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                  <text>Page D6 • The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, oH· • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Holzer Hospice•
announces expansion

Garden giants, A2

•

Unteclunology,~

\..

Employee

Discount
for
Everyone

' ·l'rinted on 10d 9,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS

··Vul. 58, No~. .51

SPORTS
• Gi~:~rits beat Bengals
.in overtime. See Page Bl

06 SIDIN

2009 PONIIIC

25

33

INSmCKI

lrl

08

10
INSTOCKI

MPBI

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.. SEPTE:\IBER
'·
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GM ~PlOni DISCOUNT .....51,424

'

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"'"'-m" laih&gt;&lt;·•llin l'l.&lt;·um

Work continuing at coal mine site
Bv BETH

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDIIILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - Work continues at the site of Gatling,
Ohio's coal .mine centrally
located along Yellowbu sh
Road ·outside of Racine
·with production slated for
early ne 0t year.
On Friday a Gatling , Ohio
spokesperson said the construction was "ahe ad of
schedule" and the company
was pleased with the way
the project was progressing.

PlOYEE PRICING • GREAT REBATES
!009 PONIIiC

'. .

Rt:e~·cled ~ewsprint

The steel for the coal
preparation plant, a six story structure , is ready with
the foundation already
poured and the steel for the
first story already in place.
Drilling of one of the two .
mine shafts was set to wrap
up this past weekend. There
will be two mine shafts, one
250 feet in total depth , the
other 325 feet in total depth.
The first 250-foot mine shaft
should be completed by mid
to late October after which
the 325-foot mine shati will

begi n to take shape by North the excavation lor the coal yet been approved for ·the
American Drillers. The preparation facility's foun- mine&gt; barge load-out facilmin,: shafts will be lined dation was done by Pullin s it y along ~th e 01\io Ri ver
with steel to ensure the air Excavation and all concrete ca lled Meigs Point Dol·k,
shafts stay open.
,
used on the job has been sup- Roses ' Excava tinu and
Gatling personnel are plied by Forest Run Ready Pullins Excavation '~ere the
constructing the mine 's Mix, all of Meigs County.
low bidders for jobs at the
slope which will be I ,400
'The Gatling management site and both will share
feet in total length. At this is personally delighted with earthwork responsibilities.
point the slope has been dri- the results from these three Design work has al so been
ven about 400 feet and the local organizations in the completed on 1he site bu t no
company anticipates fini sh- construction .. we 're slightly field constru ctio n ca n begin
ing it early next year.
ahead of where we thought until the permit is approved.
The excavating prepara- we'd be, a lot of credit goes
Gatling estimates around
tion for the mine shafts was to the local contractors."
200 peop le will work at the
done by Roses' Excavatin g.
Though the permit has not Meigs· operation .

OEPA
liiiiH BUICK

lACROSSE ca

2008 BUICK

lUCERNE

employee
responds
to e-mail
controversy

CK

25

28

MPOI

MPOI .

MSRP ...................52~290
· GM EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT .....• St,l39
GM RETAIL CONSUMER CASH · . .. .5500
GM PURCHASE BONUS CASH ...51,250

MSRP .... .... ........... 525,600
GM EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT .. . ..52}32
GM RETAIL CONSUMER CASH .•.. )500
GM PURCHASE BONUSCASH .. .S1,250

BY BETH SERGENT
. BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

'

2008 GMC

SIIRRA 1~00 4X4 RIG CAB

10119 PtiNliAC

4X4

VIDE

...
·51
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......
..

-

28

va

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MSRP ....... •...• •.. .... 518,135
GM EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT . •. . •5~369
GM RETAIL CONSUMER CASH ...• )500

s
!UU9 BUICl

•

ENClAVE Cl

MSRP . . . .. . . . ......... 531,301
GM EMMIU DISCOUNT .....13,1 81

1001 iNC

'

CANYON 414 Ill CAB

' lOOiGMC

MIIP .. .. ...... .........522,420
GM EMPLOYU OtiCODNI .....11,830
6M lll~L COMliiMU CAIH ...II 000
GM PIIROIAII BONUS CASH ... .!11111

!OOIIMC SIERRA I~GHD
CIIW CU DDIIIU DIISH

MIIP .. ... .. ... .........534,310
GM EMPLOYE! DISCOUNT .... .13,748
GM iHijl (ONIIJMIR (ISH .. 52,11110
GM PURCIIASIIONUI CASH ...13,000

MSRP ............... .'.. .$47,«1
GM IMPIOIU DISCOUNT .. ... S6,015
GM IETAIL CONlUMIR CAlli .. .11,000
GM PURCHASE BONUS CASH .. ,54,000.

!i
•ca ~~~~~~

• Youth hunt.
See Page AS ·
• Talk about
your prescriptions.
See Page AS
·, Roush family
. announces new history
volume. See Page A3
• Ohio Genealogical
Society officer visits.
See Page A2

SIERRhoomm

MIRP .. ,... .'............134,055
GM IMPLOYU DIICOONT .....13,853
~M IIT~l CONIIJ.IliHAIH : .12,000
GM PIIRCIIAIIIONUS CAlli ...13,000

11)1)8&amp;MCSIERRA I~OUIICIIW

INSIDE

WEATHER

1008 GMCYUKON 414

MSRP ..... ........... ... $47,!71
GM EMPlOYE! DISCOUNT .... .11,841
GM IHIII CONIIJMII (ISH ..12,0011
GM PURCHASIIOIIUS CAlli .. .13,000

. Details on Page A3

INDEX '

Hamilton, ·Crane.best
at Art in the Park
BY BRIAN
;

3RD&amp;ANN ST.
.1 BLOCK FROM THE COURTHOUSE
PARKERSBURG, WV 26101

304-485-4418

WWW.MATHENVMOTORS.COM
SALE HOURS: MON·FRI9AM-7:30PM • SAT 9AM·6:30PM • SUN IPM·SPM

o:-· --·-·-

-.·-·-··---- --~--

W£ A~E PROFESSION.\[ GRACE'

0.

Drive Beautiful.

· erator art. and other projects.
Storyteller Donna Wil son led ·
in telling an unfolding story.
Patty Sykes ·of Canal
Winchester was the featured
artist for the show and art sale.
The Huntington. W.Va . na.tive
grew up in southern Ohio, .and
her love of nature was evident
'in the work she displayed .
Sykes works from her own
studio , The Ridge Art Studio.
and is also an art instructor.
Judging results, by class . were:
Oil
painting:
Bobbi e
DeLong , Pomeroy, "Goodie ,
Goodie Gumdrops ;" Lula
Toban, Pomeroy, "Gathering
Eggs ;" and Julia ProctorHouston, "After Renoir."
Acrylic painting: Rhojean
McClure, Pomeroy, "Gray;"
Harold Bumgarner, New Haven ,
W.Va., "Desert Horses;" Linda
Riggs, Reedsville, "Ocean ."
Watercolor pai;,ting: Robert

Please see Art. A5

· A3

Thinking pink

Calendars

A3

Raising funds for free cancer services

Classifieds

B3-4

Annie's Mailbox

IIMC:

REED

MIDDLEPORT
Elizabeth
Hamilton
of
Gallipolis took best of show at
the Riverbend Arts Council's
Art in the Park Saturday, for
her painting , "Indian."
Peggy Crane's photograph ,
"Two . for Tea ," was reserve
best of show . Crane is from
·Middleport.
A beautiful autumn-like day
and the beautifui.Ohio River in
the background made for a perfect art show. The event, held in
Dave Diles Park, was considered a success in terms of both
participation and public interest.
Paintings and photographs
lined the park's riverfront
walkway, and free activities
were organized for young
arti sts and older ones, as well.
A community canvas was
painted, and children could create sidewalk drawings, refrig-

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGFS .

