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                  <text>· The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Tuesday, November ts, :ioos

History points toward.USC-Texas Rose Bowl
RALPH D. RUSSO

of the title game and eventu·
ASSOCIATED PRESS
all y shared a national championship with LSU.
NEW YORK - Only once
The Trojans and Longhorns
before has a team been where are such a solid 1·2 in the
Southern . Ca lifornia and BCS standings, the question
Texas are in the Bowl that can now be asked is:
Championship Series stand- Could USC or Texas lose a
ings and not played for a game and still reach the Rose
national title.
Bowl?
The Trojans and Lo nghorns
BCS analyst Jerry Palm
held the top two spots said it's Lmlikely the Trojans
· Monday. and are both unbeat- or Longhorns could do what
en with three weeks left in Oklahoma did in 2003 or
the regular season. With two what Nebraska pulled off in
more victories each, they.' ll 200 1, when the Cornhuskers
lock up spots in the Rose lost their fi nal regular-season
Bowl for a matchup that has game to Colorado and still
appeared in evitable for played Miami for the BCS
months.
title.
USC is in first with a BCS
"The formula now is so
average of .9829 and Texas is poll driven that if you lose
second at .9771.
late in the ·season.you' re pretMiami is in third place with ty much dead," he said.
.
one loss, needi ng a misstep
After Oklahoma was No. 3
by the top two to play fo r a in the polls but still played
LSU in the Sugar Bowl two
national title.
BCS history says USC vs. seasons ago, the BCS
Texas in Pasadena, Calif., on revamped its formula to
Jan. 4 is all but sure thing. make the polls worth twoIn the seven pre~ iou s years thirds of a BCS average and
the BCS has determined col- the computer rankings worth
lege football 's champ, 12· only one-third. Also, the
undefeated teams have held ' strength Of schedule compollne of the 10p two spots in the nent was eliminated because
standings with three weeks to computers and poll voters
go. Only one of those teams take strength of schedule in.to
- UCLA in 1998 - didn't account.
play in the BCS title game.
"Okiahoma was the last of
Oklahoma was unbeaten those teams in the polls, but
and first in the standing s the computers and strength of
heading into its 'final regular- schedule moved . them up,"
season game two seasons Palm said.
ago, lost the, Big 12 title game
The key is the polls, and
to Kansas State, and still whether Texas or USC could
played for the BCS champi- hold one of the top two spots
onship.
in the ·coaches' and Harri s
That year USC was left out polls after a loss. ·
BY

a

usc and Texas remain locked

In the
. top two BCS spots
Games through Nov. ~ 2
Ranking In bold

Harrla

BCS

Team

J.vo.

PTS.

•11829

1 2,806

USA Today

Computer
Ranking a

PTS. PCT.

PCT.

PCT.

1 'iloutnem Cal
2 Texas
3 Miami rf!a.)

.9771

2 2,731

.9667

2 1,495 .9645

1 1.00

.89116

3 2,585

.9150

3 1.421 .9155

s 0.84

4 Penn State

.8520

5 2,342

.8290

5 1,25 1 .8071

3 0 92

.81!24

4 2.452

.88e0

• 1.363 .8794

8 0.72

.7895

7 2.076

.7349

6 1,168 .7535

.729!;

'6

2,004

.7094

9 1,008 .5500

8 2,05 1

.7260

8 1,088 .70 19

4 0.88
8 0.79
9 0.64

2,175
10 1.766

.7699 7 1,165 .7516
.6251 10 1,001 6458

13 0.52

12
14
11
15
17

1.549

.5483 11

890 .5742

12 0.53

. 8 I.SIJ .
8 Virginia Tach
7 OhloSlaiO
8 AlaOama

g

Nlllre~me

10 Oregon

·11

~Cl.A

.6893

.6805
.6603

. .550tl

12 West Virginia

.5487

13 ;AW!rm

.4875

14 TCU

.4520

'11 Ml&lt;hlgan

.4;1MO

Georgia

.4029

frtlllj&gt; Slate
18 Louisville

~

~6

!?

.2275

''~Tech

.~11

20 Wisconsin

.2056

;J' MJ......ta

•.1973
.164!;
.1372

22 Florida

•23 Soutl1 ()arO!Ino

24 Boston College .1286

l$d!!ahama

,12Q5

.9933

1 1,543 .9955

2 0.96 .

1 0.77

1,392

.4927 13

1,695

.6000 12

642 5432
10 0.61
672 .5626 1·17 0.30

1,250

.4425 1!;

672 .4335

· ~ ·~7

17

14 0.48

,sw

11

Q.ll5 .

495
13 , ,431 .5065 14 · 763 4923
20 0.21
!.3497
tl
11
5!17 .3504 .NB Q.Q§
996
18 778 2754 18 445 .2B71
24 0.12
11 ., 7~ .2589 11 382 .2 . 21 0.15
24 . 268 .1019 24 147 .0948 16 0.42
214' .0758 :f1
81 ..0561 1f Q.46
20
561 .2057 20 322 .2077 NR 0.08
22 449 .1589 :n 252 .1828 28 0.09
23
301 .1065 23 216 .1394 T·22 0.14
21 . ·l11 .0093 211 SQ .~ " 0.29

"

.

EXPLANAriON
Team perc6nta~Eis are derived br dividlng a leam·sactual wotrng points~ a ma.dmum 2,825
~lble points n lhe HarriS lnleracllve Poll and t ,550 possible points in t e USA Today Coaches

I

SIK COfTliLI~r ranklngs calculated in lrwerse polnbi ordar (25 1or No. 1, 241or No. 2, etc.) are used
to deterrmne the overall computer component. Th e highest and lowest ranking lor each team is
dropped, and th e re mainin~t lour are added and divided by 100 (the menlmum possible pornts) to
produce a CQ11puter Aankrngs Percentage. The six c,omputer ranking providers are Anderson &amp;
H ~n&gt; ler, Richard BMIIngsley, Colle~ Matrb. Kenneth Massey, Jell Sa.Q&amp;rin , and Peter Wolfe. Each
computer ranking accounts !Of schedule strength In lt!ltormula .
The BCS Awrage Is calculated by avera gi ng lhe ~rceot
Coaches and Computer polls.

totals of the Hanis lnterac1i~e . USA Today

-SO_U_R_C_E_:Bow_I_
Ch-a-mp-lo_n_sh-ip-S-.ries-----~------AP

That'd be a tough task for
the Longhorns. who will be
big favorites at Texas A&amp;M
(5·5) on Nov. 25 and in the
Big 12 championship on Dec.

3 against either Colorado,
Missouri or Iowa State.
"Worrying about anything
but A&amp;M right now is just
fooli sh," said Te~as tight end

David Thomas, reciting 1he
party line.
USC, which has been No. I
in the AP, coaches' and Harri s
polls all season, looks to have
the tougher remaining opponents but both games are at
home. The Trojans play
Fresno State (8- 1) oo
Saturday and UCLA (9- 1) on
Dec.~.

If lhe Troj•lns dropped ·a
clme game to UCLA, it doesn't seem inconceivable that
they'd only drop to No. 2 in
the polls - but that would be
un·usual.
"I'd be surprised .." Palm
said . "That's not typically
what happens."
Penn State is in fourth
place, followed by LSU,
Virginia Tech, Ohio Stale and
Alabama, slipped five spots
from third last week after losing its first ga me of the season, 16-1 3 to LSU on
Saturday.
Notre Dame is ninth. The
Fighting 'Irish need to win
their fi nal two regular-season
games against Syracuse and
Stanford and linish in the top
12 of the final BCS standings
to be eligible for selection by
Sugar, Orange or Fiesta
bowl s.
· Oregon is I Oth, followed
by UCLA, West Virginia and
Auburn.
·
TCU is ,14th, two spots
behind where the Horned
Frogs would need .to even be
considered by the BCS. The
Mountain West Conference
champion finished its regular
season '!0- 1 last week.

·'

Garcia still Lion's starting quarterback

'

Refund delayed for
businesses' injured
worker insurance, As

PREP FOOTBALL

'

NFL I ROllNDUI&gt;

Bv THE AssociATED PRESS

•,_,

Holcomb or J.P. Losman will Fitzgerald caught nine passes
start .in San Diego on Sunday. for 141 ~ards and a touchALLEN PARK, Mich . - Mularkey said that Holcomb s down; Arizona rushed for 36
Jeff GarGia is still the startin~ health and how much he can yards in 18 carries.
quarterback of the DetrOit practice this week will factor
The offensive line, depleted
Lions. That doesn' t inean he's mto his decision.
by injuries, has had trouble on
going to play Sunday in
Making his .fifth consecutive run blocking all season. The
·Dallas.
start since replacing Losman at loss of Wells, who started
Coach Steve Mariucci said quarterback, Holcomb did not every game at left guard, is the
Monda~ that Garcia is still return after he was hurt in the latest blow.
·
Detroit s. No. I quarterback, second quarter when he was
The Cardinals have had 23
even after Joey Hanington's sacked by the Chiefs' Jared players miss at least one game
three-touchdown perfonnance Allen . Losman took over, mak- due to injury.
in Sunday's 29-21 victory over ing his first appearance since
Jets
Arizona.
losing his job, and threw two
Tackle Jason .Fabini was
·· "We named Jeff our starter a touchdown passes as Buffalo placed on injured reserve after
.few weeks ago, and since then, (4-5) stayed a game behind the tearing a pectoral muscle. He
I haven't chan!ied my mind," AFC
East-leading New joins starting center Kevin
Mariucci said. 'Joey has prac- England Patriots.
Mawae (triceps) as members
!iced well since Jeff was
The Bills· also lost veteran of the offens1ve line lost this
named the starter, and he free. safety Troy Vincent, who season.
played well on Sunday. But we did not return after hurting his
To replace Fabini, an eightneed to see if Jeff freshens up left shoulder. Mularkey said year veteran who has started
this week or not."
Vincent's status also is uncer, every game he has played as a
Garcia missed the first five tain.
pro, including 114 regular-seagames after breaking his leg in
Giants
son . ga'mes, the Jets signed
the final exhibition game. He ·Defensive tackle William rookie tackle Isaac Snell from
started twice - wmning in Joseph has a dislocated elbow the practice squad.
Cleveland and losing to and will miss at least four
The Jets have I0 players on
Chicago - but has missed the weeks. Joseph was hurt in the injured reserve.
.
last two games with soreness fourth quarter of New York's
Bills
in the le~. and he didn't sound 24-21 loss to the Minnesota
Takeo Spikes was on crutchoptimist1c Monday. .
Vikings.
es, Sam Adams was out, then
"I don't feel any different,"
The third-year player, a first- Kelly Holcomb and Troy
he said. "I haven't really seen round draft choice in 2003 out Vincent. went down with
myself make the kind of of Miami, started eight games injuries.
progress that I want. It has this season after startmg a total
When the Bills needed their
been discour.1ging."
of lour games in the previous reserves the most, the backups
Mariucci, though, hopes to · two seasons. He has 19 tackles. delivered. From quart~rback
have Garcia on the field and two sacks. Colts
.J.P. Losman and safety Rashad
against the Cowboys.
Safety Bob Sanders has no Baker especially made ·key
"He's getting close," he said. ligament or structural damage contributions in a 14-3 win
"We'll just have to wait and in the knee he injured m against Kansas City, keeping
see what happens."
Sunday's win over Houston.
the Bills (4-5) firmly in playoff
lJears
Sanders, who has 60 tackles contention, a game behind
Offensive tackle Fred Miller and one interception this sea· AFC
East-leading
New
and center Olin Kreutz son, hurt his knee during the England.
·
acknowledged Monday they first half of the 31 ~ 17 victory
"We had a lot of young playwere in a fight last week in over Houston.
ers step in and play well for
whicn Kreutz broke Miller's
"We'll have to see how he us," coach Mike Mularkey·said
is,"
coach Tony Dungy said of Monday. "I think it's a great
ja~;"
.
th'mg
oe re·al'1ze It. was some
the possibility Sanders could confidence builder for their
very stupid on both of our parts miss the next game at play, and I know it's a confiand it's nol going to happen Cincinnati. "It's still probably dence builder for a coaching
again," Miller said in the lock· too early to tell. Hopefully, it's staff that you've got guys like
er room as he apologized to his just bru1sing."
that able to step in in b1g games
family, his teammates and
Sanders played the past few like that and perform."
Kreutz.
weeks with wrist and biceps
Losman, making hi s first
Details of the fight were not it~uries, and Dungy was reluc- appearance in five games since
clear, and neither Kreutz or tant to say whether Sanders losing his starting job to
Miller would provide them.
could play through the latest Holcomb, went 9-of-16 for
. Miller needed surgery last injury this week.
137 yards and two touchweek after initially saying he
Cardinals
downs, taking over after
hurt his jaw in a fall at his
The sinking Cardinals lost Holcomb suffered a severe
home. He missed Sunday's another offensive lineman, concussion in the second quargame against the 49ers, endmg starting left guard Reggie ter.
a stretch of II 0 stratght starts Wells (broken left ankle), the
The banged-up defense· also
dating back to 1998. He will latest in a long line of injuries got a big boost fro m the
also be sidelined this Sunday that have plagued the club thi s reserves. Baker got his second
when Carolina visits Soldier season:
career interce ption and was
Field.
But standout wide receiver credited with two tackles and
Kreutz, a four-time Pro Anquan Boldin (bruised right two passes defended in replacBowl &lt;;enter, said he didn't knee) could be back for ing the veteran Vincent, who
know if he could be punished Sunday's game at St. Louis.
hurt his shoulder i~ the second ·
by the team or the league for
"Your body will tell you quarter.
the fight.
when you ' re ready to go,"
Texans
"Thin~;~s got out of hand. Boldin said on Monday, "and I
The injury-riddled offensive
. Somethmg happened and it think I'm at that pomt right line took another hit: right
just got out of hand," he said. now."
tackle Todd Wade will likely
·
Bills
. As welcome as Bo)din's require surgery to repair an
Kelly Holcomb was still return would be, especially injured knee. He's the third
having headaches Monday, the with Bryant Johnson's shoul· starter to go down on the unit
day after suffering a concus- der injury, it would not solve that has allowed a league-high
sion in Buffalo's 14-3 win over the Cardma!s' biggest problem 46 sacks this season. ·
Kansas City.
on offense - a woeful running
Coach Dom Capers said
Coach Mike Mularkey said game. While K1,1rt Warner Monday the 6-foot-8, 315he hasn't determined whether threw for 359 yards and Larry pound player sprained the

medial collareral ligament in
his knee midway through the
fourth quarter of a 31-17loss at
Indianapolis.
Center Drew Hodgdon is out
for the season with a foot
injury and' right guard Zach
Wiegert has been sidelined for
several weeks with a high
ankle sprain.
Now oft-sacked quarterback
David Carr will likely have yet
another combination of linemen as the Texans (1-8) face

Kansas City.
Seahawks
Veteran outside linebacker
Jamie Sharper not only missed
the first game of his nine-year
career, he's expected to miss
the next month of play. Coach
Mike Holmgren said Monday
that Sharper received weekeno
hospital treatment for a staph'
infection in his right knee,
missing Sunday's &amp;arne. .
"My hope is, we II have him
down the stretch," Holmgren
said.

All games 7
wise noted

Region 1

, unless other•

Ethnic rebels claim car
bombing that kills three
in Pakistan, As

At Parma Byers Fteld
( t ) lakewood St Ecfward ( 1Hl) vs. (3)

CIEi. Glenville {12-0) Region 2

At Akron Rubber Bowl
( 1) Gan. McKinlu. (12·0) vs. {3) Massillon
Wash1ngton (11· 1
eglon 3
At Upper Arlington Moorhead
Memorial Stadium '
(1) Hilliard Davidson (i2 -0) vs. (7)
Worthington Kilbourne (9·3)
Region 4

en

At Clnclnnali Nippert Stadium

. (1) Cln. St. Xavier (12-0) vs. (2) Huber
Hts. Wayne (11-1), 12.30 p.m.
:

All

OI~WN II
games!
p.m. Friday
RegionS

At Bedford Stewart Field at Bearcat

•

Stadium
(1) Tallmadge (12-0) vs . (6) Akr. Hoban

(10·2)

·

·

511 CE:'IJ I'S • Vol. 55 , No. hh

Region 6

At Fremont Rosa Harmon Field at
Paul Stadium
111 Avon La~e (12·0) vs. (2l Tol. Cent

Cah.(11 -1)

.

Region 1
At Warren Harding Mollenkopf
Stadium
(1) Louisvi lle (12-0) vs. (2) Canfield (12·

01 Region 8

At Middletown Bamltz Stadium
(1) Springboro (12-0) vs. (6) Day. Carroll

(I0-2)

• Rio Grande awarded
top seed. See Page 81

OIV~~~Np.m.
Ill
Friday

Region 9

AI Ravenna Stadium,_ Gilcrest Field
(5) Youngs. Uberty (1:.::-0) vs. (3) Akr.
·
Buchtel (10·2)
,
· Region 10
At Lewis Center Olentangy Braves
Field
t1 ) Clyde (11 -1)'vs. (2) Spring. Shawnee

Region 11

At Canton Fawcett Stadium
(11 Steubenville (12·0) vs. [2) Newark
LICking Valley (12-d)

Region 12

At Newark White Field
(Sl"Thornville Sheridan (9-3) vs . (3) Co ts.
DeSales (8-4)

PIV¥'10N ~
All gameS p.m. 8turday
· Regron 13
Al Twinsburg Tiger Stadium
(1) Youngs. Mooney. (T0-2) vs. (7) Can.,
Cent. Catf'i. (9·3) Reg1on 14
At Findl~ Donnell Stadium
(4) Huron (1 1-1 vs. (2) Coldwater (12·0)
eglon 15
At Ohio University Peden Stadium
(1) Bellaire (12-0) vs. (2} Ironton (10-2)
Region 16
At Cincinnati Princeton Mancuso
Field
(1) Germantown Valley Vit1w (11 ·1) vs . (2)
. Lemon· Monroe (1 1-1 )
'

PIV~~~N
V Friday
All GameS
:
p.m.
Region 17
AI Canton Central Catholic Stidium
(1l N. LimaS. Flange (1 2-0) vs. (7) W
Safam NW (10-2)
Aegion 18
At Tiffin National FJeld at Frost·
Kalnow Stadium
(1 ) Hamler Ratrick Henry (12-Q) vs. (2)
Bucy ru s Wynford (12-0)
Region 19
At Lancaster Fulton Field ·
(4) Lucasville Valley (11·1) vs. (6)
Centerburg ( 10·2)
Region 20
At Troy Memorial Stadium
( 1) Cin _Hills Christian (12-0) vs. (3) Lima
Cent. Cath. (11·1 )
p.m. ·saturday

Region 21

A!---..--

At Carrollton "CommunitY Field .
111 Columbiana (11 -1) vs. (3) SteubenVille
Ca h. Cent. (9·3) -

!leglon22

(1) Bascom Hopewell-Loudon {12·0) vs.
·

Region 23

KICKOFF
THE

HOLIDAY
SEASOtt!

Beth Sergent/photo

Tuesday th1s banner was placed at the Meigs County Courthouse to raise awareness
of tomorrow's Great American Smokeout which encourages smokers to quit for at least
one da~. From left, Courtney Sim from the Meigs County Health Department. Brenda
Curfman and Kyle Ord from Meigs County Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition, Judge
Scott Powell , Lora Rawson from Holzer Medical Center's Tobacco Prevention program. ·

Dola

OBITUARIES
Page AS
· • RobertArbaugh, 76
• Pearl A. Keyes, 75

INSIDE
• State gives plan for
combating inflated school
attend8f)ce nvmbers.
See
A2
• ~eigs Girl Scout Diary.
~. Page A2
.. ··Family Medicine..
See Page A3.
• Local Briefs. .
See Page AS
• Pension insurance
agency reports $22.8
billion deficit for 2005. ,
See Page A6

flge

SYRACUSE - Ralph 'and
Jan Lavender have lived in
Syracuse for 40 years and
until Monday morning they
were unaware that resting
beneath their property was a
seam of coal slag that had
been smdldering ·on Water
Street above the Ohio River.
Ralph and a neighbor had
recently attempted to ·smoke
out a ground hog which
may' ve provided a vent of air
to the underground slag
which caused it to burn hotter. Officials from the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire
Department said it could
have been smoldering for two
weeks underground.
"You could feel the heat on
your shoes," Ralph said about
.the ground above the . slag
seam.
Officials from Ohio's
Abandoned
Mine
Land
'Program (AML) were called to
the scene as was Robert Byer
from the Meigs Emergency
Management Agency.
Please see Sy11cuse, AS .

Both Sergent/ photo
For days smoke has been rising from what is believed to be a coal s lag dump on the property
of Ralph and Jan Lavender on Water Stmet in Syracuse. Ralph stands back from the caution
tape that now surrounds his front yard. :Tuesday the dump was still smoldering, creating dangerous, noxious fumes.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Wednesday, November 23rd

Reach Over
~ Households

In Meigs
County!
Advertising Deadline
Monda.y, ·November 21st
Call Dave or Brenda
992-2155

Details on Pa&amp;e A6

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2!·4

Comics

Bs

pear Abby

A3
A4
As

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section

A6

© aoos Ohio VaUey Publiahing Co.

- - - ··· . .J--- · - -

RACINE - Racine residents honored veterans in a
Veterans Day service hosted
by the Enduring Freedom
Support Group and the
Racine Area . Community
Organization.
The "Honor the Veterans"
event was held at the
American Lepion Hall Post
602 in Racine.
·
Jan 'Cardone of Enduring
Freedom estimated that 75
people showed up to the
event, including veterans
from every branch of the
armed services.
Dr. Douglas Hunter was the
master of ceremonies, Ronnie
Sal ser from the Racine First
Baptist Church gave (he
opening prayer while Kerry
Wood from the Racine United
Methodist Church gave the
closing pray~r.
State
Representati ve
Jimmy Stewart (R-Meigs)
also spoke during the ceremony as did Syracuse resident ·and Army National
Guardsman Charles Wolfe.

Ple•se see Recine, AS

- - -- - - - - -- - - - - ·t- -· ·-

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Racine honors the veterans

WEATHER

-5,000

Wellston
group to share
revitalization
•
expenence
BY BRIAN

.

Region 24
At Lima Sinlor Stadium
15) Delphos Sl. John's (10 -2) vs. (2)
Hardin Nortt)ern ( 11·0)

POMEROY - Tomorrow residents of Meigs County will participate in the Great American
Smokeout in an attempt to raise
awarenes s of the dangers of
tobacco use and encourage users
to.quit for one day, O( longer.
The Meigs County Tobacco
Use Prevention Coalition is challenging Mei~s County businesses to participate in this year's
festivities
by
encouraging
employees who smoke to quit for
the day. These employees are
then asked to place the money
they would have spent on ciga.rettes for the day into a donation
box at the business with that
money going to the American
Cancer Society.
The business raising the most
money will be treated to a cold
turkey sandwich lunch provided
by the Meigs County Tobacco
Use Prevention Coalition.
Coalition members will collect
the buckets and money.
For questions call Tobacco
Prevention Educators Kyle Ord
or Brenda Curfman at the Meigs

County Health Department, 9926626, or Meigs Cou nty's
American Cancer Society representative . Leigh Ann Hehr at .
374-5464.
Donation bu ckets for the
American Cancer Society are
also displayed at local busine ss
where a donation can earn
smokers (or non smokers) a treat
such as a coupon for cookies or
fren ch fries.
Also as part of this week.'s
activities the Coalition recognized a letter to the editor written by Mid-Valley Christian
·School fourth grader Kyl e
Johnso n about the dangers of
second hand smoke .
·
· Last week Mei gs County
Commissioners Mick Daven(Jllrt
and Jim Sheets signed a proclamation recognizing tomorrow as
the Great American Smokeout.
Yesterday, members of the
Coalition, Meigs County Health
Department and Holzer Medical
Center's Tobacco Prevention program placed a "Great American
Smokeout" banner at the Meigs
County Courthouse to raise
awareness of the observance.

