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. PageD~

TRAVEL

SMOKY. MOUNTAINS:

Consultant
Melanie Simon,":
right, explains a '
visitors survey
to Don and
Lynne Byers of
Hiram, Ga., as
they begin their :
trip July 29,
through Cades ··
Cove in the
Great Smoky
•·
Mountains
National Park ,
near Townsend, :
Tenn. The sur- ·
vey is part of a •
'·
study to find
ways of relieving
traffic conges- :
tion in the popu-'
lar cove.
'

VISITORS FLOCK TO CADES
COVE DESPITE TRAFFIC
other park locations..
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
By and large. visitors Jove.
the cove aliu had to be drawn
TOWNSEND, Tenn. out to find something to comNineteenth-century farm s. plain about. she said. · .
On a scale of I to I0, with
black bears and a pastoral
landscape surrounded by the 10 the best, virtually every
Appalachian mountains have person leaving the cove ·rated
made picturesque Cades the ex perience an 8, 9 or I0,
Cove the most popular desti- she said. "Now there are
nation in the country's most- some complaints about' trafvisit~d national park .
fie , but generally_ people
More than 2 million visitors seem to be willing to put up
a year flock to this 6,500-acre with that," Simon said.
,
valley at the southern end of · The biggest issue for many
the Great Smok.y Mountains was restricting access. Most
National Park on the are opposed.
Tennessee-North Carolina
Congress stipulated in ereborder, making it one of the ating the Smokies in the
most heavily used park areas 1930s that it was the people's
anywhere in the United States. park and would never have .an
"You have great scenery. admission fee. The Smoktes
great nature and great history. ·is now one of the few major
It's got the combination national parks where the pubthere," said Dianne Flaugh, lie still can enter for .free,
the park 's landscape architect. althoueh. fees are charged for
But with sightseers comes such things as backcountry
traffic congestion. particular- c:t mpground reservations.
Jy during summer vacation
Visitors
were . asked
and right on through autumn , whether it was more imporwhen visitors tlock to see the .tant to be able to come to
brilliant colors of the leaves.
Cades Cove whenever th_ey
Up to 4,450 vehicles a day want or when there were
take the narrow. one-way. fewer crowds. "The majority
one-lan'e road that loops II were saying come whenever
we want," Simon said.
miles around the· cove.
Forget .the 20 mph speed
Not every visitor who
limit, it's a backwoods grid- approached the survey-takers
Jock every time so meone decided to enter the cove.
pauses to ogle a deer or pho- Simon said. Some turned
tograph a bear. Campers and around after they found out
cars are lined up bumper to how long the trip could take
bumper. occupants breathing or .saw pictures of the traffic
in the exhaust.
they cou ld face.
The Park Service cautions
But these tentative concluthe loop road nip can take three sions sound similar to the
to four hours during these busy . results of another Cades
times. ''EXPECT DELAYS!" Cove visitor survey taken in
says the park Web site.
I &lt;,198. That survey found that
With traffic volume rough- "amazingly enough - well,
ly dou.bhng every decade no, it is not amazing - peasince the 1970s to more than pie love the park. so every563.000 vehtcles a year, the body is usually satisfied wtth
park is now considering ways the'ir visit," Flaugh said.
to cut. not just cope, with
''I've got a lot of mixed
congestion in Cades C~we . .
Five suggested alternative
V.
approaches take progressively stronger actions, from
adding warning _ signs for
CADES COVE:
~'bear jams ahead" and more
Located eight miles from
roadside pull-offs, to creating Townsend, Tenn. An Ita shuttle service or limiting mile, one-way loop road
access during peak periods.
encircles the valley floor.
. ~·1 am perfectly happy that Expect traffic delays in
people want to come and spend peak summer and fall; driihree or four hours in Cades ving "amund the loop can
Cove;; Flaugh said. "But I take two to fonr hours.
think it ought to be spent doing
Alternatively, you can bike
som~thing more enjoyable than
the loop, and there are also
watching the red brake lights of · hiking and horseback trails.
the car in front of them."
The Cades Cove Visitor
Consultants surveyed near- Center is ·located approxily 900 Smokies visitors in mately six miles around the
July as part of a $1'.3 million loop at the Cable Mill area.
study on the Cades Cove
experience. The results. still
FOR MORE
being compiled, will lead to a
INFORMATION:
round of public meetings
www.nps.gov/grsmlgsinnext summer and final recsite/cadescove. html.
ommendations in 2008. General information about
Melanie Simon of ORCA the park:(865) 436-1200.
Consulting in Clerntont, Fla .. To learn more about fuiUre
headed the survey work. which plans to manage traffic in
interviewed visitors entering the area, go to www.cadethe cove, those leaving the scoveopp.com/.
cove and those who stopped at
Bv DUNCAN MANSFIELD

If

"'

tOU

G0. • •

CYBERTRIPS: Autumn in the
Appalachians at Pigeon Forge
BY ROGER PETTERSON
A~::.OCIAlED ~RESS

WRITER

Autumn is a great time of
year
to
visit
eastern
Tennessee and the Great
Smoky Mountains for fall
foliage, harvest festivals · arid
some down-home music at
Dollywood.
Before you go. fire up your
computer to gather travel
information from the Web for
spots such as Sevi ~:;rville http://www .se vierv ill~c hamber.org/ - a town east of the
big city of Knox ville where
you can hit a few antique
. shops, and vi sit Forbidden
Caverns.
Then. on your way fanher
·into the. f110untains. give your
kids (and yourself) a fun
break with a visit to Pigeon
Forge - http://.www.mypi geonforge.com/ - home of
everything from museums to
stage shows and amuse ment
parks. The town 's autumn
Harvest Festival runs from
mid-September
through
' October. If you can't make it
for the festival. think about
holdi~g off until winter and

the Jan . 7-15 Wilderness
Wildlife Week. For more
details, you'll have to click on
"Special Otfers'· and look for
"Request a Travel Planner."
' You t·an't go to Pigeon
Forge without a visit to
Dollywood
-. http://www.dollywood .com/
- Dolly Panon's countrythemed amusement park.
· Alo'ng with the rides; including the Thunderhead wooden
roller coaster. there ·s a Music
&amp; Harvest Celebration running Sept. ·23-0ct. 29 with
free gospel. gospel and bluegrass mustc.
Drive up the highway
about a half-dozen scenic
mile_s. to Gatlinburg -·
http:/ /www.gat Iin burg.com/
~ a bustliog town with its
own collection of amusements that serves as a gateway to the Smokies. And yes,
t,he y ~ lso have a fall festival ,
includin~ hay rides and the
Gail in burg's Craftmen's Fair.
If you have a few minutes to
kill. peruse their photo
gallery. Then check out
"Ailraction&gt;'· and "Spec:al
Events ...

andmark Mghan ·
electiQns hailed as
s~ccess as Taliban fails
to disrupt the vote, A2
I

Sunday, September 18, 2005,

emotions about it," said visitor
David Mills of Owensboro,
Ky .. as lie prepared recently to
take his family, sitting in lawn
chairs in the bed of his Ford
pickup, on their annual drive
through the cove.
"Some of us like to bicycle
ride (through the cove) ;md
some of us like to ride in the
truck. But that bumper-tobumper traffic doesn't work,
either. So they ought to do
something," he said.

Report: Mortgage
brokers, appraisers
fueling foreclosure
increases, A6

.

.SPORTS
• Green runs past Eagles.
See Page 81

AP Photo

Crow allo
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -Judge Fred
W. Crow Ill ruled Friday that
a Warrantless search of a
Rutland home in March was
lawful, ·and ·will admit evidence siezed in the search in
a trial of the home's owner
on dru~ charges.
Martm "Marty" Pierce, 44,
was first charged in Meigs
County Court in March, and
was mdicted in Common
Pleas Court in May on two
charges each of grand theft
and receiving stolen property,
and three counts of tampering with drugs - Klonapin;
Zoloft and Buspar. He is now
free on bond.
Pierce, of Beech Grove

siezed evidence in Pierce trial

Road, . Rutland, was first
charged in Meigs County
Court in March, and was
indicted in Common Pleas
Court in May on two charges
each of grand theft and
receiving ·stolen .property, and
three counts of tampering
with drugs Klonapin,
Zoloft and Buspar. He is now
free on bond, awaiting a jury
trial to begin Thursday.
Sheriff's deputies were
summohed to the Pierce resi dence twice in one March
evening, after neighbors
complained of gunshots
being fired. On their second
visit. deputies entered the
home and found a female
subject, marijuana, drug
paraphernalia and · prescription
medication
which

appeared to ·have been pack-.
aged for illegal
sale.
Deputies also found I 07 marijuana plants in a grow room
in a building adjacent to the
house, and a camper and
tractor which were discovered to have been stolen.
Pierce, lhrough his attarney, Charles H. Knight, had
filed a motion to suppress the
evidence siezed, arguing that
the warrantless search . -was
illegal, that none of the law
enforcement
officers
involyed in the search had
seen a crime committed prior
to the search, and that law
enforcement officials h.ad
received anonymous calls
weeks before the search
about the stolen propet1y. and
had done nothing to investi-

OBITUARIES

~NINI

• New Orleans' battered
health system faces
ongoing crisis, national
hospital offic.ial says.
See Page A2 .
.. Grace Eich honored
for DAR service.
See Page A3
• French Colony Chorus
celebrates charter.
See Page A3
• e-Bay selling basics
training offered.
See PageA3
• Police charge
woman, son with theft
involving qharity.
See Page AS
• Plant turning pollutants
into fertilizer.
SeePage AS
• Private judges
face scrutiny of
county colleagues.
SeePage AS
• State looking to ease
natural gas spike.
SeePageA6

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INDEX

.i' .• ·"' .

'

2 SOCTIONS -

• Tau~. Tags,
hes exira. leballl.lnduded
prke of new vlhldt lis!M wlwe ep,lkallle.
On approved credit. On seladld models. Not r~ lor "'"""'kll errors.
I'! ices good Sepsember Is-. ·r~h Sepllmber Iit•t .. Excluding C.rv~.

l2 PAGES

A3

Calendars
•
Classifieds

............. ........... _

B3·4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

Editorials

\

Obituaries
Sports

Every Tuesday and Thursday
for the past several weeks
Meigs County boys of grade
school age have been suiting
up and learning the basics of
football in the ~ig Bend
Youth Football Leagae. The
league began their five game
sellson this weekend which
. they hope to extend to seven
games if they make it into
the playoffs. Here .. the
unsung heroes of the offensive fine prepare to protect
the punter and are (from left)
Austin ·Hill, Austin Johnson
and Tanner Diehl of the fifth
. and sixth grader's teani.
Here, the tl)ird and fourth
graders meet in ~ huddle to
discuss their next play with
coach Kelley Gruser. The
league practices in Syracuse
· on the ball field and hosts
their games at the old
Middleport Junior High
School football field.
-

Sercent/pllatOO

B Section

Weather

MONDAY - SATURDAY 9 am- 8 pm • SUNDAY 1pm · 7 pm • 422 -0756 • TOLL FRH 1·800-822-0417

A6
•

Please see Principal. A5 .

© 2005 Ohto VaUey Publishing Co.

·I

'

.

.

•

"·

'

New principal,
new attitude for
Southern High
. RACINE - When Mark
Miller of Martin's Ferry was
hired · as Southern High
School's new principal in
May he promised to give 110
pen.:ent to his job and now
that school has started he is
pulling that statement to the
test
Miller said part .of that 110
-percent is building unity in
the staff and creating an
"ope
n house .. atmosphere.
'
"Perception is reality,"
Miller said about being visible and wnnecting with staff.
students and a public that he
wants to feel welcome at the
schooi,including at student
pep rallies .
"I want the public to feel
like they can come in and ask
questions." Miller said. "1
want them to know that if
they have concerns they can
call me personally. I'm serious about that."
Mfller has added his own
touch to pep rallies by introducing the '·spirit stick;"
which students can earn by
yelling the loudest at the rallies among other spirited and
creative activities.
It s all part of Miller's
effort to encourage school
spirit as is a planned tailgat·
ing. e\'elll f&lt;)r homecoming on
Oct. 14 for the community.
As for · developing unity
amongst the staiT. Miller said
he has asked each staff member to establish goals that
they want to reach this year
;tnd has asked them for input
as to how to ~et . students
moti\'ated.
Miller also had the idea to
giye the staff identical tc
shirts. identifying them as
"Southern Local Staff' to
wear if they .choose to at pep
rallies and other school
events. The staff wearing the
shirts promotes a team
atmosphere which is pan of
Miller's '·perception is reali;
'' .. the of\.
• "We hil\'e a !!ood staff here
and they work- hard." Miller
said. " We ha\'e a nice mixture
' ortenured and new teachers,"
.-\ s to how he relates to his
student&gt;. Miller said he talks
to them as adults.
"I give kid s choices:· he
said . ~· It' s important to treat
them with respect and they' ll
respect you. At' the same time
I am a disciplinarian and my
style is if you do something
wrong todav you're going to
face discipJ[ne today:·
Miller is also focused on
rai, ing Southern' s state proficietll'Y and graduation scores.
Eastern was the only
sdt&lt;&gt;ol district in Meigs to
achieve an "effective" rati.ng
on the achievement and proficiency tests while both

INSIDE

AT www.to•pedell.oco•~_... .

the house would have beel)
"negfectful'' had they not
searched the re sidence for
children. He also determined
that the discoverY, of drugs
and paraphernalia in the
house was inadvertent as a
result of officers searching
the home for ch ildren or others who might have been in
danger.
Crow will wait unti l
Monday to dete rmine the
validity of the warrant in
light of the fact that it did not
address -who was to conduct
the search, an admi-nistrative
procedure .that - was not followed. and a question Knight
has raised as to why the warrant itself was not filed in
Meigs County Court after the
search was executed .

BY BETH SERGENT
- BSERG ENT~MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

Page AS
• Raymond Furbee

Yl$11 US

gate.
.
Knight also noted that
deputies seek in; the search
warrant · from Lounty Court
Judge Steven L. Story did
not inform him that they had
already entered the home.
Assi stant
.Prosecuting
Attorney Richard Hedges
maintained . that -the drugs
were found in plain view and
that Pierce's son led officers
to one of the stolen items.
and said officers entered the
residence in search of children who might have been in
danger because of the gun- ·
fire.
Crow, in allowing the evidence as pan of Pierce's trial.
determined the search to be
lawful, and said officers
investigating the si tuation at

little giants of midget league football

Employee
Price

Prit:es Bei!IW.Ihe

•

�. ..

:P,.e Daily Sentinel

NATION

PageA2

WORLD

Monday, September 19, 2005

NEW ORLEANS~ BATTERED HEALTH ·sYSTEM FACES
_ON·GOING CRISIS, · NATIONAL HOSPITAL OFFICIAL SAYS
'

,j

;.

BY DAVID CRARY
AP NATIONAL WRITER

NEW ORLEANS - This
city's health cilre fal'il ities
have lieen shattered to an
e'Xtc nt Llllmatched in U.S. hi story. and its hospital system
faces grave challenges a:-. re:-.i'dents begin return ing. the vice
president of the national hospital accreditation urganization said Sunday.
. The oflicial. Joe ·Cappiello.
said several hospiwls were
_probably damaged beyond
repair by Hurricane .Katrina.
while some may try to rush
back into business be fore conditions itre safe. Others. while
rebuilding. may lose doctors
and nurses to ':ummunilies
else\vhere.
He also recounted harrowing details of how doc·tors and
nurses felt compelled &lt;95ainst the fundamentals of
their tra ining - to mo1ke
tiiagc-sty k choice' during the
flooil. They were forced W aid
·sa m~ p~ t i e nts at the expense
·of others with less ch&lt;nKe of
survival. ·
· "Essentiall y the health care
infrastructure ·of New Orleans Members of a cleaning crew gather at a back entrance to Tulane University Hospital and Clinic
· is gone - it no longer exists."
~aid Cappiello. who just comAdm. Thad Allen. head of the city's
largest
hospital s.
pleted a three-day mission to more &lt;.lays to prepare.
plan
is
to
start
fed
eral
·government's
hurriNagin's
to
reopen
on
announced
plans
the city along with a c:ollea~uc
· 'from the Illinois-based Joint repopulating the city neigh- . cane response. has urged Wednesday, when re sidents
Commission on Accreditation borhood by neighborhood. Nag in not to rush people back are due to start moviflg back
starting Monda y with the in . He didn' t want to set a into the neighborhood. That
of Healthcare Organi1.ations.
' Although the city has mmc Algiers section. across the timeline on Sunday. but he would m&lt;tke it th~ tlrst to
than a dozen hospitals. none Mi ssiss ippi River frotll down- said the information he was reopen since the storm.
have resumed normal ope ra- .town New Orlean.s.. Over the getting fr~m1 admini strators a1 Cleaning crews were busy
-tions. Officials at Children\ next week and a half, the . the U.S. Centers for Disease Sunday carting out debri s and
Hospital. which Mayor Ray Garden District and the Control and Prevention and readying the hospital to open.
Nagin had hoped would be French Quarter. the city \ his- the Environmental Protectioit
Dr. Brobson Lutz, the city's
ready when re side nts arc toric heart . are due to open to Agency suggested it still was- former health director and an
n't safe enough.
allowed to return to th e residents and businesses.
assistant coroner · for Orleans
· All are areas that didn't
Touro ·Infirmary in · the · Parish, said the hespitals
Uptown neighborh ood this
week. said they may need I0 llood. but Coasl Guard Vice Garden District. one of the clearly won't be up to accreditation standards, but the city

