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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
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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

.

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Mississippi Queen passes through

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TUESDAY, SJo:IYI'EMBER 20 , 200:,

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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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PageA2

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

-

.

•
'

The Daily Sentinel

·"
Tues4ay, September 20, 2005

Public meetings

.

ASSOCIATED

PRES~

WRITER

NEW ORLEANS
Under
pres su re
from
President Bush ami other
top federal offic ials , the.
mayor
suspended
the
reopening of large ponion s
of the city · Monday and
instead o'rdered nearly
.everyone out bc&lt;.:ause of
the risk 'of a n ~w round of
flooding from a tropical
storm on the way.
"If we are oil, I'd rather
err on the side of con~er­
:v&amp;tism to make sure we
-have everyone out." Mayor
·Ray Nagin said.
The announce ment came
after · repeated warnings
from top federal officials
-. and the president him self - that New . Orleans ·
was.. not safe enough to
.reopen.
Among . other
things , federal officials
?&lt;arned that Tropical Storm
Rita . &lt;.:ould brea&lt;: h the
~ ity' s tempmarily patched -·
. up levees and swamp the
-ci ty all over again.
: The death toll from
:Hurricane Katrina rose . to
973 across the Gulf Coast,
\Vith
the
number
In
. Louisiana alone rising by
_90 to 736.
·
mayor . reversed
· The
.course even as residents
:began trickling back to the
first neighborhood opened
;is part of Nagin's plan. the
tightly damaged "Algiers

AP Photo

Lines of traffic crawl towards check ,points in New Orleans Monday as residents try to return to their homes and businesses.
The city had opened sections of the city to residents to return but later in the day reversed the decision ordering an evacuation
·
due to Tropical Storm .Rita.

that "there was a city to that the city 's pumping
come ba&lt;.:k to. " He said he system was r\ot yet runhad strategically se\ected ning at full capacity and
ZIP
codes that had suf- that the levees .were still in
; ~ection.
fered
little or no tlooding . a "very weak position."
: Nagin said he had wantBut '1now we have conHe ordered residents .
ed to reopen some of the
who
ditions
that
.have
changed.
circumvented · checkcity's signature nei'ghbor-'
We
have
another
hurricane
points
an.d slipped back
hoods over the coming
us
,"
that
.
is
approaching
.
Into
the
still officially
week in order ' to reassu·re
the people of New Orleans Nagin said .' He warned closed parts of the city to

leave immediately. Those
The city requested 200
ar~as include ·the historic
buses td assist in an evacFrench Quarter, the Garden uation, his office said.
District , Uptown and the They would start running
central business district.
48 · hours before 'landfall
. Nagin also urged every- from
the
. downtown
one already settled back Convention Center and a
in!o Algiers to be ready ' to · stadium in Algiers.
evaGuate as early as . Louisiana Gov. Kathleen
Wednesday. ·
Blanco, in a televised

Thesday, Sept. 20
RUTLAND Rutland
Yillagy Council, 4:30 p.m.,
Civic Center.
MIDDLEPORT
Middlcporl , Village Council
special meeting, 7 p.IJI ., council chambers. .

address Monday, urged
residents of coastal southwest Louisiana to also
make
preparations
to
leave.
",We are taking Rita .very,
very se riou sly, " Blanco
said. "Prepare your family,
prepare your house for the
possibility of ·evacuation."
Tropical Storm Rita was
.headed toward the Florida
Keys and was exp~cted to
become a hurricane, cross
the Gulf of Mexico and
reach Texas or Mexico by
the weekend. But forecasters said it could veer in
Louisiana's direction.
" We're ·
watching
Tropical Storm Rita's projected path and, depending
on its strength and how
much rain· falls, everything
&lt;.:ould change. ~esidents
moving into the area may
ha.ve to evacuate again,"
said Col. Duane Gapinski,
commander of the Army
Corps of Enginej:rs task
force that ·is draining New
Orleans and repairing the
·
levees.
Under · lhe mayor's plan,
Algiers opened Monday,
and Uptown, the Garden
District and ttie French
Quarter were supposed to
reopen one ZIP code at a
time between Wednesday
and next Monday, bringing
a total about; 180,000 of
New Orleans ' half-million
inhabitants back.
The dispure over that
plan was just the !ates't
example of the lack or fed. eral,local coordination that
has marked the 'disaster
pra&lt;.:tically from the start.

Wednesday, Sept. 21
CHESHIRE _Board of
Gallia-Meigs
Directors
Community Action Agency,
noon. Cheshire Office.
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern · Local Board of
·_Education regular meeting,
'6:30p. m.. elementary library
conference room.
ThurS&lt;Iay, Sept. 22
POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District will meet at . ll:30
a.~ . at the Metgs SWCD
ofltce, 33101 Hiland Road .

Clubs and
organizations

Rita is the 17th named
posted for the Keys and dents take ·pride in staying
Miami; Dade County, the put during hurricanes, others storm .of the Atlantic hurrihurri'Cane
center
said . . said they were worried cane season, making this the
Residents were ordenid to be&lt;.:ause of Katrina's devasta- fourth busiest . season since
evacuate the lower Keys and tion of Louisiana and record-ke·eping s.tarted in
visitors were orde,red to clear Mississippi. Most stores on 1851. The record is 21 tropiout of the entire chai'n of Key West's Duval Street cal storms in 1933. Six hurriislands, connected by just were boarded up Monday canes have hit Florida in the
one highway. Voluntary · and that and other streets last 13 months . .
Gov. Jeb Bush said the
evacuation orders were post- were nearly empty as the sky
ed for some- 134,000 Mtami- turned cloudy.
·
.
highway patrol reported that
Dade residents of coastal
"We're gomg north, wher- traffic out of the Keys was
areas such as Miami Beach ever the storm isn't going," . moving well ·on U.S. I.
and Key Biscayne.
· "'John Williams said after he However, lines were forming
'This · storm has seme. and Lisa Sparks got married at gas stations.
potential to it: The time to go Monday· morning on the
In the Bahamas, some pubts now," said state emer- beach in Key West. They lic schools were closed as the .
gency management direcior joked that if they had a baby · storm worked its way up ihat
gid they would name her chain of islands w1th wind
Craig Fugate.
While many Keys resi- Rtta. ·
and rain.

surged on the possibility that
the storm would interrupt oil
and gas production ..
The storm's top · sustained
wind speed was 70 mph by
midafternoon Monday and it
was expected to strengthen
into a Category I hurricane,
with winds of at least 74
mph, by 'the time it got close
to the Keys early Tuesday.
"The main concern now is
the Florida Keys," said Max
Mayfield, director of the
National Hurricane Center in
Miami. "It's moving over
very warll) W_ater and that's
extremely favorable for

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

KEY WEST, Fla.
Residents boarded up windows Monday and evacua!ed
·the low-lying Florida Keys
as Tropical Storm Rita gathered
strength
in
the
Bahamas, threatening to
grow into a hurricane. with a
potential 8-foot storm surge.
Officials in New Orleans
warned that there was a
·chance Rita could charge
through the Gulf.of Mexico
and interfere wiih recovery
from Hurricane Katrina,
:which . also roared across
South Florida. Oil prices

~evelopment."

Humcane warnings were

The Bush administration
North Korea ·s agreement to shut down its nuclear
weapons program Monday
but warned th&lt;tt the pledge
: must be followed by a&lt;.:tion.
-"Now we've got to verify
: whether that happe ns,''
President Bush ~a id .
\
The announcement that
North Korea would dismantle'exi"ing weapons and stop
. building new ones. culminat: ing two years of bargaining.
contained no deadlines and
few details . The· Ui1ited
States and four other nations
negottatlng witb North
tc;orea agreed to return to
talks in November. when the
difficult questimis of verification and timetahles wiH he
on the table.
'The question is. over time
wifl all parties adhere to the
· agreement'!'' Bush said. .
A collaps~ of the talks . .
held . in Beijing. ,ecmcd
imminent over the weekend.
But a secret meeting
Secretary
of · State
Condoleezza Rice held in
New York with Asian diplom~ts helped pave the way for
a co mpromi ~e. ~aid a senior
· U.S . official.•.
The
deal
announced
Monday , would require
~ailed

Pyongyang to account for
and di smantle weapons it
develt~pcd in secret, 04tside
international arms control. ·
estimates
International
place Nor)h Korea's . nuclear
arsenal at between two and
13 weapons. probably hidden in tunnels to avo.id satel lite detection.
. "The proof. so to speak.
will be in the pudding.'' Rice
said in New York, where. she
is attending the United ·
Nations General Assembly
s.ess!On.
The agreement leaves open
the possibility that the communist Nonh may one day
have a civilian nuclear power
program. The administriuion
has previously said North
Korea cannot be trusted .with
'atomic technology, and the
current round of internaiional disarmament talks nearly
dead! ocked over the issue.
Rice denied that the agree- ·
ment 'represented an administration turnaho.ut. But
Democrats said it was exactly thai.
·
"The Bush administration
was right to reverse course
on North Korea and ·stop lettin g ideolouv get in the way
of results:·~~aid Sen. Joseph
Biden of Delaware , top
Democrat on the· Senate
Foreign
Relations
Committee.

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Point Pleasant Register

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Sunday, Sept. 25
BIDWELL - A beneiit tiJr
the Fall Harvest Gospel Sing
· will be held at I ·p.m. at the
Clark Chapel Church · on
Bidwell-Porter Road. Dinner
will be at noon: singers will be
Sid and Carol Havman. Brian
and Family Connection, and
others.

Other events
Thesday, Sept. 20
MIDDLEPORT - Upward.'
Basketball registration, 6 to ~
p.m. , Middleport Church of
Christ.
' ·
Thursday, Sept. 22
MASON
.Bluegrass,
country and gospel jam, 6:30
p.m., Mason City Park . Live
music. Take lawn chairs.
Friday, Sept. 23 .
POMEROY - 'Fhe Meigs
Cooperative Parish nuirsewill
be laking blood ipressures
from I 0 a.m to noon- at
Powell's Foodfair.

Support groups

POMEROY - An update information table was in
on pending federal legislation place at the Meigs County
in the Senate to close all Fair. The Society, it was
birth records in the United noted, is still accepting fiveStates all the way back to the generation ancestor charts of
1600's was given by Keith those with Meigs County
Ashley, president of the connections for its upcoming
. Meigs County Genealogical book of charls to be pubSo&lt;.:iety at its recent meeting I ished. ~
held at the Meigs Museum.
Discussed at the mee ting
The .reason give . for this was the use. o.f cameras in
.Jegislation, according to &lt;.:burt records and it was
Ashley, is to prevent identity reported that cameras are
theft liy terrorists. HoW6'/er, legal ii1 ihe recorder 's oflice. ·
he reported a recent inve~- The society has subscribed to
tigative study showed that no "The Genealogical Helper",
. cases of the use of birth which is the nation's most
records for this purpose arc read genealogical publication.
known. The Society has sent The magazine whi&lt;:h ceased
.lett.ers to both of Ohio's to publish apo~ t two years
United Sti,ltes senators asking · ago, but has been revived to
for their opposition to the bill. rave. reviews.
.It was noted that the
The application of Diaqe
Society awarded a $50 sav- Jordan. of Westerville into the
ings bond \0 Eric Wood for First Families of Meigs
his winning 4-H entry in Counties was accepted. She is
genealogy at the Meigs joining on Amos Partlow
County Fair. Karen Werry proven .in Meigs County by
was judge of the entries. An 1807 and Jacob Partlow in

1817.
A report on a recent ad 111
the newspaper regarding his- ·
torians
searching . on
Company K, 7th Ohio
Volunteer Infantry of t~c
Civi l War Wa&gt; discussed. The
president met with the
·re~earchers ai1d rc&lt;:omniends
that anyone with an ancestor
in this company conta&lt;.:t the
researc hers. who plan a book
on this Mei gs County unit.
A'dis,ussion ·of the authon-.
ty of justices uf the pca&lt;:e to
marry couples out side the
townships from which the
justices were elected w'" Ji scu~scd . . an a report on a
re&lt;.:ent trip to the Na1ional
Archives was given hy tne·
president.
A member of the soc ietv is
currently work ing Iu c·ompile ·
information on !Jle Bailey ami
Young families of Meigs
Co unty. There are scrcral
unrelated families ol cad1
name. it Wa~ noted . .

Pain Awareness Sessions to be held

Thursday, Sept. 22
POMEROY - Caring and
GALLIPOLIS · - In obserThesday, Sept. 20
Sharing Support' Group will vance of Pain Awarene ~s
MIDDLEPORT - Brooksmeet at I pi.ll;l Thursay at the Mon,th 1n September, Holzer
Grant Camp Sons of Union
Sunday, Sept. 25
. meigs Multipurpose ~enior
Veterans of the Civil War and
RACINE _ Eagle Ridge Center. The .topi.c of discus, Health Systems is offering spe- ·
·Maj. Daniel McCook Circle
Gial pain awareness sessions
Ladies of the Grand Army of Community Chw-ch homewm- sioil will be on stress and the entitled, "Chatting About
th R bl '
·
ing, Sunday school, I0 a.m., ba&gt;- holillays.
·
Pain", at various locations in
. e epu tc, regu 1ar meet- ket di~ner at noon .. Aliemoon
the community.
tng, 7:15 .p.m ., Mtddleport · · 1
f
··
Masonic Temple. Dr. Carl ' smgmg, p.m. eatunng Everett
Sessions will be conducted
Denbow, history professor at GE. rant and the Southbound
by Dana Johnson, Rl,l, and
Oh
U .
.
k
xpress.
Sharon Shull, RN, and will
10 . ntverstty, to spea .
HOBSON _ Th H b .
Friday, Sept. 23
Pubh&lt;.: mv1 ted.
. .
·
.e o son
RACINE - . Edna Knopp; cover such questions as why
CHESTER .
_ Past Chnstmn Fellowshtp Chur.:h
pain occurs, what can be done
Councilors Club of Chester will have Its homecommg Racine, will celebrate her about pain, when medication is
Council 323, Daughters of wt~h . the Rev. . J•m.m~e 88th birthday on Sept. 23. needed, plus .much more.
·America, 7:30 p.m. , home of McKmght of Institute, W, Ya. Her address is 49800 Portland
Johnson and Shull were
Ruth Smith. Take gifts for preachm~ and smgmg. A tun - Rd., Racine, Ohio 45771.
trained to teach the sessions by
games.
cheon will be h~ld at . noon
the Ohio Patient Initiative
S~turday,Sept. 24
· POMEROY
_Eagles and the servi~ wtU t~llow
LONG BOTTOM - Ralph Group; who saw the need and
Auxiliary anniversary dinner that.. Hershel hlte IS pastor.
H. Ballard will observe his secured timds for education of
at 6:30 p.111. Take a covered
medical professionals who can
82nd birthd&lt;lY on Sept. 24. teach about pain awareness to
dish. Meat will be ·provided.
. A
Submttted photo
Cards may be sent to him at th
Meeting to follow.
bl !C. ccording to state Holzer Health Systems nurses . Sharon Shull, RN, left and
e
pu
Bashan Road, Long Bottom,
Saturday, Sept. 24
POMEROY - A meeting
n1Jmbers, an estimated 1.2 mil- · Dana Johnsun, RN, hold a copy of the resolution procla1m1ng
Ohio
45743.
·
of Drew Webster Post 39
RACINE - The ninth annuial
lion Ohioans live with chronic
pain caused by various diseases September 2005 as Pain Awareness Month . signed by Oh!O
scheduled for Tuesday has Thomas and Isabell Weaver
Monday; Sept. 26
or disorders. Common com- Governor Bob Taft. Holzer Health Systems will be sponsoring
been cancelled due to'rl'mod- Stobart reunion wll be held at ·I
ALFRED - Nellie Parker plaints of pain in individuals pain awareness sessions throughout Gallia, jackson and
eling in the buildiqg. ·
pi.m. at Star Mill IPark, Racine,
· · Meigs counties in Ohio during Septe(Tlber and October.
Take a covererl dish. Family and will observe her 92nd birthay ..come f.rom th e bac k, arthnlls,
on Sept. 26. Cards may be or pain from injuries that have
tiiends.
Thursday, Sept. 22 ·
. POMEROY - Alpha Iota '
sent to her at Arcadia Nursing taken place in an individual's. the session.s. according to Friday: Sept 30 from 2 tci 3
Masters, II :30 a.m .. St. Paul
Center, . East Main Street, past.
. Sunday, Sept. 25
Johnson, is to "empower indi- p.m. at the ' Pomeroy Public
- Wood Coolville. Oho 45723.
Lutheran Church. A tneeting · POMEROY ,
The public is welcome to victuals to become advocates Library: Thursday, Oct. 20
,.attend any of the sessions that for theirown pain.' '
·trom 11a:m. 10 noon at the
will
take place during
Sessions will take place Meigs Senior Citizens Center:
·September and
October. throughout Gallia: Meigs and
Individuals can , learn more Jackson counties during the and Wednesday. Oct. 26 from 3
about pain awareness and man- following days' Tlwrsday, to 4 p.m. at the Jackson Senior ·
and those who expe- Sept. 22 from 2 to 3 p.m. at Citizens Center in Jackson.
agement,
POMEROY - Peoples
Sunday School teacher· and
rience chronic pain are ·encour- Bossard Memorial Libr'!l)' in
For more information.
Financial Advisors recently
youth leader.
announced tbe addition of
· Clients interested in prod- aged to attend . . The sessions .Gallipolis: Thursday. Sept. 29 please feel free to call .lohdscm
R. Daniel Coffi'il as a finanucts ·and services offered by · will be VCI)' infonnal and ques- from 2 to 3 p.m.' at the Jackson · at (740) 446-5(Xl0. extension
cial advisor.
Peoples Financial " Advisors tions welcomed. The goal of City Library i.n Jackson: 4 i23.
· Coffill will be pari of the
may contact Dan (304) 675: Peoples Financial Advi sors
44RO or visit him· at Peoples..
group,
specializing
in
Bank's Pt Pleasant Oft1ce
investment and insurance
located at 421 Mai.n Street.
products and services. He
P e o p t' e s
Peoples - 27.66
Wai-Mart - 43.87
Financial Advisors, a di vi- ACl - 69.05
will fows on the Athens,
Pepsico
..
55.43
Wendy's - 44.01
Gallia. and Meigs counties
sian of Peoples Bank, AEP- 38,77
Premier - 13.40
Worthington - :1,8.90
:in Ohio and Mason County,
makes available a full line Akzo- 41.75
Rockwell - 53.21
Dally stock reports are the 4
· W.Va.
of investment services for Ashland lnc.- 56.27
Rocky
Boots
30.16
p.m.
closing quotes of the
·
"Peoples
.Financial
individuals and businesses. AT&amp;T -19.73
RD
Shell.65.31
previous
day's transactions,
:Advisors is proud to he able ·
including
investments, BLI- 11.23
SBC24.06
by Smith Partners
provided
· to otfer the knowledge and .
R. Da!llel Cofflll
trusts. life insurance, finan- Bob Evans - 24.04
at Advest Inc. of Gallipolis.
Sear.i - 119.97
expertise that Dan brings to
cia! -plann-ing. and retirement · BorgWamer- 55.46
our team." said Dave Baker. in the US Army and the plans. Peoples Bank is a CENX- 23.19
•
president, Investment and Ohio Army National Guard. ·subsidiary
of · Peoples Champion- 4.42 .
·..
· Insurance Services.
"He He is a board member of Bancorp 'Inc. . a diversified Charming Shops -11,58
· en!lbles us to oiler a full the Hocking County United ·nnancial products and ser- Clty Holding- 36.11
. tine of investment and Wqy · and Hocking County vices' company with $1.8 Col- 47.11
· insurance options."
Historical Society.
. billion in assets, with 50 DG -18.99
. Coffill has 5 years · of . Dan resides in Logan with offices and 34 ATMs in DuPont- 40.30
experience" in the tinancial hi s wife, Jeanette. He is an Ohio, West Virginia. and Federal Mogul- .45
services arena. He attended · active member of the Ken tuc k·y. Learn more abou t Gannett
USB - 29.50
_ 70 .47
: Ohio University. Franklin Immanuel United Methodist
Peoples al www.peoples· · an d a1so serve
· d Ch urc h where- he ts
· al. so a ban.:orp.Com. .
General
- 34.05
: umverstty.
GKNLY _Electric
5
Harley Davidson - 51.97
JPM- 34.59
Kroger - 20,42
Ltd.- 20.13
: RACINE - This week
Enduring Freedom con- If you wi sh to &lt;.tdd a s~ r­ NSC -37.26
: the - · Enduring
Freedom tinue s · to
remember' vice person ,onto their list Oak Hill Rnanclal - 30,50
· Support Group donated a around ·40 military service write to P.O. Box 376, OVB- 25.30
stat]dard ' American flag to . personnel here and abroad Racine , 45771. The ser- BBT- 40.23
. New Orlean s, La., Btloxt. with their c.are packages. vice is free .
Miss. and Mobile, Ala.
Each' of the three cities
were
hard
hit
by
Hurricane Katrina and
Enduring Freedom members wanted to help out.
. Because their group
Would you likE
play .
operates on donations for
sending care packages to
or
. : military serv ice personnel,
Middleport Church of Christ is sponsoring Upward Basketball for boys and
: the group . did · not · feel .
· r.ight usin g the money .for
girts in grades 1-6. Att games wilt be played in the Family Life Center on
: anything else but that.
.Saturday during the months of Jan. and Feb. Each child will haye equal
· However. the group had
playil)g time. separate leagues for boys and girls, and an evaluation
new flags that cou ld . be
process to provide equal opportunity for improvement. Practice begins in·
donated.
Oec. Uniform!&gt; are included in the fees.
"We wondered what we
Check out our brochures! ·
coufd do :" said Enduring
: Freedom
member Kay
HOW TO REGISTER ,
·Warden. "S ince we ' re a
1. Bring or mail the registration form and the lee to the Middleport Church
: patriotic group we thought
of
Christ, 437 Main St., Middleport, OH 45760 before Sept. 26th
the flags would be a good
2.
On Sept. 20th. come to the family life center between 6:0Q'·and 8:06pm
thing to send . for when
to register your child.
"their · towns get up and
Remember alter Sept. 26th and until last day ot reg1stratlon on Oct: 7th
running again .''
'
there
wilt be!' late lee of $10. Call 740·992- 2070 lor questions.
The nags were sen t to
1-S00-200--lOOS or 1:--lOI 6b:--';'1SS
: each city's mayor for
D
S
'I ,,. •1 ,
I
, '1 •'••1•.1"
•" I •!,
~II.,, 1 ~
·· their city halls.
·

Reunions

Six to 15 inches of rain
was· possible in !'he Keys,
with 3 to 5 _inches possible
across southern Florida: A ·
storm surge rising 6 to 9 feet
above normal tide level was .
predicted for the Keys.
Long-range
computer
models. which can be off by
hundreds of miles. projected
that Rita could be in the
northwest Gulf of Mexico
near Mexico or Texas by .the
weekend, with .a possibility
that it could turn toward
Louisiana. Katrina crossed South Florida into the .Gulf
last month before it slammed
and
into
Louisiana ,
Mississippi.

Peoples Bank adds financial .advisor

Local stocks

Enduring Freedom donate flags to Katrina cities

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Proud to be apart of your life.

Church events

1·eunion for decendants of
Joshua ahd Mary Botts Wood,
will be held at the King Farm,
3~858 Smith Road, Po,meroy
wtth a p:otluck dinner at
12:30 p.m. ·

Birthdays

US. says procf will be in the pudding
· for North Korea nuclear deal
ANNE GEARAN
' . Bv
AP DIPLOMATIC WRITER

will follow a luncheon served
by the social rommittee.
TUPPERS PLAINS - YEW
Post 9053 wilol meet at 7 p.m. at
the hall in Tuppers Plains.
, REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club will eet at 7:30
p·.m. at the home of Mary alice
Bise. For roll call take an early
school picture of yourself
CHES1,'ER - Chester Cub
Scout Pack 235 will have a
round-up at 7 )J.1i1. in- the
Eastern Elementary School
. cafeteria..Any boy in. the first
throiugh fifth grades in the
Chester .area may come and sec
what cub scouting is all about
and join the pack.