BSERGENT@M~DAILYSENTINEL.COM

At Zanesville S'ulsberger Stadium
(51 Newark Cath. (9·3) vs. (3) Shadyshje
.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT

(~)Norwalk St. Paul (10-2)

(10-2)

www.my•luilp•·ntind.cum

Meigs County's · · past comes
back to haunt Syracuse family

DIVISION VI

.All gameS

"VEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 2005

Great American Smokeout tomorrow, win a free lunch.

SPORTS

All gamea:

(11·1)

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Submitted photo

Last week residents of Racine honored their own with the fourth annual "Honor the Veterans "
event sponsored by Enduring Freedom Support Group and the Racine . Area Community
Organ ization. Those veterans in attendance were sitting tfrom left) Homer Proffitt . Aaron Wolfe,
Curtis D. Jones, Charles Wolfe , Clarence Frank; standing (from left) Tom Wo,lfe , Rick Baker, Gary
Willford, Delbert Smith. Bud Blosser. Gene R. Lawrence, Clarence T. Wolfe , Dave Zirkle, Dale Hart.
---·

..

MIDDLEPORT
A
breakfast
presentation
Thursday morning will offer
information about the revitalization process from a community that has been successful at it .
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co. and Hometown Market
will sponsor a breakfast for
representatives of Well ston's
revitalization project, which
has served as an unofficial
model for Middleport's own
plans for revitalization. The
breakfast will be held from 8
a.m. 10 I 0 a.m. at the Family
Life Center of the Middleport
Church of Christ.
Shannon Weber, an attorney from Wellston; who
helped spearhead and coordinate th'e program in Well ston,
and others associated with
the project will share lessons
they have learned learned.
The Well ston team was
assisted by the Institute for
Local Government and Rural
Development staff, and has
seen considerable success in
improving their downtown
retail climate ~nd its appearance.
ILGARD has worked
close ly with the Middleport
Development Group in completing a market-based retail
survey, a mission statement
and priorities for revitalization efforts.
"As Middleport 's revitalization program progresses,
it becomes more important
that we learn from the successful secrets of other co mmunities." said Paul Reed,
pre sident of the Middleport
Group.
Deve lopm ent
"Wellston started its revitalizatio n program facing
many of the same obstac le s
we ' re facing in Middleport.
and we hope we can learn
from thei r successes as well
as any mistakes lhey may
have learned from th ro ugh
the process.'"
Reed said •attendance at 1he
free breakfast is open to anyone who wishes to participate in the revi talization project; lend ideas or time, or is
conside ring starting a busi·
ness
in
downtown
Middleport.
"Community buy-in has
been a m•\ior priority for us
all along." ' Reed said. "We

Please see Wellston. AS

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

LOCAL • STATE

VVednesday,Novernbert6,2oos

Something fishy

State gives plan for combating inflated school attendance numbers·
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

'
t

'

only a I 0 percent reduction.
which the state is generally
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
re luctant to impose because
of the financial burden it
COLUMBUS
The would place on districts, J .C.
.state sc hool boartl is co n- Benton. a Department of
o;idering way~ tu make dis- Education spokesman, said
. tricts mo re respo nsible for Tuesday.
·
th.e &lt;.lata they submit and
Another option is making
.exp l oring po:-. -.. ibl e new the accuracy of data one of
san..:Llom. for d ist ricts that the state standards that disturn in bad uata.
tricts receive a rating for o'n
One opt ion "ould be to the annual report 'card,
reduce districts' state aid by I Benton said.
percentage point for each
Debate over data arose
violation. Curr~nl law allows after Cleveland city schools

acknowledged they boosted House Educahon Committee ing options to ensure the
enrollment figures by includ- on Tuesday.
.
. integrity of the data submiting children with excused
But tradttionally, the accu- ted by districts," Burigana
racy of the data has been the said.
absences.
However,
·Cleveland's
That raised attendance to responsibility of the districts,
attendance
data
did
not affect
96.7 percent instead of what he said at a special hearing
the district said should be called over the Cleveland the districts' state or federal
aid or state report card rating,
closer to 93 percent.
problems.
. The state has numerous
The ~tate is re-examining Burigana said.
Cleveland schools had no
ways to check that the data that approach in light of what
tli str icts submit to the state happened in Cleveland, and · comment Tuesday on the
fo llo\\( s the proper format in reaction to a. bill in the hearing, said spokeswoman
·
outlined by the Education Senate that targets schools Becky Hague.
The (Cleveland) Plain
Department, Steve Burigana, that submit inaccurate data,
Dealer reported last month
chief operating officer for Burigana said.
the department, told the
The department "is explor- that the district submitted

only 620 excused student
absences to the state last year,
when the actual number was
closer to 519,000.
An attendance rate increase
from 80 percent to 97 percent
was one of the accomplishments that the district's chief
executive officer. Barbara
in
Byrd-Bennett, cited
August as one of the accomplishments of her seven-year
tenure.
Byrd-Bennett noted the
gain when she announced she
was leaving the district.

Department ..
A Hallol'!een party and
haunted house was a real
scream on Oci 2 I . A big
area on!~llll lations are wei- thanks to Larry and Patti
~·· , !corned io j&lt;lin in the festivi - Dunn for opening up their
':\ i~~ ties . The cost is $3 per per- home to the whole troop.
·&lt;i1'1i~son. Troop 1208 invites all Thanks to all who worked so
~
~ area organizations to come
hard to make the haunted
and help with this wonderful house such a great success.
service project. More inforOn Oct. 22. our troop parmation may be obtained by ticip&lt;rted in Black Diamond
call ing Jerrena Ebersbach at Council's "Be&gt;•rs, Books and
,.
992-7747 or Shirley Cogar at Blankies" program. We
992-2668.
· donated stuffed bears and
'
Meigs Daisy Troop
animals . to Meigs County
O.ur first 'meeting was Nov .. Sheritrs Dept. While there,
14 at Sacred 1-l.eart Church. Deputy Bill Gilkey led the
The meetings will be held the girls on a tour of the Sheriff's
first and third Mondays of the office and jail.
month.
We then went to' Darst's
Barbie Musser is the troop Adult Care facility where the
leader.
girls had the opportunity to
Southern Daisy
visit with residents while givTroop 1292
ing them each a warm blanThe troop started this ket of their own . Next was a
month off with a meeting on visit to the Meigs EMS office
Oct. 3. where they earned the to present Gene Lyons with
"Considerate and Caring" bears and blankets. Gene
petul fo r their Daisy tunics. talked to the girls ubouthow
They met again on Oct. 17 to to call f(w help in an emerhttn~ an inve-.titure ce remony, gency and what the EMS perat which the gi rl s received sonnel do.
·
their ll111ics and patches. Then
Jay Buskirk demorlstrated
it was oil to· Nease's Dairy · how to wrap a sling on an
Farm. A big thank you to injured arm. The last stop
Dan and Roger Nease who was Holzer Clinic. Children's
tauglll them about the milk- books were distributed in the
ing pru&lt;.:ess and how the waiting room and pediatric
1
• ~farmer·, hantls never tollch
exam . rooms. Diana Jeffers
·. •the milk .
led a tour of the Clinic facili ,
Meigs Brownie
ty and gave each child a gift
Troop 1271
bag to take home.
This project was . in honor
We have had '' busy and
flln year so far. The girls have of
National Make A
earned tl1e following Try-Its Difference Day.
Special
during
September
and ·thanks to all who shared their
October: Puppets Dolls and lime and knowledge with our
Plays. Hubbies. Friends are girls ..
Space Explorer and
A
trip
to
Chester
Science in Action.
Bow hunters Club was 011 Oct
The girls attended the 24. Thank you to John Young
Space Day on Oct. 29 where and Gary Kapp for letting us
. ·they learned about constella- tour the facility, demonstrattions. played with "goo" ing how to shoot a bow and
from Planet Oobleck. shot sharing information about the
rockets. bllilt a · model of sport.
.
S:llu rn anti built ed ible space
Our troop finished out the
rovers. These Brownies sold month attending the Space
· of nuts to help pay for all Odyssey event on Oct 29.
badges they wi II earn and The girls visited " Planet
help stlpport the activities Oobleck," built models of
· wallt to attend.
Saturn. made cork "rockets"
gi rh are going to col- propelled by vinegar and
canned food on Nov. 12 baking soda, learned about
. , for our annual food drive on the moon and solar system
Nov.l9. As a reward for and even built edible Lunar
being such great Girl Scouts Land Rovers.
. we are having a pizza party
Reedsville Brownie
artcr the food drive .
Troop 1067
Our girls just had an
Brownies are working on
nvcslitttrc/ R~dedication cer- the make-it, eat-it Try-it.
em~'ny where they rece ived
They have helped make
their Brownie pins. Try-Its coqkies and punch and also
a11d p&lt;tlches. Our Brownit"s are collecting recipes for the
urc: Angel Sanders. Miranda cookbooks they are making.
Gi llilan. Brcuhna Thompson,
Meigs Junior
Collrtncy Robinson, Mikayla
Troop 1276'
Van Matrc. Sierra Hall ,
These juniors have taken
Victoria Walker. Adriahna over the troop. Look out. Yes,
Patterson. Kelly Mankin. they are running the meetBrand\ Par.sons. Jerrika ings, leading the other girls
~~:~~:~;·'j, Cheyannc Lambert, and having fur\, too. The girls
t
Morris. Emily take turns being in charge of
1
Kay lee Werry, Kylie the meetings. They have disKing and Morgan Lodwick .
cussed how they will govern
. Troop leader is Dee their troop. They have
S\\artJ. The troop meets from learned about what it takes to
2 Ill ~ p.m. every other be a Model Citizen. They
Sundav at Zion Church of have learned what it means to
Christ ~ Ot•r next meeting IS be a Girl Seoul in the USA.
Nm. 10.
The juniors made up their
Southern Brownie
own skit for the rededicaTroop 1120
tion/investiture ceremony
October was a very busy and what songs they would
111th hcginning with panic- sing. They went to Space
n"llnn in the nut and candy
Day.
The girls are going door to
Oct.
I0
was
the · door on Nov. 12 to collect
In""' tit ure/ Rededicat ion canned food for our annual
Ceremony and Court of food . drive that ts on
Ac.·,rd, The girls pledged to November 19.
the Girl Scout
Junior Girl Scouts are :
1\C
and Laws and Allyson
Davi s, Alyson
•cc,ivr'rl patches earned.
Dettwiller, Alyssa Cremeans.
' On Oct. 15. our troop went Brittany
Durst .
Devan
Tupper' Plains to partici- Dugan, Dominique Watson.
. pate in the Harve.st Fe&gt;tival Emma Perrin. Hannah King.
p:~radc orga nit.etl hy the
Holly
McGrath ,
Jes si
Tuppers
Plains
Fire Meadows. Kentlra Haning.

Wednesday, Nov. 16
CHESTER - Shade River
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, special
meeting, 7 p.m. at the hall to
confer Master Mason degree
on a candidate. Master Masons
invited. Refre~hments .
MIDDLEPORT .
Middleport Literary. Club, 2
p.m. at the home of Pauline
Horton. Jeanne Bowen to
review "With No One as
Witness" by Elizabeth George.
' POMEROY -Narcotics
Anonymous open discussipn,
7 p.m., Sacred Heart Church.
Thursday, Nov. 17
. POMEROY - · Diabetes
1
Support Group, 10:30 a.m.,
Meigs Senior 'Center.
POMEROY
Meigs
County American Cancer
Society Task Force. regular
meeting, noon, in the basement of the Pomeroy Library.
Call Courtney Sim for more
·
information, 992-6626.
POMEROY - AA open dis-

SWAPS. President reported own clay, arrange ~ !lower troops in Meigs County met
that 3 II nuts and candy were arrangement, emboss and . and worked on their Artistic
sold making the troop rubber stamp, dip bears and Crafts Interest Project Patch.
$202. 15, to use for more make ·candles and just have Activities included making
trips, crafts, and badges. all around fun hanging with candles; an object out of clay;
Abby was the top seller with other girls from another a Christmas flower arrangeI00 items ·and Brittany was troop. Those attending were ment; and waxed a teddy bear
runner up with 75. Girls Catherine Grady, Ravenne . with scented vanilla. Girls
were reminded that service Reed, and Whitney .Putman.
also helped prepare for the
units "Space Day" event will
The girls announced that next day's Space Day as their
be
at
the . Syracuse the space event was a very
service project for that badge .
Community Center. Their sis- nice event that was held on
ter Brownie troop judged the Nov. · 29. Lindsey Putman, Attending from the troop
girls' costumes. Everyone Courtney Bauerbach, Raven were Erickri Cogar, Joyce
Reedsville .Junior
was a winner. While the girls Reed and Catherine Grady all Romines, Ashley Romine8,
Troop 1042
enjoyed
refreshments attended and had a grMt time. and Ashley B-Lee.
Members are busy working brought by all, they did a
Allending Space Day were
The troop held a Juliette
on self esteem and being their feeling game. started a swap Lowe/Halloween party where Joyce Romines, Ashley
best. They just finished The tree and helped Kimmy fil)ish some dressed and some did- Romines, and Ashley BLet's get cooking badge her black cat.
earned
steps
n't and we made some fun Lee. They
work.
their
"Space
They voted no't to have a crafts, made tomb stones for towards
Southern Junior
meeting next week so that our musical chair game, put Exploration" Interest Project
· Troop 1204
some could go Trick or together an edible witch then Patch.
The Meeting of Oct. 3 Treating in Racine.
we gobbled her up. Thanks
opened with flag ceremony
Any girl is invited to join goes out to the parents for all
which included the pledge our troop . that is in fourth, their hard work and great
and promise.
fifth or sixth grade: We meet food.
Dues was taken from four weekly. from 5-7 at the
Food drive is Nov. 19. We
girls and minutes were read.
Syracuse
Community
Center.
are
collecting non-perishable
New girls xoted on the uni- Troop · leader · is Shirley
food
items for this drive.
corn as their troop crest for
Anyone wishing to jdtn us
this year. Troop rules were Cogar.
Reedsville
Cadette
you
can find us at the
revised, the dance badge was
Reedsville Church of Christ
Troop 1254
• Instant Messaging - Kaep your buddy IIIII
decided for Sign of the Sun,
each
Scouts
are
working
on
phoMonday evening fro.m 6
• 10 e-malllddrnus with Wtbmaltl
leader told girls that money
• FREE TfiChnieal Support
had heen sent in for the Gem tography. We hope to catch to 7:30 p.m., or call Tami
• Cu1tom Start Page - News, Weather &amp; moral
Events and that we would some very nice fall pictures Putman at 378-6422. You can
need another driver to trans- and also they started a Studio also check out our web page:
6XIaster!J
2B booklet abo11t banking. www.tamipurman.tripod.com
port the girls.
JusrsJ rnam
Sign Up Online I www.LocaiNetcom
e girls showed their As a . troop some of the
Cadette;senlor
tal s and the "Who Am !" Cadettes made it to the
Call Today 3 Sav~!
•
at
the
Cadette
workshop
Troop 1208
for. ne of the requirements.
On October 28, several
Ki mm y · Deaver served Syracuse Community Center
Ruhable Inte rnet A ~ cess S mce 1994
where they got to make their girls from the cadette/sr
refreshments.
The meeting for Oct I0 had
seven girls present. After the
••
••
••
!A
tlag . ceremony, girls went to
.~
the kitchen to start craft.
Bottles were filled with sand
and then a light bulb was
taped on the bottles, gitls
then put paper mache on the
bottle and bulb.
· While this was drying the
girls started their meeting.
Troop rules were handed out.
The president told girls to
start collecting a bag of
clothes or toys lo lake with us
on the event. This will give
them a patch. Girls voted that
they wanted a Halloween
party so the rest of the time
was used to plan it while they
had refreshments served by
Sarah Eakins.
,
Five girls attended the
meeting on Oct 17. Dues ·
were collected. Befor,. meeting started, the girls took
their craft outside and 'Spray
painted. While they were drying they starred their meeting.
The president reminded the
girls that the followin g
Saturday was the event in
Belle, W.Va., and that they
needed to meet at leader's
home at I 0 with their bags of
clothes.
Magazine booklets and nut
Deadline for entries is: November 30, 2005
·forms were· turned in. Ears
were cut out and then girls
glued them on their crafts
The winning pets will be featured in this
· with eyes, . pipe cleaner
whiskers and tai l. A mouth
unique calendar.
was cut out and glued on with
porn porn nose. making them
The winner will be highlighted on the cover.
the cutest black cats for
Halloween . ·
1 Name of pet:
·
~.
While
gi rls
enjoyed
refreshments, they finished
: Your Name:
·
,
planning their party for next
Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __
week.
Oct.
24
was
their
Halloween Party meeting.
Five girls attended. Six girls
I
Phone: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
reported on the Gem Event.
I
They donated more bags . of
.~.
· Please send or bring this entry form along with your photo to
clothing and toys than anyone else . Attending were:
®allipoli!i mail!'
.
..
Abby Atkins, Brittany Cogar,
Ki mmy Deaver, Rachel
-at:rllmne
l\egt!iter
Da1ly Sentmel
Payne, Anne Cund iff. and
"Pet calendar"
."Pet Calendar"
"Pet Calendar''
Megan McGee. Girls enjoyed
1
•
825 Third Avenue
200 Main st.
Ill Court St.
several activities: Food land
rover made by girls, light
~Gallipolis, OH 45631 Pt Pleasant, wv 25550 Pomeroy, OH 45769
bracelets. planet necklaces,
~:·
and star constellations. ·
Afterwards. they traded
Krystal Bass, Magpie Smith,
McKenzie
Whobrey,
Miranda Manley. Savanna
Capehart, Sharon Wright,
Taylor Hood, Tess Phelps,
Vada Johnso n and Valerie
Wolf.
Troop· leaders are Dee
Swartz and Amy Cremeans.
The troop meets from 2 to 4
p.m. every other Sunday at
Zion Church of Christ.
Our next meeting is Nov
20. '

Brtan J. Reed/photo

Jerry George of Rutland caught this 43-pound catfish in the
Ohio River just below the Racine Locks and Dam last week.

FAMILY MEDICINE

Daughter 's.morphia
scleroderma is rare disease

~

l.
-- -... Pet Calendar zoo6!
••
.... ..

Question: My 15-year-old
daughter was diagnosed with
morphia scleroderma about
·three years ago. She has a
large discoloration that looks
like a scar that the doctor says
is associated with the disease.
It's on the side of her stomach
- about five inches long and
~bout an inch and a half wide.
. The doctor has prescribed
·creams to help it fade but
nothing seems to work. It's
embarrassing for her when
she wears bathing suits in the
summertime. She wants to go
to a skin doctor to see about
having it removed. Can you
tell me if this is possible?
Answer: There are several
different types of scleroderma. Before I discuss the
specifics of the morphia type,
let me tell you a. little bit about
the disease in general.
Scleroderma can cause thickening, hardening or tightening
of the skin, blood vessels and
internal organs. It is classified
as an autoimmune disorder,
because the sufferer's connec.tive tissue is attacked by his or
her own immune system. This
.occurs when the immune .sys·tem mistakes the body 's connective tissue for a foreign
invader. Connective tissue is
found throughout the body,
providing support and fonn
for organs and structures.
When the immune system
:attacks the connective tissue,
researchers believe, it causes
an overproduction of collagen.
This is a tough, hard protem
that your body uses to make
up all connective tissue,
including tendons, bones, liga. ments and skin. It is when this
·excess collagen is deposited in
various places throughout the
body that the hardening and
stiffening of tissues that I mentioned earlier takes place.
· Morphia scleroderma is a
rare form of what's called
localized scleroderma, which
means it doesn't affect internal
organs. It occurs in children as
well as adults and produces
hard, scar-like oval shaped
patches on the skin, usually on
the trunk and limbs.
. The plaques start off purple
m color then become tvory
white in the middle with a
light ,Purple border. Old
lesions may be brown. The
surface is smooth. shiny and

••

•

•••

i·· Send us a
photo of
i·· your . ·
favorite
pet and
they .
might be----.:..::::~~~
voted into our
e;
2006
....
Pet Calendar!

•

1"•----- ------- -- ----------------- -------.---.. --•.

~

cussion, 7 p.m., Sacred Heart
Church. Al-Anon also meets.
MIDDLEPORT -Regular
meeting of Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, 7:30p.m.
of
officers.
Election
Refreshments.
POMEROY -Caring and
Sharing Support Group, re~u­
lar meeting, I p.m ., Me1gs
Multipurpose Center. Topic
discussed will be the Medicare
prescription drug plan, also
referred to as "Part D."
Friday, Nov. 18
'
POMEROY - · Meigs
County Cancer Initiative, regular meeting, 3:30f.m. in the
conference room o the Meigs
County Health Department.
For information call Courtney
Sim. '192-6626.
Saturday, Nov. 19
POMEROY - Narcotics
Anonymous, 7 p.m., open discussion, Sacred He~rt Church.
Monday, Nov. 21
POMEROY - Seminar on
Chronic
Obstructive
Pulmonary · Disease (COPD),
regular meeting, I p.m. to 3
p.m. ar Mulberry Community
Center in God's NET. Speaker

Lenora Leilheit, RN , Herbert
Carson, pharmacist.
Tuesday, Nov. 22
POMEROY - A free lecture on eating disorders presented by specialist Jeff
Bryson, IMFf of Crossroads
Counseling Center of Albany,
7 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. The lecture includes
treatment approaches and a
se lf-~creening test.

Pomeroy Municipal Building.
POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District , regular meeting.
II :3 0 a.m.. Meig s SWCD
Office, 33101 Hilanti 'Road .
Friday,No:v. 1!1
ATHENS
Ohio
Department of Health to con&lt;;Juct public informational meeting. 6-8 p.m., Athens County
Health Department , 278 W.
Union St.. Athens, to discuss
drali of new statewide sewage
treatnlent system rules. New
rules re late to installation .and
Thursday, Nov, 17
maintenance
of private houseMARIETIA -District 18
hold
'ewage
treatment
systems.
Executive Committee meets at
10 a.m., Holiday Inn. Purpose Public i1~put recommendetl.
to recommend projects for
Round 20 funding under Ohio
Public Work&gt; Commi&gt;Sion
State Capital Improveme nt
Thursday, Nov. 17
and Local Transportation
POMEROY
Harry
Improvement Programs.
Potter magic workshop ai 6
SYRACUSE
Meigs p.m. at the Pomeroy Library.
County Board of MRDD Each child who auends
Meeting. 3 . p.m .. Carleton receives a free magic kit.
School.
Saturday, Nov. 19
POMEROY- Rescheduled
SYRACUSE - Free clothregular session of Pomeroy ing giveaway, 5 to 6· p.m.,
Village Council. 7 p.m .. Syracuse First Church of God.

