools 12746.
-------STNA,
CHHA,
PCA.
Competitive Wages and lt70
.3 bedroom, 2 balh, wHh fire••----• • ~...
placa • 40x60 barn· · R1'o
Benefits includlnn health
,.......,.....,~·~
•
G nde
fl
ra
area. 0 n 8 a1aces.
insurance and Mileage.
(740 )709- 1166
120
000
App~ at t 480 Jackson Plkf1. Seasoned fire wood, Oak
• ·
·
Gallipolis or 2415 JacUon and Hickory split. You haul 4 rental hOuses ~For Sale·
Avenue, Point Pleasant, WV or I haul- Take CAA&amp; HEAP Good income producing
Of phone,tollfree l-B66-4 4 l· 740-949·2038.
properties. Great locationl
13
_
_9_3_· - - - - - Price(s) are Negotiable.
WANTED: ~art-time position
'To Do
Motivated
Sellerl
In
available 10 assist lndividu·
Gallip~~li.
Call
Wayne
('"')4
3602·
els with mental retardation
....,...
at a group
in Bidwell:
Anl8ted Uvlng In
About $3000 down. 812 S.

I

~~;~;;;=~
li'
Ohio Vollty Publlthlol
Compooy h"' pon·rlmo
open Iell In t b• ma II room .
• I'
b
.-.pp telftl •n•l ave •
\'I lid driven licente.
Pleuupply in penon

be"''"' llm-3pm 11:

82! Th.lrd Aunur,
Gallipolt1, Oh.lo C56JI
~o

Phonr C•ll• Pltue.

s

r,ll:iii~~;;W;ANlED:....--....,

home

35 hro/Wk: 3-10p WITh; 311 P F; tOa· 9P Sat. Must
have
high
school
d' loma/GED
I' d.~
tP
· va td ••V8r's
'
d th
Ircense
an
·r ae years
good driving experience.
$7.25/hr. Pre·employment
Drug Testing. Send resume
to: Bucl&lt;eye CommOnity
Services, PO Box 604,
Jaclcoon,
OH
45~0 .
Ooodllno loi oppllcants:
12/6106. Equal Opportunity

my

-~~~
$25.00 por cloy.
(740}311-0118

U SAVE heating, cooling &amp;
wa1ar heaters. Will 'IYOtk on
all models 15 1'0811 oxperl·
once, 24 hr. aorvlce, will
beat
anyone's
prloe.
(740)J!11Hl039
•

3rd. Ave., Middepor1. Totally
remodeled. 3 bedrooms, 1
bath. Perfect credil not
requlrad Pa'Jme'nt $525.
'
Appraised $70,000. 740·
367·7129.
-------Altlntlonl
Local company oflertng "NO
OOWN PAYMENr pro·
groma for you to buy your
homolnottad ranting.
• 10011 financing

bath,
and a three quarter bath.
1421 SQ\JllrO lee1 of living
space wi1h a lull finished
basement and attached two
car garage. Also lr&lt;:ludes a

32' X 40' heated metal oot·
side building with concrete
floor. Home is equipped
wTth heating, •coofing, water
and all . electric utilities.
Some kitchen appliances
are included. For more
Information catl 740-985·
3315 (daytime) or 740·992·
2071 (evening).
Price

r.

·~ """-"

1981

14~~:60

~

M~"~

I
•

Nashua

Governor
2
bedroom,
t.Aobie Home $3.800 can
(304)882·2319 or (304)593·
2115
--------2003 16x80, Fleetwood,
3BR, 2BA, vinyt siding. shlngle root, central air inctuded,
nice Home. Call tof pr.ang.
Daytime
(740)388..0000,
Evening
'( 740)388·8017,
Cell (740)645-6150. 6. 14 &amp; .
16 wide's to chooSe from.
_,.
-. •
Doublewide.

=~---:-:--:~-:- '

or

~!!;DLY

,. ,. .

Kem

Call740·992·2334.

A-t
Locat company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYt.AENr pro·
!lJMIS lor you to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 10011 financing
• Laas than perloct credit
accepted
. • Payment could be the
aame as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367-&lt;lOOO

I

ol6311.

·~Reach .
'

'

..

For Rent- 2 bedroom house,
$400 a month. (740)992·

6909
For Rent: Beaut~l Dutch
Colonial
Housa,
P1 .
Pleasant, 7 ' rooms, 2 lull
baths, stove, rehigerator.
forced-air furnace, air-condi·
$650/month catl
.tloned .
(304)675-2319

...

'

···-=· y

Paid

.. •

i

Hoose lor Rent 2br. $275 a
, _ , Oeposit, References.
No Pets (304)675-4874

~;;oo Midwest (7-'0)628·
:.:.::.::..
· -----pra·owned slwide.
Ow
1
. ntr
inancing. Scott
(740)828-2750.

112

!:...:::!::=.:::.:::.__ __

Great ultd 3SA home only
$9,995. Will help wi1h dallv·
ary. Gall (740)365-7671 .

or

Payment could bo tho
Leading
Way Will toke coro the Eldtny oomo u ront.
In their hOmo, hlvo 11 yooro Mortgogo
Locetors.
A&amp;J Ttuokinn n,...., Hiring at
• ...
oxporlonco coli ( 30~)875· (740)367.0000
our NeW Haven, WV
3264
~_;__ _ _ _ __
Ttrmlnal. For Regional
- I Homo on Codor St.
Wrop·oround porch. 3BR,
Hauls·Dump Otv. 1 ytlr
liiJ
OTR
•
\,.JUU,.
1.SBo, furnished kltchon ,
verlfllblt exp.
DR, LR , Don, FP, out.lxJI&lt;I·
Call 1·800-462·9365 a&amp;K for Ovornlght with oldtrly Lldy. lng. $118,000 (7~0)«6·

The

1.5 rfttles 1rom Holzer.
Security
OeposK
&amp;
References
Required .
(740)368·9101

ll2

Now 14•70, 3 Bedroom, 2
Bath Ht up bo-n Athens ·
and Pomeroy. Roady for
immodloto oocuponcy. Only
Will do Houaa Clooring o
$1QQ.67 por month. Coli
_Em_P_Ioy_or_
. - - - - - oouplt daya I week. GOOd • Leu 1hln perfect credit
(740)365-4387.
Roferoncoo (3a.)675·2208 ICCOp1ed

R&amp;J TRUCKING

4 Bedroom House tocaled

bedrooms, one tun

' roa d, $26 ,000. Land a
.$ii160;;:·;000;;::·; ;;00:.......,..._.....,
ma.n

i:i!F;;;;,;;;;,;.;;.__"""''

Full time position. Assistant
to Treasurer. Southern local
District.
Benefi1s
Experience wfpeyroll, insur·
ances, accounts payable
necessary.
Job description
Camden·Ciark Memorial
Hospital
available at District Office.
Human Resources
Send resume. loner of ln1er·
P0Box 7t8
est, and references to
Pa,rkersburg, WV 26102
Richard A. Koker, Treasurer,
Fax: 304·424-?688 or apply 920 Elm ·St ·• Racme,
·
OH •
online at
45771 b)l December 4,
wwwccmh org
r;2006
;i::i:.===;:::=.::::;'l
LOCII monufoctuMng
EOE
••1 0 ..,... 1 ~
Com ~rry
~
·~
~·
tton
IYIII8blo lor
-------1 n• d u • t r 1 • 1
Computer instructor need·
M 1 1 n ten 1 n c • •
ed. Must be MS Word ,
Appllcont muot poa·
Excel, and PowerPolnt
good ,_,.nlcol
know1edgeabfe and possess
end electrlcll tkllll.
a bachelor's degres In relet·
Apply In poroon at:
ad field. E·mall resume to
SFS ll'uclc Seloo
jdenlckl 0 galllpol iscare,ar·
2110 Eootam Ave
college.com or tax to 740·
QolllpoHo, OH.
446-4124.

An Excell«1! way to earn Domino's P1ua Now Hiring
Sate
Drivers .
Point
money. The New Avon .
Coil Marilyn 3a.·882·2645
Pltlllnt ,
Gallipolis
&amp;
Pom~roy locationS Apply ir'l
AVONI All Areas 1 ·ro Buy or Person
Sell
Shlnoy Sphro, 304·
675·1•29.
-------Help wanted at Darst Group
BENNiGAN'S Now Hir1ng Home, working wrtn elderly,
servers Apply a1 the Point hea vy lifting Involved 740·
J)leuant Loca~on
992-5023

1997 bi-18\181 house 2 car
garage, 7 acres, 3 Br, 2
bath, 40X20 pole barn,
12X20 deck, pon tieat pump
mergsl Gallia line $140,000
_ea:..l_l7_40-..:_7_42:..·_t1:..54
___
Bedroom house in
3

Ranch style home on 2.6
acres overlooking the beau·
tiful Ohio River In Long
Bottom. Ohio located at
61618 SR 124.
This six
room house Includes 2.5 ·

NIW 18•60 Clly10n, Cor
Port Clorogo, porch, hilt
pump, totol Eloctrlc, 2 BR, 2
SA ut"i1Y room &amp; Iorge

•.. THE
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

fenced lot coli (30~)773·
51011 _ _ _ _ __
::..:;:.;_
Now

2008

Cloy1on

~aUipoh~ 1DaHp Qrribune.

oln·

g t - 1t01r11ng ot 51118.8~

'

per month. llldo·lno ,wol·
come~- Gall (740)365·243o4.

