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attmes ·ienttnel

PageD6

DoWN oN THE FARM

Goodyear and
Steelworkers
look ahead to
2006 talks, A6

Sunday, 'October 30, 2005

TWo farmers sue over USDA tobacco buyouts
BY STEPHANIE STOUGHTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

William Neese began farming burley tobacco in southWe£!
Virginia's foot hills
when he was 12. He quit only
because payments from a
federal tobacco-q uota buyout
promised to help him exit a
business that no longer guaranteed profits.
But in March, the 52-yearold farmer from Abingdon
was stunned to team that he
would receive only a third of
AP Photo
what he had expected from the
Tobacco
farmers
Wil
lia
m
J.
Neese,
left,
and
Daniel
M. Johnson
$10.1 billion buyout. Other
longtime growers were getting of Meadowview, Va .. are seen on one of nine fields that Neese
grew tobacco on prior to the National Tobacco Buyout program.
similar unwelcome surprises.
The
two southwest Virginia farmers are suing the federal gov·
Now Neese . and another
ernment
for changing the buyout program.
Virginia farmer have sued the
U.S.
Department
of any power-to change it," said market, have been assigned to
Agricui!Jire, accusing it of Neese, who stopped growing individual farms since 1938.
steering away from Congress's tobacco last year and now rais"We understand many
directives and effectively es more cattle. "I guess we're farmers were mistakenly led
slashing their payments, For getting an education here."
·to believe that they would
Neese, that means .he would
A spokesman for the receive payments based on
receive about $190,000 rather · USDA declined to comment the farm's 2002 effective
than the $563,000 he expected. and deferred to the Justice quota," wrote J.B. Penn, a
The other burley farmer; Department, which said it USDA
undersecretary.
Daniel M. Johnson of planned to file a response in "However, the statutory lanMeadowview, would get Oc.tober.
guage requires many adjust$217,000 versus $503,000.
But in an April letter to U.S. ments to be made to the 2002
The farmers say the .agency Sen. George Allen, an official . effective quota when calculatreplaced a simple calculation · with
the
· Agriculture ing payments for producers."
approved by Congress with a Department said a lot of farmExactly who contributed to
complex formula that cuts ers got the false impressio n any mi scommunication is
payments to many fanners.
that they would receive pay- unclear. Penn's letter came
"!didn't realize that if the ments based on their 2002 after . A lien . raised questions
House passed it, the Senate tobacco quotas. Quotas, about possible inequities in
passed it and the president which represent the amount the agency's formula. In
signed it, that the USDA had of tobacco that growers can · March, Allen told Penn in a

letter that he was concerned
that the USDA's formula
appeared "to deviate from the
clear direction" of the law.
The
farmers'
lawsuit
· emerged from Congress's
decision last year to end the
federal program setting price
and production co ntm ls on
U.S. tobacco. Tobacu&gt; quota
holders will be paid over a
decade to compensate for
losses as thi s system ends.
The buyout will be funded
from assessments on tobacco
companies. About $9.6 bil lion was to go to quota hold.ers and producers, while the
remainder was to pay outstanding expenses. Under thelaw .pa&gt;Sed by Congress,
farmers who grew tobacco in
2002, 2003 and 2004 would
receive $3 per pound, based
on their 2002 quota.
Owners of tobacco quota·
- which includes landowners who lease their production licenses io active farmers
- would get $7 per pound.
· According to the farmers'
lawsuit, Agriculture Secretary
Mike Johanns i~sued regulations in the spring that deviated far from Congress's directive. Instead of basing the for-·
mula on the 2002 quota, as
the farmers say Congress
intended, Johanns effectively
used the growers' sales for
·each of the three growing
years, the lawsuit said.
But many burley farmers

have been unable to produce
up to their quota levels due to
crop di sease and poor weather conditions.
"Our bigges t gripe is that
Congress has said $10.1 bil-

GALLIPOLIS- United Producers Inc. market r.eport
from Gallipolis for sales conducted on Wednesday, Oct.
26.

.On deep water Raccoon Creek in Beautiful Gallia Co.,
5-20 acres. Don't miss out on this one!
Call for free maps, or visit us at IWM'.countrytyme.com
Lawrence Co. WOW! 197 acres $1,299/acre.
· .. Gallia Co. Pumpkintown-Sacres, $13,900
Mei&amp;s Co. Across from the OH River 4-6 acres From $23,900

for

Green Township ·
Trustee

COUNTRYTYME..l
--

-

www.count

Couillr t me SE Ohio

50 CENTS • Vol. 55, No. 54

.SPORTS

275-415# St. $90-$148 Hf. $85-$136 425-525# St. $90$133 Hf. $85-$122 550-625# St. $90-$120 Hf. $80-$110
650-725.# St. $90-$110 Hf. $80-$105 750-850 St. $85$105 Hf. $75-$95.

• Lady Eagles net berth at
regionals with third district
crown. See Page Bl

Cows-Lower
.Well Muscled/Fleshed $42-$46 Medium/Lean $38-$45;
Thin/Light $10-$30; Bulls $53-$59.75.

Back To The Farm:
"tow/Calf . Pairs $540-$975; Bred Cows $300-$830;
Baby Calves $37.50-$245; Goats, $1~-$1 00; Lambs,
$115-dn.; Hogs. $46-$52.

Sale this week, 10 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 2.
For more information, call Brad at (740) 584-4821 or
DeWayne at (740) 339-0241. Visit the Web site at
www.uproducers.com

MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2005

''"'"'·m)dail)"'ntincl.&lt;·um

School sale delayed pending completion of survey
BY BRtA.N

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

MIDDLEPORT -The sale
of the Middleport High
School building will be ready
to proceed on.ce a survey is
completed, Mayor Sandy
lannarelli said Friday.
The village plans to sell the
high school building and the
central building adjacent to it,

but a n.umber of delays have
prevented the sale, to date.
lannarelli told village council
on Monday that the sale
would be delayed again pend- .
ing the completion of a survey
excluding the stadium and
footballlield now used by the
Big Bend Youth Football,
which will be excluded from
the sale.
The village recently signed

a new 10-year lease with the
football leag ue for the fi eld
and stadium.
. Part of that property to be
excluded from -the sale is on
one of several tracts of land to
be sold. and must be excluded
by means of a new survey,
Iannarelli said. A local surveyor has bee n contacted to
complete the work , and
lannarelli said she expects the

survey to · be completed in who will develop the proper
time for coundl 's Nov. 14 ty. she said .
meeting.
lannarc lli said she expl:"ch
Once the ' survey has been the "de to proceed ea rl y 111 th e·
comp leted and the new new year. or earl !t:r.
·
description is prepared. coun At least one developer IHI\
cil mu st .set a minimum bid t:xprc s~ cd interes t in pun.:ha:-.and advertise rhe sale. iilg the property lor converlannarelli said. The sale will sion
in to
ap:.1rtm enl'i .
be posted in several newsp"- lann arclli said the village wi li
pcrs, online, and by other
means in order to seck a buyer
Please see Survey, A5

October Fun Fest at Meigs Primary

Upcoming specials:

200 kids
defined as
homeless in
Meigs County

~
0

RE-ELEC-T

BY BETH SERGENT
BSER GLN f QP MY DA! Ll' S E'.Jl INEL. COM

LARRY A. FALLON
'·~·

POMEROY
StereotypiL'itl images of the
homeless arc people sleeping
on park benches nol mult iple
fam ilie-. -.;leeping under th e
same roof thou ch that is often
the c;J&gt;e ,whe o; defining the
homele" of Mei ~s Co unty:
200 of which are sc hool age
chiklren ac(.:ordin!! tn Laurie
S. Wayland .
·
WayJanu is the llrst homcle~-. educ:.Jtiun l i ai~on fur
Meigs
Co unty
Scl1llol
Distri(.:ts and her main nbjt:c·
tive. is to keep high risk chi ldren in school. specifically
those that .meet the hmneks.s

for
Perry Township Trustee
Your Vote &amp; Support. will be Appreciated

--

-~---'--~

\..

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Feeder Cattle-Higher

River Lots Now Available

Lonnie Boggs

.

' LIVESTOCK REPORT

lots for Sale!

RE-ELECT

lion," said Daniel McKinney,
chief executive officer of the
Burley Tobacco Growers
Cooperative Association in
Kentucky. "How come we're
not getting that'"

Rosa Parks honored by
nation's leaders in
Capitol Rotunda, A2

Paid for by lhe Candidate.

Larry A. Fallon. 11261 St. Rt. 14 1 • Patriot. Ohio 45658

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Josephine Tyree, 71

INSIDE.
• Trumpeter from New
Orleans is star of nation's
biggest Halloween event.
See Page A2
• Uncia Jones named
employee of the month.
See Page A3
• Longtime members
recognized. See Page A3

WEATHER

definition . Thi'i , defin i tion

Meigs Primary School recently held its October Fun Fest
Day completed with hay
rides, pumpkin patch, petting
zoo, farm equipment hay
maze and a presentation of
Allee in Wonderland by
Cincinnati Playhouse in th€
Park. Children came to
school in costume and
zoomed through the hay
maze before learning about
farm equipment like this
John Deere combine.
Bath Sergant/photos
.

~ ~.,-~

' "'.~

.

tricil y anU running walcr.

....

··,« ... ,_ '~·.,.~".

Details on Page A6

Also iu Meigs homclcss-

. ~-

~TOYOTA

,,

~··

.

buyatoyota.com 1

Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B2-4
Comics
Bs
Dear Abby
A3
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
As
B Section
Sports
A6
Weather

German company cal led
Dummen that will mean a
&gt;i!!J!ficant increase in business, Barnitz said . Dum men is
·a breeding company, which
means it develops new st rain'
of flowers.
Bob's Market wil l serve as
li rooting station for cuttings
of new flowers to be se nt
from ~ stock plant in Costa

© zoos Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Please see Jobs, AS

Please see Homeless, AS

EPA ESTIMATED .
34MPG
HIGHWAY!ff

I.IISEFOR

BACK

FROM TOYOTA'

'.

/MO

Bob's Market adding 18 jobs with state loan
BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

MASON, W.Va. - Bob's
Market and Greenhouses Inc.
will add 18 jobs and another
98,000 square feet of greenhou se . space · after being
awarded its fifth loan since
1997 from the West Virginia
Economic
Development
Authority.
Gov. Joe Manchin has

announced that Bob's Market
will receive $800,000, one of
five bu sinesses included . in
loans totaling more than $9.2
million. The largest portion of
that mone y, $7.5 million, is
being loaned to the Wood
County
Development
Authority to assist wtth an
expansion of Coldwater
Creek's distribution center in
Mineral Wells.
Bob's Market received

EDA loans in 1997, 1999,
200 I and 2003, and now has
received news of a fifth loan
receiving approval.
"We were elated... said
Scott Barnitz, vice president
of Bob's Morket. "We have
had .a fantastic experience
with the state that has allowed
our business to grow at an
accelerated rate."
Bob's Market recently has
formed a partnership wi1h a

ne s-.; for children is compli cated by ge nerati onal cycles

of poverty and lack or ed ucation which is another part of
Wayland's joh which requires
her 10 act a~ a mcnt ur for
homeless kids to keep them
in scl10o l.
"These kiJs are our future,
why shmild we expect a
future from the m if we don't
g1ve them one now.
Way land s:t id ahout the
importance or education and
mento ring.
Low p&lt;l ying joh1 end lack
of hot"inu a-lso exacerbates
the -. it uat. .inn for lw1 w.:l~~'
familic~ in i\ ki g~ County
according to Wa yl and .

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

often indudc.s families with
both wurkin2 pa rents th at &lt;.tn:
sharing a house with another
.family due· to economic lwrJ ships. youths th at have been ·
kicked ou t of the home hy
their parerils ami chi ldren
getting ready to gn into foster
care.
Wayland services all three
sc hool di -. tr ich ~ tnd is
employed by the AthensMeig s Educational Service
Center throu!.!h u ~nan t
fromthe Ohio Departlllc.nt of
EJucalion . The gran! is fllnded hv the No C.hild Left
Beh ir1d Act.·
1-l omc lc-.:-. n!.!ss
rc nwins
hiJJen in Mci~ s Count y'" it
docs in most ol' rural A1iu~rica
according to Waylanu. Urb&lt;ln
homcl css!~e-.s j_.., vis ib le &lt;.tl)d
on the st reet s whereas rural
homclessnc -.:-. is not. and in
Meigs .County just hecalise
someone 1i vcs in a home docs
not mean they have tlte modern amenities uf heat, elec-

•

MOS.

DUE AT SIGNING'"

DUEAT SIGNING INCLUDES: Sl 360 DOWN PAYMENT t SO SECURITY DEPOSIT t S23911T MONTH PAYMENT t S400 ACQUISITION FEE. TAX, TAGS AND INSURANCE ARE EXTRA.

3101 EAST SEVENTH SIRED
PARIERSBURG, WV • 304·424-5122

Holzer Clinic is Close to You. ••

'PURCHASERS CAN RECEIVE C~SH BACK FROM TOYOTA OR APPLY CASH BACK TO DOWN PAYMENT. "CAMRY BASED ON MODEL251 4 MSRP $19.81 5. CUSTOMER IS RESPONSIBLE FOR EXCESS WEAR AND TEAR AND EXCESS MILEAGE CHARGES THAT WILLVARY BASED ON
MODEL AND PRICE. PAYMENT MAY VARY BASED ON FINAL NEGOTIATED PRICE. NOT ALL CUSTUMERS WILL QUAUFY. 'MILEAGE PER TANKFUL CALCUlATED BY MULTIPLYING EPA HI'IY ESTIMATED MPG BY FUEL TANK CAPACIJY. ACTUAL MILEAGE WILL VARY AND DEPENDS UPON
MANY FACTORS NOT CONSIDERED IN EPA TESTS. " EPA ESTIMATES FOR 2005 CAMRY 2514 5-SPEED AUTO, SIENNA 5336 2WD. RAV4 4419 FRONT WD,AND 2WD V6 HIGHlANDER 691B. ACTUAL MILEAGE MAY VARY. SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. All OFFERS END !0/3t/05.

Athens Charleston Gallipolis Jackson Lawrence Meigs Point Pleasant

•

•

..

.

.

�NATION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

.

Rosa Parks honored by nation's leaders in Capitol Rotunda
Bv KEN THOMAS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITE R

WASHINGTON - Rosa
Parks, the former seamstress
whose defiant refusal to give
up her bus seat to a white man
inspired the civil rights movement , became the first woman
to lie in honor in the Capitol
Rotunda on Sunday, sharing
an honor bestowed upon
Abraham Lin coln, John F.
Kennedy and the nation's
highest leaders.
President Bush and congressional leaders placed
wreaths by her casket. while
members of a univel"'itv choir
sang 'The Battle Hymn or the
Republ ic:·
Rep. John Conyers, DMich ., for whom Parks
worked irt Detroit, said the
ceremony showed "the legacy
of Rosa Parks is more than
just a success for the ci vil
rights movement or for
African-Americans. It means
it's a national honor."
Secretary · of
State
Condoleezza Rice paid tribute
during
a
service
in
Montgomery, Ala.. earlier
Sunday. Rice said she and
others who grew up in
Alabama during the height nf
Parks ' acti vistJl might not
have realized her impact on
their lives, "but I can honestly
say that without Mrs. Parks, I
probably would not be standing here today as secretary uf
state."

Outside the Capitol , as llags
flew at half-staff, thousands
of people awaited the chance
to pay their respects. Some
carried signs that read.
"Thank you, Rosa Parks.'·
The crowd chc~rcd loudly
when. the motorcade , led by
Parks ' hearse and a v.intage
D.C. Metro bu s, arrived. Her
casket was carried up the
Capitol steps by a military
honor guard while Rep.
Carolyn Kilpatrick , DMich., prayed with t'i)mily

members and friend s.
Senate chaplain Barry
Black, bowing his head in
prayer, said Parks' courage
"ignited a movement that
aroused om national con science·· anU served as an
example of the "power or
fateful , small acts."
Bush didn't speak at the
small ceremony. but he issued
a proclamation Sunday ordering the u.s. flag to be nown
at half-starr over all public
buildings on Wednesday, the
day of Parks· funeral and burial in Detroit.
The president and tlrst lady
La(tra Bttsh were joined by
Senate Mitjor1 ty Leader Bill
Fri .st.
R-Tcnn ..
Senate
Minority Leader Harry Reid.
D-Np.. temporary Hou.se
majority leader Roy Blulll . RMo., and other members or
Congress.
"She was a citizen in the
best sense of the word.'' said
Seti. Tom Harkin. D-lowa.
"She caused things to happen
in .our sociery that made us a

better, n1orf caring, more jw~t
societv ...
Fred Allen. 59. who grew
up in segregated Halls. Tenn ..
brought his 20-year-old son to
help him understand the civil
rights era.
"He has no idea what it was
like to grow ltp in the South,
where you had to hold your
head down." Allen said.
Parks, 'n, died Oct. 24 at
her home in Detroit. She .had
been arrested in 1955 for
refusing to give ltp her seat at
the front of a city bus to a
white man. Among those who
supported her was the Rev.
Martin Luther King Jr.. who
led the 381-day hoycott or the
Montgomery bus system that
helped initiate the modern
civil rights movement.
·
"She was a gentle giant."
said his son, Martin Luther
King Ill.
Sunday morning , before her
casket · was flown
to

.Community Calendar

Washington,
Parks . was
remembered by hundreds of
people in a chapel bearing her
name at St. Paul A.M.E.
Church in Montgomery, Ala.,
where she was once a member.
"I was here when Rosa
Parks started and I just wanted to be here when she departed." said the Rev. Joseph
Lowery, who co-founded the
Southern
Christian
Leadership ·Conference with
King.
· Lowery ahd the Rev. Jesse
Jackson said one way to carry
on Parks' legacy now is to
push Congress to renew the
1965 Voting Rights Act,
which they said would be in
jeopardy when it comes up for
review in 2007.
The Rev. AI Sharpton, who
was a year old at the time of
Park&amp;' arrest, said when he
arrived in Montgomery for
the memorial, he thought
about "how if she had just
moved her seat, how history
mig hi have changed."
Sharpton, a New York City
act,ivist, said national leaders
such as Rice · and former
Secretary of State Colin
Powell would have never
reached their posts witl)out
Parks' . symbolic .act. Rice
would be struggling · in a
racially charged Birmingham
and "Colin Powell would be
sitting in a segregated Army
barracks; · Sharpton said.
Johnnie Carr, a 94-year-old
veteran of the bus boycott,
said Parks was her childhood
friend, a woman who "gave
every ounce of her devotion"
to fighting racial inequality.
"We. have accomplished a
lot, we've come a long way,' ~
Carr said, "but believe me, we
have a long way to go."
AP Photo

People view the coffin containing the remains of civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks· who lies in
honor inside the Capitol Rotunda, the first woman accorded such an honor Sunday in
Wash111gton . Rosa Parks. inspired the U.S. civil rights movement by refusing to give up a seat
on a. city bus to a White man.

Public meetings

'•

.

Church events
Monday, Oct. 31
POMEROY - Spook-a-ta,
hosted by Comedy on the
Rocks, 6 p.m., Pomeroy
Amphitheater. Music by
Capstone .
CORE
and
J.U.M.P. drama teams to perform . Free.
Monday, Oct. 31
POMEROY ·- Enterprise
United Methodist Church and
Pomeroy Church of Christ
three-night revival through
Nov. 2. Rev. James Corbitt as
guest speaker. Services will
be held at the Church of
Christ, 7 p.m. each night.
Special music.

Family ties are fraying after dad's sexual assault

Trumpeter from New Orleans is star of
nation's biggest Halloween event
NEW YORK, (AP) r- The
leader of New York's annual
Halloween parade will not be
a drag queen on roller skates.
It will not be a giant caricature of President Bush . It will
not be a naked man covered in
glitter.
The star will be a little
trumpeter from New Orleans
- 10-year-old Glenn Hall Ill,
whose house and hom were.
destroyed by Hurricane
Katrina. In New York, he got
a new trumpet that he will
play Monday in what is billed
as the country's biggest public Halloween event.
Glenn 's role as grand marshal is part of a New Orleans
lheme at Monday's parade.
\Vhich takes place in New
York's Greenwich Village.
The parade's symbol - as it
was in 200 I after Sept . II is a phoenix rising from its
ashes.
· The .phoenix will rise from
a traditional New Orleans
jazz funeral. with di splaced
Katrina survivors dancing
behind a coffin in both grief
and joie de vivre.
: "The dancing is to rai se the
spirits, to bring them back.
And the music is a cry for the
people who died." said New
Orleans rapper Allen Porche, .
22, who will be dancing in the
parade. On his right arm. he
•
i
has a tattoo that reads "Ninth
Ward" - the neighborhood
where hi s family 's home was
submerged under 27 feet of
water.
AP Photo
Glenn tlew to New York
Ten-year-old
Glenn
Hall
Ill,
center.
from
New
Orleans.
is
hugged
last week with hi s 6-yeur-old
by
his
father
Glenn
Hall
Jr
..
left,
sister
Jazz.
background
ce nter.
sister. Jazz. their parents.
grandmother and cousin. All and mother Patrrce as they walk down 48th Stree t in Manhattan,
of them had been living in while taking a break from his trumpet practice al The Jazz
Memphi s after the hurri cane Foundation in New York City Friday. Glenn will be the grand mardestroyed their home. Glenn, shal of New York's Village Hallowee n Parade today.
a son of a handyman. was street mu sician s in New
"Thei r li ves are in bits and
given the new trumpet last Orleans. whose instruments pieces. they' re ' pread all
week at the Manhattan-based
also weri donated through the over." parade director Jeanne
Ja zz Foundation.
Fl em ing said. "But on the
·•1 love it. It's got more Jazz Foundati on.
Members of the Hot 8 band night of Halloween. we' ll all
,sound , smoother pi ston s. a
softer mouthpiece than my were di spersed all over the co me toge th er. When thi ..,
old one." said Glenn, fin ger- coumry. hut the Hallowee n band comes dow n tile street
ing the sil ve r, Paris- made pa rade re un ited them. wi th and they' re playi ng the ir
trumpet donated by a . orga nt ze rs . pay ing th ei r musit:, it\. go in g to mo ve
energy and ~p i ri t. People are
California woman through the expenses.
Jau Foundation .
For them and other Katrina goi ng to fee l th e mournin g
He'll be joined by the Hot 8 survivors. the phoenix in the that needs to be done for New
Orleans ...
Jazz Band - I0 of the edgiest parade is not just a symbol.

