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                  <text>Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel ·

Tuesday, September 6, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Reds fall ~hort of Brewers on Labor Day ·
CINCINNATI (AP) ' Geoff Jenkins' · sore back
doesn't hurt when he swings,
just when he runs. Five
swi ngs were all he rieeded to
carry
the
Milwaukee
Brewers .on' Monday night.
Jenkin s tied his career high
with five hits and scored the
go-ahead run in the eighth
inning to back the efficient
pitchi ng ofTomo Ohka as the
·Brewers beat .the Cincinnati
. Reds 6-1.
" It won't get any worse.''
said Jenkins, who had two
doubles and an RBI while
personally outhitting the
Reds 5-4. " It doesn't hurt
when I hit o r throw. It onl y
,hurts ·•hen I run or occasion ally get out in front. It \ as
bad as it's ~een for the pitSL
few weeks. but I' II make it
through the season."
With the score Lied at I and
one out in the eighth. the
Brewers loaded the ba ses
against re liever Matt Belisle
(3-7) on sing les by Jenkins
and Wes ·Helms and a walk to
Dam ian Miller. With the
AP photo .
Cinc innati infield at double
play depth. JJ . Hardy Milwaukee Brewers second baseman Rickie Weeks, top,
bounced a single th roug h the . jumps over Cinc1nnati Reds' Edwin Encarnacion as Weeks
hole into left field to drive in completes a double play on a ground ball hit by Ryan Freel durJenkins with the g0-a head ing the seventh inning Monday in Cinci.nnati.
run.
ing away from 0 ur ri·ght-h&lt;ln- great game , too."
' , Kent Merck,er replaced cters ." Narron said. ·Tm sure,
·'Brandon was outst.andBelisle and gave up an with a lot of outs early in the ing," Narron said . " lt 's a
almost identical run -scoring count. guys were thinking shame to waste that kind of
single to pinch -hitter Jeff they were getti-ng good pitch- effort."
Cirillo. Brady Clark hit into a es .and just missing th'em."
Carlos Lee and Jenkins hit
double play to end the
Rookie Dana Eveland consecutive doubles with one
in ning.
. pitched the last two innings out in the fourth · to give
Jenkins had five hits for the for his first career save.
Milwaukee a 1-0 lead. Lee
thi rd time in his career. secThe fi fth-pl ace Reds fell 24 extended his hitting streak to
ond thi s season.
1/2 games behind Central eight games with his 'ground Ohka
( I 0-7).
who Division-leading St. Louis. rule double, a bloop down
improved to 4-1 with tWo no- Ci nc innati has 25 games left. the right-field line that
Reds starter · Brandon bounced into the stands.
decisions in his last seven
starts, needed 74 pitches to Claussen, who had won five
Adam Dunn tied the game'
ge t ·throu gi) his seven consecutive decisions before in the bottom of the fourth
· innings. allowing three hits losing 10-0 at Houston last with a one-out homer to right
and one run with six mike- Wednesday, gave up seven on the first pitch. It was hi s
outs.
hits and one run with six 36th of the season and first in
Narron . sa id the Red s strikeouts and two walks in 30 at-bats since Aug. 26. It
couldn ' t get anything ' goi ng · seven mmngs.
also broke a tie with Ken
against Ohka.
" My job is to make sure I Griffey Jr. for the team lead.
" He got a lot of outs early give our team a chance to
Mi Iwaukee added three
i'n the count. It looked like he · win." Claussen said. " I felt runs in the ninth on doubles
had pretty good movement . like I did that. f have to tip by Lee and Jenkins and a
His slider or cutter was mov- my cap to Ohka. He pitched a pa ssed ball.

Indians close to AL Wildcard
lead with 2-0 win over-Detroit
DETROIT (AP). - Scott
Elarton was able to throw his
fastball where he wanted to,
and that made all the difference.
He won for the first time in
more than a month, allowing
rour hits in 6 1-3 innings as
the Cleveland Indians beat the
Detroit Tigers 2-0 Monday
and pulled within 1 1-12 games
of the AL wild-card lead.
Jose Hernandez homered to
help send Detroit to its fifth
strai ght loss. The Tigers
haven' t scored in 19 innings.
Elarton (8-7) walked two
and struck out six, combining
with two relievers on an eighthitter. He had been 0-2 in five
starts since Aug. 2.
"I think the main thing is
that I finally got my command
back today," he said. "I was
able to locate my fastball."
Bob Wickman pitched the
ninth for his 36th save in 41
opportunities, getting pinchhitler Chris Shelton to ground
into a game-ending double
play with runners on first and
second. Shelton nearly won
the 'game on the previous
pitch, hitting a foul ball into
the seats near the pole in right
· •
field.
"It was a good pitch (fastball, .low and away), "
Wickman said. "That was the
only thing .... If I got beat on
it, I would've just got beat."
IVWl Rodriguez had three
hits, and Carlos Pena added
two for the Tigers.
The only hits Elarton gave
up were Rodriguez's two-out
double in the first inning,
Pena's infield single with one
out in the fifth, Rodrigu~z's
two-out single in the sixth and
Pena's one-out single in the
seventh.
"He (Elarton) pounded the
strike zone consistently,"
Detroit
manager
Alan
Trammell said. "The last couple of days we've been trying
as a team to work a little
more. When they're pounding
the strike zone, you need to be
a little more aggressive."
The last hit chased Elarton

5254 COMPACT 'TRACTOR

'233/MONl'H
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ATT~

SOLD -TII.Y

'183/MONlli
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1

AP phol9
Cleveland Indians starter .Scott Elarton pitches against the
Detroit Tigers in the second inning on Monday in Detroit
Elarton (8-7) won for the first time in more than a month,
allowing four hits in 6 1/3 Innings as the Indians beat the
Detroit Tigers 2-0
in favor of Bob Howry, who games we haven 't scored any
got Placido Polanco to tly out. runs. But that's going to
Curt1s Granderson then sm- change.
·
gied off the right-field wall.
"We've got a good otlense.
moving Pena to third. But You can expect us to score
omar Infante popped out to runs. But there's going to be
end the inning.
days wh~re even the best hitHowry "
allowed ung teams are goin'g to get
Rodriguez's third · hit of the shut out."
.
·
game and walked Dmitri
Cleveland took a 1-0 lead in
Young in the eighth. He then the first on consecutive sinallowed a two-out infield sin- gles by Grady Sizemore,
gle to Craig Monroe, but Coco Crisp . and Jhonny
Rodriguez rounded third base Peralta.
tOO far and was tagged out by , Hernandez led off the fifth
first baseman Hemandez.
with hi s sixth· home run of the
, "Pudge was thinking I was season to make it 2-0.
going to tlrst base and he kept
Notes: Peralta's first-inning
running," Hernandez said. RBI single broke an 0-for-16
"That's how we got hitn at slump . ... Rodriguez tumbled
third base."
over the railing and into .the
1213)
Clevelancl
dugout while chasMike Maroth (
allowed two runs and five hits ing a foul by Aaron Boone in
in six innings. walking one the second inning and was
and striking out six.
·
caughi by Indians' hitting
"I've been getting a lot of coach Derek Shelton. ...
runs. They've been scoring a Granderson. playing center
lot of runs for tne. They . field, robbed Pemlta of a
picked me up several times," heme run in the third by leapMaroth said. "This is just one ing above the left-center field
garne. Obviously the past two fence and catching hi s drive.

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_submitted to Ohio newspapers. "U.S .. EPA is devoting
considerable resources to an
POMEROY - The Ohio 'expedited review of C8..
Environmental
Protection Since C8 has. been found in
Agency will rely on the U.S. the environment in several
EPA to determine a "safe"
level of C8. in water sup- states, a national approach
plies, Ohio EPA Director makes sense."
Joseph P. Koncelik said.
C8 originates from the
"EPA has greater expertise DuPont Washjngton Work s
in this area than we do, plant
near
Parkersburg,
including their National W.Va. has been detected in
Science Advisory Board, a four Ohio water systems,
panel of national experts," including Tuppers Plains"
Koncelik said . in a column . Chester and Pomeroy Village
BY BRIAN

. • Gallipolis Invitational
held. See Page 81

• 25 HP' K.Wasaki"

WIDE TRACK

\\ 1.11'\\ Sll .\\ . Sll'' ll \lilt R --, ~ oo : ,

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•'

INSIDE
• Rehnquist's body lies in
repose; Bush to speak at
conservative chief justice's
funeral Wednesday.
See Page A2
• Con:Jpletes Marine
training.
See Page A3 .
• Haymans hold reunion.
~Page A3
• Trial set for one of two
murder suspects.
See Page AS
• Pomeroy traffic accidents. ·
See Page AS ·
• Community college
leader hopes to teach
Leno a lesson.
See Page AS
• Talabani says Saddam
has confessed to.crimes
committed by his regime.
See Page AS
• Saudi forces overrun
villa where Islamic
militants holed up.
SeePage AS
• Stocks surge on declining
oil prices; Dow up 141.
SeePageA7
• Weaver reunion held.
SeePage AS
• Awarded Eagles
Scholarships.
SeePage AS

I

Brian J. Reed/photo

..

Carla King of ,Peoples Bank accepted the first donation of $500, from Middleport Community Association President Donald
Vaughan, Jr., and Sally Lambert, who is in charge of an association-led fund drive for victims of Hurricane Katrina. Peoples Ba~k
offices will accept donations to the fund until at least Oct. 4.

Community Association leads hurricanefund drive
BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

-The
MIDDLEPORT
Middieport
Community
Association will .lead a local
fundraising effort to help victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Meeting Tuesday at Peoples
Bank, the association .voted to
establish an open account
through the bank for donations
to assist those who have lost
virtually everything as the

result of last week's hurricane.
The association also voted to
open the account with a $500
donation from the group's
· treasury.
Donations may be made
payable 10 the Katrina Fund at
any Peoples Bank location.
including those in Middleport.
Pomeroy.
and
Rutland.
Association President Don
Vaughan, Jr. sai~ the associ ation has not yet decided which
organization will receive the

1B30 OLD LOGAN RD SE
LANCASTER, OH 43130
(740) 6$3-2827 I (BOO) 710-192f (TOLL FREE)
'

--~~~-·&lt; a ·:·· t..cc tt5 ·- c _... ase; ~· "" J~Cl ~· - ~·~~a:~~~· ·:-;;yf?ITh or&gt; yr.~· c:w.rr Cr~ •l Cara \1i'l' fY\ urn iO:jb aow~ D')'merl •Ft c,.ree
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Detail• on Page AS

INDEX
2 SE.CilONS -

Calendars

16 PAGF.S

A3
B4-6

Classifieds
Comics

B7

ufar Abby

A:3

Editorials

A4

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Ga re 'Y :"·c·ases ,~ ·a~9::t. ''8CJ&lt;l ~ -n n"TVml as o!21l/OS. ar'&gt;CIT'il)' -1ary alter t ~.a, !la·e
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,,• ·

B Section

Sports

·as rated by engrne -n anu 1ac.Ur€· (J.t:199-21-S8t.7::-1

AB

Weather

,£) 2005 Ohio Valley Publi.liihins Co.

•

local contributions, but said it
will likely be the Salvation ·
Army or another reputal;&gt;le .
charity. The association will
decide at its Oct. 4 meeting
where the f'unds will go.
Earlier this year. through a
similar fundraising program,
the Community Association
collected over $2,000 for
UNICEF's efforts to help the
victims of the Tsunami in Asia.
Community
Association
. me'rber Sally Lambert . of

Peoples Insurance will coord-inate the fundrai si ng effort on
behalf of the organization . She
also was in charge of the
rs'unami rel ief drive in January.
. Other business
The Community Association
also voted to donate $300 to
the Village of Middleport for
expenses relating to the · past
season at the Middlepon Pool.
The pool operation has strug'
Please see Drive, AS

Racine ·unseals bids for water treatment plant
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

BBBO UNITED LANE
ATHENS, OH 45701
(740) 593-3279 I (BOO) 710-1917 (TOLL FREE) ..

·a , a precau tionary s t ~ p to
protect puhl ic health
DuPont has &lt;dread) agreed
to finan ce a program prtl\'iding . bottled ll'ater to c!Jstomers of the Little Hocking
\Vater A-. ~oL· i ation. which
ha' the hi glte, t lewis or C8
detected in Ohi o. While the
le veh there are also below
the curre nt act ion level. the
Ohio EPA belicve.s it · "prudent'' lor l'Ustomers in Little
Hocki ng to use bottled
water. Konecilik said .

take s.teps to limit their own
exposure.''
A panel of national experts
.commissioned by the State
of West Virginia recommended a preliminary action.
level of 150 partsper billion.
All of the detections of C8
in Ohio waler systems ha ve
been far less than that. but.
Konecelik said , a' more
information about . C8 ha s
become available, U.S. EPA
will review the data and may
lower that recommenda tion

BY DIANE POTTORFF
OPOTIORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

BY BEtH SERGENT

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

systems in Meigs County in
levels not considered harmful by water system officials
in relation to DuPont's own
safe standard. However,
while DuPont has established
its own safe level of the
chemical, the EPA has not.
'"The presence of C8 does
not necessarily mean it is
harmful." Konecelik said.
"The key question is what
level of CR should cause
government officials to take
action, or lea(l citizens to

.

Fonner
Wahama coach
pleads guilty to
sexual assault

WEATHER

ALLPOWJ:R EQUIPMENT

" " " ·""'''•ih ·" ·"'""'' ·"""

:pirector:
Ohio EPA to rely on federal agency for C8 standards
.
.

SPORTS

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· TANK• M60-KW

timetable for draining
New Orleans, A2

..

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BIG COUNTRY 4X2 UV

· ·Bill boosts ethanol,
bio-diesel, AS

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

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6284 COMPACT TRACTOR

•
an uncertain

RACINE Last night
inside. council's chambers at
the
Racine
Municipal
Building most of the chairs
were taken by contractors who
had arrived to ·hear how their
bids stacked up against their
competitors with the prize
being the village's new water
treatmem plant.
Clerk-Treasurer
David
Spencer read the bids for
Divisions A, B, C. D and E for
the project which is water
tran s.m i ssio n/distri but ion
(line wo.rk), water storage
facilities (lhe tank:), water
treatment plant (the building),
well field improvements
(electrical). and telemetry:
If Racine decides to go
with last night's lowest bids
,with no alternates that total
would come to $1,977,182.
This would leave $302,182
that the village would have to
borrow to complete the project ,
which last year had an estimated cost of $1.759,900.
The figure of $1,759,900
excludes the well field reha-

.

POINT
PLEASANT,
· W.Va. - Lon~time Wahama
High School ~ teacher and
. baseball coach Gordon·
Spencer will be sentenced in
December aft er pleading
guilty Tuesday to cha rges of
sexual abuse while at the ·
school.
For more than a year.
Trooper First Class John
Black. assisted by TFC Brent
Keefer, investigated allegation s that Spencer, 54. of
Hartfon.L had been sexually ·
abu sing several &lt;tudents at
WHS. according to Keefer.
Spencer entered into a plea ,
agreement with Special
Prosecutor Jim Young of.
Wavne County in Mason
County
Circuli
Court
Tuesday . on two counts of
third-degre e sexual a&gt;Sault
and one count of third-degree
sexHal abuse.
~
He will be sentenced Dec.
13 in front of Mason County
Judge David Nibert.
Spencer's attorney. Matt
Clark. ' said he had no comment on the proceedings.
The incident s that Spencer
was charged with occurred
between the years of 198790. Keefer said.· All of the
victims wae students at
WHS but most were not in
his classes.
Because of tile statute of
limitati ons. onlv li1·e of the
former students· cases could
be heard. he said. An estimated five tu I0 victims came
forward during the inve,tigation.
~
,.
~
It is all eged that one of the
victims 11 as a special needs
student .
When word Qet; l&gt;ut about
the case. Kc~fcr said th e
detachment cou ld recei1·e
telephone. calh from other
,-ictim s.
.
"I wouldn't be surprised."
he said ahout the potential for

tract which will lock in current
prices despite Hurricane
Katrina and rising fu el costs.
Racine Council will review
and possibly vote on which
bids to accept at their next
meeti'ng ":hich has yet to be
determined. Howe\'er. decisions on the bids will be made
this month according to ,
MavorJ.ScottHi\1.
~
Council was , cheJulcd to
. meet in regular 'c" ion toni ght
. but only Councilmen Greg
Taylor and Gary Freeman
were present.
Hill hopes th at construct ion
will begin on the pbnt in midOctober.
Bob Allen. field a£cnt with
Ohio Rural Co~nmunitv
the
. Beth Serjlent/ Ph&lt;&gt;to
Members of Racine Village Council and Mayor J. Scott Hill dis- Assistance Program was pn!cuss bids that were received for the village's new water treat- sent for the meeting arld said
ment plant which is due to begin construction in mid-October. he believes everything i, on
The bids were unsealed by Clerk-Treasurer David Spencer last track to break ground 0n the
plant as scheduled . .-" lien
night and will be voted on by council this month.
believes a big part of sta) ing '
on course de,pite the ri 'c in
bilitation project.
cost estimate . Due to this. material s i' the fu nrlin e that
To date the village has been Division I;l., well field has been lined up .
~
promised $1,675,000 in grant improvements I electrical.
"I was surprised at the gl'ant
· will have to be re-bid by law.
funding for the plant.
The bids are good for 60 to
Last night's bids come in
Please see ,P lant. AS
558 ,582 over the engineer's 90 days depending on the con 1

•

'

more Yictims.

During rhc im·cstigation,
Keefer said he shared the
inYestigatJ\'e dUties with
Black. who i' now an agent
with the .- \knh,&gt;L Tobacco
and Firearms and ' lationed in
Loui,vilk . K1·.
Ac·corJ ii1{ to Dr. Larry
Pa rson s. ~~ ~" o n County
S ~ ll&lt;H' I'
su perintendent.
Spenl'Cr ' olun tari ly retired
aml , urremkrcd hi s teaching
certifi catt' wi thin the last
\'t."ar.

"He surrendered his certificate to the ltatc and provided
the papc'rwork for hi s retiremem:· P ar~on~ s'aitl.
With the investigation
completed. Parsons said that
the school board ,:ooperated
with the state poli~e while
thev conducted interviews ·
11 ith former stude.nt s and
~tall .

"The ' tuJents involved are
no11 adu lts ·and live away
from here and are living their
liws in other states," Parsons
said . .. And the others who
Please see Coach, AS

�ATI N .

The Daily Sentmel

- The Daily-.-BentinelWednesday, September 7,

2005

WITH LEVEE FIXED, AN UNCERTAIN TIMETABLE FOR DRAINING NEW ORLEANS
BY CAIN BURDEAU
A5SDCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW
ORLEANS
Progress was measured 111
inches Tuesday, . in rhe slow
dropping of water levels outside New Orleans' huildings,
as engi neers strugg led to
drain this saucer of a ci ty in a
herculean task that could take
weeks _ if they are lucky.
The Army Corps of
Engineers said the timetable
ranges from three weeks to
nearly three mnmhs. uepcmlin g on a string or l'ariablcs.
incl uding ra infall. the stillunknown condition of the·
pumps
abandone&lt;.l
to
Hurricane
Katrllla.
ai1d
whether the sy.stcm can withstan&lt;.! the llutsam ur bruken
bui_ldings. trees. tr•r sh and
corpses.
"We have to gl't the water
out of tb ~ citv or the nh:ht mare wil l l'~)ntinu~. " ~aid
Louisiani.l
Euvinmmental
Senetary Mike McDanid He
said the wilier will he pumped
into Lake Pont c ht~rtra in eve n
ihuugh rt JS fouled wit h
sewage, heavv metal;. ~asoline t~nd other' dange ri1us- substances.
·
The pumping bcgtm after
the Corps useJ hundreds of
sandba~s and roe·ks over the
Labo1· Day weekend to close a
200-foot gap in the 17th
Street Canal levee th at burst
in the aftermath of the sturm
and swamped 80 percent nt'
this below sea-level city.
Following an aerial to ur
Tuesday. Mayor Ray Nagin
said the water was d roppi n ~
ever· so slightly. and he estimated that it covered 011l y 60
percent of the ci ty.
''Even in areas where the
w:1ter was as hi gh as the

ricd S2nd Airborne Oivision
to use small boats, including
inflatable Zodiac craft. to
la un ch a new search-and-rescue effort in flcrudcd sections
of the city.
Some Natiopal Guardsmen
and helicopters were uive_rted
. from their search missions
Tuesday !O fight fires, .an
emerging threat in a city that
is ' till at least a Jay and a half
away from re~loring the first
running water since the storm.
A candle was blamed for
startitig one major blaze in the.
lower Garden District a historic neighborhood ofi110stly
woode n homes. The flames
started in an abandoned brick
b1rilding and spread to a
neighboring apartment hhuse.
The blazes burned i'or hours
before Chinook helicopters
with water po uches were
hrought in to fi ght the hld7e.
New
Orleans
Police
Sup~rintendent
Eddie
AP Photo Compass said lawlessness in
Two soldiers stand guard as firefighters battle a house fire in the lower Garden District of New the c ity "has subs ided tremendously." and officers warned
Orleans. Several fires broke out in the downtown &lt;Jrea Tuesday.
that those cm1ght looting in an
area
where tl1e gove rnor has
roo ftnps . 1 staned to see parts per day. But by late Tuesday nHlsq uito spray and other supof rhe huJidinQ.s." be said. afternoon. Corps oflleials .said plies. "This is all I've got. I'm ucclarcd an emerge ncy can
. addinQ . . ''I'm st'artin~ to sec only three of New Orleans' prcuy damn old to stan over." ge t up to 15 years in prison.
rays ,)f lig lu ."
, · 11ormal . contingent or 1'4X
In a plea to holuouts who About 1 2~ ·prisoners filled a
. But he also warned of the drai nage pumps were operat- might be li stening to portable downtown jail set up at the
horrors that wuld be revealed ing.
radios in the powerleS\ ci ty, city's train and bus terminal..
"We continue to get better
whe n the waters recede. "It's
.With the water dropping. N~gin warned that tile fetid
going to he awfu l and it's rnilitary and police 1\Jrned water could c~rry disease and day by day," Compass said.
The 'igns of hope 'came
going to \vak&lt;' the nation up their attention to evac'-!ating that natural gas was leaking
against
increasingly angry
again." said Nagin, who a day the streets of the estimated allover town .
.
,·arlie r upped his estimate of 10,000 people still believed to
"This is not a safe env iron- rhetoric over the' federal
the de•nh to ll in his city to as he in the city. Some ' have ment," Nagin sa id. "I under- response as top little too late.
much"·' I0.000.
been holed up in their homes stand the spirit that's basical- In Washington, congressional
The job got off to a woeful- fur more than a weeR and ly. · 1 don 't !vant to abandon leaders planned hearings into
ly .slow Start.
rel\rsc to leave.
my city.' It\ OK. Leave for a the aften)Hrth of the storm.
·Once all of the city's pump"You've got to protect your l-ittle while. Let liS get you to
"We need to rebuild th e
of 'the American
contidence
ing stations are running, they property. that's the main a better place. Let us clean the
canm,&gt;ve water at a rate of 29 thing," said 69-year-old John ci ty up."
people .. . in our government's
billion gal lons a daY. anu ·Eba nks, wh&lt;l waved off
To that enu, the Pentagon ability to protect them from
lower the water level ;i half- would-be . rescuers from a began se,nding 5,000 para - attack, whether it comes from
inch per hour. or about tl font · porch stocked with food , trooper' fmm the Army's sto- nature or from terrorists ,"_said

Sen. Joseph Lieberman •. DConn . "The eovernment srmply did not 'ac't quickly and
effectivel y enough .". .
Jefferson Parish president .
Aaron Broussard was even
more blunt.
..
"Bureaucracy has murdered
peQple in the grctiter New
Orleans area," he ·saru on
CBS' "Early Sho,w." "Take
whatever idiot they have at
the top of whatever agency
and give me a better idiot.
Give me a caring idiot. Give
me a 'en&gt;i ti ve idiot. Just don't
give me the same id iot." . .
Five of th e I 3 sub-basrns m
New Orkans were still seriously flooded, and barges ttnd
crews were gelling into place
to fix kvcc breaches at two
other .spot.s _ the London
Avenue canal and the
Indu strial canal. The London
Avenue canal is in the northwestern section of the city, the
Indu strial ca nal in the east.
The levees were Ueliberately breached in some spots to
let the water flow back out
into Lake Ponchartrain, where
the wt\ter level had dropped
below that inside the city.
How long it takes to drain
the city could depend on the
condition of the pumps _
especially whether they were
submerged and damaged. the
Corps said. Also. the water is
full of debris, and while there
ar~ screens on the pumps, it
may he necessary to stop and
clean them from time \O time.
"We're working every
avenue to do whateVer we can
to uct thin us bark in order,"
sa1d Walter Baumy, .CDrps
mtm ag~r for the project.
"We're going to accomplish

the mi ssion ·or gelling th€
water out of the city."

Rehnquist's body lies in repose; Bush to speak at conservative chief justice's funeral Wednesday
BY GINA HOLLAND

O'Connor's scat was now
"w ide open. " ·
Fla~s. includ ing the one
WASHINGTO N - Tcarv- above tire court. were at halfeyed Supreme Court justices. staff in honor of Rehnquist, a
a somber President Bu sh and President Nixon appointee
one-time clerk John Roberts who served oh the court for
led a: long line of Americans 33 years and was elevated to
paying thei r last ·respects to chief justice in I \186 by .
William 1-1. Rehnquist. the fresidcm Reagan.
·chief justice whose conserIn an acknowled&lt;&gt;n\ent or
vatism helped drive the high the · period of r~ourning,
court toward the right.
Roberts' confirmation hearWashington protocol under- ings, which had been sched- ·
scored a changing of the uled to begin Tuesday in the
guard Tuesday.· Roberts , the Senate, were delayed until
former
Rehnqui st
clerk next Monday.
named _ to succeed hi s old
Bu sh
and
Senate
bos&gt;, was among the pallbear- Republicans are pushing to
ers carrying the flag-draped confirm Roberts before the
casket up the court's long new -court session that begins
steps and into the Great Hall. Oct. 3. Democrats cautioned
Rehnqui st died Saturday at against ti rush to judgment
80 after battling thyroid can.- now that Roberts is a candidate for chief justice and at
cer.
Bush, hi s head bowed. and irge 50. could shape the court
fir" lady Laura Bush spent for decades.
about a minute standing near
"I would hope all senators.
the casket and a short time Republicans· and Democrats.
. looking at the portra it of wou ld ask ve ry substantive
Rehnquist on a stand nearby. ques_tinns hec~use this is. after
Justice Antonin Scalia escort-. all. a lifetime position.'' said
. ed the couple.
·
Sen. Patrick . Leahy of
On Wednesday, funeral ser- Vermont. the top Denwcrat on
vices will be at 2 p.m. at St. the Judiciary Committee.
Matthew's
Cathedral
in
In a simple morning cereWits hington. open to friends mony. six jus tice ~. along with
and family. Bush and Vice fo rmer clerk s and court staff
President Dick Cheney plan lin"d -th e steps outside the
to attend. and Bush is to court. awaiting the arrival of
speak. alan!! with retirin!! the
heursc
bcari ng
Ju stice Sandnr Day O'Conno~· Rehnquist\ casket. Seven
and Rehnqui st family mem- men and one woman _ mo~t
bers. of them -former Rehnquist
Bush initia ll y nominated clerks _ carried the casket
Roberts. a tederal appellate past the line that included a
judge. to replace aconnor. cryi ng O'Connor.
In
the
Great
Ha ll.
who announced in July that
,&gt; he would step uown . The Rehnquist\ casket was placed
president said Monday that he on the lincoln Catafalq11C. tl1c
would nominate Roherts to he structlJrc 011 which President
the nation's 17th chie(justice Lincoln\ collin re.steu in the
instead and that the -l i't or Rotunda of the Capitol a ·cenpossible · nommces
for tury anu a- half earlier. Two
·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

spray' or flowers and the portrait were on display.
At the cast end of the hall
were the doors leading to the
court chamber, .a reminder of
Rehnquist's years of service.
The Rev. George ·Evans Jr.,
the Rehnquist family pastor at
the Lutheran Church nf the
Redeemer in Virginia, · read
from psalms and led the
Lord's Prayer. There were
audible sobs from the family.
Rehnqui st's
personal
employees were the first 10
make a circle around the coffin. A stream of othe!- court
workers followed. Absent
were Justices A.nthony M.
Kennedy and David Souter.
After the brief ceremony; a
long line of people formed
outside the court and people
began walking inside past the

·

coffin.
House
Minority two extraordinmy intcrven- "_ju st a ve ry simple Lutheran
Leader Nancy Pelosi, D- lion s in the exec utive branch sen·icc" led hy Evans .
Calif., and Rep . James _ the impeachment trial of
St. Mt~tthcw ' s was the si te
Sensenbrenner, R-Wis . ~ were President Clinton and the set- of Pres ident Kennedy'_s funeramong those who paused tlement of the 2000 election al in 1963. The funeral of forbefore the casket.
in Bush's favor. He oversaw a mer Justtcc William Brennan,
Among --the' first was Sarah court tl1111 dealt with the separ a Catholic. also was held
Chu&gt;id, 24, an intern at ration of church and state, the there.
'
Mobilizing · America's Youth. ri en hts of -states, affirmative
B
· 1at Ar1·mgton 1Nahona
· 1
. una
a private ore.anization
that
action,
abortion
and
·
gay
. Cemetery . will be private.
seeks to increase the involve- rights.
Rehnquist served as a soldier
ment of young people across
Rehnqui st was . Lutheran.
the political spectrum.
but his. funeral will be held at in the U.S. Army Atr Corps
Although she considers her- a Roman Catholic church. during World War II.
.
As chief justice. Rehnquist
self a liberal , Chusid said she Susan Gibbs, spokeswoman
respected the influential role for the Catholic Archdiocese is entitled to a state-sponsored
that Rehnquist played on the of
Washington ,
said official funeral , a ceremony
court for more than three Rehnquist's
family
had that inclt1des a 19-gun salute.
decades. "This is a pivotal - re~uested use of the church, four ruffles and llourishes
time in the court's hi story : I j'Jrimarily because of space. from drums and bugles, 'and
had to come down and bear She said church rules allow it the last 32 bars of the John
witness to this event," she to be used for other Christian Philip Sousa march "Stars and
said.
·
services if there is a need.
Stripes Forever" among other
Rehnqui st was involved in
Gibbs said plans called fo r military honors.