Landmark Afghan elections hailed as
~~~~;s~~g~them
success as Taliban fail to disrupt the vote .....~~

AP Photo

in New Orleans. Sunday.
in New Orleans or the doctors
give a hoot whether they
accredit our hospital s or not,"
Lutz said. "We need to have
our emerge ncy rooms open so
that if people returning need
emergency care for trauma or
infections or other thing s.
they can get it."
Cappiello expressed concern that some hospitals, despemte to get back into business for competitive as well as
public-service reasons, might
move too quickly. before all
mold and contaminants from
th'e !loading are removed.
" I hope there's someone
looking at all the health care

open as soon

d""'on't believe the people

assets and making sound decisions as the mayor faces overwhelming political pressure to
let people back in," Cappiello
said . "The federal gove rnment
needs to go in ther~ and make
sure the ~ospitals are a safe
environment before they're
reopened."
Many local doctors and
nurses are without paychecks,
he said: "There's a nationwide
shortage' of nurses. People
will try to recruit them and .
man y may never come back."
He cited Charity Hospital,
where floodwaters continue to
be pumped · out. as one that
seemed beyond repair.
The hospitals seemed to
have been well-prepared for .
Katrina's howling winds, but
not for the disastrous flooding
that 'followed, Cappiello- said.
That foiled plans to evacuate
critically ill patients and
knocked out backup generators that would keep air conditioniryg and lifesaving equipment on.
At Memorial Medical
Center, doctors and staff
•worked valiantly during the
worst 'of the t1ood 'to evacuate
more than . 200 patients by
boat and 'helicopter, but 45
patients - most of them critically ill - died at the hospital,
·
"We' re going to hear of a
thousand more acts of heroism." Cappiello said. ''But the
bottom line is that having a
response plan that relies on
· heroism is nottenable.''
At a couple of hospitals, he
said.. ofticials ordered a lockdown of pharmaceutical supplies, wanting to protect them
from looters when th.eir hospi·
wls emptied. They later
learned that staff were unable
to gai n access to the drugs to
aid ailing patients after !loadin g thwarted evacuation
plans. ·

Bv DANIEL COONEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

KABUL. Afghani stan sc hools.
.Trooping
into
mosques and tents. millions
Qf Afghans detled a Taliban
boycott call and militant
:attacks to vote for a new parliament Sunday. taking the
last formal step in starti'ng a
democracy aimed at endmg
decades of rule by the gun .
Officials hailed the polls as
a major succes·s. although in.i_tial estimates suggested voter
~urnout was lower than hoped
for because of security fears
and fru stration s over the
inclusion of several warlords
6n the ballot. Results were
not exi&gt;ectcd for more than a
week.
Many people looked to a
.big vote to marginalize rene·
.•gade loyalists o f the ousted
:Taliban regime by demon~trating public support for an
elected government built up
tinder the protection of
:20,000 soldiers in the
·American-led coalition und
:11.000 NATO peacekeepers.
: Washin~ton and other govoirnments have poured in billlons of dollars trying to fostl!r "civic system that encour.ages Afghani stan\ fractious
·ethnic groups to work toge th ~
;er peacefully and ensure the
:nation is never again a !o.tag·iiJg po't for a 1-Qaida and
·&lt;zther terrori,t groups.
• "After 30 years of wars.
ihterventions, . occupat ions
misery.
today
.and
:Afghanistan is moving · fo r:Ward. making an economy.
:making polilical institutions."
~resident Hamid Karzai sa id
'lS he cast his ballot nearly a
.year after his own victory in
an election that defied
'
Taliban threats.
He praised Afghans for
going out to vote for tl1e parliament and 3-&lt; provincial
counci ls "in 'Pile of the terrorism. in spite of the
threat,_" ·
Fifteen people. including a
French commando in the
U .S.- led mal ition. were
killed in a , pate of violence ·
during ,the day. But there was
no spectacular attack as
threatened by Taliban mili.tants. whose stepped-up
:insurgency the past 'ix
months caused more than
1.200 deaths:
- Heavy, security kept mmt
violence away from polling
sta.tions . Election official'

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A woman casts her vote in Kandahar, Afghanistan . Sunday.
Afghanistan held landmark parliamentary elections on Sunday,
the first in three decades.
reported three people wound- vote in Kabul. "We want diged and no one killed in nity. we want stability and
attacks near polls and said peace." ·
only 16 of the 6.270 voting
The United States started
stalions did not open· because Afghans on the road toward
·
of security threats.
den]Ocracv when it 1ed a milVote
comiting
hegins itary campaign inlate·2001 to
Tuesday. aild with dilllkeys topple the Taliban for refu sand camels being used to col- ing to hand over Osama bin
lect ballots in some remote Laden and close al-Qaida
areas. preliminary e lection camps. A tribal council
results are not expected until adopted a constitution early
earl v October.
in 2004. followed by
Eie n then. it likelv wi ll Afg hani stan's first presidentake time to ti~ure otit "ho tial election last fa ll and then
has tlie power' in the new Sunday's parliament ballot.
Wolesi Jirga. a parliament
At least. 190 U.S. military
with 249 seat,;. 68 of which personnel have been killed in
are set aside for wome n. or near Afghanistan during
Most of the -2.775 candidates that period. and Washington
ran &lt;is independents . and hopes the strengthening
Kartai was careful not to Afghan democracy will calm
publicly favor atlyone. fear- the insurgency and let
ing renewed ten sions if .any American troor&gt;t start to
politi cal blocs become ,too withdraw.
powerful.
· U.S. Ambassador Ronald
Rights activists viewed the Neu'mann called the elections
election as a big step for a "great success:· putting an
women in thi s traditionally optimistic cast on reports that
malc-domina,ted society. The voter turnout appeared lower
5.800 candidates for parlia- than for October's presidenment and the provincial tia l election.
as;emblies . included 582
"In America. only half of
the
people vote,'' Neuman n
women. and a quarter of legislative seats are reservedJ said. "If people are getting a
for women. ·
little more used to elections.
then
maybe Afghanistan is
Enthusia:-,m wa.~ generally
high as Af2hans clutching turning into a normal counvoter identitication cards try.
•
.
Electmn or!!anilcrs said
(jied intp school s with
lessons still scrawled on \Oter 'turnout figure' wou ld
black.boards or stepped over not be ktlown until Monday.
Karzai said large numbers
piles of shoes to cast ballots
in mosques. Tents sen·ed "' of women voted in 'event!'
polling 'talion ... in remote area' wracked by violence.
includi ng in the 'outhern city
area~.
"Today is -~ magnifi cent of Kan&lt;.lahar. a former 'trongday for Afgh&lt;lllistan ... sa id Ali hold of the repressive Tali ban
Safar. 6~ .... umding in, li1le to reg1me.

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The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Homecomings

"scrubber" to be discussed .

Tuesday, Sept. 20
Sunday, Sept. 25
RUTLAND
·Rutl and
RACINE - Eagle Ria ge
Community Church home- Village Council , 4:30 p.m.,
coming wil be held with Civic Center.
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday school at 10 a.m.
and a basket dinn er at · Middleport Village Council
noon . Afternoon singing special meeting, 7 p.m ..
wtll be at I p.m. featuring council chambers.
Everett Grant and the
Wednes(!ay, Sept. 21
Southbound Express.
CHESHIRE - Board of
Directors
Gallia-Meigs
Community Aclion Agency;
noon, Cheshire Office.
Monday, Sept. 19
Thursday, Sept . 22
LETART
FALLS
POMEROY
Alpha
Letart Townshi p Trustees,
Iota Mas ters will me et at
5 p.m .. office building.
RACINE
Racine II :30 a.m. at St. Paul
Village Council, 7 p.m:, Lutheran Church. A mee tmunicipal . -building. Bids ing will follow a luncheon
for water treatment plant served by the social comand concerns over AEP mittee .

Public meetings

'

BY THE BE·Nn·
Monday, Sept. 19
PORTER
- Old-fashioned ca mp meeting will
be held at White Oak
Youlh Ca mp off Ohio 555
ncar Porter. with _preac hin g
and sing in g at 10 a.m. and
7 p.m .. through Oct. I.
There will be no mornin g
services on Monday. Food
and housin g · ure prov ided·
free. Information at 6827400 or 367-7886.

DEAR ABBY: My brother.
"D ick," was a sheriff's
deputy for five years. He was
arrested recently on felony
theft charges, ste mming from
burglaries co mmitted in the
rural area he was assig ned to
. protect.
I gave up on Dick years
ago. He has almost destroyed
the famil y farm by no1 showing ~p for meetings and
spending money that wasn't
hi s. He also stole items from
the farm . as well as a substantial amount o f cash from
our mother.
. Thesday, Sept. 20
I am worried about Mother.
MIDDLEPORT
She
knows Dick is gu ilty, but
Upward Basketball regi stration will be held from 6 makes ~p every excuse under
to 8 p.m.• at the MiGdleport the sun ·for him . He take.s
an'ti- depressant s .- · she
Church of C hri ~ t.
blames th em. She blames his
soon-to, be ex- wi fe . She
blames hi s gi rlfriend who
"put him up to the cnmes and
then turned him in .'' She bails
him out and lets him stay
with her if he wants. •
Anything negative my siblings say abo ut him. she ta~e s
as a direct insult. Dick broke
Mom's . heart years ago. and
my siblings and !.were left to
pick up .the pieces. Now she's
allowing him to do it all over
ag-ain. He's tearing our family
apart. How can we &lt;:onvince
her, it's time ,for tough love '?
- TRYING TO HELP MOM
IN THE NORTHWEST
DEAR TRYING : It might
be better for yo ur brothe~ if
you could. but you can 't.
Your mother is so fully
invested emotionally in your

Other events

Submttted photo

Anna Cleland , left, gave a tribute to Grace EiCh, a 64 year
member of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR, and then presented her with a certificate of recognition for her years of ser·
vice to the organization .
ship in the National Society
Daughters of the American
Revolution on the Revolution
War service record of Robert
Alexander. Eich is a descendent of Revolutionary War
Patriots. including Robert
Alexander.
Thomas
Alexander, Thomas Beard,
Joseph Birdseye. Margaret
Lawrence Blis s, .Thomas
Bliss. Christian Cackler, John
Chapman. Robert Chapman.
Norton Claypoole. William
Davi son, Joseph Hawley,
George Hull , Seth Jones,
Joseph Loomis, Habben
McClure, Moses McClure.
William McKay, James
McMechien, Capt. William
McMeehen. Mile s Merwin,
Matthew
MeMechen .
Richard Platt , David Steele

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Co&lt; !'\""'""'· USA,
,

Monday, September 19,' 2005

and Samuel Williamson.
She has been active u~ .
genealogy research for many
years and recentl y gave ·her
extensive personal library
holdings to the Meigs
County
Library
and
Historical Society.
Cleland said that she
prefers to be remembered for
help to the needy and people
who have had misfortune and
are in need ef ~elp .
Grace and her cousin Anna
Cleland have traced their
ancestors hack to Su san
Gandee. born m 1826.
Cleland completed her tribut.e by presenting Eich with a
certificate of recognition for
dedicated service to the
Return
Jonathan
Meigs
Chapter, DAR.

father\ mailing li st. he woul d
have seen a lis t of people
who wpuld have been interested in hi s father's demise.
I'm going to code ou r list
now. to indicate who should
Dear
be contacted in case or'dealh
Abby
or seriou s illness. - GRI EV·ING IN MISSOURI
. DEAR GRIEVING Over
the yea rs I have received lit·
erall y hundreds of lef.ters like
brother that she can no longer yours from people who have
differentiate between him and lost old friends. These are
herself. That is why. when
people who would have liked
You criticize him, she takes it to
have sent condo lence'.
as a perso nal insult . That is
also wh y she is so determined made donations to charity.
to "protect" him from . the said a final goodbye at the
consequ ences of hi s actions. funeral. or shared a happy
What 's sad is: sh.e is not help- experience at a memorial for
ing your brother. She.' s only the friend they lost
allowing him to continue his
Readers, although none ,·, f
anti -soci al behavior.
us likes to dwell on our own
Let 's hope th e state ~ ieps in mortality. I don' t kn ow &lt;ff
and prevents yo ur brother anyone who has managed to
fro m continuing hi s criminal last forever. So co nsider for a
activities - for a while. mo111ent the people who care
Howe ver. even then. don ' t , about you. Go th rough your
expect him to change until addre_ss book and note . tk
the conseq ~e nc es of hi s tndtvtduals .you. thmk would
actions become so severe that ltke to be noufted 11 you are
he feel s he must. Why should unable. to do it yo urse lf. lhe
he '? Un til now. hi s mother has tas kwtll take only a few mill tossed bini a featherbed every ute s. And leave a note indi- .
time he should have landed eating where to find the
on hi s fann y. It 's called information with you r imporENABLINO.
tant papers.
·
DEA R ABBY: A few
Dear Abby is written by
weeks ago, I e-mailed a mes- Abigail Van Burell, also
sage to an o ld fri end . I known as Jeanne Phillips,
received a reply from hi s son, and was founded by her
who was handling his father 's mother, Pauline Phillips.
affairs after his death a few Write
Dear Abby
at
da ys earlier. He had no idea www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
who I was.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
If he had ' looked at his 90069.

e-Bay selling basics training offered
MARIETTA Buckeye
Hill s
Hock ing
Valley
Regional
Deve lopment
Distri ct in Marietta will spon:-;or a one-day training session-on the eBay Selling Basics.
The training will be held
on Sept. 26 from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. a1 Buckeye Hills
Hooking Valley · Regional
Development District office,
located at 1400 Pike Street.
Marietta. Seating will be
available for 30 people for
thi s training so space is limited. The cost is $30 which
includes the eBay University
manuals and lunch and payment mu st be .received by
Sept. 22. Call (740) 374-9436
to reserve reservations for the
training .

For those who have been
buying on eBay and want to
learn how to sell on eBay or
si mply pick up new tips; this
is the right class for you. said
Boyer Simcox, exec utive
direc tor of Buckeye Hills
Hocking Valley Regional
Development Di stri ct. We
hav&lt;;: many small businesses
in the area that need an
affordable presence on the
internet and we feel this is
one of those outlets. Also,
there are individuals . who
could
supplement
their
income by selling items on
eBav.
This is first of ~eve ral
trainings scheduled for this
fall 'lind winter. The training
has been arranged by special

arrangenent with Sherm
Stevens. a certified eBay
trainer from Columbus. Tile
eBay Selling Basis course is
designed to teach:
• A brief history to tBay .
concepts
• How to open a Seller
Account
• Research selling prices
• Create effective li si ing
• Learn to· write better
descriptions
• Learn to shoot better
product photographs
• How to ge t paid fb r your
auctions, including how ·to
open and use a pay pal
account
• Monitor your listings
~ Comple.te your transactions: feedback

'irench Colony Chorus celebrates charter
GALLIPOLIS - French
Colony Chorus is celebrating
being chartered by Sweet
Adelines
International.
Organized only last fall . the
.lecalladies group qualified to
·be officially chartered in less
·lhan a year. an unusual feat.
Now a chapter of the
of
worldwide
network
.. women singing !llusic in the
. barbershop style of four-part
:harmony, the local . group
:hosted a party to celebrate.
. The chorus ·is directed by
Susan . Russell, who ~as
assisted by Mary Madsen and
Donna Patrick in the formation of a local chapter. All of
. these ladies were multi-year
: 111embers of other Sweet
: Adeline chapters, and their
experience and leadersl)ip
were vital. in the r;tpid sueces~ of the local group.
which continues to grow.
French Colony Chorus
· invited men's and women's
· barbershop choruses of the
tri-state area to perform at a
party in celebratiQn of receivmg their charter. A buffet pre·
pared by members preceded
the •entertainment and social
. hour.
A cake decorated with tile
·chapter's logo. the Gallipolis
Park bandstand. was created
by member Sue Priest, and
t1oral designs were supplied
by another member, Suzy
Parker. . Be v Alberchinski.
. mistress of q:remonies. read
: an original poem she had
written in honor of the occasian, preceding a perfor-

mance . by the French Colony
Chorus.
Charter members of the
Colony
Chorus
French
include : Director Su san
Russeli, Team Manager Mary
Madsen, Secretary Donna
Patri ck, Finance Manager
Linda Lane, Communications
Manager Bev Alberch'inski ;
Publicity Manager Suzy
Parker. Membership Manager
Amy Sprague, Historian Toni
Ford.
Plannin2 member
Marti
~Ede lmann .
Photographer Linda Hall .
·and Hospitality team Sherry
Fenderbosch, Na n Heiskell.
Dorothy Musgrove, Jeanie
Runyon and Sue Priest.
New members accepted
soon after chartef\ng include
Alva McCoy- and Ellie
Alderson.
Guest groups performing
included a combined me11·s
chorus
made · up
of
. Barbershoppers (ro m: The_
Thunder
Tones
ol
Barboursvill e. W.Va.: The
Kanawha
Kordsmen
of
Charleston.
W.Va. :. The
Singing Kerne ls of Ashland .
Ky._; and from Athens.
Women's choruses which
performed separatel y and
participated in a combined
women 's chorus induded :
River Magic of Huntingllln..
W.Va.: Almost Heave n of
Charleston.
W.Va.:
PHarmo ny
Express
of
Parkersburg, W.Va. : and
French Colony of Ga!Jipolis ..
· Several women's quartets
el).tert aincd.
including :

Repri se and We4, members
of Rive r Magic. and Touch of
Magic. members of French
Colony.. A male quartet.
!:::rushed Velvet, compri sed of
members from The Kanawha
Kordsmen and The Thunder
Tones. performed doo-wop
harmon y numbers in costumes of the ' 50s.
The part y was . held at
Grace ·United Methodi st
Church. 600 Second Ave. in
Gallipolis. where French
Colony Chorus rehearses on
Tuesday s at 7 p.m. Any area
hJdies who ..:njoy singing are
invited to co me to practice to .
ge t acqu ai'ntcd with the sweet
harmonies of the barbershop
music st-y le and enjoy the fel lowship wi th members.
The gro up is· accepting
requests for performances at
local publi c and private
events:
.
For more information.
women . mav contact Be v
·Alberchinski. at (740) 446'
2476 or Suzy Parker at (740)
992-5555. or e-mai l frenchcolunychorus@ yahoo.com.

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"llli'III)IDII EM IIIII~

PageA3

Mother's.defense of thieving
C{lurch events ·
son is tearing family apart

Grace Eich honored for DAR service
POMEROY
Grace
Crow Eich was honored for
64 y~ars of dedicated service
to Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter. Daughters of the
American Revolution. during
the recent Constitution Week
observance . .
Her · cousin, Anna Circle
Cleland, gave a tribute to her
for her service not only in
the DAR but the community
of Pomeroy . A native of
Letart Falls, the honoree
Ohio
graduate
from
University with both bache- ·
lor and master's degrees and
in I968 was honored by that
institution for outstanding
service. For 32 yers· she
taught institutinal food s in
· the in high schools in both
Canton and Chillicothe ,
She has been a member of
lhe Meigs Chapter · DAR
since 1941 and has the
longest membership among
current active members.
' Eichis a past regent. 197779, and has held several
positions in the local chapter
· and has. given support to various DAR affiliate groups
including the Ohio Room in
the National DAR Building.
the Friends of the DAR
Museurn, Seimes Microfilm
:Center, SAR Museum; and
:Waldschmidt House.
: She holds membership in
the
Daughters of the
American Colonists. Great
Danes of America, Daughters
·of the 17th Century and
:many patriotic societies, and
:is a member or the Episcopal
Church .
She qualjfied for member-

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OPINION

..·The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

O~io Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
'

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishmmt ~f religion, or prohibiting the
free exe_rcise tlureoj; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Govemment for a redres.s of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER~'S

VIEW

Prayer
•

Monday, September 19, 2005

Obituaries

VVhat have we paid for with Palestinian handouts?

The Daily Sentinel

'

PageA4

Necessary in school

· /)ear Editor:

Being in ten ic\\Cdhy the school admmistrator, the eager
teachmg prosrect sa rd. "let me see if I've got this right.''
"'rou want me to ~o mto that room with all those children
"'"I till then eve•)· w.tking moment with a love for learning.
And l"m supposed to instill,, sense of pride in their ethnicity. modtlv thctr disruptive hehavior, observe them for signs
of abuse and even cen&lt;or thetr T-shirt messages and dress
hahlls...
"You v.ant me to w.tge a war on drugs an,d sexually-transnlllted diSeases. check the1r backpacks for weapons of mass
destruwon . .md raise their self esteem. I am to check their
he,1ds for lice. maintai~afe environment, recognize signs
of .m ti- ,ucl.tl beh,wiur. m;ike sure all students pass the
mandatory state exam&gt;. even those who don ' t come io
school t'egularly tJr complete any of th.eir assignments. And I
tun to nlfnmunicate regularly with the parents by letter, telephone. newsletter and re[lort card."
·
"All of thts I am to do wtthjust a piece of chalk, a computer. a tew books: a bulletin bqard, a btg smile and on a
,startmg salary that qualities my family for food stamps.'' ·
"You want me to do all this and yet you expect me not to
pray'!
Robert L. Richmond
·

Maybe it was lhat last $50
mill ion )hat George W. Bush
forked over to the Palestinian
Aulhority in May lhat made
the Gaza transfer between
Israel and the PA this week so
... What was Condoleezza
Rice's wOf\l for the lawless
Palestinian stampede of looting and desecration that erupted after the lsraeh withdrawal?
"Successful."
That is, something must
have sweetened the deal to
make Israeli-Palestinian coordination on this territorial handover so very ... How did Ms.
Rice describe the dynamic that
led .10 lhe llags of jihad terrorism being hoisted into a sky
darkened by burning synagogt!es?
"Effective."
Successful and effective?
Not everyone's first reaction.
but maybe it all depends on
what Ms. Rice wa&lt; hoping for.
The fact that burning synagogues failed even to singe the
Secretary of State's asses~meot
of diplomatic success and
effective statecraft i; nothing
less thah chilling. But maybe it
rellects our arrival ·at a cold,
new reality that calls into ques"
tion administration attitudes
toward longstandmg American
motives and goals in th&lt;:
Middle EaM.
Sin..:e the Oslo "peace
process" began in 1993,
Palestmians have recetved
, more than $1.5 bi Ilion from the
United States - more aid, as
lhe San Fmnctsw Chronidc
pointed out in August, than
from any other single country.
Not lhat other countries, main-

Arab or I is too low for Arab md
to !low.)
,
They say you get what you
pay for. But what exactly have
we patd lor'' As recently as
Sept
2, accordmg to
Diana
Palest mian Media Watch, the
West ·
PA's "Voice of Palestme" wus
sermoni7ing a!!ainst "hcrctict~" America, · exhorting the
Mushm taithful to attack
ly European ones, haven "t Americans 111 Iraq - ·Just iho:
been generous. The Atlantic latest i~stance of anti-U.S pm·
Monthly's David Samuels tal· paganua carried on PA -run
~cd up post -Oslo P aid at $7 radm. A few weeks ago. the
billion, estimating that as much PA's so-called Ministry ot
as half of that money was Culture released ih "Book of
siphoned off by Yasu Arufat the Month," a collection of
and his cronies. Still the bucks poetry honoring murdertlow. This year alone, the bomhet Hanadi Jaradat. This
Chronicle reported, the United "Rose of Pt~estinc" killed 29
States will double la&gt;t year's Israeli Jews and 'Arabs at a
$275 million PA aid package. crowded Haifa eatery in
payirtg out $550 million. (not October 2003. back when such
including the $50 million carnage was still shocking
handed out in May, as ncar as I Palestinian Mediu Watch also
can tell). In JtJ!y, even as noted a PA government newsjihadis struck the London pa re r tcport about female
Underground, the Group or Hant.t' temmsts phoEight countries wuldn't pile logmphcd holdmg Amencanup money for the PA fast mad~ automatic ntles.
enough. agrcemg by 2008 tu
All ol whtclt should make us
present tts govern·ment wonder: Have we paid for a
which by then could very well "peace process." or htwc we
include landslide-elected ter· financed holy war Uihad)'!
rorist~ from Hamas, Islamic
Have we supported a "peace
Jihad, AI Q.tedpvhatever partner'"! Or have we JUSt
with $9 billion.
helped create ,1 terrorist state''
(Acconding to the Chrontclc Time. muybe " very short time.
tuticle, Arab tinancial suppon will !ell what already seetm
is, alas, mther sktmpy, amount· cle,rr - exceptio our secretary
ing to some Egyptimt materiel of state . Or so I wish. That ts. I
- ammunition, trucks and wtsh 11 were myopta alone that
whatnot. Palestinian Autl1ority had brought us to this not-soPresident Mahmoud Abbas. pretty pass. It could be. howevthe paper reports, "will seek to er, that wuh the rise ol
rally Arab fimmcial support"' in Condoleezza ·Rice, the cwTent
the fall. Maybe the price of Bush administration now

Raymt~nd

relletts the re-ascenda111:e of
lhe old Bush· Bakcr-Scowcroft
school of foreign policy

'

Ar..tht~m .

That wou ld explain the dts·
tre»tllg &gt;ymbolism in U1e State!
De-partment 's apparent ' nub of
lst adt oilers of aid in the earl:; ·
afterm:uh
of
Hun·i~an e
Katri11a, as ·repmted by the
news Web Site World
Tnbunc com: Cettainly, State
Department spokesmen haye
qu ttc tema rkably omiueq
lsnrcl'&lt; nmne when ticking off
cnunll

il'"

particrpatmg m

th'7

1elict d fort. By now, the
llnil, I ': rates has receive!:)
offcts ' ,.. ,, ist•t)lCe from Israel.
&lt;~s well ·" Arab countries, the
Ia uer dtpll'lllatically e!evated
by silence on the t(mncr. In lhe
strange, subtle (and not-so~
subtle) world of dtplomacy. tltf!
American cold shoulcl&lt;rJ·
"alarmed"" Israeli diplomat~
"Concerned that their count ry
v.as bcmg marginali t.ed.':
World Tribune.com reponed
But why'' Cttmg unnantct,l
sourc-es, the Weh sue IH&lt;llo
that ·'tbl;! administration w.b
concerned that (lsr.1elt :&lt; idl
would deter Arab and J, Ja111k
counmes from ollenng :. h -.i:-.tancc.'" Frankly. if Israeli ptu tictpallon ts constLien;d " dealbreaker. then nuts to Arab and'
lslamtc assistance. It we tolct:
.Jie such bigotry - like bum'
mg synagogues - our fltturc, I
am afraid. does not look very
bnght.
·'
(Diana West is a colwmrist
for Th e 111:1shmgron 7imes. She
can
he
l 'mlfal ted
l'I&lt;J
dttmmre.w@\·t~n;m1 . ne t.)

DESIGNER ...

TODAY IN HISTORY

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EDITOR
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Can we win the war on poverty?

seat.

But when Katri~a blew
lhrough the Gulf Coast. ''
ripped a hole- in rh,• 'creen
that so ntccl) &gt;eparat~s the
truly poor from tht' rest ot us.
The 24n coverage delivered,
tmages of a New Orlean' that

Joan
Ryan

resembled a South African
township more than a major
U.S. ctty. As I watched, I kept
thi nkmg about Johnson's
vow. and even Herben
Hoover"s. who a year before
the great collapse of 1929
declared. " We shall soon.
with the help of""God, be
wttllll1 sighl ot the wy when
poveny will he banished fmt11
the nation."
So what happened'' Wh)
do 30 percent of households
in New Orleans have no e rr''
Why do nearly 22 percent ol
the Mississippi population
and 20 percent of l.oulSlana·s
still li ve below poverty level''
Why do ooo in_.six children in
Missi&gt;Stppi. Lout&lt;iana and
Alabama still li1·e in abject
poverty, their parenl,· e;miing
b&gt; than $8.730 a yetrr"'
Given the etfons ol the p.t&lt;t
41 years. a rc&lt;Lsonable person
could •conclude that wan. bn
poverty are unwmnable.
Maybe a capitalist republic.
by its nature. will 11lways
have the extremely poor.
After, all. there
were
almshou~e s in the cnl on1e~
Udting back to 1685. So arc
we !tiling at \\inumill , in
· thmkin!! that . a, the Gult
Coast rebuildS: it can ,ei,i·
tl1e o~ portuntt y to chm1ge the
lives of its poorest rc&gt;idems''
I posed the que,ti•&gt;n to
'.

lAw.You CAN UsE:
BANKRUPTCY lAW To CHANGE SOON

'. RACINE - Raymond L. Furbee, R6, Racine, went home to
be Wtth ht:&gt; Lord at I :40 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 17, 2005, at
Rrverstde Methodtst Hospttal, following a brief illness
Q.: I hear the bankruptcy repayment amount is based
Born March 30, 1919, in Great Bend, he was the so~ of the law. is changing in October. on what thecourt tinds to be bankruptcy I want to file an attorney about bankrupt·
unless I can prove I don't cy''
late Manon and Mary McCormick Furbee. Raymond was Will the changes be drastic?
reasonable.
make
much money. Is that
A.: You should co nsult
retired 1~o~ the. Katser Aluminu.m Corp., and loved farming .
federal
A.: The
true?
with an attorney experienced
He .servc d 111 the U.S. Navy dunng World War 11 and was an Bankruptcy ~eform Act that
Q. : If I tile for bankrupt·
A.: Generally,
yes. in bankruptcy issue; when
active member ot the Racine United Methodist Church. He becomes
on
effective