Public meetings

Other events

Letter writer still needs help putting thoughts into words

( Z,; :;:

..

Wednesday, November 16,2005

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations

MEIGS G.IRL SCQUT J)JARY
POM EROY - The annual
Food lJriYc Game Day will
be hcl&lt;.l at God's NET from I
to · ~ p.m on Saturday. All

.PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

~oint ~{ea!iant

.=·· .. -\¥ .... ii .. ---... -. -.. --- --.. -· ·; ---

...

~-- · ---

hairless. The discoloration of
the skin is not just "associated
with the disease" as you put it
but it is the condition itself.
Therefore, surgical removal is
not really an option.
As for treatment, there are
many treatments that have
.been tried, but none have been
proven to be effective ·in most
cases. Also, there are more
treatment options available
for adults than for children.
There has been some success
with the use of the anti-cancer
drug methotrexate in children
with localized skin lesions,
but more ·studies are needed.
Here are some other treatments that have ·had some success, but may not be indicated
for children. There are numerous creams that have been
tried with varying success,
including steroid creams.
A variety of phototherapy
techniques have been tried
with different types of light.
One that has been successful
for some people is long wave
ultraviolet A, with and without the usc of photosensitive
creams. In other cases, longterm courses of antibiotics,
oral steroids, and the seizure
medication Dilantin· have
been tried and have been
found to be helpful.
Because this is a very rare
condition, probably the most
important thought I can leave
you with is to find a physician
who specializes in the treatment of juvenile morphia scleroderma. He or she will be able
to give you the best advice for
the treatment. both short- and
long-tem1, for your daughter.

Family Medicine® is a
weekly columu. To submit
questions, write to Martha A.
Simpson, D.O., M.B.A., Ohio
U11iversity
College
of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
Box 110, Athe11.~, Ohio 45701,
or via e-mail to readerquestiotls@familymedicilletlews.o
rg. Medical infori1UJtiou iu
this colum11 is provided as ar1
educational service ouly. It
does 1wt replace the judgment
of your pers0110l physician,
who .~ lwuld be relied 011 to
diagnose a11d recommend
treatment for 011y medical
co11ditions. Past columns are
available online at wwwfamilymedicillenews.org;

DEAR ABBY: I have been
using your booklet "How to
Write . Letters for All
Occasions" for many years.
The suggestions and samples
you included for writing. letDear
ters of thanks, congratulaAbby
tions, condolences, etc. have
been extremely helpful particularly the section on
condolence letters because so
often I have difficulty fin(ling
the right words.
1
l~e nosy, sometimes hostile
It has reached the point that reactions I get from people who
my booklet is falling apart. If assume that only Seein~ Eye
it's still published, I would like dogs are allowed in publtc?
a copy for myself, plus copies
Many disabled 'people stop
for my two daughters who now taking their medically neces:
live on their own. How can l sary dogs in public because
order them?- PAMELA IN of this problem. - MARY
SCARSDALE, N.Y.
IN NORTH HILLS, CALIF.
DEAR PAMELA: Thank
DEAR MARY: Your assisyou for the kind words about tance dog should have an
the Letters booklet. I am identifying harness &lt;_lr jacket
·pleased that it has been help- it wears when it is on the job.
ful to you. I agree that some- If that isn't enough to solve
times putting one's feelings the issue and you are denied
into wordsisn' t easy.
entrance to a business
Yes, "How to Write Letters because of the animal, ask to
for All Occasions" is still in speak to the manager. If the
print. Copies can be pur- questioner is another cuschased by sending a business- tomer, rather than becoming
size, self-addressed envelope, defensive, consider it an
plus check or money order for opportunity to educate some$5 (U.S. funds only) to: Dear one who is probably asking
Abby, Letters Booklet, P.O. out of curiostty or ignorance.
Box 447, Mount Morris, IL Many people are unaware
61054-0447. (Postage is that dogs are now trained to
included in the price.)
help people with a wide-rangDEAR ABBY: I'm disabled ing array of problems, and not
and have a dog trained to just those who a(e blind.
DEAR ABBY: 1 have a
accompany me in public
.
f
places. How should I deal with nen d, "Stacy," w.ho has a

mental illriess and is on pubDEAR PAMPERED: Yes,
lic assistance. I try to help her you could have been arrested
out by giving her rides to var- as an accessory to your
ious places. Yesterday I gave friend's shoplifting if she had
her a ride to the store. She been caught. You . have a
knew I was low on diapers, responsibility to your baby.
so she shoplifted some for You don't need problems with
me. I didn 't know what to do the law. In a non-confrontabecause Stacy is emotionally tional way, speak to Stacy and
unstable and can get verbally make it clear that you cannot ·
abusive when confronted. condone what she did, nor
and I had the baby with me so accept any more stolen propl accepted the diapers and erty. Tell her if it happens
drove her ·home.
again you will no longe r be
I am uncomfortable using able to provide her with transthe diapers and would like to .portation. As for the diapers,
return them, but I don't know donate them to a shelter.
. how to go about doing so withDear Abby is wril(en by
out getting Stacy into trouble. Abigail Van Buren, also
because she doesn't know that known as Jeanne Phillips, and
what she is doing is wrong. was foutuled by her mot11er,
Also, could I have been arrest- Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
ed, too, if Stacy had been Abby at www.DearAbby.com
stopped? - PAMPERED IN or P.O. Box 69440, Los
BENSENVILLE, ILL.
Angeles, CA 90069.

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·

~.TJ'.T.T.T.T..T.T.T.T~'I'Th:-TV:;~:;~-TQf.T.T.T.T.T.T.T.T~T-~

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· Thank You ·

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Re-Electing Me To The
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Board Of Education

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Rutland Township
Thanks For your Support!

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,Pd. for by the camlid ut~.:

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OPINION

The ·oaily Sentinel

The death

The Daily Sentinel

Rosa Parks died in late
October, 50 years after her
· brave move to the front of
that segregated Alabama
bus. Her defiant act was the
symbolic push the civilrights movement needed.
Her legacy is inspirational,
but her funeral was a shameful ·spectacle.
In Detroit on Nov. 2, 4,000
gathered at Detroit's Greater
Grace Temple to celebmte
the life of Rosa Parks. But
sometime during the tribute
to Parks, the ceremony fell
into a graceless political
·
rally.
The message of Rosa
Parks' courage in 1955 is a
nonpartisan one. And yet,
fanatical politics found their
way into the ceremony via
lef!-wing stalwarts. AI
Sharpton, who has run for
president as a Democrat,
seemed to get moving on a
pulpit strategy for another
campaign at the funeral. He
declared: "I heard somebody
say Jim Crow is who she
fought and Jim Crow is still
around. But Jim Crow is old.
That's not who I'm mindful
of today. The problem is Jim
Cmw has sons."
The crowd went wild.
"One we gotta battle,"
Sharpton continued, "is
James Crow Jr. Esq. He's a
little more educated. He's a
little slicker. He's a little
more polished. But the
results are the same. He
doesn't put you in the back
of the bus. He just puts ref-

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
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 tlte press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Go,ernment for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S.•Constitution

l

'

!~

TODAY IN 'HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Nov. 16, the 320th day of 200~ . There
are 45 days left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History :
On Nov. 16, 1864, Union Gen. William T. Sherman and his
troops began their "March to the Sea" during the Civil War.
On this date:
· .
In 1776, British troops captured Fort Washington during the
American Revolution . .
.
In I gss. Canadian rebel Louis Riel was executed for high
treason.
In 1907, Oklahoma hecame the 46th state of the union.
In 1933. the United Sta(es&lt;Jnd the Soviet Union established
diplomatic relations.
·
In 1959, the Rodgers and Hainmerstein musical "The Sound
of Music" opened on Broadway.
In 1961. House Speaker Samuel T. Rayburn died in
Bonham. Texas, having served as speaker since 1940 except
·
for two terms.
In 1973, Skylab 3, carrying a crew of three a.stronauts, was
launched fT&lt;im Cape Canaveral, Fla., on an 84-day mission.
In 1973, President Nixon signed the Alaska Pipeline measure into law.
.Ten years ago: Refusin g to yield, President Clipton threatened anew ro veto the latest Republican offer to end a threeday partial government shutdown: Democrats savaged House
Speaker Newt Gingrich for claiming Clinton had snubbed him
recently aboard Air Force One. Attorney General Janet Reno
disclosed she had Parkinson's disease.
. Five .years ago: AI Gore won a legal fight to expand manu- .
al recounts as he struggled to trim George W. Bush's 300-vote
lead in Florida's presidential race. President Clinton began a
visit to Vietnam. Civil rights activist Hosea Williams died in
Atlanta at age 74.
,
One year ago: President Bush picked National Security
Adviser Condoleczza Rice to be his new secretary of state,
succeeding Colin Powell . AI-Jazeera television said it had
received a video showing a hooded militant shooting a blindfolded woman in the head; it's believed the woman was kidnapped aid worker Margaret Hassan. Sunni Muslims in Iraq
expressed anger over videotape showing the fatal shooting of
a wounded and apparently unarmed man in a Fallujah mosque
by a U.S. Marine.
.
TO(Iay's Birthdays: Actor Clu Gulager is '77. Blues musici;m
Huben Sumlin is 74. Journalist Elizabeth Drew is 70. Blues
musici an W.C. Clark is 66. Actor Steve Railsbac.k is 60. Actor
David Leisure is 55: Actress Marg Helgenberger is 47. Rock
musician Mani is 43. Country singer-musician Keith Bums
(Trick Pony) is 42. Tennis player Zina Garrison is 42. Fonner
baseball player Dwight Gooden is 41. Jazz singer Diana Krall
is 41. Actress Lisa Bonet is 38. Actress Tammy Lauren is 37.
Rhythm-and-blues singer Bryan Abrams (Color Me Badd) is
36. Actress Martha Plimpton is 35. Olympic gold medal figure
skater Oksana Baiul is 28. ·Actress Maggie Gyllenhaal. is 28.
Pop singer Trevor Penick is 26. Actress Kimberly J. Brown is
21. Actor Noah Gray-Cabey ("My Wife and Kids") is nine.
Thought for Today: "No matter how dull, or how mean, or
how wise a man is, he feels that happiness is his indisputable
right." - Helen Keller, American author and lecturer (·1880-

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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Correction Policy

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Wednesday, November 16, 2005

of Rosa Parks'funeral
Kathryn

Lopez

erendums on the ballot to
· end affirmative action when
you can't go to school. He
doesn't call you a racial
name, he just marginalizes
your existence. He doesn't
tell you that he's set against
you; he sets up institutional
racism. Where you have a
nation respond looking for
weapons in Iraq that are not
there but can't see a hurricane in Louisiana that is
there."
Ah yes. President Bush the same blind president
who called the governor of
Louisiana to insist on a
mandatory evacuation · of
New Orleans - didn 't even
see hurricane Katrina coming . Regardless, he was
probably still looking for the
weapons in Iraq . .You know,
the ones most of th,e
Democratic
politicians
(Hillary Clinton, John Kerry,
Bill Clinton ... ), who also
spoke at Rosa Parks funeral,
thought were a threat too.
Sharpton went on to more
specifically slap down the
Michigan Civil
Rights
Initiative, which would
amend the state's constitu-

tion to, prohibit "state entities from discriminating or
granting preferential treatment based on race, sex,
color, ethnicity, or national
origin." The Michigan Civil
Rights Initiative is, in truth,
the logical continuation of ·
any struggle for civil rights
in America - it's just. AI
Sharpton would get that if he
were a civil-rights leader.
But don't let him fool you,
he's just a left-wing demagogue.
Jesse .Jackson, also a former Democratic .presidential
candidate, announced during
his eulogy - THE eulogy
- that the president had
nominated "an . extreme
rig.ht-wingjudge, antithetical
to everything Rosa Parks
ever stood for." Presumably
Jackson was talking about
Judge Samuel Alito, who
President Bush had nominated the · same week to the
· Supreme Co\lrt. Alito is for
segregation? That's news to
,., everyone .. Jackson must
have gotten swept away.
That sometimes happens at
political conventions. People
get silly and carried away
demonizing the guy they
want to beat. But, oh wait.
This wasn't a political convention.
It was a funeral.
Rosa Parks deserved better. Americans who can be
well served by her example
for decades to come deserve
better.
In the December issue of

~ Wednesday, November 16,

2005

~

Obituaries
Robert Arbaugh ·

Glamour, Geraldine Ferraro
has it right. Speaking of,
Rosa Parks, Ferraro tells~
Glamour, "I was very
impressed when I met this·
giant of a woman, who was '
maybe 5'2." The Afghan and
Iraqi women who are fight: ·
ing' for their rights are doing
so in the tradition of Rosa
Patks." I' m ihe type of gal
that's conservative, Reagan~ '
loving and rarely agrees with
anything groups like the
"National Organization for
Women" have to say, but
when the former Democratic
vice-presidential candidate is '
right, she's right!
Ferraro gets it. While
politicians play blame games '
over prewar intelligence,
complete with childish pubc'
lie-relations stunts, and nonsensical rhetoric fills an otherwise beautiful event, folks
here and abroad live the
legacy of Rosa Parks, who ·
refused to give up her seat af
front of the bus, simply
because it is was the righi'
thing to do. It was the brave..
move someone needed to ·
make. And she made it. No
one
Democrat. or:
Republican, black or white;·
American or Iraqi - should ·
be segregated from thai •
inspiration.
.
(Kathryn Lopez is the edi~·
tor . of National Review ·
Online
(www.nationalre•,
view.com). She can be con•
tacted at klopez@nationalre_&lt;
view.com.)
'

'"

Refund delayed for businesses' injured worker insurance

·POMEROY - Robert Carl Arbaugh, 76, Pomeroy, passed
away on Saturday, Nov. 12, 2005, at Holzer Medical Center in
Gallipolis.
He was born on July 26, 1929, in Radcliff, son of the late
~earl Ellis and Nma Doles Arbaugh. He was a truck driver for
t~e Ohio Packing Company for 37 years.
)n addttton to her parents, he was preceded in death by two
Sisters. Bretta Keesner and Leota Aurand. und two brothers,
Ronald and Donald Arbaugh . .
' He is survived by hi s wife of 51 Years: Virginia Thomas
Mbaugh, Pomeroy. a stepson. Charles Robert Arbaugh, Sugar
Cirove; grandchildren: Christopher: Bryan and Michael Delay
and John Thomas, Pomeroy; sisters-in-law : .Evelyn Thomas,
Ann Thomas, and Mary Lou Arbaugh; a brother-in-law,
Carroll Bal ser; and several nieces and nephews.
A private graveside service will be conducted at the convenience of the fami ly.
.Arrangements are being handled by the Fisher Funeral
Home, Pomeroy, and online condolences may be sent to
www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.
" Donations may be made to the Hysell 'Run Community
Church, 33094 New Lima Rd., Rutland, Ohio 45775 .
· Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral-.
tiomes.com.
.'

Pearl A. Keyes

'·
,NEW HAVEN , W.Va. - Pearl A. Keyes, 75, of New
ijjlven, W.Va., went home to be with the Lord on Tuesday,
J'l,ov. 15, 2005, at Overbrook Center in Middleport.
, Born June 15, 1930, in New Castle, Pa., she was the daughter of the late Charles Lynn and Stella Thompson.
''She was also preceded in death by a brother, Robert Lynn, a
sl~ter, Evelyn Lynn, and a grandson, .Jerome Keyes.
"Surviving are her husband, J. Robert Keyes, whom she married on Dec. 27, 1947, at John's Run, Ky.; two daughters,
Roberta (Gary) Acree of Middleport and Kathy (Mike)
Howard of Cincinnati; two sons, Jerry (Carolyn) Keyes of
l:.etart, W.Va. , and Robbie (Diane) Keyes of Letart, W.Va.;
mne grandchildren: Jeff (C heryl) Acree of Wheelersburg,
Gary L (Brianna) Acree uf Rutland, Bethany Keyes of Letan,
W.Va :, Kerri Howard and Elisabeth Howard, both of
CinCinnati, Trisha (Benjamen) Alexander of Pendelton, Ind.,
Alicia Keyes and Joshua Keyes, both of Letart, and Jeremy
'(oung of Kentucky ; three great grandchildren: Cody and
Brent Acree of Wheelersburg and Victoria Alexander of
Pendelton, Ind.
She was a devoted wife and mother and a member of the
Rutland Comt;nunity Church . She will be greatly missed by all
her family and friends.
. .
Services will be held at I p.m. on Thursday at the Weslexan
Bible Holiness Church in Middleport with Pastor Amos Ttllis
officiating and burial following in Sunrise Cemetery.
.Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m . on Wednesday
at Acree .Funeral Home in Middleport.

WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS - The new
· director of Ohio's insurance
fund for injured workers said
Tuesday he is delaying a decision on whether to give
refunds to businesses while he
makes sure figures are accurate at the agency ifl the middle of an investment scandal.
"We want to be absolutely
accurate on the financials,"
said William Mabe, administrator of the Bureau of
Worker 's
Compensation .
"Not that I don 't think we ' re
inaccurate, but right now it's
like there's a lot of loose ends
AP Photo
hanging out there."
William Mabe reads a written statement at the start of his con ~
Before Mabe 's decision, the firmation heari ng to be the new administrator of the Ohio
Workers'
Compensation Bureau of Worker's Conwensation Tuesday in Columbu s.
Oversight Commission was Mabe said Tuesday he is delaying a decision whethe r to give
scheduled to discuss Thursday refunds to businesses while he makes sure figures are accu·
whether to refund businesses rate at. the agency in the middle of an investme ~ t scandal.
some of the money they paid
in premiums. Mabe said he
Mabc replaced longtime of fhe invest me•~ scundal.
. still hopes to have a recom- administrator James Conrad.
Noc's attnmevs h" ve
mendation by year's end.
who was forced out in May acknowledged that SI 3 milThe commission in June by Gov. Bob Tah as word lion of a $50 milliQn state
rejected an agency proposal for broke of the agency's losses. investment in rare en in.-. mana $70 million refund because On Tuesday, the Ohio Senate aged by Noe em,. I be
of ongoing concerns about the formally approved Mabe's accounted for. ' ·
bureau's investments.
appointment.
Noe is under st"tc inve&lt;tiAt that time, details · still
Aiso Tuesday, the Senate gat ion for hi s management of
were emerging about losses passed a bill removing .an the fund and .has been indictof $300 million, including April deadline for the sale of ed on federal charges of try$13 million invested in rare the 'rare coins m.anagcd by ing to skin campaign finance
coins and $215 million in a Tom Noe, a former Toledo- laws by funnelin g contrihuhigh-risk hedge fund .
area coin dealer at the heart li ons to President Bu sh

Bv AFZAL NADEEM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Meeting canceled

Tellabration! 2005

... Wellston

I write .the songs that no one sings

'-

Jim
Mullen
---Two,"

"'Fearsome

Foursome," "The Legend
of the Gplf Ranger" and
· '' Double Bogey Boogie."
There was a truck-driving
fad in country music a few
decades ago. For a while, it
seemed as if every song on
country radio was about
driving a big rig. "Six Days
on the Road," "Convoy,"
"East Bound and' Down,"
and " White Line Fever.''
But honestly, how many of
us have ever driven an 18wheeler? More of us drove
trucks than surfed, but tons
of people drive SUVs. So
where is all the SUV
music? Where are all the
songs
ce lebrating _!he
romance of the ·two-hour
morning drive? "Bumper to
Bumper" "I'd Like to
Merge Left With You," or
" If We Were Together,
We'd · Be in the HOV
Lane." Where are all the
songs about stopping by the
Starbucks for a cuppa and a
paper on the way to work?
Don't songwriters do any of
this stuff or are they all' off
surfing and truck-driving?

Or maybe they all sleep till
noon and don't know what
real people 'do all day long.
Why is it that I see RVs
on the roads all the time,
but I never hear any songs
about driving RVs? I never
· hear any songs about
pulling a camper down the
interstate. Where are all the
ambulan•e .drivin ' songs, all
the bus drivin' songs?
And what about dating
songs? The Shangri-Las
met the Leader of the Pack
at the candy store. It always
seemed a little odd to me
that the leader of a rough·
and-rumble
motorcycle
gang might be shopping for
· candy in between bar-hopping and bullying terrified
townspeople, but it had a
nice beat and was easy to
dance to. ·
Today, she'd most likely
meet him on· Match.com
rather than a candy store.
Him: Likes candy, leather
jackets, throbbing exhaust
pipes, scaring little old
ladies .~ and cuddling. Her:
Likes candy, puppy dogs,
dolls and leather-wearing
thugs. Yet as popular as it
is, I hear no songs ·about
Internet -dating.
It was in the news recently that for the first time the,.
$9 billi.on a year video
game industry out-grossed
the movie industry - in
both senses of the word.
Maybe I' m listening to the
wrong radio stations, but

si ght

ha d

co nse-

quences.
"The idea is to make sure
you have control s around
everything you have." Mabe
said .
"If something is not really
important to the organization

it's a hi"h risk. bu t the
return i ~ not 'g(ling to be there
-'- you really ought not to .be
in that kind of investment."
~

KFC , went off Tuesday
morning as commuters were
heading into downtown
Karachi, Pakistan 's bu.siness
hub and largest city. In addition to the three people killed,
22 were injured .
The U.S. Embassy wamed
American nationals to avoid
areas
frequented
by
Westerns until more information was available about
. the attack.
Karachi is a center of
Islamic militancy and has
been wracked bv terrorist
attacks in . recent years.
Previous bombings have
AP Photo
been linked to extremists
opposed
to
Paki stani Officers of police and bomb disposable squad collect evidence
Presi·dent
Gen.
Pervez after a bomb blast outside the U.S. food fra nchise Kentucky
Mush,arraf's close ties to the Fried Chicken (KFC) restaurant in Karachi, Pakistan on
United States.
· Tuesday. A powerful car bomb exploded outside KFC restauThe U.S. consulate and rant in the southern Pakistan city of Karac hi on Tuesday. killing
American fast food restau- at least three people and injuring 15 others, pol tce said.
rants have been repeatedly
The rebel army said it was
troops are in the cou tllry
targeted .
targetin g the offices of the
Police initially said that helpi ng with quake relief.
But after the Baluchistan Puki,tun Petroleum Limited
the KFC restaurant was also
the target of Tuesday's Liberation Army claimed hx:alcd ahove ihc KFC. The
attack, which came three respon sibility, a .sen ior state-run compa ny extracts
days before Pakistan hosts Kurachi investigator. Raja natural ga:-. from fields in
·
an international conference Umer Khitab, said poli ce Baluchistan .
in the capital Islamabad to . could not immediat ely find
As.w c ioft'd Press nTiler
raise ful"!ds fur. vict'ims of the "traces of j ihaUi clements" in Nasl't)r Kt~kar m Qul'tta,
Oct. ~earthquake . Hundreds the auack and were "eriou sly Pakistan. rolltrilm!i't! to this
I'CJWI'f.
of U.S. and other foreign considering the BLA claim.