Clubs and

Refreshments to follow.

•

· A.1·socia1ed Press writers By
Sam ira .lafari in- Montgomery,
Ala. ,
and
ilwiJ-Carlos
Rodriguez in Washington con tributed to this report.

Dear

Abby

DEAR FURIOUS: I disagree with you and your sister. Your mother should be
told immediately exactly
what happened. Your father
sexually assaulted your partner. Because an extreme
change in behavior can be a
sign of serious mental or
physical illness, he needs to
be scheduled for a complete
physical and neurological
evaluation.
Please do not postpone it.
Your father has shown himself to be a danger to your
partner, and possibly to your
daughter . as she begins. to
develop. I am sorry for your
mother, but you can't protect
her from this. For everyone's
sake including your
father's - this must be dealt
with now.
DEAR ABBY: My husband
and I are child-free 30-somethings who own a home with
a yard and no fence. Our
house and yard are a sanctuary from our hectic professiomillives.
Lately, the neighbor's cat has
been using our yard as a place

to recline, and it hisses at me
angrily when I tell it to go
home. I'm not fond of cats, and
I'm actually afraid of this one.
Also, another neighbor and his
kids have been using our yard
as a thoroughfare from the
property behind us to their own
yard, which has a renee.
I don't go into other people's yards. I respect .the space
of other people. I expect that
respect . in return, and don' t
want people tramping through
our yard. We plan to plant
more flower beds in the
ftiture, and they will be in the
way of their path. Am I curmudgeonly to feel this way, or
should other people respect
our privacy and property? ENCROACHED UPON IN
FLORIDA
DEAR ENCROACHED
UPON: They should respect
your privacy, property and
expressed wishes - but it
appears they don't. So surround your property either
with a hedge or an attractive
fence. And as to the -.:at that is
"menacing" you, tell its owners that unless they keep .it off
your property, you will
inform animal control. (Then
do it if necessary).
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Va11 Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was jou11ded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write
Dear Abby at
http://www.DearAbby.com or
P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,
CA 90069.

Longtime·members recognized
POMEROY- Recognition
of members with long mem,
berships was a feature of the
recent hemlock Grange held
at the hall.
Doris Ewing and Janice
Weber received 50 year golden sheaf award and ere also
presented 50 year .pins by
their mother, Sarah Caldwell.
A 70 year membership seal
was given to Sara Cullums.
The charter was draped in
memory of Burl Windon and
thank you notes were sent to
Dale Kautz, Rosalie story,
and . Mildred Ziegler. Also
thanked were those who
helped with the three auctions
served by the Grange.
It was noted the Pomona

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Grange will met Nov. 4 at
Racine Grange. Oftlcers conference will start at 6:30 and
the meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Members and friends reported
ill were Harold Blackston,
Ziba Midkiff and Betty Riebel.
Kim Romine, lecturer, used
National Cookie Month for
her
program.
North
Americans began to use the
word cookie for a.. small
sweet, tlat or slightly raised
confection in the 18th century. according to Romine who
listed chocolate chip as the
most famou.,.
Around
1930
Ruth
Wakefield of Massachusetts
who owned the Toll House
Inn decided to cut up chunks

of Nestle's
semi-sweet
chocolate bars and add . them
to a rich butter cookie dough.
The Nestle Company discovered her cookie and bought
the rights to her recipe. They
produced and packaged the
cookie, using the Toll House
name and printed Ruth
Wakefield's recipe on the
back, Romine said. ·
She listed si~ types of cookies, bar, drop, molded or hand
formed, pressed, refrigerator
and rolled . At the conclusion
of her program she passed out
chocolate chip and peanut
butter cookies to everyone.
The November meting will be
proceeded by a ham dinner at
6:30p.m.

Past councilors club meets

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• 21.6 HP Oi ese l Engine

CHESTER - A pancake
breakfast to raise money for
re novatio~ of the Chester
Academy fund was held
Saturday morning at· the
Chester Fire Department
headquarters sponsored by
the Modern Woodmen, the
firemen and Chester Council
323.
Plan s for the event were
discussed at a recent meeting
of Chester Council held at the
Ma.&gt; onic building in Chester.
Laura Mae Nice -presided and
opened the meeting with
sc ripture, the Lord's Prayer
and the pledge to the. llag.
Reported ill were Opal
Eichinger in the hospital ,
Donna Grueser Arnold who
fell and injured her leg, and
Ruth Smit~ who is.ill.
Offic.ers reports were given
by Charlotte Grant an Opal
Hollon . JoAnn Ritchie was
reinstated in the club. Mary
K. Holter report on a call
from Laura Damewood of
Urbana about the members. It
was noted that the November
ludge mee tin g will be held at
7 p.m. Tuesday.

• Hydrostatic Power Steermg
• 3-Rcmgl:l V&lt;:~rlable Hydr ostat ic Tran smission
• Wet Disc ll rakes
• ~ e altree! Camouflag e Pattern
on Rec reatiOnal Model

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--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - -•

---

Monday, October 31,

2005

LINDA jONES NAMED EMPLOYEE OF THE MONTII

orga~zations
Monday, Oct. 31
RACINE- Sputhern Local ·
Monday, Oct. 31
School Board, special session,
POMEROY
- Oh-KAN
to discuss personnel issues, 8
Coin
Club
will
meet
at 7 p.m.
p.m. at the high school.
at
the
Pomeroy
Library
for a
Friday, Nov. 4
POMEROY Public meeting and auction.
testing of voting equipment
Thesday, Nov. 1
wtll take place at the Meigs
CHESTER
Chester
County Board of Elections Council,
Daughte.rs
of
office at I :30 p.m.
America, will meet at 7 p.m.
Thesday, Nov. I
at the Masonic Hall. The
ALFRED - The Orange meeting time was changed
Township Trustees will meet due to Election Day.
at 7:30p.m at the home of the , MIDDLEPORT
clerk, Osie Follrod.
Middleport Lodge #363 ;
. ·Wednesday, Nov. 2
F&amp;AM , 7:30 p.m., for elecPAGEVILLE Scipio tion of lodge officers and regTownship Trustees, 6:30p.m: ular business. All lodge
Page ville town hall.
members urged to attend.

DEAR ABBY: I come from
a very close-knit family. We
always tell each other we love
each other after every meet.
ing and phone call.
·
My life partner, "Jennifer,"
has become part of our family. We can't be married
hecause we are lesbians.
Jennifer thought a lot of my
dad until last week. I was at
work. and my father came by
the house. I had no idea that
he would ever make· a move
on Jennifer. She told him four
times to knock it off. Dad
weighs more than 220 pounds
and Jennifer weighs only 95.
He ·continued to fondle her
and try -to kiss her. She was
scared to death. As soon as
she got the chance, she ran
upstairs to be with our preteen daughter.
Abby, this weekend I couldn't even look at my father. I
didn't hug him or tell him I
loved him. I wanted to beat
· him to the ground. I talked to
my sister about this. We
agreed that we shouldn' t tell
Mom. They have been mar-·
ried 37 years, and she would
grieve herself to death. I don't
want to drag her into this, but
I don't want anything to do
with JT)Y father right now
either. Dad says he "doesn't
know what's wrong" with me
and that he was "very hurt"
after seeing me last weekend
because I was so cold to him.
Please advise me on what I
should do. - FURIOUS IN
VIRGINIA

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 31, 2005

Opal Hollon and Thelma
White served refreshment s.
Games were conducted by
Mary K. Holter and Laura
Mae Nice. Door prizes were

won by Doris Grueser, Jean
Welch, Laura Mae Nice, and
Sandy White. Others there
were Esther Smith and Goldie
Frederick.

RE-ELECT

SCOft WAL,.OI'
To

Meigs Local Board
Of Education
"Continuing to work toward
progressive educatio11"
Your vote is greatly appreciated!

'

POMEROY
Linda
Jones; administrative assistant for nursing admini stra- ·
tion at Holzer Medical Center,
has been named the October
2005 employee of the month,
according to James Phillippe,
president.
·BIJrn in Pomeroy, Jones is
a graduate of Eastern High
School in Reedsville and
received an associate's degree
in microcomputers and business · management from
Southeastern
Business
College.
She began her
career at HMC in 2002 as a
human
resources
assistant/clerk, and transferred to her current position ·
in nursing admini stration in
December 2002.
In addition to her duties at
Holzer Medical Center, Jones
has served as president of the
Hospital's Employee Activity
Association for the past two
years, .and has also served in
the past as treasurer. She is
the recorder for the standards
customer service team at the
Hospital, in addition to various nursing committees.

Grace Thoma of Chester and
the late Glen Thoma . She and
her husband of 19 years, Jeff.
an RN and emergency depart ment coordinator at St.
Joseph 's
Hospital
in
Parkersburg, W.Va., reside in
Rutland . They have two sons,
Bradley and Taylor.
In her spare time, Jones
enjoys gardening, attending her
sons· activities, participating in
school organizations. church
activities, archery, and theater.
As for what ·she likes best
at Holzer, she said "the people
Linda Jones ·
and knowing that the facility
Before joining Holzer does really make the Holzer
Medical
Center,
Jones Difference in the communi worked at Veterans Memorial ties scrved.
Hospital in Pom'eroy from
As employee of the month.
1984 - 2002. She began as a she received a $100 U.S.
switchboard operator and Savings Bond, a reserved
clerk in the emergency room, parking space. a complimenand over the years held such tary meal in the hospital cafepositions as admini strative teria. her picture displayed on
clerk, business otlice manag- the employee of the month
er for the long-term care unit. wall near the employee
admini strative secretary/med- entrance, and her name
ical staff coordinator, admin- engraved on the 2005
istrative assistant, lmd human employee of the month
resources/payroll manager.
plaque. also displayed on the
Jones is the daughter or emplpyee of the month Wall .
1

'

November is Home Care Month in Ohio
RIO GRANDE - Gov.
Bob Taft has proclaimed
November 2005 as Hpme
Care Month.
The resolution issued by the
State of Ohio Executive
Department in part declares.
"Home care preserves a
patient's dignity and indcpenden.ce and improves their
quality of life by enabling
them to stay ih the comfort
and security of their own
homes during times of illness,
disability and recuperation."
Pamela K. Matura, executive director of the Area
Agency on Aging District 7
Inc. (AAA7) received the resolution.·
Matura notes that an important declaration is "homecare
professionals,
hospice

Weight-loss winner
COOLVILLE- Joan Cole
was named weekly best weight- .
loss wi1U1er at Tuesday's meeting of TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) Chapter #OH 2013,
Coolville. There were 23 members pn:scnt.'
Several members attended
the fall rally in the First
Baptist Church held in
Jackson Saturday.
The group . meets every
Tuesday at Torch Baptist
Church. Weigh -in is from
5:15 to6:15 p.m. with. a meeting at 6:30. For information,
call Pat Snedden at 662-2633
or attend a free meeting.

providers, and family care- work or volunteer in the
.givcrs are everyday heroes .)1omeca(e network are also
who play a vital role in the thankful.
delivery of care and services
"We expect notes from
to millions of Americans.'·
senior citizen center stall, hosAs part of the recognition, pice volunteers, and family
AAA 7 is planning a celebra- caregivers who have a story to
tion of "Giving Thanks" to tell of how they are blessed to
mark Home Care Month. help others remain at home,''
During November, notes of said Suzanne Shelpman,
thanks, blessings, and hope AAA 7 homecare director.
will be gathered from senior
AAA 7 encourages ·anyone
citizens who have been wanting to give thanks should
touched by the many heroes submit a note to the Area
being honored.
·
Agency on Aging District 7,
The notes will be formally Inc., F32-URG , P.O . Box 500,
placed in a "Giving Thanks" Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 by
scrapbook that will be on dis- Nov. 14. For help in partici play and presented to the Ohio pating in the "Giving Thanks"
Department
of
Aging. recognition, please call
Director, Merle Grace Kearns. Sharon Bowman , AAA 7 com· The agency believes that munity relations director, at
the special individuals who (800) 582-7277.

Local Briefs
Set bazaar
POMEROY - Sacred Heart Church will hold its annual
Fall Bazaar on Nov. 10, with dinner served beginning at 4:30
p.m. Cash prizes will be awarded.

Evening clinic hours
POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department will
offer evening hours from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. tomorrow. The
~vening hour&gt; will feature the following services:
Immunizations, blood pressure and sugar assessments, WIC,
prenatal services, head lice screenings, environmental· health,
vital statistics including birth and death certificates. General
health related questions will also be answered. The TB clinic
will also have evening hours until 6 p.m. Call 992-6626.
.

.

'

It's Time For a Change
(Four more years is a long time)
Give some thought to what you are about to read! ~Y name is Victor C. Young Ill, I spent
4 years in office servi.ng my town and lei low citizens, 3 1/2 years as a council member
and 6 months as Mayor. During my term I got things accomplished, the Water Works
Park built, the Basketball court on East Main St. repaired and painted so the kids could
use it once again after years of neglect. The Mechanic St. playground was also improved
with new basketball nets, new swing chains and seats and new picnic tables. I worked on
getting the Beechgrove cemetery mill levy passed for maintenace and up-keep. Police
Chief Proffitt and I worked to get 2 houses and land donated to the village, then we
worked to get 3 houses torn down on Butternut Ave that were eye sores for years. I
supported the 'former mayor John Blaettner on the walking path we now have and on
raising the water rates in order to have our New Water Treatment Plant, which is
Pomeroy's main asset. I also backed pay raises for the Town employees, which have not
had a raise since! I always made time to try to keep on top of what Pomeroy's citizens
needed done for their town. Even walking along Mulberry St. and Union A,ve. in 2 It of
flood water in the pouring down rain. Trying to help t)le street department men open up
the street drains so water could subside which was in the basements, yards and around
the homes of the people which had voted me in office. All of these accomplishments
were part of lhe job in being your council member and mayor. Now let me ask you an
important question: On Election day November 8th, do we as voters vote any of our
council menbers in office now, back into their seats? If any of these members with the
exception of George Wright who does a lot throughout the lawn, accomplished just 10%
of what I did, but I can't see anything that has been accomplished for our town and the
people of Pomeroy! They seem to think this town runs itself.
Now I can name some things: The Mechanic St. Park got completely tore out, wrth just a
concrete pad poured with 2 basketball nets replaced. The old Pomeroy High Schools is
still standing with broken glass hanging out the windows, after plans to demolish and the
funds to do it with , were there before I left office in 2003. The grass along our streets and
curbs this past summer had to reach almosl16" before it got cut. Some of our street
curbs finally got cleaned after 2 years· and some you still can't find . We still have burnt
out houses and houses falling down around us in this town . I've read the newspaper
articles regarding the council meeting and .the Council seems to always be questioning
the police Chief on what he is going to do about all the problems in our town. Weill think
it's time we the people and voters of Pomeroy take care of our problems in this town.
Come election day, Vote in 5 new facesr There are 5 council seats open this November
8th election. We need council members willing to spend time working hands on with
projects the people of this town want or need done, after all, if I did it anyone can!
Your Neighbor,
Victor C. Young Ill

�•

•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Cour:t Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

. Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for redress of grievances.

a

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Monday. Oct. 31. the 304thl day of 2005. There are
61 days left in ·the year. This is HallffiWeen.
Today's Highlight in History: On Oct. 31, 1517, Martin
Luther posted the 95 Theses on the door of the Wittenberg
Palace church. marking the start of the Protestant Reformation
in Germany.
On this date: .In 1864, Nevada became the 36th state.
In 1926, magician Harry Houdini died .ih Detroit of gangrene and peritonitis resulting from a ruptured appendix. .
In 1941, the U.S. Navy destroyer Reuben James was torpedoed by a German U-boat off Iceland with the loss of 115 lives.
even though the -United States had not yet entered World War II.
In 1955, Britain's Princess Margaret ended weeks of speculation by announcing she would not marry Royal Air Force
Captain Peter Townsend.
In 1968, President Johnson ordered a halt to all U.S. bombing of North Vietnam, saying he hoped for fruitful peace
·
negotiations.
In 1980, Reza Pahlavi, eldest son of the late shah of Iran, proclaimed himself the rightful successor to the Peacock Throne.
In 1984, Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi was assassiqated by two Sikh security guards.
.
· In 1994, p Chicago-bound American Eagle ATR-72 crashed
lit northern Indiana, killing al168 people aboard.
: In 1999, EgyptAir Flight 990, bound from New York to
~airo, crashed off the Massachusetts coast. killing all 217
people aboard.
: Ten years ago: Stung by defeat in the secession referendum,
Quebec Premier Jacques· Parizeau said he would resign as
qead of the bitterly divided province at year 's end.
• Five years ago: A Los Angeles-bound Singapore Airlines
Jiunbo Jet sped down the wrong runway in Taipei, -Taiwan,
~amming into construction equipment and bursting into
flame s, killing 83 people. A charter plane in Angola crashed .
into a remote jungle, killing all 48. aboard. American astronaut
Bill Shepherd and two Russian cosmonauts rocketed into
clrbit aboard· a Soyuz rocket on a questto'become the first resi_~ents of the international space station. Death claimed Oscarwinning screenwriter Ring Lardner Jr. at age 85 and former
llousing Secretary Samuel R. Pierce Jr. at age 78.
:One year ago: In the closing hours of their bitter campaign,
President Bush and challenger. Sen. John Kerry charged
through the critical battlegrounds of Florida and Ohio, going
from hushed Sunday church services to raucous campaign ral lies with promises to keep America safe.
· Today's Birthdays: Actress Lee Grant is 74. ·Former . CBS
anchorman Dan Rather is 74. Singer Kinky Friedman is 61.
Actress Deidre Hall is 57, Talk show host Jane Pauley is 55.
Actor Brian Stokes Mitchell is 47. Movie director Peter Jackson
is 44. Rock musician Larry Mullen is 44. Actor Dermot
Mulroney is 42. Rock musician Mikkey Dee (Motorhead) is 42.
Rock singer-musician Johnny Marris 42. Actor Rob Schneider is
41. Country singer Darryl Worley is 41 . Rap musician Adrock is
39. Rap performer Rob Van Winkle (formerly known as Vanilla
Ice) is 37. Rock singer Linn Berggren (Ace of Base) is 35.
· Thought for Today: "There are very few monsters who warrant the fear we have of them.'' - Andre Gide, French author
and critic (1869-1951 ).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All/etters are subject ro editing, must be signed,
and include address and teleplume number. No unsigned let ters · will be published: Lellers should be in good taste,
addre;·sing issues, not personalities. Leuers of thank.&lt; to organizations and individuals will nor be acceptedj(H publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correetton Polley

(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stori~s is to be Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, ~ 11 Court Street.
accurate. It you know of an error in a
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992-

2156. '

Pomeroy, Ohio.

Second-class postage

paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated P ress and the

Our main number Is
(740) 992·2156.

Department extensions are:

Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Oh io 45769

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Monday, October 31, 20Q5

Understand
the process

cap ita, for which they
received 5 points.
It is pretty clear from the
applications that Middleport
did not score the most points
Dear Editor:
for indebted ne ss.
In Wednesday 's . Daily · Fred Hoffman
Sentinel, Commissioner Jim
Middleport
Sheets
stated
that
Middleport's Issue 2 application scored high because·
of the village's high indebtedness. I think Mr. Sheets
Dear Editor:
should understand the scorWhen , are Meigs Co'u nty
ing process before he makes law enforcement and the
any statements concernin g humane society going to do
how projects are scored.
something about the way
Ju st to set the · record people's pets are bein g murstraight on the four applica- dered')
tions filed in Mei~s County,
A year ago, my Dalmatian,
I am ,Hsting the pomts scored Lola. was shot twice and
for indebtedness· on each killed. I told the dog warden
application.
and the sheriff's department
Pomeroy listed an ·indebt- who did it, and nothing was
edness of$643.64 per capita. ever done or said to the man.
for which they received 25
Now,
her
grandson,
points.
Domino, the beloved pet of
li s ted
an Tom and Bess ie Darst, was
Middleport
indebtedness of $127.26 per poisoned in their own yard. I
capita, for whi c h th ey think it 's past the time for
received 15 points.
law enforcement or so me
Meigs County listed an kind of authority to stop this
indebtedness of $44.82 per cruelty. How many countless

t

people have alread y suffered
because of people or a person with a sick mind 0 The
majority
of death-row
inmates started killing afte r
they killed an innocent animal. Check the facts and
stop and think about it. I feel
for the Darsts.
Melanie Walters
Pomer~y

Charity begins
at 6ome
Dear Editor:
America is like a great
hou se filled with ma ny
rooms. One of those rooms
is chl1rity, charity for all at
all times and at all places
U1\der any and all conditions,
in all ways, shapes and
form s poss ible.
And while a great storm
may break down our house
and run over great cities, it
cannot break our spirit or
ruin our lives forever. · We
who have shed the blood of
mill ions of those who have

I

MIDDLEPORT - Josephine Gay Tyree, 71, of Middleport,
died 'unexpectedly at her residence on Saturday Oct. 29, 2005.
. She was born in Sharon, W.Va .. the daughter of the late
George Washington Falin and Virginia Collie Falin. She
wo:ked a s a cook and retired from the Meigs Coun1y Senior
Ot1zen Center 111 Pomeroy.
.
Besides her parents she vvas preceded in death by
Charles Tyree Jr.; a daugh ter, Jane; eight sisters; ol)e
brother; and a great grandaaughter. •
·
' She is survived by six children; a brother; a sister; several grandchildren and great grandchildren and a very
good friend , Nina Vance.
. . Josephine requested that she be cremated and there be
no services or calling hours. Fisher Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements.
Online condolences may be seni to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.
·

Homeless

Intermediate School to coincide with the fall fe stival. She
. has al so organized clothing
from PageA1
drive s on Nov. 7 - 21 at
Southern High School with
"In a two family house- the help of its student counhold, if bo th parent s are cil. and on Nov. 14 - 18 at
working it would take them a Mei gs Elementary. Gently
minimum of working 89 used clothing without any
hours a week to afford a two rips ,. holes or stains are wel bedroom rental in the area," come.
The food and clothing go
Wayland said. "It 's not
to
local charitable organizaexpensive to live here but if
tion
s including God's NET to
there are low wages and no
education, where are you . help the homele ss and
Wayland also pa sses the
going to go?"
clothing
directly to her
She often poses these
sc
hool
kids
. . Since starting
question s to her homeles s
teens, helping them develop a her job on Sept. 6, Wayland
·strategy for employment as said 29 homele ss kids had
well as balance their school been clothed .
Wayland also praises the
work.
resources
in the community
Wayland also ge ts her
including
God 's NET, the
hands dirty. so to speak, in
Department
of Jobs and
her job by arranging food ,
medical , hygine and clothing Family Services, residents
as sistance for her kids , and the teachers in all three
describing ~o me homeless di stricts, calling them all
teens as living an existence of "amazing" for donating supsleeping on a series of couch- plies and caring about the
well being of Meigs County's
es.
children.
Wayland herself was in the
Wayland plans to stay
same situation when .s he lost
both her parents between the "hands on" when helping her
ages of 14 and 15. She cred- students saying, "These kids
its the solid, encouraging have trust issues and they
foundation her parents gave need to see me helping them.
her for keeping her motivated They always know they can
to stay in school. Knowing call me.''
Wayland' s office is located
that she could have been one
of those homeless kids moti, at the Meigs Alternative
School and she can be
vales her for work each day.
"People don't realize that reached at 992-9121·. She is a
homelessness can happen to 1989 graduate of Meigs High
them," she said. "These · are School, received a degree in
our friend s, families and nursing from the University
neighbors."
of Rio Grande and also has a
Wayland has organized a background in social work.
food drive for the homeless She has a 12-year-old daugh·
on Saturday at Meigs ter Brianna.