•

J.

BREED @MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Comics

Bs

A4

Editorials
Sports

B-Section

A:3

Weather

' Publishing Co.
© 2008 Ohio Valley

.

Bv

COLUMBUS
..,. The
Ohio
Env ironmental
Protection Agency employee who wrote wh at has
become a much ·talked
about inter- office e-mail
about a permit regarding
Amencan
Municipal
Power-Ohio\
proposed
power plant ha s spoken to
The Daily Senti nel.
On April
10. Mike
Yandrich of the Ohio EPA
who w01led on the draft
wastewater perm it for
.. AMP-Ohi o's r~d ve ri zedcoal powe r plant wrote to
supervisor Bruc e Goff:
"Don't have I he · SEJ
(social/economic justification report) do ne. I am ·
strug gling personall y ·and
professionall y with this. as I
cannot in goqd faith provide
any type of positive social .
or economic justifi cation."
Last month the Ohio EPA
mainl\t ined th e e-mail.
which was referenced · at a
public hearing llli the permit
by Nach y Kanfcr of the
Sierra Club. ha' been mi s·
cons1rued and misu nderstood . Kanfer fe lt the e-mail
showed " that Mike was
confused ahout hnw to subvert hi s own judgment."
Yandrich. who .has been
with the agency for 13 years
but only with the Division
of Surface Water for four.
told The Dail y Sentinel on
Fridav his e- mail was "definitely taken out of context
by the Sierra Club ... no one
(from the Sierra Club) contacted or asked me what the
e-mai l was aboul. I th ink it
was taken out or contex t to
. serve their purposes."
Yandrich maintained what
the Ohio EPA had previou s
said. that when it cam~ to ·
fillin g out the SE.I report
(his first at the agency) he
did'n't fee l qualified or
Patty Sykes of Canal Winchester was lhe featured trained to the point where
artist at Saturday's Art in the Park event. She grew up · he felt comfortable signing .
in sou1h flrn Ohio, and has won many awards for her off on the document.
"I'm an engineer. I'm not
work, mostly in oils.
trained in e·c onom ics or
soCioeconomics or any of

for $5 and can be purchased
at Clark's Jewelry Story in
Pomeroy. The drawing will
POMEROY
The take place on Oct. 29 with
Meig s County Cancer - the w1nner notified by
lmttat!ve offers a vanety of phone. MCCI member
tree cancer screenmg s.er- Norma Torres said all
vices to women and in money raised from the tickorder· to keep those serv1 ces ets go to support MCCIfunded, the group is selling. sponsored cancer awareness
t1ckets for a. chance at a activities and programs.
homemade afghan..
.
For the .last few years
The afghan ts pmk With MCCI has been the recipiptnk ~tbbons crocheted 1~to ent of a Susan G. Komen
the fabnc to ·symbolize Breast Cancer Foundation
breast cancer awareness.
·
Tickets are $1 each or six
Pleese see Pink. A5
BETH SERGENT

BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENmiELCOM

'

~~ ·

'

/I; ...

••
'
..
J,l

' I '

•'

Both Sergent/photo

Please see Responds, A5

- - - - - - - - ·-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - f

'•

.."'.' '

Norma Torres
of the Meigs
County Cancer
Initiative shows
off a handmade
afghan donated
to MCCI which
is holding a
drawing on lhe
afghan tb benefit their free cancer screening
programs.
Tickets a're $1
and are avail ·
able at Clark's
Jewelry Siore.

that ," he said . ..
Even after he was instruct ed by supervisors on how to
fill out the SEJ report. when
asked if he then felt more
comfortable with fillin g out
the SEJ. Y&lt;mdrich simply
said "no, I didn't."
Yandrich clarified his
comment by .saying he had
problems with the actual
SEJ reports and that there'd
been " internal di " ussions"
on perhaps "re' titl in g" the
report "rather than imply it
is truly an SEJ.''
Yandrich also maintained
the SEJ is just one component in the wastewater permit as did hi s supervisor ..

'

'

�PageA2.

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 22,

•

2008

Coin winner

Garden giants

Y T E B EN

..The Daily Sentinel
ANNIE ' S MAILBOX
'

Hesjleeingfrom
.:family responsibilities

••

Submitted photo

Rotacy contributes to MCCF
POINT
PLEASANT . .
W.Va. - The Point Pleasant
Rotary Cl ub receiJt ly presented th e Maso n County
Founda t ilHl
Communi tv
(MCC FJ ":ith a check for
$ 1.000 tu- a"i't with th e
. Yoltth Development Fund
p'rojecL
By year e11d . th e MCCF
will c~ t a bli .s h a permanently endowed grant fund that
will pro vid e th e communi · ty with a local source of
·grant fund s de signated to
·address yo uth program s
and projects in Mason
Count y.
Once est ablished . thi s
' fund wil l be open for application each .fall to an y non. . profit organinnion that has
·a need fo r funding for youth
· asso'ci:ned program ~ of pro·jects. Grants will be issued
in No vember each ye;1r in
·
.
SubmiHed photo
conj unction
with
the Lesley Marrero, a representative of the Point Pleasant Rotary, presents a check to. at
Foundat&gt;on 's Co111munity right, Amy J. Leach , chairman of the Marketing Committee for the Mason County
. Action Grunt Program .
Community Foundation.

Public meetings

Quarterly
birthdays
observed were those of
Sharon Rifne. Dawna
Amold.. Scottie Smith , Julie
Curtis. Susan Baum . Doris
Grueser, and Laura Mae
Nice.
Attendin g were Susan
Bautn , Dori s Grueser. Jo
Ann Baum. Sandy White ,
Janet Depy. Charlotte Grant ,

Submitted photo

The Point Pleasant Rotary Club recently presented Charles
Garland of Henderson with a gold com that he won in their
recent drawing. The proceeds from the fundraiser will go
toward the· Mason County Community Foundation Youth
Development Fund project. By year end , the MCCF will
establish a permanently endowed grant fund that will provide the communtty with a local source of grant funds designated to address youth programs and projects in Mason
County. Once established, this fund will be open for appli·
cation each fall to any nonprofit organization that has a
need for.funding for youth associated programs or projects.
Here Lesley Marrero, a representative of the Point Pleasant
R'otary, presents the coin· to. at right, Charles Garland.
·