Racine

I'm not hearing any songs :
about wasting my entire '
day sitting in front of a
computer screen playing
violent, anti-social video ·
games. If anything screams
for an angst-filled teenage
rock • n' roll song, being a
video game addict would be
it.
"My Baby Won't See Me
Because I Won't Leave the
House," or ul Can't Take
Another 29 Years of Living
at Home" and a sure-fire,
chart-busting hit, "Game
Over, You Lose," should all
be in heavy rotation but no, '
there are no songs about
video gaming.
There are no songs about
taking the family to
DisneyWorld, telecommuting, buying a home, order- ,
ing pizza or the I ,00 I other
things real people do every,
day, but there are thousands ,
of songs about gangstas ,
knocking back $125 bottles
of Crista! champagne in the,
back seat .9f their • Benz's
while blinding us with their .
bling-bling . It's like surftng.
A lot of people sing about
it, few people do it. I'm
just waiting for golf music ·
to catch on. It could be the·
next big thing.
· (Jim Mullen is the author'
of " lr Takes a Village IdioT.'
ComplicaTing rhe Simple '
Life" and "Baby's First
Tmtoo. " You can reach him ·
at jim_mullen@myway.com)

maJor

KARACHI, Pakistan- An
ethnic rebel group claimed
responsibility for a car bomb:
ing Tuesday in downtown
Karachi that hit a KFC
restaurant and rattled the
offices of a state-run petroleum company, killing at least
three people.
Police were investigating
the claim made by the
Baluchistan Liberation Army,
which is demanding more
revenues for gas extracted
MIDDLEPORT - Leaf pickup will continue iti the Village froin its impoverished comer
of Middlepon through Nov. 25. Residents are asked to rake of southwestern Pakistan.
their leaves to the curbside, where they will be picked up.
.
The blast marked the first
time ,the group has claimed
responsibility for an attack
outside Baluchistan, where it
PORTLAND - The Ohio Historical Society has canceled a has launched occasional
meeting set for Saturday to discuss preservation at the bomb and rocket attacks
ButTington Island Battlefield. It will be res~heduled for Dec . against security forces and
gas pipelines.
·
17, at a time and place to be announced.
"We did it to protest, and
we did it to pressure the
government to ·get · our
rights," · Chakar Azam, a
MIDDLEPORT - Tellabration! 2005 will take place from spokesman
for
the
7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturday at the Riverbend Arts Council Baluchistan
Liberation
Theater, 240 N. Second Avenue. Admission is $5.
Army, said in a phone call to
The Associated Press.
The bomb, concealed in. a
strategy for securing state stolen
car parked outside the
funding for revitalization and
streetscape projects in downtown Middleport. An applicafrom PageA1
recently sent care packages · but wC ' rc going to ~lick with Frccd01n 's free mailing list
tion for Phase I revitalization
to while they were serv ing it,'' Cardone sai d about call 949-2-149.
funds
will
be
submitted
by
·
oversees.
remembering the troops.
Thi s w'" tile fourth annual
have been encouraged by the
"It was a wonderful feelfrom PageA1
number of business owners year's end.
If you wish to add mili\ary ..Honor 1hc Veteran·s" event
ing ," Cardone said about
The group a\so hopes to
and others who have come on
personnel onto Enduring in Radne.
board with us, and we hope work to secure low-interest Wolfe spoke about his expe- spea~ing with the serviceloan opportunitie.s for those riences while in Iraq, com- men in person . "I told one of
that will continue."
· "Tomorrow's lunch will be interested in starting busi- plete with a lap top presenta· them that they were almost
a; great learning ·experience nesses , buying shop build- lion of pictures from his stay like my sons."
Cardone's son Trevor
ings or improving store- in country.
for all of us."
OPEN HOUSE
recently
retired from the
"The
.
Middleport fronts . Those loans could be
Wolfe also presented the Army and live s in . Rhode
CELEBRATION
Development Group will used with grant fund leverage Racine Amen can· Legion
Island.
Trevor
and
Wolfe
both
likely pursue Wellston' s in a matching program.
TO HONOR
with an American flag. that graduated from Southern
was flown in Iraq ..
High School together and
At
the
end
of
the
program
·
both
.served in Iraq at the
smoke because it was toxic
local
singer
Craig
Harrison
011 His 80th Birthday
same
time but never suw one
and that she and Davies
sang
patriotic
songs,
includanother while in country.
wouid be in contact .with him
Saturday Nov. 19, 2pm to Spm
ing
a
medley
of
all
the
armed
Enduring Freedom is down
about
what
comes
next.
from PageA1
Pomeroy Gun Club
to 12 servicemen and women
Flowers was contacted for services ~ songs.
"It was tremendou s," . on iis holiday care package .
Pom eroy Pike 'BL' I Wc\..~11 M cig~ High School and
,
this story but was unable to
·. Ralph said he was told by return the phone call before Cardone said.
Five Po in l&gt;. Slop By And Sa y Hello
mailing list, sending the packAML representative Barbara press time.
No Gift~ R ~qll .:-,tcd
During the ceremony ages to places like Korea, Iraq.
Send Card s tn 4.12~ 1 Smith-Gcnglcin Rd .
Flowers that before her orga·
Ralph believes the slag was Cardone and members of · Afghanistan and Germany.
Pomeroy. OH 45769
n'ization could get involved dumped by the Brocalsa Enduring Freedom had a
·"I hope they all get home
that the local fire department Chemical Company which chance to meet with the ser- soon and no soldier wi II need
should first try to contain the was located near his home in vicemen with whom they had groups like ours anymore,
problem.
.
Syracuse years ago.
'Mayor Eric Cunnmgham
Yesterday
both
who is also a member of the Cunningham and Byer were
Syracuse Volunteer Fire attempting to get in touch.
Department said the fire with Flowers and the Ohio
department used the village's Environmental Protection
backhoe ro dig a large ditch Agency about the situation.
line and filled the ditch with
Byer said it was not
water on Monday evening. uncommon for these types of
When dousing the remaining fire s to occur in Meigs
-hillside with water two fire- County with. its ri ch mining
balls occurred ,. slightly injur- hi story.
ing one firefighter who
As for now Ralph and
. Syracuse village officials
received burns to his neck.
; Even after the firefighters' . continue to monitor the situaattempts and a steady tion and contend with the
eyening rain, yesterday _ the .noxious fumes. waiting on
499 Richland Ave., Athens, OH 45701 ur
smoke was still · ri sing up word from government offtfrom the seam.
cial s.
·
Ironically Ralph is retired
'Flower&gt; returned yesterday
with AML colleague K. Scott from Meigs Mine Number
Davies who is a geographer Three though he said he
and de sign speciali st. Mr. never had any coal slag fires
Cavender 'aid he was told by to deal with. at least not at the
Flowers to stay out of the mine.

Leaf pickup underway

.,

throu gh colleague,.
Invest igators ~ay they
would likely need to keep
many of the coins as evidence
beyond the April deadline .
In addition, a retired federal bankruptcy judge overseeing th e 'ale "1ys the deadline
is limiting his 'rbility to get
the besr pri ce possible for
the coin s.
"A.s we ~ct closer to the
deadline. the price I will be
abl e In re.:eive for .:oin s and
asseis uf the funu s will be
reduced because huyers will
kno w- that I must se ll ," Judge
William T. Bodoh told Senate
President Bill Harris in a letter late last mllnth.
After hi s confirmat ion,
Ma bc said the workers' comp
bureau has to do a better job
of managing the risks it takes
with it s in vestm ents.
'
He cit&lt; d the lack of control s ove r the $50 million
coin funds. a small part of the
agency\ S 14 billion portfolio
but llnc whose lack of over-

Ethnic rebels claim car bombing that kills
three outside KFC restaurant in Pakistan

Local Briefs

~IG\t..

Remember the surf. music
craze in the early •60s? The
Beach Boys, Jan and Dean,
Dick Dale, The VGntures?
Surf music was huge)y popular, but how many people
who listened to the music
actually surfed? Not many,
I'll bet. Brian Wilson, the
Beach Boy who wrote their
hits, never surfed. He was
afraid of the water.
Surfing may be a fine
sport, but compared to all
the people who watch
NASCAR races, compared
to all the people who play
soccer, football , baseball ,
hockey, skiing, snowboarding and rugby, surftng is a
relatively tiny sport. The
surf music craze would be
. the equivalent of having a
curling music craze.
Yet, as popular as it is,
how many NASCAR songs
have you ever heard 0 How
many football songs have
topped !he charts? Why are
the Soccer Moms a demographic group and not a
si nging groujj 0 Why is
· there no golf music?
If ever a sport (OK. an
activity) deserved a music
craze of it's own, it's got to
be golf.
"Grab your cart and ride,
ride, ride/
"Got a par on three and
birdie on live ... "
See, the songs. almost
write themselves. Well, the
titles almost write themse lves. "Tee Time for

The Dail y Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bv ANDREW

"

. 1968).

Reader Services

PageA4

Guido Girolami

;Syracuse

Ears to Ya!

594-6333 or 1-800-451-9806

~· 'o!·: cr ~. llolf .--......---"--------"-------~----------

,.

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

VVedncsday,NoveiDbert6,2005

Pension insurance·agency reports $22.8 billion deficit for 200~
BY MARCY GORDON
AP BUSINESS WRITER

WASHINGTON - The
federal agency that insures
the private pensions of 44
million workers is having big
problems of its own. hitting a
deficit of $22.8 billion as big
airlines in bankruptcy dump
liabilities.
With billions flying o.ut the
door of the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corp., concern has
been mounting over its tinancial footing . The agency disclosed Tuesday in an annual
report that as of Sept. 30 it
had $56.5 billion in assets to
cover $79.2 billion in pension liabilities.
Withput a legislative overhaul of ihe private pension
system, the PBGC eventually
will run out of m\mey to pay
the pension claims of the
retirees of companies · whose
·plans it has assumed, the
head of the agency warned.
That. would raise the possibility of a taxpayer bailout. ·
Traditional employer-paid
pension plans, giving retirees
a fixed monthly amount
based on salary and years of
employment, are now esti-

mated to be underfunded by
some $450 billion. That
could jeopardize the retirement security of millions of
Americans, lawmakers say.
There has been an explosion in recent years in the
number of big, ailing companies - especially in such
· industries as airlines and steel
- shifting their pension liabilities to the PBGC.
"Unfortunately, the financial
health of the PBGC is not
improving," the agency 's executive director, Bradley D. Belt,
said in a statement. "The
money available to pay benefits is eventually gomg to run
out unless Congress enacts
comprehensive pension reform
to get plans better funded and
provide the insurance program
with additional resources."
The PBGC's $22.8 billion
deficit for fiscal 2005 takes
into account both the pension
liabilities the agency has
assumed and those it expects
to take over in the future. It is
slightly narrowed from the
record $23.3 billion shortfall it
reported a year ago. If events
such as corporate bankruptcies
that occurred after the Sept. 30
end of the fiscal year had been

cqunted, the 2005 deficit
would have ~n $25.7 billion,
the agency said.
Signaling a deepened
future risk, the PBGC said its
estimate of "reasonably possible exposure" from companies that could default on
their pension P.ayments hit a
record $108 btiiion this year,
up from $96 billion in 2004.
For the fiscal year, the
PBGC assumed 120 terminated pension J?lans. lt reported $4 billion m losses from
pension liabilities while it
collected only $1.5 billion in
insurance premiums from
companies. ~he agency
earned $3.9 billion in investment income.
Treasury Secretary John
Snow said the deficit "reminds
us that action to reform
America's pension system
cannot wait any longer:·
United Airlines and US
Airways used bankruptcy earlier this year, with judges'
blessings, to slash costs by
dumping their employee pension liabilities - a combined
$9.6 billion- onto the PBGC.
Delta
Airlines
and
Northwest Airlines, which
both {iled for Chapter 11

bankruptcy protection on
Sept. 14, ·may do the same.
The pension plans of the
nation's No. 3 and No.4 airlines are underfunded by an
estimated $16.3 billion.
And there is speculation
that auto parts maker Delphi
Corp., which filed for protection from creditors last
month, also could end its
pension plan and transfer liability to the federal agency.
For months, lawmakers have
been grappli!lg with an overhaul of the rules governing
company pension plans to
tighten controls over employers with underfunded plans and
shore up the PBGC's tinances.
A key House committee last
Wednesday cleared legislation
on the matter, advancing what
could be the ' most important
retirement issue Congress will
address this year as Social
Security's overhaul has faded
into the background.
The full House could take up'
the bill as early as this week.
Many companies are
replacing traditional definedbenefit pension plans with
less expensive defined-con-

tribution programs, such as
40 I (k) plans - in which
employers contribute to a
retirement fund and workers
receive only wha.t the investments have earned. The
PBGC only backs definedbenefit plans , which ato most
prevalent in older industries
.such as automobile manufacturing, steel and airlines no\v reeling from record fuel
costs, historically low fares

· Tu~SDAY's

ScoRES

.No local games scheduled

and cutthroat competition.
The agency was created iii
1974 as a government insuf.
ance program for traditional
employer-paid pension plans,
Companies pay insuranc~
premiums to the agency, and
if an employer can no longet
support its pension plan, the
agency takes over the assets
and liabilities and pay;
promised benefits to retirees
up to certain limits.

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

'

Rio Grande awarded top seed
BY MARK

.. .astSreak

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
- The University of Rio
Grande Redmen soccer team
ended the season as the
NAIA's top rated team. They
enter the 20-team national
tournament as the favorite to
win the championship.
Rio Grande earned the top
seed. based on a superior
LONGO rating and an undefeated 19-0 record.
The Redmen have a firstround bye as they had last
season when the Redmen
were the No. 2 seed. Rio lost
2-1 in overtime to Evergreen
State in the second round a
year ago.
Rio will face the winner of
No. 16 seed Bethel (IN)
College ( 11-6-6) and No: 17
Embry- Riddle
( 17: I).
Embry-Riddle is the host
school, so if the Eagles win
the first round match-up Rio
Grande will no doubt face a
hostile environment in the
second round game.
Should Bethel win the
game it would mark a
rematch of the season opener
when the Redmen edged the
Pilots in overtime by a score
of 3-2.
Freshman Euan Purcell
scored two goals in that
game, including . the game-

GALLIPOLIS -A schedule ot upcoming college

and high achool varsity Spo!1ing events in11oMng
teama from Galia, Meigs and Mason oounUes.

Jhurld&amp;v't gamta

College Soccer
Rio Grande at NAIA tournament (at
Daytona Beach, Fla.), TBA

Friday'• paron
.
Women's College Basketball
' Rio Grande vs. William Woods (at
Georgetown Classic), 6 p.m.

Sahlr.day'a gamaa
• , Women's College Basketball
Rio Grande vs. Siena Heights (at
Georgetown Classic). 2 p.m.

Iueaday Ngyembtr 22
College Basketball
Aio Grande at Urbana, 7:30p.m.
Women'• College Basketball
Rio Grande at Urbana, 5:30p.m.
Saturday, Nqyembtr 26

&lt;fFJ.nJ

Wednesday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
Ctty/Reglon
a slight chance of thunderstorms· in the morning ... Then
ForecastlorWedneeday, Nov.18
High I Low temps
partly cloudy with a slight
chance of showers in the after'
MICH
noon. Much cooler with highs
in the mid 40s. Southwest
winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
J
Youngetown •
Wednesday night... Mostly
'
46'145' .
cloudy. A chance of sprinkles
I
Menalleld •
and
flurries
in
the
43° 143°
o 'oo
evening ... Then a chance of
flurries after midnight, Much
colder with lows in the upper
20s. West winds 10 to 15 mph.
*Columbus
Thursday ... Partly cloudy
41 ' 140'
with a chance of flurries in the
morning ... Then mostly sunny
in the afternoon. Jfighs in the
upper 30s. West winds 5 to 10
mph.
·
. Thursday night... Mostly
clear. Cold with lows in the
'
lower 20s. Northwest winds
'fi/ V/\,
around 5 mph in the
KY.
evening ... Becoming light and
variable.
.
Friday through Saturday ~ Cl~dy ~ ~;- ~ Fl~mes ~ Ice
night... Partly cloudy. Highs
Partly~ '7;-;-;7 ~ ~~ "•" ~
Cloudy ,
Showers ~
Ram
• •
Snow
•••••
in the mid 40s. Lows in the
upper 20s.
Weather Underground • AP
Sunday... Mostly cloudy. A
chance of rain and snow
Sunday
night... Mostly . Atonday
through
showers in the morning. cloudy in the evening ...Then Tuesday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 40s. Chance becoming partly cloudy. Cold Hig~s in the mid 40s. Lows in
of precipitation 30 percent.
with lows around 30.
the upper 20s.

Today's Forecast

@

•
Glrla Blaketball
, Meigs at River Valley, 6 p.m ..
Symmes Valley at South Galha, 7:30p.m.
College Basketball
: Kentucky Christian at Rio Grande, 7:3~
. p.m.

en!mg

THURSDAY, NOVE. BER 17 .
9AM-8PM

INSIDE

C.
00 0
.,

0

0

No...,bor 16-22 tn Daytono Buch
DAYTONA BEACH , Fla. - The National Association ·of Intercollegiate AthletiCS
(NAtA) has released the bracket for the 47th Annual NAtA Men's Soccer National
Championship. The 20-team tournament, hosted by Embry-Riddle University (Fla.) II
Novembef 16-22 in Daytona Beach. All19 games can be viewed llve on ft1elntemet
at www.nalasoccer.org via a pay-per-view service. All game times aro listed aa
Eastern.

· ~.

DG -18.83
DuPont ..:.. 42.35
Federal Mogul- .40
USB-29.99
Gannett - ·62.67
General Elec:tr.lc - 34.40
GKNLY ...:.. 4.95
Harley Davidson - 55.81
JPM- 37.73
Kroger - 19.30
Ltd.- 20.80
NSC·-:-: 42.34
Oak HID Financial 32.10
OVB-25

~-Jii~Jtl&lt;N~~a.
Auto Accidents Workers'
Compensation

V.P.

Brad Sherrilan/OVP File

· • Jackets trade for
Fedorov. See Page B6

Food Drive being
held at Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
athletic department would
like
to
announce
a
Champions of Character
Food Drive for the holidays.
Rio Grande will be collecting non-perishable food
items until Dece.mber 20.
Collection boxes wilt be
placed in every facility on
.campus.

Y"'' 1998

Chiropruc1~ S.•i"Y

Member of ~"""""' &amp;..ro rl
f&lt;m~sk l'rofmiooals
20 ~TS tXperient(
Member rl AmeriClll Acoderny
of Mo:lirnl ~""""'

on Second

• Sporrs lojuric:ll
• Medica~
• MO$IIRM"ftOCeS
• Acupuncturt" • Same: da)' appt.

155 N. Second, Middleport, Ohio

Ravelllwood
Cbiropracdc Center

·-

• 304-273-5321 w
316 Wash!

nSt

.

•Gap

• Victoria S Secret • Target
• Express

· •··············~·····································•

•

• 01!1 Navy
1

Ravenswood, WV

• Limit€d Too

Hours:
M-Sat
9to5

: CINCINNATI (AP) . Cincinnatiright-hander David ·
Weathers had surgery Tuesday
to repair a small tear in the
medial meniscus of his right
knee.
• The 30-minute procedure ·
was performed by Reds medical director Dr. Timothy
Kremchek.
Weathers is expected to
recover in four weeks.
Weathers was 7-4 with 15
saves and a 3.94 earned run
average in 2005. He~ pitched
77 2-3 innings.
.

• Limited • Mossimo • Aeropostal

• Talbots • NY &amp;Co. • Nordstrom • Christopher Banks

• Liz Claiborne • Chadwick's • A&amp;F • Lane Bryant • Van Heusen

3 Days Only- November 17-19

•

Reds reliever
has knee surgery

,n-----------------n
II

I

:• THE GIFT OF.CARING :• I 50% off Any 1 Item II 25% off TQtal Order I
I

:
:
•
I

•
:

Are you interested in becoming a volunteer? Why' not give a gift of caring?
Pleasant.Valley Hospital needs volunteers to assist in meeting the needs of
families facing terminal illness.
If you would like to become a Hospice volunteer please contact the PVH
coordinator, Becky Peck, (304) 675-7400.

•
•

•
:
••

PLEASANT VALLEY
Home Health • Hospice • Private Duty

:
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'

'

116 Belhel College (Ind.) (11-6-6) vs. 017 Embry·Riddte (Fla.) (17·1·0), 7:30p.m.
120 McKendree College (IU.) (15~5-3) vs. lf13 Grand View (Iowa) (18-3·2), 1~ a.m.
#14 Lee University (Tenn .) (19-4-0~ ~s. lf19 Virginia lntennont College (17.-5-2), 1:30 p.m.
115 Judson COHO\IO (Ill.) (18·3·1) YS. 118 COnoordla Univemlty (Ore.) (15-4-1), 4:30p.m.

Second Round,

Wai-Mart - 48.78 . ··
Wendy's - 48.54
Worthlncton - 19.64
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith· Partners at Advest
Inc. of Gallipolis.

•i too
wv
~r.~ t~l!JtK. )l~J.il~ Oi""""""

Flrtt Round

WednHdly, November 16

·

BRIEFS
BBT- 42.76
Peoples - 29.28
Pepsico - 58.70
Premier - 13.80
Rockwell - 56.45
Rocky Boots - 24.57
RD Shell- 60.91
SBC- 23.89
Sears - 115.80

winner. Fellow freshman
Frank Brown added a goal
and assisted Purcell on the
deciding goal in the 104th
minute .
. Rio and Bethel/EmbryRiddle will play at 7 p.m . on
Thursday evening in Daytona
Beach, Fla. ·
Rio Grande is appearing in
a filth consecutive NAIA
National Tournament and
sports a 7-2 record, including
capturing the 2003 National
Championship. · The loss to
Park (MO) in the quarterfinal
round of the 2002 tournament
has since been amended due
to Park using an ineligible
player.

·NAIA Soccer Championships

Local Stocks
ACI- 68.90
AEP-35.83
Akzo -44.05
Ashland Inc. - 55.41
AT&amp;T-19.87
BLI-12.11
Bob Evans - 24.16
BorgWamer - 58.73
CENX - 20.38
.
Champion - 4.32
Charming Shops - 12.45
City· Holding - 36.81
. Col- 44.87

WILLIAMS

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'

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.... .

: _ _.

Rio Grande's Ryan Baxter- goes up for a header over a Saint Vincent player during the second
half of the Redmen's 5-2 victory over Saint Vincent during Region IX tournament.
action Friday. Rio Grande won the regional and earned the top seed at this. week's
National Tournament in Daytona Beach, Fla., where it will seek its second national
title in thr~e years.