Jobs
from .Page A1

Put in prison at 16, she's free at 46
The four-page letter, ·on
pink-lined
paper ,with
schoolgirl
penmanship,
arrived in the new sroom
eight years ago. .
"Hi!" it began, as cheery
as. a postcard from summer
camp.
Lorrie
Sue
McClary,
inmate W-13181 at Valley
State Prison for Women in
Chowchilla, went on to tell a
tale that raised que stion s
about the purpose of prison,
the concept of justice and the
imbalance of a legal system
that sent a 16-year-old girl to
prison for decades while letting her adult co-defendant
go free after four years.
On Monday, after 30 years
behind bars, McClary finall y
went free . · She walked
through the prison' s front
civilian
gates, wearing
clothes - a black skirt and
blue top- and climbed into
a car without shackle s for
the first time since she was a·
round-faced teenager.
."It's more than you can
describe," she said by phone
Tuesday from her parents·
home in Coulterville, east of
Modesto
in
Mariposa
County. She barely slept
Monday night, she sa id.
staying awake to read the
cards and letters welcomin g
her home. When it began to
rain, she opened the window
to "nell the air, the first time
she had opened a wi nclow,in
three decades.
She is 4'6 now. but ·he r
cravings on Mond ay were
still a teenager's: She wanted pizza. Pepsi, peanu t-butter-fudge ice cream and
something she had only
heard about - cab le televi Sion.
"I feel like I'm starting my
life from scratch," she said.
"I returned to planet Earth
finally, and I want to know
what this planet is all about.''

what I did. " she told me.
" But I'm not guilty of murder. I've done my time. I've
don e every single thing
they 've asked me.' '
The State Board of Pri so n
Joan
Terms g'ranted her release
Ryan
thi s summer and set the date
for last Friday. her 46th
birthday. But burea ucratic
red tape delayed her relea se
When I t1rst met McClary, until Monday. But when her
she was sitting across a parole officer showed up at 8
Formica table in the cafete- a.m. to drive her to he r parria -like visitor's room of ents' house. officials said the
still
hadn ' t
Valley State · Prison for paperwork
arrived
.
They
told
her
she
Women. She was 37 at the
time , hard-lookin g, pasty wasn ' t going anywhere. trigand overweight from a thy- ge rin g me mori es of that
roid condition imcl two awful day in 1998 .
The parol e board haLl
decades of prison food. She
had been locked up 2 1 years, granted her rel ease that
co nvicted at age 16 in the spri ng. citing her exemplary
st ran g lin g death of a 7Y- behavior, a rare letter of recfrom the
. year-old widow in San om me ndation
prison
warden.
and
even a
Bernardino County. She was
the youngest female in le tter of support from th e
Cali forni a ever to go direct ly slain widow 's son. "Twentytwo years is enough,'' he
into an adult prison.
Pete
Wil so n,
She· said she had co nfessed wrote.
to the cri me at the urging of California governor at the
her tro ubled 23-year-old ti me . had 30 days to veto the
boyfrie nd and co-defendant re lease. On the 29th · day,
- who McClary said was · after McC lary had begun
the actual killer - because se nding boxes of her belonghe told her she would be ings ho me with her mother,
tried as a juvenile and Wilson overruled the board.
So McC lary took noth ing
receive a li ght sentence.
" I thought I was in love for granted as she waited
with him ,'' she sa id with the Monday morning for her
tl at, matter-of-t:Uct tone th at offic ial releas~ . At midday.
finall y
came from repeating the the ·paperwork
details so m;my ti me s over arrived, ancl her parole otfi·
the years. He pleaded gui lty cer drove her to her parents'
to second -degree murder, hou se in Cou lterville, east of
test ifi ed against · her und Modesto, a house McClary
served just four years.
had never seen. They had
Mc C lary. o n the ot he r movecl there ·17 years ago to
hand, was still sleeping in a be closer to the prison. On
prison ce ll two decm.les later. the trees lining their street.
ri sing at 5:45 every morning, her family had tiecl yellow
reporting to her job makin g rl bbo1t-.. The y hung a
eyeg lasses, wri tin g letter' tu "We leu me Home " banner
medi a and politicians ,to over the front door a nd in vi tplead her case, moving from cd friends and neighbors for
one empty day to the next.
.a party.
" I take responsibility for
McClary said she plan s

Bush fundraisers got $1.2 billion in public funds

Josephine Tyree
worn and who today wear
our country 's military uniforms. We who have spent
billions o f our dollars to help
co untl e~s nations and people
all arOlmd the world. can we
not reach deep, deep into our
own pockets and pull forth
money, hope, help and aid
fo r our brot])er and sister
Americans so that they can ·
beg in to rebuild thei r homes,
dreams a nd fa mil y.
We and only we have an
unlimited ability to build and
rebuild . to create and re-create ou r nation . li ves and
fu tu re. Le t us all reach out
with- this everl asting ability
to do so. Every dollar that
we give today will be worth
hundreds . perhaps thou sands
in th e hearts, mind s . and
souls of those who rece ive it
for all of their lifetime.
Would we not want them
same for ourselves if we had
suffered so'
David Edwards
, Pomeroy

to learn medi ca l tran sc ription and work from home .
She want s to garden and
paint. She ·want s to learn
how ·to drive again. She ha s
been cuddling her siste r' s
dog , a small pleasure she
mi ssed for 30 years. She
plans a trip to Costen thi s
week to see for herse lf the
enormous stacks of goods
her mother ha s been telling.
her about.
I ca n' t say I eve r saw
Lorrie Sue McClary as a
tragi c figure . She wa s an
accomplice to a murder. But
her story macle ine que stion
th e purpose of keepin g
someone like her lpcked up
for so long, someone who is
as reh abilitated ·as a person
can get in pri son. It made me
wonder about a system that
would be so certain that a
16-year-old g irl , rather than
a re peat-offe nd er 23-yearold man . was the mastermind behind a murder and
check-forgery scheme . It got
me thin kin g---about whether
. justice is only about punish· ment , or if justice is also
about acknowl edging when
punishment should give way
to common sebs~ and compassion.
McClary has hc ,ll't prob]ems . osteoporosis, asthma,
back pain a nd arthriti s. She
is significantly overweig ht
from her thyroid condi tion
and th ree decacles of prison
food. She isn ' t lik e ly to be a
th reat to anyo ne . She is
where she s houlcl be. at
home. wi th her · aging par,
ent s. llguring out who she is ·
now. a full-grown woman
marveling at the joy of opening a window.

(Jncm RHm is a ·cu!u,unist

for rh~ · Sa n Francisco :
Chronicle. Smd comments .

ro her in care of thi.1 new.vpaper or ~e11d her - e~ mail at "

joanrwor @sfchrmride.com.)

Rica, where "mother plants"
will be grown. Those cuttings
are to be nurtured at Bob's
Market, where they will grow
and develop roots .
In addition to the new partnership with Dummen, Bob's
Market also is enjoying an
expansion in business from
its current customer base .
"We've in a very fortunate
situation,'' Barnitz said.
"When
your
customers
expand, you should expand."
The hiring of 18 additional
employees will boost the
workforce at Bob's Market
by about 15 percent, Barnitz
said. The community-minded
Bamitz family, which is a

Survey
from PageA1
reserve the right to reject any
bid but said She is not sure if
the 'village can restri ct the use
of the land or force developtnent of the property Qnce it
is sold .
The- villa Doe assumed ownership of the thre e school
build ings in Middleport the high school and ce ntral

regular supporter of local
schools, is especially pleased
that the success of their busi•
ness means that more people
from Mason, Meigs and
Gallia counties can count on
them for their livelihoods.
"It's very gratifying,"
Barnitz said. "The quality of
people we have working for
us from the tri-county area is
fantastic . We're thrilled to
death to continue employment and expand our base.
''We ' re thankful and we ' re
bles sed. We feel that our
employees are probably our
strongest asset."
The 98,000-square foot
expansion will be accomplished with two new structures in Mason: one 20,000
square feet and another
78,000 square feet. They are
expected to be completed in
February.
'

buildings and the elementary
school Pearl Street - when
they were vac ated by the
school di strict two years ago.
Since that time. plans have
been made for a new jail and
VIllage haJ] In the elementary
_ building, which is now occup1ed by the R1ver C1ty
Players. Several 1deas have
been proJ)_osed for u ~_of the
hi gh school. However, both
it
.
,
and the ce ntral bulldmg
remain vacant, and targets for
trespass ing and vandali sm.

~r.. t~¢\lY {l{.. l)~lil~

~~6&gt;)\~@'~l

.l(il:lt''
\ ~tl . . ~

~

Auto Accidellls Workers'

ChiroprM.'Ior oi ttk.' ) l"M 1()1)8 ·

V.P. \It'\ ' Chin"l!T.teli&lt;: Soci\:1)
Member o( Amt•rican Hoard of

l·orcnsic rrof('li&amp;lm~l s
10 ~ rs c:xp:rier-.."t'
Mtml\.'1" d American Ac-.td:my
of ~l'dit-al Arn(JI.I/1('\Llfe

Compemation
• • Spt1r1 ~ lnjmics
• M~o..J u..:.are

• M( ~lln~ llt.!r'U't

• AL'upunctun:

• Sao1( da)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As .

www.mydatlysentinel.coin

Obituaries

READERS' VIEWS

Action needed

Publisher

I

PageA4

Monday, October 31, '2005

TOLEDO (AP) - Thirty
Rangers lead two Ohio
Ohioans who raised a comhealth
care . companies:
bined $4.1
million for
Toledo-based HCR Manor
President Bush's re-election
Bv THE AssociATED PREss
Care Inc. and Elyria-based
campaign have received more
Invacare.
than $1.2 billion in public
Some highlights from The (Tol edo) Blade's analysis of
HCR, for whom M . Keith
funds for their companies and
public funds paid to some of Presidenr Bush 's biggest
Weikel serves as chief operatclients, a newspaper reported.
ftmdraisers in Ohio:
ing
officer.
relied
on
Since Bush took office in ·
Medicare and other govern200 I, the federal government
THE PLAYERS: Thirty Ohioans raised a more than
ment payments for two-thirds
has given those companies
$4 million for the Bush-Cheney re-election campaign.
·of
its $3.33 billion in revenue
more than $447 . million in
The fundraisers, many of them business leaders and loblast
fiscal year.
subsidies, contracts and other
byists, were known as " Pioneers" if rpey raised $100,000
lnvacare, whose chief execpayment s,
according
to
and " Rangers" for raising $200.000.
utive
is Malachi Mixon, and
records analyzed by The
THE PAYERS: Companies led by and clients served
its s ubsidiaries have gotten at
Blade. Ohio has awarded
by the fundraisers received more than $ 1.2 billion in publeast $3. I million in federal
them about $800 million in
lic funds. Some of the fundrai sers were given political
contracts
since 200 I. Invacare
the last six years, · the paper
appomtments.
also has received at least
reported Sunday.
MOTIVES TO GIVE: Some of the fundraisers said
$691 .000 from Ohio since
Business leaders and lobbyBush 's Christian values led them to support llim. One
1999 , mostly in development
ists who raised money for
Republican official said there was no connection
Bush were called "Pioneers·"
grants.
between state contracts and campaign donation s.
if they · .rai sed at least
Bob Bennett, the chairman
of
the Ohio Republican Party,
$100,000 and "Rangers" if including his stance on abor- Alex Knoll , spok esman for
they rai sed $200,000; Sllme tion and gay marriage.
the
Center for . Public said it's a stretch to connect
also were given political
"I didn ' t want , nor did· 1 Integrity,
a
nonpartisan state contracts to campaign
expect, anything at all in .. watchdog group , based in donations.
appointments.
One of the fundraisers, coirt return," Corn said. He added Washington.
''Why is it wrDiig?" he said.
One of the Bush Rangers, "What makes it wrong' You
dealer Tom Noe . was charged that his reward was seeing
Thursday with illegally fun- John Roberts confirmed as William R. Timken Jr. , assume that these people are
neling $45,400 in contribu- chief justice of the United became the U.S. amba&gt;&amp;ador buying
something,
and .
lion s to Bush 's re-election States.
·
to Germany this summer. they're not. They're buying
Both Bush and hi s oppo- Timken is the former chair- good goveniment. They're
bid. Noe ha' denied wrongdoing in hi s fundraising and in nent. Democratic nominee man of Canton-based Timken buying a philosophy of govhis handling of a state invest- John Kerry, sought out Co ., a ball bearing manufac- ernment."
·
ment fund , whi ch prompted fundraisers who would in turn turer that has received $259
John -Edwards, Kerry's runan investigation that led to tap dozen s of others to con- million in government fund s
ning mate. said The Blade's
Gov. Bob Taft's conviction on tribute the $2,000 maximum since 2001 , according to
analysis shows a continuing
allowed under federal law. record s.
ethics charges.
pattern of fundraisers getting·
Noe's initial appearance in The Bush campaign rai sed
The federal government
federal court in Toledo is set $293 million overall to gave Timken $109 million ·in special access to the Bush
for Monday.
· Kerry's $252 million.
2003 because several countries administration.
"A significant amount of
Doug Corn , an insurance
"The Pioneers and Rangers ''dumped" large quantities of
that
money was raised by peoexecutive for Northwestern are the networks of people ball bearings on the U.S. mar-.
Mutual Life in Cincinnati, the friends of the friends of ket for low prices. Timken said ple who had .partkular interraised at least $250,000 for the friends - who put money tl1e dumping caused $63 bii- ests. And it is obvious that
some of them were awarded
Bush and said he has met with into these coffers. They are lion in damages.
what
they
did.
Timken spokesman Jeff for
the president 16 times in last given a tracking number · so
two years.
their donations can be given Datler told The Blade he Unfortunately, it's the voter
Corn said he decided to credit and there is only one would not comment on the and the tax payer who suffers
raise money because of reason for that: if that is going company's individual revenue for that ," the former U.S. senBush 's Christian value s, to be used as value. later," said sources.
ator frol'(l North Carolina said.

Bush fundraising in Ohio

Kashmiri militant group claims responsibili . for deadly bombing
NEW DELHI (AP)- A little-known group that police
say has ties to Kashmir's most
feared
militants claimed
responsibility Sunday for a
series of terrorist bombings
that killed 59 people in New
Delhi.
Authorities said they have
gathered useful clues about
the near-simultaneous ·blasts
Saturday night that ripped
through a bus and two markets crowded with people
preparinj: for the Hindu festi·
val of D1wali.
reponedly
Investigators
raid~d dozens of small hotels
across. India's capital looking
for possible suspects, and
police said "numerous" people were being questioned.
The attacks came at particularly sensitive· time as India
and Pakistan were hashing out
an unprecedented · agreement
to partially open the heavily
militarized
frontier
that
divides the disputed territory
of Kashmir to speed relief to
victims of a massive earthquake earlier this month.
The agreement was finalized early Suriday, and Indian
officials appeared hesitant to
quickly blame Pakistan-based
militants for the bombing. as
they have for previous terror
attacks during a 16-~ear- old
insurgency by Islam•c separatists in India's part of
Kashmir.
Pakistan's government was
also quick to condemn the
bombings.
White
House
Press
Secretary Scott McClellan
issued a statement saying the
United States "strongly condemns the heinous terrorist
attacks in India."
"By targeting innoce nt civilians making final preparations
for holiday ce lebrations, terrorists have de monstrated yet
again that they are enemies of
humanity and contemptuous
of the values all in the civilized
world s hare,'"McCiellan said.

·

APPhoto

Oelhi Pollee personnel cordon ·off a section of the site of a bomb blast In Sarojlnl Nagar area
of New Oelhl, India Sunday. Investigators detained more than 150 people during raids on
dozens of small hotels across the Indian capital Sunday as they hunted for suspects in three
terrorist bombings that killed at least 61 people in two crowded markets, a report said SundaY,
accusations
of
. India's
Pakistani involvement in a
200 I attack on parliament put
the two nuclear-armed rivals
on the t&gt;rink of a fourt~ war.
But they pulled back and,
after pursuing peace efforts
since early last year, appeared
intent on keeping the atmosphere calm.
"We have lots of information but it is not proper to disclose it yet," Indian Home
Minister Shivraj Patil said
after an emergency meeting of
the Cabinet called to discuss
the attack s. "Our people are
making good progress. The
investigation is going well.''
A man called a .local news
agency in Indian Kashmir to
say the militant Is lami c
lnquilab Mahaz. or Front for
Islamic Uprising, &gt;laged the
bombings, which police said
killed 59 people and wounded
210.
The caller, who identified
himse lf as Ahm ed Yaar
Ghazmlvl. said the bombings

were "meant as a rebuff to the
claims of Indian security
groups" that militants had
been wiped out by security
crackdowns and the Oct. 8
earthquake that devastated the
insurgents· heartland in the
mountains of Kashmir.
A senior police officer in
India's Jammu- Kashmir state
said the caller's name was not
familiar to intelligence agencies, and New Delhi's deputy
police chief, Karnail Singh,
said the group had not been
very active since 1996.
However. while Singh
refused to comment on. the
claim of re sponsibility. he
said the group is linked to the
Paki stan-based Lashkar-eTayyaba, the most feared of
the dozens of Kashmiri mili tant gro ups .
A le ading anti-terrorism
expert said earlier that the
timing and nature of the blasts

appeared to indicate the work
of Lashkar.
·
"It looks like Lashkar. They
are . the most active group
here," said Vikram Sood, the
former head of the Research
and Analysis Wing, India's
foreign intelligence agency.
Police said they also were
looking for a man · in his 20s ·
who refused to buy a ticket on
a bus and got off in the
Govindpurl
neighborhood,
leaving behind a large black
bag. When some of the 40 passengers raised an alarm, the
driver and conductor examined
it and threw it out just as the
blast occurred, injuring them
both along with seven others.
Several Indian television
stations said dozens of hotels
in New Delhi had been raided
after the bombings and suspects ~ere detained. Singh,
the deputy police chief,
refused to comment.
'

RE-ELECr

SCOft WILTON
108 W. Main St., Pomel'\)y, OH
·
. PH:740-992,- 9070

Dl'fll BDUSB
Thesday ~ November 1st
6:30am to 9pm
Ribbon Cutting lOam ,

To

Meigs ~I Board
Of Education
"Continuing to work toward
progressive education"

appc.

Ravenswood.
CbiroprJctic Center

=.304-273-5321.

316 Washln ton St.

Ravenswood, WV

Rel'resbments! Door Prizes!
Grand I&gt;Oor P.rlze: One night's
stay at Obiu River Cabin's

Stop by and say "Hi" and clleck
out the new_e.&lt; tfitness center for
merJ. &amp; wo1hen
**Jenny Smith **.Judy Williams

Your vote is greatly appreciated!

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 31, 2005

~
A.P BUSINESS WRITER

CLEVELAND - When th~
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Cn.
opens comract talks next year.
it mav want the United
Steelworkers of Amcric&gt;a to
draw on snme tough lessons
learned in the union\ past
struggles with a consolidated
steel industry.
Goodyear executives said in
an in vestor&gt; meeting in New
York on Sept. 23 they are considering closing an undisclosed number of plants and
saving up to $1 billion over
the
next
three . ye·ars.
Goodyear did not say how
many jobs would be cut, how
many plants would be closed.

I
'

High School Football
Eastern 32, Southern 6
High School Volleyball
Eastern 3, Notre Dame 0 ·
College Soccer
Rio Grande 4, Tiffin 1

Monday, October 31, 2005
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Local Weather
Todars Forecast

Monday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Southwest winds I 0 to 15
mph.
night ... Part lv
Monday
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers after midnight. Lows
in the lower 40s. South winds
around 5 mph. Chance of rain
20 percent.
Thesday... Partly
cloudy
with a slight chance of showers in the morning ... Then
mostly cloudy with a chance
of showers in the afternoon.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Southwest winds 5 to 10 mph .
Chance of rain 30 percent.
nighl ... Partly
Thesday
cloudy. A slight, chance of
showers in the evening. Lows
in the mid 40s. West winds
around 5 mph. Chance of rain
20 percent.
Wednesday
through
Thursday... Mostly
clear.
Highs in the mid 60s. Lows in
the upper 30s.
Thursday night through
Friday night.. ;Mostly clear.
Lows in the upper 40s. Highs
around 70.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

SATURDAY'S SCORE..')·

AP Photo

City/Region

High 1 Low terrps

Forecast for Monday, Ocl. 31

Youngstown • ·

. Mansfield • . ~

~

61 ' 143'

143' 0 ~

65'' 141 '

*Columbus

64' 143'

Cincinnati

~

Cloudy . . . . . .