was also a member of Gideons International and Racine Post October 17 , 2005 will cy after Oct. 17, 2005. what Before you can file for bank- constdering . bankruptcy.
changes caiJ I expect?
ruptcy, you will be required
#602 , American Legion.
imposemany new requireA.:
Many
changes
will
to
take a "means" test that Dependtng upon you r partic.', He is survived by hi s wife, Grace ~nderson Furbee, whom ments on consumers who file go into effect, including the
shows how much you earn ular &gt;ll uation. your a11orney
he marned on May 6. 1945, in Langsville; a daughter, Karen bankruptcy. Also, some peo- following: ·
compared to the median fam- can help yo u decide if it
(Joe) BrdweU. of Columbus; two sons, Eric Furbee of ple will lind their
• Generally, before your ily income level for your woul d be to your advantaoe
Hammondsvtll e and Richard (Tammra) Furbee of West
"
bankruptcy choices more bankruptcy case can be tiLed state. With certai n excep- to h.. ie bankruplcy before the
Chester, Pa.; seven grandchildren: Michelle Bidwell Dumond limited under this law.
you ":'ill need lo get a certiti: tions, you may have no law changes 111 October,
Mtchael Btdwel,l, Douglas Furbee, Aaron Furbee, Brent
cate
from an approved credit choice but to file ~ Chapter when requirements and rosl.s
Furbee, Chase Furbee and Brenden Furbee; a great grandson,
Q.: · What types of bank- counseling agency. This cer- 13 bankruptcy if you earn will increase-or it yo u should
Kyle Furbee: a stster, Harnet Schaefer of Kettering and sever- ruptcy can I file now? '
liticate shows the court that more than the median delay filing . ur avoid tilin~ at
al beloved nteces and nephews .
A.: Currently, if you are you have made an effortto income.
all.
: Bestdes his pare~t s,. he was preceded in death by a sister, the "person seeking bankrupt- avoid bankruptcy.
Mrs. Thomas (Juamta) Sayre.
cy relief. you can choose to.
• You will have to complete
Q.: Will the bankruptcy law
' . Raymond enjoyed preparing for his Sunday school class file bankruptcy und~r ei.ther an approved credit and budLa11 You Cau U1e i1 a
changes
affect rpe tf I earn
each week and yrepanng breakfast tor several years for the Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 of geting course before your
less than my state's median h't:ekJ., tml\llllu! r legal mfor·
Methodt st Men s prayer group.
f1U[fi OI1 column {11"n\ ided !1.'
the bankruptcy code.
tiled bankruptcy case is com- mcome''
Servtces wtll be held at I p.m . on Wednesday, Sept. 21,
Ohio
Sw re
Bar
A Chapter 7 bankruptcy is pleted.
A.: Even if your income r/re
2005, at ~r~m~ens Funeral Home in Racine with Rev. Kerry also known as "straight liqui• During your bankruptcy level is low enough that you A l"l o&lt; iarum 1OSBA! Thi,
_ Wood ofhctatmg. and bunal following at Meigs -Memory dation." In a Chapter 7 bank. case, you wi II be asked 10 can
/choose between a arride " " ' prepared br
Gardens.
ruptcy, the examiner appoint- provide many more docu - Chapter 7 and a Chapter 13 L/01 d D Cohen. 11 wlc pmc·
Friends may_ call form 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral ed to the case (the "trustee") ments than is currently
bankruptcy, you will still fltioner 1n €o l11mhtH . For
home. Memonal contnbuttons may be made to the Gideons may sell your non-"'xempt required.
have
to pay more to file for il~f'ormalion about a I'U rU! l'
InternatiOnal or the Racine United Methodist Church. assets (such as a car) to pay · • Greater . burden will be
bankruptcy than before. The of legal roprc.1. 1 1.1// rh~
Envelopes wrll be provided at the funeral home.
off some of your debts. Your placed on your attorney, who increased
requirements,
remaining debts are "dis- will need to investigate your including the calculating of OSRA,'1 Web'"""'""'"" oiJu,.
charged" (legally forgiven) in situation, verify your infor- the mean s test, the need for hm:org. A rude.~ appenrlng 111
bankruptcy.
mation , and certify that your more preci sion and more rhi.'t coltmm Wt' inlf:'nded to
In a Chapter 13 bankrupt- tiltng is well-grounded in fact documentation will increase pronde hmad, general inforcy (also known as a "repay- and warranted by existing attorney fees. and court costs marrun abtm1 rhe la11 ·. Bejo re.
ment plan bankruptcy") you law
for Chapter 7 bankruptcies applying thi \ informatum ro a
.lf&gt;eqfrc legal"problem. read·
wo~ld keep your property
also are expected to rise .
CLEVELAND (AP) - A be what this is all about?"
Q :' I've heard I wo n't be
ers are ~trged to ~.e ek the
while repaying a portion of
little-known law has some
Judges must have resigned your debts over time. Your able to choose the type of
Q.:
When
should
I
consult
adrice
of 11 I!CfiJsed arr omer
former Ohio judges hiring from their previous. posts themse lves out privately. not been voted out of office
allowing them to tackle com- - to qualify for private pracplicated civil cases without tice. Glickman, 39, reured
taking on criminal trials or from the Common Pleas
SHADYSIDE (APl - A
The proJect ts a partnercampaign seasons.
bench last year. Foley Jones,
60-year-old
power
plant
ship
among the Ohio Co;JI
Robert Glickman and 47, lost a Common Pleas race
Ohto
Rtvcr
is
along
the
Development
Office, which
Pel,:gy Foley Jones have used last year after 12 years on the
doing·
something
about
arr
mvested
$5.5
mtlilon :
the 1987 law to preside pri- bench . Gov. Bob Taft
BATAVIA
(AP)
A
the
money
gomg
to
help
pollutton.
making
money
by
of
Akron·based FtrstEnergy.
vately over civil cases in appointed her to a one-week
woman
and
her
son
have
semor
cittzen
,"
township
turnmg
tt
mlo
somethtng
whi ch paid $4 g mtllton : and
Cleveland. a practice they say spot, giving her enough time
been
charged
with
theft
after
D~tecttvc
Bill
Paul
said.
productive.
New Durh.un. N.H. -based
relieves county judges of to resign and become eligible
"'All
the
checks
were
wntten
a
14-month
investigation
The
FtrstEncrgy
Corp.
Powers
pan · Corp . whtch ·
time-consuming cases and for pnvate practice.
for
their
own
benefit.
"
into
their
business
that
sold
plant converts the pollutants hel ped deSign the pollutantlakes' the politics out of the
Glickman maintams hi s
mstant
lottery
and
bingo
The
charity
was
set
up
by
by burning its coal removmg system and conemitted
courtroom.
post with a Cleveland law
and
was
supposed
to
tickets
Gaddie
and
her
late
husband
for fertilizer. tributed $17 7 mtllton
into
mgredtents
"It 's almost like a ment firm in addition to hts private
provide
money
to
help
m
the
1980s.
The
missmg
then
sells
11
to
a
Toledo-area
The two companies and
selection system, whtch ts practice. Foley Jones is not
where we 'd like to be any- allowed to practice law senior citJzcns. authonties money was misspent from farm products manufacturer. the coal development oftice
the mid-1980s through 2004.
The R.E. Burger plant. plan to demonstrate the proway." Foley Jone s smd. "It 's because she also serves as a said.
police
said
.
built
Betty
Lemberg
Gaddie,
63.
in the 1940s about 5 Ject tor other utilit y compaa no-lose situatton."
. visiting judge, a retired judge
of
Milford
,
and
Robert
The
$750,000
came
from
miles south of Whee ling. mes and regulators later this
But opponents.
most who hears cases reassigned
40,
of
Miamt
Lemberg,
the
sale
of
instant
lottery
•
W Va., is equipped wllh an month
notably a cadre of Cuyahoga from Common Pleas judges.
ticket
s
and
bingo
cards
Township,
spent
$750,000
at
the
electromc
device
that
vaporwhich ts
FtrstEnergy.
County JUdges, say the sysRusso
worries
that
family
's
store,
police
said.
that
was
supposed
to
go
to
tzes
compounds
contained
in
under
a
$
}
I
bi
II ion court
tem abuses puhlic resources Ghckman 's dual roles could
Gaddie
has
denied
the
their
nonprotit
organization.
emissions !rom the burnmg order to cl ean up its power
and all but conslltutes JUdge- contlict.
allegattons.
The
chanty
Seniors
Helping
S.eniors,
lent
coal.
plants. says the 1echnology is
"It's as if they ' re eating the
shopping. Judge Nancy
Miami
Township
police
satd
medical
equipment
and
beds
the
mixtur~
'ts
fed
Then.
JUSt
one optton the co mpany
Margaret Russo last week apple from both sides at the
Friday.
The
money
was
used
to
seniors
in
need
and
prointo
a
·"scrubber""
designed
to
is
cons1denn!!.
questioned the constitutional· same time," she said. "It rsn 't
''Prelimlnttrl'
deCISIOns
ity of private judgeships m a appropriate to serve as a instead to open a strip club. vided transportation to the change the nitrogen and suljudge one day and appear in buy jewelry and dinners and Senior Olympics, among fur pollutants into elements about equtptllent we wtll
memo to her colleagues.
install will be made v.tthin
of fertilizer.
"The
public's 1110ney court the next day as a litiga- pay for Florida trips. police other things, she said.
_
said.
"They
are
coming
back
on
A
two-year
test
on
the
the
next couple of weeks:·
shouldn't be used thi s way," tor."
.
The
molher
and
son
each
m' with these types of process ends Monday, but spokeswoman Ellen Raines
she said. "It just isn't fatr."
Glickman says he 's just
were
charged
with
aggravat.
c
harges when never anything FtrstEnergy officials have said.
What irks her is the fact trying to help alleviate couned
theft
and
engaging
in
a
come
up in all these years," already pronounced it a sucThe company also 1s lookthat Glickman and Foley ty judges of the complicated
she
said.
"We
never
had
any
pattern
of
corrupt
activity.
cess.
ing
at . technology that
Jones dip into the county jury cases that lodge in thetr dockin
the
questions
of
anything."
Lemberg
remained
"Reliability is 98 percent- removes carbon dtoxide
pool and hear cases in county ets and back up easier trials.
no
answer
There
·
was
Clermont
County
jail
plus,"'
Morgan Jone s. a from smokestacks.
Russo also questioned
courtrooms without paying
Saturday
to
calls
to
Gaddie's
on
Saturday.
Gaddie
was
out
FirstEnergy
environmental
Powerspan CEO Frank
whether private practices
rent.
home
·
seeking
further
combond.
specialist.
told
The
said he has had a ~ood
Alix
Russo wants private judges allow attorneys to selectively
"There
is
no
record
of
any
ment.
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer for working relattonshtp 'With
to be restricted to bench trials work with judges who aren't
a story publi shed Saturday. Ftr&lt;tEnergy da11ng to the
that would keep ,them from accountable to the public.
"It
s been a blazing success." tenure of Peter Burg, the
But James Malone , a
pulling county jurors. She
Atier
the remaining vapor utility's chatrman "hen he
also wants them kept out of Cleveland lawyer who's oneis electronically processed, it died 111 200-l.
county courtrooms and away for-one on cases he ·s hired
is packaged and sold to
"We would not be hete if
from government employees. Glickman to preside over,
Andersons
Agricultural
it
hadn 't heen for Pete r Burg
questions
of
The judges' policy commit- di;missed
and
f current president ) Tony
Group LLP. a fertilizer
tee wtll address the issue this impropriety.
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
bn longer.
Alex,mder:· Alix said .
"He was wo~derful. right.
week . . said Presiding and
. Allen says the city need s maker based in Maumee.
Jones fe els the sa me
Another
bonus
for
Administrative
Judge down the middle, equally fair
Major developments in drmkable water. a 911 sys- FirstEnergy is the technolo- to\\
ard Pov. crs pan .
Richard McMonagle. a sup- to both sides," Malone said. lhe aftermath of Hurricane tem and a way to notify
gy that allows it to burn
"We 11·ere so tmpresscd
"And fairness is a huge issue Katrina :
porter of the private system .
people of future storms that cheap. htgh-sulfur Ohto coal ' that we de ctded to budd the
"If the courtroom is there. in this business because if a
- A hospital accredita- might overcome the weak why not use it?" he asked. private judge is perceived not tion oft"ictal says New ened levees. "We •an do rather than tmport cleaner ptlot . 1\c nc\cr see n anoth·
er u111111 do what we have
"It's our obligation to help to be fair. they 're not going to Orleans · health care factli- that , and we can do that coal from other states.
"The more sultur vou done -· take a bench-scale
the litigants . Shouldn' t that get any b~;~siness.''
ties have been shattered to
have.
the better the process tech no Jog\ and time 11 to
an extent unn1atched in fairly soon.'' he says. "'but
work
s."
Jones said.
full co mnierctah zatton:·
U.S. history and some of its n·s ,·ery. very soon to try
plans to have academic inter- hospitals are probably dam - and do that thi s week:·
vention classes for all ninth aged beyond repair.
• The death toll linked to
grade students staning next
• House Republican s are the hurricane ri ses to 883
year.
from Page A1
looking
at delaymg some along . the Gulf Coast. 646
As for this year, Miller is
spending.
including in Louisiana alone . The
federal
completing his Freshman
!llOney for hi ghway proJects sear&lt;·h for bodies continues.
Southern and Meigs were year as principal and as a and a Medicare prescription
• Suburban New Orleans
)libeled
in "continuous Meigs County resident. He
resides in Syracuse wilh hi s drug benefit . to offset the residents tinct a few stores
improvement:·
"Like it or not we are grad- famtly. wife Kelley, . 9-year cost o f rebuilding the Gulf and coffee . shops already
ed as a district on scores that old son Tyler and 5-year old Coast. a leading GOP fi scal stocked and open as the}
says. return to s torm - dama~ed
kids receive." Miller said . daughter, Brooklynn who conservative
Democrats
question
how home s in Jefferson Pa;ish lwww.• mydallysentlnel.co
attend Southern Elementary.
~we have to be able to get the
The Dailr Sentinel
Miller's most recent job Pres ident Bush ca n pay for ' for the first 'time .
most out these kids."'
'
the
Katrina
recovery,,
and
•
The
U.S
.
attorney
in
Los
was
as·.
a
full-time
special
· · Miller said his school curAngeles County announces
rently has i'ntervention class- education teacher and athletic stt!l support tax _cut s.
New . Orleans Mayo r the first federal char2es
es for students in sc ience and director at Harrison Hill s
Ray Nagm _wants to start invoh·ing . an
al)eged
math, students are partici pat- School in Harrison County.
He
received
his
baccalauiQg in online activities to
bnngmg re st dent s back to Hurri cane Kat nna relief
sharpen skills for the proti- reate degree from West ht s ctty starttng Monday
ciency test and each class- Liberty Slllte College, West wllh the Algie rs sec ti on. scam . Two people acc used
room has laminated posters Liberty, W.Va., his masters across the Mt &gt;s tss ippt of posmg as Amcncan Red
depicting
the
Ohio degree from the University of River from downtov.n New Cross volunteers took tn as
.
Department of Education's Rio Grande, and his adminis- Orleans. But Coast Guard much a'&gt; S2.000, prosecuAcademic Content Standards trators certification ' from Yice Adm . Thad All en tors say.
Salem rntemational College. urges New Orleans resif{)r lhe tests.
dents to delay their return a
·~ Miller added that there are Clarksburg, W.Va.

Plant turning -pollutants into fertilizer

a

UNDER INTELLIGfNT

Mttrk Shmer. "ho mns the father dtd. that JXWe'ny can ~
United States operations for er..tdkated. I etlvy his hopt&gt;- ··
Save the Chtldrcn. which hus fulne" r /11 ha\'lllg a tough
been helping needy children time at the moment relocating
smce the Dust Bowl in 1932. my own. Maybe it's the oov" .Shriver \\as a yeur old when cmmcm·s breathtaking mdil
hts father. Sargent Shriver. ference and incom;Jeren~~
wa' appoiuted to lead ahcr K3tnna coming hand OQ
Johnson· s ambitious anti - the hee ls of mmmtmg deaths
poverty campaign as tltre~lor and mjunc' in !ray. The probof the new . Office ul lems 'L--c m t&lt;XJ btg. loo fiti"
EconntlllC Opponuntty. w~
beyond the grasp of any Olle
talked by phone thts wee!-. '" of us.
·
he was h~adit)g out to Jlllll hts
I am 11) ing to keep m mmd
colleagues 1n New Orie.ans
a
story I read abolll S.tfl!eni
TI1cre "s Ill.--en great progress
overall 111 dtminishing po\'er- Shriver vistting Pope Paul VI ·
ty. he satd. ciung the drop in in the mid-l960s.
"Some people arc &lt;JHotmg
povcny r.Jte&gt; tinm 20 percent
in 1%0 iu about 13 percent the Bihle again't us in the
today ," But there are still poverty war. sayi ng, ·The
incredihle rxx:kets of poverty. poor alway' ye have with
man) in the Deep South and you ... , Shnver -at d. He asked
the Central Yaqey "'tnh .of the pope tf he could suggest a
you," Shnver _,aid
good reply.
'Tell lhem." the pope said.
He heheves. "' manv do.
that pmgmms like Head. Start " that they arc also conunand- begun during hi s f.alhcr's 'ed by the Bible to feed the
tenure "ith the Johnson hungry ;md clothe the naked.""
admmistratton - alle viate
Maybe "c ran never win
povcny. But all the great pro- the war. But neilher can we
grtum 111 the world - includ- tum our backs on it.
ing l"o Child Left Betiinu.
·· Hopefully~ ' thi s disa,ter
which Shmcr supported m-·
·r h d . wtll mohthze the go\'emment
c~l not1't~~g. 1 1 ey on 1 · ~o do sometl1ing for the """h G If C
recetvc 'u ••ctent monev 10
.. ··-can" the m out.
·
P 1e on 1 e_ u oast. Mark
" From the slllft. Johnson's Shnver smd ~fore l1e went lo
programs were underfunded.'" see th: deva,tation for him~
he said. " Head Start i; still self. The government let
sigmticantly underfunded. No them down before. durin g
Child Left Behtnd is under- and tmmedtate ly aft er the
funded. And we know thtlt hurricane . The que;tton is
tHe more educated the. popu- whether tt"s going to continue
latton, the lower tl1c poverty to let them down ... ·
rJte \Ve ha\'c 10 provJdc an
(Joan Ryan i 'i· a colwrmi't
c.?dllcation ""'h.."'m
thLtt ~'1\e, fm
tire
~ em ' Franciw·n
.
peopk the opportunity to pull C/1/tll//i"lc' Snrd cmwll~/1/s to
themsclve' up."
her m care of illii 11ewspaper
_Dc,ptte the failure' of the or ,·end her &lt;'·mail at JOOII·
· pa.,t: Shri1cr believes. ,a.s his ryan0'.ifehmllicle.\ om.) •

.The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Police charge woman, son
with thift involving charity

... ONE NATION

Say what you will about
the president's legacy as a
leader, but give .htm credit for
acknowledging lhe shameful
conditions he saw in the ~p
South among the most
impoverished of !tis fellow
citizens.
The people were . .he sa1d.
"that other nation within a
nation - the poor - whose
distress has not captured the
conscience of America." He
pledged help to those who
"live on lhe outskitt.\ of hope
- some because of thdr
poverty, and some because of
their color. and all tl)l) many
because of bot 11 " He made
this vow:
'This admimstr,tlton today.
here and now. declare'
unconditioned war on rxwerty
in Amenca."
The president was Lvndon
Johnson. The year. I96-i.
Forty-&lt;Jne years ago.
When you live 111 the Bay
Area. or any of hundreds of
prosperous regtonl, you can
pretty much live y,our entire
life without ever &gt;oecin!! timroad. 1m-roofed 1hant vtowth
where cardboard and duct
tape piLSs for windo\1 s t~n d
rats climb through hole' in
the tloorboitrds, ragged children sleep on &gt;econdhand
mattresses on the front stoop
and grown men and women
have never crossed the county line, much less buckled
themselves into an ;urpldne

Fulilee

www.mydailysentinel.com

Private judges ·race scrutiny
of county colleagues

Middleport

Today is Monday, Sept 19. the 262nd day of 2005. There
are I03 days left in the year.
Tuday·s Highlight in Hi story :
On Sept. 19, 1777, dunng the Revolutionary War, American
soldiers won the fLrst Battle of Saratoga.
On this date.
· In 1796. Prestdent Washmgton's farewell address was published.
In 1881. the 20th president of the United Slates, James A.
(Jarfielu. died of wounds inllicted by an assassin.
· In 1934. Bruno Hauptmann was arrested in New York and
charged with the kidnap-murder of Charles A. Lindbergh Jr.
In 1945. Nazi propagandbt William Joyce. known as "Lord
Haw-Haw.'"" was sentenced to death by a Bntish court.
In 1955. Presr uent Juan Peron or Argentma was ousted after
a re~olt by the army and nav y.
Thought fot Today. "If you are losing your leisure, look out;
you. may be losmg your soul." - Logan Pearsall. Smith,
Anglo-American author (I 865-1946).

.

Monday, September 19, 2005

\

Major developments in
Hunicane Katrinaos aftermath

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OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 19,

Report: Mortgage brokers, appraisers fueling foreclosure increases ·
- COLUMBUS (A PI
Aggrc..,sive mortga~~ brokers and apprai . . t~r . . an: ~,:nn
tributing to the: ri..,ing t'llfl' closure rate in Ohio. " here'
mortgages fai l more th an
any
other
state .
Tile
Columbu s Dispatl'il rL'f'"i"led "
Sunday in the fiN part of n
four-pan series.
More than 59,000 forc· closure notices were fil eJ in .
Ohio last yc:11;. In the first
half of ~005 , :1J pc tUJII of
state home l o an~ we re in
foreclosrtre, mo re than triple
the national a ve rage, accordinn0 to lhl' Mo rtnb a ~e B ~tnke r -..
Association .
An analysis of fedn.tl ,lata
by The Dispatch show, tlt:ll
more Ohio resiJ~nts are borrowing many time ' thci1
annual inconw or takin g
interest-only loans wilh pa yments that increase sharph ·
after a few yea rs .
Brokers and appr:oi'L' i''
who profit regardless ol
whether loans succeed or
fail are laying 1he fL&gt;unda tion for fore closure ,. tile
newspaper repone d. And
consumer advocafcs say lax
state oversight is only building on the problem .
"While other .stares are
AP Photo
passt ng
comprchcnsi\'C Carl H. Woodford, left, is handed a receipt from Patty Cahill , right. with the Franklin County Sheriff's office, during the she-riff's
reform, Ohio " ac:tualh auction at the Franklin County Court Building, June 10 in Columbus . Aggressive mortgage brokers and appraisers are co n-'
weakening its sta11darrfs tnbuting to the ri s ing foreclosure rate in Ohio, where mortgages fail more than -any other state, The Columbus Dispatch repo rt
whik th is foreclosure cxpi&lt;J- ed Sunday 1n the first part of a four-part series.
sion is, going un.'' said Uri:th
King, a former Ohio hou-.. i n ~ put in place in 2002 and many applications were
"The industry is as anx- after . he was se ntenced to
advocate now with the incrca\ed ~ta tT tn Ueal with withdra~n or given special ious as any member of the nine year.s in pri,on for
national
Center
for inl'csti gat ions. But they Lin consideration.
study committee to remove stealing $5 million fm m .
Responsible Lendin g in &lt;~cknowledgc some probUsing
limited
public the bad actQrs from our customers.
Durham. N.C.
lems.
resource s, The Dispatch ranks. The
(Commerce
And those who rile cnmAmong advocates· com" I admit that we can identified 20 licensed loan Department) has the proper plaints say the state is _s low
plaints: the use of unli - improve ," said Commerce oftlcers with convictions for tool s in place to accomplish about inws ti g&lt;~t in g them .
censed propetty appraisers, a Department' Director Doug theft , .sex crimes and drug this, but has been largely
"They just kind of tli'p ynu
law prohibiting dec ~ptivc White . "We admit that there dealing.
unable to use them," the off.'' said Shirley Rispre ss, a
s;tles practices that doesn't is a need to Llo better."
· Background che,cks are groups wrote.
_
Columbus woman who filed
mention mortgage broke[s
About 8JOO mortgage only statewide, a loophole
complaint
against
Complaints i'gainst mort- a
and an exemption to public Joan officers work in the commerce officials and . gage brokers are shielded Ameribanc in· Septemb ~ r
recbrds laws that shield s state. roughly six tilne s as Attorney General Jim Petru under an exemption in pub- 2002. "They don "t lake ymt
brokers complaint fil es.
many as five years ago.
have advocated closing since lic records law, which legis- seriously at all."
"If you're looking as a
Loan officers began hav- 2002 to identify applicants lators and commerce offiThe
Co mmerce
predator, there's no better in g 10 undergo criminal with federal criminal histo- cials say protects them from Department. plagued by a
state than the state of Ohio ," background checks in 2002 ries or convictions in other false accusalions.
~rowing backlog of cases.
said outgoin g Columbu s before
th ev coulti
be states.
. Commerce offi cials note forward ed her co mplaint to
Urban League President licen sed. The-L'hccks tlagged
In a joint letter to the that any state di sciplinary Ameribanc . R is press had
Samuel Gresham Jr.
about 1.300 applicants, or predatory lending commit- action is public record.
lost her house to foreclosu re
Lawmakers mostly say about 15 percent.
tee, the Ohio Association of
But the exemption, which by the 1ime the slate got
lenders should no1 be held
But the slate only tried to Mortgage Brokers, the Ohio was put in place 'in 200 I, involved about In months
resp&lt;.msible for people who block about 140 of those. Financial
Services shielded complaints against later.
take on too ·nntch debt. accordin ~ tn il 2 (~)3 report Association and the Ohio the owner of the noW"We acted at t11e moment
Officials 111 the
stat e (ntll l ,1 k~i,latin:: commi tl ce Mor1 gage
Bankers defunct
Ameribanc we hud t:IWll!.!h to mtwc ...
Commerce Department po1111 th :tt .,,llldied prcJatory lend- Assn&lt;.:i&lt;Jti&lt;&gt;n saiLl they wcn'i Mortgage in the Columbus · Commerce Spo kcs\vum&lt;Ill
to tighter licen sing standards ill~. It \\ a:-o und car how eager for change.
suburb of We sterville, even Denise Lee said .
~.

I

~--------

~.~ -- -~---~------------------

State looking to ease natural gas spike
BY JOHN

that.
"The number one issue is
helping people get through
COLUMBUS - Natural \ht winter comfortably
g~s pdces are going higher without pushing people
as the thermometer goes into bankruptcy." Taft said.
lower, so tlie .state is look Three programs can help
Ing for ways to help cus- people keep the heat on.
tomers. especially those
Two focu s on lhe poor,
with low ' incomes: ease the defined &lt;IS an individual
pain of payi ng their bilh.
making no more lhan
"The expected price spike $ 14.355 annuallv or a famis being blamed on high il y of fou.r earni;1g no more
oil prices, which have dri- than $29.0~5. One allows
ven the demand for natural cu,tomers tn pay a pergas. and the destructi on of n: ntt~gc of their in~:omc. ll'i
Gulf Coast drilling plat - long "' the bill is paid on
form s and processing ' ra- lime and fpr the full
tion s by Hurricane Katrina. ainount. while the other
" Katrina took · a vo latile provides a one-time paymarket and turne d it upside ment for cristomers of
down ,"
said
Steve most utilitie s.
Jablonski, a spokesman for
Another program. &lt;)vailColumbia Gas of Ohio, the able to all customers who
state's largest supplier to face ..,ervice disconnection
r~sidential customers.
· or ho tn~ had it d i:-.conneCt. ·The average residential cd, can resume serv ice by
bill for October 2004 was' paying the entire bi II or
$40, compared with an $ 175 . whichev.er is Jess.
anticipated $53 for next
Ohio
Consumers'
month 's bill , and most Counsel Janine Migden industry watchers expect it Ostrander, whose office
go hi1;her as winter begins . represents residential cusGov. Bob Taft said he's tomers in rate cases, is
looking for ways to help urging people to get on
people keep up . Hi s s1aff their supplied budget
plans to meet this week payment
plan.
which
wit-h several state agencies allows any customer to pay
with the resources to do the same amount over 12
·
McCARTHY
·ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Local weather
Monday ... Mostly

•;unny.
the mornmid 80s.
variable
south
the affer-

Widespread fog in
ing. Highs in ihe
Light
and
winds .. .Becoming
around 5 mph in
noon .
Monday
lliJrhi ... Partly
cloudy. A slight ~ hance of
111
the
showers
evening ... Then a chance of
showers afte r midnight. Lo\1-,
in the lower 60s. Southwest
wind&gt; around 5 mph . Chance
of rain 40 percent.
Tue.fday ... Partly cloudy. A
chance of showers in the
morning . Highs in the lower
80s. West winds 5 to I0 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
I

Flight makes emergency
landing at Cleveland qirport

months. The bill s are high·.
er· than actual use during
the warm months ·but !_ower
than usage during the winCLEVELAND (AP) ter. Customers can fi 'nd
information about the bud- A Continental Airlines
flight made an emergency
get plans on her Weh site.
"During the six-month landing after the captain
winter heating season. lhe noticed a burning smell
llverage impac1 on a cus- in th e cockpit on Su~day.
tomer 's home may be close an airline spokesman said.
Flight 1703. traveling
to $775 more than last season,
Mi gden -O strander from Los Angeles to
sa id. emphasizing the fig - Newark , N.J., landed at
Hopkin s
ure wa s based on industry Cleveland
International
Airport
at
projections .
Mi£den -Ostrander will .3:05 p.m.. said Martin _
t e~ tify this month at a DeLeon , a spokesman for
· hearing of the House Houston - b. ased
·uri.lities Continental. A mainte·
Public
Commission. whose chair- r1ance crew checked out
man, Rep. John Hagan, is the plane and . did not
looking at · options like
weatherization assistance.
''
On ·Wednesday, the committee will hear from representatives of Ohio's gas
utilities.
"What we're afte~ as a
total overview is as much
feedback from the indu stry
as we can get to give
ratepayers an idea of IWliiiW.• n'lydel~nel.
what's coming arid what
we can do to help." said
an
Alliance
Hagan,
Republican who also is a
heating and plumbing contractor. "It's better that we
have people pre.pared for
.. than underesti-

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source
. for ·
news