Thu111d1y, November 17 &amp; Friday, November 18
116/1117 Winner vs. 11 Rio Grancte (1 g-o-o). Thursclay, 7 p.m.
11! Park Univeffilty (Mo.) (15-3-2) vs. 19 H... ngs Cottage (Neb.) (17+3) . Friday, 7 p.m.
IS Azusa Pacific (Calif.) (17-4.0) VB. #12 Gracoland (Iowa) (11·5-2), Friday, 11 a.m. .
:14 Auburn-Montgomery (Ala.) (22-1-0) vs. #201113 Winner, Thursday, 11 a.m.
t14/li19 Winner vs. 13 Southam Nazarene (Okla.) (t7-1·1). Thursday, 1:30 p.m.
16 Simon Fraser (B.C.) (14·3-1) vs. t11 Notre Dame (15-3-2), Friday, 1:30 p.m.
t7lindenwood (Mo.) (H)·5-4) vs. lt10 Oklahoma Baptist {15·5·2), Frtday. 4:30p.m.
12 lindsey ~ilson College (Ky.) (19-HJ) vs. #151118 Winner, Thursday, 4:30p.m.

OUirtarfiMia- s ..urday, November 18, 7:30p.m., noon, 2:30p.m., 5 p.m.

serrilllnele- Monday, Nonmt.r 21,1 p.m., a p.m.

Champtonahlp - Tueldey. November 22, 7 p".m.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

PIJOIS Wins nrst•
Albert Pujols won the one
individual award that eluded him
for his first four big league
seasons. He was named the NL
MVP for leading the Cardinals to
the best record in the majors.
(Nl rank).
BA ... . . .330 (2)

Recruiting
day at Rio
scheduled

R .............. 129(1)
HR ............. 4t (3)
RBI .......... 117 (!2)
SLG ....... .609 (2)
OBP ....... .430 (2)
TB ......... .. 300 (2)

PuJol a

Top vote-getters
PLAYER

1ST 2ND 3RD TOT

~J!&gt;io.L_!IIL --~- ... 18 ~- :__3_
78

Andruw Jones,All

t3

17

2 351

~o:r.~!&lt;.b~".Qhi ·--··-LL~.-. ?.~

Morgan Ensberg, Hou -

~g~el&lt;;:a.~rer-•..~1?
Cartos Delgado, Fla

-

. 160

·-+··-·- -

PatBurreii, Phi

146
84
65
AP

photo
St. Louis Cardinals' Albert Pujols connects for a double to deep left center in their game
on Aug. 16.
AP

Cardinals slugger Pujols wins NL MVP
BY RONALD BLUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - Albert Pujol s won
his first National League MVP award,
beating Andruw Jones in a close vote
Tuesday.
.
The St. Louis Cardinals first baseman ended Barry Bonds' four-year
winning streak, receiving 18 first-place
votes and 14 seconds for 378 points in
balloting ,by the Baseball Writers'
Association of America. Jones. the
Atlanta Braves ceriter fielder, got 13
first-place votes, 17 seconds and two
thirds for 351 points.
Chicago Cubs first baseman Derrek
Lee got the other first-place vote and
was third with 263 points .

"It 's awesome when you hear people major league seasons, averaging 40
compare yourself with Barry," Pujols homers and 124 RB!s to go with a .332
said.
avsrage.
He was third behind l;londs and
Pujols was second in the NL with a
.330 average, five points behind -Lee, Adrian Beltre ill last year's MVP votand hit 41 homers. trailing only Jones ing after linishing fourth as a rookie in .
(51) and Lee (46). Pujols tied for sec- 200 1 and second to Bonds the followand in RB!s with 117. II behind Jones. ing two seasons. Bonds missed most of
He played in 161 of 162 regular-sea- this year with a knee injury after winsan games despite being bothered ning the award four straight times to
nearly the entire 'season by plantar increase his total MVPs to a record
fasciitis, a heel injury that he also tell . seven.
in 2004 .
JaRes led the major leagues in home
"There were some times when 1 got runs for the Braves. and batted .263.
out of bed, I had to sit up before I He has won eight straight Gold
jumped out of bed because it was both - Gloves .
ering me so bad," he said.
"I think he deserved it. The voting
The 25-year-old Pujols has put up
remarkable statistics in his lir&gt;t five
Please see MVP. Bfi

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
will be hosting · an Athletic
Recruiting Day, Sunday,
Dec. 4 at the Pau I R. Lyne
Center.
Prospective student-at~­
letes will be able to meet
with coaches from all the
athletic teams, including
cheerleading and dance
teams . Rio has women 's
sports in ·volleyhall , soccer,
cross country. ba&gt;kel'ball
(varsity and junior varsity),
track and field and softball.
Tlie men· sports offered are
soccer, cross country, basketball (varsity and junior
varsity), track and field and
baseball. ·
Admissions . financial aid,
housing and eligibility information will also be discussed and campus tour will
be offered .
Registration begins at 1:30
p.m. in the Lyne Center.
For more information contact Ken French. Athletic
Recruiter. at (740) 245-7294
or the admissions office at 1800-282-720 I.

�www.mydailysentinel.com

B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

www.mydallysentinel.com

.. ~rt~une - Sentinel

m:rtbune - Sentinel - i\.egtster
CLASSIFIED

SSlFIE·D
r._M•%iiiiii'::li~liiHii~iioM-E5'.,lll.,r__AroiPAi i~li~li'lli.:::s
';;,...,~1 t

Wetove
Meigs. Gallla,
And Mason
CountlesUke
f\lq.Qne ··.
llseCanl

FOKRiiNl'

Mobile Horne 1n Country 2br, Brand

new 2BA apt 1n
~ 2ba, total Electnc, (304)882· Gallipolis $450/month
: 2537
2BA apt SA 160 past Holzer
Mobile holne spaces
Country Mob1le Home Park
(740)385·4019

G.. lllll County, OH

TOWNHOUSE/APTS
NOW LEASING!

FOR

(304) 675-1333
Word Ad!!i

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AQ
Successful Ads
Should
These Items
To
lA'J!.T ANI&gt;

In Next Day' s Paper

Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays--·--·-·

• All ads must be prepaid'

POL.ICIES: Ohio \Iaiiey Pub11shlng raaervea the right to edit. reject, or cancel any ad at any lime. Errora muat be reported on the first day
Trlbune-Sentlnei-Reglater Will be responsible for no more than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and ontv the trrat insertlan. We
any lo.a or eapena11 !hat results from the publication or omission of an advertisement. Correcllon will be made In the trrat available ed!lron
are alwa~a confidential • Currant rate card applies. • All real aalate advertisement• •r• aubjac1 to the Federal Fair -Housi ng Act of t968.
I
wanted ada maeting EOE standards. We will not knowlngl~ accept any advertising In violation of the la w.

• l.wright2005@comcast.net

(;!\ EAWAY

Absolute Top Dollar US
Silve r and Gold Coms
Proofsets, Gold Rmgs, Pre·
1935
U S.
Cu rrency
Sohta1re D1amond s- M T S
Coin Shop, 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-4462842

~ ..,

Free to good home (7) 8
'week old k1ttens. 11ery pretty

40

fl~;:~;:
t ::~~~~:
lo

74

YARI&gt; SALEPoMEROY/MtDOLE

days old Huge Garage Sale on Sat.
grveaway Call (740)446- 12th Bashan Ad , Aacme
2170 .
Tons of baby clothes hke
new and many other baby
Llli!ANIJ
supplies Clothtng lor boysFOliNO
Iris and adult fema les

WANTED
Lost- black/tan
mBU\'
Pmscher ' 11 /8
Rou1e
248 .
Reward
(740 )985- 4149 Marsha or I blJy Junk Cars (304)'773T&lt;m
5004

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement .. ..........................................030
Anliques .................. ... .............................. .... 530

Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market.. ........................... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................770
Aulos for Sale .............................................. no
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ..................... ,....... 750
Building Supplles ........................................ 550
Bus mess and Butldings ................... ..... ..... 340
Business Opportunity................................. 210
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790

.,

Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ............ :.......................... 190
Elect ricai/Refrigeration .................... ,.......... 840
Equipment for Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating ........................... ........................ 830

Farm Equipment.. ........................................ 610
Farms for Ren1. ............................................ 430
Farms for Sale ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490

For Sale ........................................................ 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ........... :.........................580
Furnished Rooms ........................•.... .... ....... 450
General Hauling ............................,..............850
Giveaway .....................................................040
Happy Ads ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Grain ..................................................640
Help Wan1ed ................................................. 110

•'

Home lmprovements .. ...... ................... ........810
Homes for Sale ............................................ 310

Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent.. ........................................ 410
In Memoriam ....................................... ........ 020
lnsurance .......................... ........................... 130

Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. ......................660
Livestock ...................................................... 630
Lost and Found .......... :................................ 060
Lois &amp; Acreage ............................................ 350
Miscellaneous.............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise .•.•...••••......••.... 540
Mob1!e Home Repair .................................... 860
Mob1le Homes lor Rent ............................... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale ................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220

Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
Musicallnstruments .•.. ..... .............•.•......•..• 570
Personals .............................. ........... .......... 005

Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumb1ng &amp; Heating .................................... 820
Professional Services ........ ........................ 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... ISO
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schools Instruction ..................................... I 50
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted .... ........ ............. ,••••.....•••• 120

.'

Space for Rent... .......................................... 460
Sporting Goods ........................................... S20
SUV's for Sale .............................................. 720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ...................................... ..... .... 870
Vans For Sale...............................................730
Wanled to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .................. 620
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Wanted to Rent. ...... ..... ....................... ........ . 470

Y&gt;rd Sale· Gallipolis ................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ........................ 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

·- ,

•

110
HHI'WANH1J

LEARN

TO
DRIVE
'NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
• FULL TIME CL.ASSES
'COL TRAINING
' FINANCING AVAII.ABLC
• JOB PLACEMENT

' ENROLLING NOI'I

I

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR-TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE , VA

1-800-334-1 203
YM"N elranc ! r~ctor rra.rer

1:&gt; 2005

www.comics.com

com

100WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts,
wood tlems
To $480/wk
Matertals provtded
Free mtormatton pkg 24H r
601·428-4849
2 parHime workers wanted
Kennel Cleaners 1 lor dogs,
1 lor cats Must be 2t yrs or
oiOer, wtlh drrvers license
Galt MCAWL at (304)675
6458.

----,---An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304-882·2645

AVONI All Areas! To Buy or
$ell
Sh1rley Spears 304675·1429
CNA'S
&amp;
Re stdent
Assistants lnterv1ews Are
Now Bemg Conducted For
CNA &amp; Resident Asststan1
Poslltons. If You Are A
Carmg
Enthusias tiC,
Dependable Person, Then
We Want You To Join Our
Team - Come On Over &amp;
Check Us Out! Competitive
CNA
Wages ,
Pald
Vacattons. Pa rd Meals.
Many
Olher
Benehts
Ravenswood Care Center.
1113 Washmgton Street ,
Ravenswood , WV (Across
R1tch1e Br.1dge, At 2 North,
Las t Bus1ness On R1ghl)
References Requrred
Dnvers . Aeg10nal. groat pay,
bonuses. benehts, home
ttmel 1yr tanker or 2yrs tractor trader expenence Marttn
Transport 866·293·7435
For a limited ttm e make 50%
set11ng Avon Call 1740)446·
3358.

110

1•

110

HELP WANTED

Insurance otftce seeking a
qualitred Customer Service
Representative The cand1·
date rnust have good custome r service and computer
sktlls. Insurance expenence
ve ry nelplul Please send
resume and references to .
Dally Sentinel, PO Box 7296, Pomeroy, Oh 45769

.1

IIELPWANIID

Ohro Valley Home Health,
Inc hirmg AN's, CNA,
STNA, CHHA. Full and Part
Ttme pos1t1ons Competitive
Wages, Mtteage and bene·
fits mcludi ng health Insurance Apply at1460 JacksOn
Ptke, Galhpolis or phone toll
tree 1·866·441·1393

Home Hea1 1n Care ot
Southeast Ohto IS currently
hmng home mdes and registered nurses Full ttme. part
ttme per-cltem Compe!Jitve
wages. llex1ble scheduling
Call Ton Free 1·866-368·

1100

.
1

//-/(.

~

by NEA, Inc.

HtuWANTEIJ

Telephone
mtervtewer,
e~~:ce ll ent computer &amp; communication skills, full-t1me,
no benefits, $10 per hour
after 4 weeks tra1n mg, $8
per hOur dunng t ratnmg tn
Pomeroy, start 1mmedtatety.
call Mark 800-556·3583

The Soutnern Local D1strrct
IS laking applications for the
poSition . o f
treasure r
OuahttCattons
include
Bachelor's degre e {B A ) or
equivalent fr9m a Jour-year
college or untversity F1ve to
ten years related expenence. Appropriate State of
Ohto Certtftcatron!lrcense.
Such allernat1ves to th e
above qualrflcations as the
Board of Education may f1nd
appropnate Interested candidates may send a letter of
Interest, resume, ant:t a copy
ot lheu license to Bob
Grueser, Supenntendent,
920 Elm Street, Aac1ne,
POSTAL JOBS
Ohio 45771 Tile Southem
$ 15 94-$22 56/hr , now htrLoca l School D1stnct IS an
tng For application and free
equal op porluMy employer.
governement 10b mfo, ~all
Amertcan Assoc of Labor 1· Upcomrng certified nursing
9 13-599-8220. 24/hrs emp ass1stant class. Must nave a
serv
htgh school diploma or GED
to apply ApplicatiOns may
REM Opt1ons tn St. Albans be picked up at Laktn
WV 1s currently looking for a Hospttal,
Monday
thru
Dtrect Serv1ce Employee to Fnt:tay. 8 00 am-4' 00 pm
provtde 1 on 1 service to Appllcations must be turned
JUVentle male 1n the Po1nt 1n no later th at 11/30/05 at
Pleasant/Mason
County close of business E 0 E
area
Expertence w1th
MA/00 and Autism pre· Work @ home · Earn $450·
!erred
Please contact $1.500 monthly part lime;
Jenn1fer Dantel or Cnsta H1ll $2.000-$4,500 lull ' ltme.
at (304)768-5575 tor more www.OurAnswer.ciom
tnlormahon Wtll also accept
Work around your schedule,
resume . cover letter and 3
$450·$1500 monlhly partletters o t references marled
LPN
needed
full-trme to REM Options 6404 \tme , $2Q00..$4500 full-ltrne
Monday-Fnday. day shtlt no MacCorkle Ave , St. Albans, (303 )29 2·9960,
www OurAnswer com
weekent:ts
no hqlrdays WV
25177 or !awed to
Apply at 936 St At 160 (304)768-7748,
Attn ,
SCHooLS
Gallipotts (740)446-9620
Jennrfer Dante!
IN,o,"JRtJCilON
Part Ttme Reg1stered Nurse
Local business needs a cer- Mason County Health Dept
trfred mechantc w1th tools ca ll (304)675-3050
Apply at 420 West Matn,
Ponnec&lt;&lt;y. Ohto
Patr1ot EMS see~t ng FT/PT
EMT's &amp; Paramet:tics After
Introductory penod EMT's
make
up
to
S10/hr
ParamediCS up to $12/hr
100% medical msurance,
prescnptton caret, patd days
off &amp; vacalton. retirement
paid tratntng . All ve htcles low
m11eage, new eqwpment.
For
more
information
www.patrrotems.com or call
(740)532-2222

Full Time Bookkeeper and
Part/Fu ll Ttme labor and
Agncultu re back
sales
grount:t a piLJS Send resume
to P.O. Bo~~: 73, Chester Management posttron avatl·
able In the Gall1polts area
OhiO 45720
Manag ement . expenence
reqwed Pleas e tax re su me
to (6 14)85 1-5948
150-$300 day Local mea
1str1butor lookmg for tnde·
endent Route Manager
rth reliable p1ckup trucks
o truck. no problem Wha
re you waiting for call th
aptarn Now (740 )645
ZMEAT

110

Someone expEmenced tn
matn tenance, healing/coolIng pfumbrng , eiectncal ,
pa1nltng, etc Apply 1n person
at
Holiday
Inn .
Now hmng full and partlfme Gallipolis No phOne calls
McCiures Restaura nts rn plea se
Mtdd tepor t a11d Gallipolis
Apply between 10·1 0 30am

Nursrng Assrstant Class.es
Begrnnrng November 28th,
2005 If you enJoy elderly
people and want to becom e
a member of our nealth care
team , please stop by
Rocksprtngs Rehab1lrtat1on
Center
at
36759
Aocto.spr rngs
Road,
Pomeroy Ohto 45769 ant:t frll
out an applrcatron for the
classes Extendrcare Health
Servrces . Inc 15 an equal
opportuntty employer that
encourages
workplace
dtverstty MI F ON

Residential
Treatment
Factlrty taktng apphcattons
for youth worker Pay based
on
expenence
Pa1d
ln~urance
Call between Paramedtc s
&amp;
EMT's
9 ooam-3·oopm Monday- needed Ap ply at 1354
Frit:tay. (740)379-9083
Jac ~son Ptke, Galhpolts

Gallipolis Career College
(Ca reers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740·446-4367,
1-800-214-0452
WWVO gallipoiiSCilltleiCQIIege com

EnJ'\Y a pro lessiOI'lat work
envtronment as well as
•Up to $8/hour
•An addtlronal S1Jhour
w1tn allendance bonus
• Weekly pay/bonus
•Complete tra1nmg
•Pa1d vacatiOns
Catltodayr
1·877·46.3-6247 ext. 2321

ar.d Schools 12149

l.ull

FOR SAUl

All real estate advertlaing

Wtll do Adult care in my
Home Alzhei mer's welcome
(304)675·6781

Fair Housing Act ol1968
whlctr makes it illegal to

Will do babysitting In my
home any shift CPA Cart
(740)441·9744 ask for Amta.

II\ \\ ( I \I

(740)441 ·0194

TOWNHOUSES
AVA ILABLE

r

MONEY
TO LoAN

HNOTI(;IlH
arrow Smart Contac
he OhiO DIVISIOn 0
Financ1al
Institution'
Off1ce ol
Consume
fla1rs BEFORE you reh
ance your home o
btarn a loan. BEWARE
I requests for any largE
dvance payments o
ees or Insurance Cal
he OffiCe of Consu me
Affai rs toll free at 1-866
78·0003 to learn 1f thE
mor tgage broker o
ender
IS
proper!
lcensed (Thts ts a pubh
erv1ce announcemen
rom th e Oh1o Valle
PubhShlf!9 CompanyJ

r

PR(')f}$10NAL
SEKVt[:E';

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY iSS!?
No Fee Unless We Wtnt
1-888-582-3345

IH \I I .._,I \II
10

Ho~m;
IURSALE

WANTED

ToDo

Computer
Repair
and
TroubleshOot Web Design,
Netwo r~r ng Programmrng.
BUild New Systems, Restore
W1 ndows Vrrus Removal
Certtl 1&amp;d Phone W740·9922395

t

REAL ESt"-TE

WANIID

Need to sell your nome?
Late on payments, dtvorce,
JOb tran sfer or a death? I
can buy you r home All cash
and qutck closi ng. 740-416·
3130
Rl \1\lS

Wanted

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
: Drive from $344 to $442
• Walk to 'shop &amp; mov1es Can
· 740-446·2588
Equal
Housmg Opportuntty

0

r~.,'. .,;ro i HiO~.o;RENTi i i ;. .,tl ·
..

109 Ltberty St PI , Pleasant
3 BA. Appliances tncl uded
(304)675·4655 or (304)593·
0909

thla newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

For sale by oWner 3BR
ranch w 1th 10 + ac res.
Addi son/C heshtfe,
large
24x38 garage, 2 full baths
$128,500
(740)367-0944
after 5pm
'

i

J\.f()BlLE H~
FOR SAU:

I

12x65 older tra1ter 2BR.
1 BA . good cont:tlllon . new
carpet,
underptnntng,
propane
gas
$3 ,500
(740)367·7628.

1996 Oakwood 14x70 2
bedroom. 2 bath. very clean
(740)388-8513 or (740}388·
8017 (evenings)

of

COOK
POSITION

Small 2 Bedroom. no pets.
W/0 hoo kup .
$350 00
month
$300 00 deposit
304·773-9192
Wanted
3-4
bedroom
house allow 5 lb dog
S500/ month or less Call
(740)446·7823 .

20 MoBILE HoM~:s
. IUM

Ri-M

3Bdr ms .2 Bath 5t7 Butclette
Street All etectnc, depos1t
and reference reqwred No
P.ets (304)675-5402

'GARBAGE DISPOSAl
'WIND BLINDS
. 'CEILING FANS ·
'WATER , SEWAGE, &amp;
'TRASH INCLUDED
PETS CONDITIONAL
(304)882·3017

No phone

call~

GRAIN

Vent -Free, 3-Piaque
Gas Heater
(Propane or Natura l)
,_,anual Control $143.95
Aluminum Ftberated Pa1nt
(Great tor Mobile Homes)
5-~r. Bucket $29 95
We now have candy melts
rn stock for your
holiday baktng
Patnt Plus Hardware
675-4084

r

r

~= I

Square bales of hay tor
Sale $2 50 a Bale 740742-1516.

I "'' ,'\ (, \ IWI ' I

O L 11'

0::. ~

How:
l\IPKOVEME!'&lt;Il;

aASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncond111onal llfettme guarantee Local references fur·
mshed Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs ( 740) 4460870. Roger s Ba sement
Waterproolrng

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

•

02 Dodge Dually Hon
extended
cab ,
4w4
Cummtns Turb o dtesel,
21.000 mtles. excellent condillon, garage kept $25 000
ftrm . (740)286·0257
1995 Dodge diese l SLT
auto,
extremely
clean,
$10,500
163,000 miles
OBO, (740)742"·3020, 740·
992·3394
95 F250 4~~:4 Supercab
Heavy-Duty New transmtsSIOn, goosenec~ towmg
package 79,000 mtles Great
shape
$8 ooo
OBO.
(740)245-9142
99 4 dr GMC . 4 wnee l dr
best offer over $3500 for 1
wee~ 304-675·4088

r

foe 575 O(J, (740)992·3457

1993 Plymouth Voyager 7
passenger
van
Good
shape, 25 mpg , $2,000
080. (740)441 -1417 alter
5pm

2000 Grande Caravan V6,
rear heat and atr child
seats. 89 000 hmes Sell for
payoff (740)379-2723

~:;) • MomRCYct.E»' 1
.

Alot of extras $15 ,000 firm
Low m1tes l1ke new, must
see
(740)446· 2815.
(740)446·2673

85 Cllevy Cavalier fo r sa le
(304)675·1506
2003 Harley Davidson 100
Anntversary Road Kmg
88 Mercedes Benz 260E, 3000 m11es. $7,000 worth of
looks. runs. drtves great. Ext ra Chrome
$16 000,
25mpg too much new to list call ·
740·992·6520,
(740)245·9142
between 9 00-5 00
2003 Suzuki 4WO V1nson
90 Vo lvo 240DL, no rust.
500 ATV wtth 34 m11es
runs great, totally reliable
$4900
CARMICHAEL
25mpg
$3,000
080.
EQUIPMENT
(740)446·
(740)245-9142 '
.2412

Lookt ng fo r a corn picker lor 94 Toyota Camry $600 Cars 2004
Her1tage
Sohatl,
parts New Idea Mod 323 from $500 For hst1ngs BOO· 13,000 mtle $16,500, call.
740-992·6520 9 00-5.00
740·698-6448
391 · 52~7 Exl C548.