Partly~~

Cloudy

Showers

~~r- ...... F.l~rrles ~
......

~

1oe

...,~~~
Rain

~

Snow

::::.

Weather Unct&amp;i'groun::t • AP

Goodyear · tires are displayed at a Goodyear Tire Center
Thursday, Oct. 27 in Mayfield Heights. When the Goodyear Tire.
&amp; Rubber Co. opens contract talks next year, it may want the
United Steelworkers of America to draw on some tough lessons
learned in its past struggles with a consolidated steel industry.
ber and plastics industries as
"Ou1· union has shown that
former United Rubber it can be an extremely innovaWorkers members. a union tive partner," Hoover said.
now merged into the
But he wasn' t sure what to
Steelworkers.
make of ~ich 's comment
The Goodyear contract, ·about -the union 's experience
approved in 2003 · after with steel.
about five months of tense
"I'm a Steelworker and I'm
negotiations, covered about certainly proud of it. Wliat
16,000 employees and gave happened with us in the steel
the company the option tQ industry, I don 't see how it
cut. jobs if production and applies to Goodyear," Hoover
cost-cutting goals aren't said.
met. The union agreed to
Unlike numerous steel
productivity-improvement bankruptcies that threatened
targets at every union plant permanent los s of jobs,
in North America. The con- Goodyear appears to be overtract provides for minimum coming its business woes. On
employment levels and Thursday, the company
guaranteed capital mvest- · reponed its third-quarter earn. ments.
ings more than tripled, boostRon Hoover, the union's ed by record sales for any of
Goodyear contract coordi- its quarters. Goodyear earned
nator, acknowledged that $142 million. or 70 cents per
health care and pension share, on sales of $5 billion
costs are ongoing issues. He for the quarter.
also said the union and
Hoover said the union
Goodyear can work together would be supportive of any
to maintain benefits while Goodyear need to close a
controlling costs.
nonunion plant.

WHAT'S AHEAD: The
Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber
Co. and the United
Steelworkers of America
next year will go back to
negotiations to replace a
three-year contract that
expires July 22.
EARLY TENSION:
Goodyear executives said
at an investors' meeting in
New York on Sept. 23they
will close an undetermined number of plants to
save up to $1 billion over
the next three years.
STEEL DEBATE: "The
Steelworkers understand
what happened in the steel
industry,'' said Jonathan
Rich, who heads the company 's· Nonh American tire
unit. 'T don't see how it
applies to Goodyear," said
Ron Hoover, the union's
Goodyear coordinator.
The company has 12 tire
plants in North America nine in the United States and
three in Can-ada.
The plants represented by
the
Pittsburgh-based
Steelworkers are in Gadsden,
Ala.; Buffalo; Topeka, Kan.;
Freeport, Ill. ; Tyler, Texas;
Danville. Va.; Union City,
Tenn. and Fayetteville, N.C.
A .nonunion plant is rn
Lawton, Okla.
In Canada, a plant in
Napanee, Ontario, is not
union-represented, but plants
in Valleyfield, Quebec, and
Medicine Hat, Alberta, are
unionized.
The question the union has
to consider is how much the
tire business is shrinking, if at
all, said Mary Deily, associate
professor of economics at
Lehigh
University
in
Bethlehem, Pa.

Lady Eagles net berth at regionals wi~h third district crown
· out and play well," said Caldwell.
"We knew Notre Dame was going to .
be a good club, but we come out and
got the job don e."
WELLSTON - Eastern is headed
The Eagles showed plenty of conback to the Division IV volleyball
sistency
throughout the match, postregionals following an impressive
ing
favorable
numbers of 71-of-75
25-17, 25-15, 25-19 sweep of
fro
m
the
service
line, 90-of-98 in hitPonsmouth Notre Dame Saturday at
ting and finished 113-of-137 in passWellston High School.
The Lady Eagles (22-3) earned ing.
More importantly, those numbers
their third district title in the last five
helped
lead EHS to another 'school
years with the triumph over the
Titans ( 19-3), and the Green and best, wins in a season.
"The things that this club has
White will also make the school's
accomplished
have been great. They
third regional appearance in history
Thursday at Lancaster High School have the most wins in school history,
against No. 2 ranked Newark they're TVC Hocking champs, sectiona1 champs and district champs,"
Catholic.
Eastern coach Howie Caldwell said Caldwell. "For not having any
thought Saturday's inspirational vic- seniors on this club, these girls have
tory came down to early determina- progressed a very, very long way."
tion by his team.
Game one saw Eastern break open
"I thought we were focused today. a .three-all tie with a I 0-5 run for a
Bryan Walters/photo
We had a little hit-a-thon earlier in 13-8 advantage. Notre Dame closed
Members
of
the
2005
Easten
Lady
Eagles
volleyball
sqlJad
pose
for a picture
the day, and even then, you· could just
Please
see
Sweep,
86
after claiming their third district crown with a sweep of Notre Dame Saturday.
sense that they were going to come
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

LocAL SCHEDULE
GALLIPOLIS- A sch&amp;dule of upcoming college
and high school vars~ spot1ing &amp;\Ients in110tving

llilam!i from

Gal~a,

Meigs and Mason counties.

Tuttday)gamg

Collage Basketball
OSU·N6wark 81 Rio Grande, 7:30 p_.m.
Co!oge \lolloybllll
Rio Grande at Asbwy CoMage, 7 p.m.
'-.

Fddav'a gomeo
Ohio Playoff foolbell
Sheridan at Gallia Academy, 7:JO p.m.
Football

Haman at Duval
Moorefield at Wahama
Satyrdllv'B QIIDIB

Ohio Playoff Football
South Gallla at Hannibal River, 7 p.m.
Women's College Basketball
Rio Grande at Carlow, 2 p.m.
College Soccer
MlC Playoff, TBA
College Croas Country
AMC Cha~ionship, 10:15 a.m.

Cross Country
'

INSIDE

Locals
compete at
Regionals
Blue Angels
move on to state
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@IMYDAI LYTRI BUNE .COM

PICKERINGTON
G&lt;dli&lt;t Academy printeu-llp
shirts thut read "2005 state
· quali fie-rs" before ever head-'
ing

Please see Regional, 82

• Browns embarrassed by
Houston.
See Page B6
Brad Sherman/photo

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Eastern running back Terry Durst (31) goes airborne over a pair of Southern defenders o score his third touchdown of the
·
first half Saturday in Racine. Durst and the Eagles earned their first:victery of the season.

Durst, Eagles soar over rival Tornadoes
Bv SCOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

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CINCINNATI
Not
even Brett Favre can overcome . five interceptions ,
though he sure came close.
Facing the team that jumpstarted his career 13 years
ago, Favre threw five interceptions and came up short
on a ga_me-ending drive
Sunday, preserving the
Cincinnati . Bengals' 21-14
victory over the Green Bay
Packers.
The Packers ( 1-6) fee I
they're never out of it as
long as Favre is throwing.
·With the Bengals' orangeshirred defense catching its
breath, Favre kept throwing
right to the end.
Backed up on their 5'yard
line with 56 seconds left, the
Packers got a break with a
48-yard pass interference
penalty. Favre then drove
them to the 28, where a fan
ran out of the · stands and
plucked the ball from the
quarterback's passing hand
·after a play.
·
Guards needed several
minutes to run down the fan,
giving both teams a much-

Medk41 Excellence.
Local Caring:

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51l.llrtU.IIIII
Brad Sherman, Sport1 Editor
(740) 446·2342, oxt. 33
DshermanOmydallytrlbune.com
Bry1n W1lttr1, Sport• Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext 23

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(304) 675-1333, oxt. 19
Ierum C mydallyreglster.com

-----'------RACINE - ·Behind a
four-touchdown, 177 -yard
rushing game from senior
running back Terry Durst,
the Eastern Eagles (1-9. 1-4)
deflated
the
Southern ·
Tornadoes 32-6 Saturday
during senior night at Adams
Memorial Field in Racine.
The win breaks Eastern's
2005 winless streak and
technically gives them third
place in the Tri- Valley
Conference race.
Trimble (9- I, 4-1) beat
Miller Friday 34-0, and
Waterford upended Federal
Hocking 25-20 throwing the
TVC race into a three-way
tie
between
Trimble,
Waterford , and Federal.

Miller had two league wins
over Southern and Eastern.
Southern finished the
league winless at 0-5, 2-8
overall.
Eastern, supercharged by
the running of .Durst and a
good effort from its line,
moved the ball well all
evening long, but Sou'thern
did also when they could
hold onto the ball. Southern
had a case of fumbelitus , a
disease that proved to be
deadly to the quest for a win.
Southern fumbled five
times. Three directly resulted in Eastern scores.
Eastern had 12 first downs
and 307 total yards.
Southern had 11 first downs
with 214 total yards. The
Eagles were able to look the
Southern gift horse in the
mouth and fly away with the

victory after capitalizing on
Southern mistakes.
Durst ran 23 times for 177
yards, senior running back
Bryce Honaker carried six
times fur 30 yards and
caught two passes fa t 31
. yards; Cody Gerlach was 220. Cory Chaffer was 4-16,
and Jordan Pierce was 6-11.
Nick Kuhn caught one pass
for 22 yards.
·
Southern rushing was led
by Weston Counts with 16
carries for 66 yards and a
·reception for 22 yards, Jesse
McKnight was 12-54, and
Butch Marnhout was '14-27
with four catches for 31
yards . Wes Riffle caught one
pasS" for twelve yards.
Senior football players
honored at senior night and
playing their last ~arne were
Josh Pape, Davtd Myers,

un

Please sae So•r, 81

See Page 86

BY JoE KAY

Pickerington

and·Zach Imboden.
Eastern se niors playing
their last game were Bryce
Honaker, Nick Kuhn, Terry
Durst, · Lucas Grueser,
Michael Cranston, Levi
Clegg, Brandon Goeglein,
and Branden Batey.
On the opening drive of
the game Southern's Weston
Counts had back to back tlve
·yard c"arries for a first down, ·
then Jesse McKnight and
Counts
combined "for
Southern's second first
down. Southern appeared to
be on a roll and had momentum. With the aid of an
Eastern personal foul penalty Southern advanced to the
Eastern 32 yard line. On the
very next play Southern had
a hold that brought the ball

• Ohio State wins
shootout over Gophers.

Bengals halt
Favre, Packers

to

Saturday.
It wus dose. but the llluc
Angels were indeed able to
don the new threads in th e
post-race picture.
Lauren Adkitis won the
Division II girls race in leading G~llia Academy to a
fourth place finish. and the
final coveted ·s pot at the state
meet, durin g the regional
(TOSS country meet Saturday
at Pi ckeri ngton .
G~ll ia Acadcniy amassed
138 _points for ·fourth place.
Fellow So~theastern Ohio
Athletic League member
Warren won the regio nal title
with 108 points thanks to a
tie, breaker over runner-up
· Circleville. Dover was third
with 129.
All four move on to the
slate meet Saturday at Scioto
Downs in Colttmbus. The top
16 individuals not on an
m.lvancing team also caru a
trip.
Finishing first is nothmg
new for th e freshman.
Adkins. who has paced the
Blue Angels in every event ,
this seaso n and finish ed fiN
overall in the !ton's share of
those. Her winning time ul
' 19: 39 was 10 seconds fasler
than runner-uf Samttnthu
Mcintosh
o
Harri.smr
Central.
Fellow Gallia Academ y ·
freshman Lee Ann Townse nd
was 14th tn a time of 20:49.
Junior Carol Fahmy was 2Xth
(2 1:37).
frush
Andrea

Blue Devils host, Rebels making Redmen take down
Tiffin in season finale
first ever trip to posts~ason
BY MARK WILLIAMS

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

SPECIAL TO THE SEN TINEL

COLUMBUS - All the
playoffpairrng questions are
answered.
Yes - Gallia Academy is
playing host in the postseason for the first time since
2002.
Yes - South Galli a is in .
Did anyone expect two
Gallia County teams would
be playing Week II when
the season started - proba- .
bly not.
Playoff feve r hit Gallia
County Sunday afternoon
when the state football playoff brackets were officially
announced. Gallia AcademY

RIO GRANDE - Th.e
University of Rio Grande
Redmen soccer team. the
NAJA's top ranked team ,
defeated Tiffin , 4-1 on
Saturday afternoon at
Evan Davis Field in the
regular season finale .
Rio Grande (16-0, 8-0
AMCS) was able to clo se
out the regular season
with a perfect record
although the game didn't
start out well for the
Redmen .
Tiffin (9-8-1, 4-4 AMCSl
drew first blood in the 12th
minute
when
Mark
Dlugopolsky beat Rio goa l-

(8-2) entertains Sheridan
7:30 p.m. Friday, while
South Galli a (6-4) will travel to Hannibal River 7 p.m.
o n Saturday.
It's the first time ever that
two Gallia County clubs
qualified in the same season.
It also marks the return to
the postseason for coach
Matt
Bokovitz's · Blue
Devils, who missed out last

season after five consecutive
appearances.
In
Division Ill . Region 12,
Gallia Academy earned the
fourth seed and the allimportant home field advantage that comes with it.
"'We're really excited, this
is one of the big perks you
ge.t from winning ball games
and playing a decent sched-

Piease see Postseason, 81

Redmen
Soccer

lJS

keeper AnJv Moore to give
the Dragon' a 1-0 lead .
· The Kedmen ti ed the
game in the ~9th minule un
u gonl by ... uphornore Ryan
Baxter
(Todmorden.
England ). l:laxter put a
header into the net after
recc ivtn g a feed from
senior • miJ-fie!Jer · Jnhn
Carroll.
Rio would take the lead
in the .1-It h minute on a
header in traffic by ju nior
dcfen,ive
back
Ton y

Please see Redman, 81

�I

Page B2 • The Daily Seritmel

Postseason
from Page Bl

wolld ·· he st,lted
Whtle G,tllta Ac,tdcmy"s
berth was expected - South
G&lt;tllta's entty 11110 the p(ht -..;edson

I

w~1:-.

'iurpn:-.tng

tl'IOrl.!

ule," Bokov tt l s&lt;ttd ··Th" 1,
li's the l11 st-ever pl,tyoll
what eve 1y foo tb.ill te,lm 1, appc,lr&lt;~nce lor the dec,ldclookmg l or~atd 10 111 the old school, &lt;~nd &lt;~t 6-4 (lil tstate ol Ohio _ ge ttmg m &lt;til. represe nts tts lttst Willthe pl ayoffs and seemg what ning se,1son ,Is well
happens- ,md pJ,1ying thell
Smtth Gc~ ll t&lt;t needed ovetbest footbd ll th iS 11111 e ot t1 mc to defeat Suotovlllc
year"
E&lt;1s t, 26-20, Fn d,ly Th&lt;it
Shendan's loss to West wm, along wll h some help.
Muski ng ham F11day &lt;tllowed a ll o~cd
wac h
Justy
Gal ha Academy to stay 111 Burleson s team to Jump
the top fo uc. A wm would three spots hom No 10 to
have hkcly va ulted th e No 7 m DIVIS IOn VI, Regl(ln
Generals mto sewnd or tht rd 23
- droppmg the Devils to
''We d1d need some bre.1ks
ftfth.
\ here and there. and we got
But now, as luck has n, those," he sa1d '' It may have
Sheridan (7-3) ts VIStlln g even ~orked out better tha n
Memonal F1eld th1s week. In we though! , the way we' re
a strange lwtst, 11will also be set up Ill th iS reg 1on
a prev1ew ol sorts ot th e
" It 's a treme ndous tee hng
2006 season-opener lor both ••gilt nnw to know 1h,1t we
clubs.
put it .til on the Ime and
The Gal It a Ac,\demy- came up b1 g"
Sheridan wmner gets enher
The Rebels make the long
top-seeded Cmcmnaulnd1an dn ve up Ohto 7 l c~ce
H11l (10-0) or Roge r Baco n Hanntbal R1ver (7-3). a team
(6-4) But that's the least ol that Burleson !eels IS much
the wornes for Boko; 1tz &lt;~ n d hke h•s ow n
"They sound a lot hke us.
his staff
"We' re not concern ed they've got about the same
about the way the brackets number ot pl ayers and we've
fell dow n, we ' ve go t got Slm tl ar stze." he
Sheridan nex t week and we explamcd "1 hey run a
don ' t care about what hap- Wing· T ofl ense. wht ch IS
pens anyw he re else m the somethmg tha t we've faced

Soar
fromPageBl
back to the 45. first &lt;1nd 25
Then, SHS fumbl ed for the
first time Eastern's Cod)
Gerlach came up With the
recovery.
Southern 's defense, whtch
later had two succe ssful goal
hne stand s, held on dnd
forc ed the Eagles to punt
On the second play ot the
possessiOn Southern tumbled
and thts tmte E&lt;tstern took
over on the SHS 24 Afler
Southern held Eastern at the
lme of scnmmage on two
stratght plays. SHS was
called for a person,\! foul to
gtve EHS a first down at the
15 yard !me. Eastern prepared for the least. That set
up a Ten y Dw sl fou1-ya•d
tou chdown run at the 1 39
mark of the f 1rst penod A
fumbled two-poml allempt
fell short w1th the score 6-0

Monday, October 31,

www .mydailysentincl.com

That score stood at the end of
the first penod
With 8 18 show1ng on the
clock m the second penod,
Southern had the ball on tls
24 yard Jme 111 a ti rst and 13
snuatum A h1gh snap over
Butch Marnhout's head
rolled a couple yards before
Terry Durst p1cked tt up and
ran tt ten yards tor the second
Eas tern score, 12-0 afte r
Southern stopped the twopmnt conversiOn . What was
lelt of the ead y T01 nado
enthusiasm and momentum
was ~ t s 1bl y deflated
Aftet Southern appeared to
he getlmg ns oflense back tn
gear, Eastern p1 ess ured SHS'
quarte rback Josh Pape &lt;1nd
produced a Codey Geliach
lflt erccptton Gellac h gal loped to the 13 ya•d lute on
the 50-yard inte rce ption
return. After a Durst 5-yard
run. SHS C(llled ltme out to
regroup with the ball on the
seven yard lme Durst then
rambled seven yards for the
score at the 4·29 mark

mo1e th,\1\ &lt;1 couple umes
'] thm(.. tt's g01ng to b~ "
IC ~l lly

good lll.llLh- up. i.lnd

ddu,lllcly the type of game
th.1t we tcel excucd .tboul
geLt1ng mtn. It wouldn"t rn~n­
tct tl tls H.:gul.lr scuson ur
p()\ll',JS('llll

l'hc Snuth G.dlid-River
Wtlllll'r ~ets e 1ther No 6
S) mmes Va ll ey 01 No 3
Sh,ldysJclc Symmes Vu lley.
diCh '"'" nl the Rebels,"
JUst nne of sevchll te.t ms
trnm Southc,tstel n Oh1o su ll
,11 ound lo1 &lt;It le,lst one more
week '
Mtdml T1&lt;1Ce w,1s the lone
DIVISI011 II .u e.l sq u.id to
e&lt;~rn
,1 spot In D- Ill.
f,ur lleld
Un1on
&lt;~ n d
Hlllsb01o both m.1de the
Reg •nn I2 hst ,tlong wnh the
Blue Devils
One ot the most In terest·
mg m.t tch-ups 1s 111 DIVISIOtl
IV between neighbors Rock
Hil l &lt;~nd Ironto n Wcstl ,tll
and Z,1t1C Trace '''"' ct.tcked
the top e1ght 111 Rcg 1on 15
WhcclciSburg.
V,1lley.
Ne lsonvi lle- York and Ade na
came away wn h berths 111 a
wil d DIVI'IOtl V, Reg1on 19.
Amo ng those wu h sllong
records that were let t ou t
Wele Tiim blc (9-1). Logd n
(8-2). Log,w Elm (7-3).
Jdc kson (7-3)
Feder&lt;~]
Hoc km g (7-3). W&lt;~terford (73) &lt;tnd Me1gs (7-3)

2005

Monday, October 31, 2005

Ky le H1 ve ly (6Rth, 18:30)
lively lor Gallm Ac,1demy
,tn
d Chns Lester (72 nd,
R1ver V.tlley was IOth
(250 pomts) m the D1vts1on 18:36) fo llowed Ju mor
II boys standm os Umota Dame! Hil l was the ftfth
from Page Bl
won the reg1on.1l title with scorer m H2 nd ( 18 55).
AIS&lt;J tor R1ver Valley.
onl y 52 pomts, whtle
WISeman 60th (22 32) and Clay mont (I 23 ). Cuclevd le M,111 N1bert wds 108th
sophomore Aanka Stanley ( 134) and Logan Elm ( 137) ( 19 42) dnd ·Tyler Youn g
took 64th (22 43) to wun d also punched ttckets to the I26th (2 1 45)
out the scormg
Clm s DaviS of Eastern fin slate meet
Me•gs' lone represe ntaSophomore
V1 nce IShed ,, strong 33 rd (17•42)
ti ve, fresh man Kuttberl y Weatherstem was the top out ot a fteld of 127 runn ers
Swtsher. __was 66th (22 45) Rmder limsher m 44th poSI- w tile boys D1 vision Ill race
Hannah Roush and Bnttyn tiO n in a ume of 18·JO
The DIVISIOn II g1rls race
Saunders were I 14th (26:50) Coac h Ed Sayre's semor tno begms at II 50 a. m
,md 11 5t., (27 II ) respec- of Jon Casto (47th. 18 I 1), Saturday

Regional

Redmen
from Page Bl
Gn ffl th s Fe llow JUili Or
Conar Dawson asSisted on
the go.1l As 11 Ill\ ned out
that IS all that the Redmen
wo uld need to claun VICtory
Rt o wo ul d take a 2- 1 lead
to halfti me
The Red men c~dde d an
1ns urance goal m tile 57th
mu1ul e
when
Milan
PartemJeVIC fo und the back
ot the net PartemJCV \C was
ass tsted on the play by
Baxter
R10 pl ayed agm n pl ayed
add-on 111 85th mmute on a
fro m
Dawson
. goc~l

Shaffer ran the ball 18
Eastern led 18-0 Southern
sto pped the EHS PAT ya1ds on the first play from
scr1mmage, but tl ags tlew
dttempt
,After a lost Southern pos- and Eastern took over on the
sessiOn, a 16-yard pass play 44 after the penalty was
fro m Jordan P1e1ce to Br)ce marked oft Irom the pomt ot
Honaker was negated by an ml rdC tlon F1ve plays later,
Eastern hold as E&lt;tstern Shaffer faked mto the lme
pushed to~ ards a score wnh and spun around bootleg
under a mt nute and a halt lelt fashton to the left , where he
until the 111lelllli SSIOI1
h1t Honaker 16 yards deep in
Sh.tl fe• completed a pass to the end zone lor Eastern's
Derek Young lor I I yards fourth score of the mght.
and L11 e1ail ed back to Terry•Durst ran in the extra's
Honaker for a gam of another for a 26-0 Eastern lead at the
yard Southern stu ck P 1~ rce 9 08 mark 111 the thud quarter.
on the next p l&lt;~y for a fumble
Sou the• n's
Ryan
and Jesse Mc Kn1 ght p1 cked Donaldson had a 13 yard
up the ball and ran tt back to return on the kick. A 12-yard
the EHS 35 yw d hne as tune pass play to Wes R1ffle and a
ran nul 111 the half McKni ght personal foul call on a late htt
rambled 47 yards and almost pushed the ball to the Eastern
broke the das h fm a touch- 35
dow n
Counts had a ten yard run
But tune r &lt;~ n out and off tackle for Southern 's first
Eastern held &lt;Ill 18-0 advan- score at the 6 18 mark of the
thi rd qu arter The PAT pass
tage "' the half
To start the second half to Marnhout fell short and
Btyce Honaker took a Eastern led 26-6 If Southern
Weston Count s k1ck 32 yards was gomg to stnke back, now
was the tllne. Coach Bob
to the SHS 42 yard ltne.