Ohio Genealogical
Society.officer visits

POMEROY ·- Donald ning at 9 a.m. There is a $15
Clark, district vice president cost to attend . The ·morning
of the Ohio Genealogical session will deal with interSociety. was a guest at the net usage and choosing a
recent meeting of the Meigs genealogy program for your
County
Genealogical home computer. There will
Society held at the Meigs be hands-on demonstrations
County Museum.
of program's.
·
Keith Ashley. president.
The afternoon session
welcomed the members will deal with local records
and conducted the meeting availability in the counties
at which time the Society of the di strict . Anyone m~y
planned to complete it attend the session.
five-generation ancestor
Gerald Crawford reported
chart project this fall for the closing of the Carnegie
publishing. Anyone still Librar~ in Beaver Falls, Pa.
wishing to submit charts This library houses a large
may do so at no· cost by genealogy research collecsending them to P.O. Box . tion.
Many
Meigs
Pomeroy,
Ohio Countians migrated from
346,
45769 . If blank charts are there in. tbe early 1800's to
needed for completing, call Meigs County and then
the president at 992-7874.
migrated back after the.tum
Karen Werry reported that of the 20th century makiQg
she has the ancestry of the this county important in
Van Meter family going research .
·
back 60 generations to 20
The society is. continuing
A.D. June Ashley reported to copy Meigs County
ATHENS - O'Blencss Memorial Hospital that the Roush Family . in Probate marriages and is
has again been aw &lt;irded a three-year term of America has begun work on now in the mid 1940s.
accreditation in mammography as the result of . Volume 5 book of the fami- The se later marriages are
a recent survey by the American College of ly for the purpose of includ- import ant to chi ldren doing
Radiology (ACR) . O ' Bl eness ' mammogr~phy ing updates , corrections. research for 4-H and Girl
services have been accrcd ited since' 1992.
and new lines. A discussion Scout . gene alogy projects.
The ACR award s ac credit~tion to facilities of various · cemetery con- . They will be fu ll y indexed:.
for the achievement of hi gh pmctice stan- cerns was held .
The members held a
dards after a pee r-rev iew evaluati on of the
The society repmted that · moment of s ilence in memprac tice. EV&lt;Jiuations are conducted by it had awarded a $50 sav- ory
of
98-.year-old
boanJ-certificd phys ician s and meclical ings bond to Eric Wood for Christi ne
Fruth , · who
physicists who are experts in the field. They · his first place win in the 4-H recently died. She was an
assess the qu alificati ons of the personnel and genealogy project. Also. the active member and copied
the adequacy of fa cility equipment. The sur- fall issue of the society's many of Meigs County 's
·veyors report their findings to the ACR's newsletter is nearly ready cemeteries that are now
Committee on Accrcditlltion. which subse- for mailing.
published for research.
quently provides th e practi ce with a compre Donald Clark reported . Memberships for the soci- ·
·
hensive report.
that there will be a fall dis- ety cost $10 per person and
· The ACR is a nati onal organization serving trict convention of the gives an · automatic submore than 32 ,000 diagnostic and intervention- Athens District , which scription to the society~s
a! radiologi sts . rudiation oncologists , and includes Meigs County. q~arterly newsletter. The
nuclear medic ine and medical phy sicists with Thi s will be held at the Bob next ·meeting will be held
programs focusin g on the practice of medical Evans Farm Hall at the the second Tuesday of
imaging and radi ati on oncology and the deliv- ·University of Rio Grande November at the Meigs
ery of comprehensive healihcare services.
on Saturday. Oct. 25 , begin- County Museum .

Scotti e Smith , Debri&gt;
Wolfe, Laura ·Mae Nice.
Everett Grant, Julie Curtis,
Marge Fetty, Opal Hollon . .
Dawena Anold. Th elm n
White, Gary Holter. Estiler
Smi th. Goldi e frederick,
Marge Fett y, Ruth Smith .
Mary . Jo. Barringer and
Helen Wolfe along · with tbe
fou r new members.

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&amp; ,d .

2008

Tinkham ol the Ohio
Consumers
Counse l.
Mu sical program too. Ca ll
992-32 14 for lunch reservations by Tuesday. Guests
welcome . .

Chu rc h of Chri st Fu mily
Life Center. Fifth and Mai n.
Menu. biscuits and grav).