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

~

...

~

Racine Gun Club
Sunday,
November 20th
12:00
Slug shoot-Any Gauge
Bring Shells
Public W~lcome

VANS
FOR SA!.J-:

2002 HD Soft-tall Deuce.

I

~10

IU!Miijii!iijiifW -'2'll3::'3---:~:---,
r"
44
I
F xs
I
s
~----O·R--A·I·
"··
· ~

CUSTOMER APPRECIATION DAYS
for the remainder of
We will pay 57¢ a pound for
aluminum cans - also top dollar lor
catalytic converters, aluminum
wheels, # 1 &amp; #2 copper, as well as,
cast aluminum &amp; aluminum sheet.

~

~

- -

Check out our Year End
Discounts on lawn Tracto~s
&amp; Z Trak Zero Turn s Buy
now and get 6 Months No
Payment
No
Interest 94 Dodge truck 2WD, V8
Carmtchael
Equtpment auto,
$2 000
OBO
~0)446 -2412
(740)256-1652 or (740)256·

L 4 WHEU.ERS

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

MUJlJRS

w/eleclnc am;hor 4 5 gasoline Mercury engme new
$2 300
080
1993 GMC Tr uck heavy half battery
4 wheel drtve 4 3 V6 a'uto- (740)44 I -8299
mattc transmt ssrorf Runs
liD AtJIU PAKIS &amp;
ewcettent. tranny rebutlt
motor ha s low mrles. dual
Acet:'iSORJI'S
e~chaust. toolbox Will sa le
for $3,800 or best oNer 1n
cash Call {740)441 9378 Am rac1ng wheels F11s Ford
leave message
Mustang GT $200 l1ke new
(740)446-2815 or (740)446 90 S-tO ext-cab, 4 wheel
2673
Onve automatiC transmis Sion 4 3, !pol bol( $1 ,300
(304)576-2753

TRI-COUNTY RECYCLING

John
Deere
Mower
Conditioners and balers 0%
Financtng for 48 Monlh1
Carm1c~ae1
Equtpment
(740)446-2412.

Bo,ns &amp;

2 Man Bas s Boa1. new

t

I \ln l .._,l 1' 1'1 II "
,\ I I\ I . _, I ( U 1\.

50

2000 Dutchman Class C
Motor Home. Sleeps 8
3407
Jackson
Ave

&gt;URSALE

Buy or sell
Rtvenne like new, cost ove r $400.' Will
Ant1ques. 1124 East Main sac rifice for $ 150 (740)446·
flO
AlTI06
on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740· 8627. (740)645·0971
992-2526 . , Russ Moore,
owner
W93 Cad:::
4
M!SCF.LIANF1lUS
SPAL'h
VS , 59.000 mtles . all
MEKCHAJIIIJISE
Block, bnck sewer ptpes. opttons, leather, new ltres,
roR RENT
Windows. lmtels etc Claude maroon
$5.000
firm.
Winters, Ato Grande, OH (740)645·0626
Body
Mat
Tackle
Box
lull
Downtown ON1ce Space- 5
Call 740-245-5121
r.oom su1te $650/mo, 1 room 740-985-4 168
off1ce- $225/rno .. 2 room
1995 Dodge Caravan , V6,
PF.TS
Dual recliner coucn real
SUIIB $250/mo
Secunty
auto,
powe r seats , runs
FOR
SALE
$175 bunk beds no matdepos1t reqwred You pay tress $50 ; cht ld s Kettcar
gre at
S1 ,600
OBO
utilllles All spaces very nice
(740)256·1652
(pedal car) $50, Smart 10 week old Jack Ru ssell
Elevator Call (740)446-3644 Crunch $15 (740)367-0157 Puppy lor sale. 740.742- 1996 Stratus, 106,000 miles.
for appotntment
Sspd, A/C runs great,
2233
For sate· Hosprtal bed With
$1,300 060 • (740)256For Leafie· OH1ce or retail trapeze bar (740)446·2037 5 month old Pomeranian· 9031
spaces 1n very good condr·
reg1stered Ca ll {740)388JET
lton Downtown Gall1pohs
1996
Chevy
lumrna
8309
AERATION
MOTORS
Approx 1600 sq f1 each 1
$2,750
740-'l92·6
154.
Repaired, New &amp; Rebu11i In AKC Beagles
or 2 baths. Lease price
6wks. In-color,
negotiable to encourage S toc~ Call Ron Evans, 1· weened, wormed, $100. 1/2 199&amp; Dod ge
Strauss ,
800-537-9528
new
bustness.
Call
Boar wether goat 8mt $70 110.000 miles. cold air. runs
(740)446-4425 or (740)446Steve Stapleton (740}256· great, 5 speed, $1 100 080
3936
New and Usee! Furnaces 1619 {740)446· 41 72.
(740 )256·1233 (740 )256l ~talla lton
avatlable
9031
Tra1l er Lot for Rent 1n
CKC Jack Russell pups,
(740)441-2667
Mtddleport 740-992-6849,
$200 Vet checked shots
1999 Monte Carlo 3 1, V6,
SPAS SPAS SPAS
Ready to go (740 )379-28~4
black,
rear sporter, al l power,
Over 30 In Stock
miles garaged ,
RATLIFF POOL CENTE R CKC Lab pupp1es Chocolate 90,000
excellent
condtiiOn,
$5,000
&amp;
black
Vet
checked,
shots,
(740)446·6579
(740)379·9038
wormed,
$150
OBO
1·800·894-6997
(740)379-2697
www bul lfrogspas co m
2001 lsuzu Rodeo , mllesCKC lab Pupp1es
Vet 069.036. $9,000 99 Cl1ev
checked,
shots,
and 1500 ext cab Jrd door. V8
wormed.
$200 00
Ten auto, 2 WD miles· 094 002
weeks old Choc and black $8,995, 95 GMC Somona
740·379·2697
Sl E, 4 3, V6, autom 4x4
rnil es· 090 078 $3,795. 95
JacK Russell puppies for
GMC Sterra SL PU, 2WO
is having
sale, S125 each, (740)742·
autom, V6 mr les· 059.994
2192
$4,995
Southern Aut o Sales
Shth·Tzu Dog $100 oo
2005.
(740)446·8554
House tr~ined . Jack Russell

please

AUCTION

.

&amp;

MaroRHm!E'

B1g discounts on John
Deere ATVs . $800 Ott our
already
low
prices
Equ1pment
Carmtchael
(740)446-2412

HAY&amp;

Twtn Atvers Tower is acceptIng applrcat1ons for watlmg
list lor Hud-substzed, 1· br,
apartment, call 675·6679
EHO

CAAU'EIIS

4WHHU~

(740)446·1282

Located at the corner of
St. Rt. #7 and St. Rt. #143
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-5114

ESTATE

«&lt;&gt; M&lt;YillKlYCU:'i/

Couch and Loveseat lor
Sale ReclinerS m both
pteces. Blue Plaid, made by
England Less than 3 years
old, bought at Big Sandy for
$1,800 Excellent cond1hon
Selltng for SBOO (304)882· Orgmal Star Wa~s Empire
3570 alte r 5PM
Str1kes Back ac11on Ftgures,
K1tchen Aid washer &amp; dryer Hoth, AT-AT, and much
$500 Three years old, like more Call (304)675-6578
new Purchase pnce $1,000 $500 for all

If it's aluminum, we pay
top doll!ldor it!

Auction ·

Auction

•

Close out on Bat of Furn at
Mollohans,
200
Clark
C~pel Ad . (740)388·0173

r

shift
Applications
available
at
Coolspot #1
Coolville, Ohio

.

II\'\ I 11..,1

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepatr-675-7388 For sa te,
re-condrhoned
automattc
washers &amp; dryers, retrigerators. gas and electnc
Tara
Townhouse
ranges, atr conditione rs, and
Apartments. Very Spacious
wr~nger washers Wtll do
2 Bedroom s. CIA. 1 1/2
reoatrs on maJor brands In
Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Bath
shop or at your home.
Pool, Pat1o Start $385/Mo
No Pe ts . Lease
Plus
Secunty Deposit Requ1red
weslo by Cadence treadmill
(740)367-7086

3 pm to 11 pm

Missed by
Bob &amp; Family

Benefit for
Terry L. Hatton
19, 2005
6:00pm

November

Rutland American Legion
Help with Med Bills
Due to motorcycle
accidenl
Washington DC Getaway
May 4, 2006 to May 7, 2006
4·Dayi3-Nights
$460/person
. Based on double occupancy
Includes Roundtnp motorcoach
transportatmn, H otel accomrpodattons, Tourmob1le T icket. P lease

contact PV H Commumly Relations
lo make reservalions, Ext. 1326 or
1492. Cash , check and credil cards
gladly accepled . II purchasing as a
Chrislmas g1ft· we can supply a

certificate

for

presentation .

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

~

. "1

Reaeh 3 Counties

r

i.
l
•

Hou se for Rent $250 a
month plus ul11it1eS Deposit
References
No Pets
(304}675·4874

3 bedroom , 2 bath , V1119
2br Mob1le Home $375
Street. Racine. on 3 lots, 2002 Clayton only $142 per montn . $375 deposrt No
new carpet throughOut, new month, will deltver (740)385- Pets (304 )67 4-4633
4 67
rool , new detached 28x32
~
3 bedroom mobile home 1n
garage , nllat well main - For sa te o r rent t989 t 4x70
the Shade area Water
tained home, (740)949·4019 2·3bedroom
heatpump, sewer. trash 1nctuded. $325
3·4 bedroom home tn New porch must be moved a mon th plus depostl No
(740)388-8375
Haven 11 f2 ba . totally $ 1 I 000
pets allowed
{740)3 85·
alter
7pm
remodeled, everythmg new
4019
tns1de &amp; out $87.000 304·
Great used 99 Skyhne 3 bedroom mobile home. all
882· 3131
16xao Vtnyt/shtngle. 2x6 electric, .tn Middleport $400
4BR . Foreclosure , onlv walls. glamour bath Call plus depoSit 740-416·1354
$ ,900 for hstmgs call (740)385-9621
or (740)992 3194

Compan1on?
Ha
Lutton house for Sale
Reference s
Call Beverly McCullough Rd . (304)675·
(304 )675·1084
8622

shift

Far rent 2 story home, 3BA,
A!C, $500/month
$500
deposit. (740)446-3481

16x80 3 bedroom, 2 bath,
2000 Oakwood
mob tle
815 Clark Chapel Ad
home 16x80 vmyVshingle. 4
$450/ month, $500/deposlt
,bedroom. 2 bath , C/A
(740)367 -7 187
Must be
(740)245·0001

New 16 wtde only S190 per
month V1ny1 Stdmg . Sh1ngte
Root &amp; Delivery (740)385·
7671

1n Memory

' Mommy on your
82nd Birthday. You
will always be in
our thoughts.

3 pc carved oak parl or sc uec, 2
provrnct al LR suite. 2 matching
recliners, chl"rry Wurlitzcr doubl e
organ, Zcnil h 19" color TV. m a ho~:h a••Y
bamboo 3 pc sofa set, RCA vi
dineu c, porcelain lOp t able. o ld cabmct ,
library table , half moon tabl e, oak
w/mirror, Johnson Carper BR suite, 5
French prov in cial BR suite, !\tnall lril'ol&lt;t(
mirror va nily, wardrobe, Mahogany bell,
cedar chest. metal file cabmct . VJ l'lOrian

kc:yh&lt;Jar•dl

II
II

I

I

bench. 5 p&lt;. mc1al pali o sco. ghdcr. KcrlnHJCe

mi crowa\'C, GE rcfngcrator.

Norge

washer

goblets.

stem ware , m tlkgta .. s 'iC t o f glas~cs

tee bucket w/ovcrlay. pink depressiOn p1a.1 cs.1
Gennan bowls. ltm ogcs. Frankoma vases.
American

Fostona vase.

mother of

pearl

t

I

pollery pllchcr. S1r F. Landsccr
Elk. Pnn..:c, 7 Star Eagle do th

I

I

dryer. g l asswan: . beau tt lul Enghsh china 1
&amp; saucer~. Greece cup &amp; s;~uc~r. Candlc•rid' I

oil l amps, matchi ng p&lt;~ir llghtl1&lt;1usc lamp~.
Central lantern. store jars, stone pitchcr.

very unu ~ u al earl y
. Da1 scy

3 bedroom 1 bath. full base - _m_o_ve_d_ _ _ _ _ __
2 bedroom . 1 bath, very
ment
w/gar
Aacrne. 2001 14x50 Clayton 2 bed- clean 1n country $300tmo
Across from Park 57 000 room , 2 bath, excellent con- $200 depostt, 2 references
reqwed (740)256-6202
below appr 740·949·1372
dthon. Call (740)245-9497

Do you need a Care. Glver.p_o_-3_9_1_·5_2_28_•_,_F2_5_4_._

SERVER

In Memory

111 I6123-4n m
Rememben ng you

AHentlonl
Local company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams for you to buy your
home Instead of rentmg.
• 100% ftnancmg
' Less than perfect credit
accepted
' Payment could be the
sa me as rent
Mortgage
Locators
1740)367-0000

Newly remodeled house In
Galltpol rs.
$495/month
14x 70, 3 bedroom 1 1/2
Brand
new
2BR
house, m
batns whee ls, axle s &amp;
Galltpolls.
S495/month
b loc~s $7,500 (740)3881740)441·1184, (740 )44 18978
0194
1987 Oakwood 14x70 2
bedroom. 2 bath. 1 car
gara ge, 8lt20 enclosed
porch, set up on lot Ready
lot rent
to move in
Call
Gean
$125/mo
(740)645· 1968 O[ Allan
(740)645·3440

Midnight to 8
shift

Helen Jeffers

No Down Pavmenl. Less
than perfect credtt 0 K. Ftve
minutes
from
Holzer
Hosp~tal Three Bedrooms· Buy 78drm. 5ba. foreclo·One Bath. level lot. Newly . sure $ 18 000, For list ings
800·391·5228 ext. 1709.
remoOeted. 7 4 4 16.Jl JO.

o.

WANTED
FUEL DESK
CASHIER

3 pm to 11 pm

3-4 bedroom, 2 bath central
heat &amp; a1r natural gas. In
Po1nt Pl easant $650/rent,
$650JdepoSII 1 month rent
&amp; deposit In advance No
pets. (740)446·9585.

dwellings advertised In

in Coolville
HELP

I

3 bedroom house, Jackson
P1ke. close to hosp ttal,
$675/mo secunty deposit
requrred (740)44P·4051

Thla newspaper W111 not
knowingly accept
advertlaermrntalor real
estate whtch ialn
violation olthe law. Our
readers are hereby
informed that all

Cool spot

Beech Street Middleport, 2
bedroom furnlshet:t apartment, deposit &amp; prev1ous
rental references , no pets.
(740)992·0165

I

'ALL ELECTRIC
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
' STOVE , REF.,
' DISHWASHER

RENT

3 rooms and bath All uttl1 t1es Plea sa nt Valley Apartment
. pa1d Downstairs.' no pets. Are now taking Applica tions
$450/mo 46 Olive St for 2BR , 3BA &amp; 4BR.
Appl rc a!IOns
are
taken
(740)446·3945
Monday thru Fnday. from
Beauttlul 2-story townhouse 9·00 AM -4 PM Of.ltce IS
overlookrng Galhpohs ctty Located at 1151 Evergreen
park Kttchen
OR, LA , Drlve Point Pleasant WV
study, 2 batns laundry area. Phone No tS (304)675 References requrreq secun- 5B06E H O
ty depoSit, no pets $900 mo
. Ca ll
(740)446·23 25
or
(740)446-4425
Help

3 bdrm. 1 bth. LR. DR. Kit .,
Ut1l Am. 2 ca r garage w/220
nookup Nice fro nt yard .
Green Twp Water &amp; trash
Included Kttchen furniS hed .
$750 mth plus S500 dep
Ref req (740)446·0969

advertise " any
preference, limitation or
dllcrlmlnatlon based on
race, color, religion , sex
familial atatua or naUonal
origin, or any lnlenllon to
make any such
preference, llm1tatlon or
dlacrlmlnation.··

eNOTICh

New 16x76 3 bet:troom/2
bath Mtnutes from Athens
Must sell Move 1n today Call
(740)365·2434.

2 story Colontal home 3BR
1SA $500 month, $500 sec
depostl No mdoor pets
(740)446·3481

In ttda newspaper Ia
subject to the Fed..-al

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommends tha
ou do business wrth peo
le you know, and NOT I
end money through th
atl unhl you have tnvesh
ated the otfenn

I

'

MOBil-EHOMES

STNA wants to do Home
Health Care call ·(304)675·
8634

Concealed Prslol Class Oec 112 Pleasant Street, 3·
10
2005
Chnstmas Bedrooms. 1 -1 ~2 Baths,
Spec~al. $50.00. 9 00 am. New Cerrtrai/A1r Cond . New
Gas Budget
VFW Mason WV
Ph. Wtndows.
$65/month (304)675-4034
(740)843-5555.

Accredited Membe• Accreditmg
Councrl lor lnCiopendOill Colleges

We ren ew NRA
membersh ipS and make
fundra1stng calls for
political organtzattons.

HOMES
ffiRSALE

Georges Portable Sawmill,.
Attention!
don't haul your Logs to the Local company olfenng "NG
M1ll just call304-675-1957
DOWN PAY MENT ' pro •
grams for you to buy your
Health Care PrOVIder N1ght home 1nstead of renting
Shtft. 9 00 PM·-6·00 AM • 100% ftnanctng
References . Call 740-985· • Less than perfect credtl
4282
accepted
Look1ng to take care of eld- • Payment co uld be th e
erly or handrcapped . Please same as rent
Mortga ge
Locators
ca ll (740)446~743
(740)36HOOO
Magic Years Day Care
Preschool 7 30-5 30
Brtc k home 4B A, 3BA
garage basemen t, hreplace
"PuH1ng Chtldren First'
Ages 2·12 State Lice nsed. ntce lot wtth storage bldg ,
lmk Approved. Exce ll ent carpo rt . patio, pool and
Skllls Spaces avatlable lor fenced backyard Excellent
all ages. (304 )675·5847
tocatton on Jackson Pi~e
(740)446 -7903
cell
Openrngs (2 ) Elderly Mob1le. .(740)441·7098
Non Smokers, Drinkers
Chnst1an Home 3 meals &amp;
Snacks
St.
Certified
D ecember 1st.
2005,
(304JB82-38ao

Sil{\lfl&gt;.;

r

a'

'

I \IPI 0 \ \11 '\I

~.,l__w..11·~-Do--.,.J1 r·o
186

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

WANTE!l

~--------~~. ~.,.. ._.F.'&lt;•&gt;~
._n. .~~-,.. ..-1•''•B•l•'l'. .~
Lost·
male
Beagle,
Flatwoods/Texas
area,
Adult male Rottwerler/Lab Wed . no collar (740)992Lov es K1ds good wa tcn clog , 5039
needs fenced yard or coun·
try (740)446 25 15
Lo st Blue Bass D rum 1n
black case between Spnng
Bea ul 1tul 1 Owk old solid Valley and Meigs Htgh
b!nck mare. 3 14 Lab pupptes SchOol (740)441-9059
Ftrst shotsl ..,ormed Need
ream to run (740 )441-1417 Mrssmg
c.log. $1000 00
Reward for safe return no ?
g,~. ehec 5pm
asked Wrlly IS a male long
): ·:l3eaulrtullong Silky ha1r calr·
legged, slender part shor t
~1 co cal young adult. female
natred P01nter. he IS Whtte W
.~ ~ 7 40 ) 441 0145
•
I Brown head 8 ears. last
Elec glass stove lop 8 bit tn seen 111 Gnmms Landmg
oven Ex cond (740)446· Mason County tf you have
ariy mlo on W1llys where3416
abouts please call 304-636Free to good home. female 6047 or/ 304·642-6043
mrxed breed pup (German
Shepherd and ?? ), had frrst
Y&gt;\RUSALE
shal s wormed 740-446·
1305

All Display : 12. Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

Sunday In-Column: 1 : 00 p .m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Descripllon • lnc:tude A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders$3.00/perad
1,!04
Graphics 504 for small
$1.00 for Iorge

DisDiiiV Ads

Dally In-Column: l : OQ p . m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion

$400/month (740)441 -1 184,

EXTRA NICE 2BR 1 car
garage, qutet netghborhood
• 1 and 2 bedroom apart· $425 -1- dep &amp; ref (740)446• rn•nts, furnished and unfur- 2801
• nishad, secunty deposit
• teqUired, no pets, 740-992 Furnished 3 rooms &amp; bath,
. 2218
downstatrs swtable for 1
person 919 Second Ave
1 BR nicely furnrshed apt $295/mo
ut!l ttres pard
Outet area Suitable for 1 (740)446·3945
adult
Prtvate driveway
~ew
W/D Furnrsned upstatrs. 3 rooms
: wfcarport
(740)446-4782.
&amp; bath Clean, ref &amp; dep
requ1red No pets (740)446·
~ 1br, Garage Apartment fur1519.
: nlshed Open Immediately
· $275 + ublrhes {304)773- Grac1ous hv1ng 1 and 2 bed·
. 5054
room apartments at Vrllage
Mano r
and
Rtversrde
1BR, washer , dryer hookup
Apartments m Mtddleport.
Close to hosprtal 740-441 From $295-$444 Call 7400117
992·5064. Equal Housmg
: 2 bet:troom apartment Mergs Oppor1untltes
• Cour'tty, ve ry ntce, clean,
N ·3rd Ave Mtddleport
: $425 per m0nth plus
• depos11, no pets, referen ces Br furntshed Apt Depos1t
and prevrous ren tal refer• requtred. (740)992-5174
ences No Pels. 740-9922BA apt 4 rent WID hookup, 0165
water, sewe r, trash pd $400
mo.
(740)367 -7746 , New &amp; c l ~an effiCiency
(740)367,7015, (740)446· apartment ref &amp; dep req no
pets 304-675·516.2
4734.

l\egister

Offee llo~~

SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
BOTH FLATS &amp;

/~C

''

HOCSEIIOLD
Gooo;

NEW ELLM VIEW

Nlee 3BA mobile home lor
rent $400/dep , $550/mo CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
. Need 3 references Call ED &amp; AFFORDABlE !
apartments.
• (7-40}446·3601 or (740)441- Townhouse
and/01 small houses FOR
• 5899
RENT Call (740)441-1111
tor application &amp; mtormatmn
AP.&gt;\RTIIU'NTS

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

\II

AP.&gt;\Kfi\11-J •ffS

.

hosp1tal, $375/month
1n
2BA
apt
B1dwell.

OeacltirtU"

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

home

hoat

The ""''alu ry (

pnnt o n Ohto Rt

1

Frames. French tapc~try. l ar,gc Mer gss :~'~i~,~ ~
Ohro book .
g tlt cd nurror. g umh~ll IT
larg e hooked ru g. h.md tool ed dog 1r o n s.
Rem mgton road lypc wn tcr. o l d dol l ".
m c k l uggage. comlortcr ... u.:c cream
o ld sheet mu sic. ol d tool s. Evinrudc spr•"'l:cr (

lI
'

much m ore

Auction Conducted

!