Community Calendar

.Tillis first birthday

Public meetings

Friday, Sept. 9
MIDDLEPORT The
Widow' s Fellowship will
VVednesday, Sept. 7
meet
at noon at Bob Evan'
PAGEVILLE Scipio
Restaurant
in Mason, W. Va.
Township Trustees, 6:30
POMEROY - OH-KAN
p.m., Page ville 'town hall .
Coin Club will have an
exhibit at Farmers Bank and
Friday, Sept. 9
POMEROY,
-· Meig s Savings Co .. Pomeroy lobby,
County
Commissioner' The. club will offer_ free
meet at II a.m. Priday at appraisals of coins and curthe office, rather than rency, and di~plays of bank
Thursday~ due to a schedul- memorabilia, including local
Meigs County bank note;
rng conflrct. .
and tokens. Door prizes. of,
uncirculated 1935 and · 1957
$ 1 silver certificates will be
. give n away and free o,,ean
View nickels .
POMEROY -Evange lin&lt;'
'
VVednesday, Sept. 7
Chapter
# 172, Order of
CHESTER
-Chester
Eastern
Star.
is merging with
Garden Club open house,
Harrisonville Chapter #255.
7:30 p.m., Chester United
Methodi st Church. Betty All members ' are urged to
Rimmey, "The Weed Lady," attend a meeting at 7:30 p.m.
' Bring covered dbh for
will be featured stJeaker.
potluck.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Lodge 411 ·
Monday, Sept. 12
past masters meeting, 7
POMEROY - The Meigs
p.m., with entered apprenTobacco
Cou.nty
tice work. Refre shments.
Prevention/Card io vasc uIar
Health Coalition will meet at
Thursday, Sept. 8
· CHESTER .
Shade · II :30 a.m. ar the Pomeroy
River Lodge 453, 7:30 p.(Tl .. Library.
at hall. Refreshments.
RACINE - The Bethanv
Dorcas Sonshine Circle wiil
meet at 7 p.m . at . the
Sunday, Sept. 1l
Bethany Dorcas Church . All
RACINE - The annual
wume.n welcome.
Harvest Festival will be held
TUPPERS PLAINS at the St. John Lutheran
VFW Post 9053 meets at 7 Church, 33441 Pine Grove
p.m. Thursday at the hall. Road, Racine. Worship will
Dinner at 6:30 p.m.
be at I0 a.m. with a special

Clubs and
organizations

· Church ·events

music pre,emmion "' II a.m.
LANGSVILLE Tyler
and a potluck dinner at noon. · Tillis celebrated hi; third
COOLVILLE
birthday on Sept. 5 with a
Evangelist Ken Greene, party given hy hi&gt; dad. Adam
who operates in the gift of Tilli&lt;. si,ter Aleigha Tillis
healing. will be at Faith and Shellic Maurer. Joining
Harvest Church in Coolville in the celebrati on were
at 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. on granuparents. Dian~ and
Sunday and 7 p.m. on Sept. Charlie Landers. grandfat her.
12 and 13. Information is Bud Tillis, Dylan Tillis.
a\·ailabl.e at 667-6973.
Clwck anu Willie Landers,
Tim, Kellie, Bradky and
Zachary Hellon. anu J.R ..
Chasidy, Alyssa anu Kailcy
Lei b.
Saturday, Sept. 10
POMEROY - Samuel
Allen Eblin reunion, 4 p.m ..
Waterworks Park ncar
Minet'vil lc. Bring food,
drin~ s and lt~Wll chair.
POMEROY
- Marine
Corps Pfc. Jason R. Young .
SOil or Barbara A. and James
Sunday, Sept. II
RACINE - Kcrwood-Hill R. Young of · Pomeroy.
Reimion. carry-in dinner, 1- recently comp leled basic
t1:aini ng Jl Marine · Corps
p.m. at Star Mill Park.
Recruit Depot. l';ll'ris Island,
S. C and was meritoriously
pronwtcd to his current rank .
Young successfully comFriday, Sept. 9
pleted 12 weeks of training
MIDDLEPORT - Pari'h designed to ·challenge new
Nurse Lenora Leitl1eil' wi ll Marine recruits hoth physitake blood preS\ures fro m I0 cally t~nd mentally. Young
a.m . to noon at Hometown and fe llow recnrits began
Market.
th eir training at 5 a. in. , ' by
ru_nning three miks and perSaturday, Sept. 10
formin g qli·sthenic s. In
RACIN E - The Racine irdditiun to the physical co n ~
Volunteer Fire Department ditioning pro g~a m . Young
will be tlu sh ing hydrants and spent numerous hours in
conducting !low tests today - classroom ami' field .as~ign­
and Sunduy. Water may be ntellts which included learndi scolored for " short period ing first .1i d, uniform regul~­
of time. Direct question ; to tion~. combat water survivttl.
949-2296 or 949-2920.
marksmanship, hand-to-hand

Reunions

Leib turns one

Tyler Tillis

Co~pletes Marine training

Other events

RUTLAND
K"iln
Shae Leib. tla u~l n er "' I k
and Cha'-lidY L..:il1 . Ill! !h..\.J , ll!L
year old un.Sq't. I -l ire c·elc bration took p l a ~o: e tlll "-- t..'pt .~
at the Lci b ft~.lllil ' I" '"'~ " 111·
a de li l ra~ . ca.k L' ;111 d iL·L·

cnmhat
and . assorted
weapons training. They per. formed close order drill and
operated as a smal l infa1itry
unit dliring field training.
Y.oung and othei- recru its
also rece ived ithtruction on
the Marine S:orps' wre v~l ­
ues: Honor. couraee ~nd
commitment,' and w"ha t th e
words mean in guiding personal and professional &lt;:anduct,
Young and fellow recruits
ended the training phase
with The Crucible. a 54-hour
team effort. problem solvii1g
evolution· which culminated
with an emotional ceremony
in which th e recruits were
preseillcd the Marine Corps
emblem. and ·were addressed
a' "Marines" for the first
time since boot camp began.
Young joined the M~rine
Corps in March.

cream.

Pt~ula W r i~ht. -\ shle ' II 11•'111
Linda
-,_lah tlll. · .l:i JJIC'e
Goodnit e. Be th ll .Jrnll;
Adam and A lei ~ h " Till is
S·hcllie Mau re r :Jnd \ ",ck'
Cox.
Karen 1'vkCrav t~nd fc~ll r i h
anu Jim and Clllini c (! &lt;'Odlll(~·
sent gifts.·

Keepi,ng
Meigs
·informed

Haymans hold reunion .
RACfNE- The 47th annual reunion of the family of the
late George R. and Vira Mae
c;rawford . Hayman was held
recently at Star MiH Park in
Racine.
Dan Hayman offered grace
before dinner.
Attending were Sid and
Citroly Hayman, Corri, Shawn
and Owen Edwards, Debbie.

Daniel , Donna, Bryce, Brian.
Angela. Morgan , Logan,
Grift1n and Dean Sayre, Duris
Rogers, Gladys. Gary and
Loren Richardson, Margaret
Packman, Dave, Don and Jean
Carpenter, Lil Hart. Ginny
and Bill Huffman, lsabd and
Tom Edwards. Virgil and
Delore s Ours, Linda and
Allison Jewell , Phyllis Young,

Jennifer. Curtis. lrby, Nautica.
, Rhonda and Jcrrod Wolfe ,
Lisa. Ormisten ,
Kindra.
Kirst en and Matthew Moore.
Zane Guy, Dan, Faith. Kim
and Josh Ha yma n, Tamara,
EriL· am!.Paytyn Faith Tucker.
Erin and Mallory Roach.
Gerald Crawford .. anu Bill and
Shirley Moore.

,

Altcndin !! the l'L:khr:11 11111
were her ~1-;md !atllcr. R.111eh
GooUnit C.'..
g rand·tllliih~:l

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE:

. Sunda.y 71mes-Selllinel
.

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- .OPINi-QN --·

Wednesday, September 7, 2005

. Someone remind PETA Jesus isn't a pig

Daily Sentinel

PETA issues its own reads of
The People for the Ethical
the Koran. It toys with the
Treatment of Animals needs
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
Book of Mormon. Few
a shot of perspective.
www.mydallysentlnel.com
beliefs
are .spared , PETA's
Straight up. No offense to
offensiveness.
Pamela Anderson, Sharon
Ohio Valley Publishing- Co.
And PETA's influence is
Osbourne, Alec Baldwin,
Kathryn
not confined to obnoxi.ous
John McEnroe and other
Jim Freeland
Lopez
billboards, Web sites and
glitterati who seem de•perPublisher
protests. As · the "Holy
ate to hug PETA.
Cows" notes: ln 2003.
Normally my instinct ·is to
Charlene Hoeflich
PETA's president, Ingrid.
ignore this fauna-rights
General Manager-News Editor
Newkirk, faxed terrorist
organization, dismissing it
Arafat
after
as just silly. After all. this is Holocaust campaign , but Yasser
the group that's sponsoring a really just justified their Palestinian terrorist~ used
explosive-strapped donkeys
"Make-Out Tour." As the nonsense.
The Holocaust analogy in a terrorist attack, asking
Congress shall make no law respecting an
PETA.org Web site explains:
di sgrace is not the group's Arafat to spare the donkeys:
"In a public display of pa~­
ma~lishment of religion, or prohibiting the
sion that's bound to raise a first offensive marketing Not mnoccnt Israeli civilians
free exercise the'reof; or abridging the freedom
ploy. As the Center for being . targets, but the donfew eyebrows and turn lots of
Consumer
Freedom points keys. "Leave the animals out
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
heads, two PETA members
out in. a new study cal led.
- ' a U.S. marine and Iraq . "Holy Cows: How PETA of this confl~ct," she wrote .
. people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
War vet wearing only boxer twists religion to push ani, The Center for Consumer
the Gof!ernrnent for a redress of grievances . .
report
notes:
shorts and a raven-haired mal 'rights,"' PETA'is equal Freedom
beaLity decked out in sexy opportunity, especially when "When The Washington Post
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
lingerie - will passionately i't comes down to preying on inquired why she didn't ask
Arafat to perSLlade his pea~
make out in a bed in order to people who pray.
pie ,to stop blowing up
make the point that vegetariIt's no &lt;H:cident they target
ans are better lovers."·
believers. The "Holy Cows" Israeli citizens as well , she
Definitively
shrug-off· report documents one ani- replied: 'It's not my business
Touay 1s Wednesday. Sept. 7. the 250th day of 2005. There
able.
mal-righ.ts leader noting at a to inject myself into human
are 115 days left in the year.
But
PETA
is
not
run
by
convention for his types: ''If wars."'
Touay\ Highlight in History:
.
I'm betting Newkirk
benign tree- or dolphin-hug- we are not able to bring the
On Sept. 7. 1825, the Marquis de Lafayette, the French hero
gers. During their "Holocaust churches. the . sy nagogues knows whether Hitler. Tojo
of the American Revolution, bade farewell to President John
un Your Plate" campaign, for and the mosques around to or ldi Amin were kind to
Q11incy Adams at the White House.
On this date:
1. example, PETA contended the animal rights view, we . animals, too. As for me, I
that "like the Jews murdered will never make large-scale (Jon 't care. I know what he
In I822, Brazil declared its independence from Portugal.
in concentration camps, ani- progress for animal rights in did to my fellow man.
In 1892 , James J. Corbett knocked out John L Sullivan to
wm the worlu heavyweight crown in' New Orleans in the first
More recently. as part of
mals are terrorized when they the United States."
major prize light conducted under the Marquis of Queensberry
are' housed in huge filthy
And how does one do their "Animal Liberation
rule, .
project," PETA aga in insists
warehouses and rouT)ded up that? Why, offend them all.
In 190 I, the Peace of Beijing ended the Boxer Rebellion in
for shipment to slaughter.
.Jesus was a vegetarian, that animals are people, too.
China.
The leather sofa and handbag they insist {it's OK if you Wesley Smith, author of
In 1936. rock legend Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin
are the moral equivalent ot want to roll your eyes at that "Consumer's Gu1dc to a
Holley in Lubbock, Texas.
World"
New
the Jam pshades made from claim and move on). But Brave
In I\140. Nazi Germany began its initial blitz on London
the skins of people killed in what about when PETA (Encounter Books, 2004 ),
dunn~ World War II.
the death camps."
issues a Last Supper parody among other books, makes
In T\!63. the National Professional Football Hall of Fame
T~ank you , PETA, for
the point: "When ALP
card
for
Easter
was ded1cateu in Canton, Ohio.
places
a photograph of
detestably
belittling
one.
of
Christian ity's greatest holy
In I%9. Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen died
most
horrific
human day - declaring "Jesus was hanged blacks with that of a
in Washington D:C.
··
.
tragedtes
in
modern
history.
the Prince of Peace, not a dead cow being hoisted by a
lo 1977 , the Panama Canal treaties, calli~g for the U.S. to
rm not going to deny that a · bloodv butcher." written in rope for butchering, it is
eventually turn over control of the waterway to Panama, were
cattle
slaughterhouse isn't blood: depicting a figure so because animal liberationists
signed in Washington.
disgusting. But· any reason- many believe to be divlne actually believe that the
In 1979, the En tertainment and Sports Programming
of
Africanlynching
able person knows 'that beheading a Jamb .
Network (ESPN) made its cable TV debut.
In 1990. Kimberly Bergalis of Fort Pierce, Fla., came forAmericans
equating the plight of a cow
in
the
Jim
Crow
You don't have to . be
ward to Identify herself as the young woman who had been
with the coordinated extemli- Christian to be offended by south and slaughtering cattle
i11fected with AIDS, apparently by her late dentist. (Bergali s
nation of millions of human, this, but consider this are equivalent ev ils.''
dieu the following year.)
,
Christian-raised columntst · I'm not bnnging this to
beings is reprehensible.
Ten years ago: After 27 years in the Senate, Bob Packwood,
PETA claimed to apolo- ti'cked otf. .
you just to rev up your
R-Ore., announced he would resign, heading off a vote by colAnd the list g'oes on. anger-meters, or wading into
gize earlier this year for its
leagues to expel him for allegations of sexual and official misconduct. The space shuttle Endeavour thundered into orbit 1.
e-,-"'\~@1.-0e&gt;:s"" ~ ...... ~~·fl'~'"""'A,·"~~­
wtth live astronauts on a mission to release and recapture a
t\ULN\1;;.
pair of science satellites.
,
Five years ago: A jury in Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, awarded
$6.3 million to a woman and her son who had been attacked
by Aryan Nations guards outside the white supremacist
group's· north Idaho headquarters.
Today's Birthdays: Heart surgeon Dr. Michael DeBakey is
97 Pianist Arthur Ferrante is 84. Senator Daniel Inouye, DHawati , IS 81. Jazz musician Sonny Rollins is' 75. Actor John
Phillip Law ts 68. Singer Alfa Anderson (Chic) is 59. Singer
Glona Gaynor is 56. Rock singer Chrisste Hynde (The
Pretenders) is 54. Actress Julie Kavner is 54. Actor Corbin
Bernsen is 5 I. Rock. musician Benmont Tench (Tom Petty &amp;
the Heartbreakers) is 5 I. Pianist Michael Feinstein is 49.
Singer Margot Chapman is 48. Rock musician Leroi Moore
(The Dave Matthews Band) is 44. Model-actress Anjlie
Everhart is 36. Actor Tom Everett Scott is 35. Rock musician
Chad Sexton (3 I I) is 35. Actress Diane Farr is 34. Actress
Shannon Elizabeth is 32. Actor Oliver Hudson is 29. Actor
Devon Sawa is 27. Actress Evan Rachel Wood is 18.
Thought for Today: "People do not live in the present
always. at one with it. They live at all kinds of and manners of
distance from it. as difficult to measure as the course of planets. Fears and traumas make their journeys slanted, peripheral,
uneven. evasive." - Anais Nin, American writer(! 903- I977).
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

TODAY IN HISTORY.

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some exercise in text-based
voyeurism.
The London Zoo recently
held an exhibit where men
and women were on display.
Eating, playing, copulating
as any zoo animals ·might.
It 's a weird, disturbing,
PETA-Iike statement to
make : That man isn' t any
different from d zoo animaL
It's a statement, that, when
mixed with PETA's tendency
to compare some of the most
appalling human tragedies in
recent times to the front'end
- of a burger assembly line, is
one we've got to watch.
It's a worldview that,
when fully considered, .holds
devastating
possibilities,
excusing human depravities, ..
relieving men (and women)
of their moral culpability.
It's not a place we wan,t to
be. ,
So I'm resigned to do
more than roll my eyes when
I next see PETA ' crucify a
Jesus figure with a pig's
head- or whatever the next
awful campaign they want to
pull is.
During the Hurricane
Katrina devastation down in
New Orleans, Ron Magill of
the Miami Metro Zoo was ·
on
Tucker
Carlson's
MSNiK show talking about
the plight of animals in such
chaos. He said, "I said this
after the hurricane at the
zoo. I said, folks, you have
to keep something in mind.
There is no single animal
life that's more important
than a human life."
That's what you call ,perspective. Someone get
PETA's head out of a donkey
and remind them of that.
( Kathrwr Lopez is rite edi·
tor of National Rev1ew
Online
(www.nationalreview.com). She can be contacted at klopez@nationalreview. com.)
·

was struck from behind by
Christopher C. Amhony,
Dexter. Damage to both vehicles was-minor. Anthonv was
cited for assured dear distance.
S.
Bu,h.
Zachary
Langsville. wa' backmg from
a parking space in the
employee parking lot at
Craw's KFC on West Main
Street when he. backed Into"a
parked vehicle 'belonging to
Deanna Hme s, Pomeroy. No
citation was listed on the
report .
- Amber N. Will. Pomeroy.
was driving on West Main
Street near the Wildh lme
Cafe when an unidentified
vehicle went left of center
and struck her vehicle. The
unidentified vehicle wa s
des cribed .as a midsize
maroon car driven by a male
wnh short hair
Ramona K. Co.mpton.
Pomeroy. struck the bumper
of a parked vehicle owned by
Danny T. Salyers. Pnme~uy.

,.

on Lincoln HilL No citation
was listed on the report.
· Judy K. Welker, Rutland,
backed into a vehicle driven
by Eunice L Jones, Pomeroy,
Ill the Dollar General Parking
Lot. Welker was cited for
Improper backing.
Carrie F. Borton. Pomeroy.
backed into a parked vehicle
owned by Herman A.
Roberts .
Pomeroy
on
Mulberry &lt;\venue. Borton
. was cued for improper backmg .

Earl K Thoma. Pomeroy,
W&lt;I' trawling up Lincoln Hill
and drove around a truck in
the roadway and struck
J uanit ~1 Bryam. Pom~roy.
who was driving down
Lincoln HilL Thoma was
cited for left of cemer
Tracy L. Wood. New
Haven. W.Va .. struck a vehicle . dnvcn by Bonnie Lou
Johnson. New Haven. W. Va.
in · the rear on West Mam
Street. Wood wa; &lt;'ited for
assured clear uistan,:e.

Trial set for one of two murder suspects

Community college leader
:hopes to teach Leno a.lesson

Plant

Concert in
the park

easy-to-store Spam, Alex," change your tar paper, how to
for which you would win put a car up on blocks on
yourself a case of it. As well your front lawn . and how to
as the home version of place swing sets and mini
"Name That Product'"
- "CSI: Key West." The trampolines and other teys
latest edition of the CSI fran- around your house so it looks
chise has "Will and Grace" like you have 14 kids instead
joi nmg the boys from "Queer of seven.
Eye for the Straight Guy" to
- 'The Altos." It's a
solve crimes in AmeriCa's . touching series about an
most wide-open city. ·In the Italian-American family that
first episode, Will and Carson isn't in the mob, doesn't kill
fight over who· gets to collect anyon~. doesn't swear and
hair and fingemai,l samples.
- "Survivor: Teenager." gets_ ahead by working hard
' Twemy teenagers are placed and being decent. Their kids "
into a beautiful suburban grow up to be doctors ·and
· home from which they can l~wyers and contribute to
see a giant mall within easy society.
walking distan'ce, There's
- "Lost and Found." It
plenty . of food . plenty of, takes place in the luggagewater. They must live with- claim area of a large airport. '
out cell phones. credit cards,
gum. a comb or a hairbrush It'd be the story of the same
for 24 hour,. Visiting the 200 people, week after week
mall automatically disquali- trying to reclaim thei~ missfies a contestant. The last one ing luggage. You'd learn
to scream'. "! can't live like about the characters and their
thi s anymore' I am not an fan)ilies as they explain for
animal '" wins a week in a spa the umpteenth time why they
and free psychiatric care for a really need their suitcases.
year.
(Jim Mullen is the author of
- "This Old Shack." ~ ,
new home-design show for "It Takes a Village Idiot:
people who can't afford basic Cvnrplicatiug. the Simple
cable . it'~ on broadcast tele- Life :· and "Baby's First
vision only. It offers tips on Tattoo. " You cmi reach him at
when the best time is to jim_mu/len@ myway.com)

•

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Police Department
recently tiled repons in the
following traffic accidents:
'
.
A car parked on Butternut
DEAR ABBY: My husof my business because I am Avenue and owned by Jerod
band, "Justin," and I have
only 1'3, but my brother and l Gilmore of Pomeroy was
bee.n together 12 years, marwant her to get out. We don't struck by an unidentified
ried for five·. We get along
like this guy and don't want to vehicle. Gilmore's vehicle
well ,''except for one thing, hi s
see him anymore . I have told sustained damage to the left
so-called "jokes."
my mother this. She says rear and gas tank. Found near
Dear
Rather than coming out and
she ' ll leave, but she never the scene was broken glass
Abby
saying I' ve done something
with
does' What st10uld I do? I impr-inted .
that bothers him, Justin will
:'GM
I
65
I
0950CR2"
and
need help to get her to leave
make a sarcastic comment.
this guy because mental abuse ''M&lt;~de In Canad~" which
then insist he's "just kidding."
leaves a scar on your life that police believe came from the
If I forget to turn off a light,
vehicle that struck Gtlmore's
he'll say something like. "So, for what he's doing is "pas- causes you to hate and fear vehicle .
MICHAEL IN '
you:re trying to make sure the sive aggression.'' People who others . At the Colonial Park
electric company doesn ' t go use it aren ' t secure enough to NASHVILLE, TENN.
Apartments,
Pomeroy, David
DEAR MICHAEL: For
om of business - ri2ht''" If I be directly .confrontational. so
L
Nance,
Racine,
was backsomeone I 3, you are very
tell him, his unsl1&lt;1~en face they beat around the bush ing from a parking space and
huns when he kissc ~ me._he ' ll taking little jabs here and world-wise. I respect that you struck a parked car belonging
say, "Most women would there, not eno'ugh to do seri- want to help your mother get · to Mark Dailey, Pomeroy. No
love it if their husbands eave ous damage. The measured away. However, that will take citation was listed on the
them kisses all the time ... doses of venom keep their not only careful .planning, but report.
maybe I shou ld have married viellm oil balance and in a a strong .desire on her part Lynn M. Smith, Miami .
one of . the 'm.': No single constant state of irritation. (If and J' m not sure your mother Fla. was stopped at the traffic
remark sounds that terrible, the targets react. it becomes really wants to go.'
light ar East Main and
but it's been going on for 12 "their" fault.)
Are her parents still living' Sycamore Streets when she
You must be a very strong If they are. tell them what you
years and I've had enough .
person
to have tolerated this
No matter what he says , as
have told me. Does she have
long as Justin claims to be for so long. I'm sad to say. sisters and brothers? Tell
"kidding." he doesn't think I your husband may be inca - fhem , too. lf she has no one,
have a reason to get angry. pable of chan~ing . However, give her the number of the
He' If say I don' t have a sense a way to get h1m to recognize National Domestic Violence
BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
of humor. or that I'm "thin- what he' s doing. :ind how Hotline: (800) 799-SAFE
skinned." I tdl him frequently damaging it is, would he (www.ndyh.org). When she's
that it bothers me. I have through marriage counseling. ready. they can help her make
McARTHUR - Trial has
asked repeatedly that he just If he won ' t go. go 1~ithout a plan for leaving. But no one been set for · one of the sus'
say what\ on his mind, but he him. It will giv~ you insight
can do thi s for her. Ultimately. pects in the slaying ·of a
doesn't. How can I get and perspe&lt;·tive.
ABBY: My mother this is something your mother Vinton-area man· earlier this
through to him that what he 's hasDEAR
year. While another suspect 's
been living with this guy must do for herself.
doing isn't "joking"; it's
trial has been delayed.
seven years. We don't live
Dear Abby is writtm by
avoiding accountability for for
Ruth Ann Wood,' 38.
his comments? NOT with her, but when we visit. Abigail Van Buren, also ' Dexter. will go on trial Sept.
he mentally and emotionally known as Jeanne Phillips,
AMUSED IN VERMONT
abases her. Yesterday he and was founded by her 2 I in Vinton County Common
DEAR NOT AMUSED: It cussed me and my brother
Pleas Court, Prosecuting
would be mteresting to know out. and threatened to beat us moth{lr, Pauline Phillips. Attorney Tim Gleeson said.
Write
Dear Abby
at
~omething about the atmosGleeson said Wood's attarup.
www.DearAbby.com or P.O. ney, John K. Clark Jr. of
phere in which your husband
Mv mother wants to leave
was raised, because emotion- but she can't. I know it's none Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA Wellston, is expected to file a
ally, he's ,a coward. The term
90069.
motion to suppress ·a piece of
evidence in the case this
week.
The evidence, Gleeson said,
was a firearm reportedly
found in Wood's home whose
bullets matched those found
in Marvin Hunt; 53, Vinton,
whom Wood and Donovan
ARCHBOLD (AP) -The pens. that 's great." Young Harley-Davidwn motorcypresident of Northwest State said. "The goal is to raise cle on pan of the trip and
Community College is tak- the profile oLwhat we uo in will put . it in a trailer at
ing
her
Harley
to community colleges by other times.
The American Association
Hollywood, hoping to teach transforming peoples' Jives."
from Page AS
of
Community Col'leges is
Young
sent
a
letter
to
Jay Leno a lesson about
Leno in May, challenging helping to. organize the tour. funding Racine has received
education.
"The motorcycle is simply but Scott, Dave and members
President Betty Young him to a motorcycle ride
will set out on a· cross-coun- with hopes of putting a stop a tool to get people think- · of council have persistently
try motorcycle trip on Sept. to his jokes. Now she 's ing," she said. "This is real- worked at pursuing grants,"
to
ride
19, and her goal is to pro- decided
to ly an opportunity for us to Allen said.
have a grass-roots, national
mote two-year schools and California .
The submitted bids for
Her ride, · which will campaign with a fairly low each division were as follows :
maybe even meet with the
"The Tonight Show" host include at least five stops at budget."
Division A (water transNorthwest
State mission I distribution).
who has made community other community colleges,
college studenls a target of will end Sept. 27 ar Lena's Commun ity College is Roses' Excavating, Racine,
about 50 miles · west of $206 ,7 35;
offices.
jokes.
Diversified
Young will ride her own Toledo.
"If we do and that hapEnterprise. Inc ., St. Albans ,
W.Va., $3 !9 ,300; J.B.
the premises and was not sexual harassment by their Hayes Excavating and
allowed back on the staff members.
Pipeline, Inc.. Athens,
Now, school staff mem- $261 .588.75;
grounds." Parsons said.
Distel
bers,
receive
educatton
about
Members
of
the
school
Construction,
Inc ..
from Page A1
board also were informed of sexual harassment, he said.
the 'investigation and what The state police talks with
the staff nbout the responsiworked with him are retired action had been taken.
Parsons also said that bilities of reporting these
and gone from the area."
Spencer was the Wahama Mason County Schools offi- types of crimes.
"Linda Rollins, who hanHigh School baseball coach cials were closely involved
ules the sexual harassment
from I 975 -2004 ·with a with the investiga'tion.
Legal council advised the complaints, has done a very
record of 446-290-1.
The White Falcons base- school board not to get nice job with training that is
annually,"
ball team won two West involved with any investiga- conducted
MASON. W.Va. -There
Virginia state baseball cham- tion, while the state police ... Parsons said about the class- will be live bluegrass and
pionships in i-996 and 199R, wa s conducting theirs. es.
gospel music in the Mason
Mason County is not the Park at 6:30 p.m. Thursday,
was a state runner-up in 1978 Parsons said.
"We honored the legal only school system who has Sept. 8.
and I988, won I 8 sectional
titles and four regional titles direction ," he said. "Our this kind of trouble.
Jammin on the Break will
"Thi ' has happened in the be performing. Other musiduring Spencer's 29 years as administration workeu close
coach.
with legal council (the past in another county.'' he cians and groups are also
· He ulso was voted into the school ,board '; attorney) said .
invited to perform.
P:trson said he is on the
Hall of Fame at Richwood through the process and the
The public is invited .
professional practice panel
High SchooL his alma mater, employee was dealt with."
Back wlien the incidents that looks into the ethical
and played football at
Glenville State College occurred, the school system practices of school staff.
before he began his teaching did not have full responsibil- When charges such of alle.' ity of reporting such inci- gations like this · occur and
career at Wahama.
When the state police dents. That did nut occur are proven, the teacher loses
informed Parsons of the until 1994. when the · U.S. his Jiceihe. he said .
"The state police did a
investigation. Parsons said Office· of Civil Rights recogSubscribe today • 992-2155
Spencer was suspended from nized sexual, racial and e~h ­ nice, thorough job."' Parsons
teaching that very day.
nic harassment , · Parson&gt;. said of the investi 'at1on.
"He was met by a represen- . said. In I992. the Supreme
·tative of the school system Court case of Franklin vs.
and was told to clear out his Gwinett Couiny held school
personal items from his districts le_gall'y responsible
oflice at the school, to leave lor protecting students !rom

Cremeens. 18, Vinton. are
accused of slaying at a cemetery near Wilkesville earlier
this year.
. Testing by the state Bureau
of Criminal Investigation and
Identification matched the
firearm wnh the bullets fired
into Hunt , Gleeson said.
In recent months, the court
has ruled to allow an aud iotape confession made by
Woods entered as part of the
prosecution's case, Gleeson
said. A statement made by
Cremeens that Gleeson smd
has been· "characterized as a
·confe ssion'' has been also
bi:en allowed tu· be admitted.
Wood is alleged to have
shot Hunt at the cemetery.
while Cremeens is alleged to
have run over Hunt with
Wood's car fol lowing the
shooting. Hunt was later
located by a Vinton County

Drive
from PageA1
gled financially this yeat.
despite a yeru· of strong attendance and increased acti,·ities
there.
"We're supporting the pool
tinancially because we fed
II'S a wonhwhile cause and
we ,w.ant it to reopen ne:it year
to serve the people of

thing ...