(740) 446:..2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
•

I

'
'·

for Christmas

·-- - .. · --~ ·-·---------------...:..-----·-~---------

�www.mydallysentlnel.com

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

,,

Wednesday, November 29; 200e

www.mydallysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

'NEA Croaaword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
DriiWint 1y1n0 n1 being In 1M ~ In 1M..,_ enll- loall 111, It ,._ au ..,..,
IMNIIndlll',
""""County of llelp MCI tied Hllon, I will olllle o..d RacanM of togelhtr with 1M right
R1J111 d C:O.,
s- Of Ohio MCI In e11P0W to .... Ill pub- ....... COUnty, Ohio. 10 mine 1M NIM, and
Sec. 2311.20
Columbhl -•lp, 11c -aon on lllelnont Aucltor..
,.,.. •H ...,. •nd rlght-oiOIIIce
o1 and due 1111 • u IDI- ,..,. ol the llelp Numlllr: 1M0127.000 wey llong 111 miMrlll
. Commlhl...,.,.
ol lowl: Beginning In N County c-t HouN Retwtnce
DMCI: -me to trenapon
Jurora,
. cen11r ot the IOIId 1110- on Frldey, ..__,. I, Volume 171, l'l!le 307, co.~l end meterlll•
1o1e1p County, Ohio
lng 1n1m Dywvllll to 200111110 e.m.. ol"ld Mtlge County Otnclll uNCI In mining &lt;*1.
NoNnber 211,2005
School Lot, 15 rodl day, the following lleccMdl
SAVE AND EXCEPTTo All Whom It May SoutholtheNorthUne dlacrlbecl-'-' Prapa1yAild ua:14135 INGOUTOFTHELAST
Concern:
' of 111e Nonh- quer· Plnlll One:
Lincoln
Helghll, DESCRIBED TRACT
On Wednlldly the 6th 11r o1 Sectiot1 8, lnd All IIIII! cemln tnoct 01 Poir•OJ, OH 45781
OF LAND. I lmlll to
• .,~~l'ft'"'P.'I
day of .Dicember, 2005 ebout 31 · rodl lnd 20 pen:el ol lind, ....... Curr.nt
Owner: dncrlbed .
11 r--'E"----.,
118:30 o'clock a.m., II llnkl Ell! ol llle w..t lylnt and being In 1M MICIIINIIIullonl, 1111. lollowi:Biglnnlnt II I
ILW~I~~~~.....
t.,e alflce ol the line ol 11ld qllllrttr 180 Acre lot 1224, 1bwn 1835 Ullcolntlllghll
PI pipe lllkl In the
r
1· Commt11ton1rs
ot uctlon runnlngm- 2, A•nt• 13 . WHt, PomaOJ, OH 45781
Nonhwelllrty 'llne ole
MIJiu;r
a
Jurora
ot
Melga Ellt ebout 22 rode; Sallabury Townahlp, ppt1M0127.000
rD.Id whiCh lllda !rom
· County, Ohio, Jurors thence South 67 roda; Vllllgl ol Pomeroy, Prior
DNd Sugar Run Streel In
Will be publicly drawn thence Well about 40 Melp County, Ohla, Roalerancea: Volume 11ld Vllllge; thence
g7 Beech Street
lor the Jenuary 2001 rode to the cenllll' ol and being ru-n end 171, ,._ 307
South 53Digrlll Eall
Term of the common the fOld IHdlng trom dMignlllld on • map Appr-.llld
11 121 teet; thence North "Take the pain out
Middleport, OH
Plell Court ol uld Dyeevllle to School ol Lincoln helghtl t47,1500.00 term• at 21 112
W..t palnllog-let us do it
I OX I.OX I Ox 20
County.
Lot; t~ence Notth mede by Brnca IIM:Cennot be aold 125 teet; thence North
for you"
J1nlce Young
•long the cenllr ot loCarper, Reglatlll'ld lor ~ thin 2l3nla 01 53 Dltl,_ Eat 1l1
Interior Only
992 3194
. Chrlatopher T. Wolle
Hid rD.Id to piiCt of CIVIl
Engln. . ., lht lpprellld VIIUt. fill; thenOI Nonh 28
, 6 -·-4t80
Comml111oners
ot beginning, containing Huntington,
W..t 10% down on day ol 112 lltgrNI Well 125
or
992-6635
7...,.7...,
Jurora
ebout 6 ..,.. 1nd 22 Vlrglnle, dllld October .... ce•h or oertllltd teet; tllenoa Nonh 53
Jury drewlng will be rode, bl the 11me, 17, 1142, a copy or chicle, llllllrnce due on Dtg,... Eut121 fill;
Leave message
"Middl4port's only
held at tho Molga more 01 IIH.
which n..p- ftted In canlllllllllon
thence South 21 112
before 6 PM
seii·Storep•
County Boerd ot Subjocl to ""'"'""· the omce of thl The epprelal did 1101 lllgrHI EHI 125 Feat
Elections at 117 Eat rNtrlc1lonl, end_. Recorder ot Melg1 lnctudl an Interior to thl piece ot begin-.
YOUNG'S
Memorial
Drive, vatlon• ol record, II County, Ohio, on 1M uemlnatlon at the nlnt, being .,.n at a
Pomeroy, Ohio 457611. any.
11th dey ollleOimber, houte.
tract of5.86 ecre• pu,.
CARPENTER
(11) 211
Plnlll ID; ·QS.40867.000 11142, lnd recorded, In Raben E. Bngle, cllllld by W.H. Jobll
Current Owner: Chid A Plat Book Na. 3, 11 Illig• County Sherlll lnlm J.P. Bredbury and
SERVICE
'McKibben at II
Pagn .43 end 44, H Attorney lor the plain- wilt by dlld dated
Room
Addltton• a.
29670 Bashan Road
Aemoc:t.llng
January 5, 1910 and
Property 11: · 38676 Lot No. 25, n1 being un
Public Notice
Racine, Ohio
NewO....~
Sllnllrt
more
pertlcullrly Little ShllllllloWIII'IIIII' recorded
In Volume
45771 '
E'-ctriCIII 6 Plumbing
Sheriff Sllel
Pomei'OJ, Ohio 45769 dlacrlbecl u lollowl: 213 E. Second St.
104, Pill' 4 at the
740-949-2217
Roofing I Outt.rt
C... Number 05CV05e PPt 05-008f7.000
Slglnnlnt at 1 point In Poineroy, OH45789
Recorda ot Malga
Vlnr. Siding I P•lnllng
Nltlonll City MOl1glgl Prior
DMd thl Nonh lint ol 740-1112_...
County, Ohio.
P•t o •nd Porch Deck•
.
WV03812S
Co
Reterencee: Volume Lincoln RD.Id 11 the (11) 211, (12) 6,13
ALSOSAVINGANDEXPialntm
103..... 327
Southtllllrly corner
CEPTINGTHEFOL·
V C. YOUNG Ill
va
Apprallld II $105,000 01 Lot 25 11 lliown on
L 0 W I. N G
'llJ.' h.' 1 )
Ched A. McKibben till 11rm1 of ule: Clnnof uld mep, uld point
PubliC Notice
DESCRIBEDREALEST
f' "Ill&lt;'' '\ ll \ "
Delandanll
be IOid lor leu thin being In the Ellllrty .·
ATE:
&lt;, 'r
Court ol Common 213rdl of the epprsllld uterlor line ot Hid SHERIFF SALES
Thla following r111
Pl111, lhlgs County, value. 10% down on Lincoln
Helghll; cNumber: aetate II!Uitld In the
Ohio
day ol Nle, ceah or lhlnce with uld line of 05CV104
County ol Mllg•, In 1M
ACE TREE SERVICE
In l"'rsuence ol an certified check, bll· Lincoln Road, North N1tlonellr Mortg1ge Still ol Ohio and In
· Com,lllete Tnta Ca11
. order o1 Hie to me ance due on conftl'llll- er 51' Welt, 50 fill; LLC
the VIllage ol Pomtroy,
Top• ftn• CIOtl Rtti'IGVII
directed !rom uld tlon ol ule.
thence with the line Ctni!IY Home · Equity and being a pan ol
Cnne•Hoollng• =~
11'11 RIM Str-.1•
II,
Fnactlon 25 o!The Ohio
court In thubove anti- The apprallll did not beho11n Loll 24 1nd Co. Plalntlllve.
Rick Johnaon Jr.- Owner
tied action, I will Include an Interior 25, North 26" 011' Eut, Darin Doyle RD.ICh,
Company'l Purch11e
INSU 0
expoN to ule at pub- aumln111on ol the -312.111 INI to a point In 1111 Delandantl
and bounded and
FrteE.........
Phone: (140)441.f31'7
lie auction on the front hou11.
1M South line ol Nonh Coun ol Common dltlcrlbed .
aa
etepa ol the lhlge Robin E. BHgle, sti'MI; thence With Plel1,
lollowa:Cartlln lend•
and t-menll No. 25
County Court Hou11 Melli• County Sherlll Hid line of Nonh Mtlge County, Ohio.
on Frkllly, ,!an. 5, 2007 Attorney
tor the Strlel, South 86' 33' In pursuance ol •n In the VIllage ol
at 10:00 a.m., ol Mid Plaintiff
Ell!, 60;17 teet to • order ol eale to me Pomeroy, County ol
dey, the following Lerner, Sampeon a point In the lloiMIId directed from Mid Melge end Stele ol
dlecrlbecl reel lillie: Rolhtull
adlrlor line; thine• CQ~Jn In the lbove 111'111· Ohio, dlecrlbed aa toiSituoted
In
the 120 E. Founh St 8th with Mid line, South tied 1ctlon, I will IOW1i, -It: Beglnnlnc
Townehlp ol Columbia, Floor
26" 45' WHt 317 INI to upoea to ule at pub- 11 • point In thl north·
County of Meigs, and Cincinnati, OH 45202- the point ot beginning; lie eucUon on the front _...,. nne ol a roed
Still at Ohio, and 4007
IMIMr\g, ho-, the 1tapa at thl llelp IIIII lelda lnHn Sugar
Affordable
coallnd all other min- County Court Hau.. Run Strnt ol 11ld West Shade Bart&gt;er Shop
dllcrtbeclaelollowa: 513-241-3100
. Dependable
Parcel No.1: Being the (11) 211, (12) 6,13
erelelnand unct.~ on Frkllly, J1n1111ry 5, Vllllgl, put the rell·
Fully Insured
Owned &amp; operated by
Southeast Quarter of .
the ebova dHcrlbecl 22007 11 10 e.m., at denCI o1 J.J. McCany,
&amp; Bonded
Chris Parker
the Nonhweet OUilntr ·
property, tagllhlr with Mid day, the lollowlng In en Eolllrly dlrecDally,
Weekly, or
17 yr:;. experience.
01 Section 8 01 Town,
Public Notice
the right to mine the dNcrtbeclllll Hllll: lion, which point Ia
Plans
Monthly