Genealogists oppose closing birth records

Homecomings

Florida residents evacuate and oil industry gets nervous as Rita nears hurricane strength
BY MICHELLE SPITZER

Tuesday, September 20,2005

Community Calendar

NEW ORLEANS
MAYOR
SUSPENDS
REOPENING
.
OF THE CITY BECAUS-E OF A NEW STORM
Bv MICHAEL RUBINKAM

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysenllnel.com

Ohto Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

'

Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Edttor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establislnnent of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Tod.1y 1s Tuesday Sept 20. the 263rd d&lt;~y of 2005
There .tre I02 days lett m the )Car
Today's H1ghltght 1n Htstory
On Sept 20, 1519. Portuguese na\ tgator Ferdmand
M.tgcllan set out lrom Spain on a voyage to find a western passage to the Sp1ce Islands 111 Indonesia (Magellan
w.ts ktllcd enruute, but one ot ht s shtps eventually c1rcled
lh~ world )
On tht s d.tte
In I S70. ltalt.m troops took control ol the Papal States,
le.tdmg to the Ulllticatwn ot Italy
In 187' pa111c swept the tloor of the New York Stock
Exc hange 111 the w.1ke ot t.ulro.td bond defaults and bank
!aLlures
' In 1881 Chester A Arthur was sworn m as the 21st
prestclent of the Un1ted St.Jtes succeedmg the assassmated J,unes. A Garfield
•
In I'147 forme! New York City Mayor FIOrello La
Guatdt.L d1ed
In 1971, m thetr so-c.tlled 'battle of the sexes," tenms
st.tr Btlhe Jean Kmg defe,Lted Bobby R1ggs m stratght
sets, 6-4, 6-1, 6-1, at the Houston Astrodome
In 1971 , stnger-songwnter J1m Croce dted m a plane
cr,1sh ne.1r N.Jtchttoches L.t he was 10
In 1980, Spect.ICLLI.Lr B1d ' 11dden hy Btll Shoemaker,
rnn '" the on ly entry m the Woodward Stakes at Belmont
P.1rk 111 New York .titer three potenttal challengers
Lhopped out 111 horse racmg s hrst walkover smce 1949
In tn4, a surc1dc C&lt;Lr bomber attacked the US.
Emh.1ssy annex 111 north Be1rut, killing a dozen people
Ten years ago In a move that stunned Wall Street,
AT&amp;T Corp announced It was sphttmg mto three companie s The House voted to drop the nattonal speed hm1l
,md let states dectde how last people should dnve
!losm.tn Serb rebels pulled back enough he,ny weapons
lrom .JrounJ Sar.tJevu to keep NATO a1rstukes at bay
F1 vc years ago Independent Counsel Robert Ray
onnounceu the end ol the Wh!lew,Jter mvesttgallon, saymg there was tnsu lilcJent e&gt;tdence to warrant charges
agamst PreSLuent Chnton .md Hdlary Rodham Chnton
F.urmer Sov1et cosmon,mt Ghern1.111 T1tov d1ed at age 65
. One year .1go CBS News apolog•zed for a "nustake m
judgment" 111 tis story questLOmng Pres tdent Bush's
N.ttLonal Guard serv1ce. saymg tl could not vouch for the
~uthent1ctty of documents featured m the report A vtdeo
-posted on a Web slle showed the beheadmg of a man
Jdentttied as Amencan ct\tl engmeer Eugene Armstrong
Tod.1y's Btrthdays Basketball Hall of Fame coach Red
Auerbach '' 88 Stnger Gug1 Grant rs 81 Actress-comedtan Anne Meara " 76 Actress Sophm Loren ts 71
-Rock mLLSICian Chuck Panozzo IS 58 Hockey player Guy
LaFleur " 54 J,tzz mustc:t.ln Peter Whue ts 51 Actress
Betsy Br,mtley ts 50 Actor Gary Cole 1s 49 Actress
Knsten Johnston ts 38 Rock smgers Matthew Nelson and
Gunnar Nelson are 18 Rock mu&gt;tcJan Ben Shepherd ts
37 Rock mustc1an R1 ck Woolstenhulme (Llfehouse) ts 26
Thought for Today Htstory must stay open, tt ts a\1-humanuy" - Wtlltam Carlos Wtlhams, Amencan author
and poet ( 1883- 1963)

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, . EDITOR '
Letre11 10 rile {'{/Ito/ (JIC welcome. They should be !eS&gt; titan

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PageA4

Tuesday, September 20, 2oo:;
•

Roberts comes off as no conservative in Scalia- Thomas mold

The Daily Sentinel

Publtsher

..

11

County
'53 55
'10710
'2 14 21

It's about as certam as
anythmg that John Rllberts
wtll be the next chtef JUstice
of the Umted States, but tt's
anythmg l;&gt;ut certam where
he'll come out tdeologtcally
That should be encouragmg to moderates and liberals
and dtscouragmg to conservatives,
who
expected
Prestdent Bush to appmnt a
JUSttce m the mold ot
Justices Antonm Scalia and·
Clarence Thomas, whose
v1ews are seldom m aoubt
L1beral mterest groups and
Democrauc Senators ought
to be usmg the standard Sen
Charles Schumer, D-N Y .
applied to Roberts II he 's
not an "extrem1st' conservative and "out ol the mamstre.lm," he ought to be confmned
If that's the test, Roberts
surely passed tt, JUdging by
hts early performance before
the
Senate
Judtctary
Commtllee But the mterest
groups and. apparently, the
mam bf!dy of commtttee
Democrats. stLII seem set to
oppose hun.
If a maJonry ol Senate
· Democrats follow thetr lead,
assummg no damnmg evtdence surfaces be lore a conttrmauon vote, u wt\1 brand
the pally .;s tdeolugtcdlly
dnven and out of the mum
stream Itself
Polls show that Roberts
has made a htghly f&lt;tvor.Lble
unpress10n wuh the public
And both h1s htstory and
performance more than luitill the tradmonal reqturements of " Supreme Court
JUStice mtelltgem:e. fatrmmdednes s, a JUdiCial temperament and the respect of
hts profess1onal colleagues
Roberts
specJftcally
declared that he would nut
brmg an "overarchmg pht losophy" to the court and
would "look at cases flom
the ground up rather than the
top down"
He satd he IS a "modest
Judge" who will mterpret
law and not make 1t, who
values precedent, who
respects the v1ews of hiS colleagues and who v.t\1 not
allow h1s personal opm1ons
to sway h1s Judgments
Roberts may be a conserv-

Morton
KondraCke

•

auve, but he's not a ng1d,
b1g-C · conservat1ve tdeologue And. assummg he 's
bemg honest. he's not go mg
to be the ,tctt v!st hoped lor
by the nght and feared by
the left
Roberts' memos from the
Reagan era do suggest "
smarl-alecky conservattve
posSibly on h1s way to btg-C
status, as m hiS reference to
a "so-called nght ot pnvacy" m the ConstitUtion
But Roberts 1s now 20plu s years older, and he went
out uf hLS way to mlurm the
commlllcc that fie adnmcs
the late Ju ~t 1ce Roher! H
Jackson, once Fr,mkhn D
Roosevelt's attorney ge ne1
,tl who changed hts mmd as
he eh,mged hLS JOb
It's dlso a good stgn ol
Roberts · matunty and openmmdedness that he told stu. dents at W,1ke Forest L.1w
School m Febru&lt;Lry that he· s
found be1ng a Iedet al
.tppc.Lis court judge !,tr harder than he had &lt;Lnllctpated
_ " I kmd ol though! that 111
most of the cases, ll would
be pretty obvtous t\1.1t thi s
person should lose. thts persun should wm and you \J
spend most ol your lime
wrttmg optmons " he satd
''I've found that I have to
spend more ttme th&lt;Ln I
thought JUSt gettmg to the
ltrsl step - what the qght
answer should be," he said
"It 's not at ,,II unusual to
have one vtew when you
timsh readmg the bnel s.•1
d1ffetent vtew when you stt
down wtth your clerks.
another alter oral arguments
and you're back to a dillerem vrew alter the conference
(with other judges)
~~Th e n

,\s you go lhtou gh

the wnung process, :,ou
come up wtth etther the
ongmal \ 1ew. " thtrd v1ew or
the second v1ew" Can ,my-

A
I cons1der myse\1 a patnot. When asked my rehgton,
I answer " the ConslltutJon,
parttcularly the Bill ot
Rtghts •· And the se days,
am1d vtrulent parttsan pohttcs, I tum for a detimllon of
patnot1 sm to statements on
the floor of the Senate by
Repubhcan John McCam ol
Anzona on July 20
Jntroducmg amendments te&gt;
end the abuse of detamees
that he wanted to attach to
the $42 bilhon Pentagon btll
for 2006, McCam satd our
enemy doesn't deserve our
sympathy, " but thts rsn't
about who they are Th1s LS
about who we are "
The MeCum amendments
have been swept out of the
med1a by the dts,Jstrmts
aftermath of Hurncaoe
Katnna, the John Roberts'
nommatron. and the eager
envelopment ol
Cmdy
Sheehan by such clones of
Mtchael
Moore
as
MoveOn org
Aftirmmg Amenc.m vo~l ­
ues. McCam's first amendment would have estabhshed "the Army F1eld manual as the standard for mterrogatJon of all detamees
held m the Department ol
Defense (DOD) custody ·
He noted that a new edt
tton ot the Army manual ts
due out soon. but hts
amendment would requtrc
that congressional delense
commntees be mlon11ed 10
days before an) revts1ons In
v1ew of the bypassmg of the
Army F1eld manual 111 lr.1q .
Guantanamo
Bay
.mu
Al ghamstan - resultmg m
the ahuses ot pnsoncrs "the revtstons wou ld h,1ve tn
be consiStent w11h (our)
law!\ lu'ld trealy obllg.ltHHh ·
Telhngly. McC.un .tdded
· Had the m.tlllhli been lol lowed across the board, we
cou ld h,,ve avo1ded the pn s-

ddiniti~n

one
mMgme
Justtces
Thomas or Scaha not knowmg from the get-go how
he'll rule ''
When asked by a student
several menths before he
was nommateJ who hts
favonte JUSttces were, he d1d
not name Scalia and Thomas
- Bush's favontes - but
rather
Jackson,
Fehx
Frankfurter, John Marshall
Harlan , Wtlltam Brennan
and hts mentor, Wtlilam
Rehnqu1st
And 1t 's JUst concetvablc
th.tt Roberts mtght end up a
JUStice Jdeologtc,LIIy more m
the mold ol Anthony
Kennedy, a swmg conservauve. th&lt;Ln even Rehnqu1st
Kennedy wrote the court's
piLlrailty op1nton m the 1992
Planned P,uenthood v
Casey case , upholdmg Roe '
v Wade, ,md SLded wtth ltberals 111 stnkmg down state
laws dLScrtmtnatmg agamst
g&lt;lys
Kennedy .1lso voted With
conserv.1t1ves on some
si.Ltes nghts and cap ttal
pumshment cases and on
Bush v Gore ,tfter the 2000
election Roberts -chs,lgrees
w1th Kennedy's frequent
credttmg ol foretgn precedents, but he seems to share
Kennedy s open-mindedness
Roberts 11g01 ously refused
to lorec.Jst hts v1ews on possibly pcndmg cases, but he
dtd tndtc.ue stron gly that
he\ no dutomtttlc vote to
overturn Rue, '" ught
wmgers expect trom a Bush
appomtee
In answer to searc hrn g
qucst10n s from Judtclary
Ch&lt;Ltrman Arlen Specter, Rp,, , Roberts demonstrated
stLOng 1e'pect for 1he doc
tHne ol stare decJSLs - th.tt
1~,
lollowtn g precedent
Specter smd that Roe had
been Jevtstled by' the court
111 38 cases smce 1972 wtthout betng reversed
Roberts concurred th,Lt
bre,tkmg p1ecedent constitute s "" toll to the leg,tl system" .1nd th.tt "tt's not
enough that you mtght th1nk
the p1ecede n1 ts ll.1wed to
JUstJi y re\tsllmg 11 "
He certamly c1ted theoteiJcal grounds lor rcvtstllng

precedents
suc h as
unworkab1ltty or eroston qf
the precedent - but nghtwmgers are expectmg . a
reversal on the mere grounds
that the case was "wrongly
dectded" to begm wtth
Roberts also departed
from the rt ght-wmg line b¥
saymg that "the n ght to pdvacy ts protected under tlie
ConstitutiOn m various
ways" and that "the court 111 "senes of dectstons gomg
back 80 ye.1rs - lias recogmzed th .tt personal pnvacy
' ' d component ol the hberty
protected by the due procqs
ddUSC4 '

A nght ol p11vacy was a
key baSLs f01 the Roe declston . and b1g-C conservati\Cs routinely say 1t;s
nowhere to be lound 111 tt\e
ConstLtuuon , much
as
Roberts d1d back 111 1981
In response to Roberts'
ti"t-day testimony, ,, coaltLton ol hbetOII gro ups,
Independe ntcourt org , put
out " press release .1ccusmg
htm ol mov1ng "from dodgmg to diShonest ·•
ludt cwryCumm1ttee
Democr,Jts LSsued " JOtnt
sta tement
s,ty mg
that
Roberts "didn't · answer
qucstwns
Sen Jose ph
Btden D-Del practtcally
shouted. "You've told us
nothmg." bcc,1usc Roberts
woulcln 't d1sclose ht ~ person.tl feehng s about hie and
death
But. a»Ltnung he's not
dtssembltng. Roberts has tn
'
fact told Congress ,, lot thut
he's tully qualtl!ed to be
ch1el JUsttce, that he'll look
.tt cases l&lt;tllly .md wtthout
prejudgment .md th.tt he's D\1
tdcologue
Democrats have no way to
block h1111. smc e the "Gaog
of 14" agreement takes the
f1 hbuster out of play They
have a dectSJon Let h1m
through and concentrate on
Bush's next appomtce, or
oppose h11n .md br,md themse l\es ,,s' mere agents ol
the11 111terest groups
(Mot ron Kondlit&lt; ke 11
neuun e edi/01 of Roll Call,
tl"' neH ljl{tpet of Capt to/
Htll J

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

Obituaries

tot an mdependent comnllshave go ne nowhere
In stead, the1e h.tve been
whttew,Jshes by purported
Jmesl!gattons set up by the
Defense Dep.u tment And,
str.mgely . McCam and
Lmdsey do not ' support a
congressional mvest1gauon '
Pres1dent Bush. moreover,
has expressed no tnterest 1n
trul y mdependent mqulfles,
.md
Attorney
General
Alberto
Gonzales
hqs
rebu ffed the 1dea After all,
Gonzales would be a Witness concernmg " the lorture
memos'' he orchestrau;p
when he w.ts a counsel In
the prestdent
II Warner docs go aheill
w11h an mvesttgauon, I hope
he w1ll remember McCauf,s
words "We .1re nut simply
any other countt y We stand
for soJnethi\ig more m th'e ,
world ~ ,, mural mt sston,
one ol freedom ,md democtaC) and hunldn nghts at
home and abroad "
Meanwhtle. the McCam
amendments
remam
attac hed to the Pentagon
spend1ng btll when tl return s
to the Scn.Jtc lloor Wtll
George W Bush \ eto that
btl! tl tl s passed wtth the
amendment s" Or wrll he
take
thJ;
democratiC
Ameucdn alternative .•md
let ,1 Sen.tte vote on. the
McCaul .unendments st,md.
11 they' re adopteJ' Or wtll
he try ag,un to h.1ve the
enure bill pulled off the
lluor'
(Nar He111nf} 11 a narwn -

SIO!l

alh tl'llOH ned aullwr rl) 011
the F11 11 Atllmdmellf at!(/
the Htll of Rt ~ h11 and mlfii&lt;J,t

of man' hoo/... \, uu ludiiHt
71"· Wm mt rite Htll of
R t~h t1 wtd rite Garltenlls
( Se\l'll Sturre_..\
2003 J )

Re H Hall((''

Pte\\

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydaiJysentinel.com

Local Briefs

Bemice Carpenter
LANCASTER - Berntce CarolyR Carpenter 87 of 957
Beck 's Knob Road, Lancaster, d1ed Sunday, Sept' 18.'2005, at
Fatrtield Med1ca\ Center m Lancaster, followmg an extended
illness
1
She was a rettred schoolteacher With 38 years of serv1ce m
the Middleport and other Me1gs County school systems. She
was a dtstnct offtcer for the Women's Soc1ety of Chnsuan
Servtce and Worthy Matron of a Me1gs County Chapter Order
of Eastern Star, along with servmg as deputy m the Grand
Chapter, 0 E S She was a meruber of the Bend of the Rrver
Garden Club, Daughters of the Amencan Revolutron and
Middleport Literary Club and numerous other orgamzauons
She was born Apnl5, 1918, m Letart Falls, daughter of the
late Wtlham 0 and Ruth Alexander Barnltz.
Surv1vmg are her daughters and sons-m-law, Janet and John
Young of Lancaster and Altta and Denms Carroll of Fnsco
'N C. , a daughter-in-law, Patncta Carpenter of The Plams, SIS:
ters and brothers-m-law, Juha and Harry Young, Thanet and
Ntcholas Kramer, Wtlma and Larry Nelson, Elmora Wells,
and B1ll1e Jean and Melvm Hoelscher, and two brothers and
ststers-m-law. Robert and Corena Barmtz and Dean and Elva
Barnttz, seven grandchildren and e1ght great grandchtldren
Bestdes her parents, she was preceded m death by her husband, Wtl son R Carpenter, a son, James W Carpenter, a
brother, Hayman A Barmtz, and a brother-m-law. Robert
"'ells
.
Servtces wtll be held at I p m on Wednesday, Sept 21,
2005, at Ewmg Funeral Home m Pomeroy Wt!h calhng hours
from 6 to 9 p m on Tuesday

Boil water
advisory
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plams-Chester Water
D1stnct has 1ssued a boll
water adv1sory for Chester
Townshtp on the followmg
roads Sumner. KeebaughFollrod, Miller and Stethem
It Will be m effect unul4 p m
today. The advtsory 1s due to
a repa1r ot a leak on the mamlme on Sumner Road

dies. shredded chtcken sandwtches, sloppy Joes, hot dogs
and a selection of s1des d1shes
and homemade desserts.
The youth depanment wtll
also be servmg breakfast from
7 30 am to 10 am m the
Bethany dmmg room offenng
a selecuon of brC&lt;Lkfast Jlems
An "all you can eat" pancake
breakfast wrll be featured on
Saturday mornmg

•

Seeking afumni
band members

Trinity serving
lunches

TUPPERS Pl,.AINS
Eastern Htgh School band
alumm and fnends ol the
POMEROY Tnmty band are mvtled to parttctpate
Church, located at the corner m the alumm band at Eastem
of Second and Lynn Streets, Homecommg , on Oct 7
Will be servmg lunch dunng Band Dtrector Cns Kuhn satd
the Sternwheel R1vertest on all tormer Eastern band memThursday,
Fnday
and bers and parents of current
Saturday from II am to 2 band members who pla)ed m
pm
• ,mother htgh school band may
The menu will mclude parttclpate
Those mtere sted are asked
homemade chtcken and noo-

to call the htgh school office t1me

at 985-3329, m order to
All acttVIt les are free and
rece1ve a rehearsal schedule residents are mvtted to JOin
and mustc Ass1stance may some family fun at the hbrary
also be a variable to those who
need an mstrument m order to
part1c1pate

Clarification

Library joins
in Rlverfest
activities
POMEROY - A schedule
of acttv1t1es has been planned
lor Sternwheel R1verfest at
the Metgs County Ltbrary m
Pomeroy
Usmg fundmg !rom an
Ohto Reads Grant, the itbrary
wtll present Mark Wade, ventnloqulst, m a program at the
hbrary On Saturday from II
to I p m a Part1es R-Us
bounce house and shde w1ll
be on the Pomeroy L1brary
front
t
parkmg
lot
Refreshment &amp; will be served
on the front porch dunng that

POMEROY
- R1 ck
Patterson., prestdent of the
Ohto Patrolmen's Benevolent '
Assocrauon, the loc.LI umon
representmg deputtes of the
Metgs County Shenfl's
Department, clan lied plan s to
re-work deputy sc hedules m
hght of tinanctal dtfticu\ues
111 the department
Patterson satd Monday he
wtll work With Shenfl Robert
Beegle to dc termme tl
deputtes can work 1wo 24hour shtft s per week , and be
patd lor 40 hours on the JOb
The remammg e1ght hours
would be constdered ·oncall" 11me The p!Opos,tl was
reported mcorrectly 1n the
Sunday Tunes-Sentinel

Lawmakers seek to broaden business tax .exemption Adult children should let parents follow their bliss
BY CARRIE SPENCER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
COLUMBUS
Lawmakers are seekmg to
broaden an exemption from
the state's new tax on business acuvity _ wh1ch was
promoted as ,, way to lower
the tax rate and elimmate
loopholes and exemptions
A two-year tax break for a
new Columbus cargo d•stnbUIIon fac1hty was tucked mto
a few paragraphs at the end
of the 2,300-page state budget that took effect 111 July
'I'he center, backed by $30
mtllton m federal htghway
money, 1s bemg butlt m one
of Ohio's nme foretgn tr~de
wnes, a federal des1gnatton
that hfts U S Customs
duttes
A brpart1san proposal to be
mtroduced ttits week would
exempt all mne trade zones.
at least until the next two~ear budget m 2007, but legtslatlve leaders are hestt,mt
"We ' re lookmg for a level
playmg field," satd Rep
Mark Wagoner, a Toledoarea Repubhcan who drafted
a bill to be mtroduced m the

Scrubber
from Page A1

if patriotism

wh1ch, ltke the others. was
JOmed by Repubhcan Sens
John Warner (V1rgrma) and
Lmdsey Graham (South
Carolin.t) - hm1self a former mtlllary lawyer Nat
would have prohtblted the
Hentoff
"cruel, mhuman and degradmg treatment ol anyone m
Amencan custody" - the
very l.mguage ol the U N
Conveni!Oil Ag,unst Torture,
oner abuse scandal."
wh1ch th1s cou ntry has railMcCam 's posJIJon IS hard- lied
Obv1ously,
that
ly radtcal. and, m facl , ts McCam amendmem would
strongly supported by sever- not h.1ve been necessary tf
al htgh-r.tnkmg former mtlt- ther e w.Jsn't .1 pattern ol
tary officers and some of the Amettcan detatnees bemg
mtlttary
prosecutors trc.ttcd m th1s way
enmeshed m the admtmstra"We ,tre Amenc.ms,"
lmn's vcrs1on of " mthtary McCun satd on the Senate
COIIllll iSSLOnS ,. that evade noor, "and we bold ourdue process, at Guamanamo selve' to humane st.mdards
Bay
of lteatment of people no
Another MeCum amend m.ttter how ev1l or temble
ment he told hLS colleagues. they may be
Prestdent
would ha ve requ1red that Bush understands that the
"e&lt;~ch mdlv!du.ll detamcd 1n
war on terror ts ul11mately ,,
,, DOD lactllly who " .1 baule ol tdeas, a b,Lttle we
nauon.1l of a foretgn country wtll wm by spreadmg and
be regtsteted wnh the standmg tirml) lor the v.1l
Internatronal Commtttee of ues of decency. democracy
the Red Cross That 's tt Ju St· and the rule of law I stand
regtstercd ThiS wt\1 help us w1th h1m m lhts commitehmmate the problem ol ment."
ghost detamees we faced m
But tl th1s IS what
Abu Ghratb pnson 1n Iraq, Prestdcnl Bush beheves,
m whtch other government . why .ue these .tmendments
agcnctes held unregtstered nccess&lt;Lry to prc\ent "repeat
detamces 111 a l,lc lhty opel
ol what wds clearly and
.ucu by our tmlttary I .thund,mtly documented nut
hcl1eve thts provJSLon to he on ly by human nghts orgajUsl baste common sense nv.tllons hul ,tlso hy some
.md I c.m hardly see how ol our own mlllldry witnessanyone could object though es 111 the lield'
I don 't doubt the sensll!Vtty
I hear reports that Warner
of my colle.tgues ··
i chaLLnl.ln o l the Senate
The Whne House d1J Armed Serv1ces Comm1ttee)
object to the amendments. m~IY c.:unduc.:t clll Jn\t esl!guand
mstructcd
Senate tiOil ot dmrgc~ umcemmg
M.tjOrHY leader Btll Fnst. R- the .1busc ol dctarnecs I
Tenn to pull the whole would h.11 c preleJrec,I an
u11kpenJenr mqutry hy a
P~nt.lgon 'pendmg htll ot1
the Sen,lte !loot lest the LOll ll lll.., ... lOil mcludmg torSen,tle P•l"' lhe amendment... mel .t nJ pr esent nHILtary
Judge .tdvocate gener,lls
With the b1lls
However. prev10us calls
A thtrU ,uncnumcnt.