Middleport ·and the surrounding communiJies." Vaugan
said.
Middlepon downtown merchants will again sponsor a
Moonlight Madness shopping
promotion on Oct. J I. with
extended shopping hours and
other events planned. The promotion will be finalized at the
assoctation 's Oct. 4 meenng.
Plans are al so underwav for
Christmas_
promotions.
Vaughan said.

Email engagement wedding or anniversary
announcements and photos
to netNS@mydailysen~nelcom!

Proud to be apart of
your life. .

NEW EARMOLDS AVAILABLE

,heriffs deputy while on rou tine patrol.
Wood and Cremeens are
charged with first-degree
murder. Gleeson said.
Cremeens was scheduled to
face trial on Sept. I 4. but the
court . granted a continuance
request t1Jed by his attorney.
William Henderson of Logan.
Wood has also undergone
psychological testing to deterrome 1f she is competent to
stand trial. In an interview in
May. Gleeson said that
despite delays. the cases were
proceeding as they should . "
"If the defense attorneys
weren't doing what they were ·
doing, I would face ' the
prospect of a conviction
thrown out because they did
not receive a proper defense,''
he said "They are being thorough . and that's . a good

Portsmouth, $26 1,704.04.
DivJSion C alternates
Division B (water storage two. Doll Layman. Ltd ..
facilities). Mid Atlantic 55.000:
Downing
Company.
Storage Systems. Inc .. Construction
Washington Cou rt House, $I I .000: Ameritcon, Inc ..
$502.870.
$5.000 :
The
Righter
·Company.
lne
..
$9.630.
Division C (water
treat,
DIVISion D (well field
ment plant), Doll Layman.
Ltd .. T1pp City,$ 1.171.000; improvements I electrical').
Downing Con .-truction Co .. KAL Electric. Inc .. Athens.
Baltimore.
$I .086.000; $1 18.1~7.
Division E (telemetry).
Ameritcon. Inc .. Dayton.
$1.184,000; The Righter MicroComm. Inc .. Olathe ,
Company, Inc .. Columbus, K.S . $63,450 .
The engineer estimates
$ I ,302,960.
Division C alternates for each division were as
Division
A.
one. Doll Layman. Ltd .. follows:
5280,900;
Division
B.
$32.000:
Downing
Construction
Company, 5523.700; Division C.
$33.300; Ameritcon. Inc .. $995.700; Division D.
$43,000; , The
Righter $60.000;
Division · E.
$58,300.
Company, Inc .. SJ6.960 .

Local Briefs.

'

The long hot summer is
almost over, the kids are back
in school, and we all know
what that means - it's time
for the new te Jevision season.
The networks will introduce
Jim
new shows that are even
Mullen
worse than the ones they
i ntrOd[\ced last year, shows
that will be cancelled within
weeks even though they have
been promoted endlessly dur- for live-gallon jerry cans of
ing pre-season football low test regular. Losers will
games and the World Series. get a free SUV as a gag gift,
The good news is that the but winners could win as
.shows they premiere this fall much as a tanker truck of regcould be much worse, ular unleaded. The bad news?
because. believe it or not. low You have,to·pay fur the gas to
as they may be, even televi- haul your winmilgs away.
sion h4s &gt;landards. I know The further away you live,
becau'e here are some pro- the more it would cost you 1
- " Name That Product!"
gram ideas that I submitted to
the networks. For some' rea- With more and more televi viewers
TiVo-ing '
son , I've never heard b;ick sion
through boring and oftfrom them.
- " American Idle .. lt\ a repeated commercials, adverrip-off of "American Idol" in tisers have to come up with
which contestants would vic new and better ways to get
for the crown of "The Laziest their products mentioned on
Person in America." In the TV On this show. which is
tirst episode, overWeight men based on "Jeopardy." lhe tirst
woulu try to talk audien,ce contestant that can name and
members into gettmg them a say something nice about a
beer from a tridge while they .pictured ·produ ct would win·
sit on a sofa and watch a foot - it.
If we showeu a picture of a
ball game.
can
of Spam. the correct
- "Win Some Gas'" A
brand new game show where answer would be something
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·PageA6

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Wednesday,

TALABANI SAYS SADDAM.HAS CONFESSED Saudi forces overrun
TO CRIMES COMMfi'IED BY HIS .REGIME villa where Islamic
Bv OMAR SINAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD. Iraq ~ Iraq's
president sa~d Tuesd,ty that
Saddam Hussein had confessed to killings ,md other
"crimes" committed during
hi s regime, including the
mas sacre or thousands of
Kurds m the late 1980s.
President Jalal Tal.tbant
told lra4i televi sion that h~
had been . informed by an
investtgatmg judge that "he
was able to extract wnfes·
sions from Saddam's mouth "
about crimes "such as .execu·
I tons" v.htch the ousted lcaLkr
had personally ordered.
Asked about spectftc exam·
pic&gt;. Talaban1 , a Kurd. replied
"Antal." the codename for the .
19X7· XX camp:ugn which hts
Patriuuc Un1on ol Kurd~Stan
mamtau1s kclto the deaths of
about I ~2.000 Kurds and the
destruclion ot "do/ens ot
Kunllsh vtll,tges."
Those vtll ages 11tcluded
Halabp. where thousands of
Kurd1sh vil ldgers were g~.ts ~ed
in 1988
Howcvet, Abdel H.tq Al,tnt .
a legal cotNtltant to S.tddam's
family sa1d S,tddam did not

"Is thts the labricattort of
Talabani or what? Let's not
have a tnal on TV. Let the
court of law, no1 the medta.
make tts ruling on this, " Alani
satd
Saddam faces hts first trial
Oct 19 for his alleged role m
another atrocity _ the 1982
mass&lt;~cre of Sh11tes 111 Dujail.
a town north a t Baghdad, following an assassination
attempt there against him
The l r&lt;~qi Special Tnbunal
has &lt;lectded to conduct trials
on separate alleged ol1enses
r,tther than lump them all
together 111 a single proceedIng

,

.

S,tdd.tm wuld face the
de,tth penalty if convicted m
th~ Duptl case, the only one
rei erred to trial so far.
lraqt television aired the
In terview so late that it was
11nposstble to reach Saddam's
lawyer, Khalil al-Dulaimt, or
c&gt;fficials of the .special tn bunal.
Alani. ho"e'er. condemned
T,tlabam\ remarks and said
the
alleged
confession
"comes to me as a surpnse, a
btg surprise."
"I have heatd nothmg whatsoever about this alleged
mention anv confession when media speculatton," Alani
he met Mo;1day with hi s Iraqi told The Associated Press in
Amman. Jordan . "This IS a
Ia" yer.

.

malter for the judtciary to
decide on, not for pohticmns
and Jalal should know better
than that. Why should he
make a statement on the
accused to the public? The
court, the judge need to
dectde on thts ."
Saddam's former chief
lawyer, Ztad Khasawneh of
Jordan , satd the lraq1 presi,·
dent could st tll face the dedth
penalty if he confessed, but a
full trial would not be necessary if he admitted to the
charge.
However, details of the purported . confessions were
unclear. It was uncertam. lor
example, whether Saddam
believed he was admittmg to
a crime or Simply. acknowledging having issued orders
whtch he believed were legal
_ something only a trial could
de term me.
Operation Anfal took place
during Iraq's war with Iran ,
whtch the lraqt government
beheved mamtamed ttes to
the Iraqi Kurds
The 1991 suppression of.
Iraqt Shiites. another atroctty
for which Saddam may face
charges. occurred after the
maJority rose up after U S. ·
led forces drove the Iraqi
army from Kuv.ait Shitte
leaders had hoped _ wrongly

·MIDDLEPORT ~ Altsha
Lynn Cremeans ot Pomeroy
has joined Kay's Beauty
Salon in Middleport, offenng
a full range of services
including cuts. color, permahents and styling.
_
· She ts the daughter of
Wtlliam
and .
Teresa
Cremeans. She graduated
May 27 and JUSt received her
state license.
Walk-ins are welcome at
the shop, located at 169
North
Second
Ave,
Middleport. The phone number ts 992-2725

five suspected militants were
kil led since the ltghttng .
began Sund,ty. of !lewis ~aid.
DAMMAM, Saudi Arabia
One "a' tdenttfted as the
- In a batTage of gttnltre and No. J Dn the ~ ountry ' s mostexplosions , Saudi spectal wa11t~d list . 7 atd Saad Za1d
forces overran ,, seaside vtfl.1 ,ti-Snm,Jn. 31. " Saudi sought
Tuesday where lslamtc mi lt· 111 ,· t~nn c·c·t ll ll t v.it\1 numerous
rants had been holed up. ,•nd IL'IItlr .ilta(~s launched in the
mg three days uf heavy figh t· ~ IIJ~dt&gt;l ll """e May 2003.
mg that killed at lc~1~ t lltllL'
l:hl' t 1 ~ l11ing began whe!l
people.
Jhtltcc' , , ;&lt;l.:d a milit,mt bide~cL·urity forces thdt swept ou1 cl"" ll' te in D,unmam on
111to the buildtng in the east· Sllnti,ll' ' ~ wup of heavily
etn ctty of Dllmmam found anneci' 111\,,t',mts lled to the
'~veta! charrc~ bodies. &lt;~ppar- vii i&lt;~ in th e Mubarakiyah dtscutly those of mtlitants ktllccl 11 i~t and barncaded themtil cxplostons _ sugge st11tg the selves inside
The battles prompted the
death toll trom the fighting
would ri se.
U.S. Emha"y to close the
It was the fi ercest clash in A met ica n const1late
tn
months in the kingdom 's two- Dhahtan. 13 mil{s sollthwest
ye,11 c1·" ~down on al-Qatd,t· of Dammam. on Monday
lutkcd militants
Secunty commandets had
Otfi c i&lt;~ l s 111 the conserva- warneu tha t th e militants
ll\'C. oil -nch tMlJOn _ a key were
heavily armed and
U.S . .tHy _ say they buve been appeared ready to Ytght to the
winutng that ltj:hl
In death .
October, Saudi forces clauned
Tuesday's assau lt lasted for
to have ktlled the leader of al · hours. with the frequent thud
()aid" m the kmgdom in o of RPG exp losions Black
series ol raids 1n the cdpit,tl smoke billowed from th e
and tltc holy ctty of Mecca.
100 L At .tb tclevtsion at one
Kmg Abdullah. "ho took point showed vid eo of a
ovet the thnme last month bcard~d man . .tppatently one
&lt;~ttet the death of IllS h,df. of the mtlttants. clambering
btotlter. F&lt;1hd, h&lt;1s vowed to over the vtlla's rnof cattying
push ahead with the crack· what appeared to be an explodo-..n. and some have sug- st'e hell
gestcd he may tntenst ly tt
Three militants and two ·
l-or two nt ghts . spec t,tl poltce otlt cers "ere klil~d
League to allay fears of Iraq's forces pOUt)ded the villa with e&lt;~rl y T11 esday. a ~CC llrt ty olltrocket-propelled grenades cwl said in Riyadh He spoke
Arab neighbors.
,md
gunfire hefnre launchmg on coudition of &lt;~nonymtty
The language at issue
,,
majot
&lt;1ssault Tuesday
bec:&lt;~use he was not authodescnbes Iraq as un Islamic
Soun after· dawn. a heli · 111ed tv talk to the media.
country, a concesston to the
copter
swooped in and
After noon. the fightin g fell
non-Arab Kurds who form
about 15 percent of the Iraqi dropped special !\trees near stlcnt. and ftre trucks an_d
the vtlla. buses arrtvcd wllh ambulances armed. A sccurtpopu lauon.
On Monday. President Jalal remtorccments, and hours of ' ty otTtctdl conltrmcd the bat·
Talabani said he and the othe r gunti.re erwpted. At one pomr. tie had ended. Later. spectal
top Kurdi sh leader, Maosood an cxploston hlasted debns forces buses lett the area, and
Barzani. had agreed to aduing ,md whne smoke out of a by evening. police reopened
streets around tlte diStrict that
references to the At ab netohborino building.
"
"
. days.
Four pohceme'n and at least . had been cot done', tor
League.

Bv ADNAN MALIK

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI TER

ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD. Iraq ~ U.S.
M,u inc Jets Tuesd,ty attacked
two bridge' .tcross the
Eupht ates Rtver ncm the
Synan horcler to prevent
insurgents lrom moving fur ..
e1gn f1ghter~ and munitions
tov.ard Baghdad and other
cttles. the U.S ~ommand sat d.
A Manne statement also
satd U.S . and _Iraqi forces
Jestroyed a · foret gn lighter
;;_ale house." ktllcd two foret2ners and arrested three other~ dunng a Tuesday ratd tn
the same area as the bndgc
attack .
Elsewhere. lraqt CJ\'tltans
satu they could see smoke nsmg Tuesday from the northern
cuy ol Tal Afar. where lighting has been ragm g for days
between lJ S -lraqt forces and
msurgents satu to mclude foreign lighters
The U.S command said
two Amencan soldier\ were
ktlleJ hy separate , bombs
Mond,ty .tnd two were killed
and two others wounded
Tuesday by a roadside bomb.
At least 1 .~9 3 members of the
U.S milital) have died since
the '"'" began in March ~003.
accordmg ' to an A'~oc tated
Press cuunt.

Witne~ses ~aw ambulance~­

evacu.ttmg at least 10 mjuted
civ tlian s from the city
Tuesday.
The tightmg occurred after
U.N. chief Koti Annan &gt;atd
lra4 had become an even
greater tcrrortst center than
Atghantsran
under
the
Taliban Attacks annbuted It&gt;
al-Qatda's wmg 111 Iraq haw
stepped up m the Baghdad
area and western Iraq
A Marine statement said
F/ A-18 Jets dropped bombs
shortly after midnight on two
light bndges near Karabtlah.
about 185 miles west of
'Baghdad '
.
"The purpose of the stnke
was to·· pre\ Cill al-Qaida 111
Iraq terron!'!b from usmg the
structures for \'ehicular traffic
w ct&gt;nduct attacks." the U.S
~ tatement sa1d "The munt·
ttons used in the strike were
dcstgncd to crater the bridge,.
rendcnng them mopcrable but
not dcstroytng them."
The clash at the safe hou se
occurred when U S and Iraqi
troops .:arne under lire "by

when ,, Multmational Force
sol dt er was wounded ," the
statement satd without citing
the soldier's nationality.
Troops cal led in aircraft to
destroy the building, "which
was bemg used as an operational headquarters," the statement added
Karabtlah is one of a cluster
of towns near the Syrian bOrder, a major tnfiltration route
for foreign fighters heading
for Baghdad and other major
cities. Iraqi ofticials say alQaida m Iraq. led by Abu
MusaD al-Zarqawi. has taken
over parts of the area after
ll ed
fighting
residents
between tribes supportmg and
opposmg the insurgents.
Annan told the British
Broadqsting
Corp
on
Monday .that many young
Muslims are angry. and the
situation has been exacerbated
hy what is happening in Iraq.
·"They feel vtcttmized in
th~lf own society; they feel
victimtzed in the West. And
the) feel there's profiling
against them." he said. "And
the Iraqi situation has not
helped matters. "
Annan added: "One used to
be womed about Afghanistan
bemg the center of terrorist
aLiivittes. My sense is that
Iraq . has become a major
problem and in fact ts worse
than Afghamstan."
In ' tatements posted on
IslamiC Web sttcs. al-Qaida 111
lraLt claimed responsibility for
two auacks Mund&lt;ty _a roadstde bombmg that ktlled two
Bnttsh soldiers west of Basra
and a daring dayhg ht a~sault
agamst the Interior · Mintstry
111 Baghdad m whtch two
policemen died.
U.S. Marines said ,al-Qaida
m Iraq launched multiple
attacks Sunday again'! U.S.
and Iraqi targets in Hit, 85
miles west of Baghdad.
Twelve people dted m the Hit
attacks
Iraqi offictals sauj al-Qaidalinked torctgn lighters had
taken control of large areas of
a ' trategic Ctly on the Synan
border after weeks of fightmg
between an Iraqi tnbe that
supports the insurgents and
one that (lpposcs them.
The ·offictals. spcakmg on
condttton of anonymity for
fear of repnsal. said much of

Qaim, 200 miles west of
Baghdad , had been abandoned.
U.S.
Marines
operate
around Qaim but have complained priv'ately that they do
not have enough American or
Iraqi. forces to secure· the area
properly.
· The attacks in the Hit ,trea
began Sunday when two suictde car bombs exploded at
security barricades on the
northwest side of town, a
Marine statement said.
A car bomb also exploded
on the Hit bridge across the
Euphrates River. rettdenng 11
impassable. the Marines said.
The Marine statement said
three msurgents and one Iraqi
soldter died in the attacks.
The government in Baghdad
said eight civilians also dted .
In Doha. Qatar, the U.S.
Central Command said U.S.
jets
launched
airstrikes
Sunday on insurgent postttOns
near Balad. 50 miles north of
Baghdad, dropptng · two 500pound bombs.
The statement also said an
A1r Force Predator aircraft
fired two Hellfire mJSsJles
agamst a mortar finng postlion near Balad.
On Monday, gunmen sei£ed
a son of the governor of insurgent-infested Anbar provmce.
Mamoun Sami Rashtd al·
Alwam, offictals satd on condition of anonymity for fear
of insurgent reprisal. The
abduction occurred m the
provtncial capttal of Ramadi .
west of Baghdad.
U.S. and Iraqi olfictals had
hoped the new constttutlon.
whtch goes to the voters in an
Oct. 15 referendum, would
help pacify, the insurgency by
lurmg Sunni Arabs away from
tt .
Sunm negotiators reJected
the constitution and vowed to
defeat it' 111 the referendum.
The bitter, protracted negotiations appeared to have raised
(enstons among Iraq \ ethnic
and religiOus commumties.
Oftictals satd last week the y
were considenng some minor
changes tn the constitution to
appease the Sunnis. But Shiite
lawmaker Al1 ai-Dabagh said
Tuesday the only change
would be to add language
allirming Iraq's status as a
founding member of the Arab

MARIETTA ~ The Board
of Directors ol Peoples
Bancorp
Inc
rec ently
declared a cash dtvidend of
20 cents per share p.ty.tble
on Oct I to shate holde~&gt; of
record at Sept 15
The rhtrd quartet dtvi dend retlects a p&lt;~yout ol
approxtmately $2. 1 mtllton
based on 10.5 milhon shares
outstanding at Aug. 10 and
reflects a II I percent
increase over the I R cems
per s har~ cltvtdend p.ud 111

1
Wtll be given in MEIGS COUNTY by
1
I ~.re TM HEARING AID CENTER I
Dr. A. JaciCson Balles Office
I
I
1 New Location: 507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH 1
Sept. 9, 2005• 9:00am-noon • (740) 446-1744 I
PROUD TO BE APART I CattFRIDAY,
Toft Free 1·800-634·5265 for an Immediate appointment.
will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist; I
OF YOUR LIFE. I The testa
Anyone who has
or understanding
1
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a FREE hearing test to see if
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UMWA • UAW • ARMCO AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
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4) On-site review: .When you come to your appointment at a _mobile ~~sting

•••

site, a nurse will revtew your questtonnatre with you and;verify your eligibility to
participate. When you successfully complete this step, you are eligible to be paid $150.

•
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5) BlOOd Testing: Once your on-site revtew 1s complete, you may choose to

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have your blood tested You wtll not be tested for drug use, HIV, or sexually transmitted
diseases. Your privacy will be strictly guarded throughout the inlormatton and blood
screening process. Alter having your blood drawn, you wtll'be paid $400- ($150 is
lor the hea~h 'b:stionnaire and $250 js tor blood testtng.) Absolutely no blood
testing will
done on children ages 2 and under, a~:~d testing on .
ages 6 and under is strongly discouraged. ·
·
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I,I~C)JI:CT

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HOW : Class size is very limited. Please contact Rhonda Lyons
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New participants are always welcome!

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rl;(' .ut ene~ 1.ll rh~..· hL"•'n It . : ,m hci p ~..l...l!.: nntth. \\h1.. thcr '1r l h 1t h~..'-1! 1 JJ-.~.· 1.. ~. L.. 1'1•.:~~. nt
],,n g lrt:hlrt..'ll'U't!lll :. d-.]e .. ,mpt•lllb;.lt•\tlt'P T IH-.Ih111·111\.J-.n~.·r~. .. r I'!'HIJI~.-- u1.l r tk1-.

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weeks Sundays and Wednesdays at 5 pm at Rocksprings Rehab
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nights at 6 ,pm .
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Is \'l1tlr ,o )f t: ~,.· .1(,J tull pf h tl!h n umh~..·r-· ' \X 'h L' ll 11 u ' I u~..· . . til L .1r, h.11. .. . ._ ' ' ' 111~ h r~ htT 1111111 h., . .
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Conducied by

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d

lot

or mnm:y." ..,auJ B ,tn~ t t. aUdtng
he un!IJ not di-.L·Io'c thl' sutll
.. But I c,ut " 'l 11\ sulNdn·
tt ,t\ It\ ..;ev•.-:n tl gttrcs." ill' -..ttd
bell thou ~ h the Ruth ""'c
d 1Li tHH go to tn ,JI. the -.cnlcfUtnes caus~ ncuro!ogll\ ll 111 - mcnt L· uul d ll!..:lp Lt\\\L'l"
ncs"cs :-.lH.:h as mang.tn~'c p01 111\'0 h c~l 111 oth..:: t \\ l·\d m g
o.;oning or P.ulinson\ dr,ea"L' . ~ fume ... c:t..,c .... R11 rh \ 1,!\\ \ t' r-.
is sttll open il&gt;r turics to rtllt · Sdld
"He w.ts expo . . vd to the ~t t td
siJet 111 othe1 c,tscs The mult i·
llf
flii11C ,1JI ~HhL'I \\l' ]dL'I" \\l'IL'
dt&gt;tmt litigation 111\'tlhcs
exposed Ill. but lot tt\L'I1 .t
aOOU[ 70 dclcltl)ants
Ruth's kg&lt;~ I team . .111 ftollt shoner pcttod llt 11 tlll' th.tn c1
Mississtppt, said thct r dectSI\111 lot ol others." Ba11ett '""1 ol
to settle and &lt;JVOtd tnal was nut Ruth

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Now Open! ·

U.S. Dtstrict Judge K&lt;~thleen
M. O'M,tlley. who h.1s been
decidmg pretrial issues t(&gt;r the
we)Jmg C:t&gt;es across the COlin·
try. had set the Ruth c.tsc as the
lirst tor tnal O'Malley was to
be the judge in the tnal, whtch

'' We setlled hcL:athl' 11\

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Chester
92 Memonal Drtve.
Pomeroy, OH.

fume s and that the deuslOll to
sctt!c was procedural and
b~1s~J on lcg.1l i""uc s

intlucnccd b~ pc'I'SI&gt;II,ti piohlems due to Hu n ~e.tn c
Kttltl tl.l\ lk\ d"l.tltlltl of tilL'
GLtll Coast

..

eligibility by bringing official qocumentation proving your restdence/water usage for at
least one calendar year. For example, bring a utility bill frorn January of 2002 and
January of 2003, or bnng a 2003 Tax statement. You must prove that you
consumed water from public or private sources within the six
affected water districts for at least one calendar year PRIOR TO

Stone Rd , off Washtngton Blvd.,
behind Cornerstone Heatthcare.

was expected to ),Jq IOUI
weeks .
The dclcndants were Hoball
Brothers Co .. hascd tn Ttoy.
. Oh10. and ESA B (iroup Inc.
based tn Lond(m. England
Both compan tcs make w c ld111 ~
prouuch
The settlement uoes IH)t stop
an} other weldmg lume cases
hom gomg to tnal. and the key
question _ whether wc ldmg

••

3) Validation ol eligibility: You are responsible lor validating your

Route 95 South.
behind Tebay Datry

The settlement .1greement W.ts
reached Friday.
RLlth's l.tw yers satd they
were prepared to present CVIcle'nce to a ;ury th.tt hts til ness
was .:auseJ hy weldmg fumes
·_ a Jiagnosts made 111 20!HJ by
doctms at l:laylor Medical
Cente1 Ill Houston But
defense lawyets contmue to
deny Ruth's phystcal problems
can betted to inh.tling wcldtng

•.

•'
'

Belpre -Little Hocking

and a monthly tndcx ot indu'- tlte wor)d\ brgC\t reratler\
tn,tl purchasmg acltvlly from J.X~HJ outlet\ The mmpa111
Chicago also dropped dr.t- ,,r,o reuer,ned 1h.1t ll urric,111e
mut~eall y.
K.11n11.1 could hurt 11s s,lies
Koe stt:nd1 . howc,et. " tor Scptemhcr W&lt;ti-Man
skepucal ahuut whethct cl unbed $1 I.J to ~-15 6'-.1
traders' views \ll1 the Fed arc
Trouhled 1 .tccinc m.tker
correct. As far as the ccono- l htmn Co rp jumped 72
my goes. ''I'm no t· 'ure any· cent ' to S-n 51 .titer Jh boarJ
thing
has
neccssanly reJec ted an ,Jll-c,J'h 1akeover
changed, " he satd. "We ha ve ofl er !rom ;.,Jo,,Jrtis AG. ,,,y.
seen some ccotJ omtc dccelcr- 1ng the ollct " tn;Jck~tt'itic
auon, but 11 doc,n't mean the On Sept I. :-.:"""'" h.td
Fed is going to pau se"
ollcreJ to huy .~bou t 'iX .1"''In company n,ews . Dow cem ol Cht ron sh,Jres 11 docs
industnals Home Depot and · not alreadv "" n "' S.J() per
Coca-Cola cli mhcd on ex pee- sh,tre Ntll ,Jrt" .td dcJ I X
tatlon of rcbutldtng alter cents to ~.J l) 2X
Katnna and an a11al yst' s
No nlt wc,t· All illlc~ C\11 p
upgrade. respecti ve ly. Hom e te ll .J cents to '. \,,') &lt;:\en
Depot rose $ J.:lK to $.J 1.71 &lt;liter St.md.11·d &amp; P&lt;H II'
after the compan y satd l11c ol downgraded 1ts ckht fullilc&lt;
m stores .rcmatncd closed nHo 111n~ sl.ll\1 ' T~c lldlH&gt;n's
be cause nl Katttna. hut 11 lnurth-l,trgcst c,tn lc'l'. 11 hose
hopes to reopen thre.: b) med1,1n1 c' .11c &lt;Ill '' "~c . '"'d
week's end
- ThursJdj 11 ' ' rtlllllllt~ &lt;Hit ul
Coca-Cola f!&lt;llned 6~ ce nts tone to ,1\'lllli h,mkluplL)
to $44 52 ,liter B.tn c ot
Achanc111~
'"""'
kcl
Amenca Securities hoost cd dccltne~&gt; b\ 'm ntc th ,Jn 2 IC&gt; I
it s raune on the &lt;tock to on the .~c'll Ynr~ Stuc·~
"buy': from "neutral." ct lln g Esd1.1n~c' 11 hcte umso!Jd,tlcd
potential upside to the ftrm \ vnlum.:' 11 ' " I &lt;J.J 11111 11111
fisc,d 2006 earnings eslllll,Jic' , h,u-cs .. 111 lllelc.tsc Irum lhc·
,md room for the stock's 1alu- I 66 111 1111111 sh.tlc's 11.1dcd on
,Jti on to me.
Frtd.t\
.
Wai -Mart s,uct only I X of
Th e Russc'il 2000 111dc·\ ol
its stores .tnd one cail .:.: nt c1 sm,lilc r u&gt;lll)l,lll lc's
" '"'
tem.11n dosed foll ow11J~ II 15 . " ' I hX pet cent to
K.,ttllna. d maJOr llllpn&gt;v e" 674 .JX
mcnt from when K,Jtrin.~ hit.
0' er'""' J.tp.m's rs tUc·,
Jnittall y closi ng 126 of it stoc~ .1\ et.tg.: tell 0 2X pc1 ·
faciltti es. Eightv-nine facdi cent, illl t. lln \ FTSI I{)()""''
ti CS h.JVL' 1Cpo.rtcd damage 0 4 rerc·e nt. (ielm.lll) \ DA.\
With only nme having majo1 tndex tosc· I 19 pe~e·e11t. .II Ili
damdue Tile shutteted stores F1 .tncc\ CAC -40 """ 0%

Your guide to weekend
entertainment in the Tri-State

••

will be contacted by a Brookmar-representative to set up an
appointment for you at one of our testing sites. Do not call us
for !In appointment, we will call you.