B~

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO. #66
304 773 5tt47

or 30tt l13 5185

Co-Executor~· Sll'\ l'n C4J:.lb &amp; Cht l~ ttm:
Mel ttl ) rr
Case Nn · Mc 1gs Cmtn ty 2()()..+ 10fl2

Terms·

Ca~ h o r c hcr k

w/1 D

l

I
I
I
I
I

Place .Your_Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Rnn F~r FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

v.ood carncc.1 •

Sandcr:i Oh10 painttn g hun g 111 '"" " " "
lor years.
s~.:vcral old p 1ct u n:s

bllal m olur plm

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•

!®alhpohs J)ailp ~tibune

I
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•

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•

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The Daily Sentinel !)oint l)leasant 1\egister
I..._.,_J~~.~:.234~.-... _,_,_j~.~:.~._.. _,_,,_!~~t~.:.l.ll~.-... -.J

�Wednesday, November 16,2005

www~ mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday, Novernber16,2005
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

I k!NOW. .. AND

S....I.IE. TME.N\ •••.
&amp;Jr 'THINK:

Sheriff Sales
Case

Number

05CV066
Wells Fargo Bank
Plaintiff
VS
Lisa
Dill
et
al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County, ·

Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed · from said
court in the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at
Public Auction on the
front steps of the

Meigs County Court
House on F.riday, Dec.

9, 2005 at 10 A.M .. of
said day, the followIng described Real
Estate:

Situated In the State.
of Ohio, County of
Meigs and Township
of Scipio: Being in
Fraction No. 7, in
Town 7 and Range 14

of ·

the .

Ohio

Company's Purchase,

beginning

at

the

northwest corner of a
one acre 5 rod tract of
real estate conveyed
by Ase E. Jordan to

Thor 0. Carsey and
Mary L. Carsey by
deed recorded In
Volume 190, page
601, Meigs County
Deed Records, said

place of beginning
being the center of
the road
running
between Harrisonville
and
Downlngton;
thence northeasterly
along the center of

said road 206.5 feet;

AaOUT

part of Section 25, ' References: Volume
Township ·3-North, 162,
Pogo
447.
Range-12-West, Appraised
at
Sutton
Township, 580,000.00 terms of
Meigs County, Stale sale: Cannot be sold
of Ohio and more particularly described as

follows:
Beginning at a Point
in the centerline of
County Road f122
being the Northwest

corner of a 0.898 acre
more or less tract as
recorded in Deed
Bqok 334 at page 653;
thence along the centerline or said County
Road n122 the followIng twelve courses:
1. North 22 deg. 10'
18" West a distance of
42.97 feet to a point;
2. North 45 dog.
21 '57" West a distance of 58.60 teet to
a point;
3. North 67 dog.13'
47"West a distance of
101 .05 teet to a point;
4
North 57 deg.
44'11 " West a distance of 118.96 feet to

for less than 213rds of

the appraised Value.
1 OOk down on day of

Public Notice

sale, cash or certified
check, balance due

on Confirmation of
sale. The appraisal
did not Include an

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
Sealed proposals for

UNDI'S PllmNG
'1

•

High and Dry
Phone
(740) 992-5232

SavinQs

1, 2005 and then at
1 :15 pm at sold office
opened and read
lng: ·
Renovations of the

Marla

heating and plumbing

a point;
Romaine
at
al
5. North 34 deg. Defendants Court of
57'04" West a dis- Common
Pleas,
tance of 119.93 feet to Meigs County, Ohio.
a point;
In pursuance of an
6. North 20 dog. order of sale to me
30'25" West a dis- directed from said
tance of 108.38 feet to court In the above
a point;
entitled action, I will
7. North 06 deg. · expose to sale at
38'59" East a dis- Public auction on the
tance of 64.05 feet to front slaps of the
a point;
Meigs County Court
B. North 34 deg.
House on Friday, Dec.
19'2 3" East a dis- 9, 2005 at 10 A.M. of
tance of 72.93 feet to ·said day, the follow~
ing Described Real
a point; .
9. North 48 deg. Estate: House and
10'51" East a dis· Lot situated In the

systems
for
the
Community Center.

Plaintiff

VS

less tract; thence

leaving. said centerthe south line thereline South OOdag.
of; thence in a wester40'44" West pesslng
ly direction along the thru a 518" Iron pin set
south line of the
at a distance of
George E. Mayhugh 199.67 feet and going
property to the ,southa total dlatance of
east corner of the one
1076.11 feet to a 518"
acre 5 rod tract of real
Iron pin set; thence
estate referred· to · West a distance of
above; then north
107.00 teet to a 5/8"
along the west line ol Iron pin set; thence
said one acre 5 rod
South 15 deg. 25'03"
· tract to the northeast
West a distance of
corner
thereof,
67.95 feet to the prln·
thence west along the
clpal point of beginnorth line of said one
ning,
containing
tract or real estale lo

knows

as

the

property,
Avenue,

specifications.

by

either a bid bOhd In

97 Beech Street

Fraction 18, Section
than 1D% ot the bid
14, Township 2, and · amount In favor of the
Range 13, which said
aforesaid
Melga
lot No. 38 adjoins lot

1Ox 1Ox 1OxlO

Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Parcel No. 16.01449,
412 Spring Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
PARCEL II SHuate In
the
VIllage
of
Pomeroy, County of

Melge and State of
Ohio: Being all of lot
no.15 and 16 and part
of lot no. 17 in Samuel

Wyllls

Pomeroy's

less, subject to all

Subdivision lot 1,
Fraction 17 tn Naylots
Run in said City of
.Pomeroy except the

AI:
38546 S SR 684
Pomeroy, Ohio PP#
17-00021.000 Prior
Deed

References:

Volume 199, Page
473. Appraised at
$30,000.00 Terms of
sale: Cannot be sold

tor less1han 213rds of
the appraised value.
10% down on Day of

Sale,
Cash
or
Certified
Check,
Balance
Due
on
Confirmation of sale:
The appraisal did not
include an inlerior
examination Of the
house.

Robert

E.

Beegle,

Meigs County Sheriff.

Attorney · tor
Plaintiff

the

Learner,

Sampson &amp; Rot~tuss ,
P.O.
Box
5480,
Cincinnati, Oh. 45201·

5480 (513)241-3100.
(11) 2, 9,16

OUT AND THEREFROM the following

coal, and othar miner·

als contained therein
wHh the right to mine
tho some without
Injury lo the surface,

together wlll1all ways
and right of way, lot
16 and part of lot 17

the said Anderson
parcel and along the
West line of Nease's
parcel as described

House

In the Meigs County
Official
Records:
Volume 29 page 763

2,000.00

and

Lot
·a t

Appraised
21 ,000.00, The Land
Only . Appraised at

reject any or all bids.
(11) 7,9,14,16,21,23.

vs

Gregory
A.
and
Michelle L. Duvall
Defendants
Court of Common

Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court In the above
entitled action, 1 will
expose to sale at
Public Auction on the
.front steps of the
Meigs County Court
House on Friday, Dec .

thence North 32 deg.
23'35" East 233.066
feet along the

center~

line of County Road
122 to a polnl ; thence

North 17 dog. 21 '02"
East 99.851 teet along
the , centerline
of
County Road 122 to a
point; thence North

10 dog. 36'23" East
75.740 feet to tho
point of beginning,

9, 2005 at 10 A .M. ol
said day, the follow·

containing

lng described Real

Excepting all legal

Estate: Exhibit A
Legal Description:
Baing a part of a 122

easements and right
of way.
Parcel

acre more or less
tract or land trans-

ferred to Charles E.

0.655

acres, more or lass,

owner Gregory A and

Deed Book 230 at
page 287, Meigs

31220

Ohio , also being a

of the house. Robart
E. Beegle, Meigs
County

Attorney
Plaintiff

Sheriff.

for

the
Kirk

Michelle

L

DuVall

Roy

Jones

!!!il E3

~

.

30 Yrs. Exp. •Ins. Owner: Roomie
Estimates

Owner: Jeff Stett'tem

Ed Dill/owner
(740)992-4100
Chuck W~•lre/Mgr.l
(740)992-0496

AflMA·Sw~ET·O

AflMA·l&gt;I/..L·O

(Commercial and Residenti1l)

Mobile Homes, Houses, log Homes, Decks, Driveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awnings, Oegreasing of
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
Dump Trucks, painting or staining of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightening.
special rates to Trucking and Dump Trucking Companies.

AllMA·6AilLIC·O

~ARNEY

DOWN

23 Bear of little

26 Snapshot

Corn·chip
name
2 Two cubed
3 Oozing
4 Crystal

29 Brown
wrapping
paper

5 Amatol
Ingredient

beasts
shrieks
24 Authorizes 48 Plant

6 Windmill
blade
7 Polar bear

26 Gas main
27 Bright

16 Conduct
41 It turns
16 Th'e bride
litmus blue
-white
43 Scope
20 Rooster or 44 Fun~loving
hen
45 On the
21 Plop down
ocean

gazer

32 Stir-fry pan

22 Shaggy

33 Mountain
overlooking

All pouss

Troy
domain
34 Lop off
8 Diamond- ·
35 Vinyl records 9 Famous
36 Where
numero
Cuzco is
10 Poached
38 No future
item
11 Mimicked
40 Doc
12 Reproaches
Holliday's
oneself for

47 Cartoon
·parasite
49 Energy

thought
50 Compass
26 ·•tt Must Be
dlr.
Him " singer 51 Campers,
30 Manage for
for short
oneself
52 Brewery

31 Tetra-

tank

preceeder
37 Eradicate

39 Takes out
to dinner

Although the North hand has only 11

LOST, HUH?

EVER'

~NNY

LAWN CARE DIVISION
(Commercial and Residential)
Mowin~,

Trimming, Tree Trimming, Aeration, Fertilization,
Spraymg of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well as small
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulchin
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PR 5

':you WN--IHO f'UI f'l\t. 0!'1. ~~
:e.uPGE.\ 1 NI-\1&gt;-.T FOIZ?
: t KJ-&lt;OW 1-\0W TO
~.......q

!!

high-card points, it makes a reasonable
one-heart opening. The only rebid prob·
lem occu-rs oVer two clubs, when North
would have to rebid two hearls.
Since no shift has any appeal, play your
second 'spade. East wins wiih his ace,
dropping declarer's jack, and continues
With the spade king. After South ruffs with
his diamond nine. what would you do?
South did well to pass out three diamonds. II North had ·the diamond king
and a spade stopper, three no-trump
could well have been there.
Do not overruff with a guaranteed trump
trick. Tllat reliable guideline helps llere
At tricks two and 'three, partner has
played his highest spade, suit-preference
signais _lor hearts, the higher-ranking of
hearts and clubs, the unplayed side suits.
So, at tri ck three, discard the heart eighl.
When you get in with the diamond king,
[ead your second heart to partner's ace
. and await the contract-killing heart ruff
Full
details
are
available
at
www.bridgemagazine .co.uk.

~ Astro~Graph

•

BIG NATE

'~

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C e~llTirt

C1pher c1yptograms ate created !rem !l liO taiiO~s by 'amous peQI)Ie, paSt and p1eserrt
Each letter tn the apMr s1and~ 'CII' ano1her

Today's due: C equals 0

" V

CVS

NVCWZ

SWTVAALVXT
WZ ' T

VR

RLO LX

HWXVJGKDG TK M t

GRSD-WZ-MDGXTLKP

AXDFLJZ ."
VCWBVWK

OVR

CGXLR

PREVIOUS SOL UTION ~''T h ere is no data on the fulure .'' .- Laurel Cutler
"Tomorrow is the myslerious, unknown guest · ~ Henry Wadsworth
Longiellow

lilT DillY

rumu

"'our&lt;JilrthWIY:

Oi!ea•ron;;:"

ill'li!Fl

of

the~

leur t ~ I O mb . ed wcr rri1 btt·
lew lc fc·.~ f"v~ !!:~:;Jfe \ltO"d~

Thursday, Nov. 17, 2005
By Bernice Bede Oaol

• Caring • Professi.onal

In the year ahead, you 're likely to establish
meaningful objectives, pursuing them with
determination and vigor. Your assertive
and Inquisitive nature will help achieve all
of your heart's Desires.

1401

WOLFE~
HOME
MAINTENANCE

-Unseld
19 Up in the air

less capable. The bidding concentrates
on the Acol system, with weak no·twmps
and four-card majors. but as someone
once cta1med, the play's the thing- as 1n
this defensive deal from Julian Pottage
You are West. Defending against three
diamonds, you lead the spade queen :
two, six , five. How would you continue?

TRI- STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE
Office: (740) 991·1804 Cell: (740) 517-6883
POWER WASHING

54 Leader

Auction Bridge Magazine began in
England in May 1926 _Three years later,
it dropped Auction fro.m the title. It is still
being published monthly 1n a large·page
format It is aimed at tournament players,
but does include some content for th e

David, Donna &amp; Brad Deal

SCORPIO (Oct24-Nov. 22)- You will get

HAWKINS
TAXIDERMY
137 s. 5th Avenue

~
Chuck Wolfe
Owner

what you want today because of your talent not to OJfend. The secret? You are
direct but not abrasive or pugnacious.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) -

Middleport, OH

• Home Repairs • Remodeling
• Additions • New Homes

./l

~ fh~r 17

Yetrrs ·

50 1-lERE I AM
RIDING ON T~E
SACK OF MY MOM'S

Expn-in~c•

A'4'ard Winning
.

liuldt~l!t

61C'(CLE ..

(740) 992-0496

" Y(r!lr pt~int ofvt:.· •~ .'' t lic
p·.~rholn~~~ ~~:,·k~"&lt;~r lectu red,

Do

not leave financial matters dangling.
"Conclude them to your satisfaction, even it
you have to solicit help.

PEANUTS

(740) 992-7533

Licensed &amp; Insured

~DER~

NOLl!, WE TURN
AROUND BECAUSE
51-lE FOR60T T~E
CAR KEYS ...

NOW,

S~E

REMEMBERS
51-tE DOESN'T NEED THE
CAR KEYS BECAUSE 5HE'5
RIDIN6 ~ER BICYCLE ..

MOM 15 REALL'(
STRESSED OUT.

"toll ld be tl1e Jr.:~ iii \ o! ~~·h at y ou

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - You aoe
not likely to be intimidated by new chai·
lenges today. Imaginary fears are paper
dragons. Use them to arouse your creaiiV·
ity and ingenuity.

Made
SR 124 between
Rac ine &amp; Syracus~
949-2734

or

have
been
demned
and willconbe
taken down. The owners have 60 days to
file an appeal. VIllage
Council shall act as

Public Notice

the Appeal Board.

Sandy ·
lannarelll,
Mayor
VIllage of Mlddleporl
(11) 16, 17, 18, 21, 23,
25

PUBLIC NOTICE
Three (~) buildings on
the Corner of N, 2nd
&amp; Mill St. In down-

For
A New HoJt"le?

TrY the
Classifieds!!

• New

Pomero .OH '

Homes

• Garages

• Complete

Cornaratona

R.emodeling

Electrical

J40-112-1m

Service

Stop &amp; Compare

• FOR ALL \'OUR
ELEcrRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME
REPAIRS

Public Notice
town Middleport have
to be torn down.
Ad~resses are 20 N.
2nd, 30 N. 2nd, 10 N
2nd
These buildings

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTRIICDDI

"'Weekly Trash Service
4 yrs of Reliable Service
(Kee p Your Money Lncal)
G&amp;R SANITATION
3356 1 Bailey Run Rd .•

Skinned, Cut &amp;
Wrapped
Summer Sausage

best to fulfill the desires of loved ones
today. Strike a balance between your
needs and the wants of those who require
your help.

Gene Arms/Owner·

Operator 740-992-3174

PIOCEIIIII

did not Include an
Interior ellamlnatlon

.....

15 It puts

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Do your

Number: 18-01367001
Properly
Address: 31220 Roy
Jonas Road Racine,
OH 45771. Current

and Margaret Mae
Yost. as recorded in
County Recorder's
office, Meigs 'county,

accept

'

'

"FAMILY OWNED"

Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

November 30, 2005 at

right to

[ANIMAL '6flAMMAfl. ·I

Dauld R. Deal
Director/Licensee In Charge
Charlie Huber, Director
Josh Billings Hssot.

45771
740-949-2217

Bids need to be In by

Check, , Balance due
on confirmation of
sale. The appraisal

P.FIANK &amp; EARNEST

Bucket Truck

52 WoJ'kable
53 Call upon

F.as t

The oldest magazine
on bridge

rJJea[ :Junera[Jfome

December 31, 2006.

Sale, Cash or Certified

Top • ReiiiOYal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

14 Clear,
as a drain

beverage

,.. ,.

,

~eminders

49 Nulls

brain

IU 7
AQ !I /! 52 '

Noi·th

48

25 Fizzy

Opening lead: • Q

fm

Point Pleasant. WV

(304) 675·6000

Racine, Ohio

feet to a point io the
centerline of County
Road 122, passing an
Iron ·pin set at 161.9
feet , for reference;

Tree Service

Somfoml

S!m1r)

740-742-2293

the requirement for a
payment bo.n d and

51 '24" West 176.415

LIAullls!lll

1mB f., ·

Affordable Services

29670 Bashan Road

Plaintiff

lldS!mluy

Call Gary Stanley

tunlty pr0¥1slons, and

Chase home Finance

JONES'

West

2•

: M.l\t-1.1\GE II\"{
: 11-.0N.E.."{ !

Hill 's Self
Storage

Dovls·Bacon

Wages, various· lnsur~
ance requirements,·
various equal oppor~

10% Down on Day ol

South

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring'M

• Leave a message

Standards Provisions

the appraised value.

Number

sale: Cannot be sold
for lass than 213rda of

.. Somry

.. 11....-

lmr

"Insured"

tained In this bid
packet, particularly to
the Federal Labor

to an Iron pin set;
thence North 72 deg.

Case

of

"IU 9:l

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: East-West

www.holzerclinic.com

OH

• Affordable Rates ·
• Relerences
Available
• Free Estimates

con-

05CV047

Sheriff Sales

Terms

•

~ liOLZER CLINIC

WO[k

Commissioners,
Courthouse,

4:00 PM to the
Middleport
Water
Depertniont. Contract
will
bo
awarded
December 12, 2005.
The VIllage has the

Public Notice

[M!m

Licensed &amp; Insured
Over 30 years

• Prompt &amp; quality

County

described real estate;
performance bond tor
Situated In Sutton
1OOOk of the .contract
Township,
Meigs · In Naylor&amp; run In the price. No bidder may
County, State of Ohio City of Pomeroy, withdraw his bid withand being in Section
Meigs County, Ohio. In thirty (30) days
25, Town 3 North,
Beginning at the after the actual date
Range 12 West of the northeast corner of of the opening tllaraOhio Company's pur- William Kasper's lot, ot. The Meigs County
chase and being
one hunj:lred (100) Commlosloners
described as follows: feet; thence east with rHerv0 the right to
Beginning at a point the northerly line ot reject any or all bids.
South about1230 feet
William Kasper's lot · Mlck
Davenport,
from the . center! ine to the place ot begin· Praaldant,
Meigs
intersection
of
nlng. Be the same
County
CountY Roads 30 and more or less but sub- Commissioners
122, said point being
ject to all legal high- (11) 8, 10,16
the centerline of ways. Parcel No. 16~
county Road 122 and 01450, 16·01451,. 16being
near
the 01452. Land only.
Public Notice
Northwest
Corner Current Owner: Maria
Anderson's Parcel as
Romine at al 412
VIllage of Middleport
described In the Spring
Street, Bids are baing taker
Meigs County Deed Pomeroy, Ohio . PPt tor a contract tor
Records Volume 251, 16.01449.000 House Solid
Waste
page 819; thence and Lot Prior Deed Collection &amp; Dlsposel
South 418.553 feet References Volume for the year 2006 for
along the West line of
297, Page 597. The January
1
to

[O)qr

24hr Emergency

TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

to:

and

'

"'K JH

[O)qr

(304) 67~2630

STANLEY TREE

Portland · Community
Center Project and
mallad Qr delivered

requirements

Wyllls

the place of begin-

Lisa

AQ 765 ~ 3

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage•

and marked as Bid far

Samuel

oa fol-

Pom~roys

17-D001.000

Bonds
shall
be
by
accompanied
Proof of. Authority of
the official or agent
algnlng tho bond.
Bldt shall be sealed

Meigs

I

l•u S"""

992-3194
Or 992·6635

gom~ls~lon~rst Bl~

lows, lot no 15 In

1 Fraction 18,

Middleport,

amount of not less

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders
Is called to all ot the

subdivision of lot no.

-

MUlErS
SElf STIRAGE

ter ot credit upon a
solvent bank In the

ly owned by Nellie A.
Molar, In the VIllage of

l

.ldri111m

1701 jefferson Blvd.

25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971

and

6.6449 acres more . or

Current owner
Dill' Property

t K 7 3

-to go

13 Farm baby

· 18 NBA coach

• .A953

·• 8 2

r

I

bounded

no. 39 now or former·

I

"

*Heating &amp; Cooihig
.

Each bid must be
accompanied

.

Bast

.. AK!063

I;

I I

1

W""MAUL

cashiers chBck, or let·

acre and 5 rod tract to

ning , containing 6
legal easements and
rights-ot-way.
acres, more or less. ~
The above described
EXCEPTING any coal,
real estale Is identi· . oil, gas or minerals
tied In the office of
previously conveyed
the Meigs County Or reserved.
Auditor as Parcel No.
EXCEPTING THERE-

Q 7

¥

""

j 1

FOCie "MON~

Ohio,

Baing lot No. 38 In

ll!Rdf...O

Commissioners ,
Courthouse ,

Pomeroy, Ohio .45769
Phone 740-992-2895.
A deposit of o dollars
will be required tor
each sat of plans and

I

Co1f.S....

l.oiis•lltllll Jr. · WlliiiLIInlr

County

Pomeroy,

described as follows:

loii.O:aa!olo(!wr

secured at the office

II. North 20 deg.
44'42" East a distance of 89.14 feel to
o point;
12. North 11 dog.
17'07'; East o distance of 75.79 teet to
a point · on the

22,

i'*'MIIItl!ll ll
[&gt;&lt;Jno

Janel Jeffers
33~95 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

Specifications provided In bid pocket.
Specifications and
bid forms may be
of · Meigs

I rI

" Where Qrialily,Compassion A11d lntegrily Come 1'11gether"

?xlO, IOxlO,
10x15, IOx20,
l0x30

fallow~

aloud far the

I

Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

Storage

Thursday, December

Bank

assumed East line of
said 122 acre more or

\'Vrst.