•

just as they have been put 111
place a1 Gavm
Clerk-Treaurer
Racme
Dave Spencer asked Long tl
Mountameer planned on
domg any a1r testmg m
Racme to check for the release
of sulfunc actd aerosols
caused by sulfur d1ox1de
(S02) ox1dtzed further mto
S03 wh1ch created the blue
plumes.
Lon~ satd nght now the
only atr testmg planned 1s
wtthm the stack Itself where a
probe w1ll be mserted mto the
stack and through a chemtcal
reactron w1ll determme the
level of sulfur dtoxrde oxtdtzed mto SOJ
Counc1Iman Greg Taylor
asked 1f any basehne readmgs
of the a1r quahty 111 Racme had
been or would be taken 111 the
event of the release oUulfunc
actd aerosols
Long satd there were no
plans tor that .but he could pass
thattdea along
When asked· how far the
blue plume traveled at Gav111,
Mountameer Plant Manager
Charles Powell smd that he
understood tt touched down at
the plant and under certam

Village
from Page A1
under arrest and transported
to the Pomeroy Pollee
Department where he was
quesuoned after wa1vtng hts
M1randa nghts
pollee
Accordmg to
VanMeter satd that he
brought the uems to the store
for a fnend whom he •dentt ficd as "Jam1c P '' VanMeter
satd that Jmme P brought the
ttems to hu11. cla1m111g the)
belonged to hts mother and
that he was allowed to sell
them
He then asked
VanMeter to sell them and
spiLt the cash
VanMeter clauned that he
• d1d not know the ttems were
stolen. He also satd that he

House on Tuesday
Sen Enc Ftngerhut, a
Cieveland Democrat, sa1d he
would mtroduce stmtlar legtslat1on tn the Senate
"The thmg hasn't even
taken effect yet and there's a
senes of exemptions," satd
Fmgerhut, who opposed the
creation of the new tax "You
s1mply cannot on the face of
11 JUStify g1vmg thts opportumty to Columbus and not to
the rest of the state."
The new 0 26 percent tax
on sales wtll be phased m
over ftve years. gradually
replacmg the old Oh10 taxes
on prof1ts, whtch had a hrgher rate and more loopholes,
and an unpopular tax on
equtpment and 111ventory
Lawmakers had complumed earlter as exemptiOns
crept mto the new tax_ gasohne stauons, doctors g1vmg
cancer treatment, certam
bank s and mortgage deals ,
sales of cars !rom one dealer
to another for purp0ses of
resale
The temporary exempllon
for "~ualthed foretgn trade
zones was worded m such a
way that only the new cargo

facihty at R1ckenbacker
International Atrport quahfred, becau se 11 can transfer
goods by atr, rat\ or h1ghway
Supporters sa1d the new tax
m1ght otherwtse scuttle the
new center For example
Card1nal Health, Oh10' ~
largest busmess, had sa1d that
drug manufacturers would be
taxed twtce under the health
products company's plan to
have all shtpments sent to
R1ckenbacker for reshtppmg
to the company 's repackagmg centers elsewhere
"It was the nght thmg to do
for the economy here in ceotral Oh10," Gov Bob Taft
satd of the exemptton last
week
The exemptton does not
apply to the enure trade zone
managed by the Columbus
Reg tonal A1rl'ort Authonty,
whtch also 111cludes mdustnal parks 111 Luna, Ch1lltcothe,
Cambndge, Logan, Manon
and other cttLes
Ohm's other toretgn trade
zones are m Cleveland
C111cmnat1, Toledo, Dayton'
Akron/Canton,
Fmdlay:
Cltnton
County
and
Washmgton County

weather condtttons made tt
mto the town of Chesh1re and
t wtce 11110 the bottoms across
the nver 111 West V1rgrma.
Counctlman Ivan Powell
asked Long what the health
nsks were for a touchdown of
sulfunc ac1d aerosols Long
rephed that 11 was an lrrttant,
espec1ally to people with
breathing problems and asthma but that it was not acute
"In other words once
you're out of the plume you'll
be okay," Long added. "It's
not chrome"
Long sa1d Mountameer
does have emergency plans m
place to deal wuh mctdents
mvolvmg hazardous chemicals at the plant but not for a
release of sulfunc ac1d
aerosols because of 11 bemg
acute, 111 nature.
"S111ce the health effects
are not as dtre what \.\e fear ts
1f we have a stren set off at the
plant for that (a blue plume
touchdown) then tt would
cause pandemomum or a
scare whtch would be worse
than the touchdown 11se lf,"
Long satd
As for those touchdowns,
Long told Counctl, "We've
seen u (atGavm), we've hved
tt and we don't want to ltve 11
"llgam."
Part ol not liVIng that scenano aga111 are the mill gallon
strateg1es
avarlable
to

Mountameer though they
have not announced whtch
technology the1r plant wtll
use. One of the technologies,
Wet ESP, would reqmre a
$200 mtlhon mvestment
Mayor J Scott Htll asked
to be noutied when the plant
dec1des on wh1ch m1t1gat1on
technology to go wl!h and any
reports on S03 readmgs wlth111 the stack
"We have learned a lot as a
company 111 commg up wah
these strategieS lhat work,"
Powell sa1d "We' v_e been a
good netghbor for 25 years
hopefully and our intentiOn ts
to keep that relatLOnshtp
gomg m the future "
As for fmanc1ally contnbutmg to Racme orgamzauons, Powell told counctl lo
get m touch wtth hts office
and he would see what he
could do to mclude the commumty
Long emphasrzed that the
plant wtll have operatmg
penmeters to momtor the
"wet scrubber's" federally
restncted emt sSLons and
encouraged anyone from
Racme to call the plant 1l1hey
see any problems !rom the
stack
Once the "wet sctubber"
goes onltne Jt wtll be normal
to see water vapor from the
stack whereas now nothmg 1s
VISible

COLUMBUS - The state's
ethtcs board was frustrated
when Gov Bob Taft revealed
st1ll more g1fts he faded to
report. the agency's leader srud
on Monday
The
Oh10
Eth1cs
Comm1ssron also IS check111g
on two more g1fts that Taft
recetved, but executive direc tor Dav1d Freel would not gtve
detatls and Said those gtfts
would also not result m addtttonal charges
He descrtbed them as "disclosure 1ssues we're trymg to
make sure we have all the
detat Is on "
Taft last month dtsclosed
etght add1uonal gtfts he had
not reported, a Week after he
became the tirsl Ohio governor

She told offtc ers that
between the hours ot 9 am.
to 3 p.m on Sept. 13. someone entered her restdence and
stole two. Bose brand stereos
from her kitchen and a
portable CD/tape player from
her hving room.
Officers reported that tt
appeared entry ma y been
made by removmg a screen
wh1ch showed damage
He.nnessy then reported
that between the hours of 9
am to 2 15 am on Sept 14
someone agam ' entered her
res1dence and stole three televtstons An upstairS entry
door was found forced open
w11h damage done to Jhe
lock
Hennessy valued the
stolen electroniC and stereo
eqmpment at $800
The
Pomeroy Pollee
Department reported the fol- .

lowmg traffic acctdent s·
Holly
M
Ferrell.
Mtddleport. was travehng
westbound on Mam Street
when she swerved to mtss an
oncoming veh1cle that had
went left of center Ferrel
then hu a uttltty pole wuh the
nght stde of the car. causmg
damage from the front lender
to rear fender A passenger
Slue m1rror was also damaged No cttallon was 1ssued
Donna
J
Aleshire,
Syracuse, was wartmg m llne
at the dnve-thru at McClure 's
Restaurant on East Mam
Slreet when Lmda A Gnmm.
Racme. fatled to stop and
struck AleshHe's vehtcle
Gnmm was cued for assured
cleared dt stance
All mctdents m thts arttcle
remam under mvesugauon
by the Pomeroy Pohce
Department

had hed to Pulhns at the store
and told h1m the ttems
belonged to hts grandmother
VanMeter was charged
w1th recerv111g stolen proper·
ty, a felony of the fifth
degree
In add111on lo Webster and
R1Iey. 111vesugatmg ~hts metdent are Pomeroy Pollee
Chtef Mark E Proffitt and
Patrolman Shannon Sm1th.
Also on Sept. 14. Maureen
Hennessy, Pomeroy, reported
lhe theft of electromc and
stereo equtpment and prescriptton ptlls from her restdence on Manm Street
Hennessy told otticers that
she beheved 20 ptlls were
stolen on Sept 12 whtle she
was at work She d1d not
know the na.me of the medlcauon but satd the prescnpuon wa~ m the name ot Jon
D11\ard

DEAR ABBY In a recent
old lady ·
letter. the wnter complamed
Please 1ell thai d.tu ~ hter to
that she was embarrassed
stop betng so concern'ed Her
because her 50-sumethmg
mother ts h.tvmg the ume of
her Itie, and more power to
mother looked hke a "motorcycle mama "
her - P&lt;\ULA IN DALTON,
I'm m my late 50s. My hus·
Dear
MASS
band ts Ill hts 1111U-40s For
Abby
DEAR ABBY I'd hke to
the first ltme m our hardask that daughter .md her SLbworkmg hves we're enJoymg
hngs a quest1on D1d THEY
ourselves gu111g places' I
ever show up at 'a fanuly
wear my leathers wherever
lunct1on with a new hatr
"Embarrassed"
satd
that
(H
I
we go
ar ey Davt dson, of
color, new pte rem g. clothes
course I) f or protectton AI so, HarlevJ Davtdson sh1rts are too btg or too small, a shock• my btrt hd ay lhts year I des1gned for gtrls m the1r 20s , mg· boytnend or gtrlln end, or
10r
not women m the1r 50s Well ,
got a tattoo on my bac k My 1
h h ld
new optnton they knew
say, w
)
s
ou
g~rls m
k1ds (I ate 20s an d 30s) say thetr
20 s have ,111 the fun'' _ would st1 r thmg s up'
1t's cool. They say 1f we're CAROL IN TWIN FALLS.
To the emb.1rrassed chilhappy. they're happy
IDAHO
dren I say, Take the advtce
"EI bwould hke to tell
DEAR ABBY Who among your parent s got when you
m
arrassed"
that
she
and
h
bl
us hasn •t hear d the expres- acted out 'It's ,1 stage
er s1 mgs should be thank- swn, "Don't JUdge a book b) They ' ll outgrow ll" Your
ful they have parents, and 115 cover"? It doesn' t matter parents' anucs are paybacks,
that they are healthy, happy what her mother wears as dude' - - NO MOTORCYan~ , enJOYI.ng themselves long as tt's legal
CLE YET IN ST PAUL
That s what counts When people r~ach 45-50.
DEAR ABBY I am also a
ANOTHER MOTORCYCLE • they start see 111g classmates btker mom whose chtldren
COALINGA, fnends, cous 111 s, people thet; are grown Wh1\e I do not
MAMA,
CALIF.
own age 111 the obuuanes buy the HD brand. I, too,
DEAR MOTORCYCLE And 1t makes them stop and dress dttferently than when
MAMA I po111ted that out 111 remember JUSt how short hfe my ktds \.\ere small What
my answer I also advtsed the can be Who wants to h\e tl'lakes them thmk her mure ts
"chtldren" to address thetr thetr whole hfe a cert,un way mapptopuate ? Jesus had long
concerns wtth thetr mother
because " what would the h.ur ,md v.ore " dress W,ts
I find the d1ffenng phtloso- neighbors th111k I"
that WLOng' - 45 AND
phtes between generauons to
There's a poem I once read GETTING YOUNGER IN
be fasc111atmg A'conservattve about an old lady who dress- WASHINGTON
generatton gave btrth to the es m a purple coat It goes on
Dear Abby is wnttett by
flower ch1ldren of the '60s -- 'and on about the "outra- Abigail Va11 Burell, also
wh1ch m tum has g1ven btrth geous" thmgs that she's gomg known as ]eatme Phillips,
to another conservative gen- to do. The gtst of the poem ts and was jou11ded by her
erauon However, most of the that now she's old, she can mother, Pauline Phillips.
readers who commented on get aw~y wtth domg the Wrzte
Dear
Abby
at
that letter agree w1th you things she really wanted to do , www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Read on:
her whole hfe because people Box 69440, , Los A11geles, CA
DEAR
ABBY Will JUSt thtnk she's "a crazy 90069.

Ethics commission frustrated with Lltest Tqft gift disclosures
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

convtcted of a en me for fathng
to report several golf outmgs
and other g1fts
The Ethics Commtsston.
wh1ch had reconunended Taft
for prosecut1on. was frustrated
to Ieam of the second batch df
g1fts, Freel smd Monday
Some g1fts mcluded multiple
ttems from one mdJVLdual or
agency that m total were worth
more than $75, the amount th,tt
under state law mu st be report
ed
In 2003, for example. Tall
recctved two gtlts on sep.Lral~
occastons from the Cunsul.tte
General of the People 's
Repubhc of Chma _ artwork
worth $50 and a book worth
$50 Because the total va lue ol
the two gtlts was more than
$75, they should have been
reported
Retemng to Taft's of!tce.
Fr~el satd u·s poss1ble that

such multtple gtfts "tnpped
them up' gtven the thousands
of grfts rece1ved by the governor
But Freel smd tt y,as harder
to understand how Taft fatled
to report a SI00 box ot steaks
from the Rtchard E Jacobs
Group m De&lt;:ember 1999
"It s a good question." Freel
smd "I d ask the go\emor s
oltice about th&lt;Lt '
Members ol the govemor s
stalt trv to the best ot the1r
abiltiV io ev&lt;Liuate the v,!l ue of
g1lts ·as they are recetved. but
there are errors ,md omLSstons
Tall spokesman Mark R1ckel
satd
· The governor reported the
ttcms h1msell and has been
held accountable · R1del satd
Desplle the commisSIOn's
re&lt;~ctton to the addtuonal gtfts
Freel satd the agency was sattslied wttll the outcome

From the desk of. ..
Kelse) M. Hcnr) D.C.
1065 South Second Street

Mason, WV 25260
(304) 773-5773
Office Hours:

Mon Wed &amp; Fn ~ 00 .11n - ' ()() pm
Other umcs h) appomtmcnl onI)

Chtropractrc Ca(e of lire Athlete
Athlete~

are a lv.. a y~ lookmg tor "a' " to unpro\C' the ar per

tormance Chtropract on. co rret:t "'PIIl:il mt~ahgnmcnts t o ~
mcrease nerve no\\ thas otlen re sult" 111 tnuc.tscd retl cxes dlld

bener hand-eye coordmauo n ChtropraLior' .tlso balance' 1he
sptna l co lumn wh1ch rchC\CS litre' s o:1 )OUr nnP•rlc" hga~
ments and tendon s Th ts helps tr.wm ,,.., .md tnJunc " to heal
faster .ls v.ell a .. le~sen the llk eh hood of rc mJunng the .~rea
Ch1ropr.1cton; are tramed to anJI)'Te e\ery Jmn t mthe body
mcludmg your ankle knee wnsl elbow and ' houlder

...

Jusllhtnk \yhcre would Barry Bond s Joe Montana E' andor
Holyheld and Arnold Schwar?cncggcr he wuhoul chtrppracltc
c.tre

_

__.:_

__

,__..

/1010 A.£4

CH~

CENTa

�.

J

The Daily Sentinel

LOCAL • STATE

PageA6
Tuesday, September 20,2005

Pomeroy man new wildlife officer River City Players meet, p1an new musicals
POMEROY
Chris
Gilkey of Pomeroy has been
assigned as a new state
wildlife officer at large for
Wildlife District 2 ·in northwest Ohio.
'
. . According to a release
from the Ohio 9epartment of
Natural Resources (ODNR)
' Division of Wildlife, Gilkey
was one of 16 new wildlife
officer ·cadets to co mplete
extensive training and be
sworn in as commissioned
state wildlife officers in a
Columbus ceremony.
Following completion of
the Ohio Peace Officers
Training course, the cadets
were provided with eight
weeks of additional specialized training by the Division
of Wildlife. In addition to ·
wildlife law enforcement procedures and agency policies,
the cadets received training in
areas such as wildlife and !ish
management, communications. public relations, administration, education. hunter
safety, and SP.ecial projects.
As a wildlife officer,
Gilkey will be responsible for
eAforcing wildlife laws on
public lands.as well as private
lands and providing assistance to ' other law enforcement agencies as needed. He

MIDDLEPORT The
River City Players recently
met to discuss upco_ming producttons and act1v1t1es.
There are plans for RCP to
once again work with the
Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce
on
Mystery
Dinner Theatre which will be
held during ' a Halloween
Cruise on Oct. 28. The production will be a murder mystery.
Sue Baker and Bob Buck
will be co-directors 'for the
mystery and a casting .notice .
will be put on the RCP 's website and newsletter.
.Also planned is "The
Melody Lingers On" a show
based on the music of Irving
Berlin and presented on Nov.
26 at Meigs Elementary
School u.nder the direction

Chris
will assist other · ODNR
Divi'sion: of Wildlife professionals in a variety of projects
as assigned and continue to
receive additional resource
training during his career.
Gilkey, 23, received an
associates · degree in !ish and
wildlife management ,from
Hocking College in 2002.

Gl)key
Before being hired on as a
state wildlife officer, Gilkey
worked at the Division of
Wildlife's Woodbury Wildlife
Area. .
'
Gilkeys the son of Jane and
Jerry Hawley of Pomeroy.
"Becoming a wildlife officer is a dream come true,"
said Gilkey.

p.m. that 'day.
ate of Ohio State University
The tour is designed to and spent 18 months in
share information about New Zealand learning about
agriculture in various parts grazing dairy farms.
of the area. Anyone . interAndy and Kate Grimm
ested in learning from the .started planting true-dwarf
experiences of these farm apple trees in 1999 and
families is welcome to now have 6,700 trees on
attend.
This year two eight acres.
This is the
farms in the eastern porti'on . newest
state-of-the-art
of the county are being orchard in Ohio and probahighlighted .
bly the entire Midwest. The
Since 2002, Kyle For:ni tour will emphasize operahas ·purchased 140 crossbred tion of modern orchards:
heifers,
built
a
New Kate's perfect apply cider
Zealand
style
parlor, samples can be enjoyed.
improved and fenced rotaFor directions and details
tiona! pastures as well ·as about the tour, contact
built cow lanes to all of his Marty Clark
at 740-373pastures. Kyle is a gradu- 6283, extension 360. ·

Tuppers Plains WMW hears
about
giving
.
.
TUPPERS PLAINS Patty Bell spoke on the livestar giving ·and mission giving ·
of the United Methodist
Church at a recent meeting of
the Tuppers Plains United
Method1st Women.
It was noted that the group
completes the giving every
year. Pastor Jane B'eattie
opened the meeting with
prayer. and the memb~rs n;ad

. ' ~ . ' " .,.
the litany and purpose.
The annual leadership day
to beheld Oct. 22m Coolville
was announced. Sharon
Louks read an article from the
~csponse · magazine. Cards
were s1gned and sent to
Louise
Haffee,
Joanna
Weaver, Montie and Glenna
Sanders, Laura McGee, and
Mary Francis Vineyard.
New officers will be elected

. ··..: .,
at the Oct. 3 meeting . Betty
Chevalier announced there is
still some cutlery to sell. The
meeting . was closed with a
prayer led by Anna Rice .
Attending
were
Judy
KeJ;lnedy, Barb Ro'ush. Anna
Rice, Connie Rankin. Betty
Cheviler, Sharon Louks, Terrj
Soulsby, Jane Beattie , and
Sue Bowen and Patty Bell,
guests.

: ':-

LOcal man among honored Masons
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.
- Roger Gaul of Pomeroy
was among a group 236 men
to receive the 33rd Degree,
highest honor of Scottish Rite
Freemasonry
in . Grand
Rapids, Mich . during the
recent annual meeting of the
Scottish ·Rite
Supreme
Council.
The degree is awarded for
.autstanding
service
to
Freemasonry or for significant contributions to humanity that reflect credit upon the
fraternity.
The 205 recipients . were
chosen from 15 northeastern
and Midwestern ·states that
·
·
SubmHtod
comprise the 240,000:mem-.
ber Northern Junsd1~tto~ of 'I
·
·
c
·
oh·
the United States. Thlfse from ,Roger Gaul: left, was one of three m the ambndge,
10 are~
the Cambridge, Ohio area :men rece1v1ngthe 33rd degree dunng the annual .meetmg of
·were Gaul who lives at 39760 •the Scottrsh R1te Supreme Council 111 Grano Raprds, Mrch . The
Sumner Road, Pomeroy, a . other two were Donald R. Heldman of Mogadqre, c~nter, and
retired maintenance supervi- : John A. Todd of Dundee.
sor; Donald R. Heldman of
3520 Curtis St., Mogadore, Masons throughout the juris- number of centers will
president, Asset Management, · diction.
·
increase lo 591 Other charities
Inc.; and John A. Todd of
'Fhe National Heritage include scholarships for col4484' Hardy Ridge Road NW, Museum in Lexington,' Mass .. lege stud~;nts and fellowships
Dundee, a retired registered was built in . 1975 through for 'schizophrenia research.
professtonal land surveyor.
their efforts to provide chang- The Northern Jurisdiction
33~J~~~~~f~~n~h=~l;~~ ing exhibits on American his- covers 15 Northeast and
d ri . up&lt;la'B on tory. Learnmg . Centers for Midwest states. ·
wives
·'"'i!!;&lt; .... P. Iil~ ,.
..... '"children with
have
The . week-long meeting
. . dyslexia
. .
Masomc cnanta e en eavconcluded
with the conferral
ors. The charities are support- been proy1dmg tree one-oned by voluntary contributions one tutonng at 53 locations. of the 33rd degree upon 236
from 1)1~ 24,Q 1 £\)9,J}IJ2,,;l~ll!!.~ _ Within the next few years, the members. ·

New DuPont manager seeks .
to repair community relations .
PARKERSBURG. W.Va.
(AP) - The new manager at
DuPont Co.'s Washington
Works plant says he is making
a .priority of repairing com~mity relations strained during a three-year lawsuit over
tainted water.
Bill Hopkins, who returned
to his native West Virginia in
fune to take over the plant,
said he is confident that a
medical study being conducted as part of the legal settlement will britig closure to the
tssue.
'Tm truly sorry that the situation exists as it does with
the groundwater contamination. We're. being forthright
and putting the facts out
there," he said. "We want to
be an important part of the
community, we want to have
a gootl relationship and some
of·that was lost."
DuPont in February settled
the class-action
lawsuit
brought by Ohio and West
Virginia residents in 200 I,
alleging the Delaware-based
company intentionally withheld and misrepresented
information col)cerning the
nature and extent of the

Dec. 18.
Orchestra seats are $23.50
and those interested-in going
should contact Ewrin by Sept.
26 at 992-6759.
.
Also at the meeting, the
RCP's recent musical "Bye
Bye Birdie" was reviewed
with those in attendance feeling that it was successful.
A percentage of the protits
'from the Labor·Day weeken4
performances will be going to
the Peoples Bank Katrina
Relief Fund which con;
tributes to the Salvation Army
and provides a matching
donation through other orga•
nizations .
RCP have also orgatiizecl a
work day at the Pearl ·Street
sc hool to organize props, costumes and sets from I p.m. to
4 p.m. on Oct. 2.

human health threat posed by
a chemica l used to make
Teflon .
DuPont, which has maintained that the chemical
known as PFOA or C8 has no
negatiye health effects, has
set aside $70 million to pay
for medi cal sc reenings for
many of the 80,000 Ohio and
West Virginia residents near
the plant. They get their water
fro m six public water districts
or from private wells within
those districts where C8 concentrations were found.
'The results of this next
health study are very important. There's some misinformation out there and we've
got .to deal with that,"
Hopkins said.
"When people don't have all
the answers, they assume the
worst." The screening is
expected to take a year to
complete. DuPont has also.
agreed to upgrade water treatment plants to filter out C8.
The Washington Works
plant employs I ,800 workers
and ·an average of 400 contractors a dav. ·
"Some o( that trust we've
had has been damaged. We
'

l!e

O'Biene$s to offer diabetes education class
ATHENS - For individuals newly diagnosed with
diabetes, or those who are
struggling with f he \lise!e,
O'Bleness
1 M~mo al
Hospital offers dialk!fs )e u ~
cation classes.
l .t J
An individual assesstilent
prior to the classes Is
required and is done by
Barb Nakanishi, R.D., ll. D. ,
C.D.E., O'Bleness' registered
dietitian/certified diabetes
educator. The two class sessions .are scheduled for
Monday, Oct. 17, and
Tuesday, Oct. 18, from I
p.m. until 4 p.m.
Participants should attend
both sessions of the classes

t

I

which will be held in the
hospital's Lower Level. conference rooms.
The American . Diabetes
Assoc1at10n-recogmzed program . assures hi~h-quality
educatiOn for pauent selfcare, Sessions are designed
, to provide education and
management skills to indivictuals with diabetes so
they can have full, healthy
and productive lives. The
goal is to offer information
that will help people with
diabetes
make
positive
choices about their lifestyle
and diabetes management.
Nakanishi
and
Laura
B.S.,
R.N.,
Ballinger,
1

need to resolve those issues
for the health of the plant and
the health of the community,"
Hopkins said. "We want to let
people know that we want to
be a good neighbor and a
good employer."
.
Hopkins, 4 7, worked at the
Washington Works plant
Thesday ... Numermis show- morning. Highs in the mid 80s.
before leaving for another ers and scattered thunder- Northeast winds around 5
DuPont job in Switzerland stonns in the morning ...Then mph.
four years ago. He has also partly cloudy in the afternoon.
Wednesday . night • and
held .positions at co mpany Highs in the lower 80s. West Thursday ... Mostly dear. Lows
operations
in
Belle, winds 5 to I d mph. Chance o.f in the mid 50s. Highs in the
Chattanooga, Tenn., and in rain 70 peroent.
.
mid 80s.
Wilmington, Del.
Tuesday
night ... Mostly
Thursday
night
and
." Manager of the DuPont clear. Widespread dense fog Friday ... Partly cloudy. Lows in
Washington Works plant is after midnight. Cooler with the · lower 60s. Highs in the
one of the top places with lows in the lower .50s. North lower 80s.
DuPont;" he said. "The plant winds around 5 mph.
Friday irighl ... Partly cloudy.
is the flagship plant of the
Wednesday ... Mostly sunny. Lows in the lower 60s. Chance
company."
.Widespread dense fog in the of precipitation 30 percent.
Hopkins replaces Paul J.
Bossert Jr., who was transferred to DuPont~ Advanced
Fibers Systems operation in
~;mydallysentinel.com '
Richmond, Va.