"

tu 2.166 86 for it&gt; best pomt
gau1 Slncc Jul y 19
Bonds fell a' stocks rose.
with the yield on the 10-year
Treasury note rising to 4.09
percent from 4.02 pen;ent la te
Friday. The U.S dollar was.
nuxed against other major
cunencies. Gold prices were
lov.er. ·
Stocks started the se s~ion
,ubstanttally htgher alter the
posttt ve report on business
activtt} tn the sc"ices sector.
The lnst11Ute for Supply
Management. "{htch surveys
370 U.S bus messes, said it s
non-manul.tctunng
tndex
rose to 65 percent tn August
!rum ti0.5 percent tn July.
Any tcad tll " ahovc 50 tndt- ·
cates the sc[t&lt;&gt;r ts cxpamlmg;
the August rcadtn g was the
best stncc Apnl 2004
Hopes that Interest rat es
wo uld stop cltmbmg also
buoyed the markets. Last
week's sottcr-lh,tn -npcc tcd
cctmomtc data rcintorccrl
some tr.tdcrs' hehcf that the
Federal Reserve wou ld stop
'" yc,tr-p ltts c.tmp,11 gn of
short-term tnt.:rest r,Jte .htke,
earlier th ,m 11 had planned .
s:11d Russ Koe,tcnch. sentnr
portio! to m,tn.t gcr .11 B.t rclays
Glob,d In vestmen ts in San
Fr,mctsco
L.tst week 's data mcluded ,J
Commerce Dcp.trtment report
that . Americdns spen t more
than they earned 111 Jul y lot
JUS! the second time 111 46
yea' '
The ln , titute for
Supply Management manu-

.Worker settles lawsuit over exposure to welding fumes

mdcpcndent consu ltants who
market '&lt;lnd se ll Longaberger
products throu gh dtrect
Bv M.R. KROPKO
sales 111 all· 50 sutes
AP BUSINES S WRITER
Longaberger 1s a makef of
handcral ted baskets and
CLEVELAND - A shipother home lifestyle projects yard worker who said hts neuthat .tre sold clire.:tly to cus- rological problems v. ere
tomers through the home caused by tnhalmg I umcs from
party plan.
weldmg rods has settled a Iederal lawsuit agamst two manufacturers, lawyers m the c&lt;tse
smd Tuesday.
Charles Ruth, 38, of
Lucedale, Miss.. had been a
welder at Ingalls Shtpyard. m
Pascagoula. Mtss .. stncc 1997 .
He began havmg vartous phystcal problems two years later
HIS lawyers said he suffered
shukes. balance and speech
problems.
The settlement avoids a tnal.
which · was due to begin
Wednesday. The case was the
ftrst scheduled for trial among
some 6,000 welding lawsuits·
that were consolidated in U.S.
District Court in Cleveland to
stmplify legal tssues .
Tenns of the settlement were
not disclosed but one of Ruth's
lawyers. Don Barrett. ~aid the
figure was at least $1 million

l- "~aCeJ f6 ~ &amp;

survey, either on our webstte or by dropping it off at one of our locations. you

Lubeck

tffe hui l din ~. the Mannes '"'d
"Multin,tt io nal foi\.'Cs personnel returned fire and
assaulted the buildin ~. ,uffer~
ing one fnendly 'c,tsualty

---

2) Appoinbnent Scheduling: Alter you have submitted your completed •

COUPON

NEW YORK ~ Wall
Street rallied Tuesday as oil
prices . tumbled, the service·
sector
reported
strong
growth.
and · investor.s.
embraced large-cap stocks
such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc ..
Coca-Cola Co . and Home
Depot Inc. The Dow Jones
industnal average gamed
more than 141 points.
lnve stors rejoiced as crude
oil and gas futures dipped to)lowing the decision by mdusAtlsha Cremeans
tnah zed nations to release nO
milhon barrels of crude from
strate gic stockpiles 1n the
wake of Hurricane Katrin,t. A
barrel of light cruqe settled at
$65.S5. down $1 1'11. on the
New
York · Mercdntilc
Exchan ge, while gasoline
the thu·d quarter ol 2004 prices on the exchange fell 13
.tnd a 5.3 per~.e m increase cents to $2.05 per gallon.
"Today wa~ a telief rally. it
over the 19 cents per share
was
an ot l price relief story,"
p.tid in the second qu'artet
said
Lynn Reaser. chic! econof 2005
nmi
st
of the investment
Peoples Ban corp lm:.. a
dtvetsified fmancial prod - strategtes group .tl B,mk ol
lK1s und servii.:CS company America. "Otl pticcs we sti ll
wtth $ 1. R bilhon in assets. very high. but mu&lt;.:h more
makes avatlablc a complete moderate than the worst fears
lmc of bankmg. in vestment. of last week. "
The Dow rose 141.K7, or
tnsurdnce. and trust solutHln
throu gh 50 locatton s and 34 1.36 percent. to 10.5XY 24.1ls
ATM s 111 Ohto . West best one-day gai n SlltCe July
R.
V~rgint ,J and Kentucky.
The Standard &amp; Poor's 500
index g,tinecl 15 ·37. or 1.26
percent. to 1.233 39, liS best
session smce Aprtl 21 The
,
Nasdaq composite index

... Coming Thursday in the Sentinel ...

at our website, www c8healthproject.org. This is the fastest and eastest way to tnittate
the process If you don't have the ability to complete the quesltonnaire online, you
may ptck ·UP a copy etther at the Brookmar office at 417 Grand P~rk Dnve, Sutte
201 tn Vienna, or at one of our testing sites. You may then take the questionnaire
home, fill it out, and drop it off at the tesltng site nearest you or the Brookmar office.

----------EE HEARING TESTS -

fore ign fi ghters octupymg"

, COOLVILLE
The
Company
Longabcrgcr
recently recngntnd '.loy
Burdette. Coolville , at it s
•tmnual conventton ''The
Bee" held 1n Columbus .
Burdette h\ts been ,m tndependent Long.tberger home
consultant smce 1991 She
. i ~ one of more than 70.000

1) Health Questionnaire: You may fill out !he health questionnaire online

Pomeroy &amp;
Tuppers Plains -

2005

~~Q~~~OOnOOn~n -~_d_e_d~2_5_7_9_._o_r_l._2~pe-'_~_en_t_._~_~_'u_r_'n~g~·-i,_td_e_x_t_e_ll_'_n_A_'_'~-·~-'s_t_re_·p_'_es_~_n_t_,_~_n_,i_oo_'_P_o_rt_io_n_o_t_r_e'_c_e_'~-'--------

There are two distinct components of the project:
the health questionnaire and the blood survey.

.

AP BUSINESS WRITER

Burdette recognlZ.. ed at

How to Participate in
the C8 Health Proiect

Decem~r 3, 2004.

Bv ELLEN SIMON

Peoples Bank incr~ases
third quarter dividend

U S. jets attack bridges near Syria to halt insurgents
··Bv. SAMEER N. YAGOUB

Wednesday, September 7,

Cremeans joins salon Stocks surge on declining oil prices;·Dow up 141

-militants holed up

that the Amencans would
Intervene on their behalf.
Saddam 's lawyers could
'argue that Talabani's comments were pre,udictal, which
tmght not sway an Iraq1 court
bur would have resonance
abroad and within the &lt;'OUntry's aheady disaflected Sunni
Arab mmority, of whteh the
former prestdcnt ts a member.
St,nnis, who lorm the e&lt;Jie
ol the insu rgenc y, are 'already
enraged by alleged ktllmg' ot
Sunni ctvilians· by the Shtitedommated secttnty forces _ a
charge the government dentes
_ and by the draft constttuttOI1
which was approved Aug. 2X
by the Shines and Kurds over
the objections of Sunni negotiators.
The percept ton that Saddam
was being convtcted before a
tnal could add the Sunn1
anger.
Saddam's legal te,!m said it
plans to challenge the starttn g
date as allow'ing msuffkient
time for a proper defense.
Defense lawyers al so ,,ud
they would chall enge the
trial's legitimacy
Saddam has been tn U.S.
custody at an undi s,·loscd stte
in Baghdad since his captut e
in December 2003. etgh t
months aftet l11s regime was
overthrown by U.S. fot&lt;.:es .

BUSINESS

·The Daily Sentinel

I ,-, If,!J, h._

'"'l'(\\t~t'Il :-... .1111 .lld 4 rIll 1·11 11\•'il
'Lilfllh! l..' ~ . llllln, II h '11, \'h\ 'I'- I II l 1l l,l 11 .\

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Jn CO IIliH,I.Illl l) ht..•,t \rh ~ •li lt' l"'',llll'lll 11 ,1 11111\1
~

Barnett, CPI -Certified Pilates Instructor

O'BI.ENESS

Memo.-ial llo; pit ,, f

. . u~9' -~¥···{&lt;~- (a. .~.,, l ,;,, .. :"'

�..
·,

rag~ AS

CAL• STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 7;

Prep volleyball roundup, Page B2
Rio volleyball roundup, Page B2
Point soccer falls to Generals, Page 83
Reds, Indians win, Page B8

~oos

Bl

The Daily ~entinel .

INSIDE

Wednesday, September 7, 2005

fNP SchEdulE
GALLIPQLI S- A schedule ct upc Qming COl·
lege and high achool 11arsit ~ spoft lng e&lt;Jents
Involvin g teams trom Ga llia, Meigs and Maso'n
counties..
,

Wadneedey $eWWnber 7

Ben Holter

Volleyball
Southern at South Gaftia. 5:55p.m.

Sharman at Hannan. 6 p.m.

Awarded Eagles Scholarships

Bill boosts ethanol, bio-diesel

fuel that is 85 percent ethanol. It
also requires that 90 perC~Ilt of
·'
tlie
vehicles the Ohio
COLUMBUS - Motnrish. Depanmclll of Administrative
com and soybean growers and Serv1 ces buys to be adaptable to
the environment will be win- the use of ethanol and bio-diesel
ners once a bill gi vmg tax fuel. which contains about 20
breaks to al ternative fuel pro- percent soybeans.
ducers be,:omcs law. its backers
Producers would not have to
said Tuesday.
be Ohlo-based, but the com and
House Speaker Jon Husted soybeans they LISe would have
said the bill is expected to. he to be Ohio-grown. Husted said.
passed once the Legislature
A gasoli1le engine mL!St be
relllms. planned tor Oct. 4. ·
adapted to tun on ethanol, but
The bill would grant credits to any diesel engine c&lt;m use biothe state income tax to cu1y pro- diesel. Currently, federal law
ducer selling fuel that is primm- requires the agency to have
ily ethanol. a corn-petroleum . renewable fuel sources for 75
blend. or for installing ethanol percent of its fleet, said Jeff
fuel pumps or convening exist- Wcsthovcn, deputy director for
ing pumps to sell ethanol.
general services. The depart,Most gasoline cutTelllly sold. mem bought 878 vehicles last
contains about I0 percent year, he said. The staft's of the
ethanol . The biH would give Ohio Board . of Regents,
breaks to producers of a type of statewide election officials,
BY

JOHN McCARTHY

ASSOCIATED PR ESS WRITER

Tllllats F11'8C8St

CttyJAeQiofl
High I Low temps

\1 'f;

Tallldo•
83"161"

Manefleld •
82' I 59'

Dav1on·O

83"1 59"

YaungalaWn •
· e2•1 se•

~

t__:)

*Calumbue

.

84"161"

0

·0

Palbmauth•
es•157•

0

the most thoughtful, progressive energy bills to come out of
the Statehouse in decades,"
Shaner said. ·
The only drawback is availability. While ethanol sells for
about 50 cents a gallon Jess than
unleaded gasoline, none is currently produced in Ohio, said
Sam Spoftorth, director of the
Central Ohio Clean Fuels
Coalition. Only one station sells
it and has no marketing campaign for the fuel.
The Speedway station in the
Columbus suburb of Hilliard
doesn't post its price because it
doesn't have room on the sign
tor it, said a .woman answering
the phone at corpomte headquarters who would not give
her name, She said company
policy prohibits giving the price
at the pump over the phone.
Spofforth said he offered to post
a separate sign, but the company turned him down.

. '

IN V4.

.

I

noon .
Wednesday night••. Mostly
, clear. Lows in the mid 50s.
Southeast winds around 5
mph .
Thursday and Thursday
night ... Mostly clear. Highs in
the lower 80s. Lows in the
upper 50s.
Friday
through
Saturday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs i~ th::, lower 80s. Lows
in the upper -50s. .
Saturday night through
Monday... Mostly clear. Lows
in the lower 60s. Highs in the
mid 80s.

next reuni on will be
held Au g. 27, 2006. at a
.location tn be announced.
Attend ing were Frank and
Marian Brown . Rockledge,
Fla.: Geo rge and Jill Harris,
Riple y.
W.Va .:
Tyler
John son . Portland; Che.ster
and Erma Martin·. West
Columbia. W. Ya.: Maxine,
Austin. Tara and Jeff Rose ,
ami Sara Grucser. Racine;
Attarah Dewhu st and Marcus
amJ Dora Weaver, Letart ,
W.Va. : and Rev. Jack Mayes,
Point Plea sant . W.Va .

Subscribe to(lay • 992-2155

·Local stocks ·
ACI - 61.96
AEP- 37.96
Akzo - 41.66
Ashland Inc. -

59.96

AT&amp;T- 19.75
BLI - U.52
Bob Evans - 23.85
BorgWamer - SS.U
Champion - 4.36
Charming Shops - 12.02
City Holding - 36.72
Col- 47.55
OG -18.41
DuPont - 39.48
,Federal Mogul - .43
' USB- 29.97
Gannett - 73.33
Genll[_al Electric - 33.94
GK~- 5.45
Harley Davidson - 49.22
JPM- 34.57
Kroger 20.12

Ltd. - 21.34
NSC- 36.30
Oak Hill Financial - 30.45
O~B -:- 25.15
BBT- 41.08 ·
Peoples - 28.75
Pep=!lco - 55.19
Premier 14.74
Rockwell - 52.75
' Rocky Boots - 30.13
RD Shell - 65.60.
SBC- 24,24
Sears - 133.22
Wai-Mart - 45.69
Wendy's - 47.07
Worthington - 18.45
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing. quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
Gallipolis.

We Accept

EBT

1 ""

COCA COLA
ClASSIC

•

Sib.$ 99

Frisby's
Crinkle Cut Bag
French Fries . l~
'"'' ~
Deliano's
Texas Garlic 11oz.
Toast

,,.,
..._;. · }
· !$-·
,.!,

'

•

~

BANQUET
·TV ·DINNERS

•

Ironton at Gallia ACademy
Wahama at Eastern
River Valley a\ Meigs
Magnolia at Point Pleasant

Soccer
Cross Lanes Christian at CNCS. 6 p.m.
Volleyba!l
Cross Lanes Christian at OVCS, 5 p.m.

College SOccer
Rb Grande at Trinity International, 7 p.m.
Saturday

Southern at South Gallla
Bishop Donahue at Hannan
Volley!Jall
River Valley at Athens T~urnament, ·g a.m.

SOccer

.
..

''

"

.,

RIO GRANDE - NAJA
No. 5 Rio Grande heads to
the Windy City this weekend looking to improv ~ to
5"0 at t.he Illinois Tech
Soccer Classic.
The Redmen (3-0) will
face Trinity International
(0-2) on Friday night with
an expected kick-off of 7
p.m.
Rio has used a balanced
attack through the first
three games. Depth has
been important as the
Redmen have had some

E u a n

Purcell and
C o n a r
Dawson notching two goals·
each.
The defense continues to
be a strong point for the
Redmen and should be one
of the keys to victory this
weekend.
Sophomore
.goalkeeper Andy Moore
Heywood

has been solid and junior
newcomer Derek Talcott
posted a shutout in a 3-0
win over Bryan College
·last Saturday.
Trinity
International
enters the game Friday ·
having lost to ·NAJA preseason No . 3 Berry
College, 6-1 and 'Lee
University by the same
score.
After getting Saturday
off the Redmen will challenge lllinois Tech on
Sunday with a I p.m . kicKIan McNemarlphoto
off. The Scarlett Hawks
won their first two games Univers ity of Rio Grande 's Conor Dawson (17 ) runs with a
of the season and are led by Univers ity of Auburn-Montgomery player Friday during Rio's 3·
. goalkeeper Nathan Woods. · 2 overtime win at Evan Davis Fie ld.

Meigs finishes fourth at Gallipolis Invitational
BY BRAD SHERMAN
B~HERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Saptetnbe£ 10

Fooiba!l

Gal~a

injuries to
deal with.
Rio has had
six different players
score a goal
this season
with Guy
Heywood ,

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

PrEp Cross Country

Academy at Point Pleasant. 7 p.m.

Cross Country_
River Val ley at Athens lnvitabonal, 10 a.m.

-....·oCollegeSoc:oe&lt;

Meigs boosters
golf tourney
POMEROY - The first
.Meigs Athletic Boosters
Golf tournament will be
held
on
Saturday,
September 17th at the Pine
'Hills Golf Course.
·
- The tournament will be a
four man scramble, bring
your own team format with
a 9 a.m. shotgun start.
The team s must have an
handicap of over 40. with
only one team member
under 10. Prizes · include
club house credit and a cash
pot.
For more in(ormation
contact Mike Chancey at
992-2158 (work) · Or 9920064 (work).

Contact Information
Fa.x - 1-7 40-446-3008
E-mail - spot"ls@mydailysentinel.com
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. ext . 33
bsherman C mydailytribune .com

.

$ 49

Bryan Walters, Sports Writ_er
(740) 446-234 2. el&lt;!. 23
bwalters@ mydailytribune .com

Larry Crum, ·sports Writer

(304) 675- 1333. ext . 19
1£r-um 0 mydailyregistar.com

RIO
GRANDE
Cabell Midland runners
were all smiles, singing
John Denver 's classic
"Country Roads" during
their cool-down run.
· And why not, they were
the only West Virginians
participating, and the only
ones to win tirst -place trophies.
Cabell Midland, a cross
country powerhouse in the
Mountain State, swept
both the boys and girls
divisions Tuesday at the
Gallipolis
Invitational
cross country meet.
The
Lady . Knights
scored 27 poiQts, edging
host Gallia Academy by
10. The two schools were
even at five points apiece
after the first four runners
crossed the finish line, but
six Cabell Midland runners placed in"the top 15.
Logan finished third ·in
the team standings with 92
points, followed by Meigs
(92). which took fourth on
a tiebreaker, River Valley
( I08) and Chesapeake
(162). There were only six
full girls teams.
Gallia
Academy's
Lauren Adkins won the
girls race in a time of
20: L8, more than 25 sec.onds ahead of runner-up
Rachel Riley of Cabell
Midland. Riley's teammate Alicia Thomas was
third (21 :06), GalliaAcademy's Lee Ann
Townsend fourth (21 :33)
and Adrienne Groves
(21 :52) of Huntington
Ross .rounded out the top·
five .
_
· Carol Fahmy was eighth
(22:03)
for·
Gallia
Brad Sherman/photo
Academy, followed by
teammates ·Aarika Stanley Meigs' Kimi Swisher leads Gallia Academy's Carol Fahmy during Tuesday's Gallipolis
Invitational at the University of Rio Grande. Swisher finished tenth overall, helping the
Please see Melp. Bl
'
Marauders capture fourth in the team event:

Blue Bonnet
Margarine
Quarters.

lib.

Bag

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Box

BY BRAD SHERMAN .
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

STEWART - . Brittany
Hysell and Samantha Cole had
10 kills apiece as Meigs
cruised to a straigh! games victory
at
Feder 'al
H oc king
Tues&lt;;lay.
The Lady
MHauders
won 25-12.
25-19. 25-17
to improve to
2- I on the
younn volleyball
seaCole
son.

Leslie Preece added four
kills with Amy Barr and
Amber Burton chipping in two
apiece as Metgs hitters
amassed 28 total. Joey
Haning. who also did a solid
job serving with three aces.
handed out 24 assists.
Meigs was 70-t'or-75 serving. Cole. Preece and Cassi
Whan were perfect on their
trips to the service li ne.
,Whitney Thoene. Meghan
Leslie. Chalsie Manlev and
Michelle Weaver provided
solid back row play in the ,·ictory.
Meigs· junior \'arsny was
also a winner by scores of 25IOand 25-22.
Meigs P.iays host to leaguefavorite Alexander lllllrsday
in a kev Tri- Va ll ~v Conference
Ohio Division showdown.

·Eastern rallies to·· : f • e I &amp;t. · . ~·
All proceeds benefit the Mason County Special Olympics
beat Lady Vikings· ~

.

Asst.
Michelina's
Dinners ·

Meigs nets
sweep of
.Fed Hock

•• •• • • • • • • • •• • • • •• • • •••• • •• • • •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
•
•
•
•

,.

Boxes

ASSORTED

Friday SeQt&amp;mbeJ g
Fooiball

Sports Briefs

JUST LOOK AT THE RECEIPT

s

•

c....

700 West Main St., Pomeroy

'

•;

Go!l
South Gailia at Point Pleasant (Hidden , ·
Valley), 4:30p.m.
Galia Academy at Por1smouth, 4:30 p.m.
TVC Ohio at Hidden Hills, 4:30p.m.
TVC Hoddng at Brass Ring, 4:30 p.m.

Walsh at Rio GraOOe. 1 p.m.
College Volleyball
Rio at Cumberland Invitational, TBA
College
Countly
Rio at Xavier lnvitatiooal, 11 a.m.

SAVE·A·LOt:

LtrrlE DEBBIE'
SNACK CAKES

~·

'.

Th ~

·Proud to be apart of your life.

CUT INSIDE
1/ FRESH
PRODUCE

OATMEAl PIES,
ZEBRA CAKES,
SWISS ROllS
6 SElECT-

· Southern at Eastern, 5:55 p.m.
Alexarder at Meigs, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5:30p.m.
South GaiUa at Hannan, 5:30 p.m.
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5:15 P.·!TI

'

02006

Tuesday.•. Mostly sunny.
Patchy dense fog in the morning . Highs in the lower 80s.
South winds around 5
mph ... Becoming southeast in
the afternoon.
.
Tuesday . night .•. Mostly
clear. Lows in the mid 50s.
Southeast winds around 5
mph ·
in
the
evening ... Becoming light and
yariable.
We&lt;! nesd ay .• . Most I y
sunny. Highs in the lower 80s.
West winds around 5
mph ... Becoming
south
around 5 mph in · the after-

Ihyraday Seplllmber 8
Volleyball

South Point at Ohio Valley Christian, 5 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point PleasB.nt at Winfek:l, 7 p.m.

ing homemade il'c cream.

LETART, W.Va. - The
annual Weaver reunion was
held recently at the home of
Marcus Weaver.
A covered di sh lunch was
served after the blessing by
Marcus Weaver.
Maxine Rose read the
minutes of last vear' s
reunion. There was no" business meeting. Those 'present
voted to retain the same ol'fi cers for next year.
All attending won door
prizes. Jill Harris celebrated
her birthday. The afternoon
was spent visiting and mak-

BIG BEND

Local weather

Women'o College Soc:oe&lt;
Shawnee state at Rio Grande, 5 p.m.

Weaver .reunion. held

1/ FRESH MEAT

• SPRITE • DIET ...

Clnclnnlltl

•85" 159"

members of the Legislature and
state law enforcement buy their
own state cars, Westhaven said.
Overall, the state owns about
II ,000 vehicles.
·
The purpose of the bill is to
help Ohio fanners, Husted said.
Its progress has been aided by
the recent spike in gas prices
since the increase in the cost'of
crude oil and production cutbacks because of Hurricane
Katrina, he said.
"We were trying to lind a way
for it to make economic sense."
Husted said. "I think we all as
Americans right now are recognizing that our dependence on
foreign oil is a liability."
The bill also helps in other
ways, said Jack Shaner, a lobbyist
for
the
Ohio
Environmental Council.
"This is exactly the direction
Ohio should move. These fuels
are Ohio-grown, renewable and
even cleaner to boot. It's one of

'

BY MARK WILLIAMS

Go!l
Ironton, River Vatley at Meigs (RJVersk1e),
4:30p.m.

Holter of Pomeroy and
attends
Ohio
Northern
Universit y
College
of
Pharmacy. Bro wn , is the
granddau ght.er of Michael
and Sharlee Evan s of Racine
.and &lt;lttends the College of
Health and Human Services
at Ohi o Uni versity.

POMEROY - Ben Alan
Holter of Pomerov and
Ashton Elizabeth Brown of
AP Plloto
have been awarded
Racine
Cars line up at a gas station where regular unleaded gas is still under three dollars a gallon , Wednesday. Aug. 31, 2005, in
Cincmnati. Responding to high gas prices , the Ohio House has made a priority a bill that would give tax breaks to alternative · $1,000 scholarships from the
Pomeroy Eagles Aerie #2171
fuel makers and would requi re state cars to be able to run on the fuels, such as ethanol and bio-diesel .
·
.
'
and
Pomeroy
Eagles
Auxiliary.
Holter is the son of Alan .

Redmen soccer looks to
stay ·unbe.aten in Chicago

MCARTHUR - · It proved to
be a competitive non-conference banle, but the Eastern volleyball. team prevailed Tu~sday
night m a four-game vtctory
over Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio division foe Vinton
County by a score of2J-25, 2520.25-23, 25-18.
The Eagles (5-1) used a perfect 97-ol-97 service night to
mlly back from an . early one
game deficit, and individual
efforts from Brittany Bissell
and
Darcy
Winebrenner
allowed the Green .and White to
get back in the win column fol lowing Saturday's loss at Gallia
Academy.
·
Bissell, a junior setter, finished the night 143-of- 144
passing with a pair of dink
points. while, Winebrennerled a

li

•

balanced
offensive . •
attack with a :
team-high I0 . •
kills.
•
Kelsey :
Holter and •
K a t i e •
Hayman foi- •
l o w e d •
Winebrenner •
with four kills •
•
Blsaell
apiece, while •
both Jillian Brannon and Erin •
Weber fiuished the nil(ht with •
three each. Morgan Werry fin- •
ished Eastern's spiking with a •
kill.
' ••
Weber Jed the Lady Eagles •
with 15 points, while Brannon
fmished with 12. Holter eight •
and ~issell six in the triumph.
:
Defensively. Hayman Jed •
EHS with six blocks. with ,o
(Pam Bryant)
Brannon and Weber each con- •
. '
tributing a bloek to the winning •
cause.
• • • • • ••• • • • • • • •• •• • • • •• • •• • • • • • • • •

•Saturday, September 10, 2005

•Hannon &amp; Ordnance Fields ·

•
•

•

I

•

•$150 entry per team _

.•Packets available at PVH Wellness Center
·For information: 304-675-4635

lla~l' rs

I'

must I)('

'f'd i'S (( iUt(' \ l Ide.·

:
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�-·

Page B2 • The ~y Sentinel

.-

Wednesday, September 7, 2005

Point Pleasant soccer defeated by Generals

Prep VollEyball

Bv

Rive·r Valley slays Lady Dragons
r--=--, ,

r e a k at 21 - 1g, hut the hosts , ealed
BWo\LTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUP..E CO M
appeared to the deal on a two-game lead
be safe earl y when Pay ne recorded a kill
un
a&gt; Waugh to ;ec: ure a 25- 19 win .
C HES HIR E
Ri\'er
the
T he Lady Rai ders used
serl'ed
Valley enjoyed a successful
hosts
out
lOa that mome m um ea rl y in
start to the 2005 home vo l ~ .
qu ick
~-0 game three. rall yi ng out to a
leyball season Tuesday with
lead .'
con\'i ncing 12-5 edge .
a 25 - 15. 25-19. 25-23
The lead
Fai rl and ' tormed bac ~ to
straight ga mes wi n O\'er
balloned as tie the colilcsl at 14. then
Fairland in Oh io Valle1
hig h as 14-4. forc:cd the host s to use iimec;,onfe rer:tce play.
·
. Waugh
but the Green out ah er captur ing a 16- 14
The Lad y Raiders (2-0. ~ - 0
an d
Wh ite · lead.
'OVC) received a ga m e-hi~h hallleu back to ";il hi n six
Four more ties wou ld fol15 kill s fr om sen ior hi tte r " ith four l'OJJ&gt;ec:ut i1·e point s. low in the fin al stanza. the
Beth Payne. while Carmen
The score wo ulc.J ge t no last at 21 all. hut RVH S
Waugh led the way v. ith 17 Ll cJ&gt;cr in that opening game. d osed out a J -·1 run Jo wn
points and six ace s to &gt;el·ure "' Ki1:cr Val ley we 111 on an the stre tch when Andrea
the first tri ump h of the year 11-7 run lO fin ish With a 25 - Flilll ,Jammed the winning
at RVH S.
· 15 Llecision . ' ·
poiIll home on. a kill for the
The Sil ve r and Blac:k.
FH S c·onti nued !hal late swee p.
which c urrentl y hold, a 3 1- 1 compe titive ,spirit ·I ll .game
Be.sidcs the 15 ki lls. Pal' ne
record in the OVC ' "1ce t\\o. jumping our to an early ab o had eight serve ,poi ins.
j ot ning bac k 111 2 0 0~ . ~ -.1 edge. but the host coun- three aces and was .\0-uf-.\ 4
improved it' all -t ime home tcrcJ wi th 9-2 spu rt to d aim on spt kc allc mpts. Kristen
record to 15- 1 fnll o" ing the 12-6 adi',Jnlage.
Caner' fol lowed Waugh with
lai es l 1·ict or'y o1w the
The Drago ns pulled to 10 serv ice points . while
"i thin fou r ro im s on fo ur Brooke Taylor join ed Wau~h
Dragon' ! 2-2. 1- 11.
· Th at impressi '.e R\ ' HS Llitlercnt occas ions. the latest wit h six aces .
BY BRYAN WALTERS

www.mydailysenti,-tel.com

Wednesday, September 7, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

1

Lauren Bing and Kari
Mcfann ro unded out the host
scori ng l'ith two and one
'en ice po ints. respec ti ve ly.
Brian na
Da\'ies
led
Fai rland •vit h ni ne poi nh .
whi le Mar ie Stewart fo llnwcd wi th six ser" ice poi nts
in the setback.
RVHS also had a thril le r in
the junior \·arsi-ty con test .
p u l lin ~ ou t a 25 -cc. 17-"5.
15-9 :\'in. Ka1 Ia Sin ith led ·
the Lau y Raid.ers with eigh t ·
poi ms. while ll iana Corfias
fol lowev Smith wi th seven
poi nts.
Fairland ~a l vage d a win in
the fres hma n co111e&gt;t , pulling
o ut a ~5- 1 2, 25 -21 sweep.
Lin sey Stover led Riv er
Vall ey with six ser" ic-e
poi nl&gt;.
RVHS
tr,11·els
to
C hesapeake Tl1l!rsday for
Bryan Walters/photo
anotkr UVC showdown . Rive r Valley's Beth Payne (4) loft s a kill over the net dur ing
Ga me ti me "s lated fnr 5::10 ,Tuesday's Oh io Valley Conference matchup wi th Fai rl and. The
Lady Ra ide rs rema1ned undefeated with a straight game win .
p. Ill'

OV_CS takes two against Lady - Warren
takes
lead
in
SEOAL
.
Rebels, Wellston in tri-match
L esley
R o b er'ts
point ed to

BY BRAD SHERMAN

BSH ERMAN@MYDA!LYTRI BUNE.COM.