Fres hm an fo1ward Euan
Purce ll was credited wtth
an ass tst
Rw totaled 2 1 shots to
onl y three for T1ffln ,md
held an I 1-2 adva ntage tn
shots on goal
Rto Gr,mde head coac h
Scotl Morn ssey was happy
to get a wm, but knows hiS
team m1 ssed seve ral scorlflg chances " It was d
struggle at t11nes. 11 seemed
l1ke." MoriiSse y smd "In
the fi rst 15-20 mtn utes we
had great chances, great set
p1ece opportuml\CS that we
JU St d1dn 't execute
"It ki nd of JUSt radiated
over the 90 mmutes, I
thought," Mornssey added
"If you look at the way we
played and the number of
chances we created, I mean,
Grueser pleaded for a defense
stop Instead Eastern broke ,,
38-yard run and the dagger
thru st deeper mlo the heart of
the Tornado
Eastern's next touchdown
was set up by that 38-yard
run by Terry Durst and another I0-yarder by the semor full
back. Southern dropped
Honaker for a 6-yard loss
wnh a ten yard penal ty
tacked on, makmg tl a first
and goal from the nmeteen
Durst ran for ten •yards on
the ensum g play then rushed
ten more yards for hts fo01 th
touchdown of the mght, the
score 32-6 wtth 3.24 left m
the thtrd qu arter The PAT
attempt fell short
One bnght spot for the
hosts was that Southern held
on downs at the three yard
lme m the Iauer stages of the
thtrd quarter The fourth penad, however, was academtc.
In the fmal frame Southern
contmued its fumbling and
Codey Gerlach p1cked up h1s
second fumble recovery of

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coul d've been I0 or 12
(goals) 11 JUSt wasn't a ve ry
good day f uliShing wtse,
but over,Ill , very. very
good "
Rt o Grande will now pre·
pare for the Amencan
M1 de&lt;~st
Co nference
Playoff ga me on Nove mber
5 Mornssey belteves the
losc t ot Cedarvill e and
Wal sh wtll be the oppoSItion for RIO Grande "It will
probably be the loser of
Cedarvi lle and Walsh, 11
wtll be good to have tht s
game at home. because
e1ther of those teams are
ca pahle of beattn g us,"
Morn ssey satd.
The game will be played
at Evan Davts Field with
th e kt ck-off ume to be
determmed

"

~

I

Not1ce of Elect1on on
Tax Levy In Excess of

the Ten Mill Limitation
Revised
Code,
Sections 3501.11 (G),
5705.19,
5705.25
Notice Is hereby

of
a
Resolution of the
Board of Township
Trustees
of
the
Township of lebanon
Portland,
Oh1o,
passed on the 28th

given that m pursuance
of
a
Resoluhon
of the

ted to a vote by the

Board of TownshiP

suance

day of May, 2005,
there witt be submit·

vlson at a General
Election to be held m

Ohio, passed on the

Lebanon Oh1o, at the
regular places of voting therem, on lhe 81h
day of November,

of

Columbia,

Albany,

6th day of June, 2005,
there will be subm11tad to a vote of the

people of said subdl·

vision at a General

Election to be held In
the township of
Columbia Ohio, at the
regular places of votIng therein, on the 8th

day of November,
2005, the question of
levying

a

tax, In

excess of the ten mill

limitation, for the ben-

efit

of

Columbia

township for the purpose
of
F1re

Protection Said lax

being - a replacement

,of

a tax of 1 mill at a

the

Township

of

2005, lhe question of

levymg a tax , 1n
excess of the ten m111
limitation, for the benefit
of
Lebanon
Township for the purpose of mamlainmg
and operating ceme·
teries . Sa1d tax being

(2): a replacement of

a tax of 1 m1ll at a rate
not exceeding 1 (one)
mills for each one
dollar of valuation ,
wh1ch amounts to ten

cents ($0 10) lor each

one hundred dollars
of valuation for f1ve

rate not exceedmg 1

(one) mills for each

(5) years. The polls
lor said ElectiOn witt

one dollar of valuation, which amounts

open at 6 30 o clock
a m. and remain open

for each one hundred
dollars of valuation,

of sa1d day By order

to ten cents (SO 10)

for five (5) years. The
Polls lor said Election
wilt open at 6 30
o 'clock

AM

and

remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M of
oald day. By the
order of the Board of
Elections, of Malga

County, Ohio. John N
lhie, Chatrperoon.
Filla
c. Smith,
Ciraclor. Catad Sept.
a, 2005.
(10) 10, 17, 24, 31
Public Notice

Will be submitted to a
vote of the people of

levymg a tax, In
e xce s s of the ten m1ll

sa•d subd1vts1on at a

ilm1tat1on, for the benefit of Ra cme V1llage
for' the purpose of
Current Expenses
Sa 1d tax bemg. A
replacement of a tax
ot 2 m1lls at a rate not

General Electton to
be
held
m
the

Township of Rutland

Ohio, at the regular

places of voting
therein, on the 8th

day

of

November,

people of sa•d subdl- 2005, the question of

the
of

Trustee&amp;
Township

P'uhlh.: N otice" Jh N c w s 1&gt;upcrs.
Ynur ltl g hl1.u Kn o "-' . ll c ln t: r t: d lt1 ~ h1 tn Yuu r Dour.

until 7·30 o'clock PM

of the

Board of

Elections , of Meigs

levymg a tax , m
excess of the ten mtll
limitation, for the ben-

efit

of

Rutland

Townshtp for the purpose
of
Ftre
Protectton said tax
being A replacement
of a lax of 1 m1ll at a
rate not exceedtng 1
{one) mills for each
one dollar of valuation, whtch amounts

to ten cents ($0.10)

for each one hundred
dollars of valuation

lor five (5) years. The

polls for sa1d Eleotion
Will open at ·6.30
oclock
AM
and
remam open unhl

By

of RevisiOn m the
manner prov1ded by

Section 571519 of
the

Code

mills for each one
dollar of valu allon ,
wh1 ch amounts to

twenly cenls ($0 20)

Public Notice

for each one hundred
dollars of valuation

for l1ve (5) years The. NOTICE TO THE PUBPolls for sa1d Election
LIC ANNUAL PLAN
wilt open al 6;30 PUBLIC HEARING
o'clock AM
and MEIGS
HOUSING
rema1n open unt1l
AUTHORITY
7·30 o,clock PM of The Me1gs Housmg
sa1d day. By order of
the
Board
of
Elections, of Metgs
County, Oh1o
John
N lhle , Cha~rperscn

R11a

D.

D~rec tor

Authonty Will con duct a Public Hearmg
of the F1scal Year

2005 Annual Plan on
Thurs day,

3, 2005 at 6 00 p.m. m

Dated Sept

t he County Annex
meeting room at 117
East Memor~al Dr1ve,
Pomeroy, Ohio All
interested persons
may attend to com m e nt and provtde
suggestions on • the
Plan
Jean
Trussell
Executive Director
Me1gs
Housing

Public NotiCe

the
Board
of
Elections, of Meigs
NOTICE TO TAXPAY·
County, Oh10 John N
ERS
lhle, chairperson, R1ta
Reference 57 1 5 17
D. Sm1th D1rector, " Oh10 Rev1 sed C o d e
dated Sept. 5. 2005.
The Metgs County
(10) 10, 17, 24, 31
B oard 01 Revi sion
has completed 1ts
work o f equalization
The tax returns lor
Public Not1ce
tax year 2005 have
Not1ce of Election on
been revi sed and the
Tax Levy in Excess of valuations completed
tho Ton Milt Limitation and are open for public inspection In the
Ravlaed
Code,

•

aald aubdlvlelon at a

ol Racine Ohio, at the

rogutor places of vot·

lng therein , on the 8th

day of November,
2005, tho question of

November

Smith

5, 2005
(10) 10, 17 24, 31

order of

General Election to
be hold In tho VIllage

Aev1sed

DS0t522
(10)
26,27 ,28 , 30,21 ,
(11)1 ,2,3,4,6

County, Ohio John
N. lhle Chairperson
Rita
C.
Smith,
Dlroctor.Cated Sepl
5, 2005
(10) 10, 17, 24, 31
Soctlona 3501 .11 (G), office of the Melgo
5705 19,
5705 25 County
Auditor,
Floor,
Nottco to hereby Second
given thai In pur- Courthouse, Second
Public Notice
Street,
Pomeroy,
auance
of
a
Notice of Election on Raoolutlon of the Ohio
Comptatnto againat
Tax Levy In Ex.cell of Vlttage Council ollhe
the Ten Mitt Limitation Village of Floclne, the valuations, as
Rovlood
Code, Racine, Ohio, paased eatabllahtd tor ta x
Socllono 3501 11 (a) on tho 20th day of year 2005 must be In
with
5705.19,
5705.25 June, 2005, thoro witt •ccord•nce
Notice to hereby bo oubmtttod to a Soctton 5715.19 of
given that in pu,. vote of tho poopte of the Oh io Revlsad

of
a
Notice of Election on auance
Tax Levy In Exceoo of Reaolution of the
tho Ton Mitt Ltmltotton Board of Townohtp
Rovtood
Codo, Truatees of the
Socttono 3501 .1t (G) Townohtp of Rutland,
Ohio,
5705.1 i ,
5705 25 Rutland,
Notice to horaby palled on the 6th day
given that In pur· of Juno, 2005, thoro

Oh 1o

Nancy
Parker
Me1gs
Grueser
County Audator

OKceedlng 2 (tWO)

7 30 o'clock PM. of
sa1d day

be heard by the Board

Code. These

Authority
(10) 31

on
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HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
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\\'\01 \II \II \ I \

rt.--G-\V
•t-;-\•W••AY--'1

the

Address ___~-----------------------City/State/Zip - - - - - -- - - ---

Phone, ______________________________

nonths old shots and Inside yard sale 700 2nd
wormed very lovable and Ave Nov 1st-3rd 5 fam1ly s
adorable
Call
Martha atot more 1tems th1s ttme

(740) 446·3659

I

(740 )339·

0943

2 pupp1es Lab/ OalmattOn

t

4 months w1ll pay Absolul e Top Dollar U S
spay/nEJ uter bill Must go to a S1h1er and Go ld Cams,
lovmg home
(740)441 F»roofsets Gold A1ngs Pre
1935
US
Currency
5837 645 7594 24 5·9143
Solitaire Diamonds M T S
5 pupp1es to g1veaway 7 wk Com Shop 151 Second
old Bmmr m1xed (740)388 A11enue Galhpol s 740 446

m1x

9956

2842

Blue Po1nt 2 yrs old Siamese
Cat not spayed to good
Home (304)882·3435
Regntlgetor needs gasket
on door {304)675· 1237

r
___

·-r~

Buy1ng black wal nuts

12e

_N_o_v_1_51_h~----I buy Junk Cars (304)773

5004
Wanted to buy Junk Ca rs

Found Beau11ful cat at 1nter
sect1on of Route 35 an d
Tornado Road (0 1'1 io Rrver
Sa lvage) Butterscotch color
w/biLJe eyes Very lovable

(304)875 6473

1\IPI!J\\11 \I
..,I In I{ I ...,

I

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

Shop the
Classifieds!

Mall or drop off thla coupon along
wtth a copy of your photo tO to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O . Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

-------------------------------

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TRAINING CENTERS
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504 2690

CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale. ... ... ......... ...

.725

Announcement .................. ....................... 030

Antiques.. ... ... . . . ..

... ..530

Apartments for Rant ...••.•.••..•...•.•................ 440

Auction and Ftaa Ma•ket.. ........ .
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories.

..080

... ...... . .•... 760

Auto Repair..... ............. ......... . .... ... .. 770
Autos lor Sale .... .. .... ... .... ...... 710
Boats I Motors lor Sale ........................... 750
Building Supplies ... . .
..550
Business and Buildings ..... •.................• 340

Business Opportunity...... ....

.. 210

Business Training .... . ... •.. .. ... .140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes.. ..•• .•••......•. .... 790

Camping Equipment... ... .. .. ...

.. 780

Cards of Thanks .......... .......................... .... 010

Ch1ld/Etderty Core ... ... .. ... . .... . . 190
Etectrlcai/Relrlgerallon..... ... ...... ..... ... 840
Equipment for Rent ........... ... .... ............... 480

Excavating..... ... .. .. ... .... ... . 830
Farm Equtpment . ... ..•... ... .•............... 610

Farms lor Rent......................,... ..... ... 430
Farms lor Sale ... ..
..
.330

For lease .................. ...... ....................... 490

... .... . ... .... ..

..

.. 585

For Sale or Trade . ... ... . . ... ...
.. 590
Fru"s &amp; Vegetables......... ...... ............ .... 580
Furnished Rooms ••• •• •••• .•• • ••• ••• 450

General Hauling ............................ .............. 850
G1veawoy .... ... .. . . . ...
... . 040
Happy Ads . . ..... ... ................... . ......050
Hay I Grain ..... .... ... ... ..... .... ..... .640
Help Wanted ... ..... .... ........ .. . .... .110
Home Improvements..... ............................81 0
Homes lor Sale
.. . . . . 310
Household Goods .................................. .... 510
Houses lor Rent . .. .. . .. ... .... 410
In Memoriam ... . •. .... ...... ..... ... . . 020
Insurance .... . .... ... ... .. ·- ... ...... 130

Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment. . .... . ... . .. 660
Livestock.......... ........... ..........................630
Lost and Found .. .. . . .... ...
.060

Lots &amp; Acreage.............. ......... , ................ 350

Miscellaneous .•. . . .•. ... ..
.170
Miscellaneous Merchandise.... ...... ......540

Mobole Home Repair ... .. . ... .. . . . ... .860

Mobile Homes for Rent •..••.. • ••• •.•••••.• .••. .• 420

... ..320

Money to Loan

.
.. . .. ... .... •.. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers........... . •....740
.. 570
Musical Instruments . •. ... .... .
Personals. ... .... ................................ .005

Professional Services . ... ...
... .230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair . .. . .............. 160
Real Estate Wanted ............. •. . •
360
Schools Instruction . .... . ... •.
..150
Seed 1 Plant &amp; Fertilizer ....... ..••.•............. 650

Situations Wanted ..... ... ... ...

. .120

. ...... ....................... 460

Sporting Goods . . ... . ... .. ... . . , .520
SUV's for Sala
... .. . .
... 720
Trucks lor Sate ............ .......... ...
715
Upholstery
. . ... . . ..
. .. 870
. 730

Wanted to Buy .
. .
.090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllea .............. .620
Wanted To Co .. ..... . .... . ... . . . 180
Wanled to Rent .................•...... .....•.....••• 470

Yard Sole- Gallipolis ..

. . . ... .. 072

Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ..

...

.... .... 074

Yard Sale-PI Pleasant............ ..... .. . .076

Society
and
The American Heart

Association
We offer
-.,/Competitive Pay Ra les
(up to $8/hr)
.!New Atten dance Bonus
earn1ng an
extra $1/hour
.tF1xed Sc hedules
.!Paid Hoi days
.!Plus mucl'1 morel

'For a limited 11me make 50%
CallllnloC s10n today'
sellin g Avon Call (740)446
3358
1-877-463-6247
FT/PT..CU AVES
Must ask for ext. 1901
To earn a
World s
largest
fitness
orgamzatton lookmg tor
$200 Hlrln Bonus•
Manager Tra1nee 11 you are
AVQNI All Areast To Buy or energetic
sell·mohvated
Se ll
Shirley Spears 304 have an oulgorng personal"
675 1429
ty and love to work With peo·

1sfnd

1rcu ahon

Sales Manager
espons1 bLI1tes mclud
ecru1t1ng and trammg o
arners customer serv1c
nd mee!lng sales goals t
ou have a posllwe atlt
ude are a self starter
nd a team player w
auld like lo talk lo you
ust be dependable an
ave reliable trenspo rta
LOn POSIIIOn olferS al
ompany benefitS lnclud
ng health dental v1S1on
ndllte Insurance 40i k
a1d vacai!On and person
1 days Please sen
esume to
Paul Bark er
Cln:ulallon Manager
OhiO Valley PubliShing
82 5 Th1rd Ave
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Or email to
pbarker@mydailytrlbune com
Drivers Needed.
COL Dnvers w11l1ng to dnve
for kx:al ready m )(-&lt;;Oncrete
company Exper1ence 1s
preferred bul not necessary
Dnver must be wtlhng to do
pre maintenance on trucks
&amp; equtpment yard work &amp;
other miscellaneous chores
Expenencv operattng equtp
ment &amp; exira skrlls such as
weldtng a plus
Cafl (304)937 3410

© 2005

WWW CO !niCS COm

E)( penenced Evening Shift
Cook Des 1red Servtng 75
80 Persons N ightly 3 4
N1ghls
Per
W eak
Competrt1ve
Wages
Benefits Available Pleasant
Atmosphera
Interested
Appl 1cants
Apply
Immediately Ravenswood
WV (Across The Bndge
North On At 2
Last
Bus1ness
On
Rtgh t)
Relerences t::lequ rr ed

Immedi ate Pos1t1on FT1PT
Nurse
Pra ct1t1one r/AN
Phys1ctan Ofl1ce Excellent
Sa lary &amp; Benefit s Reply
CLA Bo)( 566 clo Ga llipolis
Tnbune P O
Box 469
Gal lipolis OH 4563 1
Is lhe re anyone m the
PomeroyfM1 ddleport area
look1ng to r full t1me work?
Are you lOOking for better
than
minim um
wages?
Pnmary
sch edule
tS
Monday· Fnday
aam·Spm
Must ha ve vahd dn vers
license and dependable
vehicle Must be fam1l18r w1th
Mergs Co unty
Se nd resumes 1nclud1 ng
references to CLA Box 2
rJo Pomeroy Da1 ly Senllnel
P 0 Box 729
Pomeroy OH 45769

pie drop off resume and
co mplele an app lrcatton at
432 Stiver Br1dge Plaza
Knowledge of health/nutrr
ttonlf1tness or sa les expen·
ance a plus

Jamtoral serv1ce has 1mme
d•ate
open 111 g
m t he
Gallipolis
ar ea
Call
(800)988·7847
:.....:...._ _ _ _ _ __
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.E=ZM::E=A
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HOlzer Seni or Care Cen"ter

Seeking Dedicated Health
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II you enJoy workmg m a
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STNA

AN
LPN

It I \I I "' I \II
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FOR SAl E

.IiJ:;, J'
w-~

To

by NEA, Inc

Medr Home Healtl'1 Agency
Inc rs seekmg a PAN AN 1n
t he Jackso n Count y WV
area Must be licensed m
West VIrginia We offer a
compet1t lve sa lary • E 0 E
Pl ease send resume to 4245
Stare Route 34 Hurncane
WV 25526
Attn
VICki
Chadwidt

Ass 1sl ed llvmg care m my
ho me lor Elderly Pr1vate
room bath 3 hot meals
(740)388 0 11 8

3 Bed room 2 Bath \Yit h
Frreplace tn RIO Grande
central a1r
acres m/1 40ll60 barn
hardwood tloors de!ached
$125 000 (740)709- 11 66
garage large cover9i1 palio
3 bedroom 2 bath house a fenced backyard clos e to
for sale basemef11 I car schools $69 500 For more
garage
Syracuse tnformallon and/o r v1ewrng
(740)645 0164 or 614-475 (740)709 1382

a

Dom1nos MustOe over 18

riO

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coolrng
1692
sq
II
S179 900 (740)379 2615