O'Bleness' education coordinator, will lead the class
sess1ons. Resource s and
educational literature will be
available at the classes.
A physician's
written
referral using O'Bleness'
Diabetes Self- Management
Therapy referral form is
required to attend the program.
For more information or
for assistance with the referral process, call Nakanishi
at (740) 592-9205. The diabetes education classes are
held quarterly. Nakanishi
can also provide information
about the dates and times of
future classes. ·

Local .weather

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MLB Standings, Page B2
Steroid testing leads to fewer homers, Page B2
USC's stay at No. l1ongest in history, Page 86
Bengals' defense giving good account, Page 86

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

CNP SchEdulE
GALLIPOliS- A achedula of upcoming college

and high school varsity spcning evenla'in'II)Mng
te.t~ms from Gama, Meigs and Masoo counties.

Tlloodoy'o gomeo
\&lt;olloyboll
Vinton County a! Meigs, 6 p.m.
Southam at Federal Hocking, 5:55 p.m.
Eastern at Trill'tie, 6 p.m.
Coal Grove at South Gallla, 5:30p.m.
Tolsla at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Soccer
~nt Pleasant at OVCS, 5 p.m.
Gal" Academy at Jackson, 5 p.m.

Golf
Point Pleasant, Clay, Wellston at Gallla

Academy (Ciffslde), 4:30pm . .
Rl'ver Valley at BuftaJo, 4:30p.m.
Souti1 GaJIIaaiNelso!Mie-Yof1&lt; (Brass Ai1g),
4:30p.m.
.

WOmen'• Colloge Scx:cor

•.--.y.. _
\&lt;olioybotl
!/oigE:JAiYorValey at GaliaAcalem;. SOO~m
Girts Soccer
.
Point Pleasant at Csbell Mk:lland, 6:30p.m.

Golf
Roane County at Fblnl Pleasant (Hki:ten
VOJiey), 4 p.m.

Thuooday'o go~~

GallO. Academy at Jad&lt;son, 5:15p.m.
ACldi Hill at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
. Souti1 Galla a1 St. Joo;Op.m.
Trimble a1 Soulhem, 5:55 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-'bf'1(, 6 p.m
. Eascern at Waterbrd, 6 p.m
Greater Beddey Chrsltlan a1 Hannan, 6 p.m.
Soccer
AavenS\YJOO at Point Pleasant, 5:30p.m.
rrornon St. Joo at Ohk&gt; v~rev Chris1lan, 5:30
p.m.
Girts Soccer
Point Pleasant at Huntingtoo St. Joe, T8A

Golf
Gaftia Academy, POOl P"""""' al Wahama
(Ahlo.-), 4 p.m.
Meigs at lrontor1, 4:30 p.m.

c..... eoumry

River Valley, Gallia Academy at ..lacbon
lrMtational, 10 a.m.

Sports · Briefs

PaintbaU tourney
slated for Sunday
VINTON - Gaul City
Paintball will be holding a
four-man Young Gunz
Paintball Tournament on
Sunday, September 25.
Teams must be registered
by Wednesday, Spetember
21, to parti£ipate.
For registration and pricing information, call either
(740) 388-0282 or (740)
367-7619, or check out the
website at www.gaulcity. paintball.com.

. Qhio high school
volleyball poll
COLUMBUS (AP)·-

The second weekly

Ohio High School Volleyball Coaches
Association poll for 2005, with school,

record and total points (first-place 110tes in
parentheses) :

DIVISION I
1, Tol. St. Ursula (42) 10.0

453

2. Rocky River Magnificat (1) 8-1 285
3, Elyria ( 1) 1 1-1
268

4, Cln. MI . Notre· Dame 6-2
5, Cin. Seton 8-2
s. Findlay (1) 10-1
7, Tol. CentCatholic9-2
8,Cin . UrsulineAcad.6-3

226
169
150
141
112

9, Cin. Walnut Hills 9-Q

109

10, Wooster 7.0

103

"

The Daily · r'
Sentinel
.

1, Cin. Roger Bacon (39) 8-0
2, Kettering Alter (3)7-1
3, Cuya. Falls Walsh Jesuit a~ 1

425
376
288

4, Millersburg W. Holmes 7-t
5, Ottawa--Giandort (1) 9-0
6, Warsaw River View (2) 11-1
7, Sunbury Big W8.tnut7-1

232
223
168
136

8, Olmsted Falls (1)7·1
9, Washington 'CH 9-Q
1a. Day. CarTolf 8-1

;
(

"

,, '

82

9, Jamestown Gree~Mew 11-1
1 Loudonville 10-1

85

n

DIVISION IV

l. Sidney lehman Cath. (38) 1~ 417
2. St. Henry (3) 9-2

313

·),Frankfort Adena (1) 11·1

2~

4, NawarkCa1h . (1)9-0

179

5, Qed Fort 8-1
6, Maria Stein Marion Local 6-2

175
166

7, Naw Wash. Buckeye Cent. 1D-1 143

8, JacksOn Center 9-2
9. Beaver Eastern 10-0

94

, ~0 . Convoy Crestview 7-Q

91

105

, Contact Information

l&amp;!d!'l
Do It C.enter

446-2002

FIX- (740)44&amp;3008
sportsOmydailysentinel.com

~r.d Shennan, Sporto Edftor

(740) «6·2342. ext 33
~manOmydaitytribune .com

Bry~~n WaHers, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. axt 23
bwattersOmydailytribune.com

-LIIrry

Crum, Spor11 Writer

(304)675·1333, ext 19
lcrumO,myaa(tyregister.com

Crennel's
Washington slips past Cowboys, 14-13 wait for
first NFL
• •
wm Is over·

NFL -

Monday Night

IRVING, Texas (AP) As
much
as
the
Washington
Redskins
would've settled for any
kind of victory over the
Dallas Cowboys, this one
was especially sweet.
Mark
Brunell
hit
Santana Moss in stride for
touchdown passes of 39
and 70 yards in the final
. 3:46,. then the defense
made it stand up, giving
Washington a 14-1 J victory over its top rival
Monday
night.
The
Redskins .won for only .the
second time in their last 16
games against the longtime NFC East rival
Cowboys and for the first
time at Texas Stadium
since 1995 .
The comeback was stunning because Washington
hadn't crossed the Dallas
27-yard line until Moss'
, first TD, which also was
the first of the season for
the Redskins (2-0). The
second one put the
Cowboys (1•1) behind for
the first time and silenced
a · crowd of 65,207, their
· largest since 1995.
·
The lure was partly
Washington, but mostly a
halftime ceremony featurinj! the induction of Troy
A1kman, Emmitt Smith
and Michael Irvin into the
team's Ring of Honor.
They were enjoying a
great performance from
Dallas' new-look defense
and seemed only mildly
irritated by coach BiU
Parcells'
conservative
game plan.
.
It didn't seem to be a big
deal when Jose Cortez's
second field goal put
Dallas up !3-0 with 5:58
left.
Then the Redskins - on

.

AP photo

Washington Redskins running back Clinton Portis (26) is tackled by Dallas Cov:boys safety
Roy Williams (31) in the first quarter in Irving, Texas , Monday.
·

BEREA (AP) --t; lt took 2S
years in the NFL for Romeil
Crennel to get his tirst win as
a head coach.
So it was only appropriate
that quarter.
back Trent
Dilfer gave
Crennel the
game · ball
a f t e t
Cleveland
upset Green
Bay 26-24
on Sunday.
Even more
fitting
Crennel
though was
that Crennel gave . the ball
right back.
"As soon as Trent gave it to
me, I said, 'This game ball
2005
belongs
to
the
Cleveland Browns,' because
it was a team effort," Crennel
said. "[ .think that they
deserve it because they are
the ones who applied, themselves, went to Green Bay
and were .able to pull out that
victory.,
Crennel's gesture embodied the team-first attitude he 's
been trying to instill in an
organization that· had been
searching for an identity
through six mostly dismal
seasons.
His unselfishness certainly
made an impression on his
playe'rs.
"It talked about the kind of
man that he 'is and as a player
you always want this kind of
coach," rookie wide receiver
Braylon
Edwards
said
Monday. "You always dream
to play for this kind of
coach.'1
Edwards was one of sever-

Please see Crennel, 16

Tribe downs White Sox

243

133
88

S:oorts Staff

Ple111 see Free%e, 1141

.AP photo

Columbus Blue Jackets' Raffaele Sannitz. right, looks for an
open shot as Pittsburgh Penguins' Brooks Orpik defends during the second period Monday in Columbus.

Major LEaguE BasEball

342

7. Sycamore Mohawk (2) 8.:0
B, Lore City Buckeye Trail 8-0

~-mill-

on the stick side for the winner.
"David (Vyborny) went
before me and I asked him
what to do, and he told me,
'Just shoot it,"' Balastik said .
Balastik, Columbus' ninth
pick in the 2002 draft, led the
Czech Elite League in goals
each of the last two years.
The Penguins took a 1-0
lead just 3:02 in when Ryan
Malone
redirected
Ric
Jackman's shot from the
point on the power play.
Michel Ouellet then made it
2-0, making a nifty deke on
Denis.
"They came at us pretty
hard," said Columbus center
Todd Marchant. "We got

108

4, Albany Alexander (1) 10-o . 1 217
~. Huron [7) 5-0
192
6, COlumbiana Crestview (2) 10-o 157

o.

COLUMBUS (AP)- The
The game was sloppy for
players have a lotto adjust to both clubs, with the flow
in the new NHL: shootouts, constantly disrupted by
rules changes and lots and penalties. The Blue Jackets
were just 1-for-16 on powerlots of penalties. .
Jaroslav
Balastik's play chances - failing to
sh.o otout goal ,g ave the convert the .Jast' 12. The
Columbus Blue Jackets a 3-2 Penguins , playing without
win over the Pittsburgh Mario Lemieux and No. 1
Penguins on Monday night. .draft pick Sidney Crosby,
"Shootouts are fun when were 1-for-1 0 with the man
you win," said Columbus advantage.
'
goaltender Pascal Leclaire,
Nikolai Zherdev scored
who ·stopped all 14 shots he against Marc-Andre Fleury
faced after taking over (or in the shootout, with
Konstantin
Marc Denis. ''I did a lot of Pittsburgh' s
them last year. I think our . Koltsov beating Leclaire low
team at Syracuse had the on the stick side to tie it.
Balastik, the final play~r in
most in the whole (American
Hockey League). You have the three-man rotatton,
to get used to it. Obviously, swerved far to the right
the fans loved it and it's real- before swooping in on
ly fun for everybody."
Fleury and beating him high

' 9~

DIVISION Ill
~.Versailles (16) 12-o
3,ZoarvilleTusc. Valley(2)11·1

-Blue Jackets freeze Pittsburg~

.

Please see Slips, 1141

1, Carroll EHoom-Carroll (tO) 12-o 364

.,

'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

DIVISION II

Thomas

,.," .,

•

Marietta at Rio Grande, 4 p.m,

Area tour offered'to area' farmers
MARIETTA
There's
nothing like an on-farm tour
to get you . excited about
agriculture - and that's the
purpose come Oct. 2 in
Eastern Washington County.
Guests. will learn about
profitable agricultural operations
with
the
Farm
Business
Planning
&amp;
Analysis (FBPA) program
through the Washington
County Care~:r Center Adult
'fechnical Training Program.
Kyle Forni &amp; Family will
open their grazing dairy
farm and Andy and Kate
Grimm will open their
modern orchard to the public on Sunday, from I to 5

Amy Perrin.
Those interested in participaling are encouraged to
attend an informational meeting at 3 .p.m. on Sept. 25 at the
old Middleport Elementary
School on Pearl Street:
In the spring of 2006 the
RCP' s children' s thearer will
be presenting a show based
on · Roald Dahl's novel
"Charlie and the Chocolate
Factory." Director Cathy
Erwin announced auditions
will be held Dec. 17 at the
Middleport Church of Christ
and show dates Will be late
March 2006. \
Erwin is also organizing a
trip to see "Willy Wonka and
the Chocolate Factory" as
part of the CAPA Family
Series at the Capitol Theatre
in Columbus , at 4 p.m. on

•

•

.

CHICAGO (AP) -Aaron their last 14, including six
Boone's clutch hit sent the straight, while the White
surging Cleveland Indians to Sox have lost eight of II in
another victory and one what is turning into a colasgame closer to the sliding sal collapse.
.
Chicago White Sox in the · Cleveland also .maintained
AL Central. '
.
its [ 1/2-game lead for the
Boone delivered a two- AL wild card over the
run, two-out ·· single in the Yankees.
who
beat
eighth inning Monday night, Balli more 3-2 Monday
and the Indians cut the night.
Carl Everett homered in
White Sox's one-time huge
lead to 2 1/2 games by rally- the seventh off Rafael
Betancourt (4-3) to give the
ing for a 7-5 victory.
Boone, who homered ear- White Sox a 5-4 lead . Paul
Iier to help the Indians build Konerko's two-run, two-out
a 4-0 lead they couldn't double had capped a fourhold, worked his way out of run
fifth
off
Kevin
an 0-2 hole and lined a sin- Millwood ·_ three of the
gle up the middle off Bobby runs were unearned - to tie
Jenks to silence an electric the game.
crowd o( 35,748 at U.S.
The teams play twice
Cellular Field.
· more at U.S. Cellular Field
The Indians trailed the before closing the season
White Sox by IS games with three at Jacobs Field.
after Chicago swept a fourDown 5-4, the Indians raJgame series at Jacobs Field lied against Damaso Marte,
from July 14-17. and were who relieved with out in the
APpholo
still 14 behind in early eighth,
walked
Travis
Cleveland
Indians'
Travis
Hafner
(48)
high-fives
Victor
Martinez.
after
the
two
scored
on
Aaron
.... be a ·
August.
Boone's
single
duting
the
eighth
inning
against
the
Chicago
White
Sox
Monday
in
Chicago.
But they've won 13 of
Please see '" • :l ,

�•

,,

' Page 82,• The Daily Sentinel
•,
•

American League

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

st~roid testing the reason?

Home runs down

Standin&amp;s

Tuesday, September 20, 2005

www .mydailysentinel.com

'm;rtbune- Sentinel- Re
CLAS.SIFIED

E11t Dlvl•lon
W

L

Pet

87 63 sao
New Vori(
86 63 577
Toronto
73 76 490
Baltimore
70 79 470
TampaBay
63 88 417
CMtr'll Division
Wl
Pet
Choeago
90 59 604
Cleveland
88 62 587
M1nne~ta
76 73 .510
De~olt
61' 82 .450

GB

Bv RONALD BLUM

Boston

• Kantal$ C1ty
·

49 99

S31

Y,
13

ASSOCIATED PRESS
'1

16 ~~
24 \lr
GB
2 'V
14
23

40 'II

West Dlvtalon
WLPctGB

los Angeles
Oakland

84
83
75
65

Texas
Seanle

65
67
75
es

564
553
500
.433

1~

9 'II
19 '.t

Monday 'S Qlf'hlil

N Y Yankees 3 Baltimore 2
Seattle 7, Toronto 5
Tampa Bay 8, Boston 7
Cleveland 7, Chtcago White Sox 5
Kansa s Glty 10, Detroit 4
Oakland 7 Mmnesota 6
Tuesday'&amp; Gimes
Detrott {Maroth 13-13 and Robertson
-14) at Kansas City (Howell 2-5 and
Greinke 4-16) , 2, 5 10 p m
Baltimore (Ma1ne 2-1 ) at N Y Yankees
(Small 8·0), 7 05 p m
SeaUie (Harns 2-4) at Toronto
(Towe rs 1H t 1 7 07 p m
Boston (Schilling 6·8) at Tampa Bay
(McClung 6· 10). 7 15 p.m
Cleveland (Westbroo k 15- 14) at

Ch1cago Whtte Sox (81Jehrle 15·8)
805pm

Minnesota (Lmano 0·0) al Oakland
(Blanton 10-11), 1005pm
Texas (Dommguez 3·4) at LA Angels
(Colon 19·71 10 05 p m

National League
East Divlalon

w

L

Pet

GB

Atlanta B5 65 567 _
fl'hlladelphta eo 70 533 5
Flonda 79 71 527 6
Wash1ngton n 73 513 C
New York 73 76 490 11 1/2
Central Division
W

L

Pet

x-St Louis
Houston
Chtcago

95 56 629
81 69 540
74 76 493
Mtlwaukee
73 76 490
Cincinnati
69 80 463
Pittsburgh
62 88 413
West Division
W L
Pet
San D1ego
75 74 503
San Francisco 69 80 463
Los Angeles
67 82 450
Anzona
67 83 447
Colorado
61 88 409
x-clmched dlvLston

GB

13 '11
20 '
21
25

32 ·~
G8

6
8
8%
14

. NEW YORK - Baseball had a
brownout this year, with home runs
dropping to their lowest level in
eight years ,
Is there a ltnk between the power
outage and tougher steroid testmg?
" A lot of guys who were hitting
them haven ' t been httttng them."
Flonda's Lenny Harn s smd. "I
thmk the drug poltcy had a lot to do
Wt!h 11. It changed a lot ot g uy s'
di ets The re are too many pe 0 ple
havin g off years.''
An average of 2.06 homers per
game were hi! through Sunday,
accord1ng to the Elias Sports
Bure&lt;~u, down 8 1/2 percent from
lust season·s final avera ge of 2 25 .
The ftgure ha sn' t been so low stnce
It d1 pped to 2 05 m 1997
"I thmk it's cycltcal." baseball
commi ssioner Bud Selig sa1d " It's
ve ry hard to determme what vanabie s are at work here. I don ' t think
anyone rc&lt;~lly knows, and It 's hard
to draw a concluston "
Some pl ,tyers point to the flr st
year of steroid te sting with penal tics for first offenders. Nme players
hav e been su spended foe 10 da)S
each tor vwlatmg the maJOr league
policy, mclud1ng Baltimore's Rafael
Pdlmeiro
Gene · Orza, the ch1ef operating
officer of the players assocmt10n,
sa~d ltnktng steroid testmg to the
home-run average IS too simphst1c
and pomted out that th1 s year's level
is only sltghtly lower than the 2.09
average for 2002.
''The numbers are essentially the
same as they v.ere three years ago,
before there v.as testmg , and in
those three years players have been
tested a mass1ve number of t1mes."
he ·sa1d. "You m1ght want to consid·

I

3

MAJOR LEAG.tJE BASEBALL

er other possibiliti es for home run
production: the players are bigger
because of tratilmg reg1men . the
ballpark s are smaller, bat manufacture and des1g n IS dtfferent. There
can be a slew of re ason s "
Bo ston center ftelder Johnny
Damon cites better pll~htng .
"We hdven ' t really fa ced too
many chumps for pitchers th1 s
year," he swd. " Young guys commg
1n - have got some unbelievable
stuff "
Several stars had huge power
drops, many beoause of long-term
lnJUrte s. San Franc1sco ' s Barry
Bond s went from 45 to two as of
Monda), Philadelphia's J1m Thome
from 42 to severi and St. LoUis'
Scott Rolen trom 34 to ftvc .
''If I hit 12, the ratio would still be
down," Bonds sa1d
Among those players who've
been mostly healthy, Seattle ' s
Adrian Beltre has fallen from 48 to
18, the New York Mets' Carlos
Beltran from 38 to 15 . and
Washmgton 's Vmny Casttlla fr-om
35 to 12 All three were free agents
last winter and switched teams and home ballparks.
Texas has done tts part to ensure
the 'home-run average topped 2.0
for the 12th straight season- a figure reached only once in 25 years
before toe current boom began in
1994. The Rangers have 152
homers at Ameriquest Field, a
record for a home ballpark, and lead

the major leagues w1th 252 overall
- 12 shy of the mark Seattle set in
1997.
Buckmg the trend are Houston's
Morgan Ensberg , who has gone
from 10 homers to 35, Atlanta's
Andruw Jones, up from 29 to 50,
and the New York Yankees ' Jason
Giambi , recovered from Illnesses
and back to 30 after hittmg 12 last
year Jones 1s the f1rst major leaguer
to hit 50 smce Thome and Alex
Rodriguez in 2002
"I know they ' ve been saying a lot
of stuff about a lot of people using
Illegal products to make themselves
feel strong, but the game IS still the
same ," Jones sa1d "All the guys
still look strong, and there 's no
doubt in my mmd they can still hit
'home runs , 50, 40 home run s."
Braves general manager John
Schuerholz thmks some players
look smaller, but added, "It 's not
sctenttflc at all."
"There may ha~e been some relation ship. I have no data on that," he
said. "Obviously, all of the supposition 1s that performance-enhancing
qrugs allow you to perform at a
higher level physically, whether it's
speed, arm strength or power"
It's hard to d1scern whether
Increases and decreases 111 s1ze arc
related to steroids T!gers coach
Lance Parnsh talked about All-Star
catcher Ivan Rodriguez
"The only guy on this team who ' s
really lost any substantial we1ght on
this team IS Pudge, but I thmk that
was by design on h1s part," Parrish
sa1d,- "People accuse him of being
on stuff and then getting off it, and
who's to know' But I know just
from watching him from the first
day of spring training, he 's been on
an unbelievable running regimen,
diet and workout programs that are
second to none. So I can see why he
lost so much weight."