'

Husse ll fol low in g with
1.\ poi'nt &gt;.
S a r a h
Burleson finished
with
eight · points
for OVCS .
while Kri sti
Da vis
and
Andrea .
VanMet e r
each had six

Courtney Dumm itt Jed the
8 WALTER S@MYD A.ILYTRI8L '. [ C0\1
Red and Gold on the night
wit h nine points. ' while
Jessica
Cantrell and Chelsea
GA LLIPOLIS
Ohi,,
Canaday followed with seve n
Valley Christ ian imp rmeJ it'
and s ix. respecti vely.
volleybal l r~wrd to ~-1 f&lt;,l ,Jillian Swain and Megan
low ing Tu esday\ rr i -m ~11 l'l1
De lane y, led the offen sive
swee p of Wells ton "nu SL\ ul h
allac k 'at net with sevell kill s
Gallia at O VCS.
apiece. while Niki Fulks conThe . Defe nders tonk down
tri buted six kills in her 5eturn
the Lady Rockets 11 -3' by ,J
Sheets
to the court followin~ an
score of ~5 - 1 3. ~5 - }l in the
an kl e inJury.
·
fi rst contest. then ball led past points.
Ohio Valley Chri stian nexl
lrt the middle comest. WHS plays Friday when it hosts
t he Lady Rebels in the fi nale
for a 25 - 16. 25-n · triumph .
was ahle to rally back against Cross Lanes Christian at 5
Megan Sheet.s Jed the Blue · South Gallia ( 1-4) for its fir&lt;~ p m.. while South Gall ia
and Gold with t4 poim s on win wi th a23-25. 25-20. Is-7 return s home today to host
the evenin g. wi th J uli e triumph .
So uthern at 5:55 p.m.
BY BRYAN WALTERS

VI NCEN T
Warren
&gt;taked claim to sole possession of the Southeastern
Ohio Athle tic League volleyball standings with a victory
over visiting Gallia Academ y
Tuesday.
The Lady Warriors. now 40 in the league. needed four
games to beat the Blue
Angels 25 -11 , 26-28, 25-23.
25- 16.
It was the first loss 9f the
season. and in the SEOAL
fot the Gallia Academ y.
which fell to 4- t .overall and
2-1 again st the league.
Gallia Academy coach

lARRY CRuM

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

in co n siste nt

passin g

.
Close

as

lhe
mam
reaso n for
the
Joss.
so met h ing
th.at
has
hamp e r e d
her
team ,
even wh ile

. winning.
Felici,1 Close &gt;eored nine
points and amassec.J 10 di gs
fur the Gall ians. followed by
Ka y Ia Perry with eight tal lies
and II di gs. Perrv added 10
kilt s and Close seve n.
Alex is 'Geiger had three
blocks. while Katie Taylor

and Heather
Withe e
handed out
nine
and
eight. assists
respectively.
T h e
Angels did
sal vage wins
IL in the junior.
varsity and
Perry
f re sh m~ n
. games. The
JV Angels won 25- 13, 25-21
behind Ashl ey Chapman's
eight point s and fi ve kill s by
Dana Dotson .
In freshman action. Gallia
Ac ademy was' a 25 - 18. 25- 15
v.:inner.
·
Galli a Academy plays host
to Logan Thursday.

POINT PLEASANT. W: Va.
In the early days o( war.
generals typically wore down
their enemy before calling a
charge and taking the field of
battle. Tuesday night, the
Generals did just that.
With Point Pleasant (2-2)
holding a 1-0 edge through
most of the . game, the
Winfield Gener~l s (2 -0)
eventually wore down on the
Black Knights bCfore making
. a strong late charge, eventual· ly taking a 3-1 victory over
the Point boy's soccer team
Tuesday at Sanders Stadium.
Early in the garhe, the ball ·
spent equal amounts time on
each el).d of the field, with
neither squad grabbing the
·early edge . However, as play
· wore on , Point had trouble
working the ball down field
and keeping it on their opponent's end.
Despite some early struggles, the Black Knights did
manage to grab the first ·goal
in the game at the 39:21 mark
when Kenny Durham pounded a kick into _the net to give
the home team an early lead .
Pr 'nt would hold that lead
at the half and into the early
stages of the second period of
play before Winfield tied it up
~

at the 50:42 mark on a goal
from Ar'ron Dredrich. assisted
by Rajan Patel.
The two· teams played at a
deadlock for the next 14 minutes, with Point managing to
move the ball more into the
General's end of the field . .
Althoul\h the game bal anced back out, Winfield did
manage to drive into Point
territory and take another
goal at 64:16 when Travi s
Bonham scored a goal on an
assist from Wes Hager.
As time wound down in the
game, the Bl ack · Kni ght
offense stepped up and
increased
pressure
on
Winfield goalkeeper Chri s
Burton , keeping the ball on
the General's end of the field.
' Poilu's big chance to tic the
game came with I :31 left to
play when a powerful kiok
went just high of the net, as
Winfield let 'out a sigh of
relief notlo give up the tying
goal.
'
While the Black Kni ghts
crowded the Winfield end .
the General s did manage to
make a fast break late in the
game where Trey Smith made
a diving header into the net
off of a shot from the ri ght
'corner of the fi eld from Hager
at t.hc 79:23 mark . giving
Winfield the 3-1 lead.
'The goal wa s the third
given up in the game by

The Dq.ily Sr;&gt;nt:inel • Page B3

Softball tourney winners
SYRACUSE ~

Pictured below an; the top three teams al
the recent Syracuse .Youth League Softball Tournament.
Directors of the tournament were Eber Pickens and Sa mu~ l
Robinso.n.

1st Place -

Dunfee Construction

Larry Crum/photo

Point Pleasant' s Marco Schreiber goes for the ball agai nst a·
Winfield player Tuesday night at Sanders Stadium.
Ju stin Sayre. who faced 20
shots on goal anu managed
10 saves. Winfield 's Bu rton
far.:ed 7 shots and managed
three saves while onl y giv ing
up one:goal.
Poim Pleasant wil l return to

·i
•

·play 7 p.m. S"turday whe re
they will hnst their riva l
aero" the rive r, · the Galli a
Academy 131ue Devil s. while
Ripley returns homl' for a
Thur ~ da y
match
with
Sissonville.

BEST DEFENSIVE PLAYER
2nd Place -

Big Run Graphics

Rio volleyball wins one in New York
BY MARK WiLLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTI\IEL

out 39 assists and tallied 15 leu the way with six kill s. but
dtgs.
bo th al so had six errors .
·· w e had · a good comeback

aft er starling .slow," said Ri o
ROCH ESTER. N.Y ~ Th~
Universit y of Ri o Grande vol- Grande head coach Patsy
leyball squad we m 1-J for the fields after the first match tri second COJhccuti1·e wee kend. um ph.
Rio then dashed with l'el The Redwo me n won the fi rs t
Mi deast
match of the weekend agaiJhl low Ameri c: an
Cnnfcrcnce
South
Di
vision
Houghton and closed out the
Moum
Vernon
Na
za
rene.
lue
tournament with a toug h five game lo" to Daeme11. In The undefe ated Lad)' Cougars
between they ·lost to a pair of pic ked up the win in four
solid teams in Mount Vernnn g"mes. 311- 17.. 30-15. 27-30
Nazarene and Montana Stale- and 16-30.
Urton steppec.J up with a
Northern .
grcat
indi,·iuual performance.
Ri o Grande 1"·6) rcdl ieLI in
the fi r' ! m&lt;Jich 'asu' tall ying 1'9 ki lls. 20 digs . two
Houghton to coiled the win . blocks. one sol o block and
15-for-15
se rvin g.
Houghton (2 -51 capt ured the was
lirst 2ame. 30- 17. and then Kies lin g added 12 kill s and
promptly droppl'l.l th e nc.\1 · Rodgers added sel'en kill s. 16
three to the Rec.J women. 27- d i ~s and two serve aces.
Veacr handed out 40 assists
30. 17-30 and 23-30.
Smith had 17 di gs.
·
and
Senior
outsiuc
hill er
MV
NU
(
13-0
1
was
led
by
Lynnette Kiesl in g c.Jeli vereu
fUf the Red)Vo men in a big Sl,te na Beheler with 15 kills
way with 17 kill&gt;. one block and nine blocks and Amanda
and iwo block assis'ts. Junior Stevens with 13 kills and 14
Seller · Alli son'
nut&gt; ide hi-ller Lind&gt;ay Urton digs.
continuctl her uut ~ tam.lin g Kl m m ~ nn distributed 46
play. posting l.l ki lb and 1.\ ;Mists.
" We didn 't giw up. but it
di g,. Freshman middle/o utside hi ller Jc" ic:a Rougc r&gt; wasn' t enough." Fields said.
On
Saturd ay.
th e
registered 12 kill s. 2-+ di g'.
Redwo
men
npe1
1eLl
wi
th
a
one bl oc k and fou r bl oc:k
l o ~~
to r-.1 ontana Sta.tea~sis t s .
Defensively. 'oph omurc Nort he rn in three · ~a m es. IKlibero Jodt Sm ith coJ.Jectcd a. 30. 17-.10 and .22- 3().
tca m - h i~ h . 30 d i ~s .
Ju nior
Rio j u ~t coul d not ge t g'oing
Sene r i e'Sjra Vc:1ch di, hcc.J a.- Urti&gt;n anu Rodgers hnih

Urton did manage 14 digs on

,,

the defe nsive . end while
Rodger' posted nine.
Smi th led the Jefense wi th
16 digs and fre shnwn
Amanda
Ste ven s
1Bcllcfomaine, OH ) collected
10 d igs.
· ·
.. Ri o got ·the jump on ,
Daemen in the fi nal game.
wi nning the first two games
of the match. 30-26 and 3024. Daemen (2-6) responded
with three straight wins. 3028. 30-26 and 15- 12. to steal
the
match · fro m
the
Redwomen.
'Thi s mat ch was just like
last year, we could not linish
it.'' Fields said.
Rodge rs was the top oiTensive player for . Ri o Grande
with 16 kill s. Roduers also
produ ced 12 di gs. !wo solo
blocks and four block ass i st~.
Urton and Ki esl in ~ added 12
kill s each and Urt on also·
not ched 12 di gs.
S mith led the way de fensive lv with 2 1 Ll i ~s v. hile
Stevens and Veach totaled 15
C&lt;Jch. Veach al so J i, hcu nul
40 a&gt;Sists.
Rougers was nmncd to the
all -t'ourna mcnt !cam .
Rio Grande wi ll travel . to
Lchanon. TN this wecke nc.J to
l'OillJ)ek in tht' Cumberl and
Liniwr\ i t ~ Vn lle)b,ill Clas,ic.

Brad Sherman/phOto

Eastern 's Chris Davis, lett , looks to get past Pike Eastern's
John Slone during Tuesday's Gallipolis Invitational at the
University of Rio Grande.

Mel.gS

frQm Page Bl

SPECIAL TO THE SENTir-..EL

'

RI O GRAN DE - Week
three of the volleyball season
sees the Uni versi ty o f Ri o
Grande \'olleyball team head
to the Vol unteer State to play
four l'ery solid tea ms in the
Uni ve rsity
Cumberl and
Vo lle yball
Classic
in
Lebano'n. TN this weekend.
Rio Grande (2-6) has posted
back-to-hack
1-3 mmch
record' in the first two weeks
of the sea,on .
Ju nior Lindsay Urton ar.d
freshman Jessica Rodgers
. have been the big hitters for
Redwomcn.
Senior
the
Lynnene Kiesling deliverec.J
some solid performa nces last
wee k at the Roberts Wesleyan
In vi tationa l
and
the
Redwomen are hoping. lh'l'·
the trio can click on all cyl in-

dcrs thi s weeke nd.
Urton is the team leade r in
kilb wi th 95 throug h the tirst
eight matche s. Rodgers is
maki ng he r prese nce fe lt as a
freshman &lt;is she made the alltournament team last week.
Juni or Jess ica Vear.:h' has
been very ' good at the 'ener
pos ition and sophomore Jodi
Smit h has been all over the
court allhe li bcro s'pot. Vea.ch
at present is averaging o1·er
eight assists pe r game and
Smith is averaging 5.5 dig s
per conte&gt;1.
.
Th e Redwomen al\o are
beg inning to see the emergence of fre .,h man -Amanda
Stevens. who i' comin g otl an
ouhtandin g week . Stcl·cn;"
ven~arililv
her biuue-.t
."
,.. . . a~"'et.
.
Ri{&gt; 11 ill fa ~ c the ho\1
'ch ool.
Cumber l;uld
l 'nii'Cfsi tl.' on FridJI afte rnmm at 5 p.trr. · Cwnt&gt;crlanu

r. .

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wa:-. 2-2 through

fi r:-.1 four
maiches of the se;,son . The
Lady Bulldogs are Jed by
senior hiller Debbie Perry and
'o phomore Iibera Rac hel
Vande rburg .
The Redwomen wi ll pl ay
Union Cniversitv (Tenn .) in
the nig htcap on Friday. Game
time is set for 7 p.m. Un ion's
first game is not unt il Tue,day
night. The Lady ll ul ldog'
recei ved , 2 1 I'Otes in the
NA JA Pre-season Top 25 rating.
·
Ori
Saturday.
the
Red women will open with the
C nil' ~ r s it )
of
th e
Cumb e r l a nd~
(former ly
kn o wn
as
Cumberland
Co ll ege) at \J a. m. . The
Patriot' bcQan the 'caso n with
an impres,ile .J-1 record.
The final ma tch for the
Rcd11 omen 11 ill come again'!
C~rn p be ll- 1 ill c ! KY J . at I
p ill'
i t\ '

l

r·-..:---..-··-··-.. - . -.. -.. --.. _. _. _,_. ._. _. __.. .--.. -.. -.. -.. -.. ,.
Reach a·CoUnties . ..l

in the team standings followed by South Webster (92).
River Valley (I 05), Eastem
Pike tl76), Fairland ( 198).
Hill sboro (2 10) , Vinton
County
'(240). · Gall ia
Academv (263). Alexander
(266) mid Huntington Ross
( 268 ).
Chri s Lester was ninth
( 17: 57) 10 pace River Vall c; y,
followed
by
Vince

in 16th (23: 04 ), and Andrea
Wiseman in 19th ( 24 :20) .
Meigs freshman Kimi
Swisher was lOth, while her
classmate Jessica Holliday
was 22nd (24:52). Ashley
Samar · was 24th (24 :54).
Ashley Savage 32nd (25 :36) Weatherstein in 24th ( 19:02),
and Cecilia Core 54 th Kyle Hively in 26th ( I9:09 )
and Jon Casto in 27 th
(28:24) to round out the Lady ( 19 : 16 ). Danie 1 Hi 11 was the
. . Marauders' 92 points.
. Logan owned the tiebreak- Raide ~· fifth place runner in
: er edge because Meigs did 41 st place 120 : IO).
. Chris Canaday was the top
not have a sixth runner.
Gallia Academy boy in 37th
Ashley Fitch was the top position ( 20: 0~ ): Shan e
River Yalley finisffher i11 I8th . Plantz was 57th (21 :09).
place (24:1 2). Tt any 0 tier Tyler Counts 85th (22:5-+).
. was 28th (25 :00), Elame Timmy
Huffman
87 th
:Householder 35th . (25:48) · (23 :00) and Dallas Craft 97th.
:and Samantha L:rson 41st ( 23:50).
1
' (26 .. 6).
.
.
Other local girl fini shers
Other local gtrl fimshers ·
.
.
.
th
r
·
alt
not
mcluded
m
the
hnal
team
.
d
d
.
no t me1u e 111 ee 111 Gaelalm scores
inclu ded
River ·
score s
wer
•
ta
.
.
•
Academy'. Brittyn Saunders Valley s Matt Ntbert (:&gt;4th.
. (55th 28-30) Hannah Roush 20:48)~ Ryan Clary (8 1st.
:(64 th' ·29 0 )
Danielle 22 :33) and Tyler Young
"4!) · (109th , 26:32). as well as
·s d ,
(67 th
an. ers .
• 30 ·. • Gallia Academy's Greg
Jesstca Willet (.76th , 32.18) Baker ( IOist, 24:46 ). ·
All lh
M ·
c
and Andrea Mendieta (78th,
,
ree
e1gs oun 1y
· 33:51 ).
Eastern and Southern did schools were repr.esented. but
. not field full team s. Beth none ~Jelde d full .'ean,l s. ,
·Hysell was 45th for the Lady Eastern s Chn s Da vts lm ;
Eagle s and Emma Hunter tsh~d 19th ( 18:4!!). ~l e1 gs
and Rashen· Boso placed 56th Adam Pmes.wa~ 77th (_2.07)
(28:31 ) and 68th (30:54) and Kyle Goode pa c~d the
respecti vel y for .the Lady Southern runners 111 86th
Tornadoes.
&lt;22 :56).
Cabell Midland 's boyS:
The Torna_d oes l ~ck ed JU St
who have won four oft he last o ne runner of sconng; Chm
fi v'c Class AAA state titles, Burkhame(
wa s
Ill ill
were more comfortable win- (26:56). aradle.y Bro wn
ners -. scoring 31 points t,o I 14th 127: 11 ) and? Robem
se "ond ·placc Wheelersburg s Weston was I 18th (-8.361.
79~
&amp;~ste rn's Aaron M aJ1ind3 1 ~
The Knights had four run- took 79th . (22:20 ), M e1gs
ners in .the top I0; Josh Andrew 0 Bryant was 94th
Holley won in a time of (23:45 and. Morgan Kennedy
17:00.3. just two tenth s of a I 24th (30:41 ).
seco nd ahead of Josh
Cabell Mtdland also won
Linkous of South Webster. both ju!'ior high races. Gall ia
David Bias of CM was third Academy was second on the
( 17:26)
whi le gi rls side .and sixth on th~
Wheel ersburo's
Jacoh boys.
Ru ggles· took" fourth ( 17:39)
Up nex t for mos! area runand Adam Armstron g of West ners JS Saturday s Athens
Union was fi fth ( 17 :44).
In vitational. which is held on
West Union (92) was third Ohio University's coursr .

3rd Place -

The Outlaws of Reedsville ·

•

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Place Your Paid Classified Ad In"Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or I
I.
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE·In
I
The Tri-County Marketp!ace!
••

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:3

Redwomen to compete.in Tennessee
BY MARK WiLLIAMS

Submitted photo

Ethan Martin of the Syracuse Braves won the Be st
Defen s ive Player Award during the 26th ann ual Bill
Hubbard Memorial Tourname nt.

.

Jan McNemar/photo

Unive rs ity of Rio Grande fres hman sa,ccer player Jill McQuin iff, lett . goes one on one in practice with Jessica Bo'ltz Frid ay at URG . prepari ng for t he Rio women's soccer team 's first game
against Urbana College Satu rday at Urbana. The team faces Shawnee State University today
1n 1ts home opener. .
.

Re~women
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTI,..,El

t.:R BANA - All in all it
was , good show ing the
fir st time out for . the
Universi ty of Rio Grande
)\'omen 's ' occer program .
The Redwomen pl ayed their
fi r'ot e\'er l'arsity ga me on
the road at Lrbana on
Sa turday aft emoun and ke pt
the cont e\1 co mpeti ti1·e losing by the 'core of 2-0.
'f re, hm an Abiga il 'lelso n
\Co rec.J bo th go ah for

a

soccer dr9ps opener

Urbana.
The Lady Knights (3- 1, 10 AMCS) had 21 shots to
·only one fo r the 'Red wo men
(0-1 , 0- 1 AMCS).
Nel son put away two
goal s on assists from Sarah
Shope
an d
Darby
McCul lough .
· Rio face d a tough c ~ allcngc as t.:rbaria goalkeeper
Lil Ma rkl ey · ha o, playe d
re markab le th is season .
allowing only one goal in
the fi rst four gam es. ·
Ri o will 'u it up for the
j

------- -

fi rst time ever at home on
Wedn esday
when
the
Redwome n will entertain
Sllawnee State.
Both teams will looking
for their first win of the season and in Rio's case, the
fi rst win in the hi story of
the program. Kick-off is set
for 5 p.m.
· Shawnee State e nters the
ga me at 0-2 having lost to
,Grace Col lege on Sat~rday.
2-G and the ·Lady Bears
dJ'opped a 1-0 decisKm 10
Andcrson·on Suntlay.
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~allipohsl\ailp trtbun~
\

The Daily Sentinel

1~olnt ~lrasant l\rgistrr

L_. ._.~~~.~;.~~·-···-·. -·. -·.\~!.~;.~?...-:.... _,_......:.!.~.l..6J2.:.1ll~.- . _ . .

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Page 84 • The Dally Sentmel

Wednesday, September 7, 2005

www.mydailysenttnel.com

~rtbune

Wednesday, September 7, 2005

The Da1ly Senhllel • Page 85

www mydallysentlnel com

- Sentinel -

CLASSIFIED
L,Fi«&gt;_oi ~i oi iCKi o~iii;i('Mi iNi~
iliiiJUSiio.J .,L__F_u_K_S_AL_t-..I~

Wi\Nim

m Rmr
Atttnttonl
l oca company offer ng "NO
DOWN PAYMEN T
p•o
grams lor you Ia buy your
t'l ome instead of enting
~ 100% Nnanc ng
less than perfect c ed 1
accepted
Payment could be the
ume as rent
Mo tgage
Locators

Ga l l.o County OH

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

Or

Offree 11o~~

Word Ads
Dally In-Column

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

'-----.r

r

PERSONAl s

Save
a colo s
..
var
ous
SWM M dd e aged Non (740)446 2700
Smoke D ug A coho Free
Seek ng SWF 40 50 hones
car ng Pet te w same
Mo a s
Smoker Ok no
Head Games Send Photo Wh te sho th a ed tamale
Phone Numbe to OJ Rt2
Bo~ 940 Po n P easant WV ca 2 yrs o d spayed shots
nsde only ony ca
n
househo d 740)446 2700

A NNOUNCFhiL1\lS

r
~

'f~~o

r

Publlc:atlon

Sunday In Col~o~mn 1 00 p m
For Sundays Paper

Sunday Display 1 00 p m
Thursday for Sundays

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

SALE
TIME

';;::======~

I!

YARD SALE

GAUJPOUS

..;iiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiii;.,..l

.....

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4
s For Sal•-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::725
Announcement
030
Antiques
530
Apartments for Rent
440
Auctoon and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accesoor~es
760
Auto Repair
770
Autos for Sale
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Bu1ld1ng Supplies
550
Busoness and Bulldongs
340
Bus1ness Opportunity
2t 0
Business Traimng
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Campong Equopmenl
780
Cards of Thanks
OtO
Child/Elderly Care
190
ElectrocaVRefr~geratoon
840
Equopment for Rent
480
Excavatong
830
Farm Equipment
6t0
Farms for Rent
430
Farms for Sale
330
For Lease
490
For Sale
585
For Sale or Trade
590
Fruots &amp; Vegetables
580
Furnoshed Rooms
450
General Hauling
850
Giveaway
040
Happy Ads
050
Hay &amp; Grain
640
Help Wanted
110
Home Improvements
81 D
Homes for Sala
310
Household Goods
510
Houses for Rent
41 D
In Memoriam
020
Insurance
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
660
Livestock
630
Lost and Found
060
Lots &amp; Acreage
350
Mlscellaneoua
170
Miscellaneous Merchandise
540
Mobile Home Repair
860
Mobile Homes for Rent
420
Mobile Homes for Sale
320
Money to Loan
220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
740
Muslcallnstrumento
570
Personals
005
Pets for Sale
560
Plumbong &amp; Heating
820
Professional Services
230
Radio TV &amp; CB Repair
160
Real Estate Wanted
360
Schools Instruction
150
Seed Plant &amp; Fertilizer
650
Situations Wanted
120
Space for Rent
460
Sportong Goods
520
SUV s for Sale
720
Trucks for Sale
715
Upholstery
870
Vans For Sale
730
Wanted to Buy
090
Wanted to Buy Farm Supplies
620
Wanted To Do
180
Wanted to Rent
470
Yard Sale Gallipolis
072
Yard Sale Pomeroy/Middle
074
Yard Sale PI Pleas,nt
076

www

LPN needed
lu time
Monday Fnday day sh ft no
wee kends
no hoi days
Appy at 936 St At 160
Gal po s (740)446 9620

F &amp; Sat Sept 9 &amp; 10
Mu 1 tam y yard sa e 554

I

Thurs Sept 811'1 9 OOAM to
Washe D ye r
4 OOPM
Hulcll Ant que D esse
Wooden TV T ays Cha rs
La ge
Va nety
Sale l ttle Boys C ollles tots of
Ew ngton Chu ch oil SA M1sc Teafo ds Tyree Blvd
160 look 1o s gns Fr day Aac ne
and Saturday 9am ?