~~~e ~~~~~

11ight...Mostly · ;::::..:::__ _.;...:.,..,.._ __:::~:::======~
Cluroprador oflheycar 1998
clear and cooler with lows in
VJ WV Chiropractic Society
the lower 50s. North winds
Membrr
of AmeriCan Board of
.
around 5 mph .

T!Iesday

Wed11esday
through
Thursday ... Mostly · clear.
Highs in the mid 80s. Lows
in the. mid 50s.

Thursday
night
and
Friday ... Partly cloudy. Lows
i'n rh e lower 60s. Highs in the
'
lower go,_

Friday

night. .Partly

cloudy. Lows .in the lower
60s. Chance of precipit&gt;llion
30 percent. ,
.
Saturday ... Partly cloudy
wilh a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the lower,

so,.

'·

K¢\\y v·~aoi
,"'·
(1-\\ROPRN
____
Auto Accidents Workers'
CompensatiOil
• Sport~

Fa;~n\ic Profmionals

20 yl) experience
Mcmher of Mncri&lt;an Academy
of Medical Acupuncture

• ;\lo~lln!.unncts
• SiUYle da) arrt

Report:
Do11ation levels
IJiiYYOI: ODOT

~onday,Septennber19,2005

contract awards
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)
... _ DL'Si !! n and engineering

rirms tllat work for the Ohio
Department
of
Tran sportation have long
contributed to politici&lt;tns and
political action comm ittees.1
but in t\le last year, contractor&gt;' donations have begun
!lowing more readily to
DL·nwc"rats. a ncwspap€t ·
'•
reput1ed Sunday.
Sistecn . such firms h av~
,-n ntt'tbrt tcd $134.000 ro
.b,·mocrat Mic hael Coleman;·
the Columbus mayor who iJ!
runnin g for governor. That

sum is more than half of all
contt'ihutio ns the firms 'have
ma&lt;Je to Democrats . in till:
last ·uecadc. an in vestigatidll ·
by Th,· (Tolccln ) Blade found.
In all. th ese firms have
cnntribtlled $1 million to
pol iticians. parties and politi·
cal action committees in the
past decade and hav'e
received some $400 million
in ODOT contracts, tlie
newspaper said.
. .:.:
The added contributions t6
Denioci·ats come at a time
when th e state GOP is coping
with an investment scandal~!
the Ohio Bttreau of Workers
Compensation and the ethic~
conviction of Gov. Bob Taft, .
a Republican.
But Paul Tipps: a former
cha inn:111 of the Ohiii
Democratic Party who was
l lllC of the most powerful
lo bbyists at the Swtehou ~e;
sa id the c:ontribution systell'l
and
co ntract
awarding
prucess hits been -politiqrl
un Lk r g,)vc rnors fmm both
par,tics . The increased contributions to Democrats don' t .
mean a c:l eancr syste m unless
sol iLl re l(mns ·are made, he
s:tid.
"Unless we change the sys-

(NP

"laiC\\ id~

candidate '\

and

S I .000 for ie~t.s lativc candi dat es. Hut he also wa nt s to

·' "''l·

con ~ ultant..;; whn are in

&lt;.:ompctit ively hiu comracts
submi t aftldavits listi ng their
pol ilical eontrihutinns and
so I ic i1at ions.
"We don't want to disClluragc engineers from making
polnical romributions," he
said. "What we want to do is ;
make sure that the y are not
doing it .in order to get
work."
· ODOT Dtrcctor George
Proctor said a finn's contributions ha ve no bearing on
wn~th cr it is awarded government contracts. He ~~aid
merit and ran'king.s are the
-most important . factors in
such decisions and added thl!t
he only recently learned that
so many ODOT contractors
have been suppoi·t ing state
· politicians.

and h19h tiehool /arsity sporting wents involving
teams 1ro1Tj Gallla, Meigs and Mason count.es.

Mondly's Cl8lJlQ8
Gal~~

llolloyboll

at Fair1ar&lt;J. 5:30 p.m

River Valley ·at Athens, !:!:15 p.m.
South GaJia at Fb;;io; HiH, 5:30 p.m.
r:J/CS al Chesapeake, 5:30p.m.

Golf
River Valley, Ironton at, Gallia Academy

(Ciflslde), 4 30 p.m.

Point Pleasant at Buffalo, 4:30p.m.

D!A!der's...,
llolloyboll

Vinton County at Meigs. 6_p.m.
Southam a! AderaJ Hod&lt;ilg, 5:55p.m.
Eastern atirirTtlle, 6 p.m .
Coal G~UJe at South Gallia, 5:30p.m
Tolsla at Harman, 6 p.m.

Soccer
Poinl Pleasai1t at r:J/CS, 5 p.m
Gal~ ~at Jacl&lt;sM, 5 p,m.
Golf
. Point Pleasant. -Clay, Wellston at Gallia
'Acactemy (Ctmslle), 4 30 p.m.

River Valey 81 Buffalo. 4:30p.m.
South GaJUa at NelsorMio-\brl&lt; (Bmss Ring) ,
4:30p.m.

Marietta at
- Ab Grande,
·· College
4 p.m.
Soccor

Wadne~R:;:a~•mp•
Meigs/River Valley at Gatlia Academy, 5:30
p.m.
Girte Soccer
Point Pleasant at Cabell Midland, 6:30p.m.
Golf
Roane. County at Point l='leasant (Hidden
Valley), 4 p.m.

nuredav'a gamu
Volleyball
GB.IIia Academy at Jackson, 5:15p.m.
Rock Hill at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
Sou!h Gallia at S!. Joe, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 5:55p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-York. 6 p.m .
Eastern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Greater Beckley Chrsitian at .Hannan, 6

P-11'-

Soccer

Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 5:30p.m.
Ironton S1. Joe at Ohio Valley Chnstian,
5:30p.m
Girts Soccer

Point Pleasant at Huntington St . Joo, TBA
Golf
Gallia Academy, Point Pleasant at Wahar'na
(Riverside), 4 p.m.
Meigs at Ironton, 4:30p.m.
Croaa County
River Valley, Gallia Academy at Jackson
Invitational, 10 a.m.

Sports Briefs

Browns Win at
Lambeau Field
BY

ARNIE STAPLETON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

GREEN BAY, Wis. - Tpe
retirement of Reggie White's
number couldn't inspire the
Green Bay Packers past the
Cleveland Browns on Sunday.
Trent Dilfer won for the
first time in nine trips to
Lambeau Field, guiding
Cleveland over the Packers
26-24 for new coach Romeo
Crennel's first win. Dilfer
threw an 80-yard touchdown
pass to Braylon Edwards and
a game-icing 62-yarder to
Steve Heiden with I :50
remaining.
Dilfer, who lost six times as
a statter at Green Bay, once as
a reserve and another time as
an observer, completed 21 of
32 passesfor 331) yards -the
second-highest total of his
career - and three touchdowns. . The only time he .
threw for more yards was on
Sept. 15, 2002, when he threw
for 352 against Arizona.
His 62-yarder to Heiden
made it 26- 17. too much for · the Packers to overcome.
Brett ·Favre broke John .
Elway's single-stadium NFL
touchdown record of 180 with
a 4-yard toss to Tony Fisher
"'i ~h 4 seconds left. But
Bradney Pool recovered the
onside kick for Cleveland (II).

After Favre, who also
joined Dan Marino andEiway
in the 50,000-yard passing
club, pulled the Packers io 1917 with a 19-yard TO to
Robert Ferguson with 3:40
remaining; the Srowns were
backed up and facing a crucial
third down .
With the crowd chanting
· "Reg-gie! Reg-gie!" in 'honor
of the late White, whose number was ·retired at halftime,
Dilfer calmly hit running back
Reuben Droughns for a 12yard gain on third-and-5.
Then , he !iound Heiden over
the middle to put the game out
of r:eaeh..
Pleue see Browns, B1

Contllct Information
Fox- t74())446-3008

., 'bshermanOmydallytribune.com

.. ·= 304-273-5321 ,.. '
316 Washington St

Ravenswood, WV

· Brad Sherman/photo

Eastern receiver Bryce Honaker (16) bounces off a hit by a Green defender on his way to a touchdown during the second quarter Saturday at EastShade River Stadium in Tupper's Plains.

Williams, Green,run past Eastern Eagles
BY

RANDALL

FULKS

SPORTS CORRESPONOENT

Brttd Sherm•n, Sports Editor
(740)446-2342, axt. 33

Chiroprac:tic Center

Pirates rally
·. over Reds

Green 37 I Eastern 12

GALLIPOLIS - A schedule ol upcoming COllege

tem. wc·re go ing to get the .

s:une res ults," Tipps said. " If
w.e elected all Democrats.
same "YS I em, same re su It s. ..
Tipps sttppnrts a co nstitu tinn:li :1111ct1d rnent that would
li'mit indi1 idual contributions
hl ~ta t e political Cllll paignsl
now S I0.000. to S2:000 for

Sch I dUll

Sports Stsf1

Ravenswood

Bl

The Daily.Sentinel

Indians sweep Royals, Page 86
Bobcats blanked by Hokies, Page B~

E·mlll- Sports@mydailysentinel.com

lnJi.me~

• Med1Clft:
• r\cupunc mre

find any problems.
The plane continued on
to
Newark
later
on
Su.nday.
The ca ptain noti ced an
electrical 1\urn ing smell
while
lr&lt;t vc ling
ov~r
Mi c hi ~an
ju s: before :1
p.m. ;nd opted ro land in
Cleveland as a precaution .
DeLeon said. The plane
had JAJ passe Qgcrs apd
seven Newark "based crew
members . . No one was
injured, he said.
Airport authorities also
responded to the bndin g.
official .s said. ·

2005

-------------------------------··· -· "·
INSIDE

Brytn W.llers, Spon. Writer
(7401446 -2342 , ext. 23
bwatters C m~dailytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
1304)675-1333, ext 19

Ierum 0 mydaityregister.com

-~~-~~~~~~~-

TUPPERS PLAINS
Green used a big game from
speedy
back ·
Dustin
Williams and its usual hardnosed running from ·Mark
Castro to defeat host Eastern
37-12.
The non-league football
game started on Friday, but
finished Saturday after-lightning had forced its postponement.
Williams ra'n for 157 yards
and Castro tacked on 83
more as Green evened its
record at 2-2 on the year.
Eastern,
· ·meanwhile,

remained winless in four
tries.
'
The Bobcats jumped out
to a 14-0 lead on Friday
before the game was called .
The Eagles soared back with
a pair of s~cond quarter
touchdowns
to
start
Saturday's proceedings, but
Green used a long Wnliams
scoring dash just before the
half, then shut out the its
host in the second half to
sea) the Win.
I
.
The first quarter of ihe
game was spent going back
and forth until Green's
Castro hit pay dirt with 3:14
Ieft -on the clock, but missed
the extra point, leaving the

with I I :39 still left on the
score 6-0.
At the start of the second second quarter clock.
quarter, Williams scored
Shortly after the game again for· Green with an resumed, Eastern 's Bryce
amazing 55-yard run only Honaker scored the first
seconds in . Only moments touchdown for Eastern with
after the second touchdown 9:44 on the clock. Toward
of the game, a storm that had the end of the quarter, Terry
been rolling in since the start Durst ·racked up the points
of the game began, deliver- again for Eastern with a 3ing a brief shower and pro- yard run followed by a twoducing lightning, causing point conversion, pulling the
· the game to be de,layed at Eagles closer Ut 14-12.
But it didn-' t last. Dustin
around 8 p.m.
Much to the dismay of Williams struck again, lhis
spectators, the delay was time with a 55-yard run with
kept on until shortly after 10 only _seconds left on the sec·
p.m. when it was announced ond quarter clock, followed
that the game was to be post- ·
Please see Eagles. B6
poned until the next night,

PITTSBURGH (A J&gt;) Freddy Sanchez tied the score
with a triple and scored on Jack
Wilson 's single · as _the
Pittsburgh Pirates rallied for
three runs in the eighth inning
to beat the Cincinnati Reds 9-7
Sunday. _
Ty Wigginton walked on
four pitches to open the eightll
off Matt Belisle (4-8) and
scored when Sanchez hit a
drive off the glove of Ryan ,
Freel as the left fielder crashed
into the wall. Wilson singled
for an 8-7 lead and' scored on
Brad Eldred's single.·
Mike Gonzalez {1-3) pitched
the 'tina! two innings for the
Pirates, who have won four of
five.
Pirates starter Oliver Perez,
making his third start since
coming off the disabled list.
allowed five runs - four
earned .- five hits and five
walks in 2 2-3 innings.
Reds starter-Eric Milton gave
up six runs l\lld six hitJ; in twothirds of an inning. Luke
Hudson, followed with 5 I-3
scoreless innings of two-hit
relief. He struck out Craig
Wilson with the bases loaded to
end the sixth.
Jason LaRue hit a three-run
homer · in the first, but
Pittsburgh went ahead with six
runs in the bottom half on RBI
singles by J.ason Bay and
Humbeno Cora, a bases-loaded
walk to Jose Bautista, a tworun. two-out single by Perez
and an RBI single by Sanchez
that chased Milton.
Freel hit an RBI single in the
second and scored from fir&gt;t
when Rich Aurilia hit a slow
roller-to second. Sanchez threw
wildly to ftrst for an error and
Eldred, the first baseman,
threw the ball into left field for
another error when he tried to
get Aurilia at second.
· Austin Keams tied it with an
RBI grounder in the folll$. and
Wily Mo Pena put Cinciruiati
ahead 7-6 with a sacrifice fly
off Bryan Bullington. who
relieved Perez in the third and
was making his major league
debut.

Ohio State showed no sign of a Texas hangover
BY RUSTY

MIUER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - After one
bad play, No. 9 Ohio State
showed no sign of a Texas
hangover.
&lt;
With Santonio Holmes' punt
returns setting up two touchdown runs by Troy Smith, and
the defense swarming from the
second play on, the Buckeyes
rolled over San Diego State
27-6 on Saturday.
"After the first play of the
game, our defense · dominated ,'~ said coach Jim Tressel,
whose team was coming off a
25·22 loss 4o No. 2 Texas.
"After we were startled a little
bit... our defense decided no

•

more of that and shut them
down."
San Diego State shocKed the
Buckeyes on the first play
from scrimmage when Kevin
O'Connell tossed a quick sideline pass to Brett Swain. who
turned the corner at right end
behind a block by Robert Ortiz
and raced u'ntouched for the
80-yard touchdown.
A crowd of I04,533 was
silenced.
"It was an electrifying start
but I didn't have any followup," San Diego State coach
Tom Craft said.
The Aztecs •' offense disappeared after that. They never
advanced past the Ohio State
46 and finished with just three
first downs - the fewest in

·
·
·
school htsto'!'. Aher gettrng 80
yards on .\hetr first play: they .
mustered JUSt 99 on thetr last
~:
.
. ·.
We came 1~ after that fi;st
play and satd, We knov:..w~ re
a better team than that, hnebacker Bobby Carpenter said.
Fellow linebacker Anthony
Schlegel said. "That first play
wa~ a shock but -we just kind
of said. 'OK, let's play.' It's
that old saying that the next

play is the most important one.
We really took them out of
·
their game plan."
The Buckeves '(2-1 ), who
open Big Te"n play against
Iowa next week in their founh
consecutive home game. were
never seriously threatened
again by the Aztecs ((}-3).
It was the defeme that broke
the game open. On the last
play of the third qu&lt;uter, the
Aztecs muffed an option pitch
on first down at their own I.
Schlegel's recovery set up
Hrandon Schnittker's TO dive
on the next play for a 24-n
lead.
Ohio State 's offense sputtered early but special teams
picked up the slack.
Holmes returned a punt 35

yiu-ds and a late hit gave the ·
Buckeyes a first down at the
Aztecs 20. Three plays later.
Smith burst through a trucksized hole at right tackle for a
14-yard TO. Josh Huston's
kick gave the Buckeyes a 7-6
lead.
"Our punt return game,
those guys have done a great
job up front, plus Tone
(Holmes) and Teddy (Ginn Jr.)
back in the back."' Tressel said.
"Somebody told me (the
Aztecs) had nine three-andouts. When they're starting
with the ball on their II and
they're having a three-andout, and our punl'-returners are
catching the ball around midfield, !hat's huge for the
Please see Hangover, B6

Blue DeVils roll past Point .Bengals rip/apart
BY

struggling Vikings

lARRY CRUM .

LCRUM&lt;i&gt;MYOAILYREGISTER.COM

BY JoE KAY

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
-· It took two days to complete the 76th animal Battle of
the Bridge, but that wasn't
necessarily good news for one
of the teams.
Both teams knew coming
into the game they would have
to prevent the big play to win,
something Point Pleasant go1 a
taste of Friday night and fully
discovered Saturday as Gallia
Acadenw easily rolled o'ver
the Big Blacks 44-15 at
Sanders Stadium.
·Point Pleasant carne out
with a good start Friday, limiting the quick strike Blue Devil
offense to 10 point~ in the ftrst
quarter, before the 24 hour
delay due 10 li~ting.
·
When
pfay
resumed
Saturday
night,
Gallia
Academy had no trouble
going to work against the Big
· Black secondary, putting the
game quickly out of reach
with 21 points in the second
quarter an&lt;! a 31-0 half-time

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Crumlpt&gt;oto
Gallia Academy's Jeff Howell runs for a first down in the third
quar-ter of Saturday's game against Point Pleasant ,
Larry

lead.
Point Pleasant finally got on
the board in the second half
with a big run from Travis
Riffle in the third quarter, and
again in the fourth on a pass
from Matt Thompson to Will
Slone, but it was not enpilgh to
hold . off the Blue . Devils as

they added 13 more poinL~
after ihe half to take the 29
point victory ;md the seventh
straight win in the cross-river
rivalry.
.
Gallia Academy used a little
bit of el'erything to , score in
Please see !loll, Bl

CINCINNATI - · Chad
Johnson went directly from
talking 'to trashing the
Vikings.
Johnson caught a 70-yard
touchdown pass on the
game's second play Sunday.
and the Cmcmnall Ben2als
had their way during a 57-8
victory over Minnesota that
made a statement and raised a
question.
·
Yes. the 2-0 Bengals think
'
they're for real.
"lt's right there in front of
us." said Johnson. whp had
seven catches for 139 yards.
"This vear we can do some- .
thin~ s'pecial."
.
Ai1d the 0-2 Vikingso Arc
tl1c:- really tlli' h:~Li'' So f;u·.
1 e_, _

· "We Jial'e a l'etcran group
with a lot of pride . and we're
cmharm ,ed with the way
we're pia~ ing,': said Daunte
Culpepper. who threw a

career-high live interceptions.
·-rm detern1ined to fix 11. One
thing we've got to do is stay
to~ether...
) ,nd ignore the talk.
John,on ,got his mouth
going during pregame introduetions. talking a little
friendly trash to Vikings cornerback Fred Smoot. The
receiver had challenged him
during the week to show what
he ·s got.
The Bengals had it all over
the Vikings. rolling up 337
vards and a 27-0 lead rn the
iirsl half Johnson topped 100
. Please see Bencals, Bl

�•

'

fage B2 • The Daily Sentinel
r

Browns

Saturday's Boxscores
Gallia Academy 44,
Point Pleasant 15

Dustin Winters 2·6 Shawn Thompson

6 15
0 12

Green

Eastern

GA-Esmae1h 27 held goal 1 38

314

Second Quarter
G-Dust1n Williams 52 run (Williams
run) 1144
E-Bryce Honaker 20 pass from Cory

Third Quarter

S~affer (kick la1led) 9 44
E-Terry Durst 3 run (run failed) 2 36

GA- Haggerty 7Q punt return

(Esmae111 kick) 7 53

.GA--Haner 1 run {Esmae1h k1ck) 3 18
.PP- Trav1s Riffle 52 run (Casto pass)
~ 07
Fourth Quarter
~P-W 1U Slone 5 pass from Man
:Thompson (Patnck Holland K1ck) 7
~rst

Downs ....