Home runs per game n down
e.4perce11t from last season's
final average and tile lowest

since 1997.
YEAR

Tribe

F'lttsburgh 7, Houston 0
San Doego 8 1Colorado 7

Tuesday's Game•

Houston (Pethtte 16-9) at Pittsburgll
(Gorzelanny Q-0), 7 05 p m
San Franc•sco (Cam 2-1) at
Washington (l Hernandez t5-7), 7 05
pm
Flor•da (A J Burnett 12-1 1) at N Y
Mets (Benson 9-8), 7 10 p m
St
LOUIS (Suppan 15·10) at
C1nc1nnat1 (Keisler 2-0), 7 10 p.m.
Philadelphia (L1dle 11 · 10) at Atlanta
(Sosa 12· 3) 7 35 p m
Ch1cago Cubs (J W1\hams 5·8) at
Milwaukee (D Dav1s 10·1 0), 7 35 p m
San D1ego (W Withams 8·11) at
Colorado (Jam Wnght 7-16). 8 35 p m
LA Dodgers {Lowe 11 -13) at
Anzona {Vazquez 10-15) 9 40 p m

1.81

1966 -3.813 1967 4,458

from PageBl
Hafner and gave up a double
to Y1ctor Martinez. Marte (34) then fanned Ben Broussard
for the· second out and was
replaced by rookie Jenks,
whose fastball is nearlY, 100
mph.
Boone got the count back
to 2-2 before hitting a liner to
center JUSt past Chicago

shortstop Juan Unbe.
Chicago threatened m the
bottom half when pinch-hitter Pablo Ozuna led eff with
a double, but former White
Sox reliever Bobby Howry
got the nexl three batters.
Hafner . hit a run-scoring
double Ill the ninth to make it
7-5 and fmished 3-for-3 with
two walks and three RBis.
Bob W1ckman pitched the
mnth, getting Konerko to pop
to second with two men on to
earn hiS '\ 44th save 111 49
chances,
mcludmg
15

stra1ght.
Playing against Chicago
for the first time since he was
hit in the mouth by Mark
Buehrle's p1tch on July 16,
Hafner h1t an RBI double m
the first and h1s· 27th homer
in the fifth to make 1t 4-0.
Boone added a solo shot in
the second and Broussard had
a bases-loaded sacrifice fly m
the thtrd off Chtcago starter
Freddy Garcia.
Chicago finally broke
through for four runs m the
ftfth agamst M1llwood, who

Get A Jump
on
SAVtNGS

Help Wanted

0

1!)88 3.180-1.51
1989 3,083-1.46
·1900 3.317-1.58

(Part-Time)
Val\~ y

Hos p1tal 1 ~ currently
re sum es lor ,l Pdrt T1me

Pharm aciSt. BS Pharmacy. Ph arm. D
Pharmac y or Ph D Pharmac y !rom

accredited college or un1vcrs1ty VvV Stale
Pharmac l't Lt&lt;..:cn..,urc T\\o• yedrs pharmact st
expencnl:C prelcrred Hospttal expc ncn~ e

Bnng th1s ad to Ahsha Cremeans
lor 10% off any Haor Care Serv1ce

Exp1res 9130/05

retirement

resumes 10:

KIT &amp;

www.pvalley org

Senior Discount*

KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd Middleport, OH
992·2725

Ex cellent salary. holld.1 ys health msurance
sm glc / famd y plan . dent al pl an. hi e
m surance \' ac atlon long - lcr m d ts abthty and

Pleasant Valley Hospital
do Human Resources
2520 Valle) Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550,
(304) 6754340, Ext. 1414. ·

CARLYLE

Shop the
Classifieds!
M?f ANoTH€R-

lwnght@1c net

AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED: Buckeye Community
Services, an agency that provtdes
services to people w1th mental
retardation, Will be acceptmg
apphcauons and conducting
interv1ews on Tuesday, September
20, 2005, from 9am-3pm at the Ash
Street Bapti st Church in
Middleport. All apphcants must
have a high school diploma or
GED, va hd driver's license and
'
three years good dnvmg
experience. $7 .25/hr.
Pre-employment Drug Testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

ife.you 65
If so, you qualify for a

preferred

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Subscriber's Narne _ _ _ __
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Phone'--'---'---- Mall or drop off this coupon a~ng
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•
............................•.••
I

To Place·
Regtster
m:rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
_ _ _ _ _'_ _ _ _ _ _ _o~r...:F,.ax_To (740) 446·30,;,08;;....-~-0:.:r...:F..:.:a.:.:.x..:.To:..!.:.(7..:.40.:..:l...:99..:.2.:..·.::.21.:..:5..:.:7....,.

1991 3,383 - 1 . 6 1
1992 3,038 -~.~
1993 4.030 . . . . . 1.78

1994 3,306

2.07

'

~

1996 4,962

2.19

1007 4,640

2,05

1996 5,064
1999 5,528

2.08
2.2$

2000 5,693

2.34

2001 5,458

2002 5,059
2003 5,207

2.25
2.08
2.14

2004 5;451

2.2!5

2005 4,605
• TllrOII!Jh g~~~~~es of Sepl t8

2.o&amp;"

souRCe· EJ1as Sports Blleeu
long liner that a leaptog
Grady Sizemore just missed
to center for a two-run double
to tie the game.
Coco Cnsp drove a pllch
from Neal Cotts to deep left
m
the
seventh,
but
Podsednik leaped against the
fence to pull It down.
Garcia. With one win m his
last mne starts, lasted 6 1-3
mnings, gtving up seven hits
and four runs. Millwood
went s1x, surrendenng eight
hils and tour runs.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4 's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Anttquas ................................. ,..................... 530
Apartments lor Rant.. ................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market........ .,...................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair .................................................770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sate ........ .................... 750
Building Supphes ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings .......................... 340
Business Opportunity............................... 210
Business Training .................................. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ......................... 790
Camping Equipment .............. .................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
ElectrlcaURelrigeration ....... ....... ..... ..•.. .••...840
Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equipm'ent.....................................:•...610
Farms lor Rent. ............................................430
Farms lor Sale .. .......................................... 330
For Lease ... ................................................. 490
For Sale ..................................................... 585
For Sate or Trade ........................................590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .....................................580
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Hauling...........................................850
Giveaway .....................................................040
Happy Ads ................ ,...................................050
Hay &amp; Grain .................c................................640
Help Wanted .................................................110
H9J110 lmprovements ...................................810
Homes for Sate ............................................310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent .......................:. ....:............ 4f0
In Memoriam ....................... ...................... 020
Insurance ..................................................130
Lawn &amp; Garden•Equipmpnt.. ...................... 660
Livestock ....... ..............................................630
Loat and Found .......................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................................350
Mlscellaneous ............................. :................ 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse.......................540
Mobile Home Repatr ....................................860
Mobile Homes lor Rent............,..................420
Mobile Homes lor Sale .........:......................320
Money to Loan ........................................... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheeters ..........................740
Mu~lcallnstrumonts ............ ,...'\;.T""'"" "' 570
Personals .................................... " ··\; ...........005
Peta lor Sale ...........................................,... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820
Professional Servlcea .................................230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Rapalr ............................... 1&amp;0
Real Eatate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schools Instruction .. ................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted .......................................120
Space lor Rent ....; ........................................480
Sporting Goodo ........................................... 520
SUV'o lor Salo ..............................................720
Trucka lor Sat• ............................................ 715
Upholatlf( ......................................... , ........ 870
Vans For Sale ...............................................730
Wanted to Buy .......... ........... ..................... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplleo .................. 620
Wanted To Do ...: .......... ....... ........... .......... 180
Wanted to Rent... ........................................ 470
Yard Sale--Gallipolis ..................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middlo .........................074
Yard Sale-PI Ploaoant ................................ 076

-----;- · .

-- -

-----,-----.L· -

'Oeadg/r~·

Offtee 11o~~

2.02 .

1995 4.081

entered the game with the
AL's lowest ERA at 3 02
R1ght fielder Casey Blake
dropped Aaron Rowand's
leadoff !mer for a two·base
error and Joe Crede, who JUSt
missed a home run in h1s preVIOUS at-bat, hit an RBI smgle to center Scott Podsedmk
followed with a stogie to
make it fmt-and-th1rd before
Tadahito Iguchi dchvered an
RBI smgle and advanced to
second on the throw.
Millwood got Everett on a
popup, but Konerko h1t a

·or older?

PHARMACIST
Pleasant
acc epting

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

2.12

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

G•llb C011nly OH

HR Hor.E RIIN'GAME

WOrd Ads
Dally

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To
Get Response ...
\\\01 \t I \II "\ I..,

HE! p WANTED

HFI"'"A·~·Il

LEARN

TO
DRIVE

•·

' .NO EXPE RIENCE NECESSARY
"F ULL TIMECLA SSES
• COL TRAINI NG

AVt.ILABLE
' Joe PLACEMENT

' FINMC ING

' ~ NROlUNO NOW

ALLIANCE

Benefit Golf Outing .. For
Chuc~ Atlch1e lo help pay
med•cal e~o:penses
Sept
24th at 9 00 AM P1ne HillS
Golf Course Troph1es for
1st. 2nd and 3rd place and
other
pr1zes
awarded
Refreshments
served
Come out and Help

TRACTO R TRAILER
TRAINING CENT ERS

WYTHEVILLE VA

, -800-334·1203
!DO WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood 11ems
To $480Jwk
MatefiSIS prov1ded
Free 1nformat1on pkg 24Hr
801 ·428-4649

Guns m1ssmg from my
home
At 124, Pomeroy
OhiO Reward oHered for tn
formatiOn
of Recovery,
Brownings A 5 Winchester ACCOUNTS CLERK
1300 Contact ~ Rex " 740· Bachelors or assoc1ate
992· 1163
degree 111 account1ng or
knowledge of bookkeepmg
Mason CoJJnty Antmal
with
expenence
league, Inc
Respons ible for expend•
196ei Fa1rgro und Road,
lures,
re1mbursemenls
pt PleasaD t
grants, tma11,ctal repo rts
Shetter Clean-Up Day
audits and other fiscal
Saturday 9124
respons1b1blles Must have
9a.m-3pm Ra1n or Shme
knowledge ot word, elecel,
Yard Sale Bake Sale and and Quattro pro Fli. pick up
Hot Dog Sale
applicatiOns at Children s
Get your Dog 's
Serv1ces
83 Shawnee
n&amp;IIS Clipped for $5
lane Must be returned by
Basket Raffles and Free
Sept ember 26 accom paBalloons for the KidS'
med w11h a resume
To Volunteer, please call
(304)675 6458
AmbuteUe Orlyera Oh1 0 s
largest EMS system IS currently seek1ng non-em er
GIVFAWAY
gency wheel cha 1r trans
porters for Manetta and tl1e
3yr old female and 1 112 yr surro y_ndlng areas Great
old male Golden Retnevers E»Cpenence for thos e ln!er
to go od home Phone ested 1n pursumg a career m
(740)441 ·0~43
the medical f1eld Must have
va li d dnvers license w1th
4 month old Black Lau male clean dnvlng record and be
to good home (740)446 21 years of age or older
2450
Employm ent IS contrngenl
upon state mand ated cnm1Free k1tle ns Litter tra1ned , nal background ct1eck ..,
ra1sed ms1de Call (7 40)245· Excelleni benefit package
5066
Those mlerested pleas e
subrRI! resume to
Large child sw1ng se1 Good
AmbuleHe Dlvtslon
cond1l1on
740-992·233 3
1647 Southeast Ave Ste 2
Can see a! 789 Maple
Tallmadge, Ohro 44278
street Middleport
~r::::;,;;.~l.arr...,;_A_N_D__, AMERICAS NUMBER ONE

r

~n
F~~ll

HOME BU IL DER IS seekmg
a career m1nded orga!'uzed

Found Med1um s1zed black
dog weamg faded ora nge
collar fnendly Call to 1dent1·

1y (740 )446-6945

strong work ethJC are ou r
keys to making $75K or
0

Tuppers Pla1ns area wear- (740)44&amp;3599
•mg green collar, $100
Reward call (740)662-2022 AVONI All Areasr To Buy q r
Sell
Shirley Spears 304 v
SALr.
675-1429
1.ARD
.:.
-~-------Bam Help, Must be able to
work around Horses 18 yrs
old or older (304)675-1993

I

r

Bartende r/Waitress Trarmng
Available Apply at Jencho
Garage sale Corner 27 Vme
Inn {304)675-4167
&amp; Belm ont Thurs &amp; Fn

r:ol

21

&amp;~~pm

roBuv

In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00

For Sundays Paper

"

:" •

Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid"

POLICIES· Ohio VaHey Publlahmg reeervea the right to edit, reject, or cane~ any ad at any time Errors muat be reported on the first day of publicat ion and
Trlbune-Sentlnei·Aeglster wlll be reapon11ble for no more than the coat of the apace occup!ed by the error and only the fu.t maert1on We shall not be liable
any loaa or npense thai result• from the publication or om1aslon of an advertisement Correction Will be made 1n the l1rat available edttlon • Box rJumber
arealwaya contldentlal. •Current rate card applies. •All realntateadvert1~ementa are subJect to the Federal F11r Houalng Acl of 1968 •Th1s ')"'"P''"'''I
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE
We wtll not knowingly accept any advertl~1ng m II!Gial!on of the law

1" 0

H!l.PWANTI'f'

I. .1'

Non-prof! agency seeks
quali f1ed 1nd1vtduals fo r the
followmg TeacherJDrlv_
e r·
Aespon s1 bi1 11es 1nclud
M1n HS/GED w1th 3yrs early
childhood exp w1th CDA or
ec ru1tmg and tra1mng o
AGDS cert1hcat1on or w1llmgamers customer serv1c
nes s to purse Prefer AA
nd meetmg sales goals I
degree plus ACDSICDA ereOU have a pOSitiVe alii
dentlal w/2yrs exp
COL
ude are a self-starter
w/passenger
Class
C
nd a tea m player w
endorsement re~Ui red
ould like to talk to you
Teacher Asst./Driver-Min
ust be dependable an
HS/GED and preschool exp
ave rehable transpor ta
ACDS/CDA preler red COL
iOn Pos1110n otte rs al
C
ow/passenger
class
ompany benefits 1nclud
endorsement reqUired
ng health dental, VISIOn
ndl1fe 1nsurance 401 k. Family Adovacate/Drlvera1d vacatiOn and person ' Mm HSIGED plus exp 1n
I day s Pleas e sen
soc1al
serv1ce
agency,
esume to
Prefer AA endorsement
Paul Barker
requ1red
Clrculallon MBnQger
All poSitions are 9 months ,
Ohio Valley Publishing
35hrs wk
w/benehts
825 Third Ave
Request applicatiOn and
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
submit Wlih resume and 3
Or email to ,
letters of references to
pborker@mydallytrlSCAC, HAD, 540 F1fth Ave ,
bune com
Huntmgton WV 25701 EOE

50

Smoots

lNsrnucnoN

Il'lr'l 6',~;;;;;;H:;:;;;o.;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~ "'--•m•n•S•A•L•E-•
Ho\IF:S
Monn.r HoMES
Hmlf.'
~,__•m•n•·s•A•L•"-' •-•m•R•R•EN•~-•
IH \I IS I \II

"---i.F'OiliiR..SiiAiiiLE--,.1

1180

0

Do

After Life---LapTop Sates &amp;
Servtce PC &amp; Mac Repa1r &amp;
Servme 740 992-1525

Computer
Repa1r
and
Troub leshoot Web Das1gn
Now Hmng Safe Dr1vers Networking Programming,
Drtvers Needed
CDL Dr1ver s w1l lmg to dnve Apply tn Person at your local BUild New Systems, Restore
Wrndows V1rus Removal
for local ready-mx-concrete Oom1no s Must be over 18
Phone#740·992 · 7903
comp any Expenence 1s
NOW HIRINGII
http /lwww geoalles com/ho
preferred Qut not necessary
•40 hours a week
Dnver must be willing to do
ldamn3293 4 IEmarl hott Up to $8/hour
pre-mamtenance on trucks
damn32934@yahoo com
&amp; equ1pment, yard work &amp;
•Day and Evemng sh1fts
FalliS Near Let us help you
other m•scellaneous cho res
• Pa1d vacations holiday DHK
Cleanmg
&amp;
Expenence operat1ng equip
and tram1ng
Powerwash1ng
We'll
cleanmen! &amp; extra skills such as
• Professional work
er-up &amp; Gei·R·Done Call
weldmg a plus
envtronment
74 0. 9 8 5•3 63 9I 9 8 5•
Call (304)937 3410
36331740-416 1823
Call. today to schedule an
EMT po s1!1ons available m
For all your home repa1rs
1nterv1ew'
Huntington
WV
area
and •ns!allaliOn~ at afford1~877-463-6247 ext 2456
FT/PT
Start1ng
pay
able rates Call one number
$8 50/hr
Contact M1ke
(304)593 3611
Or stop by the Gall•a
Matheny at (304)526-5780
Co unty One Stop on
S 1ate· Ce rtd ted, L 1n k
or (304)5 26 5936
Friday,
approved ch1ldcare has
September 23 between
Exper1en ced Sew1ng and
1mmed1a1e opamngs fo r
Quilting Person needed to 10 OOarn and 12 OOpm We ages 6· weeks&amp; up call
Will be co nducting open
work Full T1me call att er 5pm
Shelly 304 675 2343 for
1nterv1ews
(304)593-0505 No callS aft er
more deta1ls
www 1nfoc1s1on com
7pm No Expenence needed
Wdl ca re for Elderly Day,
to apply
Over the road. Cargo Van
Night or Weeke nds
Exp
For a l1 m1te d t1 me make 50% Dnver must have CDLs w1th and References (304 )675selling Avon Call (740)446- Hazmat and good dnv1ng 7961
record Also must pass DOT
3358
I I \ \ \t \\I
phys•cal and drug test Van
Fu1111 me Babysrtter needed IS leased on wllh Panther II
BusiNESS
111 my Home Barton Chapel Must be hone st dependable
Roa d Mason County No and self-suff1c•enr 60%\
Sludents apply (304 )576- Drrver'4D% Owner split
3353
Dnvet pays for gas and tolls. ABSOLUTE GOLDMINE1
pays 1nsurances
--~---~~- owne r
60 vending mach1n es!
LPN
needed
l ull-ltme, qualcom escrows repa1rs
ex cellent locations
Monr1ay·Frtday day sh1ft no etc (740)446-6688 '
or
all for $10,995
weekends
no holidays (740)339·4221
800-235 6982
Apply at 936 St At 160
Paramed1
cs
&amp;
EMT's
Galllpohs (740}446· 9620
needed App ly at 13 54
•NOTICE•
Ma1ntenaoce Retnge ratiOn Jackson Ptke GallipoliS
I..HIO
VALLEY PUBLISH
tJr
Help Wanted
lNG CO recommends tha
ou do busmess wtth pea
5
le you know. and NOT t
end money through th
Eiectrlca l &amp; Relngerat1on 1ng For applicatiOn &amp; free
Mml mum 5 yrs ex.penence
f
II 'Tla ll until you have 1nvest1
0
REOU!REt) Excellent bene;•;'""::lh:•:o:ffe:•:,n:a·==~
Ills package Vacahon msur· 1·91 3-599-8226,
24/hrs
!\'lONEY
ance profit shanng plan &amp; emp se rv
LoAN
compet1t1ve wages
10
Send resume to
Aec pMms VEIII-!n Act1v1ty
OhiO Valley
Asst
Recpt1on1st Needed
F
or Fast-Paced Factlity 4
Supermarkets Inc
D
p
W k F 1 dl
dba Eastman's Foodlands
ay s er
ee
r en 'i
**NOTICII**
T
o
d Fl bl
PO Bole 769
t eem
nente
ex1 e
GallipoliS OhiO 45t&gt;31 or
Applicants May f'\pp\y Skills
Borrow Smart Conle e
call (740)446-9312 ext 116 Requ1red
Extremely
he OhiO DIVISIOn 0
An Equal Opportunity
Orgamzed
Able
To
cinanc1al
lnSIItuliOn'!
Employer
' AccompliSh
Tasks
Ofl1ce of Consume
ln(l ep e nden t ly ,
Afla1rs BEFORE you ref1
Medl Home Health Agency Enco mpas ses
Good
ance your home ..;_~
Inc see k1ng a lull-bme AN Judgment &amp; Reas on1ng
btam a loan BEWAR~:
Patient Care Coordinator for Ab1ht1es EnJoys People &amp;
of requests for any large
Galhpohs Oh1o and sur- The El derly
Must Be
dvance payments o
roundmg
are a
Dut1es Punctual &amp; Dependable
ees or Insurance Cal
mclude establlsh1ng and Interested Appli cants May
he OJitce of ~orrsume
malntarnmg open lmes ot Send A Resu me
To
~HMs toll tree at 1-866
commum cat1 on w1th area Recptlomst/FIII-In Act1v1ty
to learn tf th£
pl1ys1C1ans and health care /\ sst
PO
Box
307
pnortgage broker o
lac11it1eS 111 I~ delivery of Rave nswood WV 26164
ender
IS
properl
Home Health Serv1ces We lntervmws
To
Begm
1censed (Th1s rs a pubh
offer a compet1bve sa lary :S.:
•c:PI:.
• .m
.::.
b•:c•.:2cc
6:c,2::.:00
= 5' - erv1ce announce~en
and benelit package for full Route Sales
rom the OhiO Valle
11me E 0 E Please sen d
Herr Foods, Inc
re sume to Audrey Farley
Cllmcal
Manage r
352 Is ar:ceplmg resume s for · ~
I'R
Seco nd Aven ue GalliPOliS Route Sates People tn thiS
area Must posses the se
.~
OH 45631
qua ht1es ,
__
.
• Clean Drrvmg Record
e:I.....I..E.t: Apphcahons Are
TURNED DOWN ON
~ • •Self Starter
Bemg Accepted For A PT
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
•Early R1ser
Fri l l ~ LPN
Compet111ve
No Fee Unless We W1nt
Wages Pa1d Vacat 1on Paid •Good commun ication sk1lls
I -888·582·3345
• Strong sellrng sk11\s
Meals Heallh Insurance
Available
Interested F1rst yea r 1ncome potenti al
·
Applicants May Apply Da1ly ol $30K+ wfbenef1ts
94
Rayeoswpod Ca re
Send resumes to
Center 1113 Washtngton
Herr Foods Inc
Street, Ravenswood WV
476 E Seventh Street
(304)273·9236
Fax
ChilliCOthe OH 4560 1
Referenc es Requ~red _

;;;;;======::;
iiO
OPfoRruNm·
t..---!;,illlliio;.,,..t

- -- - ----,1-Cook needed Apply m person at the Holiday In n.
Galhpohs No phone ca lls,

.Absolute Top Dollar U S
CO UN SE LOR
Stiver and Gold Cams
NEEDED AT
Proofsets Gold R1 ngs PreAREA AGENCY
1935
US
Currency,
Sol1ta1re D•amonds- M T S
PNson wi th po&lt;;1 t1vf' atti
Coin Shop 1~ 1 Second
tu de &amp; u~tl' II E'f't wOr k
Avenue Gall1polts 740-446ethiC
Abil•ty to aprly
2642
sa iP&lt;; and scrv1cc tech
niq1Jes Telephone 0. com
Pomeroy H1gh School Year
pul er sk1!1s requ1rer1 Mus
Books 1964-65-66 will pay
be able to work well w1l h
(740)592·263e
c li ent s 1-on· l &amp; com~let
I \ l\'1 fl\ \ II \ I
mulll·tasks sucr.essfu lly
... I 1&lt;\ j( 1 ... .
wi th .1ttcnl 1o n to detai l.
Holllly
wage . an1W&lt;1i
rcv 1cw
wit h
merit
mcrease
team bonus.
benef1ts wogr&lt;lm .tC11(k).
etc Sf'nrl rf'&lt;;lJin[' to CLA
An Excellent way to earn
Bo~ 5 -lA r'o Ca ll lf)OIIS
money The New Avon
TfltJUI,0
PO Aox .Jf.9
Can Manlyn 304 882 2~5
GnllipOi"' OH -15631

~~=~~~ne~s~: ~ La~~r

10

Concealed P1stol Class
October 8 9 00 am ... VFW •
Mason WV Ph (740)843· 1401
Cedar
St
5555 Cell (740)4 t6-3329
Meadowbrook
Add
3
Bedroom 1 112 Bath Corner
Gallipolis Career College lot new Roof move 111 con{Cqreers Close To Home)
dillOn new Carpel and
Ca ll Today I 740-446-4367
Floormg, Storage Build1ng
1-800-214-0452
Fenced 1n Back Yard
wwwgelllpollsca,eercolegocom
(304)773-5254 or (304)593·
Ac~nrdrte l;l Member Accredrtm g 4135
Counc~ !or lndepfmdenT COlleges
and Schools 1274B
199 5 Doublew1de 3br, 2ba
ShotoKan Karate Starling wlattacned
Garage
new class Sept26 2005 at Breezeway &amp; Barn
1 56
Car leton School every acres Sandhill Ad $72 000
Monday and Thursday 6 00 (304)895 3068
PM to 7 00 PM 740-985- 2
Bed room
Home
3994 or 740·667-.3039
$375/month. References &amp;
WA'NTED
Depos1t required (304)675·
T
5578

:~~~~~~:~:i;~~~~o =~ ~~7o:c=~~~~~m:~~~~~c~~~~ns $1~9~~2;~;h~~! h,r-

---,u-m_s_IZ_e&lt;l
__
bl-ac_k_'_m_a_le ~ ~=~~~ ~~~cfl~~~~~ll ~:~~~~~
dOg wJtan markings lost 401 K
Fa•
conhdenllal
81?6 m Guysv1Ue. Shade &amp; resume to Sales Poslhon at

r

K

{p

All Display; 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevliltlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 oavs

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

$500 00 cash reward tor
mformat1on leadtng to arrest
of persons that broke In tO
my home 1n Mason on mghl
of Sunday August 30th or
early mornmg Monday
Augusl31st and stole a collectiOn of fra med lnd1an
Arrowheads
a
bounty
hunter metal detector a
homelifa XL 1:'ha1nsaw and
other ltefTIS Dav1d Dudley

1:00 p.m.