Mov ng Too s ant ques fur
n tu e I nens for sale Many

clean useful lovely terns
AI 7S at Crown C1ty s gn
Sept 9th 1Oth

Vard sale Satu day Sept
Mu t lamly yard sale Sept 101 h New Haven WVa
7th &amp;8th Toddler g s een Haven
Hts
Ant que
boys womens clothes toys Fu n lu 9
Slone
Ja s
housewa es old trun~ too Churns p ows Hund eds
much to 1st 1t1 58 Rt 141 ofToosandmuchmoe 5
(Gage)
N ce Guns
~;;r.;;;~--=--.....,
Yard Sale Sepl 9th &amp; 10th
YARD SM.£
9am 4pm
some b and
Pt P'I..£AS~'Vf
names 4371 Cherry A dge

- --------------Ad

Yard'Garage Sale 1 2 m le

r

Yard Sate Sept 8th 8 m tes
out Crab Creek turn r ght on

oft Route 160 on Bu av e Go don C eek 3 a Place
Sept 8th 1Oth

P ke

Da m

7 Everyth ng 20%of1

4

YARD Si\1 F.
l'oii1EHOY/MIDDU

4 Fam1ly sa e Sept a &amp; 9 5
m les out 325 Danv le
Furn tu e TV Baby terns &amp;
C oth ng at s zes

5 fam ly Sept 8th &amp; 9th
341
Rutland
Street
Cheap pr1ces
Midd aport
someth ng lo everyone
AanoSh ne
Thu sday
September a
Lee res
dance Ty ee Blvd Rae ne
NICe Wmte Cloth ng &amp; Lots
of M see aneous
Huge yard sa e to benet I
H lis de BaptiSt Bus M n stry
Clothes ght p1ctu res muz
z e loader craft suppl es
computers w ndows 98 6
pent1m Ill stackable cha rs
from sc:hoo and Pood e
Puj:lp es Bake Sate Thu &amp;
Fr w th tree coffee ots
moe ns de and out 100 s
of terns lOCated oH ot 33
lou ane on Co Ad 19
Mahr and Sm th yard sa e
965 Ash Street Middlepo t
Sept 9 h Sept 10th?
Longabe ge Home nler or
c othes L ttle Tyke and
mo e c:loth ng for g1rls and
boys
S&amp;pt Bth &amp;9th 23 Fam ty
37187 Vance Road s gnss
w1U be posted en erta n
ment cente typewr ter teen
g Is name brand w nte
lems tools &amp; m sc 7il0

992 6833
September 9 and 10 at
35961 Rocksp ngs Ad
Pomeroy
TV Bath Tub
S nk Household Items and

Mme

ext 2454
lnfoc:lslon com

Furn 1u e d shes c:lothes
batly tams and ots o m s

'( 7

@

110

110
HU.I' WANilill

AMERICA S NUMBER ONE
HOME BUILDER s seek1ng
a caree m nded organ zed
and energet c person to se
h gh t cket products and
se v ces Pe seve ance and
st ong work eth c are ou
keys to mak ng $75K or
mo e n the I rstlu I year Ful
benet ts nclud.ng rna ch ng
401 K
Fax
co nfident a
esume to Sa es Pos l1 on a

.1

~

2005 by NEA Inc

H~u WANI'EIJ

Cook Needed

6 Hours pe day Monday
F day day Sh ft On y no
even ngs or weekends Pa1d
benet Is nd ude vaca on
sck
&amp;
llo day
pay
Exper ence he pfu o we w II
ta n you Ap py npeson to
Ruth A1ce a ca ll (304 )675
2369 Mason County Act on
Group
Inc
(Pt Pleasant
(740)446 3599
Sen or Center) 101 2nd
An es tabl shed bus ness n St eel Pt Peasant WV
Ga po s s look ng lo one EOE MIF AIA
h ghly mot vated sa espe
Drivers Needed
son w th a strong wo k eth c: COL Drve s wll ng to d ve
to JOn ou company Are you
fo local ready m x cone eta
took ng to tu ll me wok?
company Exper ence s
A e you look ng lo a perma p eler ed bu not necessary
nent tu I t me pos !tOn? Are
Dr ver must be w II ng to do
you nteresled nun m ted
p e rna n enance on trucks
ea n ngs potent a?
All
&amp; equ pment ya d wo k &amp;
epl es w 11 be kept n st c:t
other m see aneous chores
coni dance
Send your E~tper ence ope at ng equ p
resume to CL.A Box 569 do ment &amp; ext a sk Is such as

An E~tce lent way to ea n
money The New Avo n
Call Mar lyn 304 882 2645

Medea
lndependen
med cally
1 a ned pe sonnet needed to
c:omp ete nsu ance exams
1n Mason County WV and
Gall a aM Me gs Count es n
Oh o Must be phlebO tomy
cart fed and have re abe
I ansportat1on
Fl eK bl e
hou s Fax resume to 866
366 1037 or e ma1 r es ~Jm e
a I sa cu nn ngham @exam
one com
M dd eton Estates a ead ng
p ov de of support serv~ces
to nd v duals w Ill menta
eta dat1on and develop
menta d1sabil t es s ook ng
lo 2 F ~J I Tme Home
Supe v sors
An Equal
Opportun ty
Emp oye
F/MJON
App lications w II
be aken Monday through
Fr1day
ooam 4 oopm at
the lac ty 8204 Carla Or vf!
No phone calls please

Rockspr ng s Rehab I tat on
Center s took ng o ded cat
ed compass on ate State
Tested Nu s ng Ass stants
Compel I ve wages health
and denta ben et ts and
40 t K ava lab e
We take
p de n our ac lly and res
dents and need g eat team
p aye s to o n us
t you
have these qua f oat ons
pease
apply
to
Aockspr ngs Rehab I tat1on
Cenler 36759 Rockspr ngs
Road
Pom e oy
Ohio
45769 Extend ca e Health
Serv ces Inc s an equal
opporl un ty emp oyer that
wo kplace
encau ages
d verSIIy M F ON
The Me gs County Board of
Men tal Rata dat on and
Developmental 0 sab 11 es
seeks a Heallh Serv ces
Coord nato to work three
days a week with students
and adu ts w th dave opmen
a d sab I ties mplement ng
a comp ehens1ve health and
de egated nu s ng p ogram
Must be a reg sterad nurse
cu ran y cen sed rn th e
Stale of Oh o
Prefe red
qua f c:at1ons exper ence n
publ c health nurs ng expe
1ence wo k ng w th children
and adults w11h dave opmen
ta d sab I I es Send re sume
by September 16 2005 to
MCBMRDD 1310 Ca leton
Street
PO
Box 307
Syracuse Oh o 45779

Interested

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today 740 446 4367
, 8Q0-214-Q452
wwwg11 !poi aca eercoUege com

Ace ad ad U&amp;mbe Ace ad ng
COunc~ lOr r.dependen CollegM
lind Schools 2748

Modern 1 bedroom apt

(740)446 0390

H.OUS
~~EHOLD~~ .J

Foree osu e 7B A 5BA only

II\\\( I\!

Estab shed Bus ness lo
sale by Owner Debb e s
Flowers N More 1722 2nd
Street Meson VN across
from City Nat1ona Bank
S ncere buye rs only Contact
(304)77i 5503 before 5pm

(740)245-9294

STATE ROUTE 554 BID
No down payment appx WELL New 4 bedroom 2
2000 sq f1 cia &amp; heat 3 4 bath manulacl u ed hOme
bedrooms n Pome oy 740 Featu es v ng room lam y
oom w lt1 hr ep ace and
949 7004
BO NU S room Co ne o
Above g ound poo w th poo
houso Ready for move n
sun po ch o s t1 ng oom PRICED
UN QER
k tchen v ng oom ut ty APP AA SAL I
(740 446
roam garage workshop 3 32 8
sto age bu ld ngs Ask ng
$95 500 (740)446 12 11 or
THEISS ROAD VINTON
{740)200 711 7
Brand new 3 bed oom 2
bath manufactured home
·----'-"' ,~- '~
Compte ely set and ready
d l:
I...., - . •
o move n Features v ng
oom
am y oom and
'
beau t fu sky t k tyllen
DRAST CALLY RE DUCED
Rt 2 N 3b
Ca 740)446 3570
Basement a B ck 1
Garage
Used 3b
3 b 2 b a S ngleCa
must be
Ga age Camp Conley A ea

:: -

-

.

aft.. 5 call (304)882 3279
puce Negot abe
- --------------Fo Sa a/lease
Beauty
Sa on/Merle Norman Stud o
downtown Ga !pols Prce
Dras tically
Reducad

I
l
I

{304)895 31 29

H 0 VALLEY PUBL SH

r

7783

HOP CLASSIFIED$
FOR BARGAINS

•NOTICE•
ou do bu s ness wth pea
le you kn ow and NOT t
nd money through th
a I until you have nve~t
ated tile offer n

Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

We 11 0111d I ie to sm thank \au for rhe £arr!J
11srn jlo11 w afldfood 1h~t 11 I! prepared 11ul
sellf Ia eac hof rs d mflg rloe r11 e oj Mon11
death A \feco Irlwnh tr 11 to 01 erhr" b
11111 &lt;e afld uds Ctrhenefl H sell Dr
Mm1{ield Old Squad 2l Raeme Heck\
Duddm ~ Man Foo /a-Ph II s Baier Chuck
flllm \lick Cmdijj; Ctemee fls Fw emf Home
Goldo mg Motmncle Fnends M1ddleparr
Flo er Sl up w1d Gan afld )oA "' \\olfc rl
Mosr if all rhw1k \o 1for rl e rlw rglus wod
pra m tluouglwut rhos difficulr nme
51 t II be sudfl mmed h ourfw aft
Tloe Benuce Rm11h I amoil
Ranne OH

r~~
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Un ess We W1nl

Hl88 582 3345
It' I \I I .., I \I I

L.oo....oioiliiioiiiiiiiiio..,..l

T1vo FRE E 145 c:hanne s 11 2 Pl easant Street 3
1 1 2 Baths
only $39 00 per month Ask Bed oom
how to get FREE HBO Fam y Room D n ng Room
MAX and home enterta1n Full Basem ent Storage
ment system Ca 80D-523 9'dg Garage New Central
Air Cond New Wmdows
7556 to r data s

(304)675-4034

To Do

140 1
Cedar
St
Meadowbrook
Add
3
Art of Color ntenor/extenor Bedroom 1 t /2 Bath Corner
ot new Roof move n con
house pa nt ng Free es t
d I on new Carpet and
mates Ca I (740)388 9950
F oortng Storage Bu1d ng
n Baclc Yard
Comput e
Repa
anQ Fenced
{304)n3
5254
{304)593
Troubleshoot Web Des gn
4135
Netwo k ng Progra.mm ng
Bu ld New Systems Restore 3BR 2 Bath home 2 lg out
W ndows V us Removal bu dings on 2 acres Cal
Phonel740 992 7903 after 6 OOpm (7 40)44 6
http www geoc: ties comlho 9759
ldamn32934 Email hal
damn32934 Oyahoo c:om
4 Sae 9 Am Home on 1
acre w/garage nea AKZO
Fat s Near Let us he p you $95 {)()() {3041675 5026
DHK
Cleanmg
&amp;
4y s old 3br 2ba w lh fire
Powerwash ng We clean
pace on 1 5 acres n c:oun
e up &amp; Ge A Done Ca
Uy $1l9 900 1740)709 11 66
740 985 3639 / 985
363317 40 4, 6 , 823
Newly remodeled 3 or 4

o•

bedrooms centra a r lull
Pant ng basement hllrdwood floors
and
Powe
Wash ng detached garage large cov
Reasonable rales refer ered pauo fenced back
ences e~tpe anced Free yard c ose to schoo s Pont
est mates Ca (740)742 Pleasant
$69 500
2013 0 740)645 2638
(740)709 1382

I

good
cond t on $3 200 (304)675

Auction

3BR 1 5BA 2s o y emod
elad house Exce en t oca
ton n town C ose 10
schoo s No pes (740) 446

62
Attent ion!
Loca company olfe ng NO
DOWN PAYMENT p o
g ams Ia you o buy you
home nsl ead of enl ng
100% f nanc n~
Less han perfect c edt
ac:cepted
Paymen t cou c1 be the
same as ent
Mo tgage
l oca ors
(740)367 0000

WAGNER WARE BACONIEGG SKI LLET GR DOLE
CH CKEN FRYER RON POT oK LLETS
\ TEAKETTLE
PINK OPEN LACE COOKIE JAR PINK OPEN LACE
ROUND BOWL IR DESCEN T NOR MANDIE PINK
MAYFAIR SHERBERT AND VEGETABLE BOWL
WEXFORD PITCHtA &amp; GLASSES SHERBERTS &amp;
FOOTED GOBLETS OCCUPIED JAPAN FEN TON
VA NITY LAMPS WATI APPLE BOWLS HOMER
LAUGHL N VA ROSE PLATIER &amp; GRAVY BOAT
HAALEOU N CH NA RIVE RIA CHINA SMALL '
COOKE JARS
•1~ BLUE BALL CANNING JAR SAD RONS NECK

YOLK LG ROU ND CHEESE BOX COAL BUCKET &amp;
SHOVEL APPLE BUTIEA STIRRER AUG BEATER
KRAUT CUTIER WASHBOARDS POP CRATES
RED HANDLE RICER STONE JARS BOB EVANS
LARD CAN EVANS GROCERY COFFEE CAN
OYSTER CANS IGAL SZ I LARGE GLASS P CKLE
JAR CUTIE A QUILTS OIL LAMPS MILK BOTILES
GRANITEWARE OLD MAGAZ NES JEWELRY S&amp;P
SETS CHILORENS PLAY 0 SHES WOOD BLOCKS
OLDER COM C BOOKS COOK BOOK MORE NOT
LSTED

AUCTIONEER LESLIE A LEMLEY
740-388-8115
NOT RESPONSI8LE FO~ ACC

,

NTS OR OST PROPER

V

II'

10

Automo ve C ass c Ca
Res o at on &amp; Pa ts Inc
29670
Bashan
Road
Rae ne Oh o 4577 1 Phone
740 949 2217
Webs e
www h s es1o com
1991 BUICk Skyhawk 4d
4cy auto a t t 97k new
es b akes
$1 050
(740)446 4999 0 (740)446
6352
•

each

r

VMS
FoR S&lt;ILE

1994 Chevy Lum na van 7
seale
uns good looks
QOOd As~ ng $1 100 080
740)44 0488
1995 N ssan Quest Van
$2 500 080 (304 )576 2934
1997
P ymouth Grand
Voyager Wh te 2 s drs
good cond
uns good
$3 500 080 Co (740)441
07 12
1998 Dodge G and Caravan
ES Wh te Tan eathe quad
sea s ea AIC New 1res
oaded
$6100
OBO
{740)441 0 135
1999

Chevrole

m es g ea cond t on one
owne $8 500 (740)367
7435 (740)339 3955
---~:_:.:..:.:::...:.:..:..::____
50 020 m es all Power
Loaded new T es Quad
Seas Sunrool CD H 1ch
ema

n ng

Wa ran ty n ce

$12 900 OBO

304 675

5253
89 Fo d Van 300 6cy A/C
good COf'ld 1 on good t es
Ask ng $2600
(740)245

9353

- - ' - - - - ' - - 40
MOTORC'o'L1L'il
1996 Chevy Be etta V6
4 WHEH.I'IIS
Buy or sell
R ve ne Two l ttets Beagle Pups automal c AIC uns ooks
Ant ques t 124 Eas Man some eg ste ed san e not good good gas m leage
990 Honda 250 XR D rl
on S A 124 E Pome oy 740 some Lemon&amp;Wh e Good $2 200 080 (740)441
B ke
Alt o g nal
Runs
Russ Moo e Hunt ng B ood ne (304)675 0914
992 2526
g eat Ask ng $950 00 740
owner
35 08
416 54 10
MISCFJlANHJUS
:--~FH::--m-'&gt;~&amp;:--, power sea s powers w n
dows powe daa ocks
MEROL\NOISF

C ean 2 bed oom apt stove
2 bed oom mob le home n etr d wa e t ash nc uded
Po ter Wale t ash sewe Renl $300 deposit requ ed
pa d no pets
$450 rent (740 )446 7620 (740)44 1
$450 depos 1
(740)388 9872
9325m

VFJ:,f I MIU:S

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
Townhouse
apa tmen s
and or small houses FOR
RENT Call (740)441 111 1
fo app ~eat on &amp; ntormat on

$ 1 850 740 446 11 04

Full Bed head boa ds $35
Tr m
mowe $40
MT D Home G awn To natoes
Sh ed It $75 Sears Ch ppe Fe d Run $8 pe bucke o
you p ck $5 per buckel
Vac $75 (740)446 7541

l 998 0 ds 88 oaded good
gas
m eage
$3300
740 682 75 2 (ewn ngs &amp;
weak ends}

(740)379 9110

uns g eat no trade
300 (7401992 56 17

good

s
Y our Right to KnoV\'

SHERIFF SALES
CASE
NUMBER
05CV043
Farmer s
Bank
&amp;Savings Co Platnllff

Defendants
Caun of Common

CEDAR CHEST VANI TY BENGH OAK 5 DRAWER
H GHBOY CHEST OAK PARLOR TABLE 2
UPHOLST ERED SEAT ROCKERS ROS EBACK
ROCKER AOSEBACK ST RA GHT CHAIR 2
CHILDRENS METAL!WOOD SCHOOL CHAIRS
STORAGE TOP FOOT STOOL MISC STR AIGH T
CHA RS PAIR OAK KITCHEN CH AIRS

11)1

\I\\.\_ (I \IIIli \

Hl65 Mu stang Fastback
Rangoon Red e~te o back
nter o 6 eye e 3 speed a
ado good
cand t an ng
d ver
Rust ee AZ ca
P ce $ 9 000 00
H s

RENr

vs
Carol A D Hubbard Et
at

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES AUCTION
FRIDAY, SEPT 9TH 6 30 PM
AMVETS BLDG OFF BUR,NETTE RD
ON LIBERTY AVE , GALLIPOLIS
(KANAUGA), OHIO

I

(3041576 2241

House lo Ren Pt P easant
$375 {304)675 5540 0
(304)675 4024
ask fo
Nancy Homestead Rea ty
Broke

IUR

740 742 2274

0 740 742 3065

Homes
r om $7 000
Fo ec osu as VA HUD Fo
I st ngs 800 391 5228 ex
1709

II
I

Auction

Cha CIS Bu

S500 Demons at on Bonus
La us demo a John Dee e Z
T ak o X Se es A Whee
740 992 737 1
Stee on ybu lawn and
ece ve an extra $500 oft ou
AK C
Basset
Hound a ead~ d scounted p ces
Pupp es Bwks o c1 T Co o
m ed
t me
offer
$1 75 each (304)576 2126
Ca m chae! Equ pment Inc:
AKC Reg Beag as Lemon . 0)446·24 12
i!fuiijiJ!ilil!l+
Patch $150 7 wks od

Moon E HoM~s

1

MONEY

11 999 Fo•d Range

I IVES'I'OCK

Reg steed 12 S k e Roostes fo sae 6966
&amp;
seve a $2 each 080 (3040937
3348 0 (304)937 2705

10 Week. old AKC Cocke
Span e Pupp es
but
back
bull&amp;wh te
buff&amp; blac k
wh te&amp;b ack
Mathe and Fathe o p op
e ty
Sho s wo med
dec awed
$350 00 F m

,..;......---....

II

mLoAN

r

1"'~-----..,

16 Cha os Cows 1 Reg

$18000 Fo l st ngs call

7414)

Ir·a ~~

3 room w th

WANil'D

$··2~0~0~d::e::po::s~I~-No---p•__•
~40)446 36 17

(304 )882 2872

R&gt;ben Dw1a)Le None (Ron) Rur ell Sl mn
(Edi H pp ( nd iDoug)Smd&lt; Da &lt; (Tm&lt; !R u&lt;lo
Ed Beck R u I h lit/ gr ntlt II en
I
I
md greao ~rmd 1/drm
II
II

Smoots
ThsrRUCI'ION

DIRECT TV

r

2001 Chevy Caval e 2 d' 4
cy
5 sp
g eat
mpg
24 600K
back
c ean
Klaus 33 Bulb Tannmg Bed 0% Financing fo up to 3G S3 950 (740)379 2748
$700 00 740 247 2727
man hs on John Dee e
200 Neon automat c a r
NEW AND USED STEEL Compact and 5000 Se es cond on ng 82 000 m es
S eel Beams P pe Reba T actors w h John Dee e $2 500 OBO (740)256
Fo
Cone ete
Angle C ed 1approva Check hem t652
Channa Flal Ber Stee out Ca m chael Equ pment
Gatng
Fa
Dans Inc: (740)446 24 2
0 veways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l John Deere 10 tt NoT I Dr I
Scrap Meta s Open Monday tor
Rent
Ca m chae
Tuesday Wednesday &amp; Equpmen t {740)446 2412
r.·O
F day 8am 4 30pm Closed
~ .... Goous ..
Thursday
Saturday
&amp; John Deere Comm erci al No thsta ow m es
Workslte
Products
Sunday 740)446-7300
99 Subu ban ,.2WD LS
Compact Excava ors Sk d package (740 446 8 o
Bl~LDIN(;
S ears/Tractor
Loader
SUPPl iES
Backhoe n stock Check out
Appliance
ou
enta
ales G eat
Bock br ck sewer p pes t nanc ng
ava able
Warehouse w ndows n e s e c Claude CarmiChael Equ pment Inc
W nters A o G ande OH (740)446 24 12
n Hende san WV P e Ca 740 245 5121
POLE BUILDINGS
owned app canes start ng at
Any S yte
Any S ze
DAVIDSON
METAL
$75 &amp; up a unde wa anty
Custom Bu Ito f t your
ROOFING
we do se v ce work on all
needs
1B Coos
Make and Models (304)675
FREE Est mates
JOy
warranty
n
w
tlng
7999
Fo Sae 199 1 Dodge
740 596 2909
P a tess on a ns a lat an
Dynasty $1 400 o bes
K rby G6 2000 sweeper
Free Est ma as
offe (740)386 9149
Runs g eat a anachmonts
740 596 2909
Carm chae Equipment nc ~ 15
TRucv&lt;
nc ud ng shampoo attach
--,,...--,....---., (740)446-24 12
_....,.
ment $200 (740)367 7630
Pm
ffiR SALE

800 391 5228 ext F254

par tes

MlswlANrot:s

(7401446

AKC
Pome an an
Ch huahua s

Two
2
Do
4
U
Depend able
Hon est
D sc ate an d E ~ece llent
Referen ces
Homes and
Offices
Mary (740 992

(3041675 7434

1'76

Grac ous lv ng 1 and 2 bed
oom apartments at V tlage
4734
Manor
and
A ve s de
7333
e ec c
Apartments n M ddlepo 1 Closets Sto age
Beaut ful r ve
v ew n
F om $295 $444 Cal 740 Tub/Shower WID Hook up
Kanauga dea for 1 2 peot 3 Bedrooms Ga age Ca
ple
No pets
please
Port
Ranc:h
Perfect
Appl cat ons pe ng taken
I Bu y Homes Loca person
r eferences stable JObs
Cal (740)441-018 1
buys homes Coni dent at
Own
Refr gergto /Stove
Ou ck cash J m 740 992 B dwell area remodeled
Have one 51b we I a ned
6300 No ca Is ahe 9
c:lean 2BA 1BA S375/mo
ADORABLE dog (304)593
depos t equ ed no pets
1&lt;1\1\IS
3207 p ease leave vo ce
(304)576 4037 aft e 6pm
ma
Mode n 1 bedroom a~)!
\II W II \\111..,1
$265 monlh nc: udes water

(740)367 7015

· - -Fioi'OiiiHiiSiiii'loiiloii
Joioo_.J

Stat e Cerllf ed L nk
approved c:h dca e ha~
lmmed ate opening s lor
ages 6 weeks&amp; up c:all
She ly 304 675 2343 for
more deta s