Third Quarter

G-Castro held goal 6 14 •

-P.ass1ng yards

)&lt;&gt;tal yards

~omp-att-1 nt

"f,umbles lost

:Penalties-yards

kiCk) 2 34

F1rst Downs

Rushes-yards
Pass1ng yards
Total yards

Camp aH 1nt
Fumbles lost
Penalties yards

Rushing: GA--Jaymes Haggerty a3 ( B)

G

E

412
330
1-1

427
B 16 1
2-1

6 -70

4-30

11 •
44-326
86

from Page Bl

15
38-312
115

Rushing: G- Dustin W1ll1ams 11 · 157 ,
Mark Castro 22 83 Jonathan Butler 4
50 James McGu1re 1·17 Doug Castro

1 7 Justin Saunders

~-3
Todd Saunders
"Stevens 2-(-9)

3 run (Castro

Individual Statistics

52 Oust1n W1nters 8 51 Jeff Howell 949 Seth Haner 8-48 Rusty Ferguson
Jeff Golden

Bengals

Fourth Quarter

G-Jonathan Butler

Individual Statlst•cs

:2 9

N1ck 4 I S Derek Lewis 1-8, Jeff Cnsp

1-(-

4)

E- Bryce Honaker 12-121 Cody

:PP-5·36

Travis A1ffle 8 92 Jarod Stouffer
Mark Fooce 6·30 Tyler Grant 2·
7 Matt Thompson 1 4 BJorntsr
Berg erson 1·(· 1) Brando11 Warner 6·(·

Gerla ch 3 51, Jordan P1erce 7-46

Terry Durst 5-41 Cory Shaffer 7-21

Chadd Whitlatch 1 1 2

4)
Passing: G- Derek Lew1s 3 3-Q 86
S ~affer 6· 10-0 90 Jordan
P1erce 3 5 1 60 Bryce H onaker 0-2 0

.Passing: GA--Jeff Golden 13 21 o E-corey
-206, Jaymes H aggerty 0 1 0 0
;PP- Man Thompson 3·3
20
JNarner 1 9 1 9 James Casto 0

o

twtce and cornerback Daylon
McCutcheon came down
wtth 11 and returned 11 to the
Packers 22
The Packers came out of
the locke r room early to
watch Whtte 's No 92
unvetled beneath the nonh
end zone alongside those of
Don Hutson, Tony Canadeo,
Ban Starr and Ray N1tschke.
Wh1te's wtdow, Sara, spoke
to the crowd, and h1ghhghts
were shown of White sackmg
quanerback after quarterback
and holdmg the Lombardt
Trophy aloft after the
Packers' Super Bowl win lollowmg the 1996 season.

Then, it was back to 2005,
and the Packers contmued
the1r sloppy play m losmg
thetr ~ome opener for the
th1rd stra1ght season.
Gary Baxter mtercepted
Favre's pass for Ferguson m
the left corner of the end zone
111 the thtrd quarter Two
plays later, Dilfer• htt
Edwards 10 yards downfield,
and Edwards spltt defensive
backs Joey Thomas and Ntck
Collms, racmg 80 yards for
the score. Cullen Jenktn s
blocked the extra point.
Favre fini shed 32-of-44 for
342 yards, three TDs and two
intercepti ons

n't need to say anythmg else. stdelme by Antoine Wmfield
The numbers smd tt all
' Btg mistake.
C.1rson Palmer completed
Jonnson flew F,St Wmficld
and
took Palmer s long pass m
h1s first ntnc passes agamst a
dazed defense Palmer went stnde over the shoulder for a
27-ot-40 tor 337 yards overall 70-yard touchdown play thai
wtth touchdown passes to left the Vtkings on the1r heels
three differe nt recetvers The
The Vikmgs sank a lot of
money mto thetr defense tn
one to Johnson set the tone
He was yappmg before the the offseason, bnngmg m
com toss, sauntenng toward Smoot, safety Darren Sharper
the Vtkmgs bench to xell at and hneman Pat Wtlliams
Smoot. The cornerback ~elled The_y were helpless m th e
back and made a "bring-11-on" deciSive first half - th e
arm wave.
Bengals didn't even have to
Ftfty-two seconds mto the punt.
game, Johnson was in the end
Sharper and Wmfield were
zone.
' on the bench with lllJUnes
The V!ktnjlS were slow get- while the Bengals closed it out
ting defenstve substitutions in the founh quarter.
For the second consecut1 ve
onto the tield for the second
play, and looked confused as game, the Vikmgs' offense
the coverage was called. couldn't get out of its own
Smoot ltned up m the slot way Culpepper had three
agamst
T.J. intercepttons and two fumbles
Houshmandzadeh, leaving in an openmg 24-13 loss to
Johnson covered along the Tampa liay, and repeatedly

forced passes agamst "the
Bengals - one of O' Neal's
mtcrcept1ons was m the end
zone
The V1kings' offense set
numerous franchtse records
last se,1son wtth Randy Moss,
and hasn't been the same
Without htm, sconng only one•
touchdown m two games. The
Vtkmgs couldn't even take
advantage of franchtse-record
17 penaltte~ by the Bengals
When it ended, Johnson
sought out Smoot and gave
him a warm embrace
Talkmg m hts ear the whole
lime, ot course
"It's love, man," Johnson
sa1d "It's the love of playmg
the game wtth the same passtan as you We had fun out
there."
Well, one at them dtd
"Yeah, I'm embarrassed,"
Smoot satd

raced past detenstve backs
Ray Mtckens and Chn s
Crocker lor a 42-yaru score
The Browns ( 1-1 ), who
also struggled offenstvely in
the tr openmg loss to
Cmcmnat 1, responded wtth
an 80-yard dnve capped by
Diller 's !-yard throw to
He1den
Pht 1 Dawson added field
goals of 21 and 39 yards to
g1ve the Browns a 13'-7 hal ftime lead
Hts first tield goal followed
th~ first of Favre's two mterCe[Jtlons. Favre tned to force
a pass to ttght end Bubba
Franks. but tt was tipped

0

Man

\0 0
Recel~lng

G-Corey Dyer

Dustin W1lhams 1 16
;
E- Bryct.' Honaker 2·55 Terry
50 Jorda n P1erce 2-30

· Receiving· GA-Shaphen Rob nson
4 140 Jaymes Haggerty 4 29 Just1n
Saunders 1 15 Brad Caudill 1·12

2

70

Durst 4

yards recetving before halftune, settmg the tone for
Cmcmnall 's most lopstded
wm m three years.
It was so convincmg that
coach Marvm Lewts warned
Ius players not to get ,;amed
away.
· " I ve already warned our
· guys Don't let them make
you over-exuberant," Lewis
smd
By contrast. Culpepper had
d mi serable ttme, throwmg
those ftve mterceptmns three to Deltha O'Neal The
Vikings turned the ball over
seven ttmes tn all and dtdn't
get closer than the Bengals'
49-yard line tn the first half.
By that potnt, Johnson dtd-

Roll
from Page Bl
the game and showed that
early m the first quaner when
they faked a punt on founh and
live to gtve them ,t ti1st down
whtch set up the lirsl touchdo"'n of the ~ame when Seth
Haner do'e m tor a 2-yard
score
Followmg the score, Chns
McCoy mtercepted a Potnt
""Pleasant pass, gl\ mg the Blue
Devtls a short lield to work
Y.tth
Whtle they moved lllSlde the
lO yard lme. the B1g Blacks

one more score before retmng
most of the starters when
Haner ran in a one yard touchdown, hts second of the game
Pomt tin ally got on the board
late m the thtrd w1 th a 5 1-yard
touchdown run for R1ffle, who
ended the day w1 th 92 yards on
the ground on etght cames, the
lone bnght spot on the evenmg
for the Big Blacks
The founh quarter saY&lt; both
tea ms eatmg the clock and
ended when Thompson completed a live yard touchdown
pass to Slone and, after the
~uccess lul k1ck from Patnck
Holland. the Btg Blacks !ound
themselves out of t1me wondenng how they let the game
get out of hand

The Blue Devtls led the way
111 the rushing attack with four
players over 40 yards 111
Haggerty, Dustm Wwters, Jeff
Howell and Haner
Along w1th the numbers
fro m Rtft1e, Jarod Stouffer
rushed for 36. yards and Mark
Fooce added 30 yards.
Pomt Pleasant wtll try to
regroup from the loss wtth its
thtrd of four stratght home
games where they wdl face
Cardmal Conference opponent
Wtnfleld
whtle
Galha
Academy Will return home to
face Chdhcothe Both games
are slated for a 7 30 p m kick
off.

Qtribune - Sentinel - l\e
,CLASSIFIED
;,;I; i

- -·'

_,

GaUl. Cou.11ty OH

In One Week With Us
REACH OVE:R 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

(

Qtrtbune

TO Place

ca~f;~::v... (7!?a~ To44~:!~~2

Help Wanted

C)
PHARMACIST
&lt;Part- Time)
Pleasant Valle; Hospna l ts
JCo,;umc' lo r .1

ac~.:c ptln g

~.: uucntlv
P.trt

Tum:

PharmaCi st BS Pharmac y Phmn
Pharma~y

or Ph

acc rcdT 1Cd Lollc gc or

Pharmaust

D

D

Pharnui.:y !tom

unncrslt)

WV St.ll~:

LI\.:Cnsun.: T\~O years p h.tr mau;l

cxpc n c ncc prclcrrcd

Hospital !.!xpcncn&lt;.:c

pre lcrrcd

Excellent s.dary holld.lys health m.. u,.nll:c

Slngloltanlll) plan. denta l pl.111

l1lc

msur.trKc vm.:,uum Jon£ term Lll "i.!hlllly anJ

rct1rement
Send res ume-; to

Help Wanted

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale . ..... ................................... 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antiques . . ................... ..........................530
Apartments for Rent .................................. 440
Auction and Flea MarkeL............... ..........080
Auto Parts &amp;Accessories ........................ 760
Auto Repatr .................................................. no
Autos for Sale ................. ... ,..... ..... .......... 710
Boats &amp;Motors for Sale ............................ 750
Building Supplies ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ........................ 340
Busmess Opportunity ...,............................. 21 0
Busmess Traimng ............ , ...... ............... 140
Campers &amp;Motor Homes ...................... .. 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .. ....... .... ......................... OtO
I
Care .......... .......................,..190

lwnght@!C net

Pediatric Practice for an
LPN or CMA. Must have
prior pediatric experience.
Full or Part time hours
available. Mail resume to
510 West Union Street,
Ste A, Athens, Ohio 45701
or you may fax it to .
(740) 594~5090.
Deadline to apply is
September 22, 2005. __'.(

0
0
0
0

for nern ...................................... '111\1

(}

HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\ \ \ I l l \ { I \II '\I...,

c/o Human Resources
'
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550.
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1414

r

www pvalley org
AAIEOE

• COL TAA NING
' FIN'\NCi NG AVAILA6LE
JOB PLACE MENT
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1-800-334-1203

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601·428-4649

GIVEAWAY ·

• ptes. crate tra1ned wormed
: soc1al wJdogs &amp; cats good
• nome {740 )992 3679
Bachelo r s o r associated
degree m accounlmg ol
3 solid whl1e ktnens 6 wks knowl&amp;dge of bookkeeping
Old (740)446·0 129
wrth
e.:penence
Resp onSible fo r expendi4 month old Black Lab male tures
reimbursements
to good home (740)446· grants hnanc1al repo rts
aud1ts and othe r tlscat
2460
respons•b1 htles Must haVe
7 puppieS· SpameVRet/Lab knowledge ol word excel
muc, f1rst shots (740)74 2 a nd Ouaffro pro FJT pick up
application s at Ch 1ldren s
2896
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Shawnee
Big Dog 1/2 Great Dane &amp; Lane Must ·be returned by
1/2 Enghsh Setter (304)593 Sept ember 26 accompa
n1ed w1th a resume
6526

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED· Buckeye Com mumt y
Serv1ces, an ag!!ncy that prov1des
ser"ces to people w1th mental
retardatt on. wt ll be acceptmg
apphcattons and cond uctmg
mterv1ews on Tuesday. September
20, 2005, from 9am-3pm at the Ash
.Street Baptist Chwch 111
Middleport All app licants must
have a htgh school diploma or
GED, valid dnver's hcense and
three years good dn vmg
experience $7 25/hr
Pre-employmenr Drug Testmg
Equal Opportumty Employer.

Public Notice

Public Not1ce

Public Notice

The Me1gs County Budget CommiSSIOn has completed 1ts
app,ortionment of UndiVIded Local Government Revenue and
Undivided Local Government Revenue Assistance Funds for 2006.
These revenues are based on projections from the OhiO Office ]
of Budget and Management and are only estimates of the amount of
coul~

revenue lhal

©-2005 by NEA , Inc.

&amp;Grain....... .. .......................................640
Wanted .................................................11 0
IHo1me Improvements...................................81 0
IHo1mes for Sate ........................................... 310
1Housel~old Goods ....................................... 510
IHCIUSieS for Rent. ................... ,................ 410
Memonam ................................................ 020
Itns1urance ............................................ :....... 130
&amp;Garden Equipment ........................ 660
and Found.. ................. ..................... 060
&amp; Acreage .......... .... ..........................350

received by M-1gs County

The following Is a complete breakdown of the projected revonJe.
Local Gov

Percenl

County
Townships

40.00%
30.00%

Revenue

$

222,679.81
167,010.43

VIllages

Total

$

VILLAGES
Middleport
Pomeroy
Racine

Rulland
Syracuse
Tolal
TOWNSHIPS
Bedford

Chelter

Columbia
Lebanon

Letart
Oliva
Orange
Rutland

Salem

Salisbury

38.74%
3017%
1145%
6.15%
533%
12 502%
7476%
10.168%
8

5006%
10 395%

7.51 8%
8.361%
8 607%

SC1p1o

SuHon

6.4U%

100 00% .

---

$

64,699.84
50,387.05
19,122.89
.14

SI

6 691 %
8266%

Total

'

Free k1"ens L1tter tra1ned
ra1sed ms1de Call (740)245
5066

t
Found girls bracelet w/sap
ph1re
stone
&amp;ballenna
charms found between Food
lfYld &amp; doll ar store 304·675
8608

Found Med1um SIZed blade
dog weanng laded orange
collar fnendly Call to •denti
fy (740)446 8945

~~

WW'N COmiCS. COm

- -- -·

s 14,251.07
20,879.63
12.485.60
16,981.93
8,360 97
17,361 44
12,555.72
13,963.19
14,374.19
11 '175.5(1

13,804 52
10.816,67
s 167,010.43

170

Merchandise.......................540
Home RepaIr ....................................860
Homes for Rent ............................... 420
Homes for Sale................................320
to Loan ...... ..............: ....................... 220
&amp; 4 Wheelers.... :.......... ,.......... 740
Instruments ................................... 570

Local Government

Revenue Assistance

s 80,846 67
60,634.99
60 634.99
$202.116.65
s 23,480.00
18,293.57
6,942 71
3,729 05
8.na,66
s 80,634.99
s 5,173.71
7,581 49
4,532.77
6,166.76
3,035 35
6,302 91
4,558 24
5,069 20
5,218.84
4,057 73
5,011 61
3.926,38
60,634 99
Nancy Parker Gruasor
Meigs County Auditor
(9) 19

005

for Sale ............................................... 560
::~~~~~~~&amp;::Heatlng
................................... 820
Servlcea .....................:........... 230
TV &amp;CB Repair ..............................160
Wanted ..................................... 360
I~hoolalnltructlon .....................................150
Plant &amp;Farttttzer ...................·........... 650
Wanted ....................................... 120
for Rent. ............................................ 460
Good a........................................... 520
Sale .............................................. 720

I

J~pl1o~tary ·-~.................................................... 870

l

For
.
l~~~m to Buy ___ ......................................... 090
to Buy· Farm Supptlea .........~ ...... 620
To Do ....................................... 180
to Rent ............................................ 470
Sate- Gatti polls ............................ ......072
Sale-Po meroy/M lddle ......................... 074
Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

Ambylettp Drivers Oh•o s
largest EMS system 1s cur
rently seeK1ng non emer
gency wheel ch a1r trans
porters lor Manetta and the
surroundmg areas Great
expenence for those mter·
ested 1n pursumg e career 1n
the mediCal f1eld Must have
vahd dnvars license With
clean dnvmg rec:o rd and be
21 years O• age or older
Employment s contingent
upon state mandated cr1m1
nal
backgro und check
Excellent benefit package
Tho se mterested please
submit resume to
Ambulette DIVISIOn
1647 Southeast Ave Ste 2
Tallmadge Oh•o 44278

AMERICAS NUMBER QNE
HOME BUILDE R IS seek1ng
a career mmded organ1.zed
and energetic person to sen
h1gh·t1cKet products and
serviCes Perseverance and
strong work etttiC are our
keys to making $75K or
lost Black female German more 1n lhe first lull year Full
Shepard In Pleasant Valley benelits 1ncl00ing matching
Fax
confidential
area fam1ly pet (740)2&lt;45- 401 K
resume to Sales Pos1t1on at
9502

Grey/si lver
m1n1ature
Schnauzer male Scar on
nls r1ght Side Lost on SA
790/Hannan Trace Ad area
Call
(7&lt;40)256·6009
or
(740)645-5285

(740)446-3599

Med1um s1zed black male
dog wllan markmgs lost
8126 In GuysVIlle Shade &amp;
TUppers Fllalns area wear
1ng green collar $100
Reward call (7401662·2022
I

r

YARD SAU

BURGER KING

fiELp WANTIJo

'NO EXPERIENCE NECESSAA~
' FULL TIME CLASSES

black, weanng red conar
{740)245 9538

'1'-11

HELPWM&lt;rn&gt;
MANAGEMENT

LEARN
TO
DRIVE

dog w1th little bit ot white and

FIND AJOB
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

1tO

1_

OPPORTUNITIES

Mason County Animal
League Inc
1965 Fa1rgrounr:t Road
PI Pleasant
Sheller Clean-Up Day
Saturday 9124
9am 3pm Ram or Sh1ne
Yard Sale Bake Sale and
Hot Dog Sale
Get your Dogs
nails cli pped lor $5
Basket Raffles and Free
Balloons lor the K1dsl
To Volunteer please call
(304) 675-6458

I

We seeK career oriented
1ndlv1duals who w•ll strtve to
ach1eve lh~ best 1n customer
sat1stac t on and team work
If you have a des1re to be
successfu l With a goa l driven
and grow ng company we
off health dental l1fe Insurance
prescnpt1on card
bonus program pa1d vaca
liOns 401K and manage
ment apparel Advancement
from w1thm If you are 1nter
ested m Gallipolis Oh1o or
Cl1 arleston WV area apply
n person the BurgtH K1ng
restaurant located at the
Oh10 R1ver Plaza GallipoliS
or mml resume to Burger
K1ng 65 Upper R1ver Rd
Gallipolis OH 45631 ' or tax
304 529 0055
Cook needed Apply In per
son at tile Holiday In n
Gallipolis No .phone calls
please

~st~n~&lt;~l.,r!r!!!r~&lt;u~a~t!!!o~n"
Sales Manager
espons1b1hte s mclud
ecrul!lng and tram1ng o
arm;ns customer serv1c
nd meet1ng sales goals I
ou have a pos1t1ve atll
ude are a self starter
f}d a team playe r w
ould like to talk to you
us! be dflpendable an
ave reiJBble transpo rta
10n POSIIIOn alte rs al
ompany benefits 1nclud
ng health dental v1S1on
ndhle 1nsu rance 401 k
a1d vaca110n and person
I days Please sen
esume to
Paul Barker
Circulation Manager
Ohio Valley Pubhahlng
S25
Ave
Gallipolis Ohio 45631
Or email to
pbarkerOmytlallytr•·
bune com

Third

Dnvers Nestled
COL Dnvers w11J1ng to dnve
tor local ready m1x-concrete
company Expenence IS
preferred but not necessary
Dnver must be Willing to do
pre-mamtenance on trucks
&amp; eqUipment yard work &amp;
other miscellaneous chores
El'\penence operat1ng equip·
menl &amp; extra skills such as
welding a plus
Call{304)937·:1410
EMT posit1ons available 1n
Hu ntington
WV
area
FTI PT
Star1mg
pay
$8 50fhr
Contact M1ke
Matheny at (304)526·5780
t304)526-5936

or

Experienced Sew1ng and
An EKcellent way tp earn Oul1t1ng Person needed to
money The New Avon
worls. Full Time call after 5pm
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
(304)593-oSOS No calls alter
7pm No El'\penence needed
AVON I All Areas1 To Buy or to~ply
Sell
Shirley Spears 304
For a limited t1me make 50, c
-6-75_-_
. 4_2_9- - - - , - - selhng Avon Call (740)446·

33511

Bam Help Must 1&gt;e able to
work around Horses 18 yrs Full·l1me Babysitter needed
old or older (304}675 1993
1n my Home Barton Chapel
Road Mason Countv No
Students apply (304)576
Mov1ng Sale House Full ot
3353
Furmture Good Quality
Mamtenance Retngerat1on
Excellent
Cond1t1on
Help Wanted
Pnced
I
Now acceptmg applicatiOns
Jor local supermarket cham
ElectriCal &amp; Aefr1gerallo n
M1mmum 5 yrs expenence
REQUIRED Excellent bene
fns package Vocat1on msur
Absolute Top Oollar U S
ance proht shanng plan &amp;
Sliver and Gold Coms
compet1!1ve wages
Prootsets Gold Rmgs Pre
Send resume to
US
C..m ency
1935
OtM Valley
Solrtatre D1amonds M T S
Supermarkel s Inc
Com SMp 151 Second
dba Eastman s Fooctlands
Avenue Galhpohs 740-446
PO Box 769
28&lt;12
Gallipolis OhiO 45631 or
caii(7Ml)4469312elt!116
Pomeroy H1gh Schoo l Year
An Equal Opportumty
BookS 1964-65 66 w1ll pay
Employer
(740)592 2638

r

Oeaclifirthf'
DisPlay

Dally

1 .00 p . m .

In ~ Column .

for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In~Column; 1:00 p.m.
Frlda,y For Sundays Paper

Ads

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Buslneas Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1 •00
Thur•day for Sunday s

• All ads must be prepaid'

110
1

fl;.

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

POLICIES Ohio Vllley PuDIIIhlng ruervee the right to e&lt;llt reject, or ca ncel any ed at any tlma Errore muet be report.cl on tha tire! day of publication and
Trlbun•Sentlnei ·Reg leter will be rupo nslble lor no mo[e than the coet of the epace occupied by the llfror and only the rtrallnMI'tlon We ehall not be ltable
any lou Of expen11 that reeultelrom the publication or omi•elon of an advertleam1 nl Corr~tlon will be mecht In the first 111allable edit ion • Bo• number
are alway• confidential • Current rate card app!ln • All realeatate adverl111ment• are 11.1b]ect to the F.cteral Fair Housl1111 Act oi1K8 • Th11
accepts only help wa nted ada mH1mg EOE 1landard1 W• will nol knowingly acctlplany advertl1lngln violation ol the law

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Davs

1Tiullia"'"".................,
Benefll Golf Out1ng
For
Chuck RitChi e to help pay
med1cal expenses
Sept
24th at 9 00 A M P1ne H1lls
Golf Course Troph1es lor
,st, 2nd and 3rd place and
ot~e r pnzes awarded
Refreshments
serve d
Came out and Help

Word Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Indude Complete

I\II'I4H\II'I
... 11{\111 ....

Found m R1o Grande brown

Pleasant Valley Hospital

l\egt!iter

(7!?a~ Togg~:!~?s (304) 675-1333

Monday~FrJday

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

ACCOUNTS CLERK

Help Wanted

Sentinel

~-------------------.-

2 female mnced breed pup

Help Wanted

www.mydailysentinel.com

,..