Monday-Friday for Insertion

.

110

1.

In~Column :

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
~~
1m
Borders 53.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

110

304-773-6130

Monday's Gamea

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentlnel.com

:

i

FIND AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

NEW 3 BRDM $12 99
DOWN
$229 00 MONTH
ONLY AT OAKWOOD
HOMES
NITRO WV 304 755 5885

d1 str~ct

r

LOTS

&amp;

I

~---AiiCRiiiiEii:AiiGiiE--'.

New al l bnck 2BR 2BA 2 2 65

WANTl'D

r

s1ze basement &amp; 3 car
garage Garage has 1 stall!
w1th mechan1c prt
Other
house Rental hou se w1lh
large deck All natural gas
4yrs old 3br, 2ba w1th f1re central a1r Appro~ 5 ac res
place on 1 5 acres 1r1 Galha All cleared w1th wh 1te p1ne &amp;
Co
$89 900
(740)709- blue spruce p1nes Plus '2 out
bUIIdmgs
All $ 1~5 000
1166

740·378·6325

5

House
Full
Room
Basement, Corner Lot
Detached Garage (304)67 5

3020

www.orv .com
Home Ltstmgs.
L1st your home by calling
(740)446-3~20

MOHlLE

Great Use d 1994 14x70, 3 2BR Gree,n sc hool
Bedroom 2 Bath Includes no pets Rete re nee &amp; dep
heat pump Ca ll• (740)38 5· $300 (740) 367-0632
2434
Be au tiful n ver &gt;, lew 1n
New 3 BR Home Only Kanau ga Ideal for 1 2 pea
$189/mo Includes a/c. deh v pte
No pets
pease
ery and set up (740)385 Ap plical1 ons bein g taken
4367
Call (7~0 )441 0181

r

1 m11e down ?sou th beaut1
ful nverfront Newly remod
eled 2BR 1bath home
screen po rch overlook. mg
riVer separale two-story
garage Wl\h workbench
large
yard
pnvate
References $650Jmon th +
depost1
(7 40)44 6 -4 922
even1 ngs

Mobile home
s1tes m
Country Ho rn es
Shade

$i30 mo (740 )385 401 9.

j+«l.

A.PA)(O.tENT'S

HlR

RENT

1 and 2 bed room ap art
ments furn 1shed and un1urI"JI Shed sec unty de po Sit
reqUire d no pets 740 992

2218

----~---

1BR WID hOokup electriC or
gas no pe ts $290 plus ,
depoSit
(740 )441 11 84
(740)441·0194

2 bedroo m 1 bath water
pa1 d $350 month $3 50
Call
sec unty
depOSit
(740)446- 3481
3 &amp; 2 BR apts Close l o
Holzer
hosp1ta l
W~D
hookup s
wate r1 se~r
In cluded
Sta rtmg
:at
$450/mon th
' depOSit
requ1red No pels ( 7~0)4 4 1
1184

3 &amp; 2 BA apts Close to
Holzer
hosp 1Ja l
Wj D
hoo kups
war ertsewe r
1nclud ed
Starting
:at
$450/month
deposit
re qurred No pets (740)441 11 84 (74 0\4 41-0 194
--------3 rooms and bath All utillt1es
pa 1d Do wnsta~rs no pets
$450/mo 45 Ol1ve St
(740)446 39 45

3 rooms fum1shed 1 bad
2 Bedroom House Newly room good locatiOn Apply
Remodeled Kmeon Ave at 1058 F1 rst Ave s1de door
Gall1 pol1 s
' · S5 501mo \740)446 22 67

(740)441-1184
0194

(740)441

APART·
BE'AUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
2 bedroo m house S375 per PRICES AT JACKSON
mo plus depas1t &amp; utilities ESTATES 52 Westw ood
Accept HUD
(740) 446 Dnvc tram S3"44 to $442
25 15
Walk to shop &amp; mov1 es Call
Equal
3 4 BR 2 .baths hardwood 7 40-4 4 ~ 2568
fl oors, n1ce home located on Hous111g O!)portun 1ty
Eastern Ave 600 sq 11
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT(740)446-7425
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE\
ap art men ts
5 roo ms &amp; bath stove &amp; Townhouse
re fnge rator no pe ts 50 and or sma ll hOus es FOR
Oli ve St
$350 month RENT Call 1740)441 f 111
lor appl1cat1on &amp; 1nfo•mat1Qn
(740)446 3945 .

Garage &amp; Car Port, Double
Dnveway Sits on 1/2 acre
lot on dead end Pnvate
Dnve 2 yrs old $145 000

Attention!
Local co mpany olfenng ~NO
DOWN PAYMEN T
pro
grams for you to buy your
home 1ns tead ot re lilhng
• 1Q0°o hn anc1ng
• LeSs than perfect cred1!
acce pt ed
• Paym ent co ld be the
same as rent
Mortga ge

I

Momt •. Ho~m;
FOR

SAlE

1996 doublewtde 24 x52 on
1/2 acre 3BR 2 bath large
LA new carpetllrnoleum
new 50 yr old roof 3 large
storage bwldrng Too many
ame lllt~es to hst Must see to
app rec1ate
Loca ted
111
Fa1r land or Ga111a Co school (740)367 0000
dtstr1ct $97 500 (740)256
Beaut1tut 3 bedfDarP home
1426
m
country
e rA
2000
14x70
Oakwood washer j ryer hoo kup large
Freemon! 38Ft 2BA m yard (6t4l 595 7773 or 800
Qua11 Creek very n1ce 740 798·4686
388 8513 or 740-388·80 17
For rent 2 bedroom hO.JSe
2000 t 6lf80 mobi le home 1549 Ale 1 N (7 40)446,
Many extras Owner w1ll pay 91 77
to move Call a40)44 6
For rent 1 bedroom 1 bath
· 2510
fully rendvated all app r ·
2002 3BR 2 bath Oakwood ances
S500 mont h
mob1te home Good condr- $5c))ldepos 't Call (740)446
tiOn
$28 500
OBO 3481
Ret1nanc1ng av ailable Call
Home for Re nt m Glenwood
(740)245 0131
3br 2ba delached Garage
5 Homes under St O DOO $400/mon th plus d epos~t
/304 )74 3 8584
Will del1ver (740!385-7'571

J

All real •tete advertlatng
in th1a newspaper Ia
subject lo the Federal .
Fa1r Hous1ng Act o11968
which makes It Illegal to
advertise ' .any

preference ltmltatlon or
d;.crimlnatlon b . .ed on
race, color, religton, .sea

lamltial status or national
origrn, or any Intention to
make any such
preference, Umltatlpn or
dlacrimlnaHon

This newapaper wrll not
knowingly accept

advartl..ments lor real
I· oatate which Ia In
violation of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advert•nd In
this newapapar are
a..-altal:lte on an equal
opportunity ba*"

I

Furn1shed upstairs 3 rooms
&amp; bath Clean ret &amp; dep
requ1red No pets (740)44 6
1519
Grac1ous hv1ng I and 2 bed·
room apartments al Vill a~e
Manor
and
R1\ ers 11:te
Apartments m M1dd1epott
Frorp $295 $444 Call 74!&gt;
992 5064 Equal Hous1 Rg
Opportunl!leS
Honeysuckle H1lls Apts
lo cate~ en Colom a\ Dr
ben1nd H1ghway Patrol PQst
on Jackson P1 Ke 2 bedroom
now ava1lable Ren t st a~s;
S290 month Low &amp; mod8r
ate 1ncome EQual Hous1 r1g
Opportljl1lty 17401446 3344.
TOO 1 800 750-Cl750
Mld ctl epcn North Foortl·,
Avenue 2 •oom eH1 c• eon~;y
no pets Oepos1t &amp; prev10t!S
rent a t re ferences ut11it ~s
pa1d 740-9 92 0165
·1
Mode rn 1 bedroom apt
17 401446 0390

from
S7 000
Home s
Forec losu res VA HUD For
lls!lngs SOD 391 5228 exl
1709

New 28 R apts 1n town All
e1 ectr rc water se wer trash
111cl'uded C A S525 rent
plus depoSit
No pS:s
(740)441 , 184

Totally remodeled
mtenor '
3 bectroom hOuse cen tral
heat &amp; a1r wa s11er'dryer
Used 14x 64
2 hook- up tencec! yard stor·
Foreclosure 7BR SBA only N1ce
$1 8,000 For listings cal l Bedroom Only $4995 Call age bldg $4 75 per mon th
(740)38 5·0696
rent (740)441 1 i .,
800-39 t -5 228 ext F254

New 2BR apts m tOwn All
e1ect11C water sew er , tr&lt;l ~ h
mcluoed C A S525 r en~
plus ct epo stt
No pet s
(7 40) 44t 1184 (7 40)441
0194

Due to O I VOR C~ Sellmg
2002
mobile
home
Excellent cond1t1on p1ce
se: reened front porch house
For Sale house 1n Mason type gutters shmgled rooi
$62 500 house In New t) eat pump v1ny1 s1 d1ng
Haven $52 000 (304)882 $29 DOO 00 740 949 2543
or 740 992 ·3H 6
3200 •

'

'

.,

i BR WID hookup elec tnc or
ga s no pe ts $290 plu s
depOSit
{740)339 0362
(740)441 11 84

Attention\
Local company otfenng NO
V1ew photoslrnfo on lin~
DOWN PAYMENT" programs for you to buy your , ts a Steal" 4 bedroom 2
home mstead of renting
alh , 2 car garage New
• 100% f1nanc111g
aven, WV Cod e 6505 or
• Le ss than perfect credit
all (304)882-3368
acce pted
• Paym ent could be t he
bedroom f1n1shed base
same as rent
en! we ll m a1 nta1ned 1
Mortgage
Localors
ere w1th 2 extra acres
(7401367 .0000
pt1ona l Loca ted m Pomt
leasanl WV Code 9905
Cape Cod Home 2185 SO
r call 304 675 1536
Feet. 2 112 Ba, 3 Br 2 Car

P?8-0003

n(p:&lt;ubl~•=sh=i~nna~C=o~m=o&lt;a~,n~vl~

Full Basement F1mshed
Attic New Wmdows Central
A1r, Detached 2 Car Garage
(304)882 3246 or (304 )882
2371

acres 3 i 00 sq fl
car garage 1n R1o. Grande barn Cit)' water electn c
Call
(740)446·-2927
or sept1c, c11y schools 2 m1\es
south of Gallipolis o n Rl
(740)339·0365
218 Pnm e locat1on won1
NEW BANK REPOS
last
$55, 000 se r1ous
ONLY 3 LEFT
(74 0)441
ASSUME LOW MONTHLY mqu1nes only
7333
PAYMENTS
OWNER FINANCING
Appr 1 acre near Gall ,polts
2 BAJ1 Bath Farmhouse 1n
AVAILABLE
Land con t ract (7 40) 36 7Country w/10 acres, sUi table
304-755-5566
7886
to build 3 m11es from
No down payment appx
Hartford
$49,500
For sal e 112 acre lot Ga s
2000 sq It c/a &amp; heat 3-4 water sewer Call for details
Homestead
Rea lty
(304)882·2405, (304)675- bedrooms 1n Pomeroy 740 (740)446 3467
949 7004
5540
_...:.__,-_...:__ _ _ _N_o_O_o_w_n,.-P-ay_m;_en_t_L_e-ss
REAL EsTATE
2 or 3 BR home m c1ty l1m1ts
than perfect credit 0 K FJVe
wlgaraga $44 900 must
m1nutes
from
Holzer
see
(l40}A46-4404
or
Hosp1tal Three Bedrooms Raai·Estate Wanled Local
(7:40)446-0196
-One Bath Level lot Newly person lookmg for a 11ome to
buy All cash
Me 1gs or
3 bedroom 2 bath Ranch remodeled 740-4 16 3130
Galha No double Wide or
style house, newly ramod
OAKWOOD HOMES OF
modular 740··41 6·3 130
eled B1dwell area Reduced
• NITRO, WV
IH'\1\IS
To $65,000 Call (740)441·
SUPERSTORE
740 709 5952
1
52B or (
)
after
OFFERING CLAYTON
~~=~~===~
4:._Pm-'----.,.------,. FLEETWOOD GILES MHE t!
_
10
4 year old Colomal on 3
AND OAKWOOD
HOU~"'E'S
acres Appfox 1,900 sq tt 3 LOWEST PRICES· BEST .,
FOR RE.vr
bedroom, 2 bat hs 2 car SERVICE GUARANTEED
11
bedroom house
garage Master bedroom rs DRIVE A UTILE • SAVE A
Garf1eld Ave
Gall ipOli S
28x24 with a JaCuZZI tub
LOT
S3001 mO
(740)441 0194
$120,000 (740)446-7029
304 755 5885
Two House s One Wltf"l tun _17_4_0_14_4_1._1_16_4_ _ _..:_

;:::;::!iii; ,,.,,~;. r .

i

20

20

•

�'

.

•

..www.mydailysentinel.com
I \ \' ,\ (' '

New big 2 bedroom aP.t.
Private loc.e.tion close to
, Waterts ewe'r
' Included. No pets. Deposit
: Hi"qulred.
$695/month
' (7401441 -11 84 •

, nOspilal.

lr!lew big 2 bedroom apt.
Priva te location close to
hospital.
Water/sewer
. Included No pets. Deposit
• requ ir ed.
$595fmonth
~ (7401441 - 1184, 1?40)441 0194
Pleasant Valley Apartme'nt
Are now taking Applications
lor 28R. 38R &amp; 4BR ..
Applications
are
ta ken
Monday th ru Friday, trom
9:00 AM -4 PM Office IS
Located at .1151 Evergreen
Dr rve Porn! Pleasant. WV
Phone No. is (304)6755806. E.H.O
Tara
Townhouse
ApartmentS, Very SpEi.cious.
·2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/ 2
Bath , Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Poot , Patro. Start $385/Mo.
No Pets . Leasd Plus
Securrty Deposit. Required,
F40)367-7086.
Twrn RrverS Tower rs acceptrng applications lor wartrAg
list for Hud·subs1zed. 1· br.
apartment, call 675·6679
·. EHO
,...-~----..,
SllAl'E

~-.__ _iol-llilRiioiRii~•-,ii
'r_

_.

.
Downtown Qllrce Space- 5
room su rte $650/mo: 1 ·room
e ffice- $225/mo : 2 ' room
~u ite S250!mo
Secunty
Qeposrt requrred You pay
u~lities. All spaces very nice.
: Ele&lt;Jator Call (740)446-364 4
: IQJ appomtment •

''I

I '"

II

I

BIBERT
BISSELL

CDtiSTIICTIIIII

740-992-1611

r

9 week old mate Sheltie dog VS . 59.000
miles , all
F1rst shOts and wormed. options, leather. new tires,
firm .
'sab le
m color
$300 ·maroon · $5,000
(740)256-6265.
17401645-0626

Oltice/Apartment-·3 Story
Building with garage, located rn downtown Po meroy.
Call IBr Details 740-992·
7851 .

1997
PlymotJth
Grand
Voyager. Wh ite 2 sl. drs.,
good cond., runs good.
$3,500 OBO. Calll7401441·

AKC
Aegrstered. 1997 Camara. Metallic owne r : $8,500; (740)367W1emaraner Puppres. Will green, t owner/adult owned, 7435: 17401339-3955.
be ready in 3·4 weeks Call less than 64,000miles, V6,
For sale. 1995 Dodge
(304)675-6338
aUtomatrc, air.CD, excellent
Caravan 3.3V6, luggage
and
sharp.
$6,800.
rack. c lean inside and out.
CKC Registered Golden
17401446-0369 .
good ti res. 156,000 mitos.
Retriever puppies for sale.
Ford Taurus V6 '. $1,200. Phone : (740)441 Have had ti rst shots and 1999
wormed . All female, $250. engine. automatic transmis- ··7i:99r9•
_":':'-----'"":'.,
(740 )388 ·~965 .
sian, power windows &amp; door f140 M
~-t
locks. $2,800. Call (740)44 6OTOR&lt;...'l:'C1.r....Y
Oalmat1an
Pups
AKC 0425.
4 WHEF.UX'
Registered $200 each .
13041937-2929
1999 Sunll re $3,995; two 1981 Harley Sportster Runs

Private mobile home space
in centenary. Sorne restrlcSaturns
$3,49~. good $2995.00. Call 740·
·• !tons app ly. $ 125 P,er month Doberman Pups. · Black 7 1999
$4 .695; 1995 S-10 $2.495 742-2760
(7.40)446·4053.
Tan $200 (304 )675-8196
others
instock.
3
after 5pm
\II W.C II\ \IJI'-11
months/3,000 mile warranty. 1998 Softail Chopper. 96 Cll.
COOK MOTORS
in . S&amp;S engine, 5 speed
p10
HOUSHIOUl
Full blooded Pit Bu.ll pup328 Jackson Pike
trans. day-tech, frame and
$50 each.
Call
(740)446-D103
more. $14,500 cedi after
pres.
e\lenings (740)388-0163 or _ ___:_..:.:,_:__:_:.:.._ _ 5:00pm {304)675-6105
(740)
_
.
2000 Kia Sophia. 4 door,
388 6901
autOmatic, 27mpg, 72,000 2001 Grizzly 600, alJtO,
Puppies- Chihuahuas $200; miles, goOd condition. $800 ·green, less than ·300 miles,
Cock·a-poos,
$ t50 &amp; $200; in brakes. filters, tires. belts S4.5QO, (740)742-4011 ·
Appliance
Rat Terriers. $100: second ate. tuneup. Will take trade.
s4.ooo 080 . 2001 Harley Davidson
shots &amp; wormed. (740)992- Asking
(740)441 -9 378 ,
Heritage Sottail ClassiC,
Warehouse 9475
excellent condition, several
70
2002 Mltsubishr l ancer. 5 extras.
$14 .500
phone
M~ICAt
";n Henderson. WV. Pre speed, loaded, adult driven, (740)985·3938
IN~IlUIMENrS
owned applrcanes starting at
rebu ilt title , $6.500. Call
$75.&amp; up all under warranty.
{740)256-6936
2002 HD Softai! Dellce.
we do service work on all Story and Clark Piano :.___:_:.:...:.:.::.:....~--- 'many eKtras including wide
Make and Models (304),675- 3040675-3273
92 Chevy " Z·71 $4,800. tire, chrome, Python Pipes
7999
(740)339-0368 or (740)367- 7,000 miles. (740)446-2815
FRuns&amp; ·
0827.
VEGETAJILE';
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Claik
2002 Honda Aecon E$
95 Camero Z·28, 350, auto, 250cc, AT)/, excellent c·ondiChapel Road. Porter. Ohio.
(740}446-7444 1-877·830- tHome Grown Tomatoes. T-Tops, leather, great shape, tion $2200 (304)675-1444
9162. Free Estimates. Easy Field Rlln , $B per bucket or $5,500; 92 Corsica. V· 6 .
linancrng, 90 days same as you pick $5 per bucket. auto. 4dr. lots of new parts, 650 Yamaha V Star ClJstom
nice car. $1 .600: (740)742- 6;300 miles. $3,200
cash. VlsaJ Master Card. (740)379-91 10
4011
{740)256-1618 or (740)256Drive- a- little save alot
6200.
·McKean Farm
:-~:-...
Moving sale- Washers $95; large assortment pumpkins. 95 Honda Accord . $700
CAJ\.1PF..RS &amp;
dryers $95 : GE electrrc guards. Indian corn. fodder, lmj:Jounds!Repos hom $500
MmOK Hor.oo
r~nge S125: Fngrdarre relrig- hay bales (740) 446-9442, listings B00-391-5227 Ext
erator almond in color $150': 556
Centenary
Road . C548.
1995 Starcrafl lightweight
Kenm or(! upnght freezer Gallrpolis.
99 Honda Accord LX . l ots of
truck camper Used· 4 times,
$175; ches t freeze r $ 175;
extras, 3 TV 's, DVD, custom
$4,500. 1740)245·91 09 m
couch $75: table &amp; chairs
stereo, $7,000. (740)7091740)44 1-7632.
$100,' table &amp; chatrs $40
161/t.
Skaggs Appliances
1998
Plymouth 2000 Aerolite. Sli de out
as at Oct t
28' camper traile r. needs Grey
repair. make afjer :' (1) tread- Breeze. air, auto, 4 9yl. Fulty eqpt. All ( Hitch eqpt.)
12t6 Eastern Ave .
mill. hke new. $100: (1) set of $1,800 OBO. , 1740)256· $6900. 740-99;1-5963
17401446·7398.
one row cultivators , $75; ( 1.) 1233.
'I 1~\ II t ""
Thompsons Appliance &amp; turning plow tor small tracReparr-675-7388." For sale. tor, $45: (I ) lar!W attic fan,. . SotJthern Aura Sales
701 2nd Ave.
re-conditiOned automat1c $100. 3H .P gasoline en gine
IMPROVEIWNI~
1740)446·8554
washers &amp; dryers. ref r1gera - arr co mpresSor (740)256·85 GMC 7000 Sierra diesel
tors . gas and electric 6444 .
bucke t truck, $6 ,500; BN
BASEMENT .
ranges, arr condrtroners. and
WATERPROORNG
w!inger washers. Will do For Sa te or lease Stora9e tractor w/4 ft. brush hog,
reparrs on maJOr brands in wa reho use cdst $40,000. kin&lt;j cutter &amp; 711. blade, Unconditional lifetime guarshop or at your home.
zoned S-3. lor Sale Lot on $2,500; 87 Ford F-150 pu antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
6th Street «&lt;SI $15.000 call 4x4 302 Ssp. $2,000.
24 Hrs. (740) 446·
ANTIQU~
days (304)675-1 t60 nights White 1994 Chryslet" lHS, Call
0870, Rogers Basement
auto, VS, $1,200 · 080.
L,~-------,.1 ,1304)675,6863 1
Waterproofing.
17401256- 1233 _
I \In I""' 1 1'1 II..,
AntiQlJe relngerator camp.