a

M dd eton Estates a ead ng
provtder of support ser'IICSS
to nd v1d ua s w th mental
ret a dat on and dave op
mental d sab t t es s ook ng
fo 2 pa I me LPN s n the
Abso ute Top Do Ia U S
po s area An Equal
Gal
S lver and Gold Cons
For a I m ted flme make 50% Opportun ty
Emp oye
Proolsats God A ngs Pre
sell ng Avon Call {740) 446 FIMJDN
App IC81ons w I
1935
US
Currency
be taken Monday through
So Ia e Demands MTS Are you ook ng for a change 3358
Fr day 8 ooam 4 oopm at
Co n Shop 151 Second n you nurs ng? Full I me a
the fee ty 6204 Carta Dr ve
Avenue Ga pols 740-446 Part t me AN needed fo
No phone calls pease
2842
g ow ng
home
heallh
agency Flex ble schedu ng
Need responsible person fo
Real Ealate Wanted Loca compel t ve wages w th ben
house clean ng ca reg ver 2
person ook1ng tor a home to efts Ca ll toll free 1 866
aftern oons per week $7 hr
buy A cash Me gs o 368 1100
Ove
b
ook
Rehab
1
ta
on
l
eave msg (7 40)446 3460
Ga a No doube wde or
modular 740 -4 6 3130
Armed
and
Unarmed Cen ter IS now ac:cept ng
OUTSID E SALES
Secu ty Ofl c:e s Noeded Ia esumes fo the pos t on of
I \ll'lll' " ' \ I
REPR ESENTATI VE
t ave to A eas Affected by D recto of Soc: at Se v ces
"I H\111\
he Hu cane Kat na Up to The qua t fed candidate
The
110
$1 200pe week liave and must be a LSW possess ng
,strong
verba
and
wr
nan
HElP WA.tVfED
odg ng expenses pad 6 9
1
skills
commun cat on
~~~~~~~~: appl
monlhs
ass gnf'flenls
A
cants must have a Med cad Med ca e and
clean cr m nal ecord and a MDS knowledge Long term
H gh School d p oma/GED ca e e~tper ence p ale ed
Appl cants must shpw p ool 001 not requ red Qual f ed
may
send
LEARN
of elgblty to wok 1n the candidates
esumes to Charla B own
US
Secur
ty
a~~: per ence
TO
AN
LNHA
and a med license pre McGu re
DRIVE
333 Page
te red Pease app y at I he Adm n slrato
Oh o
Wackenhu
Co po aHon Sl eel M dd epor
45760
EOE
Charleston
WV
b
anch
NO EXPEA EI-ICE ~ECESSARV
FULL T ME C .lSSES
betw~en 9 30 am and 4 30
C:DL TR.-. N NG
pm t)eg nn ng Sept 6 2005
~ N.l~C NG AVI• A.B. EO
Aodress ti3B 0 de Man
JOe PlACEME~
Overb ook ... Rehab tat on
ENROL NG NCNI
Plaza S
A bens WV
Cente s 10w accept ng
2;, 7&gt;7
esumes fo the pos t on of
0 acto of Soc a Se vtees
ALLIANCE
The qua f M
cand da e
TFI:~CTOA TRA LEA
TFI:A N NG CENTERS
must be a LSW possess ng
WYTHE\1 LLE VA
st ong ve ba and w ten
commun ca Oft
sk Is
1 800 334 , 203
Med ca d Med ca e and
MDS knowledge Long le m
D ve s
ca
e expe enc o p eleHed
POSTAL JOBS
100 WORKER S NEEDED
tur no equ red Qua ~ed
Assemble c atts
may
send S 5 94 522 56Jhr now h
S Need ed l or Reg onal cand da es
wood tams
Ru ns! One y tar1ke o 2 y esurt es to Cha Ia B own ng Fo app cal on &amp; f ea
To $480/wk
RN
LNHA gave nment JOb nto cat
TI exp eq TOP PAY PLUS McGu 8
Mate als p ov dad
Adrn n st ate
BONUSES
33 3 Page Ame can Assoc ot Laoor
F ee nto mat on pkg 24H
Slreet M dd epor
Oh 0 1 913 599 8226
24 t1 s
MARTIN m ANSPORT
801 428 4649
EOE
emp
serv
•
45760
866 293 7435

~

n
area
Sta 1ng pay
Contact M ke

LPN Ap p c:at ons
are
be ng acc:epted to a PT
LPN
&amp; 1 FT LPN
Compe t ve Sta tm g Pay
Pa d Vac:alron Pa d Mea s
D sea nts
Insurances
Ava all e
Interested
Appl cants May App y Da y
94
Ravenswood Care
Center 11 13 Wash ngton
St eel Ravenswood WV
(304)273 9236
FAX
References Requ red

3 bedroom Ira e Kanauga
OH
Wate
1 ash pd

lUI

F e wood most y oak 2000 K a Seph1a 4 door
JET
AERATION MOTORS
S35 00 toad season slab automat c 27mpg 72 000
Repa red New &amp; Aebu In $20 00
Load
cut
up m es good condrt on seoo
Stoc:k Call Ron Evan s 1
n l::lrakes f llers t 6s be ts
etc tuneup W take trade
BOO 537 9528
Ask ng
$4300
OBO
(740)441 9378

r

~-877-463-8247

Awesom e
Yard
Sa e
Septem ber 10th &amp; 1 th
9am 5pm W lkesv lie Park
Hunt ng t sh ng suppl es
too s clothes turn ture boat
motor sm okers more

$325 (740)367 0632

Furnished upst a~rs 3 rooms
&amp; bath Clean tef &amp; dep
requ red No pets (740) 44 6
1519

11,'80--wooiTiii~ioiDoiiiio-orl

Pa amed cs
&amp;
EMT s
G ve us a ca ll and start your
needed App y at 1354
new ca eer today
Jackson P ke Gal po s

YARDSALE

I'n\UliOYIMIIllll F

C ass c g e~ tabby lema e
Spayed shots ns de only 2
ys
od
Shortha red
(740)446 2700

Hm WANrrn

Looking lor a new career? Overbrook Center IS current
ly accep t ng app lc:atrons to
We have juat whet you are a fu 1 t me adm n strat ve
sec:retary Computer sk Its
looking for!
requ red M c osaft Wa d
and Exc:el e ~tpe nenc:e pre
•Up to $6/hour
fer
ed
Ben efts package
•Both !u I and part t me day
and even ng sh f1 s ava table ava abe Please stop by
our oft ce and complete an
•Pa d
a nmg
hoi days
appl ~e at on No phone calls
vacat ons
please 333 Page St eet
•Full benef Is pac:kage
M dd epor OH 45760 EOE
•Pro ess onal atmosphe e

Jay 0 Spring Val ey A I
s zes cloth ng infant &amp; adult
Large &gt;~anety of Items
nens curta ns glasswa e
www c:om1cs com
k tche nware books co l
eel bles ve y old dresse
with m rror &amp; .desk. 9am
4
'"
YARilS AI.E5pm

2 Female K te ns to QOQd
Home only (304)882 2623

11110

YARD

r

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your class1fted ads
(.;iL
1m
Borders $3 00/per ad
1!14
Graphtcs 504 for small
$1 OOforlarge

POLICIES Oh o Valley Pub l hlng reaervea the rtght lo ~ t eject ar eancelenv ad at any r me Errore muat be reported on tht fi re! cbly of publi cation and
Tribune-Sent ne Reg ater w be reapana b e tor nc mere than the celt cl me epace occ up ed by the trrCI and en y the llr.t lnatrt on Wt thall not bt
any loll cr expense thtd retulta from the pub icatlan or amiss en of en ad11 ert Hment Correction wil be meda n the first evaUeb t .dltlon • Box
are .11lweya confident a
Curre nt rate card app iu
A rea t alala advartlaemente .,, aubJect to the Federal Felr Houa lng Act of 1918
Th 1 , . .,..,,. ., .

Ir~~::~:;::~==~

w not De Respons be for
osl 8 ack ema a Ge man
any debts othe than my
Shepard n Pleasant Valley
Je n e
Fowle
a ea fam y pet (740)245
9502
Seek ng
Found a b aclc Su!llmese cat
g eat
g andpa ents
WI h c earn &amp; brown k1Hen
BenJam n Lowe and Nancy
w th
pertec.t
markmgs
l' esle
Pease ca Sh rley
Spr ng Val ey (7 40)446
(740)446 6747
4468
G IVEAWW

Bus iness Days Prior To

• All ads must be prepaid'

IT'

GIVEAWAY

All Display 12 Noon 2

In Next Day 5 Paper

• Stllrt Your Ads With A Kevword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addres1 When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 Days

Ads

rI

1 00 p m

Monday Friday for Insertion

Monday th ru Friday
WRITE AN A0

DISPlay Ads

99 Sky ne Daub ew de 3br

2BR G een school d strict
no pets Reterence &amp; dep

Wh tten
2ba t 85 acre
A dge a ea Fo ma LIV ng
Room &amp; D n ng Room Eat n
(740)367 0000
K tchen &amp; Den w F eplace
Air um
Windows
Bl level house 4bd m 3bth and
LA FA k tc:hen DR w lh 9 Beautlu Home MUST SELL
ac es Ia ge pat o &amp; deck n S65 000 (304)550 6368
c:ountry
$ ~ 25 ooo
CLEAN SWEEP SALE Lot
{740)742 3 142
mode c earance A ema n
ng 2005 s must go to make
HOUSES
room for new homes under
m RRmr
co nstruct on SAVEl SAVEl
S AVE OAKWOOD HOMES
GALLIPOLIS Ca ll (740)446 1 Bed oom House Pome oy
3093
$275 00 p us dep 740 4 6
All reel e state advertls ng
4906
In thla news paper Ia
G eat Used 1994 14x70 3
eubJect to the Federal
h lr Houlllng Act of 1968
Bedroom 2 Bath Includes
which make• It Illegal to
heat pump Cal (7 40)385
.-ivan sa any
2434
prefarenca limitation cr
discrimination basad on
Mob e Home 2002 Patr ol
race colo r religion n x
Spec al Ed I on
16XBO
familial at1tu• or national
v
nyl
s
ding
sh
ng
ed
ool
orlg n or any Intent ion to
heat
pump
n
ce
sc
eened
meke anv tu ch
front po ch Sel fo pay off
preference llmllatlon cr
$28 000 00 740 949 2543
dlacr mlnat on
or 740 41 6 125i

To Place
l\egtster
~rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
can Today•••
Fax To
992·2157

Oead'tir~

12•65 38 A mob1le home 2 65 acres 3 ~00 sq ft
S3 200 OBO (740)379 2486 ban cty wate eect c
o• {740)379 2923
septiC c ty schools 2 m les
south of Ga pol s on At
5 Homes under $10 000 218 P me ocatan wont
Jast
$55 000 se ous
W II delve (740)385 7671
nqu les on y
(740)44 t

Al!IUS
SAL.E

rID

Pleas Meigs County
Ohio
In pu'tsuance of an
order at sale to me

directed from said
court in the above
entitled action I will
expose

to

sale

at

Public Auction on the
front steps of the
Meigs County Court
House

on

Friday

October 14 2005 at
10 a m of said day
the
following
described real estate

The following raal
estate situate In the
Township

at

Rutland

County of Meigs and
State of Ohio and
being a part of
Fraction No 3 Town
No 6 and Range No
14 of the Ohio

appraised value 100/o
down on day of sale

less EXCEPT howev

RESERVING
FURTHER the right to
enter
upon said
premises prospect
explore and drill for

er from the above
described premises

develp
produce
store and remove oil

a r~ght of way through
the same heretofore

and gas or either of
them ue all machln

sale
Robert E Beegle
Meigs County Shariff

conveyed
to one
Luman Brine to one

ery

and twenty one rods
to the place of begin
nlng containing thlr
ty five acres more or

John E Stansbury
FURTHER EXCEPT
lNG all coal oil gas &amp;
other minerals now
known to be under
the real estate or
hereafter determined
to be under said real

estate together with
the right to mine and
remove said coal by
underground mining
processes (strlpmln

lng not Included) and
the right and privilege
of mining

removing
a nd
transporting
underground
and
under the surface of
the above described
premises c oal from
other
lands
now
owned or hereafter

acquired by the said

Company s Purchase
and bounded a nd

Grantors
or
s uccessor s

doocnbed as follows
Beginning six rods

and

Gra ntees

north ol the northeast
corner
of
said

waiving for them
selves their succes

Fraction No 3 thence
West forty e1ghl rods

sors
hei rs
and
as signs all damages
1n any manner arising

and

fifteen

links

thence South seventy
nine rods and fifty
lin k s
f iv e

thence Eas t
roda
the nce

SOuth forty eight rods
and filly l inks to the
center of the public
road thence east erly
along ti ald road to the

east line of said frac
lion thence North
about one hundred

their
heirs

assigns

the

hereby

from the exorcise of
the rights above set
fo r th together with

the ri ght to enter
upon lhe surface of
sa1d real e s t ate to
explore or test drill
for satd coal provld

ad that the Grantors
herein shall not do
unnecessary damage

In said test drilling

structure

der

ricks
tanks
pipelines equipment
fixtures machinery
and other appliances
and things necessary

or convenient therefore and the right to

cash

for

Attorney

purpose aforealad

rill for mine excavate
and remove suc h
other minerals aa

may be hereafter
determined to b'
said

real

estate by deep min
lng methods without
encumbrance to the

surface
Reference

for

Plaintiff
Little
Sheets

the

Deed

Volume 118 Page 771
and Volume t18 Page
119 Official Racords
of Melgo County
Ohio
Auditors Parcel Nos
1t-Ot059 11-01060
Property
Address
36694
Peterson
Hollow
Road
Rutland OH 45775
Current Owner Carol
A D Hubbard
36694
Petorson
Hollow Rd Rutland
Ohlo45775
Appraised
at
$70 000 00
Terms of sale Cannot

be sold for leso than
213rds
of
the

follows
TRACT 1 Beginning
at a stake In the cen

&amp;

Warner

213 E 2nd
Pomeroy Ohio 45769
740-992-6689
(9)7 14 21

from

SHERIFF SALES
CASE
NUMBER
03CV015
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE Plaintiff
RALPH E
METZ alai

STEIN

Oefendanta

Court of Common
Pleas Meigs Count','
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me

directed
court

from

said

In the above

entitled action I will
expose to sale at public auction on tho
front

steps

of

the

Meigs County Court
House on Friday
October 7 2005 at 10
am of sa1d day the
following described
real eatate

Legal Description
Situate In the Stale of
Ohio
County
of
Malgs and Township
of
Scipio and
In
Fraction Number 7
Town Number 7 and

Range number 14 of
the Ohio Company s
purchase and bound

Road

which

shown by the above
plat record thence

south

south

line

of

Sc
the

now
or
formerly
owned
by G
E

Mayleogh where lhe
public road leading
from Harrisonville to
Ohio Intersects

land
thence in a
northeasterly dirac

Public Notice

2004 Honda Fo eman 450
Athens onl y 195 hou s yellowib ack

Ohio at a point of the

Harrisonville to

the south line of said
Maylelgh tracl of

.

State

east
of

lion ofollowlng the
~of
said public
road f ifteen rods to a
stake
thence due
east eleven rods to a
stake thence south
thirteen rods to Merlll
McClure s north line
at a stake thence

11.

21

Property at 38504 St

~~:~y
PPI

Oh io 45769

17 00607
-00609

17

00608 17

Pnor
REf erenc es

Deed
Volume

301 Page 623
Apprats ed

$40 000 00
Term s
of

C&lt;.\li'Eil'i
M OTOR

Jayco
Camper
2004
29FBS Excellent Cond tlon
Supe S de out due ed
AC Heal (3().0)675 1938
2005 Che akee L ta 28FT
Campa 2 S des used 4
mes Exce en1 Cond 1 on

•• ! 15 300

Sale

of Harrls on\i lle coun

on

ty of Meogs State of
Ohio and Township
of Scipio Being lots

sale

Number 5 and 6 of A

Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff
Shapiro &amp; Felty
1500 W Thord Street
Suite 400
Clevelan d
Oh io

Refer ence l o which is

hereby made for dell
n ita

d es cr iptio n

of

said lots and be ng
mQre
p art icularly
desc r ibed as f o llows

to wit
Beginning at a poml
where the no rth hne
o f Fract on Nu m ber

conf tr matlon ot

Robert E Beagle
Me1gs County Sheriff

44 11~
216:tl~ 2;.1530

(9) 9 1"'91 4·9 21

(3041682 3922

even ngs

Tract 2 The following
described premises
olluated lnthe VIllage

Dunl aps aAdd lllon as
sat out In Plat Book
Numbre t at Page 28

&amp;

HOI\1ES

1999 Sta C aft Soft S de
13FT Truck Campa Self
Canta ned Fu nace Sleeps
4 C ean Good Cond ton
$5 000 (304)675 4082

Cannot be s old for
les s than 213rds ol 18 10
the appr a ised value
10°~ down on day of
sale cash or c ert1f.ed
ch eck ba la n c e due

contain ing about one
acre and five rods
more o r less

080

$4395

degrees

1/2 degrees east
along the north s1de
of sa1d 10 foot alley
100 feet thence north
11 degrees east 107
1/2 feel to the place of
beginning
Current Owner Ralph
E Slelnmetz

the publl road

place of beginning

new

west 194 feet to the
6 Arne can RaCing ms &amp;
north s1de of a 10-loot t es S250 {740}367 0139
alley thence south 70 o 740 709 6908

west thirteen rods to
The

ke

road right of way 11 (740)245 9294
10 feet wide as

ter of the public road

leadong

the

Gallipoli s

286 42 acre lot of land

the

RESERVING
FUR
THER the right to
prospect explore and

under

certified

check balance due
on conllrmatlan of

usa sa much ol the
surface as may be
necessary

or

7crosses
boundary

ed and described as

2002 HO Sotla I Deuce
many e~et as lC: ud ng wide
1 e chrome Python P pes
7000mes (740)4462615

..,ltnltt..,

Hn,IE
l \IPI«J\'Eliii.XTS

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond Ilona fet me guar
antee Loca ete ences fur
n shed Estabt shed 1975
Ca
24 Hrs (740) 4.tti
0870 Aoge s Basemen t
Waepoofng

r

EXC-\Ul'l."lG

~

Dltch lng!Trench tng
Service
4x4Commerca Dtch Wtch
wths~waybade Oggng
Depth up to 56
Gas
Wate Cable E ect c &amp;
D an L nes (304)576 9005

�"

'
Page B&amp; • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 7, 2005

www.mydailysentlnel.com

~ednesday, September 7, 2005
-~LLE.V OOP
-

www.mydailysentinel.com
'

-

-

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

-

~·

..

NEA

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

SALE~S--~~P~ub~l~lc~N~o~t~lc~e~~~E~x~co~p~l~lng~-~~~nd~~PI~alnllft

SHERIFF
CASE
NUMBER
04CVHO
LASALLE BANK NA
LASALLE NATIONAL
BANK Plalnllff va
THOMAS &amp; YVONNE
DARST ot al
Defendants
Court ol Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance ol an

order of sale to me
directed from said
court in the above
entitlad action ,_I will
expose to sale at pub-

lie Suction on 'the
front steps of the
Meigs County Court
House on. Fr iday,
October 7, 2005 at 10
am, ol said day, the
following described
real estate.
Legal Description : •
Situated In the Village
ol Pomeroy, County
ol Meigs and State ol
Ohio:
Beginning at the
Southeast corner of a
lot formerly owned by
Lucinda Starkey on
Union Avenue in said
Village of Pomeroy ;
Thence North 20 dog.
east along the north
lina ol silid Lot 100
feet; thence south 70
deg. east SQ . 1eet;
thence south 20 dog.
west 100 feet to the
line ol said Union
Avenue; !hence along
the line of said union
Avenue, north 70 deg ~
west 50 feet to the
place of beginning .
Said premises being
a part ol Lot No. 425
ol aid Village ol
Pomeroy, and being
the same premises
deeded by Margaret
Hurst lo· Theodore
Eiselsteln by deed
dated November 16,
1885, and recorded In
Volume 61. Page 224
and 225 records,
Meigs County, Ohio,
and
deeded
to
George . Elselsteln
and wile to Elza S.
. Lee by deed dated
November 19, 189t ,
and
recorded
in
Volume 73 , Pages 21 t
and
212 of the
records of deeds ol
Meigs County, Ohio.
Same and except a
sm,all traot of raal
estate conveyed to
Louis Reibel, beginning at a point 26 feet
north 20 deg. lrom the
southeast corner of
the
N.E.
Church
Parsonage lot; thence
north 66 t/4 dog. wet
3 feet and 9 Inches;
thence north 20 deg.
east 17 feet and 4
inChes; thence south
66 1/4 dog. east 3 feet
and 9 Inches; thence
south 20 dog. west t 7
feel and 4 Inches to
the place ol begin·
ning, and containing
about 65 square feet,
more or less, and it is
further understood
that no part ol lhe
well on said parson·
age lot is hereby con·
veyed.
The above described
reat
estate
was
owned by Reese - E.
Williams and Sara W.
Willis
as
Joint
Tenants with right of
survivorship by virtue
ol a deed dated May
24, 1972, recorded in
Volume 249, Page
1019, Meigs County
Deed Records. The
Court·
Probate
Records ' of Meigs
County, Ohio, reflect
E.
that
Reese
Williams
died
September 22, t 97
and his estate was
administered in Case
*22499,
therefore ,
vesting his entire
Interest •In the proper·
ty upon hi death to
Sara W. Willis.
Property
Address:
118 Union Avenue,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Owners
Property
Thomas Darst and
Yvonne Darst
Prior '
Deed
Reference : Volume
99, Page 803 and
Volume 118, Page 751
PP•z 16.()1943.000
Owner:
Current
Thomas &amp; Yvonne
Darst
Property
at : 118
Union Avenue
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Prior
Deed
References: Volume
99, Page 803, Volume
118, Page 751
Appraised
at
$20,000.00
Terms
of
Sale:
Cannot be sold for
less t ha.n 213rds of
the appra ised value
10% down on da'/ of
sale, cash or certified
check, balance due
on ~onli rmatlon · of
sale.
Robert E. Beagla .
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney
lor
!lie
Plaintiff
Reimer &amp; Lorbe r
P.O. Box ~68
Twin sburg,
Ohio
44087
330-425-4201
(8) 31, (~I 7, 14
•'

Sheriff Solo Case
Number
04CV158
Farmers Bank
&amp;
S•vlngs co Plaintiff
VS Virgil p, Phillips
aka Virgil R. Phllllpa
aka VIrgil D. Phillips
aka Virgil Philips, etal
Defendants Court of
Common
Pleaa,
Meigs county, Ohio.

In pursuance of an
order ol sale to me
directed from said
court In the above
entitled actlon, 1 will
expose to sale at pub-lie auction on the
front steps ol · the
Meigs county court
House on Friday
Sept. 30th, 2005 at 10
a.m. of said day, the
following described
Real Estate: Tract
one: Situated in the
county ol Meigs, in
the state ol Ohio, and
in the VIllage · ol
Middleport, Township
of Salisbury, and
abounded
an(l
described as follows,
to-wit: Being 31 feet
off ol the north side
ol Lot 61 , together
with any surplus that
may go with said par·
eel ol land. . The
above is a parcel of
land 3t feet, more or
less, on Third streel
and extending east ol ·
an alley, and Is part ol
the same prerrilses
conveyed from c.M.
Vail to Mayme F.
Hobart
by
Deed
Recorded in Volume
102, Page 75 ol the
Meigs county Deed
Records . Reference
Deed : Volume 298,

reserving unto former
grantors herein, their
heirs and aoolgns, all
coal, oil and goo and
other mlnorala under·
lying said rool ostato
together with tho
right to mine, drill and
remove the same. It
is undestood that
there will ba no
drilling on the real

5

/

VI

Stove J. Blect&lt;well ot
ol
Delendenl
Court ol common
Pleas, Meigs COUDty,
Ohio
In pursuance ol an
order ol aalo lo me
directed from said
Court In the above
entitled action, I Will

1 Warm

10
12

~I

Rocky Hupp Insurance

Hauling
Service

DAN BURKE

Owner: Jeff Stetll em

Ph :

45 fL~

XOO- .W~ - 1 2 00 1Jr

...,..,.~,

Sidewal ks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment. Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,

.

7..f.D-..f.4tl- ~fl.f. \

. WINDOW SUPER SALE
Vinyl Doubl e Hung

$219
INSTALLED

ro 101 u1

2150 Eastern Ave .
Gallipolis , OH 45631

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

1·800·291:5600
(!_FARMHAND ~NEW,OEA

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W'H&lt;\1 DOES T

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THIS IS MV

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• Eleclfleal &amp; Plumbing
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n

.We do all except·
. tumace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

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Pomeroy, Ohio

25 Year• Loeal EK rlenet

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Stop &amp; Compare

got YO¥

17·17·17 • S275 ton (bulk only)
12%Triumph 12% sweet horse feed
$5.50/50 lb. bag

48% Soybean Meal m.25/100 lb
Cob Meal with T.M. Sail
$6.501100 lb bag
Mushroom compost (Bulk only)

..•

SUNSHINE CLUB

.

Shade River AG Service, Inc
3~537 Sl R1 7 N ~

·

Ohio 45769

REPAIRS

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OHIO IJCEHSE # 38244

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Rac1ne, Oh10
45771
740·949·2217

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St. Rt . 124 Chester 985-3301

1114, IN. pd

50 Largest
~ . mammals
52 Smoothed
wood
53 Unruffled
54 Lpaf around
55 Monster's
loch
DOWN
1 Ukraine city
2 About, in

Yesterday. I mentioned that 1n pi:tir events
m·ertncks are vital They are also crucial
in board-a-match teams Your resull is
added to lhat of your teammates. If you
have a net plus. you receive one·point. If
the sCores are identical, you get ha lf a
point. If you are minus. you ga1n zilch.
Bill Arlinghaus, from Ann Arbor, Mich.,
found a great pi~ce of declarer play to wm
the lu ll p01nt on th1s deal from a board-amatch teams at the Summer Nationals in
Atlanta last Ju ly. Wl1at would you have
done? You reach mree no·trump. and
West leads the club six: seven. live, three.
How would you continue?
East's om:·diamond overcall is no Did of
beauty, especially a1unfa,,.orable vulnera·
bil1ty. And if one must enter the auction , as
pl ayers are wont to do these days, a takeout double looks more appropri ate. But
East wan ted to direct his partner's openin g lead. Is 1h1s another e~amp le of the
best-laid plans of mice and men?
Declarer could see nine tricks: three
spades. two diamonds (with the aid ol th e
marked finesse) and .four clubs (after two
more finesses) . Probably, though. 11would
take 10 tricks to win the board. (Three notrump just made was the reSul t at the
other table.) South could use his diamond
spots to generate a third tnck there. but
only at the e&gt;~ pense of g1ving East a trick
w1th his K-J-10 And when 1n, surely East
would shift to a heart.
Instead , declarer called for the diamond
tour ... and the trick continued two. th ree.
cl ub four.
Did yo u ever see the first trick in a suit
won by the four ?

'

'

•
~----~----·------- -~--·

39 Headlines

40 Glen
41 Footnote
abbr.
42 Sigh I fro m
Messina·
44 Merchandise
45 Coustea u·s
islands
46 Hubble
component
47 Mao - tung
48 ER practice
49 La'!'{.
to Caesar
51 C!ucker

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CeiebrifV Cipher cryptog rams are o estE_!'CIIr om quo!a!iOflS b~ 'amoos pe-ople cast a,:1 p•esent
.
Each le1te11n lhe ' ipt'e• s1ands lor or·~lhe&lt;

Today's clue · VequeJs X

" 0 ' W

Z

F o ·K

PZIL

ZMK

L EH J

P H GW

EGS

BJZHMJK

LG

LJ VZI
HOK J

GYJHOZWJ

z L J tJi o M R

BZMOJ

Z

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ME W\1./l.l" ?

SEG
CDF J

BDPJ·

o B B M J 11. "

ZHWILHGMR

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "l have lo say. tha t rs the best l ll a.,·e seen T ger
sw 1ng " - Jack N1cklaus . on Tiger .Woods· v1ctory at the Br1t1sh Ooen

AstroGraph

'::~::;~' S©l\~~-~t-~S'
by CUY I
ld i tt~

-... &lt;Birlhda,y:

Thursday, S ept. 8 , 2005,
By Bernice Bede Osot
P ropit iou S c hanges cou ld be rn th e
o il ing where your c areer os con ce rne d
on th e year ahead and the c o m ing
nio n ths prom1se l o be a n y tll on g bu l
dull . H o wever, you ' ll h ave to c a re f ully
m o nito r wh 1ch acl lv ilo es m e n t you r
time .
V IR G O _(AuQ
23 · Sept .
22 )
Agr e e m ent s in to · wh oc h y o u e n te r
1oday mu s t IJe in w11t tny ta the r t han
d o ne v e rUally or• a ila rn.h ;l lCi ka . Wh en·
Pu t onl o pract ice . e a c l1 p ar ty m 1ght
lhrn~ th e o th e r u1t e mJ e U som e th iny
d ifte rer 1t.
LIBRA (Sept. 2 3 -0c t. 231 - S t rove to
t&gt;e a s p rodu c tiv e a s y o u desir e to day .
b ut b e re.:t hs t1c aUo u t il 01n d dor1 ' t l ak*::l
o n ·m o re l h a i 1 y o u ca n man age
•R e m e mbe r t11a t olcl ad age abo ut 01e
s tra w 111a t br o~e th e Came l's b a c k
SCORP IO (Q c l . 2 4 - N ov 22 1 Don 't
blam e y o ur tne nds l o r comp lic atin g
y o u r a ffairs to day ir you perm it y o ur ·
self to b e d r awn int o an a c t iv i ty lll a t
y o u d o n ·t e n joy o r w t1lc h ca u ses y ou
som e trou bfe . O n l y yo u ·rc resp o n s i bl e .
S A GI TTAR I US (N ov 23- D ec . 2 t ) I n o rde r to s u ccoed toda y. you mus t
b e to ta ll y soll · rc 11a n t and n o t dcpcr~d
upon anyo n e . Oltlers m a y indica te
th e y 'd be withn g to h e lp. b ut whc 11
a c t u a lly
n ee d e d .
ttl ey m a y
bt"!
n o whe re around
CAPRI CO RN ( D ec . 2 2 -J,;m 191 ll'S
bes t to avo td laktng o n a task to d ay
tha t re q u tres to ta l cOn ce ntra t ion
unless y o u ca n comple tP.ty c lefH l ll e
s la l e Once d 1s t rar.1e r:1. inr h P. r1rfi 1Cu ll
to p tck up whe re ynu let\ o tt
AQ U A R IUS ( J an 20·Fe~
191 ' R echeck the l t!J ur e s ro gll t a t th e
c h eck o ut co unt e r I Od ay ol yo ot a re
~T~ak i n g
seve r a l p urc hases a t t11e
s ame ttm.e ' T h ose w h o a•e o p e r a t on g
lh e c o mput ers may ma k e m rs takes
P I,-,CES { F e b 20- Ma rc h 20) An
1
rm po rl a nt rel at 1on s ll op can b e tar ·
rus h ed today tl you p rom1se to d d
som e lh•ng w1th a n o th e r and then
d uc k ou t ea rl y Don't m a ~e p ro m1s es
yo u h ave n o. intenhon of k eeptng
ARIE S
( M a rch · 2 1- A prol
1 9)
Comp lic a t e d repa n JObs a re best le tt
up to the eKpe rt s today Don ·t a ttempt
to ta k e so m e th1ng a p art th 1nk ong you
ca n f1;o; 11 y ourself m h opes Ot s avong
m o n eY. It'll &lt;;os\ yo u more on lhe And
TAURU S (A p n l 20 -M ay 20) - Ta ku1g
a ga m ble lha t you·r f nen d s w1ll under st a nd~ a b out b rea k ong · a p rom ise y ou
maoJe to tha m 111 order to go o ff wtth
s o m eon e e lse today w on 't be v e ry
s ma r t . Yo u 'll lose the lr tls l o f g o od
pals .
Small
G EM INI ( M ay 21 · J une 201 insi g n1fic a nt d o m e s t oc d• s ago ettlnen ts
co uld get b lown way out o t proport oo n
tod a y if t hey a re not m c •nerated
rm medra tety. You 'll n eed
fire ext1n ·
g u lsh e 1 1f they tg f)ite agai n l ~ te r
C AN C ER { Jyne 2, -J ulr 221 - B f!!fo re
emba r k 1nQ on a n e rr'k n d r Un to d a y .
take t1me to h a v e 11. list o f what vou
n eed to do filon g w i th a n e111C)ent
rou te mapped o ut, o r yolJ could f ond
y ourself g o mg tn circ le • .
L EO (J uly 23· A u g 22) ~ Be rr'ifnd l u l
today w h en handling a p o sses sto n.
y ou grea tly Prize becaulll8 th e re ·s a
g ood c hancle y o u cou ld ~ l'l@. i ty 0"''
c areless If your m ond ls n t on wh sl
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Connected
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of surprise
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Out ol bed
Handled an
order
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"Taking Tlze Sti11g Out OJ
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44 Become
limp

memos
(2 wds.) '
19 Gave an .
3 Tackles
address
a slope
20 Eases
4 Understand 21 Downed
29
5 Lao-Tzu 's
a su b
" way"
22 Transmit
need
(2 wds.)
6 Frizzy coif
23 Nol
7 Wallet
31 Of roses
exciting
and tulips
conlenrs .
24 Long·
33 Rancor
8 Chocolate
legged
34 Slick
c ookie
wader
35 Sandy
9 Family
26 Wacky
27 Kramer or
expanse
mem.
Sa tie
37 Hitched,
10 Luau
welcome
28 Roy
as oxen
Rogers·
38 Repairs a · 11 Plumbing
tear
wife ·
problem
12 Posse
40 Notch
30 Spun
dispatcher
on an axis
shape
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17 Ump 's
32 Guided
cousin
securely
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OUTSIDE
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• • Appliances,

estate
described · expose to sale at
• Cars,
herein, and further·
Public Auction on the
more; that no air
front steps of the
• Garage Metal
shafts will be localtd
rJ~elga County Court
Call
on
real
estate House on Friday.
d e s c r I b a d
October 14, 2005 at
740-742-2595
herein. Reference
10 a.m., of said day,
Deeds : Volume 47,
the
following
Page 123, and Volume
described reel estate:
43, Page 301, Meigs
Lots Five (5) and ·Six
County.
Olliclal
(6) In Wehe's Addlllon
Records. Auditor's to the VIllage of
parcel
No.:
03· Pomeroy,
Meigs
· 00069.000 Appraised
County, Ohl0 1 as
740-742-2455
at:
$50,000,00
shown by the Plat ol
• Repairs .
Property
Address :
sold Addition , record·
43323 Frank Road,
ed In Volume 3, ·Pial
• Parts ·
Pomeroy Ohio 45769 · Records · ol Meigs
•·Service
Current Owner: Virgil
County, Ohio, at Pogo
for
Fam1
Eq uipm c'nt·
Phillips et al Property
1 In the Office of the
at 736 South 3rd .Ave
Recorder of laid
Trucks Dowrs
Mlcfdleport, Ohio PP# County,
• ~ p~l: i alty! C lut ches
15·01092.000 Vol 298
Property
Address :
• l3rah •s
Pg 95, $20,000.00 and
113 Wehe Terrace,
43323 Frank Road , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Parcel
No.
16·
Pomeroy, Ohio 03·
Ta~e
00069.000 lvol 47 pg
01675.000
&amp;
16·
t 23 Vol 43 Pg 301,
01676.000
$50,000.00
.. Current Owner : Steve
Tract Ona : Appraised
J. Blackwell
Let me do 11 for youI