Monday, Sept. 22
eggs. potatol!s and b a ~.· on
RA CIN E
- Southe rn
anJ de»ert.
: · BY KATHY MITCHELL
fought a grea t deal . My hus- Local. School Board , regul ar
•:
AND I\IIARCY SUGAR
band has &lt;I difficult person- meeting . 8 p.m .. hi gh school
al ity: He tend &gt; to be inse- medi a room .
'D ear Annie: I have bee n cure and controlling. He can
RUTL AND - Special
Thesduy, Scpi. 23
: married for 16 years and be unapproac ha ble about meeting of board of Leading
Thursday, Sept. 25
CHESTER
Past
: l1 ave three yo un g children. problems.
Creek Conserv ancy Di strict.
RA CIN E
- Southe ri1
. Monday, Sepi. 22
Can·ie diles not want her for sales presentation , S p.m. ~o~ncilors Club , 7:30 p.m
· My hu sband wo rks 12-hour
L'ocal School Dis trict 's
POI
NT
PLEASA
NT
.
: rotatin g shifts .and is gone fathe r to walk her down the· Regular board meeting re- the hall.
Mark Cable Fitness Ce nt~ r. ope n house.
RACINE
- Racine W.Va .
: from the house at least 15 aisle . nor wiII he be asked . schedul ed for 5 p.m.
Chapter 1.14 Ord er of Concert . T p.m : Meet and -l-7 p.m .. So4th crn Hi gh
"Who gives this woman?" Wednesday.
: hours a da y.
Eastern Stars . spec ial meet· . greet rece ption fo ll owi ng. School. free healt h sc reenMy proble m is. on his There will be no danc ing .
POMEROY
- Meigs mg. 7 p.m.. lodge hall. wea r Sponsored by aret\ ~ hurc h ­ In g~.
: day&gt; off, my husband vol- I' m afraid when my husban'd County
Emergen cy
·
. es. Located at Main Street
; untcers to referee local foot· find s out. he will be very Planning Committee reg ular chapter att tre.
RACINE - Racine Area Baptist Church. I I00 N.
: ball and basketball ga mes. upset. Is there anything else I meeting. II :30 a. m., senior
Commu.nity Organi zat ion , Main Street. Nur~ery pro• This starh in October and could suggest to Carrie that citizens building.
regular meeting . Star Mill vided. For more in fo nnaWednesday. Sept. 24
: ,goe s through Man;h . He ·s will make her dad feel spc·
POMEROY
:- Me ig s Park. potluck . new mem- tion call 304-675- 199-+.
LON
G BOTTOM
, ,!'One 'th ree ni ghts a week , cia! on her weddin g day? County Qistrict Public bers wel come.
Friday, Sept. 26
Ralph
Balla rd will ce le: {lnd there arc some weekend Worried Mom
Library, regular board meetMIDDLEPORT
The
Thursday,
Sept.
25
brate
hi
s K5th birthua y on
Dear Worried: Would
; 'game s that are 300 miles
ing . 3:3 0 p.m., Pomeroy
Church
of.'
Middleport
POMEROY
Meigs
Se pt. 24. Card s ma y be
&lt;away. necess itating an Carrie let your husband give Library.
Christ
will
have
a
free
comCounty
Retired
Teachers
.
&gt;cn t to him at .1 -l665
: overnight stay - and th at's a toa st or read a poem ?
Thursday,
Sept.
25
..
noon
at
Trinity
Church
in
munit
Y
dinner.
4:30
to
6
Road .
Long
Bas han
· not c·ountin g out -of-town Would the groom allow Dad
SYRACUSE
Mei
gs
Pomeroy.
Speaker,
Andrew
p.m .. · in the .Middleport Bottom . Ohi o -l57-l.1.
to help him' dress or be a wit· playoff games.
· He leaves me home wi th ness to signing the marriage
··the kid s and expe" s me to certificate'' Carrie should at
·do all the carpooling . My least give Dad a bmnonniere
· ' 12-year-old is signed up for to distingui sh him from the
GALLI POLIS Hol ze r Medi cal
· basketball and swimming . other guests. And you can , - - - - - - - : ; ; ; ; ; ; : : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . : : : . . - . . . ,
lovingly.
that
her
suggest,
and now he wants to play
Center· Hospice. lncalcu at 2R8 1 State
wedding day is the perfect
hockey.
Route 160. Gallipoli s. antwu nces th e
·. I don't feel it's fair for me time to try to forgive those
expansion nf new cnmpute.r ~ o ft ware.
. · to be stuck with all this . I past hlll1S and stat1 fresh .
technology for qualit y and . patient
Dear Annie: I am writing
unprovcment outc·omes.
.·never get a break.! have ev,en
· Mi sys hospice .software ts a hospi~ e
threatened to leave if he does- in response to the letter frdm
. n't stop . We are always finan - "Facing Reality,'' the 14informat ion system de signed to i mpl'll·~ e
year-old
girl
who
is
afraid
of
ciall y in the hole because he
communication amon g Ho~pi c c ~tafr
clinician s and throud1DUI our continuum
has to pay for unitorrns. gas. dying . ·I went through the
·motel, dry-cleaning and wear exact same thing. ·stat1ing at
of care. Thi s documentation software wi ll
age4
and
lasting
well
into
my
enabl
e all &gt;laiT to communicate more
and tear on the car. My hustimel y to improve patients qual ity of care.
band refuses to quit. saying 30s . People said. " You wil.l
get overt(' or, "Ym1 are not
he enjoys it .
. In add.ition to nc" softwa re . th e
Am I stuck with this self· going to Jie for a long time ."
Li febook T-+220 tablet personal compu ter
My fears were quite frecentered man ? How can · I
will be utilited hy each mirse from the
point of referral throu gh th e admi ssion
get him to spend more time quent and very intense. and
with us? I love him but feel fm1unately I was fina ll y put
pro&lt;:ess. The laptops .arc mobile and can
· neglected , and it's obvious on medication thai helped
be U&gt;ed in the pati ent 's horne . skilled
nursing facilities, ass i&gt;tCcl li ving fttcili· he doesn 't care . I'm ready enormous ly. Please tell her
I've been there . too . and it's
to pack it up. Please help . ties. and hospitals. for all adm issions .
nice to know I' m nol the
· Confused Out West .
Sharon Shull. RN. BSN Program
only'onc
.
Faced
Reality'
Dire~;tor
of Holzer Hospice stated . "We
Dear Confused: Of course
Dear faced: Anything
would like th e cnrnmunitv to understand
your husband enjoys this. It
allows him to .play games that be~omes such an obses- .
that we strive to meet J1ur patient anJ
their famil y's needs when Jaccd with a
and escape hi s family sion that it interferes with
life- limiting illness. The quali ty, timeli · responsibilities. If he has a dail y life may require counstressful job, it's Linderstand- selin g
or
medication .
ness. and expertise we stri ve In rned wil l
continue with the new techno logy of our
able he would need to blow T hanks for pointing it out..
otf steam . But it is unfair and
Dear Readers: Today is
Misys program."
Holze r Hospice serves patients in
immature to do so much of it Family Day (casafami lythat you and the chi ldren are . day.org). Studies show that
Athens. Gallia, Jackson. Mei~s. Vinton
Submlned photo
· ahand~ned. The two of you children who eat dinner
and portions of Lawrence a~1d Sciotn
Holzer
Hospice
staff
memberi
who
will
be
using
the
new
computer
techshould work out a compro- with their parents ~ave a
Counties in Ohio . For more information
mise where he referees fewer reduced ri sk of substance nology in their work with those on hospice include Becky Buckley, AN, about Holz-er Hospice services 'o r coungames or just one sp01t. Even . . abu se . Please try to make CHPN, seated , clinical coordinator; Teresa Stewart , AN , CHPN; and Lucy · ties served . pl ea&gt;e cal l 740-446-5074. or
Marcum, secretary.
better. suggest he get meals a family event.
toll free. 1-H00-500-4850 .
· involved in his child ren 's
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
athletic acti vities instead. ·
. Dear Annie: My'26-year- Marcy Sugar, lo11gtime ediold dau ghter, "Carri e." tors of the Atin Landers
pl&lt;ms to marry in a t~w column. Please e-mail your
· months . She has been finan- questions to mmiesmail·
. cia!.lyindependent for years, box@comcast,net, '" write
li ving away from home to: Annie'.~ Mailbox , P.O.
since college. She is paying Box 118190, Chicago, IL
..
l'or her own wedding.
60611. To .find out more
TUPPERS PLAINS Carrie .and her fat he!' have about Annie's Mailbox,
Hyde wa s named
Cindy
· never b~en close. Since ,she and read features by other
, moved away. they get a long Creator.~ Syndicate writers weekly best w.eight· loss
and · Roberta
line, but she has some very and cartoonists, visit tile winner
Henderson
runner-up at a
negative memories from her Creators Syndicate Web
earlier · years when they page at www.crea/ors.com. rece nt meeting ,of TOPS ·
Drs. Thomas and Susan Quinn and Dr. Robyn Sargent
(Take Otf Pmmds Sensibly)
Chapter
#OH
·20 13,
are pleased to announce the addition of Dr. Shane
Coolvil le , atlended by 16
Foster to the practice.
members .
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Dr. Foster is a Cum Laude graduate of the Ohio State
Sen·sibly)
members
LaChresia Bogardus . Mary
University College of Optometr;y,
and
Patricia
Cleland
POMEROY
The bers to provide the informaRoush and Allied Families tion for the new volume. As Richmond were .in leeway.
• Doctor Foster Is now a c c.e pting new patients
Henderson was recognized
r of America Association yet, the association cannot
• Most major vision and medic al plans a ccepted
recently held its national accept genealogy as there for regaining her KOPS
Members
are
i·eunion at Rio Grande .
has been no central reposito- statu s .
• Specialty vision services as well as treatment o f
. , There Michael Roush. ry designated to receive the encouraged to record their
eye d isease and injury
: president of the association, informati on . However. since walking and exercise total s
:announced.the kick-offon the compiling family finds are through May for the I0.00
preparation of Volume 5 of quite time con sumin g, fami- mile challenge contest.
the family history. Previous ly members can begin now Leader Pat Snedden read
"Today"
and
"Sick."
vo lumes were printed in to compile their updated
Dianne
Burns
presented
a
. : 1928, 1945 , 1963, and 1979. information to submit' later.
program
on
salt.
• This new volume wi ll include
Updates must include a
At another recent meeting
: updates to previous publi shed reference to a previous val : lines. corrections, and new ume and page number in Pat Hall was weekly best
: lines of the family ·never 'order to kno)V where the new weight-loss winner. KOPS
(Keep Off Pounds Sensibly)
• before published.
information is to be placed.
members
Bogardus ,
: Information
submitied Places of birth. death, marCleland and May Frost were
: may include more than dates riage , and residence should
in leeway.
·
:and places of birth, death, · be included with dates . ·
Fall Rally plans were dis; and marriage. Information
Newly discovered major cussed and members are
• should include place of resi- Meigs · County families asked to take an item for'
: dence . military service. occu- include the Bogard Jlunily. the the tote bag that each chap; pation(s), and education. It Linscott family. the Hayden . ter is to provide for the raf• may also include info011ation fami ly. and some previously fl e. The Octoberfest ih
! such as place ofburial.mem- unconnected Roush lines. · Coolville
on Oct. II was
Fur 'assii·umce ur furtlm· di scus.sed .
: bership in organizations , pol: itics. rel igion , height. hair itifimnatirm, . mntact Keith
Fro st prese nted a pro; color, eye color, awards Ashley, llistarian oj'rhefam - gram on "Fat Genes ." An
t received , cause ofdeath,etc . ily. at (740) 9n-78 74. open discu ssion followed .
! · The association depends Ashley is ni1t accepting com- · Snedden (ead "Everybody,
l entirely upon family mem- pleted lineages at this time. Somebody , Anybody &amp;
!
!--------------------------~--Nobody ." Members will
continue to collect non pe rishable items for th e
. food
pantry : throu gh
November.
Monday ...Mostly sunny. evening .. .Becqming Iight
The group meets every
:Hi ghs in the upp er 70s : and variable. ·
Tuesday at Torch Bapti st
; Northeast winds around 5
1\1esday ...Sunny. lli ghs Church. Weigh-in is from
around 80 .
:mph .
5:15 to 6: 15 p.m. with a
Monday night..,Mostly
Thesday night ... Mostly meeting at 6:30 . For infor:clear. Lows in the lower clear. Lows in the lower mation, call Pat Snedden at
:50s .
Northeast
winds 50s .
Northeast
winds' 662-2633 or attend a free
• arounci' 5 mph tn the · around 5 mph.
meeting.