Gooos

·oso.

--::o-.,

HOME

r

&amp;11\I'I(Jt"

~ 15

~r'l:lo:-_-~F:-.~---.,1

L

,------------Buy or
sell
Riverine

•--oi~iiiiiiiioii
' iiiioii;r-r
'

19B5 Ford truck F150 6

lop

Antiques . t124 East Main 0% Financing for up to 36
on SA •124 E Pomeroy. 740- months on John Deere
9'9'2-2526 . Russ Moo re . Compact and 5000 • Series
owner
Tractors wtth John Deere
Credrt approval. Check them
Mt&lt;;CH.J, \NWLIS
out! Carm1chae1 Equipment
IViERUIANI&gt;ISI-:
Inc (740)446-2412

F"l

F used natural gas furnace90+ eflidency. ao,OOo BTU
Heil 1- used natural gas
water heater. Used lumber &amp;
siding for sate. Cell phOne
(740)441-2667.

10'x16'x7' Green House.
wfltle plastic sides. clear on
r~t. e11haust fan &amp; some
etectrrc. $1 .800. (740)742·
4011
Extra long Twtn 'Bed. Ouahty
' Mattress. great tor tall per·
sq.n, $200, (304)882-_2494

For sate. 3.5 HP Brrggs &amp;
Stratton hOrrzontal shaft
erigrne for 99 cart or? $95
Phone (740}4a 1-7999.

JET

TRUCKS

Ir

SIBS . Runs.
~~~446·3888 o• (740)446·

on

RJj{ SAIJ;;

r

AERATION MOTORS
Repa~ted . New &amp; Reburlt In
Your ProSta r Trar ler Dealer.
Stock Call Ron EvanS. 1- Carmtchael EqUipment Inc 4X4 Truck 1997 Ford
Ranger XLT V-6 . Automatic ,
800-537·952 8.
1740 )44P·2 412
Low Mtieage, Very Clean
740-742-3020 or 992-3394.
lrke new lnvacare fold111g
97 Chevy t f2 ton S1tv~rado
wheelchatt 201118 seat- wt
4x4 eKtend cab, 68,000
cap 2501b Cost S545, sell
mrles. \ltCtory red , many
$250 (7 40)446-4561
elrtras. 1 owner, never been
Westerns Wrll Trade · or
smoked in. perfect condition ,
E11change (304)675-5884
$11 .000 .1740)742-2661

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR

BARGAINS
~

·----

•

'

Wll'fl:il
iiTORlGI:

H0metown

OF BOATS,
CA~PERS ETC.
, AT THE
"!EIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS
OCT. 8, 2005
9:00AM· 12:00

.
by
Hometown Market

____

Deli &amp;. Fun Service
· Catering SelecUons
405 Pearl Street • Middleport, OH
Phone (740) 992-3471
fax
992-5976

740·985;43'72

Cornarstona
Elactrlcal
Sarvlca
• FOR All YOUR
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS
• (,\RPENTRY
, • ROOF • PAINT
OHIO LtCEN!iE # 38244

iltffl l.P11111!111 II

Urlf.SoiW1

.ldrilh~,.,

"'fmnl!i....

[""''
.U~Iftar)

c.o...

Crrlltrrr
11Mi l.infllet.l1~

huStW!"
• Co-Otntr
:ntlifiw~

lw,.\.H""'I J1.

740·367·0544
740·367-0536

The Wiseman Ag.t~IK')'. Inc . ~ ;
4~ I S~:l'llOd Av~:nue
~ IIUTO'
P.O. llo.-.; .15\1
~::;,:·;:~:
Uullipu\i:-.. OH ·L'ifljJ .OJ.'itJ -""'""
Ph : !{()( ). J9~ - 12tllJ u r ?.J 0 -4-'fl-.\6-U
www.wis~:m ~l llil~cn ..:y.~~~~n .

•

Insured

Dltchl--"'-nchlng
'"" ....

~-

•

KlngKutter

~ ~~

~

3

· :::::· ::::!:'iJ.~:::~~~:=:~~e~~!:::::.~·~~:_:::::::-:_~,.....::':::::..::::·-:.;""~-.):~~·~'~-2!o~r:J
..
, .,-v
L___:~:_:•:_:..-....-.:

POWER WASHING
(Commercial and Re~idential )
Mobile 'Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Desreasing of
. Equrpment, Boats. Campers, Tractor Trai lers,
Dllmp Trucks, painting or staini ng of yotJr declo..
1
or log home, Alllminllm brightening.
Special rates to Trucking and Dump 'Trucking Compan ieS:

~

BARNEY
CAN YOU CHANGE
A FIVE·DOLLAR
BILL, SILAS ?

LAWN ' CARE DIVISION
(Commercidl and Residential)
.
,
Mowing, Trimming, Tree Trimming. Aeration, Fertilization1
Sprayin g of fence lines, Leaf Removal. as well as small '
landscaping jobs such as planting dnd mulching.
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED tOWEST PRICES

N0 PROBLEM ''

r----------:--,:-----....,,..,,..,....,
G001) !! CHANGE
THIS-UN INTO

A TWENTY !!

$219

~::J.

,

____....Iiiiii!md:L.Y.."..L.~~J..I

to 101 Ul
Optional Upgrades Available;
Argon Gas &amp; Heat Mirror

Pfi"-VS YO\l f.I.Ei'.RD CJr Tf\E

6U!&gt;I~

OF ELl I'll t-l"'-Tii&gt;IG TI\E.

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.

1·800·291·5600

(i F~O

~~

Office: (740l 992-2804 Cell: (740j517-688l

148..L, WE.SS Wl-\0
TI-\E 1'\\ t&gt;t&gt;LE MN-\

W"-S!

740:992·4119

i/NEW IDEA

K&amp;K EXCAVATING

Pass

Pass

Pass

See
' ~ocJW "RJ'' ·

partnership's me1t1ods, promi sed some
values. With nothing, he would have dou·
bled. So when. on the next round, North
stJpported diamonds, Sollth ' raised himself to six
There seem to be 13 easy winners: two
spades ,. three hearts, seven diamonds
and one club. Parhaps you are gnashing
your teeth at missing a baby grand slam
that reqllires only trumps splitting 2·1.

Hupp

Danny 740-590-3702
or
Bob 740·843-5437·

, Wedneadey, Sej:,t. 21, 2005

SUT 'IOU T RIED THAT

LM·T

~EAR' REt1E118EI!.?

By Bernice Bede Oeol
The drive to gel to the top in your chosen field of endea11.or will b e stranger
than ever within you in the year ,
ahead . You should succeed becatJse
you'll learn whatever's necessary, do
whatever It takes and be fire d up by
powerful ambition
VIRGO (Aug . .23-Sept. · 22) The
more m 8 ntally challenging mattars
Qecome today, the boner you'll do and
th e more you'll like it . To you , figuring
out th e answers will be like playing a

A.NO '(OU FOuND Ot..JT

IMPORTS

YOU

STtJIII&lt;. AT

.SOCC.EI&lt;.!

YE'S! WHEN I

TRY To SCOI!.E
THE 5ALL r

DILES HEARI\G CE\TER
~Mo._

Wal· !\I art Plaza

"PEANUTS

David Siders

t304) 675-3400

Ge111nlogist
17401446-3283

•••

•••

Gene Arms/Owner* Weekly Tru~h Service
-1- yr:-. of Rc! \;~h l c Scrvke
( K~'l'l' \'our M"ncv L••o.:alf

G&amp; R SANIT,\TION
.H% I B:•il cy Run Rd ..
Ponll'rn •. OH

Call R.D. Const. ·
for aU your home

re1mir nee(ls, roofing.
sidin~.

udd·ons,

remodeli11g etc.,
rn.'t· eslinullcs
174111 '1'12-2979

lean messa c

.Sizes &amp;'lf!O'
· ' to 10'X80'

...

S~l()·!fat

Tllrl

174111446-7619

Gallipolis. OH

.Jot\ nne Siders

Operalor 740-992-3174

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

-·-

Diane McVey
!U_Cft.,

JACKSON

ADIENS ,

Dl H~~m~ Simi

2711"" lhioo Simi

~~ - m u~-~-

r\1..\flo."•"*l-.,.tl!kJ

{la!T-.. \I,M, Tt..ro

l.lJ. ~

Sliurdl)bf'~

n«~) l1J6.14JO

• Room Acklhlons le
Remodeling
•New Ciarages
• BKtric•l I Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Outten
1 Vinyl Siding &amp; P1intlng
1 Pllio lnd Porch Deck•

· furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 W'~ r:tJI3
Pomeroy, Ohio

lerlee

t'
\~

")

1"1-~ r-.

12% Triumph 12% sweet horse feed
$5.50/!IO.Ib. bag ·
48% Soybean Meal m.251100 lb bag
Cob Meal with T.M. Sail
$6.50/100 lb bag
Mushroom compost (Bulk only)

' :SUNSHINE CLUB
11-l£

Ohio

ro/r HAS ..liST MJf.roXID

A~OCV~I'-l

1:1£ALTH {AR£ Fa?. SEAJIORS ..

45769

or $3.00 Each

'

&lt;:Red ':Rose Bteenhouse
Rd.

740-949-1183

Tnl.iso:

GARFIELD

.,....,.....--..,.------,!

Pl&lt;ase adopt from the
Meigs Ca1111y Dog PM&lt;i
and make afr,.nd1111" life.

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE

·740-992·3779

252 Upper River Road • Gallipolis
74G-44"6-0842 • 949-1155 Eveni!JgS

· Noroegion elk hound

: Yel~w klbs &amp;_retriever

PO N01'
-KJCK ODIE!
'

mtxe.s

· Ger1111111 skel"rd &amp;collie

MANlEY'S
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

'A DVERTISE

m1xes
·Walker caan hound

· Seago mixes
MANY CtJrE PUPPIES!

IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

WOLFE.

"Middleport"s only
• Self-Storage-

MAl WfE.N Aft/ C.E.

mas 1111 umc~
Insured
Free Estrmates
Semor Crtrzen Drscount
30 Yrs Expenence
740.992-2621 or
741).416-4902

BACI\1 LlJMBER
Scorpion Tractors

Complete Home Repairs
&amp; Remoelinu ·
wv 035087
OH 35928

.GRIZZWELLS

Now Available At

HOM£

Chuck Wolle
Owner

(7 40) 992-0167

.....:._~:___--~-------------r-;__

"Taki11g Tilr Sti11g Out Of
Hard Work!"
Mid-Size 4Whcel Dri ve Tractor
with :lOhp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985·330 I

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

..... v-t

--~-

!

~~~=~
---I

•

ToMan)· 5044'7 ~ornado
Colo"
Rac1ne, OH

-

~--~--,

' (bulk onlyl
11·17·17 • S275ton

~

,J

1

cost

35537 Sl Rt 7 N

Mums 4·$1

BUS

il.JIIil91-J571 .o

pd

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I NEvtR KNEW TI&lt;ERE WAS A
TO 'OBEDIENCE SCI&lt;OOL

Shade River AG Service, Inc

Hours

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

YOUNG'S.

by Luis Campos

Remember, though, that you contracted

ColeDrlty CIPher cry~ rllms a~ crested from quota~ans by 1am~us people pasl end PI'Bs&amp;n!
Escn ~er In the dpl'ler !llands lor another

'tor 12 tricks, not 13. You should prepare

Taday's Clue: R equals Y

-D T

"VFLFLAVJKGF

C J W N D·N

LFFEDKI ."

" L F L Z V R . . . D T_ EWF
SF

J

NN

M·T. ''

PZ VL

J

IDAVJK

H0 J VR

JA Z ME

GJVVR

z'p

E W JE

SDEW

ZTGJV . SDNHF

__

W..~E'!bU ~
13'\\S\\?i.'itW ito.¥-\~~
A\16E~·MII~MENT"

ca\l\\%1..\1-1.6..
&amp;iU~~~?

.

'::~;~:~' S©\t~~~ ttf~· :::~
UittC llty CU.lf R. '01UN _.;__ _ _ __

STINK~·

Main Street
Pt. Pleasant. \\'V

Hill's Self
Storage

CELEBRITY CIPHER

BIG NATE

OA&lt;I;OI II:. ... I.leDJ

' leave. a message

points

Round tent
Give the
go-ahead

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Old Tour de France rideiS don111'110 salvagelhetr

GAUIPOUS

740-742·2293

Psychic&amp;
may soe
one
Bangs and
slams
Magic word
Rule
Tow· zone
Bit part
Animated
character
Invitation
addendum
Focal

forcing opemng bid. Norlh's pass. in lhiS

for a 3-0 diamond Oreak.
At trick two, cash the diamond ace. ll both
opponents follow, you cart claim all at the
"'I tricks. But when West diScards, you must
llnblock the heart ace, then continlle with
a low diamond to dllmmy's seven . Give
East a trick with his diamond nine so that
you can open a' door to the king and
queen of hearts. You win East's retllrn,
play you r second low dia"mond to
dunlmy's eight. and cSsh those two top
hearts, discarding your pair oj club losers.
. Always eye your entries.

-l15'1t Staed Au.

'" Insured"'

·ana ee

"Othello"
36
heavy
Tolled
prot's
38
degree
··star Wars'" 39
princess
41
Paklslan's . 42
language ·
Harden,
43
as clay
44
Makes
public
46
Have
poison ivy 47
Shine
lustrously 48
Not
51
outgoing
Frat
letters

be
your
in .six
diamonds
aftertallows
west
leads
theline
spade
queen
and East
suit?
West pre-empted by jumping. to three
Spades over Sollth's strong, artillcial and

good game o l chess.

Call Gary Stanley

alliance ·

A newer 10 Prevloue Puzzle

· careers ; they si_mpiy recycle." - Seattle Times' Dwight Perry

Call

We do H all ex.cept

... THE
NEWSPAncnl
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

i

INSTALLED

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING .

25 Years Local E1

~[i

i- . . . ~

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Dozer - Skidsteer .
Mini Excavator Work

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• Relerences
Available
• Free Estimates

.

Vinyl Double Hung

o u:c;~

Pass

Pass

F.ast
Pass

41 Wintry cry
42 Monet or
t TO peaoera
Gauguin
4 London
45 Annuol
49 Wln11 and
radio
7 Go back·
dines
packing
so Pipe bendo
1t Well.flnown 52 Worthlell
Pharaoh
coin
12 Enlloto;aln 53 Shempoo
-(hyph.j
ldd~ive
14 Lomb'o pen 54 Faotldlous
name
55 Playback
15 Tax shelter
machine
16. Slick
56 "Kyoto calh
,17 lq•piJrwyor 57 Duet
18 Operallng
• number
a ferry
58 Hollow
19
20 Gumshoe,
often
·
DOWN
21
22 Poker card
24
23 "'Ben~ -"
Medicine
24 Slops up
chest Item 25
27 Hortlcul·
(hyph.)
turalart
2 Wool knot
26
30 Submarine, 3 Remain
mll)'be
lor a while 27
31 Turf warrionl 4 Wild horses ·
32 Part ot TGIF 5 Light brown 2B
34 "What- ·
e·- -de-sac
you say?"
7 Evergreens 29
35 Tundra ·
8 Baldwin
animals'
of films
31
36 Foot part
9 Distance
37 Dad's slstBf
measure
33
39 Overbearing 10 Couple
40 New World 13 Larr,
35

George Bernard Shaw wrote, ~o·er this
north door a trace slilllingers I 01 how a
Go thic craftsman's fingers I Could make
stones creep like ivy stems I And lilings
coruscate like gems."
You , South, although not Gothic , have lots
of gems- diamonds- in today 's deal.
Can you make the m coruscate in your
hands to pr oduce 12 tricks? What would

! -tEl

WINDOW SUPER "'"'·"'

740-446-9777

Pass

An entry is needed
to the assets

2~~

,

/

,

Free

2150 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

~orth

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

,

Sales • Parts • Service

West

Opening lead: • Q

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

JIM'S FIRM EQUIPMENT, INC.

.David Lewis
740-992-6971

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy. Ohio

'

Tree Service

~-

25 Years Experience

mo

JONES'

r&lt;WHOU..ONJ

,'C9nctete-wofk.

1/14JI

sOuth

State Auto offers
something special

'c Alf,....;
~' .Of
. --~P!:f..
. '

(7401992-5232
SxlO, IOxlO,
lOx IS. 10x20.
Hlx30

,.••. ,. 5.

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

~~

.

Phone

Soulh
.AK
¥A
tAKQ J I0 54
... 'A J I U

Wo.iale

much your savings can be.

B7 3
7 5 4 2
gast

-

rm

l)im:IIM" •

lt "s I he Aulo/Home Discount wi1h special
reduced rates if both car and home are
insured with Sinle Atito. Find ou1 how.

Storage

45783
Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
I'Jiedicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

Let me do 1l for youl

11gb and Dry

.

1&lt;1

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

Free Eslimates

'-4~~Tuppers Plains, OH

•

West
AQJ1 0!l7i14 • .1
• J • 2
¥10 876-43
• 9 6. 2
,. Q 9 6
• KB3

MONTY

170 I Jefferson Blvd. ·
Point Pleasant. wv
1304) 675-2630 ~ Ell="l

Ta~e

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

41800 SR #7

S..fm111

l.nll'!{lj f"untnl

'

+

740-667·0700. 740-843-5264

Crow·Hussell
Funeral Home; Inc.

09·20·0.~

• . BS2
¥ KQ5

Financial Services

Catering

For more Info. c•ll

North

Hupp Insurance

ExCAVATING

cylinder, atJStomatic, good
Service
body, runs . 900. (740)4 46- · 4x4 Commercial Ditch-Witch
with six-way blade, Digging974 2.
Depth up to 5'6" . Gas.
1988 Ford Ranger. V6, wa1er, Cable, Etectrrc &amp;
4WD Call (304)675 633B
·
·
.
. Dram lines (304)576-9005 ·

· 1995 Ford F-150, 302 V-8,
Auto • 4X4 , " 167,000 mites
John Deere 10 h. No Til Drrll $5,000 OBO (304)675-4080
tor,
Rent , Carmichael
98--S10 New Tires. Brakes,
Equrpment. (740)446·24)2.
Battery. Cailpack. Maroon.
John Deere 5' pull type Nice Trude;. $3.500.00. 740.
brush hog. 5260 (740)446- 742·3014 ,
3888 or (740)446·4477 . .
Don't buy a big gas hog, like
John Deere Commercial new 2001 Chevy S- 10.
Worksite
Pr.oducts 20.800 miles. extended cab.
Comp act Ewcavators/ Sk1d cost ne w $20.622, sell for
SteersfTractor
loader $8.900 . (740)388·0140 or
Backhoe rn stock. Check otJt 1740)339·0948.
our rental rates Great
For sale. 1984 Ford F250
lrnanc1ng
avartable
4x4 Ita! bed with ·goose n~
Carm1chael Equrpment lric
ball. trailer brake controller,
(7 40)446-2412
overload springs. 300 6 cyl ..
4 speed, lock out hubs.
POLE BUILDINGS
$1.200. Phone: {740)441 ·
·Any Style
'Any Srze
'Custom Burlt to fit your
7999.
needs.
4x4
'FREE Estrmates
FOR SAI.E
7411-596-2909

The Daily .Sentinel • Page 85

ACROSS

02 Chev. SilveradO 4x4, 4
door, $8,500; 98 Ford
·--oiiiiiiiliiiiiio•r Ranger auto $3,100 : 96·
Block. br1ck. sewer pipes, Dodge 4x4 $3,695; 2000
• New Homes
wrndows. linte ls. etc. Claude Nissan pu auto. air, $3,500;
• Garages
Winte rs, · Rio Grande, OH 96 ~issan ex cab. auto, air,
Call7 40.245~5 1 2 1
• Complete
$2,900; 98 Dodge Dakota ex
cab $3,200; 97 Ford Ranger
Remodeling
DAVIDSON METAL
ex cab $3,000; 98 caravan
ROORNG
$1 ,900 : 2000
Caravan
'18 Colors
$2, 800 ; 98 W~dstar van
'30yr" ' warranty in writing
$1 .800: 98 Jeep Cherokee
Stop &amp; Compare
'Professional ·lnstallation
98
Mere.
$3.200:
• Free Estimates
Mollnta1neer $2,800; 98
740·596-2909
GMC Sonoma auto &amp;· air,
$3,000.
VANS
B &amp; 0 Auto S.let
FoR SALE
PElS
Hwy 160 N.
HlR SALE
1740)446-6865
1994 Chevy Lumina van . 7
seater.
runs good, tooks
10 Week old AKC Cocker 1- 1990 Cadillac DeVille,
Spanrel Puppres:
but!, wredc:ed in front. 4 1:hrome good. Asking $1 ,000 080
black,
buft&amp;white, aluminum mag wheels . Sell 17401441 -0488.
white&amp;black . . butf&amp;black
parts or aiL C811 (740)44t: ,995 Dodge Caravan. good
Mo111er and Father on prop2667.
Engine, needs Transmission
ertv.
Shots, wormed .
1986 Jaguar XKS. V-12 $300 (304)675-3309
'
'
declawed. $350.00 Firm
V-12)
2
door
1995
Plymouth
Voyage
SE
engine
(yes
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sports car, bl ack. tan lnterl- van . f30K miles. 25 mpg.
a Wk. Golden Retriever pup- or. autO. runs wow! needs $2.400 080
pres. Full · blooded, no exhaust &amp; min'or attn., will
1994 PlymotJtl1 Voyaoe van
papers. parents on premrs- t1ade 60's or 70's GM, 125K miles, 25 mpg. $2,200
es, $100. Phone (740)645· 53500 080, (740)_416-091 B · 080. Both In good condi3569
1993 Cadillac DeVIlle, 4.9- lion. (740)441-1417.

r

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Phillip
Alder

DtnWING
SUI'I'U!S

Tuesday, September 20, 2005
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Tuesday, September 20, 2005

"

~

SLAP.'

LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 23} - You're
particularly sharp-wined in business
m a tters tod ay. especially when putting together a joint venture wrtH oth ers . You'll want to be -in tha driver's
seat in this situation.
SCO RPIO (Oct
24 -Nov. 22) A lthough you arf! by nature a se ii starter who can indepsndentty make
things happen , you're also a born
leader who enjoys the strength of
teamwo rk in which. c11an ces are.
today will be the case.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-D&amp;e. 21) Both physiCally and mentally . you're
raring 10 go and ready to roll today. II
you have something big to do, get an
early start and you'll produce double
of what you would norma lly ,ac:;corn··
pllsh .
C APRI CORN (Dec . 22 -Jan. 1 9) Activtties that are in the embryontc
stage and need lots of tending will
appeal best to you today. Put your
mundane workload . aside tor the
moment and de\lelop something big ,
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) There tsn't apt to be anything more
important or fun for you today than
being with or doing for those who you
consider to be first in your heart .
Nothing will take priority over them .
PtSCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Today
is the day to tackle all those mental
c h~ res you ha\le been puning' oH for
as long as you cou ld. Your thinking is
clear and precise now and the work
will be easiei th an normal for you .
ARIE S (Marc:;h 21-April1 9)- All you
have to do todn y is put forth th o necessary eHort and 11 IS almost guaranteed that personal accumulation can ·
be you rs. You have what it takes at
this time to fanen your bank account.
TAURUS (April 2b -MaY 20) - You
may go 1n th tnlcing you're going to just
let th ings happen today. but once you
gel involved in soniethtng yqu won't
be able to st op yourself form plltlln!iiJ
forth your own ideas and direction.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) An
annoying old t.problem that has held
you in its grip could loosen rls hold on
you today. This w tll be due in large
part to you r newly found courage and
strength you 'll bring to the. table .
C AN CER (June 2, ·July '22) - Whrle
i1 is not always true . today busmess
and ·p leasure will mix together beautifully, so if you're anemptrng to cut a
"eat, tt m•ght ~ smar:t to do so in convivial, pleasant surroundings.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - A strong
surge of ambition is with in you today,
enabling you . when noadad, to find
that powerful 5eeond effort to pllll off
the Impossible . When the, gomg gets
tough . you'll get tougher.
'

Ofour
harronljle letters of
Krombltd WOtdl
loW

tke

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to form fo1.1r simple wo1d1

I 1 I I I I'
MASLOT
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It--r.,i:-"1'::-T,--rl-'-.,,r--i
KOPEE

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.