First Barber Shop on
County and State
wtthou1
Bl1ullld
In
the Identical wtth the
Available
lforselid, elllmlled II PUBUC NOllCE
bnonce to the eurt.a;' T_...lp of Sllllbury, IOUth..eterly corner Texas Road off Roure 7
1-740-991-6196
40 ecrea, m011 or leaa. NOTICE: Ia hereby 1nd eubjocl to e n - Vlll1111 at Pomeroy, ol Lot 20 leal wide con740-985-31116
EXCEPTING lnHn the given that on Saturday, .ment 101 111111111 ftlllr Ohio, County o!Melp, veyed lly Earl McCirty
above dlacrlbed reel Dlcember 2, 2006 at dllcll or lelchlng ditch, •nd being a pen ot end Nennle McCirty to
Hllll 3.1418 ecrti as 10:00 a.m., • public a1 .., lilrth 1nd FIH!Ion 26 o!Thl Ohio J.J. McC1rty . by died
conveyed by Au D. Hie Will be held 11211 dllcrlbecl In lnllru· Campeny'e Purchlll d1ttc1 December 18,
Stlnlbury and Golden W
Second
St., ment belling dlle Nov. ·and bo11ndld end 1908;
thence
Faye Stenabury, to Pomeroy, Ohio. Thl 26, 1143, 11 r~ du rlbed Mlollowl: Northweeterly •long
Wand!l Lou Oxley by Fermers B1nk and In 11ld Recorder'a Beginning at • point In Nld Elawty line ol
· dlld · reconltcl· In Slvlnge Compeny II Office Dt. 3, 1M3; In the Nonh- line ol Hid dltllgnatlon lot to
• New Homes
Volume 247, page 367, aollln(f for ceeh In DNd book 151, at,._ 1he Rlld that lead• the · camelllry line;
DNd Recorda, Melge hind or cenllltd chick 178.
lnHn Sullr Run SINel thence e.-.y along
• Garag~s
County, Ohio.
the following collllllr- Auditor'•
Parcel In Hid vlllage Pill the the ...-y line 125
·Complete
FURT11ER EXCEPTING ol:
Number: 1M0126.000 -'!IInce ot whit Wll teet 61nchll; th..celn
Remodeling
the following: Being 2006
Chevrolet Parcel Two:
formerly W.J. Wright a aouthlllllrly dlrecaltuated
hi
tha c o I o r 1 d o The lollowlnt reel and Albarl Hualton In tlon to uld roed;
South1111 quener ol IGCCS145261145513 Hllll lltUilllld In the en~dlrlctlonto thence In ·• .Waltlrly
thl Nonh-t q - 2001 Ford Eecort ZX2 County of Mtlge In the Iande lon1111ly owned direction olong lllld
Stop &amp; Compare
ol Section 1,- 01 the 3FAFP11381R107186 s- ol Ohio, MCI In by J.P. Brtclbury, which raid 110 teet to the
Townehlp, County and Thl Farmere Bank and the Vllllge of ~. point II ldlntlcll with plica ol beginning,
Site lllorellld and Ia S.vlnge
Comp1ny, 1nd bounded 1nd the ~ cor- conlllnlng 11 5221100
: d11crlbed
11 Pomeroy,
Ohio, daacrlbecl
ae - ol• lot 50 leat wide ecnae, more or le11.
Oakwood Homee
Town.,.lp, County and re11rvee the right to lollowi:Situlllld In 160 conveyed by J.P. AIID Hve an excepting
Advertise in
BAD CREDIT?
Still oforellld and Ia bid at thla Hie, and to Acre Lot Na. 1224, Bredbury and Emma thlt pert ol. Hid rul
NOCR,EDIT?
this space for
dllcrlbed 11 follows: withdraw the above Town 2, Renp 13; lrldbury to Eerly 1111111 aold Ia H.E.
Bankruptcy?
Beginning at a ltlklln colilllll'lll prior to ule. beglnnlnt Ill 1M Nonh McCirty by died dlied Boney, alao •••• an
S27 per
We Can Halpt
the WHt COlMr olland Further, The Farmers elde of Lincoln 111'111 December 16, 1904, excepl a PIII'CII o1 reel
Coli Cradlt Hotline
owned by Thome• a,nk and S.vlng• at the Well ol 1nd
recanllll
In Hllll now awned lly
month
7~3570
Price and Del ben Complny rNeiWI the J•cob Prlocle'a Lot; Vvlume 11, Pllll481 ol M1nnlng D. Webster
TUmor, thence NOI1h right to rtJecllny or 111 lhlnce NOrth 38" Eaat the riCOldl 01 deadl dlecrlbecl In ·Delong "lei line ol the bids 1ubmltted.
1long Hid Prlodl'a .for llld County ol Book 172, pap 377,
land owned by Thome a The lbove dlecrlbed line th'" hundred Malge:
thence Mllga County Deed
Price 450 INI to the colilllll'lll wUI bl 101c1 fortyofllne (341)
Nanhneterty atong Reconll, rafartnce to
Sauth-1 earner ol "11 le-wherl II", with INI to the aid rold; the Ellterly line ol whiCh Ia hereby midi
N lind conveyed by no
axp'"aed ar thenol North 71' w..t uld ciNignlted lot to lor daftnlll dlacrlptlon
diad !rom Thelmore Implied
werranty along uld rold one the loulherly line o1 o1 this -uon.
Deer Procelllng
Sllnlbury and Minnie given. For further lntor- hundNCI Hvellly-IWo leech
Grove, Parcel
No:
1.6·
MAPLE
Stlnlbury to AH Dele mellon, or lor •n (172) teet; thence Clmetary:
thence Ot435/16-01436
Slllnebury and Ga1dan appointment to lnlpiCI South 22" w..t lhrN Eelllrly eking the line CuiTIII11 Owner: O.rln
WOODLAKE
Sllnsbury, hla will; collallll'll, prior to Ale hundNCI thirty (330) ofllid 0111-, lbout Doyle RD.Ich 1111 ·
Skinned - Cut
thence Well along Mid date contact Cyndle teet 10 Lincoln Strlll; 80 teet to 1 poet; . 311 Wright a-t
1
WrepjHHI
line 250 fill to a allkl; Ken 01 Randy at 74G- · thlnoe South W Eaat lhlnce
Ell!
14 """"""' OH 45789
lhlnce South 570- 9e2-2136. (11) 211, 30, 13 1111 to 1M piece of Dtgren North 17teet PPtt&amp;-01435.000
lllr-.....to 11!1kaln the center (12)1.
beglnnlnt, conlllnlng 1long 111d - " t y 16-01436.000
ot
the Dyeavllle- - . In the Vllllgl line ta en Elm lrN: Prior
DMd
Carpenter
Road;
ot PooMray, M1lg1 thence E•at 32 1/2 ReltrenCN: Volume
1-740-949-2734
Thlnoa Ell! by Nonh
Public Notice
COUnty, Ohio.
D1gn 11 Nonh elong 120, .... 38
280 1.-t to place ol
Slvlnt IIIII uoaptlng Hid - , line 12 Volume 204, Pagl125
beginning, containing SHERIFF SALES
the COif end other min- teet to an . Elm lrN; · Apprellld
at
2.64 ocree, more or C111
Number: '111'111 In llkl PN!r:llll, thence
North
2 $45,000;00
leu.
06CV080
and the right to mine Dtg- Walt •long T1111111 ot Bile: Clnnot
· FURT11ER EXCEPTING Home N1tlonal B1nk 1M 111111 without· ·uld ....-ry line 554 be IOid lor leu than
0.348 ecres conveyed Plllntlff
ancumbrence ta the INI to • poll In tha 213rda o1 thl 1pprallld
to the Truateee ol va. Mlehlll M-.
aurtece end Ill weye South line of Iande to,. YIIUI. 10% ·down on
Top • Removol • Trim
Columbia townehlp, at al delenclanta
and rtghll ot wey• merty awned by 111. dly ol Nle, ce• or
• stump winding
Malge Cqunty, Ohio, Court ol Common 1long 1ny ml-al Emmll JIICObe: thlnCii ctnllled chick, b•l·
lor the benefit ol Plele,
-m ruarved by V.B. South 84 DlgrtH Eaat •nee due on conllrlnl·
Bucket Tn~tk
RIWIIng'e Clmellry.
lhlge County, Ohio.
Harton 1nd Slmuel 277 taet to 1 poll; tlon olllle.
PARCEL NO. TWO: In pursuance 01 an Willi• Pomeroy, 11 thence South 17 The appraisal did
Also, the following ardor ol 111e to ma re11~1d by lhlm the Dlgl- Elll 332 teet Include an Interior
piece or percel 01 lind dlrscted . !rom nld grentore, In 1 diad ta • poll: lilaftCI South eumlnatlon of the
under the data ol 21 112 D111111 E11t houte.
No,_ber 111, A.D. lbout 141 INI to 1,the Robin E. Beegle,
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
186t, , lnd recorded In -'11-rly line ol Melge County Shlrlll
Vol. 40, ,._ 421 ol the uld rD.Id (to • 11M pipe Attorney lor,the plllnRecord ol DMCII of alike): thence Soulh !Iff
Melge County, Ohio. 13 Dag,_ Will 582 Larn,ar
Sampeon
L&amp;R
MA~Y
And .being the HIM INI liang Mid 111111 Ia 6Rathlu11
You'll be pleased to
Variety &amp;
property conveyed by • poll; tliehCI elong 120 E. 4th st., 8th floor
know
Mary kay offers
ROll EYinl to tlowlrd Uld rold 80 1111 to the Cincinnati, OH
Thrift Store
In fact, in iu• ono- you con bo oomin; $23,000 A.
Cummln• 1nd pilei of beginning, 45202~7
products everyone will
-to $50,000 aa on outomobil• 10letf*IOI't. And Charlea E. Bllklllee oonlllnlnt lbout 5.66 513-241-3100
Op#nlng
lava. From the latest
i n - ol $60,000 ro $90,000 oro wry common in
-1.2DII61
lly diad October 1, ol lend, excepl- (11) 211, (12)6,13
our induatry.
looks to advanced
Why wa; 'to IW. the good life wll~ you can have a 11148, 1nd recorded In lng coel MCI other minwe,buy, Mil, a trede
akin care.
higl; paY,i\g ccrMr nciwt Join the new Qlfltrcllion of
-•U-Itemol
Ask
me
aboul our
hard.Woi'king men and wom.. ent«iftg outomoba.
Loto ol everythtngl
IGI ... Sk~ ffle (:OI'p«at• lodd• and ahare cor• aucexciting product line
*" ....+!~• ~con enP.f -..
STOPINANO
loday!
To. to Ut oboot thi1 h-sh poying oppcwtunity. Earn