Center IS now accept ing ParamediCS
&amp;
EMT S
resumes for the positiOn of needed Apply at 1354
Director of Soc~al Serv1ces Jackson P1ke Galltpolls
The qua1111ed candidate
must be e LSW possess1ng
strong verbal and wntten Patnot EMS seek1ng FTIPT
communicat ion
sk11i s EMT s &amp; ParemedtCS After
MediCa td M edicare and mtroductory per1od EMT s
make
up
to
$t0fhr ,
MDS knowledge Long lerm
care experience preferred ParamediCS up to $12/hr
but not reqUired Ouallf1ed 100% med1ca1 1nsurance
cand tdates
may
send prescnptton card pa1d days
resumes to Charla Brown off &amp; vacation reltrement
McGUire
AN
LNHA pa1d tra mng All vehicles low
Adm1msarator 333 Page mileage new equ1pment
more
mformatlon
Street Mrdd feport Oh1o For
www patnotems com or call
45760 EOE
(740)532·2222
LPN
Ap pllcattons Are
Berng Accepted For An
LPN C.ompetii!Ve Starttng The Me1gs County Council
on Ag1ng IS accepting apph·
Pay Pa1d Vacatmn Pa1d
Meals
Dtscou!ltS
and callonslresumes for lhe fol
Home
Ins urance
Avatlable low1ng pOSiltons
Applicants
Interested Apphcants May Care Atdes
Apply
Dally
g 4 should have a hrgh school
Ravenswood Care Center, diploma or G E D rehable
transportation telephOne 1n
11 13
Washrngton
St
Ravenswood,
wv the home and w1111ng lo work
(304127 3 923t!
FAX week·ends &amp; holidays Mllst
be motrvaled and flexible
References Required
Applications are
- - - - ' - - - - - - - Willlratn
Make up to 50% wrth The evaUable at the Me gs
New Avcm
Call Leslie Mun1purposa Sen1or Cemer
Mulberry He1g1'1ts Pomeroy
(740)985-3362
OH EN EOE employer
Med1 Home Health Agency
Inc IS seeking full·time and
pari t1me
RNs
In the Work @ home Earn S450
Gallipolis, OH area Must be S 1 500 monlhly part t1me
lteensed In bdth Ohto and S2 000 $4 500 full
West V1rglnl8 We offer a www OurAnswer com

Exper~enced Cash1ers and
Reta1 1M anagenat Personnel 11 you are •nterested In a full
PositiOns Send resume to 11me or part tJme positiOn
CLA Box 570 cJo Gallipolis please stop by and till out an
Tnbune
PO Bo)( 469 Bppllcatlon at 380 Coloma!
GaiiiPQitS OH 45631 Must Onve B dwell OhiO or grve
compe1111ve salary and ben
nave a valid dr1vers license Phy llis Canlrell DON a call
ScHool~
ef1t package lor lull·!lme
at
{740)446·5001
and auto tnsurance
INS11&lt;1JCnON
employees E 0 E Please
send resume lo 352 'Second
Home Health Cere of
Avenue
Gall1polls
OH G11lllpolla C11reer College
(C areers Close To Home)
Sout1'1east Oh 10 IS currenlly
45631 Attn Viek1 Cha,dw1ck
hiring atdes and Registered
Call Today' 740-446·4367
1·800 214 0452
needed
lull ttme Work around your schedule
Nurses
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WWNgB I poii5CIIrNroolleQe COIT1
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Per D1em Monday Fr~day day shift no $450-$1500 montt11y part·
no hOitdays 11me $2000.$4500 lull t1me Acc1•a r&amp;e Memc.er Accreaulng
Compe11t1ve wages l\e)uble weekends
Courw;1l tor l!'ldllp8'ndllnl Colleges
schedul ng Call toll free 1 Apply at 936 St AI 160 (3031292·9960 , anc1 Schools 1274t3
WW« h0me303 com
GalhpoltS (740)446 9620
888 366-1100

Hunt &amp; Fishi!HIII
urn your pasSIOn Into
Can
Jt

oNOT!Ch
f-110 VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends tha
ou do bus1ness wrlh pea
le you know and NOT t
end money through lh
a11until you have mvest1
ated the offenn

r

Mo~El
llllo~N

ar row Smctrt Contac
he Oh tO 01v1Sion o
manc1al
lnstllutton
f11ce
at Consume
ffa1rs BEFORE you ret1
ance y:our hOme o
ta1n a loan BEWAR
f requests for any ler
dvance payments o
ees or Insurance Cat
he Ofi!Ce of Consume
lfatrs toll tree at 1 66
78 0003 to learn I th
ortgage croker o
ender
15
proper!
icensecl (Th s 1s a publi

r

I'ROtl'N&gt;lONAL

SEKl'IL'ES

TURNED DOWN ON

SOC IAL SECURITY /SSt?
No Fee Unless We Wmr
1 888 582 3345

Syracuse 3BR Attached
DbiGar New Root Vmyt
Siding Block Ut1llty Building
$85 000 740·949·1082 or

7,.40,.4•1,-6,.2•7-86- , . , . - - . ,
0

•-------r'
Moon E HO\iFS
FOR SAl f

2000
Oakwood
mob1le
hOme 16x80 v1nyllsh1ng1e 4
bedroom 2 bath CIA
Anentlonl
(740)245· 0001
Must be
l oca l company ollenng "NO
moved
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams for you to buy your 2002 Clayton only S 142 per
home mstead of renllng
monah w1ll deliver (740)385
• 1 oo~ t~nanc 1 ng
4367
• Less than per1ect credit
2BA 2BA Trailer $2 900
accepted
• Pay ment cou ld be the Ow ner F1nanc ng available
can stay on lot (304)675
same as rent
Morlgage
Locators 2359
(740)367 0000
Gr eat used 99 Sky line
- - - ' - - ' - - - - - -Charmmg bnck ranch A 0 1 6~80 Vmyllshrngle 2)(6
Grande Qua1nt lr 1end ly walls glamou r bath Call
n01ghborhood 3 blocks from ci7_4_0I_3_
B5_
96_2_1_ _ __

Complete yard work and
home repatr 20 years exp
Ref (740)446·3682
--------Computer
Repair
and
Troubleshoot Web oes1gn
Netwo rking P rogrammmg
Middleton Esta tes a leadmg Build New Systems Restore URG Custom-built 1n 2002
provrder ot support servrces W1ndows V1rus Removal lntenor open and a1ry
PhoneJ740-992·
to 1nd1)11d uals w1lh mental Cer11f1ed
Trad tt1onal
natural
oak
2395
retardation and develop·
woodwork thro ughout 3
mental d sabrllt1es IS tookrng
bedrooms, 2 full balhs
Mag1c Years Day Care
for drrect care employees
Large kLichen With dtnm g
PreschOol 7 30·5 30
An
Equ al
Oppo rtunrty
pantry d sposal m1crowave
"Putt1ng C hildren F1rst
Employer
F/MIOIV
Grea t room des1gn wl lh
Applications Will be taken Ages 2· 12 lim1ted ·pull up· vaulted ce11ing and gas hre·
State place w th oak mantle On
Monday th rough Fnday spaces availabl e
8 OOam 4 OOpm at the fac 11t ltcensed Lmk Approved h1ll w1th front porch ove rloo k·
Spaces 1ng woods Master suite w11h
ty 8204 Carl a Or1ve No Excellenl Sk ills
available tor all ages
phone ca lls please
h sitter bath 1ncl wh1rlpool
tub shower 2 walk n clos
Reduce high heating btll s by ets 2 car' garage landscap·
Now h1 r ng lull and part lime
add1ng msu1a11on to your mg All new appliances
McCiures Restau ranls 1n
att1c Call today lor an est1
1nduded Low-cosl heat tng/
M1ddleporl and Ga lhpo lrs
male (740)44 1 0564
Apply betwee n 10·10 30am
II\\'\( I\ I
Now H1 r1ng Safe Dnvers
Apply 1n Person at your local

HOMES
FOR SALE

1 acre w1th 2 bedroom Single
story home 1n countr y 116
Poindexter Road ott Johns
Creek Road (304)576 2247
$39 500

3 be droom 2 bath V1ne
Stretet Racme on 3 lots
DIRECT TV 3 room Wllh new carpet 11'1 rough0ut new
T lvo FR EE 145 cha nnels roof new delached 28x32
Clnly $39 00 per month Ask garage neat well mam·
Mow to get FREE HBO tamed home (740)949 40 19
MAX and home e11terta1n
men I system Call 800· 523· 78R 58A Foreclosure on ly
$1 8 000 For llstr ngs call
7556 for deta1ls
800·391·5228 ext F254

WANrnJ
Do

rio

·I"------'

8185

0

j -800-334-1203

SmOOLS

IN_&lt;;t'RUCOON
"
'-..;;oliiiiiiiiiliiiii_.! JIO
Nurs ng Asstslanl Classes
BegmnmQ November 7t h
2005 II you enJOY elderly
people and want to become
a mem ber of our health care
please stop by
team
Rockspnngs Rehab1htat10n
Center
at
36759
Rockspnngs
Road
Pomeroy OhiO 45769 and f1ll
out an application for the
classes Exten d1 care Health
Serv1ces Inc IS an equal
opportumty employer that
encou rages
workplace
drvers1ty MIF DN

LEARN
TO
DRIVE

TRACTOR TRA ILER

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

POLICIES Ohio Velley Publtehlng reaervea the right to edit reject or cancel any ad at any time Errora must be reponed on the lirst !Uiy ot
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Regleter will be rMpons ible lor !'ll;t mora than the cost ot the epace occ upied by the error and only the flrel ln eertlon We
any lo.. or e xpenM thllt reeulte from the publiCati on or omi ..lon of an edvertl ..ment Correc;tlon will bit madtt1n the flret avellable edition
are at-Ve contldentlal • Currant rate u rd applies • All real eetate adverti..mentl ere subject to the Federel Fair Houe1ng Act of 1968
accepla only halp wanted ada mHtlng EOE etandarda We wl11 not knowingly accept any IKfvtHtl tlng ln viol ation ol the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

1110

An Excellen t way to ea rn
Found· young male P1t bull
money Tl'1e New Avon
dog
bnnnel In co lor
Call Man lyn 304 882 2645
cropped tat l (740)949·0901

For Sate

Datly In - Column: 1 :00 p m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next Day ' s Paper
Sunday In- Column: 1 : 00 p.m .
For Sundays Paper

H FLP WAN'l'ED

We Aec ru1l Vo luntee rs
and Accepl Donauons for
Organtzatins like

aller 6 00 L.--HE-~.•P•W•A•Nn-;•o_.l

Fo und Black Fe mlae lal:;l,
Healthy well tra1ned w1th
1ed coll ar Will keep for a
week (304 )675 6605

Dlsolay Ads

per
pound afler hulling call ::""
:·~·:'•:•:"':'":•:•m:•:":'~=~
(740)698 6060 buymg unt I
1

Vans For Sale. ..•. ...... ..••. ..... .•.

County

County Aud itor will

.

t female m xed Lab puppy
free to good hOme 2·3

Space for Rent ..

com -

Auditor's Office on or
before the 31st dey of
March 2006. All compt•tnts ltied with

ho

l

Pels lor Sole ..... ....... . . .... . .. .... .. ... 560
Plumbing I Healing .............................. 820

plaints must be Iliad

In

~

Word Ads

• Start Your Ads W•th A Keyword • Include Complete
Descrtptlon ._ Include A Pri ce • Avoid Abbreviations
• tndude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

YARI)S\LE

Mobile Homes lor Sate .. ..... .

-------------------------------Subscriber's Name __________

Oearllfit~

Offtee 11o~~

PM

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Co11niJ DH

Metgs, G•llla,

740·949-237 1

'I

Melp

'

11

the mght.
A d1sheartened SHS coach
Bob Grueser stated, "We JUSt
couldn ' t hold on to the ball."
That pretty much told the
story of an otherw1 se wellplayed game EHS Coach Pat
Newland was pleased w1th
hi s team 's enthus1asm not
only for thiS game but the last
part of the season, and
pratsed ht s team for contmued 1mprovemeRt
Southern's Josh Pape was
7- 12- 1 for 53 yards passing
and Marnhout was 1- 1-0 lor
12 Corey Shaller was 3-7-0
for 53 yards and Pterce was
0- 1-0-0
For Southern Darm Teaford
had a sack , Ry an Donaldson
had a fumbl e recovery Butch
Marnhout had 50 return
yards, and Pape, Teaford, and
Donaldson had additional
sacks. Mtchael Cranston had
a fumble recovery, along wtth .
Gerlach who had two, to go
with recovenes by Durst and
Batey

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

All real estate advertising
tn tills news paper Ia
sub1ect to tha Federal
F.:ur Housing Act of 1988
whlet'l makes ll illepl to
.lld 'Oett lu• any
preference, hm1tatlon or
discriminatio n bue-d on
race color rehg 1on, H X
lamlll al status or nation al
origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
pretere~ . limitation or
dl.c:rlmlnatlon "
Thll newaptper will not
knowingly accept
ltdvertiaementa tor rul
estate whi ch Ia In
vlolaUon of thtl law Our
rndera are haraby
Informed that all
dwell ln;a advertiMd In
tl'lll newapaper ara
avallllble on an equ al

New 16 w 1de only $190 ~r
month Vtnyl Siding Shingle
Roof &amp; Delivery 1740)385·
7P7 1
New t 6x76 3 bedroom/2
bath M1nutes !rom Athens
Must sell Move tn loday Call
(740)385 2434
200 0
Trailer lo r Sale
Glayton 16 X 70 3 bed
room· 2 bati'1 ··C&amp;ntral Blr
porches $23 000 740 992
:.5972

r

L&lt;Jrs &amp;

~---AiiCIIEAiiiiiiiiiGiiil-_.1
lo ts for sale 1 3 acres
water and sewer Call tor
prtces Also have several
mobile homes lor sale
740 388-9686

RFA I. E&lt;rrAn:

WAN'Illl
Need to sell your home?
La te on payments dtvorce
JOb transfer or a death? I
can buy your nome All cash
and Qu1ck dosmg 740-416
3130

I&lt; I ' I \I ...,

HOUSES
FORRENf
2
bedroom house rn
area
HUD
Pomeroy
(740)992·7546
approved
after 5pm
2 story Colo01al home 3BR
1BA $500 monlh $500 sec
deposrt N o mdoor pets
(740)446 3461
2BR 1 1/2 bath $350 month
Includes water
depOSit
reQuired Call after 9pm
(740)379 2303

2BA lBA Central Heat A r
Stove
lurntshed
WID
opportunity batHa
hookup $450/month plus
Ut1htteS
Reteren ces
Country sethng m Gall1a required No Pets (412)427
County' 3 bedrooms 2 6917
baths !!replace $89 000
3 Bedroom House 1n Pt
(740)709·1166
Pleasant $475 plus deposit
House for Sale 3 bedroom call (740)256 1610
lull stze dry basement
3 bedroom near GallipOlis
Great Ne.ghborhood corne1
Green Elemenlary dt!l!rtct
lot nghltn town Take a look
ava1lable 1mmed1ately 5400
1001 Kenny C1 (n ghl Oflh1nd
depostl
reterences
Jr Hrgh School) Shown by
1740)448 6890 between 5
Appt $84 ~00 (:\040675
9pm
3123 or (304)675..0032
3 bedroom remoe1e1ea No
No Down Payment Less pets $350 month S200
than per1ect credtt 0 K Fno'EI deposrt (740)446 3617
mtnutes
lrom
Holzer
Hospital Three Bed1 ooms For rent 2 story home 3BR
$500/ month
$500
·One Beth Level lOt Newly AIC
depos1t (740)446·3481
remodeled 740 416 3130

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

r, m

"~

fUK RI.:NT

MEI!.CHANDISE

APART· For sale· air conditioner,
MENTS
AT
BUDGET I 8,000 BTU, window unit.
PRICES AT JACKSON $150, {7401985·4183
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
JET
Dnve from $344 to $442.
AERATION MOTORS
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
Attention]
740·446·2568
Equal Repa•red , New &amp; Rebuilt .In
Local company offering ~NO Housing Opportunity.
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1·
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· .,..-,...,-..:_..:__....:._ _ 800-537-9528.
grams 1or you to bUy your CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
home instead ol renting.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
• 100% financing
Townhouse
apartments, New and Used Furnaces.
Installation
available.
• L8ss lhan perfect credit and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-11tt {7401441-2667.
acceptBd

BEAUTIFUL

15Hi _ _ _ __
__:___::.:__

House lor Rent $400 a
month plus utilities Deposit
Flelerences.
No Pets
(3041675·4874

Nice 2 bedroom duplex,
near Harrisonville
$425
monthly plus utilities. No

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and · Riversid e
Apartments in Middleport
From $295-$444. Ca ll 74d992-5064. Equal Housing
Opportunities.

smokirig, no pets. Deposits
required. 742·3033

Stop renling Buy 4 bedroom
foreclosure $15,000. For listiQgs 800-391·5228 ext.
1!V09.

•

. 't)lree bedroom hOuse in
Ft&gt;meroy, $375 per. month
~us deposit, Hud accepted.

(t40I388·0435

• · Totally remodeled
,. .
lnterlor1
~--tledroom house. central
heat &amp; air, washer/dryer
I!&gt;Ok·up, lanced yard, stor·
aoe bldg. $475 per month

Soft-Top tor 2001 Jeep
15
TRUCKS ·
Wrangler-frame &amp; all/hardware-tinted windows, excellent condilion.
$300 Call
01 green Ford F150 XLT 4dr,
(304 )675·:2373 after 5pm
auto, 5.4L, VB , bedcover,
SPAS SPAS SPAS
6CD player, sunroof .. good
Over 30 In Stock
condition, 71,000 miles,
RATLIFF POOL CENTER
1W21mpg . $14,000 OBO.
(7401446·6579
(3041288·3335.
1-800·894·6997
www.bulllrog.com
1974 Ford Ranger pick-up
Vent-Free. 3-P iaque
· $600 as is (304)675-7388
Gas Heater
(Propane or Natu ral)
t 985 Ford truck F150 6
Manual Control $143 .95
Aluminum Fiberated Paint cylinder, automatic, good
body, runs. $900. (740)446(Great lor Mobile Homes)
9742.
5-gal. Buckel $29.95
We now have candy melts
in stock for your
1988 Chevy S-10 Pick-up
holiday baking
4x4,
Auto,
Air
$500
Paint Plus Hardware
(3041882·2845
675-4Q84

F
,

rent. {740)441·1111.