Clubs and
organizations ·

Other events

Birthdays

:DofA drapes charter for deceased member
CHESTER - The charter
: was draped i·n memory of
Eleanor Leonard at a recent
meeting of Chester Council
· 323 . Daughters of America .
Initimory · work for new
. members, Jud y Buckl ey.
· Bobby Kin g. Samantha
: Kin g, and Sharon Rifil e .
: was held . The commi ssions
of Jo Ann Ritchie as deputy
state councilnr and· Esther
Smith as di stri ct deputy
. state co uncilor we re read.
·Smith was .escorted to th e
:altar where she was. present:ed a gift for her work as
in specting officer of the
Council.
Laura Mae Nice presided
. at the meetin g which
:opened with pledges to the
: flags . scripture. the Lord 's
· Prayer and sl ngmg of the
· National Anthem .
. It was noted that Opal
· Eichinger and Erma Cleland
are not well and announced
. that friend ship night will be
:held on Oct 2 1 with u
: potluck at 6 p.m.

Count y Board of MR/DD
reg ular meetin g. -+:30 p.m..
Carleton School.

. Church events

0 'Bleness receives .
ACR accreditation

Submlned photo
: Ramona MacGregor, RT (R) (T), at right, senior technologist of
· O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's mammography· services, discusses
·examination techn iques with Linda Weiss.

Monday, September 22,

Community Calendar

.

Michael Dill
(ce nter) grew .
some giants in
his garden this
year when it
came to cabbage. Pictured
is Paige Dill (far
left) holding a
six pound head
of cabbage
which was 29
inches around
and Kaylee
Phillips (far .
right) holding a
head of cabbage weighing
five pounds and
measuring 27
inches around.

Page A3

.

'

740-742-2511 or 1-800-837-8217

Hospice

Losers
recognized ·
by TOPS·

:Roush family announces
new history volume

!Local Weather .

exoansion in technolouv

Your sight is
our.focus.
.

�PageA2.

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 22,

•

2008

Coin winner

Garden giants

Y T E B EN

..The Daily Sentinel
ANNIE ' S MAILBOX
'

Hesjleeingfrom
.:family responsibilities

••

Submitted photo

Rotacy contributes to MCCF
POINT
PLEASANT . .
W.Va. - The Point Pleasant
Rotary Cl ub receiJt ly presented th e Maso n County
Founda t ilHl
Communi tv
(MCC FJ ":ith a check for
$ 1.000 tu- a"i't with th e
. Yoltth Development Fund
p'rojecL
By year e11d . th e MCCF
will c~ t a bli .s h a permanently endowed grant fund that
will pro vid e th e communi · ty with a local source of
·grant fund s de signated to
·address yo uth program s
and projects in Mason
Count y.
Once est ablished . thi s
' fund wil l be open for application each .fall to an y non. . profit organinnion that has
·a need fo r funding for youth
· asso'ci:ned program ~ of pro·jects. Grants will be issued
in No vember each ye;1r in
·
.
SubmiHed photo
conj unction
with
the Lesley Marrero, a representative of the Point Pleasant Rotary, presents a check to. at
Foundat&gt;on 's Co111munity right, Amy J. Leach , chairman of the Marketing Committee for the Mason County
. Action Grunt Program .
Community Foundation.

Public meetings

Quarterly
birthdays
observed were those of
Sharon Rifne. Dawna
Amold.. Scottie Smith , Julie
Curtis. Susan Baum . Doris
Grueser, and Laura Mae
Nice.
Attendin g were Susan
Bautn , Dori s Grueser. Jo
Ann Baum. Sandy White ,
Janet Depy. Charlotte Grant ,

Submitted photo

The Point Pleasant Rotary Club recently presented Charles
Garland of Henderson with a gold com that he won in their
recent drawing. The proceeds from the fundraiser will go
toward the· Mason County Community Foundation Youth
Development Fund project. By year end , the MCCF will
establish a permanently endowed grant fund that will provide the communtty with a local source of grant funds designated to address youth programs and projects in Mason
County. Once established, this fund will be open for appli·
cation each fall to any nonprofit organization that has a
need for.funding for youth associated programs or projects.
Here Lesley Marrero, a representative of the Point Pleasant
R'otary, presents the coin· to. at right, Charles Garland.
·

Ohio Genealogical
Society.officer visits

POMEROY ·- Donald ning at 9 a.m. There is a $15
Clark, district vice president cost to attend . The ·morning
of the Ohio Genealogical session will deal with interSociety. was a guest at the net usage and choosing a
recent meeting of the Meigs genealogy program for your
County
Genealogical home computer. There will
Society held at the Meigs be hands-on demonstrations
County Museum.
of program's.
·
Keith Ashley. president.
The afternoon session
welcomed the members will deal with local records
and conducted the meeting availability in the counties
at which time the Society of the di strict . Anyone m~y
planned to complete it attend the session.
five-generation ancestor
Gerald Crawford reported
chart project this fall for the closing of the Carnegie
publishing. Anyone still Librar~ in Beaver Falls, Pa.
wishing to submit charts This library houses a large
may do so at no· cost by genealogy research collecsending them to P.O. Box . tion.
Many
Meigs
Pomeroy,
Ohio Countians migrated from
346,
45769 . If blank charts are there in. tbe early 1800's to
needed for completing, call Meigs County and then
the president at 992-7874.
migrated back after the.tum
Karen Werry reported that of the 20th century makiQg
she has the ancestry of the this county important in
Van Meter family going research .
·
back 60 generations to 20
The society is. continuing
A.D. June Ashley reported to copy Meigs County
ATHENS - O'Blencss Memorial Hospital that the Roush Family . in Probate marriages and is
has again been aw &lt;irded a three-year term of America has begun work on now in the mid 1940s.
accreditation in mammography as the result of . Volume 5 book of the fami- The se later marriages are
a recent survey by the American College of ly for the purpose of includ- import ant to chi ldren doing
Radiology (ACR) . O ' Bl eness ' mammogr~phy ing updates , corrections. research for 4-H and Girl
services have been accrcd ited since' 1992.
and new lines. A discussion Scout . gene alogy projects.
The ACR award s ac credit~tion to facilities of various · cemetery con- . They will be fu ll y indexed:.
for the achievement of hi gh pmctice stan- cerns was held .
The members held a
dards after a pee r-rev iew evaluati on of the
The society repmted that · moment of s ilence in memprac tice. EV&lt;Jiuations are conducted by it had awarded a $50 sav- ory
of
98-.year-old
boanJ-certificd phys ician s and meclical ings bond to Eric Wood for Christi ne
Fruth , · who
physicists who are experts in the field. They · his first place win in the 4-H recently died. She was an
assess the qu alificati ons of the personnel and genealogy project. Also. the active member and copied
the adequacy of fa cility equipment. The sur- fall issue of the society's many of Meigs County 's
·veyors report their findings to the ACR's newsletter is nearly ready cemeteries that are now
Committee on Accrcditlltion. which subse- for mailing.
published for research.
quently provides th e practi ce with a compre Donald Clark reported . Memberships for the soci- ·
·
hensive report.
that there will be a fall dis- ety cost $10 per person and
· The ACR is a nati onal organization serving trict convention of the gives an · automatic submore than 32 ,000 diagnostic and intervention- Athens District , which scription to the society~s
a! radiologi sts . rudiation oncologists , and includes Meigs County. q~arterly newsletter. The
nuclear medic ine and medical phy sicists with Thi s will be held at the Bob next ·meeting will be held
programs focusin g on the practice of medical Evans Farm Hall at the the second Tuesday of
imaging and radi ati on oncology and the deliv- ·University of Rio Grande November at the Meigs
ery of comprehensive healihcare services.
on Saturday. Oct. 25 , begin- County Museum .