NotiC4I

Alder

ot

SElf STORliE

Degr••

at.....

Hill 's Self
Storage

'

\

' I'

I

[

RENTALS SALES
•SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
I

•u
MONTY

West

I

1o K 5 I
• A J B7
• J 10 9 8

{]tunihJ comM:•

t AK
lo K 2

WOUE~

South

~
Ch'i)'~=~Jfe

· FRANK &amp; EARNEST

3 IR. 2 Ia. from $66,000
2 IR. 1 Ia. $59,800
100'/o Financing W~A.C.

r

WVt039714

...

•••
~

§

•

4,

BARNEY

HI 1111• Cllllliy AH Flnl&amp;lle

WHAT'S TH'

www.~.-

TO MAKE IT

LAST LONGER II

Locally
Maid

New Homes • Decks - Roofing
Siding - Foundations
Sidewalks
Lowest Prices
No Job Too Small
1-740-698-0890

RGIDT .
IISSEll
•ST11m11

Advertise
in this
space
for
54 per
month

¥

..,..,,

SIX I&gt;AYS
Uri "

IMPim
Athena

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

......

'tlllhile you learn . lucrative b.nolfdt paci.Og•.

~···
Cal HJiurMfoi SitriN Mlllllfl
DDu1r Mcfo:bwl· 7.0.119-UU
If I0 East Slate S~eel, Athens
c.ll foniScrleJ Mar
CWIIw o.briflclt - 1.0.1 U06

in the year ahead, suPport from powerful

=. . .

15 Doc1 preDOWN
ICrlbelham
16 - - · - 1 DlgHtlva
18 Network
2 Juice City
(lllbr.)
bw
It tolersll
3 EMil
21 lndNerbor o1
IUflPOIII
4 WI'*YCaek
25 Sulplclld
5o l'rlei!IIJ
21 Popullr
cloggltl'
bnlnch dl... 8 Dl:ikl
31 Loob
Ulhll
friendly
7 AU Mrs
of respect

23 PIIICho
v..... COin
24 Pllo26 Tick oil
27 Flllr
26 Dllplly

model
30 Slllmlc

8 Pu-"11 off

events

9 Ill. Jllllln 32 "Aye, aye"
34 Dllllllple 10 Tiki K on
follower
31 Htt the hom
tha36 Hallllll',
37 Monlleur, 11 DIICI'III
to Bert
In Madrid
eummone 31 Slonehongl .
38 Loud kiH 12 Evil
builder
40 CD prect.- 17 Don
. 40 Kind ol
Cllltn
19 Raina Ice
43 Shelley
20 ONpro.e 41 Yollarlng
21 - dl plume 42 ShlrF blow
44 Uklwlle
22 Th- off 44 Achy

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lull Clmpoa

Coio!&gt;ttCIIiw_.. ... - . . , _ , _ _,..... _
''

EWi Ilk In

11'11- lllrdllar ftllhlr.

TOdly'l r:M: RtqiJI/$ N

"TRO FLNS KILDP GOBTHO TRO MN

PIAU, TH TRO FIE UMO YMSPTLS
0 Y 0 H K I L D P MR D I S I K K • " -

C'O I R U 0

G H L.E 0 H 0

KI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- 'lll1plll!lliaty ~ lha soul of wit'- W.S. MlughMI
'Here'sagood nole otlhumb: /too aever is dumb.' -Ogden Nash.

IUT.MILY 0./i'.I'O 1\'\. A- /II "C ~C!• WOlD
PIIZLll \J~ 1'CIU
(It pq• ;:J tAll

tva.

.... "' ClAY l. I'OIIAII

••••a"t• Jetter~ · of . lht
Ofour
_......., - · below 10 ...... foot ll"''lla' _,.,

I

TINKllT

sources you would n911er have suspectQd to be interested wil ~ forthComing,

' I /

tant goal.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Persons who make direct demands on
you are usually quiCkly reject&amp;d .
However, owing much to your generous

PEANUTS
M'( LUNCH JUST
WENT I-lOME ..

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
'-f.

a.
Cornerstone
t1 ~ 11 · Construction

Resicl~tlal• Commercl81• General Contractlnc

Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodeling
Y(ll OSIII2
OH 31244

likely.

ideas OIMrs use and put them en together to apply t~ard achlevlng an Impor-

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Hellos System
~ ...."".)":"'1..1""3·4-:'""•
70 Pine Stn!el • Gallipolis
446-0007

~~&amp;ry

SAGITIAAIUS (NO\I. 23-oEtc. 21)- One
of your strongest assets will be your ability to 6PO! b4ts and pieces ol vartous ·

• Pluinbing • Electrical 740-387.0144
• Accoustic Ceiling
740-331-34,2

SUNSHINE CLUB

GARFIELD

KAY.

and compasslonale frame of mlod,
you're likely to comply anyway.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. 19) -Do not
Ignore your Instincts whe1;1 it comes to
business dealings. That, coupled with
your warm lriendllnes·s, will open doors
and put you In tune with your prospects.
Your logic will do tl'le rest.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Don't be
surprised when you find yoursetl s!rong·
ly motivated to fuffill cenain ambitious
ob]ec1ives. You'll have the conl'idellC&amp; you
need to do so without appea,ring to be
too assentve .
ARIES
(March 21-Aprll
19) .Involvements you have with persons you
like will work out well for just about IWGry·
body included In your plans. Being wtth
nice people means vou'll have an espe·
dally good anltude.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - What
makes for a winning combination Is to be
lucky enough to team with someone In a
jOint endeavor who respects you and
your talents as much as you do his or her
abilities.
·
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - 'rour judgment is likely to be exceptionally keen ,
so there should be no reason to d!Jd(
making diffl cull deciSions. Weigh your
altematlves and trust your evaluations.
CANCER (June 21-July 22}- You are In
an espeCially good cycle where your
. work efforts will be recogn ized and
rewarded, so put forth your very best.
Rea~ as much as vou can while you're
under the" SpotHght.
LEO \ (July 23-Aug. 22) - If there is
someone you have your eye on who ha6
been reticent about opening communications, take the maner In hand yourself.
This person Is likely to be very happy you
do so.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) -You coold
be · very successrut at finalizing work
products ot getting problematical situations under contr&lt;» to your satisfaction .
This is especially true Wl'len mohey Is
involved .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-oct. 23) -Owing to the
considerate way you've been treiiUng
friends with whom )IOU've been Involved
•socially, · your popul1rlty Ia pn~aentty
trending upwards. Keep mel&lt;lng everydn• feel important .

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) -

Juanita Grueser

GRIZZWELLS
1-\t\', l'\l-ICU5~10W I

vour lk:la. ,Expect to mp what you aow.

SOUP TO NUTZ

Ql~

'lb\l M'E~
'to!~ /#.Y
~\1~~
1.114K~"

900 East State Str11t, Alhens
. Also on the web ot
www.donwood.com/car-opporiUnitias
E.O.E.
·
.

DONWOOD
AUTOMOTIVE

.

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negotiations ar. looking ratner favorably,
moat1y becauM of the pleaNnl way you
handle people end thou who work at

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Former Harvard prolident Challes W.
Etiol wrote, 'Books are tho quletoSiand
most·conSiant of tr~ndo: they are tha
most accessible and wlsaSI Of counS81ors, and the most patient of teach·
ers.•
I WOnder II he would have Included
newspapers and magazines.
I found this deal on a teaChers Index
card. How would you plan lhe play tn
four spades oflor West loadt ·the d!l. .
mond Jack? What do you think the proposed play lhame wu? What Is tilt
problem with lhat approach?
You have nine sure lric:l&lt;a: five spades,
two ~amanda and two clubs. W the
spade finesse Ia worl&lt;lng,Mrythlng \\111
be line: but IIIIIs lo~ng, you will ~ lo
ruff your lhlrd haarl on lho board. You
should combine lha two poiiM)IIIIIea,
crossing lo lha dub aee and ca~ng tor
the haan two. ~ East pllye low, you can
. rtse with your queen 01 put In lha nina
- II matters not 1 aou or a centime and you will make your ccntract
The Index card was Insert~ 'ruff
heart." Bultherela e meJor snag here. II
East is !n mldseason form. ha \\10 play
his heart ~ng al trid&lt; three. lhJn shift to
his trump. Now no matter how yoi, wriggle, you cannot make lha contoact. II
you finesse in spadtos, Wast wins with
his king, rerurr\s a trump, - s the next
heart, and leads his third !rump, elml·
naling &lt;tommy's rulflng power. Slmll811y,
if you rise wit!' you1 spade ace at !rid&lt;
four and play a haan. West wins, cash·
es his spade ~ng and plays his laSI
spade.
.
Bact&lt; to the blackboard.

G

Tree Service

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SCRAMoi.ETS ANSWERS 11128106
. Shrunk - llimcy- Affix - Ground , I'RIENOS .
A fuvorite adage I read while in college read!;: "A wosc
man gets nue htlp frum his enemies thana fool get~
from his FRIENI.IS." lloan

ARLO &amp;JANIS

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
'

)

COlUMBUS (AP) - The 2006 A,;..,.latod Press Division 111
AIHlhlo.high school footbaHteam, based M the l't!OOI11mendati0no of I ltate media panel;

DIVISION II
FINtT-

OFFENSE: Ends-Oaniel ltf1, Dover, 6-foot-3, 175 pounds,
senior; Chal8 Munoz. Fostoria, 5-8, 155, jr. Linemen-Alex
Bu!Welt, Sunbury Big Walnut, 6-Q, 285, sr.; Corey Drake,
l(ettertng Alter, 5-10, 195, sr.; Travis Lester, Circleville, 6-4,
355, sr.; Adam Painter. Sandusky PeOOn&amp;, 6-1 , 260, sr.; Nick
Schepis, Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesuit, 6-4. 285, sr.; Andrew
Robiskie, Chagrin Falls, 6-2, 270, sr. Ouarterbacks-Zach
Coflaros, Steubenville, 6~ 1 . 180, sr.; Jeremy Fudge. Eaton, 6·
o. 180, sr.; Perci Gamer, Dover, 6-2, 215, sr.; Uick Mohner,
Painesville Harvey, 6·3, 178, Jr. Backs-Storm Klein, Newaft
Licking Val., 6-2, 205 soph.; Stephen Ford. cSmllri&lt;lge, 5·9,

Galli"*··

!85, sr.; J1ymo Hoggorty, Go111polll
6-1, 1!10,
ar:; DeVoe Torrence, Canton S., 6·2, 215, jr.; Alan Vanderink1
Mantua Crestwood, 5-10, 180, sr.; Derrick Berbe,., Bellevue,
5-11. 165, sr.; AnthOny Urbanla, 'Cieye. Benedlctlne, 6-Q, 191,
soph.; J.J. MihOci, Jefferson Area, 5-8, 170. sr. Ktcter- Aaron
Bates, New Concord John Glenn, 6·1, 185, sr.
DEFENSE; Llhemen-:-Chase Burge, Lancaster Fairfiek:l
Union, 6~. 235, sr.; Corey Tankstey, Canal Futton NW, 5-8,

210,

sr.; Bred Cash. Kenenng Aner. 5-10. 185. sr.; Nlci&lt; Clpkus.