1
I

vary nice 3+ bedroom, 2
b8th, lull basement 2 r;ar
garage, nice yard. On SA One BR apt. quiet, pnVate
~~~near Harrisonville. $650 location, close to hospjtal.
· monthly plus utilities
No ret . &amp; deposit requi red .

i.
I

Pleasant Valley_ Apa rtment
Are now taking Applications
lor 2BA. 3BA &amp; 4 BA..

are
taken
Applications
2 bedroom, Rio Grande Monday tllru Friday, fro m
area.
$375/month , 9:00 A.M.-4 PM. Oltice is
$350/deposit. waterltrclsh Located at 115t Evergreen
included. No pets. (740)245- Drive Point Pleasant, WV
Phone No. is ( 3041675 .
5671
5806 E.H.O

r

~:::::~ter located 0~ ~r~--H~JRso:-~-Rm·a·:·r--,

Ohio Aiv~r at Apple Grove, ~---iiiiioiiiiiii-_.1
Ohio, $350 per month plus
deposit, call (740) 698 _6002 Downtown Office ::lpace- 5
alter Gpm
room suite $650/ mo; 1 room
office- $225/mo.; 2 room
3 bedrooms, 517 Burdene
suite $250/mo. Security
S1.reel. All electric, deposit. deposit requ1red You pay
· ·
,and reference required No utilities. All spaces very nice.
Pets (304)675-5402
Elevator. Call (740)446-3644
3Br. Refridg &amp; Stove,Washer for appointment.

shots $75. (740):256- 1859.

CKC Lab puppies, black, (304)88:2·2567
chocolate. Vet checked, 1st - - - - - - - - shots, wormed , $250 each;
2001 F350 4 door, flatbed
Call (740)379-2697.
diesel.
auto,
814,000.
_F_u_u.:...B...:Io"o-d-ed..:.:..ccp:.;1--a,-u (7401446·9317.
Puppies, 6 weeks old. First
shots and wormEld . Call
c7_
40cc·.:.66cc7:.·0cc1.:.8.:.6._ _ __
M S h
.
Ill· c nauger
puppieS,
AKC, 2 males black/silver. 1
black
male,
$ 400;
1
·Yorkshire Terrie r, AKC, IT] ale,
3 lb s, $GOO; parti crea m
Pomeriain . puppy, male,

em:;;;.;;;;.;;:;;;;;.;;;;;;;=;
FARM

r'---mK-RENr;o:;;.:.._.lf'I~--0-·"·~--lS·O-IJJ_,.II f
APAili'MFNIN

'

I
1i

1 and 2 bedroom apart~
ments, ftJrnislled and unfurnished, security deposit
required, no pels. 74Q-992'2218.

•

__

1 bedroom nicely furnished Thompsons Appliance &amp;
apt Quiet area. 1 adult $500 Repair-6 75·7388 For sale ,
re-conditioned automatic
mo. (740)446·4782 .
washers &amp; dryers, retngera·
Large
Bedroom
tors. gas and electric
Apartment, Bath, Kitchen,
ranges. air conditioners, and
Living Room. on quiet
wringer wasllers. Will do
Street.
Private park1ng
repairs on major brands in
Construction worker pre· shop or at your home.
ter.red.
1 person $300 --"--'-...:.._--'-_:_..month plus utilities, 2 per- Used Furn iture Store. 130
tone $825, no utilities Bulaville Pike. Appliances .
couches. dinettes. chests.
(304)n3-50!54
bunkbeds, grave markers.
2 bedroom apartment lor {740)446·4762, Gallipolis.
rent in Syracuse, $200
ffi H rs. 11 ·3, M-S.
deposit, $335 per month
rent , mUst have sufficient
income to qualify. (740)378G&lt;Klll!i
6111

'-~

\'
'

r

S~lN(;

r

4x4

FOR SALE

1993 GMC Truck heavy half
4 wheel drive 4.3 V6 automatic transmission. Runs
excellent, rranny rebuilt ,
motor has low miles, dual
exhaust, toolbox . Will sate
AKC , $350. (740)696·1085
for $4,000 or best offer in
cash. Call (740)44 t -9378
Miniature Pinchers. 2 male,
2 female , black/tan, $300. leave messa e.
Taking deposits. (740)388·
VANS
8124.
FoR

&amp; Dryer included (3041576· For Lease· Offr"ce or re1a1·1
·
spaces in very good condi2934
Mobile hOme sites in lion. Downtown Gallipolis.
Country Homes, ·Shade Approx. 1600 sq. ft. eacn. 1
or 2 bath"s. Lea se price
$130 mo. (740)385·4019
I \R\1 ...,, 1'1'1 II..,
negotiable to en"c ourage
&amp; I I\ I .., II U 1,
Nice 3BA mobile hOme for new
business.
Call
rent. $400/dep., $550/mo. (740)446-4425 or (740)446Need 3 . references. Call 3936.
r10
(7401446·3601 or (7401441·
Storage ·Rentals tor Boats. ...,
EQUII'MFNT
5899.
Campers, Cars. Mason Co
Two BdRm trailer, water &amp; Fairgrounds At 62 S8 a loot · 12' New Idea Manure
Spreader. Pertect condition,
tra&amp;h included. $350 per mo. (304)675-8463
$1 ,BOO. Eve- (740)379&amp; deposit (740)441-0000.
\111~( 11\\111..,1
2171J Day- (740)44 1-7717

I·

Beaver 10 Tofl Trailer $6,000

r

L~

SALE

1993 Plymouth Voyager, 7
van .
Good
passenger
shape, 25 mpg, S2,000
080. (740)441-1417 after
5pm.

Plymouth · Grand
1997
Voyager. White 2 sl. drs.,
"good cond .. runs good
$3,500 080. Call(7401441·
0712

North

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1: for you 1

Whi~·h

High and Dry

Storage
PhQne
(740) 992-5232

5xl0, IOxiO,
lOx 15, 10x20,
!Ox30
Janet Jeffers
~13795 Hiland Road
·Pomeroy, Ohfu

New shi pment uf

ncccc panels &amp; I00%

Undqrgruu nd , c ivil

war &amp; grannie

feed sack!
Cnme see uJ.'

1997 300EX Honda. New
battery, starter, comes w•th
lots pf extra paris. (740)441 5837. {740)245-9143 ask tor
Justin.

2.BR
apt.
for
rent
$425/deposlt, $425/rent plus
utilities.
In
Kanauga.
(740}446-4107 or (740)44 1·
2707.
3 rooms and bath. All utilities
pa id. Downstairs, n() pets.
$450/mo. 46 Olive St.
(7401448·3945.

C6 transmission : 3 out of 4
Car, all nUmbers match.
$10.500 or trade and cash
(304)773-5054

adult
ridden .
Mieron
System . power commander.
Sell or trade for car or pickup, $3:800. {740)446-0746.

ji
ow
inirei::'·: - : - - - - - - . , 1990 Buick Reana; ellcellent
MISCF..LLANE.OUS
condition, 63,000 miles.
MEHCHANDroiE
$7,000. (304)675-3388
1993 Cadillac DeVilli3, 4 _9 _
• "I D 1A 1 ·
8FT
1
.ra1 er ua ~ es t1tled VB, 59,000 miles·, all
and licensed $700 firm options. leather, new tires,
(304)675· 1165
Robert maroon
$5.000
firm .
_R_im
_m_e_Y_ _ _ _ _ _ (.7_4_0:..16_4_5-062
__6_. _ _ _ _
2003 Leonard enclosed trail- t994 Cl1rysler LHS 113,000
er, 7'Jtl2'·7' roof, new t ~r es , miles. power everything,
side door. 2 "rear doors. runs great, $1 ,200 080.
$1 ,800080, (740)992·7651 (740)256·1233 or (740)2!56903 1 _ __ _ _ __:
a· Valley pooltable , one c:.:_:._

•
2003 Suzuki 4WO Vinson
500 ATV with 34 miles.
$4900.
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPMENT.
(7401446·
2412.

r

I

r

i!Ji:iF~'!"'"--~--;

-

c~ &amp;

.I

MoroR. HOMES
'

2000 Outcllman. Class C.
Futty self-contained. Sleeps
6 to 8. 3407 JackSoo Ave.

Beautiful 2-story townhouse piece slate , $700, (304)675- 1998 Blazer 2D 4K4; 1999
overlooking Gallipolis city 3388
Saturn 3D: 1999 &amp; 1998
park. Kitchen, OR, LA . OP Ultra Gym·pac, com·
study, 2 baths, laundry area
plate workout weight sys Aeferences required . 5e1=uri· tams. w/benct1 sso OBO.
ty d9posi1, no pels. $900 mo. { 740 )441 _0 t 35 _
Call
(740)446·2325
or :......c..--,-----(740}446-4425.
Firewood lor sale Seasoned
hard wood . Pickup $40/load.
Beech Slreet. Middleport. 2 delivery $60/ most areas.
bedroom furn~shed apart· Call (
_
_
7401388 8738
ment, deposit &amp; previous
rental references. no pets. For Sale: Firewood. Call
(7401992.0165
(7401308·8264
,... - - J

Rt!&lt;rt L1l11t1100 II
Cll-fulft .
OIIIU....Io&lt;lollf

-·

l.ooil!. 111!&gt;11 k

c.! F.!ti!Or
' re-Owr

l'lmSilislu

nr"""""''

andS!frtta~

Sunl1res : 1999 voya§er SE
Van , Two 1989 and one
1979 cnevy trucks . 3
BASEMENT
mooths/3,000 mile warranty
WATERPROOFING
Others in stock
Unconditional lifet1me guarCOOK MOTORS
antee. Local relerellCes fur{740)446-Q103
nished. Established 1975.
328 Jackson Pike.
Call
24 Hrs. (740) 4462000 Lincoln LS , White, all 0870, Ao.gers Base rrient
Opttons 510,800 (304)675- Waterproofing.
7565

I NT

(~Jo{). Mf

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
A~fi.ANG~

(3041675-2630 ~

·

FOflt

B r.::'J

M~EII:

TO

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

Owner: Jeff Stethem

POWER WASHING
(Commen;ii!l and Residential)
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Degreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Ci!mpers, Tractor Trailers,
Di.Jmp Trucks, painting or staining of your deck '
Or log home, Aluminum bright~ning .
Special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking' Companies.

*Heating &amp; Cooling
Ed Dill/owner
(740)992-4100
Chuck Wolfe/Mgr.
(740)992-0496

LAWN CARE DIVISION

BARNEY
UNCLE SNUFFY, D'YOU ·
KNOW ,HOW TO

"HORRIBLE"?

(Commercial and Residential)
Mowing, Trimming. Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraying of fence lines, Leaf Remowl, "s well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulching. .

www.holzerclinic.com ·

. """

i

8UT I AIN"1 N~R LET IT

MOLD ME BACI&lt; NONE

i
!
'.--I!

THE BORN LOSER .
P'"I)Ot'l\ i:&gt;OJf\E.K TR.\c.K.- OR· ""!
TRE:./'\1\NG. f&gt;..\ Tfl£ BROOKS'

M~. ~001&lt;.::&gt;

\S""'

PRE:.Gt-11'-NT ..

Self-Storage"

GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

1Jea[ :Funera[Jfome
Dauld R. Deal
Director/Licensee in Charge
Charlie Huber, Director
Josh Billings Hssoc.

740·742·2293

(304) 675·6000
1401 Kanawha St.

Advertise
in this
space

W~~t~FE l%._

for

• Home Repairs • Remodeling
• Additions • New Homes

$52 per

Chuck Wolfe
Owner

Licensed &amp; Insured

month

(740) 992-0167
(740) 992-0496

~}~ ~ liNCOLN .MERCURY
Gallipolis·, Ohio

1•
1.91111C SltHa
F-150 414
1111.11
Ill IUOirllls
JUOIIIIIS
740-446-9800

~ \Wckly

Tra.... h s~rYkc

4 yrs of Reliable Service
1Kcr:p Your Money Lrx: t!IJ

G&amp;R SANITATION
3J:'i 61 Buik.Y Run Rd ..

PEANUTS
11-115 15 M'l
REPORT ON Tf.IE
MOUNTAINS OF
CENTRAL ASIA ..

AND l THINK FOR&amp;ET 11, CORMAC ..
YOU'RE THE
M'l HEART BELONGS
TO M\' SWEET
PRETTIEST 61RL
I'VE EVER KNOWN

SORR\', Mll'.AM ..
WMERE WAS I?

!7loiJIJte
~adJ
October

3 1, 1967

June 6. 1994

Remodeling

140-992-lm
Stop &amp; Compare

REP,'.IRS

• Roo1· • PAINT

SEASONED HARD
FIRE WOOD
CUT &amp; SPLIT

OHIO LICENSE # 38244

S40 A LOAD

740·367"0544
740·367-0536

740·949·2038

w1r.rr~:n

YOUNG'S

• C.&lt;\RPENTRV

In Memory

• Complete

• FOR ALL YOUR
ELErfRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME

S'i'blilQt

OF BOATS,
CAMPERS ETC.
AT THE
MEIGS CO .
FAIRGROUNDS

Nov. 12, 2005
9:00AM· 11:00
For more Info. call

7 40·985·4372

CALL

CARPENTER
SERVICE
.• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Elec:trkel &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gun.,..
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Pqrch O.Ckl
We do It all eicept
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG lit
992-6215 WV U3b'725
POmeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local Ex

r1ence

To he abse1lt frum
the Qolly i• 1o he
pr&lt;;li:nt with th e
Lord. .il'he"\l()dy will
return tu dust and the
spiril will ·
li\'C forever.
Today we celchr;ue
Rob \ hinhday and ,
life. We lonk forward

2400 Eastern Ave .
(Across from KMart)
Gallipolis. Ohio 4563 1
1/4 Mile North
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge
Mason. WV 25260

fri e nd s

7N ¥

· Ohio 45769

LEWIS
CONCRE:TE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement
' AQ 'JYpes f)l

Hill's Self
Storage

Sl Rt

(;:qw;rete 'Wpr~ ·
25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971
lnsurwl

d. 1

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio

.,

\

II
GARFIELD

45771
740·949·2217

"s:~o~~~· ~·~
Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Fret Estimales

1114/1 mo. po'

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

GRIZZWELLS
\1/\W ~ '&lt;all SUI'\'o5t.

Scorpion .Tractors

Dad. Mom, Cindy
&amp;

DIVOJ&lt;(f.

BAUM LUMBER

(740\ 446·1711

family

+ielt, ~S A C:::J.k JM:)S
::OIIJG 1+1'0. Wlff fCtl&lt;

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537

18 Fake name
20 White-laced
22 Greek P
23 Juicy pear

"Taki11g The !}tillg Orll Of
Hard IVork !"
MiJ-Si lc .:IWI1eel Drive Tracto(
wit ll ~Ohp &amp; 40hp Kubola Engines

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301
I

DOWN

Car loans
27 Biology topic

2 Wesl Coast

competitor

deed

39 -blank
chaser
43 Flirtatious
44 European
capital

30

Jeans

go·wllh
(hyph.l

37~slgn

Cocoon
dweller

I.e.
mean a

42 What

28 Always,

animal
4

41

Friendly
talk

3 Whiskery

30 Bikers'
, maneuvers
34 Jeltystone

38 Chivalrous

27

sch.

29 Zenith-

denlzen

of system
26 Sack

1 Nudge

24

40 Quick-dry
Iabrie a

25 Kind

In poems
Craven or

43

·
44 Mr. Grlllln
45 -ex

Unseld
31 Believer

5 Authority

32 Drop the

(hyph.l

ball
33 Oriental

6 (lull st.
7 Trail mix
8 Fat llddles

Karpov

torte

maehlno ·
47 Ho directed
Marlon

48 Tableoah
51 Shaq'o org.
53 Charge

sauce

35 Franken-

9 Column type
stein's
10 Prompted
helper
13 Empower
36 Gentle
19 Sighs
39 Help21 Dangle
wanted
24 Shriveled up
abbr.

,.-,.......,.._~

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celf.lbrity C1pher cryptograms a rt~~;~eated lrom quotaUOf1S by famou'S p&amp;OJ)Ie, pest end pment,
..
Eac!lleuer 1n tns Cipher staM' for another.

Today's clue: U equals G

il

J i'N W T:
NY

JKBAOK

YXOZXNA."

B

"UFNJZGWXZKW:

GFN

GWX2KJ

LNHKJ

YNWL

VKWJNA

GFKA

KHB A

.FXL."

JVXWXZ

ZFK

KJ BW

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "It~ a grea1 help for a man lobe in love with ·
himself, b.Ut for an actor it is absolutely essential." - Robert Morley

r::z~;~' s&amp;~~lA-~t.~s·

0

.Raortonot lttltrs of the
Tuesday, Nov. 1, 2005
lou• JCrcmbltd _., bt·
By Bernice Bedll Oaol
low to form four 1lmple wotda.
Sometning of immen,se importance may
occur in the year ahead that could cause
you to retnink your philosophical outlOok of
a lew things. However, your new perspec.tive will enhance your cnaracter and
I
potential for -success.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Today is
not likely to be without its lrustrations, but
it you keep a cool head and roll with th9
punches, you can achieve your objectives.
Do your best without exp9cting optimum
conditio ns.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) - It's
wonderf\.11 ol you to be helpful .to others
you ever nolicod," •
today, but don'llet certain freeloading indif•iond
asked
me, '"thai •·ou arc
viduals you know wno should be fending
lor tl1emselves strap all their burdens on
•
•
•
·fond of people tlrat
with
your back.
you
and
•
_
fgood
lhat
···-·?'
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Don't
tac~ fe anything new today wltnout first
101 1
1-·_ _ ,
tl1inking out all of its ramifications well in
Com~:~lete tht c"'-uclda Q\olotlcl
advance . Unless you nave a game plan ,
.
•
•
•
_
by lill.ng 1ft fht "''Wno wordt
you could operate in haste thai will lead to
'-.-1-.L......J'-...J..-L.....J. yov davalop_from step No. 3 ~elcw.
many mistakes.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - ·Try to
PRINt I•UMRIREO tl11fi5
operate as independently from others as
THESE SQUA~[S
possible today if you hope to be effective
Even well-intentioned individuals who
() U'JICAAMBI! A&amp;(JV! LITURS
mean well could disrupt the progresS
TO Gff ANSWU
_ •
_ •
vou'vo lhus far made.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Have adeSC&lt;RAMLI!T8 AN8WIRS I D.'21m
quale faitn in yourself and your ideas today
or even minor setbacks could cloud your
judgment w1th negalive thoughts and
bwd m~st
entice you into qulning instead ot asserting ·
me
yo"ursell.
'
ARIES (Marcn 2t ·Aprl1 19) - Guard
REPEAJ"!NG."
against a t(mdency today to cl1ange thing s
that ara presently running smoothing lor
chan9e sake alone . The adjustments you
make could creale a long lis! of unnecessary problems.
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20) -II you're will ing to malo.e reasonable concessions or
compromises on a position you llold, those
with whom you have dealings are likely to
follow suit. They'll play 111e game by your
r!Jies .
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20)- Don'l let a
disgruntled co-worker who you consider a
friend Involve you in his/her problems
today. They'll ultimately create problem s
for you, so let your pal resolva maners
unaided
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - You may :
get involved today '" something which
could work out to be a fairly good deal, but
not necessarily the way il's in_
ili&amp;lly presented to you . You'll need to be ready t!l
adjust with the tide .
LEO !July 23-Aug. 22)- Have the tena city to hang on and things can be worked
out to your ultimate advantage today. Keep
the end results. you desire in sight at all
times and don't let circumstances blur your
locus.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Tnere·s a
strong possibility today that you ml';lhl put
too much stock In what other people ·aay
and dilute your own ~ood plana and kfeas
in the process. Be you r own person. ·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23)- Be extremely
selecilve as to wl1om you lend thln'OIS
today, especially a prized poltesalon. It
ml';lht be amarter to I&amp;Y no rathtr than be
sorry later when It come. bllck to you dam·

I
I I I I I'
I tl?1, I
III
I .I' I I' I I I
[ ll

7o_x,.::E-r.-R_,v....:.,Tr--J.

'llavc

a~e

0

.1 m~

It·

Ghmct - Trick - Rigid- 1\.e=I'Cf - llEPBt\TINO
"!just
thr
uscle.IIS lhillg," a nosy aei&amp;)lbor
related. •A mend told goulp that's not worib

PIRA'im A\1J~'r5 '.'JORt
l'ATC~ ~E\:1. oW~

M?

BUT IT IS
A LITILE

Ut\JFAIR
I

:::::

- - - -·..:.....::. N/hol ly CU.I I. POLWi _;...._ __

I I I I

SUNSHINE CLUB

Now Available At

grand rcuni o~!

to a

·Whole Corn $6.35/100
·Cracked Corn $7.35/100
·Triumph 12% Sweet Horse Feed
$5.50/50
·12% Cattle Feed $7.301100
·Black Oil Sunflower Seed $13.75
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

• Garages

carrier

17 Fotl'quarlllrs 59 Closeout

e

got you

• New Homes

Cornerstone
Electrical
Service

In Memory

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCDON

lank
58 Stockholm

D I I. V I~
j ,:~

Gene ;\nns/OwnerOJ1t'J"altJ(' 7-W--992·3174

Amiable

57 Bltwtry

S[ LT

IMPORTS
Athens

Pt. Pleasant

MA'INTENANCE

'!bur 'lllrlhdr\Y:

FIRST LI'L
DEVIL OF
THE NI(;HT

David, panna &amp; Brad Deal

Call Gary Stanley
• Leave a message

AstroGraph

WELL'. THE

• Caring • Professional
Affordable Services

56

from the dummy and from his own hand.
The contract is three no-trump .. West

BIG NATE

'"FAMILY OWNED"

"Insured"

lead: + 7

leads the heart king to drive out the ace.
Declarer wins the next club with his king
and runs lhe hearts, winninQ two spades,
four hearts, two diamonds and two clubs.
Finally, an admission: Winning trick one
isn't fatal, but it require"s great card reading to get home.

f'O\)~(.!

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring•M

"Middleport's only

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;

..:ast
Pass
All pass

leads his fourth-highest diamond. Who
has to make what critical play?
Declarer has only five top tr icks: two
spades, one diamond and two clubs. He
will get at least one mare diamond trick
and can hope for four heart winners. But
assuming the heart ace will be held "I.IP for
at least one round, South needs two
hand-entries: one to drive out the heart
ace and one to cash the established win·
ners. The key play is for declarer not to
play his diamond ace, but to let East hold
the first -trick.
Suppose East shifts to a club. South wins
on the board wiih the ace, takes the heart
jack, plays a · diamond to his· ace. and

.....U..L...--1!
j

FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES

:

Pa::.s

14 Promissory 55 Koy points

At the bridge table, three ol the four play·
ers sometimes have. a chance for "great·
ness" at trick one. The opening leader
might settle the !ate of the contract. Third
hand might haVe to lind th6 critical play.
And the d.eclarer might have two chances
to make the winning- or losing- play:

.Office: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740) 511·6881

~'fi4N1'4L

1•
J NT

lheatre
52 Norse king
l1 Crack pilots 54 Campers,
12 -vera
lor short

British socialite Margot Asquith wrote ."
"The first element of greatn~ss is lunda·
mental humb.leness: ... ·the second is free ·
dom from self; the third is intrepid
courage; ... and the fourth -the power to
love - although I have put it last, is the
rarest."

TR!·STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

~f~ON~

24hr Emergency
Service
Licensed &amp; Insured
Over 30 years
experience

FOil TI-lt

A t..OT OF C.OMPLA~NT5:

llml•

l'olnt Pleasan~ WV

North

Puss

Second hand slow,
fourth hand slower

IN~~IliT IT ---.I. l&gt;ON'T WANT

·IJ;o.Of••&gt;"

1701 Jefferson Blvd.

West

Chromo·

some unit

41 Wildebeest

1\ll&gt;m ~ llo"'b'

~ fuwi

Dealer: Soulh
Vulnerable: Both

Opening

Top • Removal ·· Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

'' WJII'rt' Quali(r,Crmrpassitm A11d lmegrity Come Together"

992·1194
or 992'-6615

t977 650 Special Yamaha ,
$600, {3041675·3308

-------

•ns s ·

South

10x10x10x20 .

I.

1964 Oldsmobile Startire
Zap Tournament grade paint convertible for restoration .
balls. 2.000 per bolt, $25. Runs, but needs TLC.
$5,000 080. Call (740)379·
740441-1417atter5 m .
2317 for details.

~

•

J 10 8

• A9 8 2
• K

7 6 4
J9U74
Q 10 2

I.

q;g guing'!

50

supply

"'Q

Tree Service

~HOLZER CLINIC

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

n. ~s t

.JONES'

MULEY'S
SELF STORAGE .

GRAIN

1 ~~----FO·K·S·A-~.,.....

Buy or sell.
Riverine
Antiques. 1124 East Main
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992 -2526. Russ Moore.

,

Crow-HusseU
Funeral Home, Inc.

.

45··

for the quills.

way is your

than anon

Wlh

8 "Old"

16 Knitter's

~nuth

NOT SURE? CA LL TODAY '

·•._.,,

Mill End Fabrics
Machine Quilting
Middleport, OH
740-Y92-3673

2
bedroom
apartment
Racine , very nice, clean .
$425 per month plus
deposit, no pets, re ferences
'
ANr!Qut::s
required,
740-44t-0110.
1972 Mach 1 Must.ang
(740)992· 51 74
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,.. Cobra Jet, 3.51 Clev81and. 2000 Honda CBR 929AR
2 B8droom Apartment, WID
Hook-up, Water. Trasll ,
Sewer
Paid.
$375/mo
(740)367·7746 , (740)367·
1
_70;.._ 5 _ _ _ _ _ __
2BA apt WID hookup, water.
sewer. trash paid $400.
Kanauga. (740)367 -7015.

Box 189
Middleporl, OH 45760 ,

5

note

"' 9 3
•
•

Reddy
1 Fair-minded 49 Sooner

15 Duiland
boring

"' 7 4
• K Q 10 5 3
t A tO 2
• K B3

HAv&amp;

Al!IOi

West

MONTY

and Financial Services

liNDA'S PAINTING

1999 Chevrolet Venture
Extended Van : blue 82.000
miles: great condition: one
__
owner: $8 ,500: . (740)367·
Square Baled Hty: First cut· 7435: (7401339·3955.
ting . never wet . $2.00 per
Dale - 740-949·2660.

V10

·Rocky Hupp Insurance

I0-3Hl5

.AK6 52
• J
• Q 6 53
lftA 74
East

Ta~e

46 Hayes or

London

·;I

Purm:m . OI-l

~40 Mmuacvcu.'i"