Scotti e Smith , Debri&gt;
Wolfe, Laura ·Mae Nice.
Everett Grant, Julie Curtis,
Marge Fetty, Opal Hollon . .
Dawena Anold. Th elm n
White, Gary Holter. Estiler
Smi th. Goldi e frederick,
Marge Fett y, Ruth Smith .
Mary . Jo. Barringer and
Helen Wolfe along · with tbe
fou r new members.

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&amp; ,d .

2008

Tinkham ol the Ohio
Consumers
Counse l.
Mu sical program too. Ca ll
992-32 14 for lunch reservations by Tuesday. Guests
welcome . .

Chu rc h of Chri st Fu mily
Life Center. Fifth and Mai n.
Menu. biscuits and grav).

Monday, Sept. 22
eggs. potatol!s and b a ~.· on
RA CIN E
- Southe rn
anJ de»ert.
: · BY KATHY MITCHELL
fought a grea t deal . My hus- Local. School Board , regul ar
•:
AND I\IIARCY SUGAR
band has &lt;I difficult person- meeting . 8 p.m .. hi gh school
al ity: He tend &gt; to be inse- medi a room .
'D ear Annie: I have bee n cure and controlling. He can
RUTL AND - Special
Thesduy, Scpi. 23
: married for 16 years and be unapproac ha ble about meeting of board of Leading
Thursday, Sept. 25
CHESTER
Past
: l1 ave three yo un g children. problems.
Creek Conserv ancy Di strict.
RA CIN E
- Southe ri1
. Monday, Sepi. 22
Can·ie diles not want her for sales presentation , S p.m. ~o~ncilors Club , 7:30 p.m
· My hu sband wo rks 12-hour
L'ocal School Dis trict 's
POI
NT
PLEASA
NT
.
: rotatin g shifts .and is gone fathe r to walk her down the· Regular board meeting re- the hall.
Mark Cable Fitness Ce nt~ r. ope n house.
RACINE
- Racine W.Va .
: from the house at least 15 aisle . nor wiII he be asked . schedul ed for 5 p.m.
Chapter 1.14 Ord er of Concert . T p.m : Meet and -l-7 p.m .. So4th crn Hi gh
"Who gives this woman?" Wednesday.
: hours a da y.
Eastern Stars . spec ial meet· . greet rece ption fo ll owi ng. School. free healt h sc reenMy proble m is. on his There will be no danc ing .
POMEROY
- Meigs mg. 7 p.m.. lodge hall. wea r Sponsored by aret\ ~ hurc h ­ In g~.
: day&gt; off, my husband vol- I' m afraid when my husban'd County
Emergen cy
·
. es. Located at Main Street
; untcers to referee local foot· find s out. he will be very Planning Committee reg ular chapter att tre.
RACINE - Racine Area Baptist Church. I I00 N.
: ball and basketball ga mes. upset. Is there anything else I meeting. II :30 a. m., senior
Commu.nity Organi zat ion , Main Street. Nur~ery pro• This starh in October and could suggest to Carrie that citizens building.
regular meeting . Star Mill vided. For more in fo nnaWednesday. Sept. 24
: ,goe s through Man;h . He ·s will make her dad feel spc·
POMEROY
:- Me ig s Park. potluck . new mem- tion call 304-675- 199-+.
LON
G BOTTOM
, ,!'One 'th ree ni ghts a week , cia! on her weddin g day? County Qistrict Public bers wel come.
Friday, Sept. 26
Ralph
Balla rd will ce le: {lnd there arc some weekend Worried Mom
Library, regular board meetMIDDLEPORT
The
Thursday,
Sept.
25
brate
hi
s K5th birthua y on
Dear Worried: Would
; 'game s that are 300 miles
ing . 3:3 0 p.m., Pomeroy
Church
of.'
Middleport
POMEROY
Meigs
Se pt. 24. Card s ma y be
&lt;away. necess itating an Carrie let your husband give Library.
Christ
will
have
a
free
comCounty
Retired
Teachers
.
&gt;cn t to him at .1 -l665
: overnight stay - and th at's a toa st or read a poem ?
Thursday,
Sept.
25
..
noon
at
Trinity
Church
in
munit
Y
dinner.
4:30
to
6
Road .
Long
Bas han
· not c·ountin g out -of-town Would the groom allow Dad
SYRACUSE
Mei
gs
Pomeroy.
Speaker,
Andrew
p.m .. · in the .Middleport Bottom . Ohi o -l57-l.1.
to help him' dress or be a wit· playoff games.
· He leaves me home wi th ness to signing the marriage
··the kid s and expe" s me to certificate'' Carrie should at
·do all the carpooling . My least give Dad a bmnonniere
· ' 12-year-old is signed up for to distingui sh him from the
GALLI POLIS Hol ze r Medi cal
· basketball and swimming . other guests. And you can , - - - - - - - : ; ; ; ; ; ; : : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . : : : . . - . . . ,
lovingly.
that
her
suggest,
and now he wants to play
Center· Hospice. lncalcu at 2R8 1 State
wedding day is the perfect
hockey.
Route 160. Gallipoli s. antwu nces th e
·. I don't feel it's fair for me time to try to forgive those
expansion nf new cnmpute.r ~ o ft ware.
. · to be stuck with all this . I past hlll1S and stat1 fresh .
technology for qualit y and . patient
Dear Annie: I am writing
unprovcment outc·omes.
.·never get a break.! have ev,en
· Mi sys hospice .software ts a hospi~ e
threatened to leave if he does- in response to the letter frdm
. n't stop . We are always finan - "Facing Reality,'' the 14informat ion system de signed to i mpl'll·~ e
year-old
girl
who
is
afraid
of
ciall y in the hole because he
communication amon g Ho~pi c c ~tafr
clinician s and throud1DUI our continuum
has to pay for unitorrns. gas. dying . ·I went through the
·motel, dry-cleaning and wear exact same thing. ·stat1ing at
of care. Thi s documentation software wi ll
age4
and
lasting
well
into
my
enabl
e all &gt;laiT to communicate more
and tear on the car. My hustimel y to improve patients qual ity of care.
band refuses to quit. saying 30s . People said. " You wil.l
get overt(' or, "Ym1 are not
he enjoys it .
. In add.ition to nc" softwa re . th e
Am I stuck with this self· going to Jie for a long time ."
Li febook T-+220 tablet personal compu ter
My fears were quite frecentered man ? How can · I
will be utilited hy each mirse from the
point of referral throu gh th e admi ssion
get him to spend more time quent and very intense. and
with us? I love him but feel fm1unately I was fina ll y put
pro&lt;:ess. The laptops .arc mobile and can
· neglected , and it's obvious on medication thai helped
be U&gt;ed in the pati ent 's horne . skilled
nursing facilities, ass i&gt;tCcl li ving fttcili· he doesn 't care . I'm ready enormous ly. Please tell her
I've been there . too . and it's
to pack it up. Please help . ties. and hospitals. for all adm issions .
nice to know I' m nol the
· Confused Out West .
Sharon Shull. RN. BSN Program
only'onc
.
Faced
Reality'
Dire~;tor
of Holzer Hospice stated . "We
Dear Confused: Of course
Dear faced: Anything
would like th e cnrnmunitv to understand
your husband enjoys this. It
allows him to .play games that be~omes such an obses- .
that we strive to meet J1ur patient anJ
their famil y's needs when Jaccd with a
and escape hi s family sion that it interferes with
life- limiting illness. The quali ty, timeli · responsibilities. If he has a dail y life may require counstressful job, it's Linderstand- selin g
or
medication .
ness. and expertise we stri ve In rned wil l
continue with the new techno logy of our
able he would need to blow T hanks for pointing it out..
otf steam . But it is unfair and
Dear Readers: Today is
Misys program."
Holze r Hospice serves patients in
immature to do so much of it Family Day (casafami lythat you and the chi ldren are . day.org). Studies show that
Athens. Gallia, Jackson. Mei~s. Vinton
Submlned photo
· ahand~ned. The two of you children who eat dinner
and portions of Lawrence a~1d Sciotn
Holzer
Hospice
staff
memberi
who
will
be
using
the
new
computer
techshould work out a compro- with their parents ~ave a
Counties in Ohio . For more information
mise where he referees fewer reduced ri sk of substance nology in their work with those on hospice include Becky Buckley, AN, about Holz-er Hospice services 'o r coungames or just one sp01t. Even . . abu se . Please try to make CHPN, seated , clinical coordinator; Teresa Stewart , AN , CHPN; and Lucy · ties served . pl ea&gt;e cal l 740-446-5074. or
Marcum, secretary.
better. suggest he get meals a family event.
toll free. 1-H00-500-4850 .
· involved in his child ren 's
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
athletic acti vities instead. ·
. Dear Annie: My'26-year- Marcy Sugar, lo11gtime ediold dau ghter, "Carri e." tors of the Atin Landers
pl&lt;ms to marry in a t~w column. Please e-mail your
· months . She has been finan- questions to mmiesmail·
. cia!.lyindependent for years, box@comcast,net, '" write
li ving away from home to: Annie'.~ Mailbox , P.O.
since college. She is paying Box 118190, Chicago, IL
..
l'or her own wedding.
60611. To .find out more
TUPPERS PLAINS Carrie .and her fat he!' have about Annie's Mailbox,
Hyde wa s named
Cindy
· never b~en close. Since ,she and read features by other
, moved away. they get a long Creator.~ Syndicate writers weekly best w.eight· loss
and · Roberta
line, but she has some very and cartoonists, visit tile winner
Henderson
runner-up at a
negative memories from her Creators Syndicate Web
earlier · years when they page at www.crea/ors.com. rece nt meeting ,of TOPS ·
Drs. Thomas and Susan Quinn and Dr. Robyn Sargent
(Take Otf Pmmds Sensibly)
Chapter
#OH
·20 13,
are pleased to announce the addition of Dr. Shane
Coolvil le , atlended by 16
Foster to the practice.
members .
KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
Dr. Foster is a Cum Laude graduate of the Ohio State
Sen·sibly)
members
LaChresia Bogardus . Mary
University College of Optometr;y,
and
Patricia
Cleland
POMEROY
The bers to provide the informaRoush and Allied Families tion for the new volume. As Richmond were .in leeway.
• Doctor Foster Is now a c c.e pting new patients
Henderson was recognized
r of America Association yet, the association cannot
• Most major vision and medic al plans a ccepted
recently held its national accept genealogy as there for regaining her KOPS
Members
are
i·eunion at Rio Grande .
has been no central reposito- statu s .
• Specialty vision services as well as treatment o f
. , There Michael Roush. ry designated to receive the encouraged to record their
eye d isease and injury
: president of the association, informati on . However. since walking and exercise total s
:announced.the kick-offon the compiling family finds are through May for the I0.00
preparation of Volume 5 of quite time con sumin g, fami- mile challenge contest.
the family history. Previous ly members can begin now Leader Pat Snedden read
"Today"
and
"Sick."
vo lumes were printed in to compile their updated
Dianne
Burns
presented
a
. : 1928, 1945 , 1963, and 1979. information to submit' later.
program
on
salt.
• This new volume wi ll include
Updates must include a
At another recent meeting
: updates to previous publi shed reference to a previous val : lines. corrections, and new ume and page number in Pat Hall was weekly best
: lines of the family ·never 'order to kno)V where the new weight-loss winner. KOPS
(Keep Off Pounds Sensibly)
• before published.
information is to be placed.
members
Bogardus ,
: Information
submitied Places of birth. death, marCleland and May Frost were
: may include more than dates riage , and residence should
in leeway.
·
:and places of birth, death, · be included with dates . ·
Fall Rally plans were dis; and marriage. Information
Newly discovered major cussed and members are
• should include place of resi- Meigs · County families asked to take an item for'
: dence . military service. occu- include the Bogard Jlunily. the the tote bag that each chap; pation(s), and education. It Linscott family. the Hayden . ter is to provide for the raf• may also include info011ation fami ly. and some previously fl e. The Octoberfest ih
! such as place ofburial.mem- unconnected Roush lines. · Coolville
on Oct. II was
Fur 'assii·umce ur furtlm· di scus.sed .
: bership in organizations , pol: itics. rel igion , height. hair itifimnatirm, . mntact Keith
Fro st prese nted a pro; color, eye color, awards Ashley, llistarian oj'rhefam - gram on "Fat Genes ." An
t received , cause ofdeath,etc . ily. at (740) 9n-78 74. open discu ssion followed .
! · The association depends Ashley is ni1t accepting com- · Snedden (ead "Everybody,
l entirely upon family mem- pleted lineages at this time. Somebody , Anybody &amp;
!
!--------------------------~--Nobody ." Members will
continue to collect non pe rishable items for th e
. food
pantry : throu gh
November.
Monday ...Mostly sunny. evening .. .Becqming Iight
The group meets every
:Hi ghs in the upp er 70s : and variable. ·
Tuesday at Torch Bapti st
; Northeast winds around 5
1\1esday ...Sunny. lli ghs Church. Weigh-in is from
around 80 .
:mph .
5:15 to 6: 15 p.m. with a
Monday night..,Mostly
Thesday night ... Mostly meeting at 6:30 . For infor:clear. Lows in the lower clear. Lows in the lower mation, call Pat Snedden at
:50s .
Northeast
winds 50s .
Northeast
winds' 662-2633 or attend a free
• arounci' 5 mph tn the · around 5 mph.
meeting.