MentOt" Lake Cath .. 6-2, 210, sr. LinebaCkers-Marc Akam,
MiHersburg W. Holmes •. 6-2, 220, sr.; Mitch -Knapp,
McConnelsville MofQ&amp;n, 6·2, 215, sr.; Ben Maxwell, Kettering
Arter, 6·1, 205, sr.; Cody Hamilton, Franklin, 5·11, 200, sr.;
Derek Lingenfelter. Lima Shawnee. 6--3, 235, sr. Backs-cart
Miller, Oelawl!lre Buckeye Val ., 6-2, 1B5, sr.; Randy
Greenwood, Mentor Lake Cath., 6-Q, 180, soph.; Brian
Hummer, Napoleon , 5·11, 185, sr.; Devon Torrence, CantonS.,
6· 1, 190. sr. Pun1er--8rooks Mohr, Elida. 6-2, 190, sr.

on.nolwl p11yero al 1he yur: Zaoh CoRaros. StetA&gt;enville;
Stephen Ford, Cambridge.
Dolonll,. ployer of I'- v-or: Ben Maxwell, Kettering Alter.
COitChw of the yur: Justin Buttennore, Dre5\1en Tri-Valley ;
Reno Saccocla, Steubenville; Rick Goodrich. Cambridge.
Socor\d Toem:
OFFENSE: Ends-Adem Alderman, Granville, 6-Q, 170,
soph.; Brandon Robinson, Eaton, 5·10, 185, sr.; Connor
MackoVjak. Cuy. Falls Walsh Jasutt. 6-2. 185. sr. Linemenlim German, Newark Licking, Val., 6-7. 275, jr.; Ryan GMtz.
Goehen, 6-3, 275, sr.; Brock C8rter, Napoleon, 6·5, 300, Sr.;
N_, Shorp, Beloit W. Branch, 8-3, 295, sr.; Ted Jones.
Aknln Bucllml. 8-3. 2.0. sr.. Quarterbaoks-Jimmy Vohalik,
Cola. DeSalas, 8-2. tOO, sr.; cameron West. Dresden Tri·
valley, 5·11 , 180. jr.; Trevor Walls, Wavaftt, 6-6, 215, jr.: Jeff
- _ Oolllpollo 011111
e.G, 195, 1r.; Was MiNer,
Aurora. 6-3. 200, sr.; -Marl&lt; Wooldri&lt;lge, Cuy. Falls. Walsh
JaeuR, 5-10, 195. sr. Backs-B.J. Taylor, Shelby, 5·9. 210. sr.;
Nata Ganyard, Niles McKinley, 6-0, 2,0, jr.. Kickers-Mike
Bolinger, Eaton, 5-9, 175, sr.; Jeny PhiiHps. Clyde, 6·1 , 190, jr.
DERNSI: Linemen--Nk;k Anderson, Kettering Alter, 5·10,
185, sr.; Alex Wasy!Jk, Sandusky Perkins , 6-5, 235, sr.; Dan
Havato, Hubblrd, 6-o. 245. sr.; Mli&lt;e Schiavoni, Cleve.
Benedictine, 5-11, 196, sr. Linebackers-Antwan Pran, Cols.
Bextey, 6-3, 213, sr.; Kevin McFarland, Cin. Indian ..,ill, 6.:0,
198, sr.; Tony Scheeler, Cleve. Benedictine, 6·3, 22f. sr.; Joel
Younkins. Hubbard. 6-2. 225. sr. · Becks-A.J. Kaltenbach,
Cols. DeSaleS, 5-11. 180, sr.; Scott Starkey. St. Bemald·Roger
Bacon, 5-10, 190, sr.; Chaz Jordan, Medina Buckeye, 5-10,
170, sr.; Brandon Ph~ps, Minerva, 5--10, 175, sr. PunterDevln Popely. Ashtabula Edgewood, 6-1, 180, sr.

"*·•

.

5~-

Kyte McCalli!!lter, Cols. DeSales; Justin Thomp,son , Cots.
DeSales; Gary Golay, Whitehall- Yearling; Donald Houston,
Newaf1tt Lk:klng Val,; Chris Perez, New Albany; Bylal

Humphrey, Cots. Bexley; Zac Lemmon, Granville; Alex Emrich,
New Albany ; Taylor Jonard, _Sunbury Big Walnut Bryan

McDonald, Canal Winches1er; Cameron McRae. New Albany;

Jake German, Newark Lieking V8L; Justin Herber1, Cots.
OeSales: Jayce Stewart, New Albany: &amp;,ttl Aine , Newark

Licking Val.; Ethan Wetzel, Sunbury Big Walnut; A.J. Principe,
Cols. DeSates;
Daniel Haddix, Urbana: Chris McKee. Eaton ; Andrew
Richards , Cin. McNICttOiaS: Pete Tepe, St. Beman:t-Rooer
Bacon; Tyrone Jones, Day. Chamlnade.Julienne; Sea.n Egter,
Belletontaine; Andrew Ford, Tipp City Tippecanoe; Kyle

Mossbarger, Urbana; Alron Jenkins, Spring. Shawnee; Chase
Oaniets. Cin .. Indian Hill: Nick Marino. Urbana; Jay Julian,
Spring. Shawnee; Kramer Heridricks, Cin. Indian Hill; Cody
Reardon. New Rtchrnond;
Adrian Balser, Thomvile Sheridan; Cody Griffin, Clrdeville;
Adam Turner, Circleville; Evan Brooks, CircteviHe Logan Elm;
Casey Williams. Waverty; Mlkey Caton , Greenfiekt Mcaain;

Kandel Coleman, Hilsboro; Phil Bokovttz, Golllpolll Gollll
AcMI.; Frank Ickes. Lancaster Fairfield Union; Aaron Puckett,
McArthur Vinton County; Aody Trimble, Waverly; Justin Mullins.
Jackson: Matt Graham, McArthur Vinton County; Robbie
Marhoover, JacksOn; Dalton Scott. Waverly; Ramone Conley,

Waverly; - • · 01111po111 Gollll Acid.; Dlvld Rumley,
Oolllpolll Goltle AC..S.; Cody Cordle, Circleville Logan Ekn;
Drew Clanin, Circleville; Silty Stockum, Lancaster Fairfield
Union; Eric Glascock, Lancaster Fairfield Union; Ben Batey,
McArthur Vinton County;
Matt Rinehart . Dover; W~de Warner, DreSden Til-Valley;
Tamawi McGhee, Steubenville; Rocco Auteri . WintersviHef
Indian Creek; Carter Paul, Philo; Sean Campbell, Steubenville;
Zak Stull, Dover: Craig Kampfer. Carrollton; John Nicolozakes,
Cambridge; Michael Evancho, Camblidge; Zach Warehlrne.
New Concord John Glenn: Adam Bfce, Dresden Tri-Valley;

Derek McCiuggage, Milersburg W. Holmes; Kyle Reeder,
Usbon Beaver Local; Nic Aingwalt 1 Warsaw River View ; Brody

w.

Estep. Millersburg
Holmes; Bryce Pons. Zanesville
Maysville: Bear Holdren, Cambridge; Blake Aeneker, Opver;
Joe Pulver, Wintersville Indian Creek; Josh Beadnetl,
Carrollton; Ryan Porter, Dover; Kh1&lt; Wetherell, Cambridge;
Grant Woodard. New Concord John Glenn; Luke Neville,
Lisbon Beaver Local; Steve Davis, Steubenville; Taylor Trout.
Dresden Tri-Valley; Micah Mills, Dover; Ethan- Russell , Lisbon
Beever Local; Michael Smith, Wlntersvill~ Indian Creek; Aai"Ofl
Moon, Warsaw River View;

Patrick Stecker. Beloit West Branch; Marte Bamhart. Poland
Seminary; Josh Neff, canton S.; Mike Maui-er, Youngs. liberty;
Jake Roman , Mantua Crestwood; Marc Kanetsky, Hubbard;
Chase Canis, Akron Coventry: Abrlm Mueller. Cuy. Falls Walsh
Jesuit; Jeremy Musch, Medina Buckeye; Man Betz, Alliance
Marlington; Anthony Chiarappa, Cuy. Falls Walsh Jesul1; Beau
Ca~ . Aurora; Tyler Houska. Medina Highland; Ryan Gillun,
Youngs. Liberty; Ma~ Gauer, Canal Fulton NW: John Adams,
Akron Buchtel; Steve Cinicola, Hubbard;
Michael Swary, Defiance; Nate Caudill, Clyde; Aaron
Contreras, Belleyue: Jake Cooper, lima Shawnee; Aaron
PfeHenberger, ·St. Marys Memorial; Tyler Kubach, Bellevue;
Jermane Kennedy, .Sandusky Peridns; Jordan VenAusdale,
Napoleon; Tyler Rhoades, Uma Shawnee; Jameson CavaliBr,
Kenton; Victor Long , 81. Marys Memorial: John Vajen,
Napoleon; Brett Thompson, Shelby; Josh lowe, Sandusky
Perklns; Derek Patrick. Lima Shawnee; Cameron Stykemaln,
Defiance;
· .
Pauly Ferguson, Rocky River; David Garrett. Painesvme
HEirvey; Mike Roesch , Chardon Notre Dame-Cathedral Latin;
Sam Amidon, Cleve". Benedictine; Andy Daniels. Hunting Val.
Univ. School; Dan Bart}', Mentor Lake Calh.; Kevin White,
Rocky River: Jeff Spik&amp;s, Painesv~le Harvey; Dave Plungas.
Mentor Lake Ca1h.; John Swearman. Cleve. Benedictine; Andy
Breidigam, Rocky River; Zach Toedtman. Chagrin Falls; Bob
LaRosa, Avon; John Schaffer, Mentor Lake Cath.; Chri_s
Aukerman . Rocky River ; Charlie Vasey, Chagrin Falls; Daniel
Terhune, Cleve. Orange; Steve Kiss-Benke. Parma HIS. Holy
Name; Alex Bain, Cleve. Orange; Nate Dent, Painesville
Harvey; Tom Geraghty, Jefferson Area ; Brett Axner, Chagrin
Falls; Corey Kendig, ClelJe. Benedictine; Ed C8tanese, Lorain
Brookside.
·

.DIVISION IV ALL-Omo LIST

Sullivan, Cols. Hartley; lim Beachy, Plain City Jonathan Alder;
Rich Klingel, Caledonia River Valley ; Jacob Zang, Cols.
Hartley; Gar Keen , Sparta Highland; Aaron Mackey, Co(s.