1ft PRINT NUMSERED
{;If HTTEIS

Say what you will about

lrouble," one gossip said to an·
other ,
always gives you
someth~ngto-·-· ·-· - ··

_

.

I'

·,t

Complere the ·el'luckl• q'vo:ed

· by f tlltng in the miurn9 .,._,rdr
you dlh'•lop from st~p No. 3 Mlow

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

Sorr.fid · Elect - W1loop • Outwit- WISH you WERE
Overheard at party: "Some people make you feel at
horne olhers make you WISH you WERE.·
'

.

'

ARLO&amp; JANIS
l.OOK WHAf

J HAVE. ~

9/20/05

SOUP TO NUTZ
MY DaD caN Be8T

1.'1' '*""" ~ ruBE ...

�.

Page B6 •

The Daily Sentinel

'

Tuesday, September ao, :ioos:

www.mydailysentinel.com

Southern Cal's stay Bengals' defense.g)Ving good account so fa~
at No. !longest in
history of AP poll

said. "You go home, get into
bed and wake up the next
morning to break down the
film. Then you start getting
from Page Bl
ready for Indianapolis. If you
al players who spoke of their do
anything
different.
admiration for the former chances are you will be sorry
·
the next week."
New England defensive
It's a mantra that his playcoordinator.
''lt seems like he's been a ers parroted in the locker
head coach for 20 years," room Monday.
"We are excited, but there
Dllfer Sal.d. "He knows what
more games
buttohs· to push, and he treats are
Joe Andruzzi
said ..left."
"Youguard
can't
us with a great deal of focus on this .one. You have

· Slips
fromPageBl
an 0-25 skid when trailing after three
quarters - changed everything.
The touchdowns by Moss came I :II
apart, so the Cowboys still had time to
regain the lead. They seemed to be in
pretty good shape, too, when rookie
' Tyson Thompson returned the ensuing
kickoff to the 48. ·
A 6-yard run by Julius Jones followed, then came two incompletions.
Going for it on fourth down, Drew
Bledsoe hit Terry Glenn with a short
pass across the middle, but he couldn't
get the yards needed for a first down.
After the stop, defensive lineman Joe
,Salave'a threw open his arms, leaned
back and jiggled with delight, while
cornerback Walt Harri s bounced up and
down as if on a pogo stick.
The Cowboys had one last drive,
· starti'ng on their 21 with 36 seconds

Crennel

0
re~~~~:gh
Crennel's wait to . ~~~~tt~ ~~hi~~ ~~u t~~d :e x~
become a head coach was a one."

''

•

long ooe, the wait for his first
win was shorter than expected and came in the most
unlikely of places
Lambe au Field, where the
Browns were 0-5 dating to
1964.
In addition to receiving and
giving back the game ball ,
Crennel ·was doused with

Despite years of success as
. an assistant, . Crennel was
passed over for several head
coaching jobs. At times, he
wondered if he would · ever
get his chance.
Crennel. who doesn't regularly wear any of the five
Super Bowl rings he earned
with · New England and the

loi of improvement to
make."
'
Although things were
looking up . and the tow,n,
was caught up in rile team s
impressive start, Lewis was
in a prickly mood Monday .
The third-year coach complained that his team wasn'{
getting ehough respect .
:
"l think before the game,
people didn't feel like we'd
beat
the
Minnesota
Vikings ," Lewis said. "(
can't figure that out.
.
"People are very cynical,
if you notice,. If you turn on.
the news, 'Oh, the Bengals
win again, hah-hah.' It's
like it's something new."
Actually, the jokes and
the cynicism are long gone.·
The team has drawn some
of its biggest crowds for the
preseason and the season
opener. .
The strong start is some~
thing new, however. The
Bengals are 2-0 for only the
fourth time· since 1990, the
last time they had a win~
ning record and went to the
playoffs . The .challenge is
to take this huge steo in
stride.
. ··
"W~e not making a big
deal out\pf it," Palmer said.'
"We've g~t 14 teams thai .
will play uS\harder now that
we've kind df got an 'X' on
our chest, s in~e we're one
of the few team\ that are 2-

CINCINNATI (AP) team in tackles. Pollack
Whenever anyone menmissed all of training camp
tioned Cincinnati'S deep
in a contract holdout and
has been slower to come
and gifted offense o~r the
around - he had one tacksummer, right tackle Willie
Anderson cautioned that
le and lined up offsides
the Bengals were more than
twice Sunday, negating
just the sum of 'Palmer,
Minnesota fumbles.
Johnson and Johnson.
The defense is ·going
through growing pains
"It's not one-sided, the
way people ate depicting
masked by all the intercepit,': the Pro Bowl tackle digging in near its own goal tions and fumble recoverline.
insisted. "Who knows? The
ies. Cincinnati leads the
"The turnovers they got league in takeaways after
defense could be 10 times
us and the field position two games, bu1 ts
·
better than Us. "
secon d . It 's not better, but.it 's not were the key to the game," to-last in run defense, givbad, either. And that 's . the quarterback Carson Palmer ing up 5.4 yards per rush ..
said Monday. ''When you
bigg~st difference so far in get the ball inside the 50 , . "When y~u're young, the
the 2-0 Bengals, who are no you really on ly need to get more you do something, the
longer getting dragged a couple of first downs to more familiar it becomes,
down by their defense .
get within field goal range. ·the more comfortable you
The Bengals intercepted You think you've got points are with it," Pollack said
Daunte Culpepper five on th'e board. Not every Mond.ay. "You know how it
. times and recovered two game is going to be like is."
fumbles in a 37-8 victory that _ you wish it was.
The Bengals did a good
over the. Viking s · on · "Our qefense is playing job covering Culpepper's
Sunday, making it easy for phenomenal. It has really .receivers, forcing him to
Carson
Palmer,
Chad exceeded a lot of people's take risks that backfired.
Johnson and Rudi Johnson expectations."
By the second half, he was
to do their thing.
The ·expectation was that so rattled that he threw one
"That' s a lot for our the offense would carry the · scree n pass directly to
defense, but if we can do team for the first few weeks O'Neal and threw another
that all year long, it'll be while (he defense came up for grabs in the end
great," said cornerback together. Coach Marvin zone. O'Neal came down
Deltha O'Neal, who had Lewis changed coordina- with that one, too.
"Event ually the rush
three interceptions.
tors in the offseason, proWith the turnovers, the mating ·Chuck Bresnahan. would get there and we hurBengals were able to start . and drafted linebacker s ried him some, h.e threw it
four of their 12 drives in David· Pollack and Odell away and made some errant
Vikirigs ' territory and Thurman in the first two throws," Lewis said. " I
another at their own 47. rounds.
think the II ' guys playing
Minnesota's defense spent
Thurman starts at middle · together at times play ed
a lot of time on the field, linebacker and leads the pretty well. We still hav e a

: Southern California's run at as coach after a 41-24 loss to
No. ! 'in The Associated Press UCLA on Saturday.
Top 25 reached a recordNo. 25 UCLA is one of four
breaking level and Oklahoma, teams to move into the rankthe team USC replaced in the ings this w~ek, along with
top spot almost two years ago, Oregon,
Alabama
and
was unranked for the first Michigan State.
time since 1999.
The Spartans·j~mped all the
With the Trojans top-ranked way to No. 17 off their 44-41
in the AP media poll released victory over Notre Dame on
Sunday, USC has now been Saturday.
No. I for 22 straight polls,
Aditi Kinkhabwala of The
besting the record set by · Bergen Record in New Jersey
Miami ·from 2001-2002.
had Michigan State lOth on
USC received 57 of 65 first- her ballot, giving the Spartans
place votes. No. 2 Texas extra credit for winning on the
received the .other eight first- road ..
place votes. LSU .is No. 3 fol"What it came down to is
lowed by Vtrgtma Tec(l and they're 3-0 and they ;won at
Florida, rounding out the top Notre Dame, a place that was
five.
all revved up and excited
The Trojans took over the about Charlie We is ," she said.
top spot Dec. 7. 2003. after ''To go in there and withstand
then-No. I Oklahoma lost the a charge, and beat a good
Big 12 title game to Kansas. team was very impressive."
Dropping out along with
State.
USC won· the Rose Bowl to Oklahoma were Clemson, an
finish the season No. I in the overtime loser to Miami,
AP poll, then began last sea- Boston College and Fresno
son 111 the same spot.
State.
The Trojans became just the
In the USA Today coaches'
second team to go wire-to- poll , the. top tive is identical to.
wire as No. J· in '2004. started the AP poll - USC, Texas,
this season as the overwhelm- LSU. Virginia Tech and
ing top-ranked team and have Florida.
·
done nothing prove the voters
The second half of the top
wrong so far.
10 in the AP poll starts with
USC improved to 2-0 No.6 Florida State. Georgia is
Saturday night with a 70- 17 seventh, Ohio State is eighth,
win over Arkansas at the Los Louisville ,
ninth ' and
Angeles Coliseum. Heisman Tennessee is No. I 0 after losTrophy winner Matt Leinart, · ing 16· 7 at Florida.
Reggie Bush and the Trojans
No. II Purdue is followed
have scored 133 points.
by
Miami,
California.
But holding on to No. I is Michigan. Georgia Tech and
about to get tougher over the Notre bame. which dropped
next two weeks as USC hits six spots to No. 16 after its
tbe road. The Trojans play No. first loss under Weis.
24 Oregon in Eugene next
After No. 17 Michigan State
week and at No. 18 Arizona is Arizona State, Texas Tech at
State on Oct. I.
Alabama at No: 20.
The Sooners are out of the
Iowa, Iowa Stllte, Virginia,
rankings for the first time Oregon and UCLA are the
since Bob Stoops' first season final five.

r·-·. . . .
:!

0. "

Freeze

\

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Wayne Jarvis, 95

INSIDE
• Rita grows to .
Category 2 hurricane
with 110 mph wind as it
roa~ past Florida Keys.
See Page A2 ,
• River City Players
meet, plan new musicals.
See Page A3
• Health Fair set for
Friday. See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
'
See Page AS
• Club members learn
art of creating topiaries.
See Page AS
• F.FA judging results.
See Page AS
• Ohio senator opposes
Bush on taxes, Social
· Security. See Page A6

I'

,

•

same:·
"Let's
right on he
the said.
practice
fielddoandit ·.1
in the classroom, and hopefully we can get it right' in the·
game."
:

I

J.

REED

Pomeroy Village Council ,· Donald Cheadle, Granville
Kenneth Buckley•. Syracuse Stout; Lebanon, Thomas E.
Village Council, Kenneth Allen , Donald R. Dailey.
Grueser, Sutton Township · John R. Krider, Lawrence H.
Trustee, Randy Hill, S~ipio Hayman, Bob Sellers, Garry
Township Trustee, and Philip Smith, Patrick M. Belt:
Erwin , Scipio Township Letart, Bob Morris, Dave
Trustee.
.
Graham, Bob L. Wood.
The following candidates · Olive, Juckie L. Westfall,
have been certified for town- Robert Headley. Carl P.
ship trustee races:
Barringer, . William
R.
Bedford, Robert F. Hawk, Osborne; Olive Township
Ronald Wood; Chester, Blair Clerk (unexpired term endWindon, 'Alan
Holter; ing March 31, 2008), Sari E.
Columbia: . Paul D. Cart.er, Putman-S uttle, Laurie H.,

j

I
i

RACINE- Despite meeting i.n .recessed session this
week, two divisions of the .
new water treatment plant
remain without bid awards
due to questions Racine
Council has concerning subcontractors for the construction of the new water treat- .
ment plant and engineer estimates for the electrical work.
"This is a major project for
this community and that's
why I'm trying .to address
these issues· now," Mayor J.
Scott Hill said to contr~tor ·
Bob Tolliver who represented
Downing . Construction from
Baltimore who had the low
bid for Division C which is
construction of the plant itself.
"l don't want a fly by night
outfitter," Hill added.
Hill 's concern did not stem
from · Downing's references
but from subcontractors
Downing employs to work on
projects.
When asked by Hill if
Downing had worked with·all
the subcontractor~ on the. list·
Tolliver replied that he had
worked with some but not all
and had requested references.
Hill informed Tolliver
that he had done background checks on some of

Please see BaOot. AS

Please see Racine, AS

Brlan J. Reed/photo

The first two sternwheelers pulled into Pomeroy on Tuesday in preparation for Pomeroy's annual Rally by the River, the
Sternwheel Riverfest. The Mudsock and the Hobby II docked yesterday morning at the Riverfront Amphitheater, the site of three
days of musical entertainment, contests and other activities. The festival is the community's biggest event of the year, and ;,odraws thousands to the amphitheater and parking .Jot. The Village of Pomeroy Will close the parking lot at 3 p.m. on Wednesday. .
Events will begin Thursday evening with a firetruck parade through Pomeroy and an open ing ceremony near the stage area. Katie
Reed, who will perform during \he opening ceremony, will also perform in concert beginning at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday evening.
Events are also planned for the afternoon and evening on Friday, and all day and evehing on Saturday.

Pomeroy reports hi~-skip,
accidents~ court news

WEATHER

Details on Page AB

.'

INDEX.

,

.

Calendars

A3

&lt;;Iassifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

DearAbby

A3

Editorials
Obituari"es
Sports

Submitted

phot~

Emma.Adams' smile tells it all. The 94-year-old nurse who retired many years ago from Veterans
Memorial Hospital climbed onto John Trout's motorcycle and the two were off for a summer ride.

2 SECI10NS- 12 PAGFS

· l_,_,!~.~:~~.--. _ . _ . -~~·~·~·-. - . ~. -~~. ~:!~·-·_j

Randy Hill and Philip Erwin,
write-ins : Sutton, Jerry L.
Hayman ,
Carl
Sal ser.
Edward E. Gibbs. Larry C.
Smith , Kenneth Guinther,
write-in.
Boards of Education
Meigs Local Board of
Education: Wayne E. Davi s,
Clarence E. Evans, Ron
Logan. Scott Walton .
Southern Local _Board of
Education : Thomas Ron

,, .,

•

The Daily Sentinel .t)otnt .t)lea~ant legi~ter

Barber; Orange, Roger
Ritchie , David L. Sheets,
James Eugene Watson,
James A. Watson ; Rutland,
L.
Birchfield,
Robert
Charles D. Barrett, Jr. , Steve
R. Lambert.
Salem,
H.'
Dannie
Lambert, R. Keith Oiler,
Cecil L. Stacy: Salisbury,
Bill Spaun , Manning K.
Roush , Oscar T. Smith;
Scipio, Tammy Andrus,
Roger Cotterill, Kevin W.
Payne, Robert Butcher,

STERNWHEELERS ARRIVE

••

~aUipohslallp Utrlbune

"~''W. mydail~·,entinel.cnm

BY BETll SERGENT

I

again showed little emotion improve..
Monday. He said he took
His first victory as a head
some time to retlect on the coach won't change that out- :.
win during the tlight home, . look.
"This week will be the ·
but didn't do anything to eel-

-

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

patience for a team that went

Jacket Lasse Pirjeta's hard
· shot from the right dot was
detlected by Leclaire with 30
seconds remaining.
fromPageBl
"Tonight I was extremely
happy
our penalty
down 2-0, something that killing," with
Penguins coach
happened to us two years ago Eddie Olczyk said. " I thought
a lot. BUl we battled through !VI arc-Andre played·extremeand got it back to 2-2. We had ly well. I liked the · way our
a Jot more chances in the sec- power play started but l didond half of the game than n't like the way it fini shed."
they did. Give their goalie
Both teams seemed .to
credit, he played unbelievle to find a rhythm in
strugg
able for them. It could have
the
game.
.
·
been a lot different if he was"There were times in the
n't so good for them ."
game where it was t&lt;;mgh
The Blue Jackets. who lost because there were a lot of
their exhibition opener 3-2 to penalties and 5-on-3s:·
Buffalo on Sunday night, Columbus defenseman Luke
tied it on Manny Malhotra 's Richardson said. "It' s somepower-play
goal \and thing we have to get used to.
Marchant's 2-on-1 scan\ off but I think it will settle down
a setup pass from Brandon ' a little bit. We have to get
'
used to it."
Sugden.
The Blue Jackets are with.The Penguins, playing thm
first exhibition game, had a out their top player: Rick
prime chance to win in the 5- Nash . who is sidelined for the
minute overtime. On the next week · Of two with an
power play, •' forme r Blue ankle sprJin .

BY BRIAN

BREED@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

Racine Council
needs answers
before awarding
plant bids

·
:

•

\VEDNhSDAY,_SEJ&gt;TEMBER 21, 2005

POMEROY -The .Meigs
County Board of Elections
has certified petitions of four
write-in candidates for the
November 8 general ~lection.
Monday was the filing
deadline for write-in candi. dates, according to Board of
Erections Director Rita
Smith.
Candidates certified as
write-ins were: \(ictor Young,

I'

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
:~~~~~~~~f~rG~~ir~ri~~ r~~;i~i:~s~~~\ ~~r~~~~~ !I Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Dai.Iy.sent1ne
. I,·And It w·ll
.1 RUD For FREE
. . . In·
I
T.he Tri··.Coun·.ty Marketplace'·
ebrate
otherphone
than enjoy
congratulatory
calls from
his wife and daughters. .
. "You don't have time to
celebrate in the NFL," he

• Meigs spikes Lady
Vikings. See Page B1

·I'

:·
'I

ne

Election board certifies write-ins, finalizes fall ballot

SPORTS

·-··-··-··-."-.,'

•

~}~~[i!eew~a~~~:si~a~~~~ ~~~3;j~~:J~~~ir~~h:~· l.
"He took it with good spir-

:;o CF.NTS • Vol. 55. Nn. 26

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

Rea·e'h 3 1'1ou'n·tie·s

,.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

·,
.
left. They got to their 4 I. then went to times for 52 yards.
a desperate measure on their last play . Bledsoe was efficient, at best, fo( the
- Bledsoe hitting Jones and him later- whole game,'but was never asked to\ do·
aling it to Glenn. He was tackled at the much more than feed Jones (22 rushes,
Washington 43, then rose to his knees .81 yards) and throw little di_nk passes,,.
and threw the ball up in disgust while He was 21-of-36 for 261 yards and'
the. Red ~kins began cel~brating perhaps remained interception-free in his secthe most satisfying victory in Joe ond go-round with Parcells.
He's being asked to manage .games,
'
Gibbs' second tenure in D.C.
It's ihe first time Parcells has lost a riot win them, which means few deep
game with his team le&lt;l(ling by 13 or balls. His first came on the opening
more points in the fourth quarter, a drive of the second half, when he used
a tlea-tlicker to open up a 70-yard pass
streak of 77 games.,
Brunell was 20-of-34 for 291 yards to Glenn for their first TD connection
with an interception, but the most since they were teammates in New
important thing was how he remained England. It was Dallas' longest play
cool despite everything going wrong since October 2002, pre-Parcells.
Bledsoe and Glenn hooked up on a
for 3 1/2 quarters. His first breakthrough was a 20-yard comp)etion to 43-yarder to set up Cortez's kick that
James Thrash on fourth-and-2 midway made it 13-Q.
Canez, who made field goals of 41
through the first TD drive. The confidence helped because that TD came on and 33 yards, missed a 41-yarder on the
a fourth-and- 15.
opening series. The Cowboys also
. Moss, acquired in an offseason deal squandered a chance to try a field goal
for Laveranues ·Coles t.o be the . after.getting a turnover in Washington
Redskins' deep threat. caught five pass- territory in the closing seconds of the
es for 159 yards. Clinton Portis ran 17 second quarter.

e

Hysell honored at
open house, A3

•

\

""

I

Sternwheel Riverfest
special edition inside ·
today's Sentinel

B Section

Weather

A6

@ 2005 Ohlo Valley Publlahl113 Co.

'

Rocksprings residents enjoy rides
ride from there up the highBY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM . way to the old park and ride
and back.
POMEROY ,- Several of ·' Ninety-four year old
the elderly residents of the Emma Adams of Racine and
Rocksprings Rehabilitation now a ·resident of the Center
Center had their first ride on was one of about 20 residents
a motorcycle as part of the to take advantage of the
facility's observance of offer. · Residents
were
Grandparents Day.
required to put on a helmet
Eleven members of the and goggles before ·climbing
Meigs Chapter of the Ohio onto the big red bike owned
River Bikers wen\ to the by John Trout.
·
Center to offer residents a
When one resident couldn:t

..

·"-

get.on the motorcycle, another qiker promi sed that he
would return with . one
equipped with a sidecar for
another round of taking residents on rides.
.
Donna Rist. activities director at Rocksprings, arranged
for the .cyclists to be there as
part of the observance of
Grandparents Day. 0\her
activities included entertainment by the Blue Lighting
Band and refreshments.

BY BETH SERGENT
driven by George A.
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENfiNEL coM Hoffmal]. Middleport, at a
stop sign on West Main
POMEROY .- A recent Street. Lee was cited for
hit-skip accident that took assured clear di stance.
place at the McDbnalds parkThe fo llowing cases were
ing lot remains under investi- recently heard in Pomeroy
gation by the Pomeroy Police Mayor\ Court by Magistrate
Department
that
also Linda Warner:
responded to two other re~e nt
Shawn Marcum Overton,
traffic accidents.
Hartford, W.Va., failure to
According to police April appear, $150 plus cost; Eric
K. Bell. Shade. was stopped Adam Bare. Langsville. pasbehind a driver who was get- session of controlled subling ready to pull onto West stance, $!00 plus cost. drug
Main . · Street
. from paraphernalia, S I00 phis
Me Donalds. Bell alleged that · cost: Jenna Vernon, Dexter,
the driver then backed up and . unlawful license plates. $63
struck her vehicle in the front plu s cost; Amy Drumm,
passenger ~iue. Bell said ,he .Middleport. no operators,
exited the ve hicle to speak SI 50 plus cost. . defective,
with the dri1·cr who then left muffle r. $50 plus cost;
the scene ' tljough Bell Tabitha Haning. Pomeroy.
observed the license plate.
di sorderly by irllox. $150
The plate was l&lt;1ter traced phi S cost. disorderly - after
to Karen F. Burns. Bidwell. warning, 5i 150 plus cost;
·No citation has been issued Gary Haning. Pomeroy. disas of ye t though charges may orderly by intox. S!50 plus
be pending and 'the incident cost. disorderly after warnremains under investigation.
ing. St50 . plus cost; Earl
Other traffic accidents Thoma. Pomeroy, unsafe
reported:
backing, $50 plus cost';
Kell y
Earl
Thoma. Joseph Jeffers. Pomeroy. driPomeroy. was hacking rrom ving un.der suspension , $150
his ·dri 1·ewa} at 200 L;ts!ey plu.'. ~os t. dnvers vte"':
and backed into the path of . obstiUctcd. $50 plus cost.
B· b· . w0 u d p 1 nt&gt;rov Barbara Doczt. Mtddleport,
,Jr ara
'' ~ar ·. '
" , · di,orderly conduct. $100 plus
Tho~1a was c\leu lot unsafe cost; Ryan Powell. Pomeroy,
b&lt;tcktng. .
.
· failure tu comply. $150 plus
Charles Lee, . Svracuse.
struck the rear of a" vehicle · Plene see Pomeroy, AS

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