Clubs and
organizations ·

Other events

Birthdays

:DofA drapes charter for deceased member
CHESTER - The charter
: was draped i·n memory of
Eleanor Leonard at a recent
meeting of Chester Council
· 323 . Daughters of America .
Initimory · work for new
. members, Jud y Buckl ey.
· Bobby Kin g. Samantha
: Kin g, and Sharon Rifil e .
: was held . The commi ssions
of Jo Ann Ritchie as deputy
state councilnr and· Esther
Smith as di stri ct deputy
. state co uncilor we re read.
·Smith was .escorted to th e
:altar where she was. present:ed a gift for her work as
in specting officer of the
Council.
Laura Mae Nice presided
. at the meetin g which
:opened with pledges to the
: flags . scripture. the Lord 's
· Prayer and sl ngmg of the
· National Anthem .
. It was noted that Opal
· Eichinger and Erma Cleland
are not well and announced
. that friend ship night will be
:held on Oct 2 1 with u
: potluck at 6 p.m.

Count y Board of MR/DD
reg ular meetin g. -+:30 p.m..
Carleton School.

. Church events

0 'Bleness receives .
ACR accreditation

Submlned photo
: Ramona MacGregor, RT (R) (T), at right, senior technologist of
· O'Bleness Memorial Hospital's mammography· services, discusses
·examination techn iques with Linda Weiss.

Monday, September 22,

Community Calendar

.

Michael Dill
(ce nter) grew .
some giants in
his garden this
year when it
came to cabbage. Pictured
is Paige Dill (far
left) holding a
six pound head
of cabbage
which was 29
inches around
and Kaylee
Phillips (far .
right) holding a
head of cabbage weighing
five pounds and
measuring 27
inches around.

Page A3

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740-742-2511 or 1-800-837-8217

Hospice

Losers
recognized ·
by TOPS·

:Roush family announces
new history volume

!Local Weather .

exoansion in technolouv

Your sight is
our.focus.
.