COLUMBU-S (AP) - The ' 2006 Associated Press Division IV
AII..Qhlo high school football team . based on the recommendations of a sta1e media panel;

Eestmoor Acad.; Chris Pollock. Plain City Jonathan Alder;

.

DIVISION IV
Fll'lt Team

OFFENSE: Ends-Trey Masciarelli, Bellaire, 5-foot-9, 170
pounds, senior; Josh Rentz, Garfield Hts. Trinity, 6·3, 185, sr. ;
Brad Thomas, Orrville, 6-3, ~80. sr.; Josh Herron, Lemon-

Monroe, 5-10. 195, sr. Linemen-Michael Law, Perry. 6-4. 255.
sr.; Ad~m Hafer, Zoarvme Tusc. Val. , 6-5, 253, sr.; Austin
Rankin, Blanchester, 5--10. 230, sr.; John Pemberton, Ironton,
6-2, 290, sr.; Jaymie Blair, Oak Halbor, 6-2, 248, sr.; Mike

Madsan. Youngs. Mooney, 6-4, 295. sr. Quartsrbocl&lt;s-Kyle .
Simmons, On'ville, 6-1, 165, sr.; Dan McCarthy. Youngs.
Mooney, 6-t , 195, jr.; Mitchell Evans, Milton-Union, 6-3, 200.
or. Bac:Q-lsolah Peod, Cofs. Eastmoor Aced .. 5-11, 175, jr.;
Travis Cook, New Lexfngton, 5~7, 155, sr.; Kevin Smith,
Wlltiamapon Woodall, 5·11, 175, sr.; Cody Donald, Tontogany
Olaego, 5-10, 180, sr:; Ryan Harvey, Peny. 5·9. 175. sr.; Ryan
Travis, Mass. TusiBw, 6-3, 210, sr. "'icker-Garren Brown.
CVCA, 5·9, 150, Sf.
DEFENSE: Unemen-Taylor Smith, Sparta Highland, 6·3,
225, sr.: Andy COlegrove. lron1on, 6·3, 235. sr.; lshmaai'ly
Kitchen, Youngs. Mooney, 6-3, 320, sr.: Wade Ishmael, Oak
Harbor, 6-1, 255, jr. Unebackers-Jordan Traylinek, Bellaire, 60, 200, If.; Justin Creager, Blanchester, 5-9, 185, sr.; Corey
Hersman, Peny, 6-0 . 205, sr.; Michael Zordich, Youngs.

Mponey, 6-3, 225, jr. Becks-Aaron McCune. Oak Harbor. 511, 180, sr.; Jerry Robinson, New LeKington, 6-1, 1B4, sr.;

Leander Brooks, Cadiz Harrison Central, 5-8, 175. sr.; Noah
Hilt, Mllan Edison, 6~3, 210, jr.; Kelly McDonald, Zanesvi•e W.
Muskingum, 6--1, 165, $f. Punter-ian Kadish, Cln. Wyomi ng,
6-1 , 175, sr.

Offenlive player~ o1 the year: Kyle Simmons, Orrville; Dan
McCarthy, Youngs. Mooney; Isaiah Pead, Cols. Eastmoor
Acad.
Dolonllwl pl1yer o1 1111 year: lshmaai'ly Krtchen. Youngs.

"'Coechel
""""Y· of the year:

Mike Elder; Perry; John Magistro,

Bellaire.

Socondl'Mm:

OFFENSE: Ends- Aaron Aobens. Heath, 6-1. 166, sr.; Zack
Byers, Cols. Hartley, 5-B, 170, sr.; John Porter, Doylestown
Chippewa, 5·9, 140, sr. Linemen-Josh Hall, Milton-Union, 6·
3, 292, sr.; Kyle Borton, Wauseon, 6-1, 280, sr.; Tyler
Muhlenkamp, COldwater. 6-3 . 204, sr.; lim Skalak. Canton
Cent Ce.lh., 6-1, 265, sr. Ouart8rbacks-Nick Rocchio,
BeMaire, 6-2, 180. sr.; Chris Smith, S. Point, 6-3,225, sr.; Sam
Slavik, Coldwater, 6-3, 181 , sr. Backs-Jeremy Murray, Martins
Ferry, 6-9, 165. soph.: Tyter Purcell, Middletown Fenwick, 5-11,
180, sr.; Brian Recker. onawa-Glandorf, 5-10. 110. sr.; Matt
Yarab, Youngs. Ursuline, &amp;1, 188, soph.; John Pettigrew,
CVCA. 5·.9, 175, soph. Kicker--Ben Rascona, Cin. Deer Part&lt;,
5-7, 170, sr.
.
DEFINSE: Linemen-Randy Hogston, Plain City Jonathan

Alder, 6-2.210, sr.; Eddie Vallery. London Madison-Plains. 6-2.
220, sr.; Matt Earley, Blanchester, &amp;2, 225, sr. -linebBck"ersRyan Zann. Martins Ferry, 6-3, 205, sr.;.Rudy Dennler, Milton-

Unk&gt;n, 6-2, 205, sr. ; t.Aatt Bloomar, Oak Harbor, 5·10, 215, sr.;
Josh Bowman, OnviNe, 5·1E), 190, sr.; Cpry Beny, Canton
Cent Cath .. 6-1.200, sr. BackS-Jacob Walburn , Wellston. 611, 170, sr.: Skylar Gibson.. WiHiamsport Westtall , 5·10, 182,
sr.; Vinny Hokavar, Perry, 6·3. 195, soph.; Matt Saros~. Perry,
5·9, 165, sr. Punter-John "Hokavar, Perry, 6-5, 245, sr.

Spocill Mlndon
Jon Meadows. CaiToll Bloom-Carroll: Chris Dunlap, Heath;
Paul KrlpPel, Cola . H8rtley; Travis Londot , Uttca; Ryan Nida,
Carroll Bloom.Carroll; Darryl Wood, Cols. Eastmoor Acad .;
Ryan Hughes, Carroll Bloom-carrot!; Dominic D'Andrea, Cols.
Hartley; Tayklr Harris, Sparta Highland; Tlri'l Williams. Plain
City Jonathan Alder; Marcus Ervin, Cols. Eastmoor Acad.; Paul

..

crum ·
from PageBl

record of 83-58. Comparing the two, OSU
faced seven teams .500 and under with ,the
combined record of teams played coming in
at 73-71 on the year. You be the judge.
Contestant two is Michigan. The Maize
and Blue finished the season Il - l with the
only flaw on its record being bitter rival
Ohto State. But while wins over Notre
Dame·and Wisconsin has lifted the stock of
the Wolverines, the biggest hurdle in the
way of their trip to the title game is - bit.
ter rival Ohio State. ~
Pl)ople outside of this area just dort't want
these two teams to meet up again for the
national championship, arguing they had
their chance and couldn't get the win and
shouldn 't get anot her chance. But for
Michigan's ·sake, they are the only team to
give the Buckeyes a challenge and in the
end could be the only team to give them a
.
.
challenge. We wi II see.
The only way we will see the rematch
of the century 1s if both USC and Florida
falls this week as the voters would not
vote a two loss LSU team or a team from
the big letdown known simply as the Big

James Ward, Pataskala Licking Heights; Gus Casaborro,

Sparta Highland;

.

Jeb Pencil, Spring. NorthweStern; Josh Miller, Cin. Deer Park;
Bren Richter. Lemon-Monroe; Josh Hall, Milton-Union; Bill
Dr~sher,
OakwOod; Davis Conway, Cln. Mariemont; Drew
Frey, Clinton-Massie; Wally Gertus, Hamilton Badil'); Mike
Miller, Lemon-Monroe; Jeff King, Cln . Wyoming ; Darryl carter,
Spring. Greenan; Levi Schwab, Cllnton-Massie; Matt Frankey,
Hamilton Badin; Eric Antonides, Milton-Union; David Bradley,
Finneytown; Josh Ak;:om . Hamilton Badin;
Shane Porter, POf1sroouth; Austin Seevers, Portsmouth W.;
Cornellu1 Engfllh, Pomeroy Melga; Dominic Murphy,
Ironton; Seth Hardin, Williamsport Westfall ; Jack Gose,
Williamsport Westfall; John Walker, Ponsmouth; Ryan
Thomas , Albany Alexander; Austin Sidwell, New Lexington:
Beau Weed, South· Point; Seth Shaw, Washington CH; Cart
Blankenship, Ironton Rock Hill; Cody Rainey, Wellston; Alan
Maynard. Proctorville Falrtand; Josh Conrad, New Lexington;
Branctyn Ward, Piketon; Cody Williams, Chillicothe lane Trace;
Chaz Horsley, POrtsmouth W .; Alex Kay, New LeNington; Zane
Bailey, Williamsport Westfall; Ray Caldwell, Portsmouth; Tyler
Rogers, Williamsport Westfall; Caleb Walls, Chillicothe Unioto;
Tyler Gill, Wellston: Mike Zimmerman. washington CH; Chad
Miller, Ironton; JarrOd Casey. ironton Rock Hill; Ben Haynes,
ChillicOthe Zane Trac'e; Aaron Story, Pomeroy lletp; Dale
Swords, Portsmouth W.;
-·
Elric Neuhart. Byesville Meadowbrook; Ryan Mirich, Martins
Feny; Zach Gust, BelmMt Union Local; Cody Huft. Byesville
Meadowbrook; ·Steven Spillman, Zoarvltle Tuscarawas Val.;
Steffan- Green, St. Clairsville; Dustin Bruce, Bellaire; Jake
Antolak. St. Clairsville; Jaimie ~axwell, Coshocton; luke
Spradling, Bellaire; Nick Perko. · Bellaire; Callb Butter,
Zanesville
Muskingum; Jake Kl~g . Martins Ferry; John
Earliwlne, St Oairsville; Rfcky Craven, Zoarville Tuscarawas
Val.; Carl Perkins, Belmont Union Local; Jayson Keyser,
Bellaire; Dustin Hynes. St. Clairsville; Tyler Hardcastle;
Zanesville W. Muskingum;
Jordan Wrask, Hanoverton United ; Demetrius Fambro, Youngs. Mooney; Nick Hooper, Akron Manchester; Andrew
Loera. Orrville; Zak Kreakbaum, Akron Manchesl8r; K8vin
Mankin. Girard; Kyle Stadetmyer. Girard; John Rhodes.
Garrensville Garfield; Nick Thomas , Akron SVSM; Tyler
Shimanek, Orrville; Sam Benson , Mass . Tuslaw; Randy
Wingerter, Navarre Fairless; Taylor Hill, Youngs. MoQney;
Gabe Clark, Sullivan Black RilJer; Garrett McMullin,
Brookfield; Maurice J~nes . Youngs. Ursuline: Harvey Tuck IV.
Akron SVSM: Kyle Skonieczny, Streetsboro; Dom
Scarnecchia, Youngs. Mooney; RQss Revelle , Youngs .
Ursuline; Joe Cvengros, Warren Ch~mpion ; Phil Garcia,
StreetsbOro;
Jimmy Dunning , Archbold ; David Panott. Bellville Clear Fort&lt;;
Tim DeCant, Millbury Lake ; Tom Laderach, Oak Harbor; Ben
Gerding, Ottawa-Glandorf; Doug SMil, Bellville Clear Fork;
Nate Tackett, Bellville Clear Fork; Jack Schemenauer,
Pembervme Eastwood; Alec Romick, Huron; Tyler Kunk,
ColdWater; Spencer Skinner, Oak Harbor; Adam Homan.
Coldwater; Jeb Miller. BeiMIIe Clear Fork; Jus1in Happeny,
Pemberville Eastwood; Tony Harlemert, Coldwater; Justin
Henck, Tontogany Otsego; Cory Klenke, Coldwater:
Chris Newrpan, Lorain Clearview; Andrew Kirsch, Elyria
Cath.; Jeff Gehring, Gar1ield Hts. Trinity: Adam Relghle~.
Wel~ngton ; Jamie Ball, Lorain C1earview; Tim Rankin, Elyria
Cath,. ; Anthoni Troff, Perry; Cody Schuster, Elyria Cath .; Billy
Svoboda, Gar1ield Hts. Trinity; David Kiinmich, Wellington ; J.T.
Schratz. Peny: Shane Peterson, Wellington: Dave Gamble,
Lagrange Keystone; Dustin Otero, Lorain Clearview; Don
Pfckworth, Wellington; Brian Madzia, Gertield Hts. Trinity ;
Steve Sinkinson, Welling10n ; Nick Suetta, Elyria Cath .; Matt
Guggenbiller, Lorain Clearview; E~ck Saunders, Welling1on;