•

:J900 EASTERN AVE. • GAUl POLIS,

reet south of a locust
lree 8" in diameter
which ~aid po,nt is

Is a southerly direction along the east
line of the George E.
Mayhugh 135.62 ec!e

owner,
maybe

people out
of the Huns
16 Edible root 55 Flles .and
17 Be overly
gnats
fond
56 Peevish

South
• J 5

heating and plumbing
of the house. Robart systems lor
the
E. Beegle, Malga · Portland Community
County Sheriff
Center,
Portland,
Attorney lor tho plain- Meigs County, , Ohio
tiff Manley Deas &amp;
will be received by
Kochalskl, 495 S. the Meigs County
High St. Suite 300, Commissioners
at
Columbus, Oh 43215- their office at the
5869 (614)220-5611.
Courthouse ,
(11) 2,9, 16
Pomoroy, Ohio 45769
until
1 :DO
pm,

, Sheriff Salas Case
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Bay
Financial

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�.www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B6 • The I&gt;aily Sentinel

Players, owners reach deal
on tougher steroid policy
BY HOWARD FENDRICH

Davis, R- Va. They are Tuesday night and passed.
among a handful of lawmak- He said the legislation won't
ers who have introduced be withdrawn because he
WASHINGTON - Major steroids bills - and it was wants to "see what the other
league players and owners Davis' panel that held the major league sports do ....
agreed to toughen penalties March 17 . hearing with We hope this agreement by
for steroid use to a 50-game Rafael Palmeiro, Mark major league baseball will
suspension for a first failed McGwire and Jose Canseco. stimulate the other sports to
test, 100 games for a second
At that hearing, Selig ahd stiffen their penalties."
and a lifetime ban fer a third. Fehr were scolded for what
Davis said that Tuesday's
Baseball also will test for congressmen called a weak news "stops the rush to move
amphetamines for the first penalty system for drug test- legislation through at this
time starting next year under ing.
time."
the deal, which must be ratiThe next month, Selig
Bunning, a Hall of Fame .
fied by both sides.
made a 50-100-lifetime pro- pitcher, noted with disapB.aseball's current steroid posal. In September, Fehr pointment that the new polipenalties are a I 0-day sus- countered with 20 games, 75 · cy makes no ·mention of eraspension for a first offense, 30 games and.. for a third ing or marking with an asterdays for a second offense and offense, a penalty set by the isk baseball records set with
60 days for a third. The earli- commtsswner.
the help of performanceest a player could be banned
The players' association enhancing drugs.
.
·
for life is a fifth offense.
appeared to pretty much
Like Bunning, Davis and
"This is an important step capitulate .to .Selig's April his committee's ranking
to reaching our goal of rid- demands, except for gaining Democrat, Henry Waxman
'ding our sport of perfor- the right to have an arbitrator of California, said they want
mance-enhancing substances review reinstatement deci- to see other sports follow
and should restore the sions. Fehr was not available baseball's lead and make
integrity of and public confi- for
comment,
union their drug policies more
dence m our great game," · spokesman Greg Bouris said. strict, too.
commissioner Bud Selig said
At a Sept. 28 hearing of the · "This is a day to celebrate.
in a statement. "I appreciate Senate Commerce, Science It's been a long, not exactly
the effort put forward by the and
Transportation smooth, ride," Davis said.
Sen.
John
"This is a major step," he
players' association and our Committee,
players in reaching this new McCain, R-Ariz.. scolded added.
agreement."
Fehr in particular for not
Davis and Waxman said
After winning the NL having reached a deal on a they still have some concerns
MVP award Tuesday, the St. hew steroids policy.
about the agreement, includ"We're at the end here, and ing details of how testing
Louis Cardinals' Albert
Pujols said he supported the I don't want to do it, but we · would be carried out and
tougher punishments.
need an agreement soon. It's whether designer steroids
"I think that if you get not complicated. It's not would be addressed.
cau~ht the third time, I mean complicated. All sports fans
Though steroids are a
that s real bad, you should understand it," McCain said problem in many sports,
get abandoned from the at the hearing. "I su~gest you baseball has been the focal
game," Pujols said. "You act- and act soon. '
point of congressional interLast week, McCain and est and pressure. As recently
shouldn't be able to be
caught the third time because Bunning revised their pro- as 2004, there was no susafter the tirst time, if you posed legislation to soften pension for ·a first offense
don't learn from that, from the penalties from two yellrs under the sport's steroid pro50 games that you sit down for a first offense and a life- gram. As recently as 2002,
without getting paid, that's time ban for a second. The players weren't tested for
bill now calls for a half-sea- steroids at all, unless there
pretty bact:•
· The sport's second new son ban for a first positive was cause.
steroids. agreement in 10 test, one season for a second
Under the new deal,
months came after lengthy and a lifetime penalty for a according to congressional
negotiations prompted by third. Their bill would apply aides, a first positive test for
urging from Congress - to the major leagues, the amphetamines will lead to
including the threat of legis- NFL, NBA, NHL and base- mandatory additional testing,
lation that would require ball's minor leagues .
a second offense will draw a
"This is what I had hoped 25-game suspension, and a
higher penalties and stricter
testing standards.
· for all along, for the two pri- third offense gets 80 games.
· "This agreement reaffirms vale parties to come to an
A player will be tested durthat major league players are ·agreement on their own ing spring training physicals
committed to the elimination without Congress having to and at least once in the reguof performance-enhancing do it for them," Bunning lar season, plus the possibilisubstances and that the sys- said, but he added that the ty of random tests. The old
tern of collective bargaining deal is "not as tough as I agreement called for a miniis responsive and effective in would like.''
mum of one test from the
dealing with issues of this
"1 and my colleagues will start of spring training
type," union head Donald be watching very closely, through the end of the regu- ·
Fehr said in a statement.
and if things unravel, we still lar season.
Representatives of the have tough legislation we
owners and players were on . can
move
through
AP Baseball Writer Ronald
Capitol Hill on Tuesday for Congress."
Blum in New York and
meetings with Sen. Jim
Had there not been an Associated Press Writer ,
Bunning, R-Ky., and House agreement, Bunning said the ·Jesse
J.
Holland
in
Government
.Reform bill would have gone to a Washington contributed to
Committee Chairman Tom vote in the Senate on this report.
·
ASSOCIATED PREss

Cavs' Hughes beats former team
BY TOM WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND 1- LeBron
James
reminded
Larry
Hughes why he came to
Cleveland in the first place.
Jilmes scored a season-high
37 points and Hughes added
22 in his first game against his
former team as the Cleveland
Cavaliers roughed up . the
Washington Wizards · 114-99
on Tuesday night.
James, who helped recruit
Hughes as a free agent during
the offseason, scored just tWo
points in the first quarter but
followed with 14 in the second, 14 in the third and seven
in the fourth before leaving
with 2:32 left.
The Cavaliers won their
fifth stiaight, and are 4-0 at

MVP
from Page 81
was the right vote. He was
the right choice," Jones said.
"He had the most solid season average wise, home run
wise and RBI wise."
The Cardinals led the
majors with 100 wins -this
season and breezed to the
Central title. Pujols was the
driving force on a team that
lost Scott Rolen and other
key players to injuries.
Atlanta went 90-72 and
won its 14th straight division
championship. Jones was the
only Braves player with more
than 21 homers or 78 RBis.
Pujols, who gets a
$200,000 bonus, won the

home, winning by an average
of 21 points at Quicken Loans
Arena.
Hughes was only 6-of-18
from the field, but he added
eight assists and made two 3pomters and scored 12 points
m the final 5:03 to thwart a
Wizards
rally.
Donyell
Marshall added 16 points and
Zydrunas llgauskas 12 for the
Cavs.
Washington's
Gilbert
Arenas, who scored a leaguehigh 43 on Saturday mght
against San Antonio, was held
to 18 - 10 below his average
- .and shot just 4-of-17.
Antawn Jamison led ihe
Wizards with 26 points and
Caron Butler had 14. ,
With James on the bench,
the Wizards pulled to 86-77
early in the fourth on a layup
by Antonio Daniel s. Bu.t
James came back after sitting

for only I: 12 and the
Cavaliers immediately went
on an 8-0 run.
Moments later, Hughes
drained a 3-pointer and Drew
Gooden ,scored on a putback
as ·the Cavaliers opened a
101-861ead and coasted. ·.
Driving to the basket at
every opportunity. James
went 6-for-8 .from the tloor
and scored 14 points in the
third. His 3-point play in the
·final second gave the Cavs an
82-70 lead entering the
fourth.
Hughes left the Wizards as
a free agent this sum'mer
' when the club low-balled
him with their first contract
offer, allowing the Cavaliers
to sign him to a five-year,
$60 million deal. He said his
decision to bolt the Wizards
after three seasons had nothing to do with money.

15th MVP award for the
Cardinals, the first since
Willie McGee in 1985.
By finishing third, Lee tri~ ­
gered a $750,000 increase m
his next 2006 base salary to
$8.75 millign,
Florida first baseman
Carlos Delgado, who was
' sixth, earned five points
toward the 30 he needs by the

end of 2008 to guarantee a
$16 million salary in 2009.
He would get I 0 points for
winning the MVP, 20 if he is
a World Series MVP and I 0
if he· is a league championship series MVP.
AP . Sports Writer Paul
Newberry in Atlanta contributed to this report

Thank You

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

Blue Jackets acquire
Fedorov from.Ducks·
•

BY RUSTY MILLER

COLUMBUS
The
Columbus Blue Ja ckets
were in i.lire need of offense.
so they wc .. t out and " ~me
of the biggest playmakers in .
hockey.
The Blue Jackets acquired
six-time All -S tar center
Sergei Fedorov on Tuesday
from the Anaheim Mighty
Ducks for forward Tyler
Wright, rookie defenseman
Francois Beauchemin and a
fifth-round pick in 2006.
Team president and general manage r Doug MacLean
likened the acquisition of
Fedorov to the free-agent
signing this su mmer of
defenseman Adam Foote, a
mainstay of · Colorado's
Stanley Cup team s.
."The point of the deal is
similar to our signing of
Adam," MacLean said. "We
have ·a lot of young players,
a lot of young kid s with a lot
of talent. We're adding a
three-time Stanley · Cup
champion, a Hart winner,
who still has a tremendous
skill level and is excited to
play. He ' 11 be a terrific addiAPphoto
tion.''
Anaheim Mighty Ducks' Sergei Fedorov, right, from Russia:
Fedorov was to fly to controls the puck against Chicago Blackhawks' Scott Nichol
Columbus on Tuesday night during the first period in this Nov. 28, 2003 photo, in Anaheim;
and is expected to be in uni- Calif. The Columbus Blue Jackets acquired Fedorov from the
form when the Blue Jackets Anaheim Mighty Ducks in a trade on Tuesday.
play
St.
Louis
on
Nash
tied
Calgary' s
Wednesday
night
at cl ub 's 20-year-old Russian
Nationwide Arena.'
star,
Nikolai
Zherdev. Jarome lginla and Atlanta's
The 35-year-old Fedorov, Fedorov has said that one of llya l&lt;.ovalchuk for most
who will make $6.08 mil- the highlights of hi s career goals (41) in 2003-04 sea:
lion this year and each of was playing on the same son,becoming the youngest
the following two years, had Detroit teams with Ru ssian player to lead the league. The 32-ye&lt;)r-old Wright
one assist in five games this standouts Igor Larionov,
season for Anaheim, his sec- Slava Kozlov, Vladimir had four assists in 18 games
ond with the Mighty Duck s Konstantinov and Slava this season for Columbus,
is and
the
25-year-ohi
after 13 seasons with Fetisov.
Zherdev
Detroit.
He
recently Columbus'. only pla'yer from Beauchemin 'had two assists
in II games.
returned from a groin injury Russia.
that sidelined him for 13
Columbus had expected to
Wright was an original
games.
.
.
contend for a postseason Blue Jacket, taken in the
MacLean · expressed no berth for the first time in the expansion draft prior to tht
concerns about Fedorov's franchise's five -year exis- club's first season. He has
health.
tence, but is off to a 5-13 -0 been active in the communi'
" He's one of the best con- start. With I 0 points, th e ty in addition to ranking
ditioned athletes in the Blue Jackets are next to last · seco nd all-time in games
NHL, aAd always has been," in the Western Conference. played and penalty minutes·
MacLean said.
Fedorov has 431 goals and and fourth in goals and
MacLean had been sorting 589 ass ists in 15 seasons in points for the franchi se. He
through trades for the past the NHL . The speedy has also played with
few weeks, but said he was Russian had a career-high Pittsburgh and Edmonton.
unwilling to part with any of 56 goals for the Red Wings
"He's gone above and
the Blue Jackets' young tal- in 1993-94, when he won beyond in this community;
ent. Columbus is last in the the Hart Trophy as the he really has," MacLean
NHL with 34 goals and the league 's MVP.
said. " He' s a guy who'~
pressure had · risen on
The Mighty Duck s gained really helped sell hockey in
MacLean and coach Gerard room under the NHL's new Columbus."
Gallant in recent days.
salary cap with the deal.
The 'B!ue Jackets have lost
"I think I may have men- Fedorov does not put the six of their last seven
tioned that iny job was on Blue Jackets in jeopardy of games, with attendance stHI
the line," · MacLean said exceeding the ca~.
high but many of the fans
with' a laugh of his talks
"He is an expensive play- disenchanted by the mountwith Fedorov about coming er, but we feel good about ing losses. MacLean said he
to Columbus.
it," MacLean said.
felt the pressure when sellMacLean said he scouted
The Blue Jackets had been ing Fedorov on Columbus.
the Russian veteran in two seeking a veteran center to
" I just told him that' it is a
games over the weekend, play with 21-year-old star great place to play, that it is
buying. a ticket in the stands Rick Nash when he is final - a great place to live ,"
in Phoenix so as not to call ly healthy. Nash missed MacLean said. "It would be
attention to himself.
most of the pre season with a a better place to play and a
One other advantage to high ankle sprain, then better place to live if you're
the deal is that Fedorov can sprained hi s knee and is out winning. I' ve found that out
serve as a mentor to the until mid-December.
recently."

LARRY
C.
SMITH
46820 Bowmans Run Rd. • Racine, OH
Paid for by the Candidate.

SPORTS
• Fedorov arrives in
Columbus. See Page 81

Mana~ement. An AML repre·'We're going to do whatse ntative was in Syntcuse ever we can do to try and
yesterday to survey the area help
situatioQ ,"
the
SYRACUSE - The coal and will be back on the scene Cunningham said.
refuse or "gob" fire near Monday to begin the extinHu sted said AML is formuWater Street in Syracuse will guishing process.
lating an approach to put out
be extinguished next' week by
Husted has spoken with ~he fire by hiring a contractor
the Abandoned Mine Land Syracuse
Eric · to excavate the refuse materiMayor
Emergency Program (AML) . Cunningham about plans to al, quench it with water, layer
according to AML Program extinguish the. fire next week. it with non-combustible
Director John Husted.
Until then, Cunningham said material so that it cannot.
The AML is a division of the village will cont inue to reignite and cap the section
the Ohio Department of monitor the tire and has since with a soil material to elimiNatural Resources Division roped off the area ncar the nate the introduction of air.
of
Mineral
Resources fire and closed Water Street.
Husted said that what

BY BETH SERGENT

•

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

may've happened to start th e
tire in Syrat:use was the burning of brush near the gob pile
and then when oxygen was
introduced such as throu gh a
gro und hog hole the si tuation
underground become Iike an
oven with an intlow and oultlow of air.
As part of their design project to extinguish the fire,
AML will establish the limits
of th e coa! refu se or gob pile
by excavating a trench
around the perimeter which

RUTLAND -The River
City Players will present
their first dinner theater,
"The Melody Lingers On,"
a revue with music and
lyrics by Irving Berlirl, on
Nov.
26
at
Meigs
Elementary School.
The revue, which features
45 popular Berlin tune s,
includes dialogue taken
from the book " Irving
Berlin:
A
Daughter's
Memoir," by Mary Ellin
Barrett and conceived .bY
Page A5
Karen Baker.
• Dencil Proctor, 72
A. company of six men,
• Cledith A 'Ciedie'
eight women and a riumber
of local ·dancers- all
Sinclair, 70
accompanied by an on·- stage sw'ing orchestra will perform 45 Berlin
tunes. The show is based on
the biographical mu sical of
Berlin, from Tin Pan Alley
• Tentative deal on
to
Broadway,
from
Patriot Act would renew
Hollywood to tours of mili provisions, curb FBI
tary
bases . throughout
Europe
and the Pacific
power. See Page A2
Music Highlights of the
~ Hidden risks of
show will include "What 'II I
Teflon-like chemical raised Do," "Puttin' on the Ritz,"
Bless
"Always," "God
by documents, company
America,'' "Easter Parade,"
insider. See Page A2
and "''ve Got My Love to
• Cancer Society off!'!ring Keep Me Warm."
Amy Perrin is director of
scholarships to survivors.
the production and Paulette
See Page A3
Harrison and Gerald PowelL
• Local Briefs.
are choreographers. Katie
Childs and her "little balleriSee Page AS
. nas" will also be featur~d.
• Six more American
along with dancers from all
service members die in
over the area.
Brian J. Reed/photo
Dinner
will
be
served
at
6
Accompanist
Sharon
HaWley
is
pictured
with
Bob
Gordon,
Bob
Buck,
Gary
'Walker
and Margaret
Iraq. See Page A7
p.m., and the show will fol- Evans, vocalists featured in "The Melody Lingers On," to be presented by the River City Players
• Meigs Middle School
. low at 7. Hometown Market in a dinner theater performance on Nov. 26 at Meigs Elementary School. ·
observes Veteran's. Day.
is the sponsor for the show.
Tickets
are $15 and must be ets will be sold at the door. Savings
Company
in Store. Peoples Bank and
See Page AS
purchased In advance. There Tickets are on sale at Dan's in Pomeroy and Mason. W.Va., Hometown
in
Market
• OSHP issues holiday
1s limited seating and no tick- Pomeroy, Farmers Bank and and Middleport Department Middleport.

OBITUARIES

INSIDE

Pl

,

INDE:x
2 SECriONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
,
Comics..
Dear Abby
Editorials
NASCAR
Obituaries
Places to go
Sports
Weather

16 PAGES

A3
B4-6
B7

A3
A4
B3

As
A6
B Section

As

© 2.005 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

they believe to be a 25 feet x
25 -feet area. The trench will
then be refilled with a noncombustible backfill.
The pruject is funded
through the federal govern ment. For every ton of coal a
coal company mines, it p,ays
a fee which is then· turned
into gru nt money for projects
such as the one being und~r­
taken in Syracuse as a sort of
red amalion.
·

Please see Fire. AS

Racine water
treatment
plant begins
construction
this month
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDA ILYSENTIN EL.COM

RACl NE - Last week all
the contractors that will be
involved with the building of
the- new water treatment
plant in Racine met with
Mayor J. Scott Hill, Racine
Council and Racine Village
Engineer Barbara Anderson
to finalize details of the constru ction proc~s.
Yesterday Racine ClerkTreasurer David Spencer said
that the contracts with the ·
contractors are being finalized with construction following shortly thereafter.
This construction process
is tentatively scheduled to
begin around Nov. 20 at the
plant's site on the east end of
Pearl Street.
The construction process is
due to be . compktcd nine
months after building begins.
Arter !he plant is 'completed Spencer sai d !he village·
will have an open house and
dedication. Invited to this .
ceremon y will b~ the public
as well as dignitaries that
had a hand · in making the
plant a rea lity.
.
The new plant will .service

Please see Racinl!. AS .

Meigs Extension ..
Service sponsoring ·
holiday happening ·

POMEROY - . The traditional holiday happening
where those attending get to
sample holiday recipes, pick:
up some decorating and ent~r-:
taining ideas. and hear about
BY CHARLENE HDEFLtCH
ticipate, including juniors
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM
creative holiday craft ide~s
and men.
will be presented Tu~sday,
However, everyone must .
SYRACUSE - "A Cozy remember that exhibit s must
Nov. 29 at the Meigs County
Christmas" will be the theme be in place · by noon on
Extension oftice ..
of the annual Christmas Saturday and cannot be
"Let it Snow" will be th~
!lower show of the Meigs removed until after 4 p.m.
theme of the evening's prO:
County
Garden
Clubs on Sunday. Open judging by
· gram to be conducted by Ohio
State Un iversi ty Extension
Association to be staged this an accredited judge of the
weekend a,t Carleton School Ohio will begin at noon on
personnel. Joyce Brown, eduin Syracuse.
cator fur Fumily &amp;·Consumer
Saturday. In addition to
There will be plenty of placing ribbons in three
Sciences: Linda King, proChristmasy things to see gram
assistalll for the Family
places in each class, special
from traditional and creative awards for best of sow.
Nutrition Program ; Cindy
arrangements using bells, reserve best of show, and
Oliveri. Center specialist,
baubles, · and glitter as creativity will be presented .
Family
&amp;
Consumer
enhancers to beautiful flow~ A best of show will also be
Sciences ; and .Deanna Tribe,
ers, a variety of indoor an\l awarde~ in the ju n.ior divi Center spei:ialist, Community
outdoor wreaths, gift wrap- sion. Horti cu lture sweepDevelo pment.
pings and table settings, stake a\vards will be awardThe workshop is sure to
along with berried branches ed in both the senior and
make the holidays a · little
and live seasonal flowers.
brighter through simple tips
junior divisions.
Since the show is sure to
offered
ut the workshop to
Plants on exh ibit must be
offer ~omething for every- owtled and grown by the
make Iife work better and the
one it is, bound to boost the exhibitor for at least three
holida ys more enjoyable.
holiday spirit of. viewers months prior to the show.
It wil l be presented at two
who are invited to attend on . and enhancers lik e oil or
locations both at 6:30 p.m.,
Saturday from I to 5 p.m. poli sh me not permitted .
the first at the Pomeroy office
and on Sunday, noon to The plant names are also to
nn Memorial Drive, and the
4 p.m.
second at the Athens County
he
fumish ed
by
the
While seven of the artistic
Exten .sion Offi ce at 280 Wet
arrangement classes · have exhibitor and written on the
Union Street. Athen.s.
Charlene Hoeftk:h/ photo
been designed for ex hibit entry tags .
Registration i' $10 a perWhile in the attistic OAGC accredited judge and former president Janet Bolin
by garden club members
son and should be made with
classes .
only, all others are open to arrangemenh
demonstrates how a synergistic design to fit into the class. "A the local Extension otTice,
992-6696.
' .
.anyone who wants to parCaroling We Will Go. ·
Please see Show, As

Gardeners to stage Chiistmas
flower show this weekend

~~

Funded by th ~ Ohio '[obanu llse Prcvcnlion and Conn·ol Foundaliun .

ODNR to put out Syracuse coal slag fire

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

· .Details
on Pace AS
,._
'
·"'- '

740.446.5940

"'"" · m"h"l"~"ti ,wl.mm

Tllt.:KSDAY, NOVEMBER t7 , 2005

Players tQ present first dinner theater

. -' .&gt;· .

For more information on tobacco use prevention or cessation, call

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

:;o ( ' I.~TS • \'ol. ;;:;.No. r.-

,..

For Sutton Township Trustee

e ·n .tne

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

W,EATHER
..·•..

Who Supported Me

i...

at

safe travel tips.
See Page AS

The Great A1nerican Smolu?out
TlHU'S(lay, Xovcmher 18

Ballet company
brings 'Nutcracker' to
local stage, A6

•

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Meigs County Tobacco Use Prevention Coalition
encourages you to be smoke.free on Thursday.

To All~ People

Kriders purchase
Racine's Kountry
Kitchen,A3

i

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