'

_

managed to hold them to just a touchdown throwmg to his 10 seconds remammg
field goal and. moments be tore matn
target
Shaphen
Galha Academy then got the
the ktckoff followmg the score. Robmson, who had 140 ball back on an onstde kick and
the game was postponed due to rece1vmg ymds on tour catch- agam Golden h1t another long
hghttng
'
pass to Robmson, th1s ttme a
es
When play resumed on
Gulha Academy ate most of 48-yard throw Then, wtth two
Saturday. the Btg Blacks con- the clock m the second quaner seconds on the clock. Justm
lmued to struggle to move the wtth a dnve that lasted nearly Wmters dove mto the end zone
ball, collecting only s1x tirst stx mmutes and ended on a one for a one yard touchdown. gtvdowns lo the Blue DeHis 18 m yard touchdown run by Justm mg Galha Acade11Jy a donuthe game
Saunders
natmg 31-0 lead
The Blue Devtls, ho,.ever,
That IS when the game got
Thmgs contmued the same
had htt le trouble on offense out of reach for Potnt Pleasant, for the Btg Blacks m the secGal ha Academy was able to as the Blue Devtls put up 21 ond half when they were held
run the ball and control the pomts 111 a little over two and a to three and out on thetr first
clock throughout most of the ' half mmtttes
possesston and were forced to
game and, when needed, open
Followtng the touchdown punt. The punt was tielded by
up the pass mg game w1th b1g run. · the Blue Dev1ls got the Jaymes
Haggerty
who
throws
ball back and Golden stru ck returned 11 70 yards (or anvther
Quarterback Jeft Golden gold wtth a 60-yard touch- Gallta Academy touchdown
t ollecled 206 yards and a down pass to Robmson wtth
The Blue Devtls would add

•

Monday, September 19, 2005

G-Corey Dyer 30 pass from Lew1s

- (kd&lt; failed) 5 06

6
43-202 29 164
206
29
408
193
13 24-0 4-13 1
t 1
00
8-70
2-20

~ushes·ya rds

•

G-W1111ams 55 run (Gastro k1ck) 37

pp

GA
18

7 - 37
0 - 12

G-Mark Castro 4 run (run fa1led)

"GA-Oust1n Winters 1 run (Esmaed1

•

9
0

F1rst Quarter

Second Quarter
.OA-Just1n Saunders 1 run (Esmae1ll
}lck) 2 37
.JlA-Shaphen Aob1nson 59 pass
.from Jeff Golden (Esmae1h k1ck) 10

•

The Packers (0-2) looked at
tirst hke they wouldn"t mtss
J,tvo n Walker, thetr star
rccc1ver who went down wtth
d season-endm g knee tll)Ury
111 the opener
Alter bemg held out of the
end zone al Detrott a week
ead!er, the Pac)&lt;:crs went
ahead 7-0 on theu first l;JOS·
sesston. Donald Dnver
caught a shon pass over the
rruddle, turned the corner. and

Scoring summary

•

00

Jared

Green 37, Eastern 12

Scoring summery
First Quarter
GA-5eth Haner. 2 run (Joe Esmae1h
kick) 4 09

k1ck)

from PageBl

14
PP-Dewey Wroten 2·15
Stouffer 1·9 W1ll Slone 1 5

-Ga111a
10 21 13 0- 44
::pt Pleasant 0 0 8 7 - 15

Monday, September 19, 2oos

www .mydailysentinel.com

""'""''pe' I

IE

~·W&lt;I NIFJJ

POSTAL JOBS

LICENSED SOCIAL
WORKER
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center IS now accepti ng
resumes lor the pos1t1on of
D1rector ot Soc1al Serv1ces
The qua1111ed cand •date
must be a LSW po ssessi ng
strong verbal and wr lien
commun cat1on
skills
Med1ca1d
Med•care and
MOS knowledge Long term
care e.:pe nenC£1 preferred
but not requ red Quphlted
candidates
may
se nd
resumes to Char la Brown
McGwe
AN
LNH A
Admm1strator 333 Page
Street
Middleport Oh10
45760 EOE

MONEl'

Hll\IEl&gt;

rol.oAN

FUR SALE

**I'IIOTIC:Il**

$ 15 94·$22 56/hr, now hlr·
1ng For applicatiOn &amp; tree
governm ent JOb mto cal l
Amer 1can Assoc of Lab or
1·91 3·599 8226
24/hrs
emp serv

A.tl real estate advertising
In thla newspaper Ia
subject to the Federal
Fair Housin g Acr ol ~968
which makealtlllegalto
advertlae any
preference limitation or
discrimination baaed on
race, color, religion sex
familial status or national
origin or any Intention to
make ,ny such
preference, limitation or
discrimination

Route Sales

Herr Foods, Inc
Is acceptmg res umes lor
Route Sales People m lh1~
area Must posses these
qua1111es
•Clean Dnv ng Record
• Sell Starter
• Ear ly A1ser
• Good commumcat1on sk1lls
•Slrong selling sk1lls
F1rst ysar 1ncome potential

- - - - - - - - -. ot SJOK+ wlbenehts
LPN
need~d
lull 11me
Send resumes to
Monday Fr day day shill no
Herr Foods Inc
nO holidays
weekends
476 E Seventh Str eet
Apply at 936 St At 160
Chillicothe OH 45601
Gallipolis (7401446 9620
Med1 Home Health Agency
Inc seekmg a lull t1me AN
Pat1ent Care Coord nator tor
Gallipolis, Oh 1o and sur
rounelmg
area
Dulles
mclud e estabhshmg and
ma 1nta1mng open lmes of
commumca110n With area
phys1c1ans and health care
facilities m the ~ehvery of
Home Health Serv•ces We
offer a compet1t1ve salary
and benel1~ package lor lull
hme E 0 E Plea se send
resume to Audrey Fa rley
Cl iniCal
Mana ger
352
Second Avenue GallipOliS
OH 4563 1

ISO

&amp;1100lS
1Nl.'lli.UCI10N

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!?
No Fee Unless We W1nt
1-888-582-3:145

Concealed P1stol Class
October 8 9 00 am VFW
Rl \I I ...,I \II
Ma so n WV Ph (740)843 r,;::~;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
5555 Cell (740)41 6 3329
iO
HOMES
Gatllpolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today 740 446-4367
1·800·214 0452
.w.w gall pol o~a re ercoll ege cam

Accredoled Ue mber

Ac cred ohr~g

Councol lur I OOpanclent Colleges

and Sctloo s 12748

r
~

FUR S&lt;II.E

1401
Cedar
St
Meadowbrook
Add
3
Bedroom 1 112 Bath Corner
lot new Roof move 1n con ,
d t1on new Carpet and
Floonng Storage Bu1ldmg
Fenced
1n
Back Ya rd
(304)773 5254 or (304)593
4135

Sl1otoKan Karate Starling
new class Sept 26 2005 at
Carleton
School
every
Monday and Thursday 6 00
Non proft agency seeks PM to 7 00 PM 740·985 1995 Ooublew1de 3br 2ba
w/ atlached
Garage
qualit1ed 1nd1v1dua1s for tne 3994 or 740·6117·3039
Breezeway &amp; Barn
t 56
follow1 ng
Teacher/Dr1ver
acres Sand1'1111 Ad $72 000
Mu1 HS/GED ,wilh 3yrs early
(304 )ll95 3068
To))o
childhood exp w1th CDA or
ACDS t:erhiiCa!IOn or wllllnQ
2
Bedroom
Ho me
ness 10 purse
Prefer AA Compu ter
Repw
and
degree plus ACOSI CDKcre TroubleshooJ Web Des1gn $3751month References &amp;
denlial w/2yrs exp
COL Networkmg Programm1ng Depos1t reqUired (304)675
Class
C
wl passenger 8 UJid New Systems Restore 5578
endorsement requtr~
Wmdows
V1rus Removal 2 BAi t Bath Farmhouse 1n
Teacher Asst /Driver Mm PllOneN 740 992-7903
Country w/ 10 acfes Suitable
HS/GED and preschool e.:p hnp llwww geoc111es comlho
to bu ld
3 m11es from
ACDSICDA preferred COL tdamn32934 1Ema il hot
Hartlord
$49 500
class
C
wl passenger damn3Q934@ yahoo com
Homestead
Re alty
endorsement requ1red
{304)882 240 5 1304)675
Fa,n1ly Adovacate/Dnver FalliS Near Let us help you
5540
Cleamng
&amp;
M1n HS/GEO plus exp 1n DHK
soc1al
serv1ce
agency Powerwashmg We II clean- 2 or 3 BR home •n c1ty l1m1ts
Preler AA endorsement er up &amp; Get A-Done Can w/garage $44 900 mu st
7 40 985 9639!985
requtred
or
see
(740)446 4404
All pos1t1ons are 9 rronths 3633/740 416 1823
(740)446 0196
35hrs wk
w/benet ts
Slate Cer tified L1nk
3 bedroom 2 ba tll Ranch
Request apphcaiiOn and
approved Chlldcare has
style house newly remod
subm1t w1th resume and 3
1mmed1ate opemngs for
eled Bidwell area Reduced
leiters ot references to
ages 6 weeks&amp; up call
To $65 000 Call (740)441
SCAC HAD 54 0 F1fth Ave
Shelly 304· 675·2343 lor
1528 or t7401709 5952 after
Huntington 'WV 25701 EOE
more detailS
4pm
II'\\'\( 1\1
Now H1rmg Safe Dr1vers
4 ~ear old Colomal on 3
Apply 1n Person at your local
acres Approx 1 900 sq tt 3
DominOs Must be over I
bedroom 2 baths 2 car
garage Master bedroom IS
28x24 Wllh a JaCUZZI tub
ABSOLUTE GOLDMINE' $120 000 (740)446-7029
• 40 hOurs a week
60 vend1ng mach1nesl
• Up lo Selhou r
excellellllocat1ons
• Day and Evenmg sh1fts
all for $10 995
• Paid vacations 1'10ilday
800·235 6982
and tramlng

eo

W\Nnt•

e

NOW HIRINGII

•Protess10nal work
enwonmenl
Call today to schedule aP
1nterv•ew1

1-ftn-463-6247 ext 2456
Or stop by the Galha
County One Slop on
Friday,
September 23 between
1(} OOam and 12 OOpm We
w1ll be conduct1ng open
1nterv1ewS
www 1ntoqsron com

This newspaper wm not
knowingly a&lt;:cept
advertisements tor real
estate wh1ch Is In
violation of the law Our
readers are 11ereby
In formed t11at all
dwellings advertised In
tkls newspaper are
ava llabla on an equal
opportunity bases

Get A Jump

on
SAVINGS

4yrs old 3br 2ba w1th hre
place on t 5 acres m Gallla
S89 900
{740)709
1166

Co

Attention!
Local company offenng ~ No
DOWN PAYMENT' rro
grams for you to buy your
hOme mstead ot rent1ng
• t 00°'o f1nancmg
· Less than pertect Cred 1!
accepted
Payment could be lhe
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators
(7 JQ)367·0000
--------Cape Cod Home 2185 SO
Feel 2 112 Ba 3 Br 2 Car
Garage &amp; Cer Por1 Double
Onvewa y Sits on 112 acre
lot on dead end Pnvate
Onve 2 yrs old $145 000
13041593 2864
NEW BANK REPOS

ONLY

Shop the
Ctassifieds!

J LEFT

ASSUME LOW MONTHLY
PAYMENTS
OWNER FINANCING
AVA ILABLE
304 755 5566

r Mo~s~!El&gt; I ,r.to--·~-~-~iiiiif.Siir-··1
Due to DIVORCE Sellmg
2002
mob ile
home
E.:cellent cond1t1on n1ce
scre ened Iron! porch house
type gutters shingled root
heat pump vinyl stdl ng
$29 000 00 740-949-2543
or 740 992 3176

Home lor Rent 1n Glenwood
3br 2ba detached Gara ge
$400/montl't
plu s deposit
{304)743 8584
Homes
from
$7 000
Foreclosures VA HUD For
l1stmgs 800 391 5228 ex t
1709

Great Used 1994 14.: 70 3
Bedroom 2 Bath Includes ·House tor Rent 4 Bedroom
heal pump Call (740)385 2 Bath Mt Alto WV call
2434
{30 4)458 2443
New 3 B A Home Only
$189/mo Includes ale dellv
ery and set up (740)385
4367

Tolally remocteled
lnterlorl
3 bedroom house centr.al
heat &amp; a r washer/dryer
hook-up fenced ya rd stOr
2
N1ce
used
14x64
Bedroom Only $4 995 Call age bldg $475 per mo nlh
rent (740)44 1 1111
{740)385 0698

r

MOBil [ HOMES
FOR RF.Nr

Lms&amp;
ACRFAGF

oo

2 65 acres 3 1
sq It 2BA Green scnool dis Inc!
barn City water elecmc no pets Reference &amp; dap
septtc City schools 2 m1les $300 (740 )367 0632

south of Galhpohs on AI
Beautiful nver v1ew m
218 Prme IOCat!On wont
Kanauga Ideal tor 1 2 peo
last
$55 000 senous
pie
No pets
please
mqumes only
(740)441
For Sale· house 1n Mason
App11cat1ons bemg taken
7333
562 M O house m New
Ca ll (740) 4~1 0161
Haven $52 000 (304 )882 Appr t acre near Galhpohs
home SIIBS In
3200
Land con tract (740)367· M0b1le
Country
Homes
St1aCle
Foreclosure 7BA 5BA only 7886
$130 mo (740)385 4019
$18 000 For llstmgs call For sale 1/2 acre lot Gas
800 391 5228 ext F254
water sewer Call for deta11s
Hill RENT
(7401446·3487
NEW 3 BADM $1299
DOWN
1 an d 2 oedroom apan
$229 00 MONTH
ments tu rn1shed and unhH
ONLY AT OAKWOOD
n1shed
secunty depo~at
HOMES
Real-Estate Wanted-Local required no pets 740 992·
NITRO WV 304 755 5885
person lookmg for a home to 2216
Me gs or
No down payment appx buy All cash
2000 sq tt da &amp; heal 3 4 Galila No double w1de or tBR WI D hookup electncw
gas no pets $290 plus
bedroom s 1n Pomeroy 740 modular 740 416 3130
depOSit
(740) 339 0362
949 7004
IU\ I \I...,
(740)-14 111 84
No Down Payment Less
than perfect cred1t 0 K F1ve
2 bedroom 1 bath wa\er
Huus~
minutes - from
Holzer
pa1d $350 month $3~0
FORRtNr
Hosp1tal Three Bedrooms
secunty
dep os ~t
Ciill
One Bath Level lot Newly
{740)446-:1481
1 bedroom house
11
remodeled 740 416·3130
Gar11eld Ave
Gallipolis 3 &amp; 2 BA apts Clo se to
OAKWOOD HOMES OF
hospital
WID
$300/mo
(740 )44 1 0194 Holzer
NITRO,WV
Mokups
warerlsewe r
("}401441·1184
SUPERSTORE
mcluded
Sta1!1ng
al
OFFER ING CLAYTON
1 m1te down 7south beaut• $450/ month
depoSit
FLEETWOOD GILES MHE lui nver1ront Newly remod requ~red No pets (740)441·
eled 2BA 1bath hOme 1184
AND OAKWOOD
LOWEST PR ICE S· BEST screen porch overlookmg
SE RV ICE GUARANTEED r1ver sepa rate two story 3 room'S lurrushed I bffi:J
DRIVE A UTILE SAVE A garage w1lh worl&lt;:bench room good 1ocat10n Apply
at 1058 F.rst Ave S1de door
large
yard
pr~va t e
LOT
References 5650/month + (740)446 2257
304·755 5885
depos t
(740 )446 4922
Two Houses One Wltl'1 full evanmgs
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
s ze oasemenl &amp; 3 car
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
garage Garage has 1 stalll 2 Bedroom House Newly PRICES AT JACKSON
w1th mechanic p1t
Other Rem odeled K meon Ave ESTATES , 52 Westw ood
SSSO/mo Onve tram $344 to $442
house Rental house ,. tn Galhpohs
large deck All natural gas (7 40)441 1184 1740)441 Wa lk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
central a1r Approx 5 acres 0194
740 446 2568
Eq ual
All cleared w1th white p1ne &amp;
Housmg Opportunity
2 bedroom house S375 per
blue spruce p1nes Plus 2 out
mo plus depos•t &amp; ut1li!les CONVENIENTLV LOCAT bu1ldmgs
All $1 35 000
Accept HliD
(740)446 Err. ...FFORDABLEI
o.
740 378 6325
2515
Townnouse
apa rtments
and/or
small
houses
FQR
3 BA 1 112 baths hOuse
Home L11ting1
$450 per month depos 1 RE NT Call (740 )441 1It 1
L1st your home by can ng
rele rences no pets Call for apphcat•on &amp; 1n format1~

r

r

AI'.\K1111ENIS

www.orvb.com

v·• -

{r.Of"S-3820

'
V1ew phOtos/into
online

•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends tha
ou do bus1ness w1th peo
le you know and NOT t
end money through th
ail until you have 1nvesh
ated the otl'en

Ove r the road Cargo Van
Dnver must have CDLs w1th
Hazmat and good driVIng
record Also must pass DOT
physiCal and drug tesl Van
IS leased on with Panther 11
Must be honest dependable
and self SUIIICI8nl
60%
Orlver/40°c Owner spilt
Ortve r pays tor ga s and tolls
owner pays msur'ances
qualcom escrows repa1rs
e'C (7.1 0)4.:16 6688
Of
(7 40)339 4221
ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT s
needed Ap ply at 1354
Jackson P1ke GalhPQiis

I

II'S a SteQolll 4 bedroom 2
alh 2 car garage New
Haven WV Code 6505 or
all (304 )882 3368
~edroom l1n1shed base
fen t well mamta1ned 1~
ere w th 2 extra acres
p110nal Located m Po1n1
leasant WV 'cooe 9905
r cal11304 )675 1536

fl20

i\IOBU.E HO\IES
IUR S.\I.E

2000
14• 70 Oakwood
Freemon! 3BR 2BA 1n
Oua11 Cre ek very n1ce 740
388 8513 or 740 388 801 7
2000 16xBO mob1le borne
Ma ny extras Own'er w111 pay
to mo~e Call ~740) 446
2570
2002 38R 2 bath Oakv.'Ood
moo le nome Gooo cond1
11on
528 500
OBO
Rehnancmg ava lable Call
(740)245 013t
5 Homes under S10 000
Will dehver (7401385 7671

{740)245 5439

Furn1shee! upsta1rs 3 rooms
5 rooms &amp; bath stove &amp; &amp; bath Clean ref &amp; dep
retr1gerator no pets 50 requ1red No pets (740) 44 6·
Ol1ve St $350 month 1519
(740)446·3945
G r~w o u s hvmg 1 and 2 bQP
Attention!
room apa rtments at V1llaga
Loca l company offer1ng "NO Manor
and
R1Vers1~e
DOWN PAYMENT' p ro Apartments 1n MIOdleport
grams tor you to buy your From $295 $444 Call 740
hOme •nstead of rent ng
992·5064 Equal Hous•ng.
• 100% fn,anc1ng
OpportunitieS
' Cess tha n pert&amp;et cred1!
Ho11eysuckle H1tls Apts
accepted
• Payme nt could be the loc aled on ColoP 1al Dr
behmd H ighway Pat,o l Past
sa me as rent
Mortgage
Locators on Jacksor P1ke 2 beoroom
now available Ren1 stans
(740)367-0000
S290 month l ow &amp; mooi rBeautiful 3 bedroom home ate 1ncome Equ al Hous•ng
!11
count ry
C A Opoortunrty (740)446 3344
washer1dryer hookup large T.DD 1 800 750..()750
yard (614)595 7n3 or 800798-4686
Middlep ort Nortn Fo urth
Avenue 2 room effiCiency
For rent 2 bedroom house
no pets Depos1t &amp; prev1o es
1549 Ate 7 N 1740)446
rental refe rences ulll1l • ~ s
9177
oatd 740 992·0t65
Fo1 re11t 1 bedroom 1 balh
tu ll y 'enovA.te d all apph Modern 1 bedroom apt
ances
S500'month (740\446 0390
SSOO depos1t Call (740)4'\6
New 2SA apts 1n town All
3481
el&amp;eUIC wate r sewe r tra$ h
For rent 2 bedroom 1 Oalh 1n.cluded C A. $5 25 rent
S300 month S300 depos 1t plus "depos •h No pe's
(740144 I 1t 84
Call (74014413 3481

•

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentind

,

Monday, September 19, 200?

www.mydallysentinel.com

Monday; September 19,2005
ALLEY OOP -

I
·New big 2 bedroom apt.

'

DAVIDSON METAL
ROOFING

~~:~i~~l. locatio~81~~::w~~

(ncluded. No pets , Deposit · "30yr. warranty In·writing
required .
$695/month.
"Prolessianallnstallalion

(7&lt;DJ4&lt;1 -1184.

• Free Estimates

96 Nissan •• cab, auto, air,

740-596-2909

$2.900: 98 DoOge Dlkola.,.

'1 8 Colors

Phillip
Alder

r

Hometown
Catering
Hometown Market

Dell &amp;.. Fun Service
405 Pearl Stre&lt;t • Middleport, OH
Phone (740)992-3471
Fax (740) 992·5976

&lt;:Red &lt;:Rose Breenhou.se
50447 Tornado Rd.

740-992·

1 70

W~N'fi:H

S'fUHlGI:

OF BOATS,
CAMPERS ETC . .
AT THE
MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS
OCT. 8, 2005
9:00 AM· 12:00

10

llot ~ EI.IOI .1&gt;

• •

lmpounds!Aepos from $500.
LIStings 800-391·5227 Ext

repair needs, roofing,

~-~od I'
rem e mg ~tc.,
free cstimtlles

99 Honda Acco rd LX. l ots of

Plano extras. 3 TV's, DVO custom

Story ana Clark
3040675·3273

GIKMII'

onst.
for all your home

·

~

. INSTRIJi\IENlS

\IIJU 11\\IHSI

stereo. 57.000. !140)709-

(740) 992·2979

t 6Hl

leave 01(•ssa e

FRUITS &amp;

Gre~

· VEGHABI ..:-i

1998

Warehouse

Horne Grown Toma toes, $1,800 080. 1740)256F•etd Run , $8 per bucket or 1233.
you pick $5 per bucke t
Southern Auro Sales
(740) 379-9 11 0

-~~-.1-lo-p

Kenmo-,e- ce-ca_m_•_
c

electnc range Black. very

r

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me clo 1t for youl

UNI'S PAINTING

F,oR SAu:·

I i15

•

Garage Melal
Call

~

740-742·2595
~;:;=====~
fll

doan S250 (740)446-0537.
28' carnper l'a ller. needs
rep:m. make offer: ( 1) treadmlll.llke new. $100: (1) sel of
one row cullivators, $75: {1)
turr"11ng p)ow for small trac -

Metal,
A II
PP ances.
• Cars,

•

lllRTR~,.,

•

r!il4 WHEEI..ERS

1985

Ford truck F150 6
cy linder, automatic. good
body. runs. $900. (740)446·

St

(7~_0)4 46 ·7398.

r

A~TIQl]iS

·r. . -.,.---,--1
(740)256· 1616 or (740)256·
6200 .

I

MurDR HOMES .

outl Carmichael Equipment Ranger Xl l V-6, Automatic, ~
. "0 441-7632.
Low Mileage, Very Clean. -

· tnc. ~740) 446 .2 412

740.742·3020 or 992-339-t .
John .Deere 10 ft. No T 1l Dri ll
fof
Rent.
Carm1chael 97 Chevy 112 lon Sil\lerado
4)(4 ellt"and cab, 68,000
Equipment (740)446 - 2 &lt;~ 12
miles. vic!ory red . many
Joh'l Deere 5' pull t)lpe e)(tras. 1 owner. never been
BASEMENT
bruSh Mg, $260. (740)446- smoked in. perfect condition,
WATERPROOFING
3888 or (740)4.46·4477.
$1 1,000, (740)742-2661
Unconditional liletime guar·
antee. Local references fur·

r

r

!111ancing

available.
1740)441'0488
~
ExC&lt;VA11NG
Buy or salt. Ai\lerine Carmichael Equlpnienl Inc.
Antiques, 1124 East Main (740)446 -2 412
1995 Dodge Caravan. good
on SR 124 E. Pol')1eroy, 74DDitching/Trenching
Engine, needs Transmission
POLE
BUILDINGS
992-2526. Muss Moore.
Sen~ lee
$300
1304)675·3309
·Any Style
' Any Size
4ll4 Commercial Oltch-WI!ch
·custom Built to fit your
1995 Plymouth Voyage SE with Blx·way blade, Oiggin gneeds.
MISCEUA'&lt;HJU'i
van. 130K miles, 25 tTIPQ.

"FREE Estimates

GaS,
WB!ter, Cable. E lectric &amp;
Deptl1

$2,400 080

740·596·2909

up to

5 ' 6~ .

1994 Plymouth Vo~aga . van Drain Lines (304)576-9005
Your ProStat Tra1ler Dealer. 125K mites, 25 mpg $2,200
Carmichael Equ1pmenl Inc. 090. Both in good condi tion . {740)441-1 417. ·
(740)446-24t2

1o·x 16'x7" Green House,
wMe plast1c sides, clear on
rool. ellhaust tan &amp; some
·eiec.rric, S1 ,800. (740)742· i!:l!i,;,.~~-~--

r.. .