oay.

-w.

Meigs County
Wmter Sports
edition inside
today's Sentinel

Canucks shut out Blue Jackets

Schaal Faalllall I111-0hla
DIVISION ffi ALL-Omo LIST

Wednesday, November 29. 2oo6

www.mydailysentinel.com

V.j\NCOUVER, British
Columbia (AP) The
Vancouver Canucks are still
struggling to score. At least
they took better care of their
own end Thesday night.
Markus Naslund scored
midway through the second
period and Robeno Luongo
made 24 saves, giving the
Canucks a 1-0 win over the
Columbus Blue Jackets .
It was the II th time in 13
games that the Canucks
failed to score more than two
goals, and the third straight
contest they couldn't net
more than one. But after los-

ing their .last two games by a
! 0-1 combined score, one
was enough for the Canu~ks ·
against Columbus.
"We talked about it before
the game and we said these
are the types of games we
have to win, the 1-0, 2-1
games," Luongo said. "And
when we got the lead we
pla~ed really well defensively.'
.
Naslund provided that lead
8:49 into the second after
Henrik Sedin drew a pair of
players just outside the Blue
Jackets' blue line. He slipJ?ed
the puck to a streakmg

Naslund, who split defensemen Anders Eriksson and
Ole-Kristian Tollefsen and
broke in alone on Pascal
Leclaire.
"Hank seems to have eyes
in the back of his head sometimes," Naslund said. "He
came through the middle and
threw it to me and I was able
to get between the Ds."
Naslund finished the play
with a hard fake to the forehand before pulling the puck
quickly across to his backhand and lifting his 12th goal .
high over a sprawled
Leclaire.

- -

"Shop Locally",..

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o t I:\ I~ • \ ol.

Eagles

,) (l.

'llll ' RSil \' . '\ll\T,IBLR :~o. :!Ooh

·

" ·" """ "·';'"''"'"''·I ,,.,,

Meigs hunte~ rank lOth in state on opening day

SPORTS
• Knicks end CaliS' home
win streak. See Page 81

0)JITUARIES
.

'

'\o . H:.&gt;

Pagjt AS
·~Anderson

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

. BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
- Meigs
County ranked I Oth in the
state's opening day deer har. vest on Monday, with 1,054
deer, and the local deer harvest increased' by 24 percent
over the first day of last
year's season.
The deer-gun season
remains
open
through
Sunday, and · then will reopen Dec. 16 and 17.
Tuscarawas .
County
topped the opening day list,
with I ,858 deer. Statewide,
hunters took 39,629 deer on
Monday, · a slight increase
from last year's opening day
total of 38,695.
Other counties 'reporting
the highest numbers of deer
checked on Monday included Guernsey, Coshocton,
Washington,
Holmes ,
Harrison,
Licking,
Muskingum, and Athens.
· Thscarawas County, located in east-central Ohio, has

been the state's top deer
hunting region for many
years. Good lfabitat and a
rich hunting
tradition in the
.. .
area sustam Its reputation as
a deer hunting hot spot,
according to the · Ohio
· Division of Wil\llife.
. Deer hunting in the state
was already «;&gt;ff·. to a good
start with both early archery
aqd youth deer-gun season.
figures up from 2005. When
tombining the results of
Monday's harvest, along
with those from the early
inuzzleloadet &amp;eason, the
first six-weeics' of archery
season and the recent youth
deer-gun season, a total of
94,491 deer have been killed
so far this deer hunting .season, compared to 89,2761list
year at this time.
Approximately 400,000
hunters are expected to participate in the statewide
deer-gun season. Ohio's deer
'· a~.., J. R-/ptioto
population was estimated to Mark Thompson of Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy checks in two deer harvested by
be. 600,000 prior to the stan Christopher Davis, Syracuse, and a friend. Dettwiller has been busy this week as one of
of the fall hunting seasons.
the check stations for deer hunters .
~

• Randy Pyles

Eastern School
Board approves
personnel

INsiDE
U.S., North Korea end
talks without agreement
on next round of six-party
negotialklne.
See Page A2
• Meigs FFA members
attend national
convention.
See Page A3
o Sheets honored for
dedicated service.
See Page A3
• Meigs County Court
news. See Page AS
o Taft says he'll veto
reYf~te of conceal carry
bill. See Page A5
. o TOPS honors losers.
SeePageA6
o Patrol names pest
. troopers, dispatchers.
See PageA6
1 Supreme Court takes
up global warming for first
time. See Page A7
o Pope offers message
of strength to Christian
minorities in Turkey.
SeePageA7
o

Henry
fromPageBl
Monday, a day after Henry
caught two touchdown
passes in the Bengals' 30-0
win in Cleveland.
The test had shown Henry
had a blood-alcohol level of
0.092 percent after being
pulled over in June, above
the state's legal limit of
0.08 ,
A jury still will hear testimony .from State Highway
Patrol trooper Michael

Henry and his attorney
declined to comment to
reporters as they left the
counroom.
Six Bengals have been
arrested th.ts year on various charges. Henry, 23, has
been arrested four times
since last December. He
has pleaded guilty to marijuana possession and a gun
charge and has one other
case pending.
He was suspended for
two games and fined
$20,000 earlier this season
for violating NFL poliCies
on conduct and ·substance
abuse.