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
Phillip
Alder

1998 Dodge Grand Caravan
ES. Leather, quad-seating,
rear air, loaded, good tires,
Stapleton rebuilt. 104,000·
actt.~al miles, was purchased
at 12 ,000 miles, well-main·
tained . NAOA value $7,200,
asking
_$3.~00
OBO.
(7401441 ·0135.

L 4 WHEELERS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

ACROSS

C0110il

1989
C-70
Dumptruck
SUI'I'U~
43,000 actual .miles, 911. telescoping dump, air brak-es.
Block , brick, sewer pipes, 427 motor w/Allison auto.
windows. lintels. etc. Ci"aude Good rubber. no rust, runs
Winters, Rio Grande, OH and ~orks good. $6,800.
Call740·245-5121 .
(7401388- 1579.
Pf:IS
FUR SALE
1989 Chev. Pic~up , Full size
-wltopper. Runs Good, some
6 male tull-blooc:led Sheltle rust . $950.00. 740·949·
Collie. 6wks old. multi col· 2660.
ored,
very
adorable.
$100/eacll.
ready now.
1995 Ford truck 4x4, 300, 6
(740)367~7689.
cyl. shortbed, mechanically
AKC 6 month old Pekingese owned, great shape , $600
black mask, all shots. {7401388·0436 . .
Ur1able to care lor $150
mcluding cage . (740)388- - - - - - - - - 9824
1995 FT 900 Tandein Ford
·
Log Truck only .17.000 miles
Beagle pups, 16 wks old. 1st $26,000.
1998 Eager

2BR mobile nome for rent
$325/deposit, $325/rent plus
utilities. On Polecat Ad
(740)446·4107 or (740)4412707.

Tara
TownhouSe
Apartments, Very Spacious .
2 Bedrooms. CI A, 1 1/2
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool. Patio, Start $385/Mo
Lease
Plus
2BA mobile home tor rent No Pets.
$325/deposil, $325/rent plus Security Deposit Required,
utilities. On Polecat Ad .
(7~0)367·7086.
(740)446·4107 or (740)441·
Twi t) Rivers Tower is accept·
2707.
lng applications for waiting
3 bedroom Trailer in Letart, list for Hud -subsized. t· br,
WV for Rent All Electric apartment, call 675 -6679
$300 month $200 qeposit EHO

FURSALE

BliiiJJIN(·;

smoking, no pets. Deposits (740)446·2957.
rtcJuired. 742·3033.

www.mydailysentinetcom ·

2001 Honda Civic EX Ssp.,
A!C, power steering ." win.dows &amp; locks, 72,000mlles.
Excellent condition 59,000.
{7401446-3754 .

Nice solid oak "gun cabinet. 93 Toyota Camry $600. Cars
Holds 6 guns. Call (740)446- !rom $500. Listing 800·3914410
5227 Ext. C548.

NEW ELLM VIEW
TOWNHOUSE/APT$
. NOW LEASING!
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;
TOWNHOUSES
AVAILABLE
"ALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL· AC &amp; HEAT
"STOVE, REF.,
'DISHWASHER
'GARBAGE DISPOSAL
'WIND BLINDS
"CEILING FANS
'WATER, SEWAGE. &amp;
'TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(3041882·3017

Monday, October 31, 2005
ALLEY OOP

L,L--rrriFU-KrliSiliA_U_,.I

2002 Honda Accord EX
Sedan 40. Estate Veh icle.
only 14,000lmiles, loaded,
Silver. Leather, Moonroof, 6·
Disk CO-Changer &amp; More.
$15,000 NADA is $17,900
See at Casey law Offices,
NEW AND USED STEEL 611 Viand Street, rear. or
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar call (304)"675-3999
For
Concrete.
Ar1gle .
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
Gratmg
For
Drair1s. 3000 GT VR-4 twin turbo.
Drivew·ays &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l Fixer up or parts car. Call tor
Scrap Metals Open Monday, details (740)37.9 -9887.
Tuesday, Wedne sday "&amp;
Friday, Sam-4:30pm: Closed 85 Ch~vy Cavalier lor sale
Thursday, · Saturday
&amp; (3041675·1506
.
Sunday. (740}446-7300

• Payment could be the for application &amp; intormation.
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators. Efficiency, Clean , 1 Bdrm.
(740)36 7 -0000
Good location , Ret Oep. No
Pets (304)675·5t 62
For rent: 2 bedroom, 1 bath,
fully renovated , all appli- Furnished upstairs. 3 rooms
ances,
s47 s/mon th , &amp; • bath. Clean , ref. &amp; dep.
$475Jdeposit Call (7401446 • required. No pets. [740)446-

3481 .

Monday, October 31, 2005

=-·A-rA·K·I-~IEl·,·~-~-.~~~-M~~-~-E·.-~A·N-~XXN=-.~~r~1~o=-=-•A·~=-=-=-~~===========================================================================--

n&gt;R RENT

6 rooms &amp; bath ,. Stove,
refrlg. $400/mo. No pets.
Recently remodeled 644
Second Ave. (740)446·0332
8am·5pm.

www.mydailysentinel.com

ARLO &amp; JANIS

aged.

SOUP TO NUTZ

�/ Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Mond!ly, October 31, 2005

Ohio State wins shootout over Gophers
Browns fall to Texans
..

BY DAVE CAMPBELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MINNEAPOLIS
Antonio Pittma~ rushed for
two second-half touchdowns
and a career-high IS6 yards.
springing No. 12 Ohio Swt~
to a 45-31 vic1orv over
Minnesota on Saturdity in a
game featuring more than
1,000 yards of offense.
Troy Smith passed for 233
yards and three scores. two to
Santonio Holmes, and Ted
Ginn Jr.'s 100-yard touchdown on a · kickoff return
highlighted a wild first quarier for the Buckeyes (6~2. 4-1
Big Ten).
The Gophers (5-3, 2-J) .had
an Oct. 15 win over
Wiscon·si n
currently
ranked 15th - wrapped up
until the Badgers blocked a
punt for the game-winning
touchdown with 30 seconds
left. After a week off. they
returned to the Metrodornc
hoping to stay in the conference race -but their defense
didn't comply.

Bengals
from Page 81
needed breather. It finally
ended with Favre throwing
an underhand pas s from
behind the line of scrimmage, then falling on hi s
back at the 13-yard line in
exhaustion.
He had never thrown five
interceptions during a reguJar-season game _ he had
six. in a playoff Joss to . St.
· dunng
· the ~001
Lou1s
L
season. His off-day let the
Bengals (6-2) take control
of a game that matched an
up-an d-coming
passer
against one of its standard bearers.
Carson Palmer threw
three touchdown passes. the
last a 27-yarder to Jeremi
Johnson that made it 21-7
early in the fourth quarter.
Favre's fifth interception set
it up.

. atun a~ s oxsrorr
0 0

6 0- 6

Ohio State\ speed \\'a&lt; just
roo much. evidenced by
Ginn\
breat h-stopping,
l!Jltoucheu return for a 17-7
lead. Minnesota surged back
to tie it at 17rhefore the half
on Jared Ellersnn's 5-yard
touchdown catch from Bryan
Cupito. a pretty throw on a
fade route against cornerback·
Ashton Yilllboty.
Laurence Maroney. the Big
Ten' s leauing rusher for a
Gophers team that led the
nation in yards rushing coming into the. game, ran lor 114
vards and a score on 16 first~
half carries a•ainst the stingiest rushing "defense in the
country.
The Buckeyes, led by linebacker A.J. Hawk. were
allowing only 62.7 yards per
ga me c)n th~ ground. They
played more like that after
halftime. holding Maroney to
just 13 yards on nine carries.
He also fumbled.
Pittman broke the tie with a
67-yard burst up the middle
early in the th1rd quarter lor
his first t.ouchdown of the season. Nobody touched hini .

Minnesota subsequently
marched to the Buckeyes 32yard line, bur after two curiOliS play calls the ball went
right back to Ohio Stale. On
tlmd-and-2, Gary Russell ran
right, stopped and threw softly across the field to Cupito
- who was running up the
left sideline. But the ball hung
in the air too long. and
Malcolm Jenkins nearly intercepted it.
Then on fourth down,
Maroney caugh t an option
p1tch I rom Cupllo and tried to
tu rn up the right sideli ne, but
Mike Kudla chased him down
and dragged him out of
bounds.
The fans wearing scarlet
and gray 10 the northwest corner of the upper deck began
chanting, "Let's go, Bucks!"
Pittman and Smith then drove
the Buckeyes down for the
clinching score - a 27-yard
pass to Anthony Gonzalez.
Ohio State, which entered
the game as one of four teams
w1th one loss 10 conference
play. won its third ·straight
after a defeat at Penn State.

Kris Brown kickcu ~ 40yard field goal, his fourth of
the day, with 2:45 remaining. to give Houston ( 1-6)
the come-from-behind win.
· The winning kick was set up
by a 63-yard kickoff return
by rookie Jerome Mathis.
Hou ston's losing streak
spanned back to a 22-14 loss
to Cleveland in last season's
finale . The loss is the third
straight for Cleveland (2-5).
Houston's defense got two
second-half fumbles that
Brown converted into two
field goals to erase a 13-10
halftime deficit and put the

Favre had a chance to pull
off his 35th fou rth-quarter
comeback - hi s first was
against the Ben gals in 1992.
though he doesn't remember
fltuch about it - in the final

record since 1991 , when
Favre was a · backup in
Atlanta. It's the longest
active streak without a losing season in the NFL
The Bengals moved one
victory closer to ending one
of the lon ges t streaks of
futility in league hi story no winning record since
1990. The team s headed in
· opposite direction s aft.er
Favre came off the bench
and beat them with a lastminute touchdown pass at
Lambeau Field.
He's working with a lot of
fill-ii1 s this time around.
forcing him to try to make
things happen with an unfamiliar cast. The Packers lost
tight end David Martin. who
hurt his hamstring during
practice la·st week, and Pro
Bowl center Mike Flanagan
left .in the second half
because of pain related to
hi s hernia surgery.
That left Favre to try to do
it all.

and Brannon finished with
"We have a motto that one.
says the toughest team sets
The feeling was that of
the rules," said Caldw.ell. "I jubilation afterwards, both
fromPageBl
thought we did that a major- for Caldwell and his squad,
ity of the time. I thought we but the venerable mentor
the gap to four at 21-17, but set
the rules."
kAows there is still a lot of
the Eagles answered . with
Brannon
led work to be don·e.
four straight points for a 25- . Jillian
Eastern
with
16
points,
folAnd the Lady Eagles do
17 win. Brittany Bissell had lowed by Kelsey Holter with
too.
two straight aces to secure
I0 points. Both Bissell and
"We asked the girls after
the 1-0advantage.
Eri~ Weber had six apiece, the game if they were satisGame two saw much of while the duo of Darcy fied with a district title, or
the same, as Eastern turned Winebrenner
and Katie do you want to move on.
an early 3-2 edge into an Hayman had three each.
They all unanimously said
overwhelming 16-4. advanWinebrenner guid~d the let's move on," said
tage. NDHS clawed back to net attack with a team-high Caldwell. "The Lancaster
within five at 20-15, but the II kill s, Brannon chipped· in · regional has been so tough
Eagles rallied with five six and Weber added five in in the past, but we are going
unanswered points to estab- the win. Holter and Hayman . up there to play and give it
lish a two-games-to-none each had two kills, and our best shot. We're going to
lead.
· Bissell aiso had a kill for play hard, I know that."
The finale saw Notre Eastern.
.
Eastern will ·play Newark ·
Dame start out as the aggresBi»ell also led the Eagles Catholic in the second
sor. jumping out to a 12-8 with 19 assists and seven match at Lancaster High
lead. EHS rallied back to tie dinks, and also finished the S~hool Thursday. Match one
the game at 14, and again at night 95-of-96 in setting.
w1ll 'ijart at 6:30 p.m., and
18, but the Eagles finished
Weber had a game-high Eastern will play approxi~trong ·with a 7-I run to
five blocks and Hayman mately 30 minutes after the
clinch another date in the. contributed. two swffs. conclusion of the first
· regional semis with a 25-19 Weber also had two dinks match.

minute. lnstem.l , Cincinnati

wrapped up its best first half
of the season since 19XR, its
last Super Bowl appearance.
The Bengals lead the NFL
with 20 intercept ion.s. ·getling five in a game' for the
third time thi s season.
Deltha O'Neal had two of
the. interceptions and tipped
,·1 p·•.ss
" tn 11·nebac ker Odell
Thurman. The five intercep,t1ons matched the club
.. record.
.
Favre passed John Elway
and moved 1nto seco nd
place for career passes and
ya rd s, but couldn' t overcome tl1e five throws that
decided the game and left
the Packers in totally unfamiliar territory. He finished
26-of- 39 for 279 yards.
They haven't had ;i losing

BY KRtSTIE RIEKEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.- - - - - - - - - HOUSTON
The
Houston Texans are winless
~o more.
They didn't find the end
zone after their first possession Sunday, bur managed to
eke out an ugly 19-16 win
over
the
struggling
Cleveland Brown&lt; and break
a seven-gume l o~in t: . . freak.

Sweep

Texans l!P 16-1 3 early in the
fou11h.
But Brown was wide right
on a 38-yarder on Houston 's
next
possession
and
Cleveland
kicke~
Phil
Dawson tied the game at 16
with a 37.-yard field goal.
David Carr rebounded
from a 48-yard passing performance last week to throw
for 13K ': trds and a touch1'""11. f
wa.') ~ackcd twice
"'' :;unday '· - the fewest
times he's been put on the
turf this season.
Houston got itlsidc the 25yard line four times in the
'econd half but had to sett le .
for tield goals each · time.
Carr often had ample time to
throw but still struggled to
get the pall to his receivers.
He did throw a perfect ball
to Mathis, who . fought
throush double-coverage to
haul m .the 34:yard touchdown on the first drive of the
game. It was ~he first touchdown receptio~ of rhe rookie's career and the tlrst time
Houston had led all ~eason.
1

Eastern

6 12 14

0-

32

Scoring summory
Firat Quarter
E-Terry Durst 4 run (kick failed) 3:39
Second Quorlet
E-Durst 10 fumble recovery (run
fa1led) 8:18
E-Durst 7 run (run failed) 4:29

•

Third Quarter

E-Bryce Honaker 16 pass from Cory
Shaffer (Durst run) 9:08
s-weston Counts 1o run (pass

s

E

1t
12
149
254
65
53
214
307
7-12-1 3-8-0
6-5
2·1
7-55
10-90
Individual Statistics
Rushing: 8-Weston Counts 16-66,
Jesse McKnight 12·54, Butch
Marnhout 14-27.
Durst

E-Terry

23-177, , Bryce

Honarker 6-30, Coday Gerlacll 2-20,
Corey Shaffer 4·16, Jordan Pierce 6·
1t .

Passing: 5-Josh Pape 7-12·1 53,
Butch Marnhout 1-1-0 12.
E-corey Shaffer 3~7-0 53, Jordan

Pierce 0-1-0 0.

" II ('l'
-,..
'
' N'l 'S. V&lt;&gt;l • ,~,..
) , ) ' "&lt;&gt;
, 'lj
• ,),}

• Bengals in position
to end 14-year streak.

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

See Page B1

POMEROY - Funds from
two of Meigs County's court
systems will allow Sheriff
Robert Beegle to bring two
deputies back to the force and
restore · overnight service
through his office.
Beegle issued layoffs in
August and September
because of a shortfall in his
salaries line. He closed the
office during the overnight
ho"urs last month because
there were not enough officers to staff it.
Common . Pleas Court
·Judge Fred W. Crow lil has
made $5,000 from his own
salaries line item available
to Beegle, and County Court
Judge Steven L. Story
$8,000. Beegle said Monday

Win.

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Harold Blackston, 79
• Laura Florence Well, 100

·INSIDE
• Poster t4)ntest winners.
See Page A3 ··
• Henderson presents
UMW program.
See Page A3
• Alleman completes
training. See Page A3
• Edwards joins staff.
See Page A3
• .Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Taft appoints retired
executive to run
injured-worker program.
See Page AS
• Soldiers search for
missing Ohio reservist in
Iraq. See Page AS'
• Oil futures settle
below $60 a barrel for .
first time in three months.
See Page A6
• Steve Case resigns
from lime Warner board.

Lightweight &amp; powerful homeowner saw.

BR 340 Backpack Blower

$299

95

This incredible blower handles big
jobs faster, while providing power
. and comfort to the operator!

See Page A6

WEATIIER

With optional kit, this handheld blower
can easily convert to a vacuum.

...
""'

Details on Page A6

·

INDEX
2 SECnONS -

Chester

Baum Lumber Inc.
46384 State Route 248
740-985-3301

Pomeroy

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street
740-992-5500

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

82-4

Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Obituaries

Bs
A3
A4
As
BSection

Sports
Weather

A6

© 2005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co. '

•''

"

t

'

www.mydail~•~ntinel.&lt;·"m

2005
•

Courts aid with deputy wages

SPORTS

2~.

14" bar

TCESI&gt;AY, NOVEMHER

,,

Receiving: S-Butch Marnhout 4·32,

$15995

en

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Weston Counts 1-22, Wes Riffle 1-12.
E,-Bryce Honaker 2-31, Nick Kuhn 1-

MS 170 Chain Saw

4...•

at

failed) 6:18
E-Dursl10 run (run failed) 3:24
First Downs
Rushing yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-aff-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

At so, Tylenol brand
gaining steam on
safety image, As

Middleport Church holds
'Trick or Trunk', A3

Eastern 32, Southern 6

&amp;~~m

he would return two housing, food and medical
deputies to their jobs at mid- care for county inmates, have
night Tuesday.
made two $20,000 transfers
Crow said the funds were to supplement rhe housing
available in his line item line item. Beegle had hoped
because one of his employees to re-open the county jail by
has been off work for mater- · the first of September in .
nity leave and a court order to save on housing
reporter has resigned and not costs, and perhaps use housbeen replaced.
ing funds for salaries, but the
Since closing the office jail remains closed pending a
during the overnight hours. state inspection.
Beegle has answered emerThree of Beegle 's deputies
gency calls from his home, remain off ihe job and will
and a pre-recorded message likely not return to work until
directs callers to the the new year.
Pomeroy Police Department.
Beegle and five deputi~s
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill has
. have covered two shifts per made $5,000 from his office
day, with one man at the disbudget available to Sheriff
patch desk and another on
Robert Beegle, allowing the
the road, since early October.
return of two deputies to
Meigs
County
cover the overnight hours.
Commissioners. who are
Brlon I . Reed/photo
responsible for the cost of ·

Stewart
co-sponors
eminent
domain
legislation

Southern
attempting
to raise test
scores with
Internet

LOWEEN FUN

By BETH SEROI;NT .
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSI!NTINEL.COM

STAFF REPDRT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.OOM· ·

POMEROY -The Ohio
legislature approved legislation last week that places a
moratorium on some eminent
domain takings by state government entities.
The legislation establishes a study committee to
examine the issue more
thoroughly. U.S. Rep.
Jimmy Stewart, R-Aibany,
was a co-sponsor of Senate
Bill 167 in the House.
The bill was passed
unanimously.
The bill was introduced by
State Senator Timothy
Grendell, R-Chesterland, in
response to a re.cent U.S.
Supreme Court decision,
allowing government entities to seize private property
to benefit private businesses. Traditionally. eminent
domain takings have been
limited to property that will
serve the common good, as
in the case of highway construction. Those cases are
not affected by the new legislation.
"In light of the Supreme
Court ruling, it was necessary to take quick and decisive action to protect Ohio
property owners,'' Stewart
said. "It is essential to strike
a balance between the eminent domain rights of local
governments and individual
property owners."
The bill prohibits until
Dec. 31, 2006, any government entity in Ohio from
using eminent domain pro'
ceedings when the property
in questio~ will be transferred to a different private
person. The moratorium will
buy additional time needed
for
the
newly ·created
"Legislative Task Force to
Study Eminent Domain and
Its Use and Application in
the State" to consider permanent soluti ons to the
ISSUC.

The task force. will be
comprised of members of
the Ohio General Assembly,
representatives of the executive branch, agriculture
community, developers and
others, and will have until
Aug. I , 2006, to make recommendations.

.,

1~1»ii~'i

White trick or treat was
observed in most Meigs
County communities last
week, the streets were lined
with plenty of ghosts and
goblins, witches and werewolves - and pumpkins on Monday - the official
Halloween holiday. The
Middle port Community
Association invited local
school children to decorate
pumpkins for a contest held
in conjunction with (he annual Moonlight Madness sates
promotion . Here. Trey
Vaughan (above) takes a look
at one of the more creative ·
entries in the "Pumpkinport"
contest. which drew over 35
entries. In Racine, Chester,
Tuppers Plains and
Reedsville, kids went door to
door for trick or treat. Here a
pair of scarecrows (left) in
Racine leave Jay and Martha
Proffitt's house who were
not skimping on candy, hand·
lng out pixie sticks and toot·
sie pops to a large crowd.
Brten J. Reed, Beth Sergentj photo•.

,_

•

•

RACINE
Southern
Local School Di~trict met
five out of 23 indicators for
the 2004-0~ state proficiency and. achievement tests
leaving room for improve.
ment.
Southern hopes that the
online web-based state
.assessment provider Study
Island will facilitate at least
some of those improvements
and help push ·the district
into an "effective" rating by
the state.
.
Study Island is .used by
over one million students in
thousands of schools and i~
a provider of state assessment preparation programs
that student can access
online.
.So uthern Local students in
third through tenth grades
can log on to www.studyisland.com to access the program that has seen an average of a 12.2 percent
increase in scores on the
state-mandated
Ohio
Achievement Test. Teachers
can compare their stude~ts'
performance ·on the practice
tests against other students
in Ohio and parents can
check on their child's
progress.
Students can access Study
Island while at school, home
or the library. Students can
study and learn at their own
pace. There is no software to
download or install, all that
· is needed is an Internet connection.
Study Island allows students to interact with thousands of questions, than
automatically and instantly
grades and records all student work. In addition, users
are atile to print custom
workbooks.
At Southern Study Island is
being offered during computer time. library time, and
some intervention periods .
Helping Southern students
get fami liarized with Study
Island are Jan Hill. Title I
intervention specialist, Matt
Simpson, district technology
and
Lori
coordi nator
Warden.
Southern
Elementary library aide.
Pleese SH Southern, A5

'.•

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