•011

"""
&amp;
GR•IN

E.&lt;tra long Twir'l Bed. Quality . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _r
Mattress. great for tan perscri. $200 . (304)81'!2-2494

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

..
WorK
ln~ured

Fn-e Eslim8lcs

HI. and Dry

Sltlrage
Phone
(740) 992-5232
SxlO, JOxlO,
lOxlS, 10~20,
10x30

I

ioiliiiiiiiiioo_p.J.

+

1740;446-0:)139

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
74()-742-2293

' Leave a-message

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bas han Road

Racine. Ohio

I

1981 Harley Sportsler Runs
good $2995.00. Call 740742-2760 ..

S4,500 1740)742-4011

Sales • Parts • Service

Sou th
2•
4•

• Stump Grin~ing

INtiAT'S viiTti TtiiS

Hi

Owner: Jeff Stethem

,

Office: (740) 992·2804 Cell : (740) 517·688~

II

POWER WASHING
,

Re sidl'nti~l)

Mobile Homes, Houses, Log H om ~s. Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Stati on Awnings, D"egrei!sing ot
Equipment. Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
-.
or log home, Alu minum brighten ins.
. •
Sp ecial rates to Tru cking and Dump Truckmg Cumpdm es. '

LAWN CARE DIVISION

:BARNEY
KEEP AN EYE PEELEDJ SMIF--1 GOT
A REPORT THAR"S A
CON MAN WORKIN'
TH' AREA !!

.

[Comm~rciat and Resid~:nt1a l )

1

.

Mowing, Trimming, Tree Tnmming, Ae raliOn, Fertiliza tion,;
Spraying of fence lines, Lellf Removal, as well as small 1
landscapin g jobs such as plantm g and mulching.
'
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES '

1

OH, HE'S

LONG GONE,

MET UP WIF
HIM LAST
NIGHT!!

SHERIFF !!

.•..

~

i.

•

,_.'
I

(

$,219

'

""'"",,

.-J'

fjJNEW tOEA

•

THE BORN LOSER

Optional Upgrades Available:
Argon Gas &amp; t1eat Mirror

l'"''i'OU'V( BEtf-1 :'&gt;I-I-OW IfiG ""1
Q\J\\( !J.. 511 OF \\'oi\T(~Tll/(
L~'iU.'( f\P--Vrn''i
'(OJ, (&lt;\'( 50'1 '?
'

www.qualitywindowsystems.com

P'"WE.LL, NOW H\t\T YOU

STOP II!

ti\E.N'il 01'\ \I, G-\ IE.F,
t fWJE OCQ.\ !

K&amp;K EXCAVATING
~"

Hours .7:00AM· 8:00PM
!11 41 1 mo. "pd

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE .
• Room Addition• ll
Remodeling
. • New•Girlg.t
• Eleclrlc.al &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Guttert
• VInyl Siding I Painting
• P.tlo .nd Porch O.Ckl

We do It alleKcept

·.;k '

r1tnce..

;BIG

••

GWJPOLJS
' ~"""~"""'"""llful
r~~b 1\".11'1.1'U~r.

•••

•••

&lt;:ene Arm.~Owner·
Orwrornr 7-t0-991-.,174

*' Week lv Tr:~:-h Scn'kl.' ·
4 ~ r~ 11f ih·liahlr Scrvh:c
!Keep Y1111r M,m,· ~ . Lth:.lll
f;&amp;R SA~U'ATION

Cornerstone
Electrical
Service
• FOR ALL YOUR
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS

PEANUTS

174614-16-7619

Diane McVey
M..~. ('ft· l.

~ T~. \\~

i)p:~)k~

1740159~m t

BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-!192-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

17·17·17 · $275 ton (bulk only)
·12% Triumph 12%sweel horse feed
:$5.50150 lb. bag
48%Soybean Meal #13.25/100 lb bag
Cob Meal with T.M. Salt
·
$6.501100 lb bag
Mushroom compost (Bulk only)

t,(tl~ ,

ro. E':UJ1Y?
rrSH:::aD

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N .1'

&amp;. FUIJ

Ohio ~576~

•

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

MYIIS '!lli~RVICI

740-99!2-2621 or

74()..416-4902

...

~

4 ':!1.1:·

\

IT SA't'S I-ta&lt;£

' ~TIOOS
~A1ffULLY

A((£PffD"

\

•

'

' •'

740.367·0544
740·367·0536

Please adopt from the
M!igS County D~;~~nd

and 7~: 9lfze:'~fflife

HOW'5 THE
COFFee?

NORRIS NORTHUP
252

· Norwogionelk hound
· Yelow labs &amp;retrievtr

River Road • Gallipolis
Evenings

•
\

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

MANY CUTE PIJPPIESI

BAUM

HOM£

Complete Home Repairs
&amp; Remodeling
wv 035087
OH 35926

LUMBEI~

Scorpion Tractors

MAIIVTEN
AW CE.
',
Wolfe
Owner

Chuck

(740) 992-0167

J

'i

" Taking Th e Sting Out Of
Hurd Work!"

II

:t:::::~~~:=ji----:-L...{(....J-GRIZZWELLS

Now Available At

WOLFf

'

I

ADVERTISE

mixes

·Welker coon hound
· Beog le mixes

or 991-6635

, Insured
Free Es t1mato s
Seh10r Ci11zen Discount
30 Yrs . E)lper1ence

--""'"'

~CARPENTRY

• RODF • PAINT
OHIO LICENSE # 38 244

992-3194
"Middleport's only
Self-Storage•

EMBARRASSIN6 ..

:SUNSHINE ,CLUB
..r r - - - ' - - - - - - ,

10x10x10x20

... THE .

SOMETIMES 6E

ROBERT

• Germon shepard &amp;collie

97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

BE~ I ND A TREE

LIKE WHEN )('OIJ
DISCOVER YOU'vE BEEN
5TANDIN6.0N T~E WRONG
SIDE OF TI-lE TRt:E ..

OF COURSE. IT CAN

..

mixes

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

REAL LOVE 15 STANDING

SO '1011
CAN SEE HER W~EN
S~E LEAVES HER HOII5E

t"r!. HJlr"f''

~) ~) AffWIIrrm

(7401llli-Itlll

Oti•r' Alld~~

THIS 15 REAL LOVE

I1S WoiiJiiioo Str'ti.·t

T!tr. t:'llljlll

lr\"T

Deal In
Shaggy
beast .
Boarded up
Deep waler

19 Coast
Guard oft.
DOWN
20 Juicebased drink
letter~
"Etder"
22 Pow!
22 Unite
sU.tesman 23 Always,
24 Low voices 2 Popeye's hi
to the bard
27 Chipmunk
3 Purses
24 Boring tool
pooches
4 Nat lengthy 25 Gawk
· 30 Fish bah
5 Admirer's
26 For real
response
31 GaUeon27 Leg joint
32 Tours
6 Baseball
28 Cypress
turfldown
s1at
feature
34 ..Iron Man" 7 Also
29 Lather
-Gehrig
8 Canning
31 Expresses
35 Good farm
Items
grief
soil
9 Wrist-to·
:i3 Gooly one
36 Suftor
elbow bone 35 Southeast
37 Cookout
10 Breathe
Asian
fare
hard
36 Censors
39 Dozed off 12 Underside 38 Dell order

39 Aurora
locale
41 Convoy

chanr
(hyph.J
Unravel
Oop'sglrl
Terrible
smell
Honey

42
43
44

46
· makers
47 Kind of loc~
48 Ms. Raines
of old
movies
50 01 . parts
51 Long sigh

52 Three
. before V

problems and answers. This. deal comes
!rom "Rea ding the Cards." You are in four
spades. West cashes two top hearts.
E8.st playmg high·low with the jack and
the 'two. NeKt, West leads the heart 10,
East discardmg a low diamond . After ruff ing . how would you continue?
"~
North's three-spade ra1se was · aggre ssive, bu t he knew from the bidding that
his partn er would be . able to place th e
cards well.
With three top losers - two hearts and
one club- you must play the spade su11
taking the finesse, but first count the
points. You are missing onlY 1B, yet West
opened and East responded. So, those
1 are probably divided 12 and 6. East
can have the spade king or the club ace,
but not both
At trick four, le ad a low club. ·11 West has
the ace and ducks, you are home. II Wesf
wins with the ace, you will play Eilst lor
the spade king. Bu t here East takes
dummy's king with his ace and ret urns
the club jack , which you ruU . .
You have now seen six pomts from East:
the heart jaCk and club ace-jack . West
must have the spade king . Cash the
spade ace at trick sbc .
The booklets are available from Baron
Barclay Bridge Supplies. Ca ll (800) 2742221 to order.

Take ca re of your own affairs .

\IHENS

lll.t ... "~"-"i!oonrl~ '

Pass
Pa ss

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct . 23) - Handin g
off th e management of importan t mat·
ters o nto o the rs today co uld un~ up
giving you more responsibilities and
wo rk th an lessening thin gs lor you .

-35'/t !itfmd i\Yt.'lllll'

Cemolngist
I 74(JJ 446-32H3

Pass
3•
Pass

Tu-day, Sept. 20, 2005
By B•rnlce B•d• O•ol
You will have many possibilities in the
year ahead for Improving yo ur lot In
life . However, probl em s w m arise if
you become Involved w ith q uestionable Individu als . S tic k with tried and
true assoclates who ha ve ch aracter~
V IRGO (A ug . 23·Sep t. 22) You
have a kna ck today for squee;zt11g
yourself Into corners and lhen lngenlow&gt;;ly d evising c lever escape routes .
Why don 't you simply s k ip the corners
and concentrate sole ly on " th e
escapes?

DILES HEARING CE~TER
.luAnne Sidt·r~
(304) 67S.J4!MI

54 Pub quaff

(2 wda.)
56
16 Cincinnati 57
river
"'"
17 TLC
58
providers 59
I 8 Olf·Whfta
20 PDO
21 Explooive

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
CekiCiit,' C1ptoer L'YDIOglliT1S are created ~CWll quota~r.-om b~ l~mou~ pe~ past a~d pri'Sent
~acn letter 1n !he Cipher s1anos r01 an01t1e1

Today's clue. E equals U

" NYP

·

(Oct. 2 4 -N ov. 22) S ubdue a hmde ncy today to antic ipate th e worst In o thers when dealing
with p eop le an d you·u save yourself a
lot o f griel. It •wo uld cre ate prob lem s
lor you th at sho uld never arise.
S AGITfARIUS (Nov." .23-0ac . .2 t) Try to maintain your usu al cheerful
a nllud!i!today, even if your co-workers
are d o wn in the dum"ps or more dour
than you can s tand . No th ing will be
accomp lished If everyo ne gats up
light
CAPR ICORN [Dec . 2.2-J a 11 . 19 ) AtthJ&gt;ugh you might have quite a· yen
lor ~ambling today, don·t tB.ke a
cl;"lance on th in gs that are dispropor tional• to 1he potenti Al gains. Betti ng
dollars to win ba ck dimes is simply
fo olish .
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20- Feb. 19) Sharp negotiat ing may be required
today In o rder ro protect yo ur Interests
and !hose ·of love d ones. S tee r clear
of yell ing tough d em a nd s o n olhers
and use your good judgment Inste ad.
P tSCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20 ) - Even
though you may feel your Ideas are
s uperior to those o l o th ers today, you
won't get anywhere impos ing th em on
yo ur companio ns or associates. Use
suggestions, not commends.
ARI ES
(March . 21-Apri t t 9)
Affec tatio ns , like trying to act like a big
sp&amp;nd er just to Impress som eone. witt
a~:tu ally work aga"lnst you instead
today. O thers will be Impres sed by
your pt:l rsonalily, not by wh a1 you
have.
TAURUS (April 20· M ay 20) - II you
d o n't have fa ith In your ab ilities today,
u ncertai nt ies w ill taka over and b e the
cause o f a ll yo ur fru strations. T"--rn this
aro t,.~n d and watc h conditi ons sUd den·
ly brighten con s ider abl y lor you.
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - B e o n
you r guard today II you have to deal
with someo n e who hes caused you
con siderabl e prob lems tn the pas t.
This person may t ry somethlnljl cute. ·
but If you"re watchful , you'll avert 11
C AN CER (J un e .21- July 22) Disappointment is Inevitable fo r yo u
t oday If you set your sights t o ta lly on
1he materialistic side of lila. Un less
yo u win the tottery. nothing witt be
enough . S1rive to enrich your spiri t
Instead.
L EO (July 23-A,j.Jg. 22) - Smiles. not
s narls . are needed today II you hope
to win the support ot others In order to
accorilpllsh yOu"r goals. Put your
de-nands aside and begin by simply
saying please.
SCORPIO

WN E M

P N' B ' W

WN

-

M V P X'M R
W C X V tl

R K' Y T K 0 X

WCX .O

MXGOGYX. "
PSVDCW

H MK B G X

PX

WM 0

GKMXXMR ;

RVIUYO

. RXKWWYX

WV I XR '

UXMMO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The silualion of worK ing at a major studio is so
hopeless !hat il you don't make a game of it, you'd go crazy." - Don Siegel

T~~~:~:~T ·S©\\~1A-~r-zr~·
0 ll•lirr onge letters of t~e

::!:

- - . . . . , _ , - - - Edlt•4 t.,. (U.T I . POUA.N _.;__ _ __

'!bur CJIIrthdlty:

Athens

J~CK SON
m H~ron Stmt

49 kind
of deer
SO EI - . Texas
53 Ring out

@text: Dav1d Bird from England and T im
Bourke.! rom Australia have so far put out
12 booklets, eac h around 90 pages long,
under the general heading of "Test Your
Bridge Technique," pub li shed by Master
P.oint Press. You first read a brief introduction to the top1c, then there are 36

N~TE

,Jtupp ·

Bob 740·843·5437 ·

Main Strtcf

1•
Pass
Pa ss

AstroGraph

IMPORTS

992-6215 ~NV ro5n5
25 Yttfll Loctl E~

..

" Roci&lt;Y. ''~J"

or

P o)IJlCT"() . OH

740-949-2217

&amp;Ji
. . a ~ ~---~~~~
'

Call
740-590-3702

42 Dix or Kno•
45 Far.well
(hyph.)

a

INSTALLED
to 101 Ul

fny

Calli.
41 Hllo gul1ar

Wllhou t loss. That would normally require

Vinyl Double Hung

four scramhff!d WC'IrdJ bt·
low to lorm four simpl• ...,.ordJ

I
I

I

RODDSI

I lz I I I
CEE LT

I'

I

I
P .H 0 W 0 I:;
Overheard al party "Some
1-:
,
;--,/r:'...:..,
/
..:.T/
,;..;;..1-J!,
I~-=:·:::·;~·=;:-:;::·~~:_, olher~ rnq~e at h9me
' I

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people

I

WUTTI O

I

f-TI
;:_;.1..:..1"1,i-_
-T.I,rrj--:-1 0
-.L._J.__ J.__.J__.J.L....J.

you feel

make you

CM•PI•••

- - yoy

•I" ''"'"' ""o"d

by flilrng •n II\@ m•st•no word1
yov de'rtllon f1om s111p No 3 h~low

L

·e

1
PPINr NUiv1BfREO
. lfiTEtS IN SQUARES

€)

UNSCRAMBLE
ANSWEI

fORI

SCIIAM·LETS ANSWERS ' !• U• 15
Etcher . Vis! a • Cross • Trough • T·SHIRTS
Gramps sal walchlng the people go by. He announced, to his friend that "Pedple now speak their minds on T·
SHIRTS"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

SOUP TO NUTZ
~ COMe """ Gu\'10
aLwaYs BRING ING vP
MY FiRST CbMMUNlON '?

Mid·Size 4 Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. R,t. 124 C hester 985-3301

\

'·'

"lllftNIN6 CALOft\ES"? ·-),1
INtiY CAN'T INE
JUST LIGtfTLY
TOAST TtitM?
!!~
'"
~~

TRI- STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

t

•:asl

Small booklets
~~ give big value

HI

'

~ort.h

. FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Bucket Truck

(Com mercilil ilnd

West

Openin g l ea d: • A

Top • Removal • Trim

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1·800·291·5600 740·992·411.9

T~R!i!X :4

Danny

South

"' 3

Tree Service

'

.,_ 40-446-9777
FAAMKI.NO

AJI0 52

. ,\Q J~HJ

JONES'

.}~~/

215'0 Eastern Ave .
Gallipolis, OH 45631

:U.%1 13uik)· Run Rd .,

4577 1

Pomeroy, Ohio

1997 · Camarc
green. lownerladult owned. 5:00pm 1304)675-6105
!J 'ock 11ncic. sewer p1pes.
less than 64.000mlles. V6 .
w1ndows . lmtels , etc ClaUde
automatiC, air CD. excellent 2001 Gnzzly 600. auto,
Wln t6rs. R1o G1ande. OH
and
sharp.
$6.800 green, less than 300 mites,

Cdll 740-245· 5121

:i'B'
mi...,.

·_JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENt INC.

KtngKuller (}

8 6 2

• ·Q 5
• K J 7 2

WINDOW SUPER SALE ·

• !!!!!

.

76

•
740·667-0700 • 740-843-5264:

·

• Affordable Rates
• References
· Available
• Free Estimates

$3,500 080. Call 1740)441 ·

1998 So't1a11 Chopper. 96 cu.
in S&amp;S FJngine. 5 speed
rrans . aay-tech , lrame and
Meta/he more. $14.500 can after

SU1,JI'S

red w.:ed rate s if both car ;. md home arc

Q,;tJQzdK"If

•

40 -Gatos,

Tide st.
55 Cheerio!
15 For 1alceout
(hyph.)

• J 2
t 8 II 4

10 !t 3

"'Q .

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med :
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident ·

Dozer - Skidsteer
Mini .Excavator Work

V.C. YOUNG Ill

· Trar. cr X Serres A!i-Whoet -:-::-:--::--·----,--'-. Steer 0'1 1 (- tH lawn anr1 1999 Chevrolet Venture
- - - recelv~aneKtrdS500off our Extendod Van, blue 82,000
N~W AND USED , STEEL alre&lt;ldy d1scounled priCes. mit~s: great condition: one
Steet Beams, Pipe Rebar L1m11ed
t1me
ollcr. owner, $8,500; (740 )367For
Concrete.
Angle . Carm1chael Equipmen t Inc. 743~ : (740)339-;J955.
Channel Flat Bar. Steel
Grating
For
Dm1ns.
[ ..,4 WMO'IliRUFE.ERSC::VUD;/
Odveways &amp; VValkways L&amp;L

Alii'OS

It \ the Aut o/Hl)me Di scount with special

&lt;. Auty"~· or ,

1997
Plymouth
Grand
Voyager While 2 sl. drs.,
good con r:t ., runs good.

8Q9·537-952e

Tuesday
We::tnesday &amp;
FOR S..u.E
Fr1cJay 8arn-4 30pm.GioS:ed .__ _
S&lt;~;lurda~
&amp;
·T'"lursday
Surelay 1740)446-7300
WhiiP. 1994 Cllrysler LHS
au to V6. $1,200 OBO.
llLfiJ&gt;JN1;
(7401255· 1233

State Auto offers
something special

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

lurnace work

Hay---Excellent
Quahly. 0712 .
Mixed Greens $2 .00. 740·
1998 Dobga Grand Caravan
949·2241 .
JET
ES. White , Tan leather, Quad
AERATION MOTORS
seats. rear NC, New tires.
Repa ·red , New &amp; Rebu1ll In $500 Dem"onstralion Bonus- loaded ,
$5,700
OBO.
Stock Cat/ . Ron Evans. 1· Letu!idemo aJoh'~OeereZ (740)44 1·0 135

Scrap Metals Open Monday.

•

f•111111
\S».i!N

W \.VW. W \~('Ill ~li iOil!C IK" )" .CI till

I

John Deere Commercial
V.AJ'.-.;
nlshed . Estabtisl1ed 1975.
Worka lta
P..roducts
-~--oiFoiORiiiiSALEiiiiio_,.
.
.
Call 24 Hos :;\740) 446Antique refr~gerator .::om~: . Compact E:wcavalors/Skid
•
0870, Rogers yasemanl
on
top
$185
Runs. Steers/Tractor
Loader
1994 Chevy Lumina \/an . 7 Waterproofing.
(74Q)J.46-3a89 or (740)4.4 6 - , Backhoe in stock. Check out
se ate r. runs good, looks
4477.
our rental rates. Great
g"ood. Aski nQ $1,000 OBO.

MEROIA~ll~

~~

llii!Oer

P.O. u. ~.~ JS9
~:.:;;.,::::
Gal\ij&gt;Uils, Oft -'.'ifd l -o:\5 1) ...
Ph : f!OO&lt;Wl-12_1!lJ m· 7-I U-·~·H i-Jh·.U

work

650 Yamaha V Star Custom
6,300 miles, $3,200 OBO.

Used Furn1ture &amp; App!1ance ~ 10
FARM
Store, 130 Bulaville P1ke.
$8,900. (740)388 -0140 or
G.alllpolls, OH . 40% of1 all •-llliEiii'-QiiLiiliil'l\iiflii";;;,r_
-"
1740)339-094a.
CAMPERS &amp; .
king mattress sets Hrs. 11-3
-ilor~~-:--.,
M·S _(74Q)446-4782
O'lo Fl.nanctng tor up to 36
4x4
months on John ·Deere
FOR SALE
' '
1995 Sta rcraf1 lightweight
Washer 5125: Dryer $125; Compact and 5000 Series
truck camper. Used 4 limos,
~locti1c range $125; relriger- Tractors Wlth Johrl Deere
.ilor $150: chest freezer C'edit approval. Check them 4X4 Truck 1997 Ford $4,500. (740)245-9 109 or
$165:
Whirlpool
. washer/dryer set 5250;
couch $125: rocker recliner
$75: loveseat SSO: table &amp;
chans $125: · table ~ cha 1rs
$4{);
tamps $10 each
Skaggs Applia nces. 76 Vine

llmhrni

L,-oiiliiillilllll--.-1

Oon 'l buy a big gas hog, like
new 2001 Chevy S·1 0.
20,800 miles..extended cab.
cost new $20,622, sell tor

·r,

L,_loiiDl!lll

;fh l· Wi~e. rnan "Age~ cy. lne .
4.' I Secm" l A;cmoc

Pomeroy, Ohio

I \IHI " I 1'1'1 II '-1
,\II\ 1..., 111( h.

~1uLHm!

nlu ch your :-«v iug s can be.

Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
M&lt;YIURC\'u.EY
Ch apel Road, Porter. Ohro.
(740)448 -74 44 1-877-8309742 ·
Janet Jeffers
9162 Free Estimates. Easy
financing. 90 days same as tor. S45 : \~)large attic ran. 1988 Ford Ranger, V6, 2001 . H arley Davidson
33795 Hiland Road
cash. Visa/ Master Card. $100 JH.P gasoline engine 4WO. Call (304)675·6338
Heritage Sollail Classic,
D11 ve· a- little Save alot
air comp ressor. (7 40)25Ei · -:::::-=--:-::-:':::-::::-:-;:- excetlent condition,· several '::::;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;:~
6444 .
' 1995 Ford F·150, 302 V·8, extr&amp;s, $14,500 pho ne
1
Thompsons Appliance · &amp;
Aolo 4X4 . 167,000 miloo 1740)985-3938
STANLEY TREE
Repalr-675-7388 . For sale. For Sale or Lease Storage
7
060
$5,000
OBO
1
304)6
5-4
TRIMMING &amp;
re-condi tioned
autqmatic warehou se cost $40 ,000,
2002
HD
sonell
Deuce.
,
GENERAL ,
98--S
1
b
New
Tires,
Brakas.
zoned
B-3,
for
Sale
lot
on
washers &amp; dryers. re lrigerameny
extras
including
w1
de
CONTRACTIN'"
Battery,
Coilpack.
Maroon.
6th
Street
cost
$
15,000
call
1ors, gas and electric
lire, chrome , Python Pipes
u
ranges. air cOnditioners, and days (304)675-11 60 nights Nice Truct. $3,500.00. 7407,000 miles. 1740)446-26 15
'Prompt
&amp; quality
(304)675-6863
742
·3014.
wr~nger washers Will do

repairs, 01'1 major b(and s m
shop or at your hom e

l•k t HO\!II Jr.