Nugent

pounds and boyish 'Just hit it like I did during
looks, Nugent can easily be warmups,"'
Nugent
mistaken for a reporter or recalled. "I knew I had to i:lo
equipment manager in the my job."
fromPageBl
Jets' locker room . On the
Besides the 54-yarder,
most y~u need on the field field, he has stood tall for Nugent made kicks of 23,
· b,
years.
34 and 40 yards Sunday. He
to d0 your J0 ·
Nugent set or tied 22 also booted three ·kickoffs
Nugent ued a career high school records at Ohio · into the end zone on a day
with four fie!~ goals in the State, where he established when the wind wasn't much
·
&lt;
h ·
ofa'actor.
Jets' 26-11 · win over
Houston on Sunday and a reputatiOn .or avmg a
•·
powerful and accurate leg.
Nugent also showed some
made a big sta\ement with Those credentials made him toughness, making an open- ·
his 54-yarder th~t was plen- one of the highest-drafted field tackle on Dexter Wynn
ty long and I yard shy of the kickers in the last 23 years during a kickoff return.
te~ record.
~
· , when the Jets took him in
"It wasn't just a tackle, it
[t wa~ a} I th 1 turkey..
the second . round, 47th was a greathit, too," special
Graham JO~ngly shouted 10 - overall, in 2005..
teams ace Brad Smith said.
h1s Australian accent as ~e
Big things were obviously "He did a great job of doing
strolled past Nugent s expected but his NFL his J'ob all day long."
crowded locker Monday.
•
,
.
"Mike really nailed it," career got of\ to a dub1ous
Nugent hasn't· had many
Kory Conley. wemngton.
coach Eric Mangini added. start. Nugent s first field- opponunities to make his
"Mike is the type of guy goal attempt wa~ blocked m mark in games, convening
that everybody cheers for th.e opener agamst Kansas 12 of 15 attempts, tied for
East above Big Blue.
because of the way he City, but he rebounded to the fewest kicks in the NFL.
Finally comes SEC backed Florida. works, the ?.'ay he cares. have a decent rookte sea''I'd say that's probably
While the debate over who owns the best He's easy to root for. son. He made 22 of 28 field the main reason it might be
conference in college football usually fires Obviously,
everybody ~oals, mcludu1. a 49-ya~der kind of a tough thing,
up the pigskin community, I win spare peo- wants three points, but aside .10 the season male agamst because you · can kick one
ple the trouble by saying pound-for-pound · from that, it 's just good to Buffalo. ·
.
field goal and then maybe
the SEC is the toughest schedule in all of see him hit that ty.pe of field . Nugent then had .a homf- · none for the next two
college football.
goal."
tc openmg g~me thts season
h
And coming out of that schedule with an
Questions about Nugent's m a 23-16 wm at Tennessee, games," he said. "But w en
11-1 record, with only a 27-17 lqss to leg strength started to creep missing two of his three you get called upon, that's
Auburn standing in the way, says a lot in after he struggled to field-goal attempts and an the time you have to perabout the Gators and their bid for the cham- reach the end zone on kick- extra point.
.
.
form at your best."
pionship game. While they have hiid some offs. He was also 0-for-3 on
"Even though I had . that
The Jets had two opponuclose calls, so has Michigan and Ohio State. fleld goals of 50 or more Tennessee game,. I'm glad nities to try for 50-yard field
·But hurting Florida 's chance was Arkansas' yards m his young career:
we got the win, and my goals against Chicago two
loss last week, lowering the strength of
. But s.nmlar to a r~hef teammates are so support- weeks ago, · but Mangini
schedule which may be the difference if the p1tcher m baseball, Nugent ive, · it's unbelievable," decided instead to punt.
Gators beat them this week.
has learned to have a shon Nugent said.
New York was shut out 10It would probably take an absolute beat- ' memory, never allowmg . Until Sunday, Nugent had 0, and many wondered if the
down by the Gators and a loss by USC for one bad. kick to lmger: He missed his only try from 50 coach's confidence in
them to be even be considered in a jump also ret uses to . let doubts this season- a 52-yarder at Nugent had been shaken.
over the Wolverines.
~~~ut IJJS abt hties affect windy Cleveland four
"I think once you get one
So in the end, who will get the rose, the
" If you 're doing your job weeks ago. He ~as 0-for-3 on the board, it always helps
final vote or, in this case, the crystal footon the field, then you're m h1 s career from .sO-plus to make the next decision,"
ball when it is all said and done ?
going to get to keep doing yard~ when Mangm1 and Mangini said. "But it will
I say USC.
what you do, do what you spec1al teams coordmator sti II be week to week.... It
Lar,.y Cmm is a spo,.ts writer for the . do best and what you love,'' Mtke Westhoff let Nugent ties into the game day as
try one Sunday.
well as him being able to hit
Ohio Valley Publishing company. He ca11 be he said.
With
his
small
stature
"The
warmups
went
realthat,
which I think helps hi s
reached at..lcrunt@mydailyregistercom or
he's 5-foot-9 and 182 ly .weJI.
at 740-446-2342 ext . .1.1
. so I was thinking, argument ."

-·--·---

•

··--~---

- --··

"""':""",~~

•

give back-side help on by what every means neces.
Vinton County's Megan sary. Vinton County suc.Owens, get a couple of . cessful ran out the clock and
stops on defense, and keep Eastern just mn out of time.
fromPageBl
in their offensive rhythm.
Vinton County was lead
The Lady Eagles, With in scoring by Dixon, who
swered points to gain a 34- successful foul shooting had 21 points, followed by
26 lead with less than four and aggressive defense that senior Owens, who was
minutes left in the third . .
caused Vinton County credited with 18 and freshMost of Vinwn County's turnovers, were able to man Rebecca Puckett consuccess came from the fullbegan to chip away at the tributed II ..
coun pressure it began to Lady Viking lead- cutting
Eastern's Erin Weber led
apply in the third, as well as it to four (48-44) with three all scorers for the night
the 20-point second half 11\inutes to play.
with 25 points.
effort of freshman guard
Eastern caused · seven
"Weber is an unbelievTori Dixon .. .
Lady Viking turnovers on able player," said coach
The Lady Eagles figuted the night, while the Eagles Ward. "We pretty mufh
out and broke the Vinton turned the ball over IS · threw the kitchen sink out
County press with almost times.
trying to double team her
six minutes left in the game
"We had some girls that and she still ·took every
when the Lady Vikings held really stepped up and opportunity to score."
a lead of 45-35.
played hard tonight,' Weber
The Lady Eagles' Katie
"They made a lot of mis- stated. Eastern's sixth man, Hayman put 13 points on
takes tonight," said Eastern sophomore Kaylee Milam, , the scoreboard, Jenna
coach Dave Weber, · "I who according to her coach· Hupp added five, Jillian
attribute · a lot of that to comes in and gives a little Brannon four and Milam
Vinton County, who has a · quick energy, stepped up made the final three points
great club and are very·ath- and sunk a three-pointer of the ~arne.
.
letic."
with nine seconds left in the
Leadmg in rebounds was
Eastern began to get in its game.
. Eastern's Weber with eight
grove and to cut the Vinton
By the one minute mark, and Vinton County's Jessi
County lead, forcing a Lady the Lady ' Vikings had Harkins, who pulled down
Viking time-out with just increased their lead to six nine .
over five minutes left to (52-44). The final minute
"All the kids gave a g(eal
play.
was very aggressive on both effon tonight," praised
Weber reminded his girls sides of the ball, both teams Weber, "I was especiall~
during the time-out that .had to work very .hard at pleased with our defense.'
a
successful
The Lady Eagles return
they were still in the game ~etting
and were now able to beat mbound pass, and no one to action Thursday when
they · play .host to the
the press, they just neede\1 had fouls to give. ·
While Vinton County was Trimble Lady Tomcats in
to finish. All Eastern needed
to do, according to Weber's trying to run the clock, the TVC~Hocking season
time-out huddle talk, was Eastern was trying to stop it opener.
Shimko, who arrested
Henry, during a trial .set for
Feb. 15. Henry has been
charged with operating a
vehicle under the influence
of alcohol and speeding.
Haddad set Henry's bond
at $10,000 on· Monday and
ordered him to repor:t twice
a month to the county's probation department. The
judge ordered him not to
use alcohol or drugs and to
undergo testing as a condition of. his bond. He can
continue driving as long as
he blows into a breath-test
ignition interlock device.

~w

I

STAI'f REPORT

.

INDEX
a SEcnONS- 16 PAGES

.

POMEROY- Up until this week
the condition of the upper parking
lot wall in Pomeroy was in need of
the Little Dutch Boy(s) to plug the
gapping holes but all that is changing.
'
·
After waiting over a year to get
started, this week workers with J.
and P. Caulking of Columbus were
able to get busy cutting sandstone
and filling a portion of the wall with
Portland cement as opposed to grout.
The workers arrived last week to
begin work but the river had risen, ..
delaying the repairs yet again. Work
on the wall had also been delayed

due to funding and bureaucratic
issues.
Sean Hill of J . and P. Caulking
said he and co-worker Joe Sofranko
arrived this week with three tons of
sandstone to repair the wail though
they anticipated needin g two l)lOre
tons for a total of five . Hill said he
searched three places in Columbus
to find a matc hing shade of sandstone for the wall.
"We should have the majority. of
the structural work dorie this week,"
Hill said, explaining this included
th e actual setting of the stone.
Of course this type of work
depends on the \~feather and weather
permitting the job should be done

next week during the "clean up"
phase.
The project is estimated to cost
around $55,000 with the village
receiving 100 percent' of the· fund. ing . Both the Buckeye Hills
Appalachian Regional Commission
· and state of Ohio will each pay 12
1/2 percent of the costs while the
Federal Emergency Management
Agency will pay 75 percent of the
total pfice tag ,
,
It nas been over two years since
the wall s ustained heavy damage in
lhe tloods following Hurricane Ivan
in September 2004 as well as a
major flooding event in January
2005.

'

Calendars
Classifieds

.

MHS juniors utilize musewn for National History Day
BY BETH. SERGENT

Comics
Annie's Mailbox .

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

AS

A4
As
B Section
A6

© aoo6 Ohio Volley Publishing Co•
'I

.

.

Bv BETH SERGENT

Detalll on Pace A6

.,

Please see Board, A5

Beth Sercont/pllotO

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL. CDM

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Please see Museum. A5

.

Jo Sofranko (left) mixes Portland cement while Sean Hill cuts sandstone to repair holes in the upper parking lot wall. Both
men are from J. arid P. Caulking of Columbus and hope to finish the job next week.

REPAIRS FINAllY BEGIN ON PARKING LOT WAil.

WEATIIER

Places to Go
Editorials

from the collection of Rev.
William Middleswanh that
were' donated to the museum. The collection is housed
on the second noor of the
Geneva and Howard Nolan
Annex Building. .
"Everyone has found
something for their project
today," McCaulla said.
According to its website.

TUPPERS PLAINS
The Eastern Local Board of
Education approved .substitute teachers and supplemental contracts at this week's
regular monthly meeting.
The board approved the
following substitute teachers
for the remainder of the
2006-07
school
year:
Alexandra Brandt, Jan
Aldridge, Cheryl Facemyer,
Marjorie Fetty, Chad R.
G.
Huston,
Edward
Safranek, Jason Wiliams.
Brandon Cottrill, Chad
Hubbard, Kyle Ord, David
Schleter and Ainy Thomas.
The board accepted the
resignation of Victor Wallace
as head football coach, and
approved the following supplemental contracts: Junior
High Cheerleading Ad.visor,
Brittni Hensley; Head Boys
Basketball Coach, Howie
.Caldwell; Assistant Baseball
Coach, Adam Pryor; Weight
Room Coordinator/Winter
Quarter, Brian Bowen .
The board approved the
following stalf for the After
School
Intervention
Program: Mildred Wilson,
Bethen Bowen. Tina KeHey,
Sandy
Needs,
Sharon
Wickersham, Nancy Circle.
Jayne Collins and Krista
Johnson.
The board approved Brittni
Hensley as a substitute secretary for the remainder of the
2006-07 sc hool year, and
Gwen Hall ana Sheila
Connolly as After School
Intervention Aides.
The board also:
• Approved the minutes of
the last meeting and October
financial reports.
• Approved an agreement
with CBIZ in the amount of
$ 1.000 to perform the annual
ac1uanal repon and val uation
of the self-i nsurance fund as
required by ORC Section
9.R33. '
• Approved the transfer of
$279. 11 from Class of 2006
Fund l200.94 l6) to Class of
2007 Fund.
• Approved McGuire &amp;
Associates. · LLC for grant
writing s~rvices for the current sc hool year.
• Approved a contract with
CTL Engineering for services related to Riverview
Elementary property soil
remediation.
• Approved an agreement

POMEROY - With the
instant gratification techno!ogy the intemet brings to
researching school projects,
other information outlets are
being overlooked by students which is why 50
juniors from Meigs Hi gh
School recently utilized the
Meigs County Museum and

information from the Meigs
County Hi storical Society
for National Hi story Day.
Tea McCaulla, Engli sh
teacher at MHS. brought her
. students to the museum to
browse through the various
items to do research on a
National History Day project. The projects could be
anythi'ng from a re,earch
paper to a performance
exhibit or video dncumen -

tary.
McCaulla said everyone
wants to use the interent but,
"I want them to realize there
are ot her th ings they can do
to research projects . like
using bo\)ks and newspapers."
Margaret Parlier of the
Meigs County Museum and
Meig' County Historical
Society said sever;~ I , of the
stLtdents had L"ed honks

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