at $20,000.00; Tract
Prior
Deed
Two: Appraised at
References: V.o lume
$50,000.00 .
The
308, Paga 76t
appraisals do not
Appraised
at .
include an Interior · $40,000.00 Terms of
examlniltion of any
Sa&amp;e: Cannot be sold
houses or slruturaa
for laSs than 213rds of
on the real estate . the appraised value.
Terms of-sale: cannot
10% down on day o1
be sold lor less than
sole, cuh or certified
213 of the appraised check, balance due
value . 10% down on
on confirmation of
Page
95,
Meigs Day of Sale, cash or
slile.
County
Deed certified check, batRobert E. Beegl,e,
LEWIS
Records. Auditor's anee due on conllr·
Meigs County Sheriff
CONCRETE
Parcel
No: 15· mation olaale.
Attorney
lor
tho
CONSTRUCTION
01092.000 Appraised
Robert E. Beegia,
Plolntlll ·
at
$20 ,000.00 Meigs County Sheriff.
Stephen D. Milos
Concrete Removal
Property
address:
Attorrey
lor
the. 18 W.
Monument
and Replacement
736 South Third Ave . Plaintiff Little Sheets
Avenue
Ohio &amp; Warner, 213 East Dayton, Ohio 45402
Middleport,
L:Att~~Qt~f
45760.
Second,
Pomeroy,
937-461-1400
Tract Two: Situated Ohio 45769 992-6689.
(9) 7, 14, 21
In the Township o.l
(8) 24 (9) 7, 14
25 Years Experience
Chester, County ol
Public Notice
Mei.QS and State ol
Public Notice
Ohio:
Being · In
SHERIFF SALES
Section 5, Town 2
Insured
CASE
NUMBER
North, Renga13 West SHERIFF SALE
Free Estimates
ol
the
Ohio CASE
NUMBER
05CV012
Wells Fargo Bank
company's Purchase 05CV017
Plaintiff
and bounded and U S D A R u r a I
aad
vs
described as follows:
Development
AnthonyT. Wolle, et al
Beginning at a point -Pialntlft
Dolen dan!
south 25 rods (412.5 vs
feel) and North 89 Barbara K. Bunch et
eourt of Common
Phone
deg. 59'42'' West at
Pleas, Melga County,
(740)
992-5232
1048.07 teet; thence Defendants·
Ohio
South s deg. 45' 11" Court of Common
In pursuance of 8n
SxlO, lOxiO,
East
t91 .4
feet;
Pleas, Meigs County, order of sale to me
lOx
IS, 10x20,
thence South 7 deg. Ohio
•
directed from said
29 ' West 64 feet:
In pursuance of an
Court In the above
10x30
thence South 4 deg. order of sale to me • entitled action, I will
Janel
.Jeffers
oa· west .121 feet; directed from said
expose to sale at
thence South 7 dog. Court in the above
Public Auction on the
33795 lliland Road
lronl steps of the
4S' East 50'; thence entitled action, I will
Pomeroy. Ohio
south 40 dog. 06'03" expose lo sale at
Melga County Court
East 239.33 feet from Public Auction on tho
House on Friday,
lhe mid point ol said front steps ol tho
October 14, 2005 at
Public Notice
section 5 North line, Meigs County Court
10:.00 a.m., ol said
said point of begin· House on Friday,
day, the following
sale; cash or c.ertlfled
ning
being
the October 14, 2005 at
described real estate:
check, balance due
marked by an iron rod .• 10:00 a.m., of said
Situated In tha VIllage
on . confirmation or
ol Middleport, County
on lhe southarly side day, the following
sale.
of said 60 foot wide described real estate:
ol Meigs and Stole ol Robert E. Beegle,
street; thene&lt;i s . 63 Situated In the Village
Ohio and bounded , Melga County Sheriff
dog. 59' West 121.07 ol Middleport, County
and described os lol· Attorney
lor
the
feet
along
the of ~elgs and State of lows. to-wit: and • Plaintiff
being known as Lot Carlisle,
. southerly side of said Oh1o
McNeille,
40 foot wide street to In 100 acre Lot No.
Number Five (5) In
Plnl, Kramer &amp; Ulrich
M.C. Hobar's Sub· 24755
an iron rod; then 5.13 309, Range 13, l;own
Chagrin
deg. 32' 14" East 2, . ol
the
Ohio
division to the afore· Boulevard Suite 200
213.13 feet to an iron Company's Purchaae,
said Village.
Cleveland,
Ohio
road; thence south 89 .and more particularly
Premises commonly 44122·5690
known
u:
439
dog. 59'42" East 240 bounded
and
216-360-7200
Street,
laet; . thence N. 34 described as follows: · Lincoln
(9) 7, 14, 21
dog. 49"20." west Beginning at an _iron
Ohio
Middleport,
317.13 feat to the pipe at the southweat
45760
Current
Owner:
point ol beginning, comer ol Harry . W.
Public Notice
Anthony T. WoHe et al
containing
1.01 McMaster's
Lot;
acres, more or less.
thence South 58 deg.
Property at:
439 The following mobile
Described below Is West 32.5 .feet to an
Lincoln Street
home will be offered
Middleport,
the centerline of an Iron pipe; thence
Ohio at public sale on
45760
accessrlghtafwayto South · 18 deg. East
Friday, .September 16,
PPI t5.()1233.000
tho parcal ol real 33.5 feel to an Iron
2005 1 :00 p.m. at 57
estate:
pipe; thence South 78
Prior
Deed Ayers Blvd., Belpre
Beginning at a point dog. 30' Eaat 323 feel
References: Volume Soles Center, 45714
North 14 dog. 34'14" to an Iron pipe on tho
107, Page 033
1997 Oakwood 28 x
west 20.4 feet from West side of the Appraised
II
80
Serlol
the. point ol begin· Rutland Road ; then!'&amp;
$48,000.00
JHONC02232775AB
nlng of a 1.0 acre lot; along the West side ol Terms
of
Sale: rnJnimum
bid
thence North 63 dog. said road North 18 Cannot be sold for · $4'7,900.00.
Terms
less than· 213rds ol cash to the highest
59' East 445.62 feet dog. West 57.5 feet to
and North 40 dog. an Iron pipe; thence the appraised velue. bidder.
06'03"Wesl 210.1 feet North 78 dog. 30'West
10% down on day ol (9) 7
(40 loot wide RfW to 287 feet to the place
this point!; thence ol beginning, contain·
North 15 dog. 14'35" lng 381100 acr11s.
West
25.22
feat Currant
Owner:
(changing to a 50 loot 'Barbara K. Bunch
wide RIW on this Properly
Address:
course) ;
thence 311 Rutland Street,
South 82 dog. t5' Middleport,
Ohio
West 470.4 teet (50 45760
loot wide RfW on ths Parcel No.: 15.()1288·
course) thence South 000
85 dog. 36'53 west Prior
Dead
· 85.1 feet (changing to Relerances : Volume
a 40 foot wide RfW on 254, Pogo 817
at
this course); thence Appraised
South 82 deg. · 15'; $50,000.00
West · 99.4 teet and Terms
of · Sale:
· south 58 deg. 01 · Cannot be sold lor
30"West 291.5 feet to less than · 213rds ol
the centerline
ol '·the appraised value.
county Road.. C-26. 10% down on day ol
Said right of way is to sale, cash or certified
be used in common
check, balance due
with
all adjacent on confirmation of .
property
owners , sale.
thei r
heirs
and · Robert E. Beegle,
assigns and all per· Meigs County Shorlft
sons lor the benefit ol Attorney
for . the
the adjacent property Plalntlft
owners bordering or Stephen D. Milos
c onnnactlng
said 18 W. Monument Ave.
right ol way. Said real Dayton, OH 45402
estate Is subJect to all 913-461-1900
covenants, restric, (9) 7, 14, 21b
lions,
building
restr iclions,
easePublic Notice
menl s, road end high·
ways ol record in
doed recorded In Vol. SHERIFF SALES
NUMBER
270, Page 681 , ol the CASE
Deed Records, Meigs 05CV007
Beneficial Ohio In~.
,County, Ohio .

•

41800 SR #7

• Metal,

09 Oi 05

"' AK9
" i 6 2

and Financial Services

Anything Hauled

'

North

Crossword

... ··a . ...

�Page BS ~ 'I]:te Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.~om

.

•

•

'

. ·

---·-.

'

Wednesday, September 7, 2005

Valentin helps lift Reds past.Brewers, 2-1
CINCINNATI (AP)
Javier Valentin got a rare start
against a left-hander on
Sunday in Atlanta., He made it
pay off against the Milwaukee
Brewers two -days later.
The switch-hitting . catcher.
who went into. Tuesday's
game hilling only .143 as a
right-hander. had an RBI sin· ~'le in the bottom of the IOtli
tnning to give the Cincinnati
Reds a. 2- 1 victory over the
Brewers.
Adam Dunn singled with
one out off left-hander Jorge
De La Rosa (2-2) and mtiVcd
to third on Sean Casey's sharp
single to right that just got
under the . glove of second
baseman Richie Weeks. Reds
interim manager Jerry Narron
eleued to stick with Valentin.
who followed with a line tlrive
over drawn -i n center fielder
Brady C lark on the lirst pitch.
" I' m starting to feel cum- .
fortable after gett in g four at bats Suildav... Valentin said.
"'M y sw ing . iS st;jrting to feel
better. My manager told me to
look fo r one pitch to drive out
of the infield. and he m;Hk
one.
"The only thin g I wa.&lt; trying
to do was put the h;tll in play.

play. I knew as soon as I hit
the hall that they weren 't
goi ng to throw him out at the
plate, because he had to go
hack on the hall."
Narron said , "Javy' s been
coming up big for us all year.
I was jLtst happy to see him get
the opportunity to swing the
bat." '
The Reds have won two of
their last three games, both in
extra innings. after a five g am~ losi ng streak. They
i mpruved to 4- 1 in extra-

inning games this se.ason and

staved off elimination from
the Cen tral Division' race·.
They are 23 112 games behlrid
ti rst-place St. Louis with 24 to
play.
.
Milwaukee went 3-for-13
with ruTincrs in scoring positi on, with just one of the hits
driving in ·a run. tq fall to 3-7
in extra-inning game~. The
Brewers missed an opportuniHe gave me a l:hangcup righ r tY for their 32 nd road win of
down the middle. and that 's a th e season. whi ch would be
pitch yoit have tu put into one more than they won last

Ohio not gettbig Katrina
evacuees, for now, As

The Reds tied it in the seventh. Jacob Cruz drew ll oneout walk from Justin Lehr and·
Ray Olmedo was sent in as a
pinch runner. After Ryan Freel
flied out, Olmedo moved 'to
third on Rich Aurilia's sharp
single throu~h the hole into
left. Matt Wtse relieved Lehr
and gave up a game-tying single to Felipe Lopez that
glanced off the glove of diving ·
shortstop Bill H&lt;!ll ard rolled
·
into left tield.
Rick Helling's start was hi s
Notes: Freel's start was his
third
since
joining
Milwaukee's rotation on Aug. first sin ce Aug. 15, the day
27 , but he still hasn ' t earned a before he went on the di sabled
decision as a starter since list with torn cartilage in his
going 7 _8 in 24 starts for right knee and a sore right
naltimore in 2003. He left the . quadriceps. He had arthroscopic surgery on his knee
game for a pinch hitter in the Aug. 18 and was activated
sixth with a 1-0 lead after Monday. ... Freel's thirdallowing four hits and a walk inning stolen base was his
·with .four strikeouts in five 30th of the. season, making
innings.
.
him. the first Reds player with
Reds starter Aaron Harang consecutive 30-steal seasons .
gave up one run and eight hits since Barty Larkin stole 51 in
with three walks and seven 1995 and 36 in 1996.... Lee
strikeouts in 6 2,3 innings.
extended his hitting streak to
Geoff Jenkins, who tied his nine games, one · short of
career hi gh with live hits on matching his season-high . ...
Monday, ga\e the -Brewers .a The attendance of 13,351 was
1-0 lead in the fourth on the lowest of the season for
AP photo
Tuesday. After Lyle Overbay's the Reds at home. The figure
Cincinnati
Reds'
Javier
Valentin
(17)
is
congratulated
after he
leadoff walk and Carlos Lee's did not include 315 members
single, Jenkins hit a line drive of the military and their imrne- · drove in.the winning run with a hit off ty1ilwaukee Brewers pitchthat one-hopped the right field di'ate families, "who were er Jorge De La Rosa in t~e bottom of the 10th .inning Tuesday
in Cincinnati. Cincinnati won 2-1.
wall for a run-scoring double. admitted free.
season, and their 69th win
overall, which would be the
most of Ned Yost's three seasons as manager.
"We just didn't execute
offensively," Yost. said. "We
had a lot of opportunities. We
just didn't get the big hit to
tack on extra runs. If we're
go ing to get over the · hump,
we have to get better at that.
It's an attitude that we will get
th e run in."

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o CENTS • Vul. ;;;,. :'1/u. , ~

AP photo

Cleveland Indians' ·coco Crisp. right. taps Grady Sizemore on .
his helmet after Crisp hit a two-run homer off of Detroit Tigers
starter Jason Johnson to score the pair in the third inning
Tuesday in Detroit.

Indians win, pull within
half-game of.New York

players and staff that, considering what is going \ln in
New Orleans and along the
Gulf Coast, any complaining
about their temporary home
will ring hollow ..
. "I think when you feel
sorry for yourselves, you go
upstairs and watch TV and
that kind of goes away."
Haslett said. "We're kind of
crammed into some quarters
_ we're short a copying
machine and I've got a coupie of coaches sleeping at the
Alamodome _ but we're not
behind at all in our preparations. It's not gain~ to hurt us
one or another bemg here at
all."
Even the . Saints' media
relations office is making do.
Daily news ,· releases are
copied onto plain paper _ the
team letterhead was left
behind, so more is being
printed.
With each day, things are
increasingly returning to normal _ or at least whatever
normal is, considering the cir.cumstances.
Quarterback Aaron Brooks
and his wife were among
· many families spending•
Tuesday's day off trying to
rent a home in San Antoni?.
Rece.tve~ Joe Hom satd he s
constdenng buymg a place.
•·unfortunately, it's our

new home , temporarily."
Brooks said. "We ' re going to
have to accept that and be as
comfortable as possible and
get into a normal schedule for
the regular season.''
In a way. temporary living
arrangements are similar to .
what players face when they
switch teams during the sea- ·
son.
"The players want an automobile and a place to live,'.'
Haslett said. ''O nce they get
that, they have a place where
you can drive over to work
and go home and lay dowfl.
That's all you really need in
thi s business."
General manager Mi ckey
Loomis said the team is planning to practice in San
Antonio for the remainder of
the season. They may, even
end up playing one or more
home games in the city's
Aiamodorne .
The Saints' lirst choice is
moving to LSU 's Tiger
Stadium in Baton Rouge, La..
and the league is still exploring all options. including ha&lt;Jing them play all 16 games on
the road.
The team's practice facility
in Metairie, La., is dry. But i\
has been used by the Federal
Emergency
. Management
,Agency to help in the disaster
relief.
'

• Meigs preps for Raider
invasion.
Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

see

'

....
.................
I

•'

Fiscal Year 1999 to FY05
was a positive despite the fact
that it was an increase .
Salaries in FY 1999 were
$2,486,476 while 1a1&lt;1ries in
FYOS are estimated at
$2,574,844.
Ohio
Department
of
.. Education Consultant Nancy
Burbacher, who compiled the
data, clarified that the 3.5
percertt came about by utili zing other funds:
Wolfe responded that the
cost was still. "nominal" to
.
the general fund. ·
Another positive according
to Wolfe was the reduction in
pay fringes for the di strict.

Page AS
• Anna Lou Roush, 78
'

INSIDE
• Using the threat of
force, police step up
efforts to clear holdouts
from New Orleans.
See Page A2
• Doll·and bear shows to
be held. See Page A3
·• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Pomeroy Court News.
Page AS
• American hostage
freed after 10 months; ·
bombings kill four U.S.
security agents and 16
others. See Page A6
• Hospitals say Medicaid
·cuts would increase .
emergency room wa~s.
See Page AS
• Peace mom's
supporters visit Ohio.
See Page A7

see

9/11 memorial
service set
for Sunday

'.

Details on Page II 7

INDEX
16 PAGES

© 2005 Ohio Valle,: Publishin,: Co.
•

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - A patriotic service in !Jenera!
UMCOR also plans to · Hartinger Park on Sunday wil.l
coordinate long-term volunteer tea ms in the weeks honor those who died on Sept.
and months ahead. Rader II. 2001, and the sold iers now
sa id .
serving in the nation 's ongoThe United Methodist in g war on terror.
Churches of Meigs County
A new 30-foot llagpole
have been asked to collect and
fla g. donated
by
special offerings next week- Middleport native Rich
end for UMCOR, Rader Hay s.
Ohio
Fraternal
Coordinator
of
the
said, and Sacred Heart Woodmen of the[ World Life
Catholic Church in Pomeroy
will collect for Catholic . Insurance Society. will be
Charities USA the weekend marked with a spec ial comof Sept. 17. Sacred Heart memorative plaque and dedPastor Rev. Walter Heinz icated at the service. which
said those who wish to con- begin s at 2 p.m . Hays. who
tribute to the Catholic now lives in Grove City. has
Charities USA fund drive provided several flag s for
may do so by mailing or public places in Middleport
delivering a check to the
Siate Rep. Jimmy Stewart,
Sacred Heart Rectory. 161 R-Aibany, and · representaMulberry Ave .. Pomeroy.
tives of other elected olfi.Those who wi$h 10 make c'ials are expected to make
: contributions online to any of ·remarks at the ceremony.
...__................a=-~7'.-n-:-J. Reed/photo the three suggested charities
Units of the local volunteer
h
If
f
h
1
Ch
f
may
do
so
at
www.methodisfire
departments
. police
. f
The U.S. and Ohio ft ags ft y at a -mast in honor o t e ate te
departments,
EMS
units.
1
h . . .• d
.
d h
Justice William Rehnquist and for victims of Hurricane Katrina. tre 1e .org. www.1sss.org. or
11
an ot
d
d ers
h
Here. Elaine Stewart of the Pomeroy Postmaster Iowers the Www'catllolt..cchar· t.tt' esus·a.org. s en s eputtes
fl
t
h
If
t'l
S
t
20
Rader
sat'd
th
e
Meigs
.
are
expecte
to
atten
.
t
· t he
flags there. They wtll continue o y a a -mast un 1 ep .
.
· h
·
Ministerial Association plans · ceremony tn onor o 1 t e
sealed in a one-gallon ·plastic where they are needed. Rader a prayer se rvice on the public safety personnel who .
. Pomeroy. levee 10 remember died in attacks on the World
bag with a zipper closure . said.
Those items will he tran s- . The parish is also collect- hurricane victims and 10 pray Trade Center in New York.
ported from Pomeroy to ing new and like-new' blan- for survivors'. safety, next N.Y. and the Pentagon in
Athens, and Columbus, then ket s for distribution to hurri- week , . with details to be Washington. D .C .
on to Louisi&lt;1na communities
cane victims.
announced.
Please see Memorial. AS
.

.

ified , · best Euro Car, be st .
motorcycle, best interior..
Concessions will be sold
RACINE - Saturday will and the event will take place
be busy in Racine with the rain or shine. There will be
Racine Fall Festival and the dash plaques given out while
"Cruisin" Saturday Night" supplies last and prize drawcar show celebrating the 50th ings will be held.
anhiversary of the Ford
Across the street from the
car show Raci ne Postmaster
Thunderbl'rd.
.,.
The car show is sponsored Bonnie Brown will be unveilby Hill 's Automotive Classic . ing a new stamp collection
Car Restoration and Parts , entitled ''Cars.of the SO's" a!
and Racine Home National 7 p.m.
Bank. All proceeds from the
The postal service has also .
event will benefit the Racine commissioned a cancellation
Community stamp of a 1955 Thunderbird
Area
Organization's Scholarship for the event. There will be a
temporary postal station set
Fund.
.
Entries into the show are up at the event for those
nor limited to Thunderbirds. wishing to send their mail '
In fact, all makes, models and with the one ·time only stamp
ye;trs of cars are eligible as designed by local resident
are motorcycles.
Melody McKay.
Many award winning clasRegistration begins at 4
p.m. and the cost is $10. The sic cars have spe nt time in
show is from 4 p.m. to 9 Racine at Hill's Automotive
p.m. on Home National Classic Car Re storations and
Bank's parking lot. Judging Parts. Owners Marvin and
begins at 6 p.m. and awa_rds• Jan Hill ha ve also assisted in
will be a nn oun ced at "8:30 orgamzmg and judging
p.m.
nationally recognized car
There will be 33 trophies show s.
For more information congive n out in the following
categories: best original, \Jest c~rn in g the car show call
Foild, best Chevy. best 949-2217 from 7 a.m. to 4
Mopar, best classic , best p.m .. or 949-4072 or 949,
truck; best project, best mod- 2 144 ~fter 5 p.m.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

Calendars
A3
dassifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
[)ear Abby
A3
Editorials ·
A4
NASCAR
B8
Obituaries
As
AS
Places. to go
. B Section
Sports
Weather
A7

''It's important that people
ask where the items they
donate arc goin g before they
donate,"
Rader
said.
"Organizations are collec ting relief donations without
any plan to get them to tho se
in need."

Please see Soutl!em. AS

Car show Saturday night RACINE FALL FESTIVAL COURT

WEAmER

2 SEf:TIONS -

'"' " ·"')clail)"'"lind.o·o u"

Meigs churches plan hurricane relief efforts
POMEROY - · The Meigs
United
Methodist
Cooperative Parish will coordinate monetary support for
victims of Hurricane Katrina
through three denominational
charities, and is collecting
materials to assist in llood
clean-up.
Rev. Keith Rader said
Wednesday ihe county-wide
ecumenical parish encourages monetary donations to
United Methodist Committee
on 'Relief, Lutheran Social
Services,
and
C(\tholic
Charities USA. all of 'which
have esiablished special
funds to help victims of last
month's hurricane.
Rader said the Mulberry
Community Center will provide llood buckets and mate- .
rials for health kits , which
will be transported through
the United Methodist Church
to Baldwi~ . La. communities
hext week. The deadline for
providing those materials is
noon on Sept.. l4. Rader .said
the cooperative parish has a
stock of 200 llood buckets,
and encouraged local resi dents to contribute health
kits. which contain one hand
towel , one wash cloth, a nail
file or ·c lipper (no emery
boards or toenail clippers), a
bar of soap, wrapped adultsize toothbrush, toothpaste
and six adhesive bandage·s.
Those items should be

OBITUARIES

.

l\11H.R X, :!em;,

ha s a st udent body nf 741,
up from 739 . last year. The
num ber of 's tall in the district has remaitied the same
as last year.
Gruescr also expressed his
co ncern about having on ly
one spare bus for the bus lleet
as well· as Hou se · Bi~l 66
which he said may deny
Southern a two to th ree percent increase in state funding.
Southern is joined on this list
by over 200 other school districts in Ohio.
Grueser informed the commissio n of the permanent
improvement levy on the

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL:COM

We'll deliver all the local happenings right to your home . Stop by our office
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I0
.
ID

su•·n

"The ratio of fring es to new ideas." ' he said about
salary was the highest in the Southern High School's new
state," Wolfe contended..
principal Mark ·Mil·ler. " He
New commission member ha s the stall involved in deciPaul Marshall made a coun- sion mak ing and · has made
terpoint by commenting on subtle changes to managin g
the relatively low sa larie s the student body."
driving up the . fringes.
Grueser admitted that the
Marshall comes from the district's sfudent body at
Ohio Office of Budget and large has lost 25 students this
Management ,
·repla~ing year due to open enrollment.
· He es timated · the financial
member Kyle Gephart.
Southern Local Schools loss to the district to be
,Robert $100,000 because of this.
Superintendent
Grueser began his comments
"That loss is damaging to
about the .new school year the distri ct," Wolfe said .
with what he called a "sl?irit . · "Open enrollment is a punof optimism in the di strict."
ishing thing here."
"Mr. Miller has brought
At thi s point th e di strict

RACINE - At yesterday's
meeting of the Financial
Planning and Supervision
·Commission for Southern
Local School Di strict, Bill
Wolfe, co mmisSion presidellt, described the district's
financial situation as "creeping toward improvement."
Wolfe 's comment stemmed
from ' 1energy notes" being
paid off which annually cost
the di strict $75,000. ·
Wolfe also felt that the 3.5
percentage of change in
salaries when comparing

"It doesn't seem like we'll
be able to return to New
Orleans in the near future,"
Loomis said. " We've got
(players and staff) that have
kids that ne ed to go to school
and a lot of other .issues wi\h
families. We think it \ f~ir to
them that we establish a base
here."
.
Saints part-ownerlexec utive Rita Benson LeBlanc, the.
granddaught er of owner Tom
Bmson. said children of players. coaches and staff mem hers that are mak ing the tiip
to Texas with their fathers are
being · enrolled in local
sc hools.
Offensive lineman Jerm ane
Mayberry, who grew up in
nearby Floresville, said many
players have approached him
and asked if he knows about
good places to live .
On the football side, players have wondered where
other necessiti es will be
located . The team is operating without a weight room,
though Haslett said the equipment soon willo.be in place.
The Saints have rented
hydraulic lifts to record overhead views of practice. To
watch the video, they're
using
meeting
rooms
equipped with large-screen
video displays inside the
city\ convention center.

DETROIT (APl - The ami seco nd with two outs.
Cleveland Indians score a lot after Rodriguez reached on an
of runs for Cliff Lee. He did- error by Boone at third base.
n't need the support Tuesday
But Lee struck out Craig
ni ght.
Monroe l.o oking to end that
Lee allowed four hits over threat and retired the next
eight shutqut innings and three batters after Polanco 's
Cleveland beat the Detro it single in the eighth.
Tigers 6-1 on Tuesday night
Jason Johnson (7-12) gave
to move to wjthin a half-game up two runs and live hits in
of ·the New York Yankees in
six innings, walking two and
the AL wild-card race.
striking out two.
Grady Sizemore. Coco
"I don't know if we're runCrisp and Aaron Boone
homered to account f(lr all of ning· out of gas. I can't
Cleveland's runs. Crisp IJad. explain it," Johnson said. "It's
just one of those things where
three hits and sto le a base.
Detroit scored in the ninth. we're kind of in a rut right
its fir&gt;t run in 27 innings. to now. Our starters had a rough
avoid its third str;iight • couple weeks, and I feel like
shutout. The Tiger~ have lost our starters arc real'ly starting
to come back and pitch well
six strai ght.
''It 's time for the troops to again. The hitters are having a
di g a little deeper here. We little rough week now, too."
get to find out what we're
The Tigers scored in the •
·made of," Tigers mana~er ninth when Brandon lnge
Alan Trammell smd. "We ve tripled off David Riske with
hit pretty much a low point in one out to score Young, who
the seaso n for me. and there's had walked and moved to secno pity party."
ond on a passed ball .
Lee ( 15-.:1) won his sixth
Crisp pot Cleveland ahead
straig ht decision. walking two ~ - 0 in the third with his two- .
and striking out four as he had
out. two-run horner. hi s II th
the Tigers off balance
of the season.
.throughou t the game.
"Coco has been really ste'p"Things went pretty good
for me ... Lee said "They did- ping up in big situations,''
n't score and I can't complain Indians manager ,Eric Wedge
•
'aid. ". :. He has no fear."
·
atiout that."
Boone led off the seventh
Detroit cou ld only manage
with
his 13th homer · of. the
two hits hy Magglio OnJonet ..
a two-out single in the liN season. off Franklin German.
and a leadoff double in the to make it 3-0.
Sizemore added a three-run
fourth. a single by Dmitri
Young in the 'sixth and a sin - homer in the eighth. off Craig
gle by Placido Polanco lead- Dingman. his 17th of the seaing off the eighth.
son .
" I located my fastball ," Lee
"That's what you play for,"
said. · ''I didn't have a good Silernore &gt;aid of the wildgrip on it. but I was locating it card race. ··You play all year
well. They started looking for in a lot of games. This is .the
l h~ve not been a ~ub~cTibcr ;n the pasl 30 days. Enclosed is my p3.ymem of S30.19 fm :3 month:-- of ihe Daify St'r~rirwl.
the ,fastball and I st-arted spot you play for."
throwing changeup~ ...
Notes: Rodriguez's walk in
.
Ordone7·s first-inning sinthe first inning was only hi s'
I currently subscribe 10 the Dail~; S~milltl. Enclosed is my payment of $59.15 for a 6 mmuh .;;uh~criplion .
.,
gle followed a walk to Ivan
&gt;eve nth of the season and fir&gt;t
Rodriguez and gave the
July 26 .... Cleveland
since
Tigers runners on lirst and
second with two outs. But 28 Ronnie Belliard got his
Lee got Young to foul out I&lt;• lir&lt;t triple of the season in the
"'l_'Lnnd inning . .... Ordonez is
end the inning .
7-for12 lifetime against Lee.
Lee retired the ne., t three
Expiration Date_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-,-- Card #
0Visa
...
Ho
me plate umpire Bill
batters
after . Onlonet \
Hohn ejected two fans during ·~
fourth-inning double .
·~
Youn£\ single in the· sixth the eighth inning for swearing
.~
·
·~
oavc
Dctmit runners on liN at Trammell.
......................................
0
.

1'111 ' I{Sil ,\ \ ,

Southern finances 'creeping' toward improvement

SPORTS

Saints in San Antonio: A logistical quandary
SAN ANTONIO (AP) Signs posted throughout the
New Orleans Saints' hotel
direct players to the place
where they can get their
ankles taped. Other signs
guide them on a quarter-mile
path to a foot bridge, over the
Riverwalk and across a busy
street to the building where
team meetings are held.
In the makeshift headquarters. right past a uniformed
San Antonio police officer
who serves as a security
guard, players come to a
handwritten board that points
them in different directions_
the offense · going one way,
the defense another.
And when meetings end _
sometimes interrupted by a
ringing telephone because the
rooms double as coaches.'
offices _ the team piles onto
, buses for a 10-ininute drive to
the high school lields that
have turned into their practice
facility.
Such is the new life for the
Saints as they try getting
ready for the NFL season
after being driven from their
home by Hurricane Katrina.
The team moved into San
Antonio last weekend and
began practicing Monday for
the regular-season opener
Sunday at Carolina. Coach
Jim Haslett has reminded his

Racine ready for annual
Fall Festival, AS

.

_ __ _

·--- - - - _,.,_

-

The Rac ine Fall
Festival ·s court of
queen candidates
has been chosen
a.t Southern H tgh .
!School. Each Of the
five candidates will
. .
I
parttctpate tn
Saturday's parade
with the winner
being crowned at
noon at Star Mill
Par-k. Th ts year's
cand idates are. sit·
ting (from left)
Jenny Warner,
daughter of Mike
and Sheifa Warner;
Chelsea Smith.
daughter of MegGuinthflr; Kristiina
Will iams. daughter
' of Debbie Williams;
standing (from left)
Bethany Riffle.
· daughter of James
and Barbara Riffle;
Andrea Parsons.
daughter of Jim
and Debbie
Parsons.
Beth S.rcont/ photo

'

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