.
e

13
14 Crlmoon

East

K
."" AKlOl14

•

;;r;.;..;~~:--...., 4x4 302 Ssp. $2,000.
_

' ad~

l'..O.~~tr
11'11~ry

insured with S.tal c Auto . Find. o ut how

Anything Hauled

101 2nd Ave.

-Pre-

7999

Ta~e

25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971

McKea n Farm
( 740&gt;446-8554
Large assortment pumpkins, 85 GMC 7000 Sierra diesel
nwneo appilcanes startrng at
truck, $6,500; SN
575 &amp; vp au ~.m'der ~arranty. guards, Indian corn, fodder, bucket
tractor w/4 ft , brush h,og,
we do servrce wor k on all hay bales. (740)446-9442,
55"6
centenary
Road , king cutler &amp; 7ft, blade,
Make and Models (304)675Gallipolis
$2,500: 87 Ford F-150 pu

m Henderson, WV

.ldro hum

C..O..r
mtf"'ll''li&amp;lrialr

ti"!M flllrr'l .

..

170 I Jefferson Blvd.
Point 1'1"""-'nt, WV
1304) 675-2630 !!!! B r.:-J

Cgncri~

Plymouth

Breeze. air, au to. 4 cyl,

Appliance

Ctrl F.Sri&gt;lrr

[~

740-985·4372

Mu~ICAL

l'•Dillll'""

f~llll'
.Oill li;rM.I.Cbu~

Wn!llll t1m

740-949- 1183

s

Call for Details.
7851.

iom LPo~"" II

Ra~lne.OH

_17c:. c-:::-:--·Gelilpofis Rf!taii/Oftice build- F'JII broou"ed Pi! 8,... 11 P"P·
...
_ 4-:0):_2_56_·_69-:30:--::
: intf, bea utiful cou ntry set· pies,
$50
each
Call 95 Camero Z-28. 350, auto.
· tmg : 4,000 sq.lt . (finiShed). evenings (740)3:88-0163 or T-Tops. leather, greatshape,
heat a11d water 1ncluded.S (740)388·8901.
$5,500; 92 Corsica, li-6 ,
For more h'tfo. call
nt;J~IIable; (740)367-7435 'P-o-pp'-oe-,-_-C·h-ih_oa_h_
oa_s_$:-2:-00
:-: 8u to, 4dr. lots of new parts.
Cock·a·poos 150 &amp; $ 200: nice car, 51 ,600 ; (740)742·
Ollice/Apartment·-3 Story Rat Tt:!rners, $100: second _4_01_1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ :::;;;,;:;;:;:;::::;::~
Bwfding with garage, local· snots &amp; wormed. (740)992· 95 Honda Accord $700 I
Call B D C
·

T'&lt;~gR.illtr "

=-o:

091H5

Dealer: West
Vu lnerable: B()th

'' Wh ert Qunllty,Comptmio n .&lt;\nd IJifrgrity Comt•

1 Toxl
4 Prep~~r.
lounclry
8 Bleech
bottle
1 I Jezebe('o

ofo K 9 4
We!Sl

45783

Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

2002 Milsubishi Lancer. 5
speed. loaded. adult driven .
rebuLII Ulle, $6.500 . . Call

47 5
9!!1
~-~'!'"-,;,.-~

I'

Owner Operated

Mums 4-$10.00 or $3.00 Each

.

~ONTY
'

1~r!.~Tu~ppers Plains, OH

Rlder-Push-Weedeatlng

r..owr .

North
• 10 9 J
• 81 6 3
t A Q5

41800 SR #7

No laWn To Small
Call 742-2595

Catering Selections

--c--.-------

ed 1n ciow11town Pomeroy

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

HARMON
LAWN ·CARE

by

- - -- -

3936.

NEA Crouword Puzzle
ACROSS

P'~asa nl Va lley Apartment
cab $3.200: 97 Fora RonQOr
A'fe now taking Application!
eK cab $3,000; 98 Caravan .
$1 ,900; 2000 Cara...an
lof 28A. 3BA &amp; ~BR .,
PI,: rs
$2,800; 98 Windatar van
Applications
are
taken
•OR SALE
MondaY_ 1thru Friday. fro~ ~~---iiiiliiiiiii;.,-" $1.800: 98 Jeep Ch&amp;rokee
98
More.
So:OO A.M -4 P.M , Office 18 10 Week old AKC Cocker $3.200:
Mountaineer $2 ,800; 98
Located at t151 E\lergreen
Drive Point Pleasant. WV Spaniel Puppies·
buff, GMC Sonoma auto &amp; air,
black.
bufl&amp;white,
bult&amp;black. $3,000.
phone No. is (304 ) 675 . white&amp;black,
5806 E.H.O
8 I 0 Auto Sates
Mothe1 and Father on prop·
Hwy I ell N.
Tara
Townhouse arty.
Shots. wormed,
[740)44H885
Apartments, Very Spacious, declawed . $350.00 Firm.
1986 Jaguar XKS, V-12
2 Bedrooms. CIA. t 1/2 ·7-40_·~99_2_-7_3_7_1._ _ __
Ba th, Adult Pool &amp; Baby . 9 week old male Sheltie dog . engine ·(yeG V-12) 2 door
Pool . Pat10, 'Starl $385/Mo. First shots and wormed . sports car, blaci(, tan lrtMri·
No PElts,
LaasB Plus sable in Co lor. $3&amp;0 or. aU1o, rUns wowl needs
eKhaust &amp; minor attn., wlll
Secur1ty Deposit Required , {7401256 •6265 .
trade 60 's or 70's GM ,
1740)367-7066.
AKC Lab pups. Vet checked . $3500 080. 1740)416-0916
TWin Rivers Tower is accept· chocolat e &amp; black. $250. Call
1996 Chevy Beretta, V6.
inQ applications for waiti~g (740)256-6463
automatic. AIC. runs, looks
list for Hud-subsized , 1· br.
Reg1s tered
Lab goOd . good gas mileage,
apartment, call 675·6679 AKC
Puppies
4
Chocolate.
1 $2.200 080 1740)441 EHO
'
Black.lirst Shots &amp; .Wormed . 0914
SPA(~;
7 weeks old. Parents on
t996 N1ssan Sentra 135,000
Site. $200 each (304 )576·
FOR RENT
miles, 2 owners, good condi2222
tion: $2,800 flrrll. (740)388Downtown Office Space· 5 AKC
Reg istered, 8 128.
room suite $650/mo; 1 room W1emaraner Pupp1es. Will -,-----=----:::
offrce· $225/mo.: 2 room be ready in 3-4 weeks Call 1999
Ford Taurus VEi
sui te $250imo , Security (304 )~75-6338
en gine , automatic transmls·
,
sion. power windows &amp; door
deposrl reqwred. You pay
uhil!leS. All soaues 11er., mce. CKC Registered Golden locks $2, 800 . Calt(7o40)4-16·
Elevator. Call (740)446-3644 RW1ever pupp1es for sale. 0425.
Have hao firs! shots and
for appolf"!tment.
wormed. All female, $250. iooo kia Sept1ia. 4 door.
For Lease: Oft•ce or reta11 (740)388-8965
automatic. 27mpg. 72,000
sPaces in \l€ry good condlmiles, good cond1t1on. $800
Dalmatian
P•JPS
AKC 1n brakes. fi lters. tires, belts
·til'ln Downtown Gallipolis
each.
A~proK . 1600 sq. It each. 1 Reg1stered $200 .
etc. tuneup. Will take 1rade.
[304)937·2929
Asking
$4,000
Oeo.
or 2 baths Lease pr~ ce ' - - ' - - - - - - - 74
441
9378
negohabl ~ to enco tJ ;age Doberma11 PUpS: Black 7 ( 0) "
·
new
busine5s.
Call Tan $200 (304)675-8196 ·
(740)446·4425 or (740)446- afler Spm

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS
BRIDGE

02 Che\1. SilvtJado 4x4, 4

door . . $8.500: 98 Fora
Ranger auto $3.100: 9e
Dodge 4~&lt;4 53,695: 2000
Nissan pu auto. air, $3 ,500;

r

www.mydailysentinel.com

..

.

•

�•

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 19,2.0 05

www.mydailysentinel.com

.. '

Bobcats blanked by No..4 Holde~.

Indians sweep Royals
. CLEVELAND (AP) -The
Cleveland Indians headed
into their key three-game
. series at Chicago playing
their best baseball of the year.
:Jhonny Peralta, Travis
Hafner and Ben Broussard
homered, and C.C. Sabathia
allowed just five singles over
~ight innings as the Indians
routed the ·Kansas City
Royals I 1-0 Sunday to complete a three-game sweep.
The Indians have wun five
straight and 12 of 13. and
bave the best record at in the
major leagues si nce July 31 at
33-11. They trailed the Whit~
~ox by 15 games on Aug . I
b[lt were just 3 1/2 games
bttck at the start of play
Sunday.
Cleveland began the day a
half-game a,head of the New
York Yankees in the wild:card
race.
. Sabathia ( 14- I0) struck out
e\ght and walked none.

New Orleans mayor
suspends reopening
of the city because of
a new stonn, A2

improving to !!-I with a 1.99
ERA since Aug. I. Fernando
Cabrera fol lowed with a perfect ninth.
Jose Lima (5-16) gave up
eight runs and nine hits in
four innings, losing for the
eighth time in nine stans. He
has allowed 30 homers in 30
games, and he matched his
career high in losses. set
when he ·went. 7-16 for
Houston in 2000.
Knnsns Ci ty dropped to 4899. the worst record in the
major lengues, and is on the
verge of losing I00 games fo r
the second straight season - .
but just the third time in franchise history.
Hafner 's two-run homer put
the Indinns ahead with two
outs in the first ; and Peralta's
three-run homer cappcd ·a sixrun fourth that made it 8-U.
Broussard added a two-run
homer in the seventh off
Chris Demaria.

f

BLACKSBURG. Va. (AP)
- Marcus Vick and Virginia
Tech started fast, stalled some
and then got it goin!(again
with a couple of kick-start s
from the defense.
Vick threw two scoring
passes and ran fur a third as
the Hokies turned thr~e
turnovers into touchdowns in
their second stmight 45-0 victory. thi s one against Ohio.
The Hokie s (3-0), who
blanked Duke 45 -0 last
.Saturday, also twice turned
the Bobcats away after they
drove to the Hokies I 9. The
first time, Brooks Rossman
missed a lield goal, and the
second time. Tech' s Roland
Minor made an interception. .
"Those guys are playing
phenomenal right now," said
tight end Jeff King, who
turned one of Vick 's passes
info a 28-yard touchdown
with a lunge toward the end
zone.
'
"Hopefully, one day we ' ll
be able to pick them up, but
that's kind of our recipe for
success right now -. they' re
setting us up for some easy
. touchdowns," King said.
The Bobcats (1-2) were
coming off a 16-10 overtime
victory against Pittsburgh
that heightened excitement in
their first season under former Nebraska coach Frank

Solich, but they had never
played a team ranked as high
as the Hokies. And they probably won't be in any rush to
again. Ohio finished with just
188 yards to the Hokies ' 473.
Solich said Vick's presence
in the backfield makes the
Hokies hard to beat.
"Any time you have a guy
who c;in run and th r"w, make
big plays with both ends of it,
you've got yourself what you
want at the quarterback position," he said.
Vick hit David Clowney for
a career-long 52-yard completion on the Hokies first
play from scri mmage. and
finished 12-for-16 for 200
yards. He also ran for 38
yards.
It never hurts, either, when
tjle defense helps out.
The tJokies limited the
. Bobcats to 17 yards on 13
plays in the !irst quarter, then
took command by turning a
pair
of
second-quarter
.turnovers into scoring drives.
The first takeaway carne
when James Anderson disrupted Au sten Everson's
option pitch, knocking the
ball away. Noland Burchette
recovered for the Hokies at
the Ohio 8, and three runs by
Cedric Humes later, he went
wide . to the left and made it
I0-0.

Hangover

Eastern's Terry Durst (31) scores on a short touchdown r.un
during the second quarte r Saturday at East Shade River
Stadium in Tupper's Plains.

Eagles
from Page Bl
by a kiEk from Castro to tally
on the extra point, leaving the
score at the halt 21-12 .
Green pressed on in the
third by adding a field goal
fro m Castro throwi ng th e
score up to 24-12. followed
. by touchdown pass from
Derek Lewis to Corey Dyer.
giving Green a comfortable

fromPageBl

lead at the start of the fout1h
quarter.
Eastern fought as hard as
they could to catch up, playing defense hard and Bryce
Honaker running the ball for
several yards.
There was no scoring in the
fo urth quarter until Jonathan ·
Butler of Green bauled his
way into the end zone with a
1-yard run with 2:34 left in
the game, followed by another goou kick from Castro.
Next week, The Eagles .
stay at. home to baule Belpre.

offense."
The Aztec s, who had
played close games with. the
Buckeyes twice in the last
four years, failed to get a lirst
down-for the third possession
in a row and punted to
Holmes again, his 13-yarcl
retum putting Ohio State in
bu siness at the Aztecs 32.
Smith carried on four of the
seven plays leading to his ) yard keeper tor the score and
a 14-6 lead at the half.
Ginn's 26-yard punt return

•
•

Middleport • Pomeroy~ Ohio

•

AP photo

Virginia Tech wide receiver Josh Morgan pushes Ohio defenper Todd Koenig. away after catching a pass in the third qua,r"
ter In Blacksburg, Va. Saturday.
·•·
"That one was tough on from 3 yards out and then
us," Solich said , "Once that scored himself on a 4-yard
pitch gets executed, you hope run in the third quarter, cap,
to have the chance fur a big ping a drive set up by
play. But it didn't and it got Minor 's interception at tqe
us in a big hole."
Hokies 5.
Late in the half, the defense
Humes added anothe{
did it again as Xavier Adibi touchdown in the fourth qum;was in the right spot to catch ter on a 33-yard run, and Jol]n
a deflection on Everson's Kinzer caught a 38-yard scor.;:
pass. He returned it 25 yards ing pass from backup Cory
to the BobcatS' 32 and .three Holt in the fourth quarter. •
plays later, Vick hit King over
By then. many of the falls
the middle with just I : 12 left were on their way to the parl}before halftime.
ing lots, off to celebra1e:
Vick also hit Jesse Allen another 'easy Hokies victory:;

SPORTS

over 400 yards in each of its
first two games, but the
Aztecs ran· tor just 13 yards
on ·19, carries against Ohib
State.
"They've got some great
individual players - and nut
just one, two or three of
them," Craft said of Ohio
State's · defenders. "They've
got them along the line,
they've got them at linebacker and they 've got them
in the secondary."
Smith, maktng hi s fir st
start since nmning for 145
and passing for 241 yards to
lead an upset of Michigan
last year, completed 14-ol-26
passes for 149 yards with
one interception. and also led

HP' Kohler• C9urage"
. 19engtne
..

* 1•

· 1,59 9 •Servic'a~te
$

the Buckeyes in rushing with
87 yards on 14 carries.
"I feel good we got the W,
but ,I don ' t feel good offensively · about my perforhe
mance, "
sUI'd . " I
should ' ve done better. We
need to sharpen a lot of
things."
.
He was suspended for tak•
ing $500 from a booster and
missed the Buckeyes ' bowl
game anu the opener against
Miami (Ohio). then came off
the bench in the loss to
Texas.
Justin Zwick, the starter
against th e Longhorns,
played ·only the tina! series
and hit on 9-of-1 0 passes for
47 yards.

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OBITUARIES
_Page AS
• Bernice Carpenter

INSIDE
• Florida residents
evacuate and oil il)dustry
gets nervousas·Aita
nears hurricane strength.
See Page A2 .
• U.S. says proof will be
in the pudding for North
Korea nuclear deal.
See .Page A2
• Peoples Bank adds
financial advisor.
SeePage A3
• Genealogists oppose
closing birth records.
SeePage A3
• Ethics ciommission
frustrated with latest Taft
gift disclosures.
SeePage AS
• !)lew DuPont manager
seeks to repair community
relations.
SeePage AS
• Pomeroy man new
wildlife officer.
SeePage AS

WEATIIER

Delallo on

Pace A6

' INDEX
2 SECI10NS -12 PAGES

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·Comics
Dear
Abby
I
.
Editorials
Obituaries

Bs

A3
A4
As

lu'~d•C JO!ICE31er

Sports
Weather

B Section

A6

© 2oos Ohio Valley Publlshlna Co.
, I

half of Ihem paper questionnaires which . must be entered
manually into the project's
POMEROY' - Those who computer syslem. The finn in
submit questionnaires for the charge of the health test is urges Health Project may have to ing participimts lo . submit
wait months before they are ·questionnaires online, at
called for an appointment for www.CSHealthProject.com,
their health survey and blood in order to expedite their
lest, especially if they submit appointments. Those questheir questionnaire on paper.
tionnaires submitted in person
Lisa Collins, a spokesman can only be added to stacks of
for the C8 Health Project, said queslionnaires awaiting proMonday the project has . cessin~, while online quesreceived 30,000 question- tionnaues are automatically
naires from residents in affect- entered into the system.
ed water districts, as many as
Collins said many of those

·who submitted questionnaires
in either format may think
they were overlooked or will
not be contacted to participate,
but, she said, the .C8 Health
Project plans to test at least
60,000 residents in · the five
water districts where C8 has
been detected, including
Plain s-Chester,
Tuppers
Pomeroy and Mason County,
W.Va.
"It could be four or live
months before some people
are called for appointments,"
Collins said.
"There are literally boxes

and boxes of paper questionnaires which .have been sub·mitted," Collins said. "The
pages of information submitted on each questionnaire
must be manually entered into
the computer, and then those
submiuting them must be
called to arrange an appointment. When you consider that
it takes an average of three
calls to arrange an appointment, that's nearly 100,000
telephone calls to make ." The project is underway as a
term of the settlement of a
class-action lawsuit initiated

.

by residents in Wood County,
W.Va ., against the, Qupont
chemical ~o mpany . Those
who submit questionnaires
and visit one of the Ioc3.! tesiing sites for an interview will
be paid $150. An additional
$250 will be paid for blood
samples.
,
The C8 Health Project testing center in Pomeroy opened
in August and is now seeing
test subjects on a daily basis.
Other centers . have been
opened in Lubeck, W.Va.,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., and
Belpre.

Meigs r~sidents
donate thousands
to hurricane relief
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

,.

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

Bv ·BRIAN J. REED
BREEWMYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

.

.

'

Mississippi Queen passes through

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'

• Redskins scalp Cowboys
14-13. See Page 81

,.w,. . m}·dail~'cntincl. cmn

.
.
.
ProJect: C8 part1c1pants may wait months for appointments

:;o CE'\TS • \'ol. :;;. , No. 2 :1

helped the Buckeyes maintain field position late in the
third quarter. That possession
ended in a punt but a holding
call on the return pinned the
Aztecs on their own I . On
first down, O'Connell' s
option pitch to the right was
behind Lynell Hamilton and
Schlegel pounced on it to set
up the easy touchdown by
Schnittker. ·
·
"I took it down the line and
wanted to pitch it but I didn 't
see Lynell at first," said
O'Connell, who completed
12-of-1 7 passes for I59 yards
but was sacked three times
and harassed all afternoon. "I
lind of double-clutched it."
San Diego State totaled

MODEL LT 1042

.

.

'

-·

..
Brad Sherman/photo

Pain awareness
sessions to be held, A3 ~

..

' '

POMEROY ..
The
Meigs County Cooperative
Parish has collected nearly
$3 ,000 for four ch'arities
providing relief to victims
of Hurricane Katrina, and
other local organizations •.
churches.
and
school
groups have contributed
thousands more.
The Cooperative Parish
has collected $2,945.67 to
the
. United
benefit
Methodist Committee on
gelief, Lutheran Social
Services,
Catholic
Charities, U.S.A. and the
parish's own diii~erreli'ef
fund. Most of the funds
colle~ted to date through
lhe parish's efforts have
been designated by donors
for UMCOR and the local
relief. fund , according to
Rev. Keith Rader, the
director of the cooperative
parish. Rev. Walter Heinz
said a special offering
Saturday and Sunday at
Sacred Heart Church ·collected
$I ,431. 92 · for
Catholic Charities , U.S.A.,
a national church-sponsored charity which has
provided significant financial assistance to Meigs
County Oood victims in
past emergencies.
· Rader
said
United
Methodist churches in the
county, and churches of
B~an J. Roedfph!llo
other denominations, have
Craig Darst and son, Cooper, 5, of Pomeroy, had a perfect riverside view of the Mississippi Queen as it passed by Meigs County de signated Sept. 25 as the
on Monday afternoon.
'
•
"official" Sunday for spe-cial offerings for hurricane
reI ief.
A special community
fund established by the
Community
Middleport
A s~oc iation is now ·open
for contributions through
Peoples · Bank
brancn
offices throughout the
BY BETH SERGENT
BY BETH SERGENT
area. inclt~ding offices in
BSERGENTII'MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM
6SERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Middleport, Pom~roy and
Rutland . The association
RACINE - Across the
POMEROY
The Ohio River from the town of
made a $500 donation to
Pomeroy Police Departm'ent New )iaven, W.Va. sits the vilthe fund when it was
recently filed reports on two lage of Racine and according
established, and since then,
thefts and two traffic acci- to Racine Councilman Ike
the · fund has collected
dents. ·
,
$1,234.
Spencer,
Racine · "Has
· On Sept. I4 Cpt. James
Sally Lambert of Peoples,
Webster from the Pomeroy received all of the pollution of
Insurance,
who is coordiPolice Department responded New Haven's American
nating the fundraising
to Needful Thin~s Anliques Electric Power Philip Sporn
effort on behalf of the
at 220 East Mam Street to and Mo.untaineer Plants and
·
association, said the assoassist Mason, W.Va. Police none of the benefits."
ciation may use the funds
Spencer made that state- .
Officer John Riley in detainto provide direct
donated
ing
,Christopher · M. ment at last night's recessed
assistance
to a famil.y disVanMeter, 27, Mason, who meeting of Racine Village
placed
by
the ·- hurncane,
was allegedly trying to sell Council in front of concerned
rather than donating to the
stolen, anlique pottery to the citizens and representatives
Belli Sergentj photo Salvation · Army or other
from AEP's Mountaineer
store.
Chris Long, plant environmental coordinator for American Electric relief organization as had
· Riley said items fitting the Plant who were there to talk Power's Mountaineer Plant discusses the plant's new ·wet originally been planned.
description of stolen antique about the plant's new. $500 scrubber" (currently under construction.) to residents and council . Students
at
Eastern
pottery were brought to the million flue gas desulfuriza- members of Racine last night. Long and other AEP represent&amp; Elementary School collectstore by VanMeter. Needful tion (FGD) or "wet scrubber" tlves were there to ease local concerns over possible touch- ed over $1 ,500 - mostly
Things Antiques owner Rod which ' i.s under construction
pennies, nickles, dimes and
Pullins also confinned that and due to be completed in downs of sulfuric acid aerosols (or blue ~tumes) similar to inci- quarters - in a chatTge
dents that occurred at the Gavin Plant and in Cheshire in 2001.
VanMeter was the person January 2007.
drive to help victims of
Spencer's
statement
· who · brought the items i!llo
Hurrica ne Katrina, accordstemmed from requesting the burning of high sulfur coal pleted high su lfur coal will be ing to the co-advisor for
the store.
Rebecca J. McFarland, rm'ancial support of local orga- at Mountaineer that currently bunied at Mountaine~r but as the stude nt council, Carly
En1 iron mental Hayes. The student council
Mason, later arrived at the nizations like athletic teams burns low sulfur coal. The Pram
store and positively identified and Star Mill Park's baseball b)Jmingofhigh sulfur coal in a Coordinator Chris Long said at ,ponsored the
change
the pottery as those stolen fields from his AEP neighbors, "wet scrubber'' at Gavin con- last · night's meeting. mitiga- drive, which also included
from her home.
and concerns over the con- tributed to touchdowns of blue tion strategies have been put in . several checks and some
VanMeter was placed .struction of the "wet scrubber" plumes of sulfuric acid place to prevent that situation currency. Those funds, she
atAEP's Mountaineer Plant.
aerosols in 20QI at Cheshire.
said, will be donated to the
Please see Vlllap, AS
Please see Scrubber, AS
Council's main concern is
When the scrubber is comSalvation Army.

Village reports
thefts, traffic
accidents

.·•

..'

Community airs concerns about
new Mountaineer 'scrubber'

•

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