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The Daily Sentinel

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(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

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Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

:------------------------------------Congress shall make no law respecting an
establisl1ment of religion, or prohibiting the
: free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the'
: people peaceably to assemblf!, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

~ TODAY IN HISTORY
: Today is Monday. Sept. 22. the 266th day of 2008. There
are I 00 days left in the year. Autumn arrives at I I :44 a.m.
Eastern time.
' Today's Highlight in History: On Sept. 22, 1776, Nathan
H 1
h
d
·
b h B··h d ·
h
: a e was · ange as a spy Y t e ntos
unng t e
. ·
Revolutionary War.
· On this date : In 17·89, Congress authorized the office of
Postmaster-General.
In 1862 , President Lincoln issued the preliminary
· a11 saves
1
· re be1
Emancipation Proclamation , dec Ianng
on
states should be free as of Jan. I , 1863.
·
.In 1927 , Gene Tunney successfully defended his heavyweight boxing title against Jack Dempsey in the famou s
"long-count" fight in Chicago.
In 1938. the musical comedy revue "Hellzapoppin' ,"
-starring Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson. began a three-year
run on Broadway.
In 1958. President Eisenhower's assistant', Shennan
Adams, resigned amid charges of improperly using his
i nlluence .to help a businessman.
, In 1958, the television show "Peter Gunn," starring Craig
.. ' ·
_Stevens, premiered on NBC.
In 1964, the musical " Fiddler on the Roof' orx:ned on
Broadway, beginning a run of 3,242 performances.
In 1975 . Sara Jane Moore attempted to shoot President
Ford outside a San Francisco hotel, but missed.
· In 19!!0, tlj:: Persian Gulf conllict between Iran and Iraq
erupted into full -scale war. ·
In 1988, Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney apol .ogized for the World War II internment of Japanese.Canadians, and promised compensation ..
Five years ago: A suicide car bombing outside U.N.
offices in Baghdad killed an Iraqi policeman. NATO
. ~llie s picked Dutch Foreign Minister Jaap de Hoop
,Scheffer as the alliance's next secretary-generaL Actor
,Gordon Jump died at age 71.
.
One year ago: Secretary of State Condoleez~a Ric~ rnet
:with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri ai-Maliki at the United
Nations in their first face-to-face talks since a Baghdad
shootout involving guards from aU .S. company protecting
American diplomats. Marcel Marceau. the master of mime.
died in Pari s at age 84.
, Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hal! of Fame manager
;Tommy Lasorda is 81 . NBA Commissioner Dayid Stern is
66. Musi ~ ian King Sunny Ade is 62. Captain Mark Phillips
is 60 . Actress Shari Belafonte is 54. Singer Debby Boone is
52. Country singer June Forester (The Forester Sisters} is
.52. Singer Nick Cave is 51. Rock singer Johnette
Napolitano is 51. Opera singer Andrea Bocelli is 50. Singer.musician Joan 'Jett is 50. Actress Catherine Oxenberg is 47 .
.Actor·Scott Baio is 47 . Actor Rob Stone is 46 . Rock musi.cian Matt Sharp is 39. Rhythni·and-blues singer Big Rube
(Society of Soul) is 37. Actor Tom Felton is 21.
Thought for Today: 'The autumn always gets me badly,
~s it breaks into colours. I want to go south, where there is
no autumn. where the cold doesn't crouch over one like -a
snow-leopard waiting to pounce ." - D.H . Lawrence, ·
_English author (1885- 1930).

-

Monday, September 22, 2008

Local Briefs

Jllle are losing Europe to Islam

Women needed for
breast cancer discussion

leftist media and governing Greece. Enlightenmeiu and
With Wall Street convulsroots :
&lt;'Stablishments that are Judeo-Chri stian
ong. and the White House
increasingly dependent on .Europe is a n111tincnt of casrace intensifying , the quesIslamic suppoo1 . by the way tle' and &lt;:athedral s. not of
tion "\Vho lost Europe" is on
- have succes&gt; fully sian- mosques and mi narets."
no one's lips, let alone minds .
. dered these· parti es as
or ~ nur'~. eve n as
Indeed. the question begs
Dilima
another: "Is Europe lost?"
"extrcm i' '' :· "rae ists :· ''lios- Dewinter admits Ill fearing
cists'' and ''Nazis .''
·
the Islamization of Europe .
West
The answer to the second
Is ad vocati ng freedom of h&lt;: and hi s colleagues act
question is , "No. not yet ."
speech "e xt reone" or "fas- with excepti onal politicul - ·
And losing Europe. I would
cist'"' Is opposing Isla on's and physical - bravery in
add, is by no mean s
onevitable. But that doesn't can't believe I'm writing that law. which knows no race. rallying voters against it.
mean the continent isn't cur- phrase). Among the first ofli- "raci st" '! Is . supporting Thi s comin g weekend . he
Israel (w hich these parties joins seven~! other politirently hell-bent to accommoial verdicts we1e those do far more · than othe r cians on the Sh&gt;1ria-l1ghting
date the dictates of Islao1 ic cupholding
the Islamic belief
law, bit by increasingly larg- in male supremacy. These European parties) " Nazi "~ right in Etirope - among
er bit. Such a· course of incl uded an inheritance deci - The ou trageou sly empty them two other men I interaccommodation.
barring sion in which male heirs epithets of th e Islamo- ''iewed . Mario Borghezio of
reversal, wi ll on ly ·hasten received twice as much as socialist left seem calculat- Lega Nnrd . which is part of
Bernard Lewis' famous pre- female: and several cases of ed to stop thought cold and Italy's ruling coa lition , and
diction that Europe wi ll be domestic violence in which trigger a massive rejection Heinz-Christian Strac he of
Islamic by century's end.
husbands were acqroitted and · re llex. In this way. resis- Austria·_, Freedom Party,
And what do I mean by · wives' charges were dropped. tan~e becomes unatJ1ema . which i' expected to become
"accommod ation"? Well. to
In a decidedly minuscule and Islamic law. unchecked. part ·of Austria's rulin g coalitake one tiny example. one minority. I say we ignore spreads across Em·ope .
ti on after elect ions this
Does
that
sound mon th
snowllake in a blizzard of the spread of Islamic law
in Co logne ~
such examples , there are across Europe, from the " lslamophobic"? You bet. Germany . In that ancient
schools in Belgi um that not schoolroom to the cou rt- How·can anyone who values cathedral city. where the city
onl y serve hala I food ' to room, at our peril . particu' freedom · of conscie nce , council recently approved
Musl im an d non•Muslim larl y given that in so doing . cyuality before the law and the construction of a longalik e (old news) , . but. we .also ig nore the vital other such·Western jewels not .:on troversi al mega-mosque ,
accord ing to a recent Frendo political parties that ha ve have a healthy fear of Islam ic these men wi ll address a
magazine report , no longer arisen in reac tion to this law, which values none of · rally agai nst Eu ropean
teach authors deemed offen- threat to Western civi li za- these things? Incredibly. this Islamizatio n. (Contrary to
sive to Muslims. including tion. Wh y . at our peri(?. is an emotion that is supposed initial repoots. Jean-Marie Le
Voltaire and Diderot; the
Because the same type uf to be suppressed - and, in Pen will not be at the demon.
same is increasiilgly true of liberty-s hrinking. Sharia- Europe. on pain of prosecu- stration.) The Shari a- fighters
Darwin. (Don't ·even ask drivetl aCcommodation is tion . Indeed. because Filij) expect I .500 demonstrators.
Dewinter admitted to such Police
ex pect
40.000
· happening here.
about the Holocaust.)
For a more substantial ,
Of the parties dedicated to "Islamophobia" in an inter- counter-de mons!rators .
These arc frightening odds
ondeed. keystone example of resist ing Islamization that ·I view. his pm1y. the Vlaams
Bclang.
has
been
taken
to
- a metaphor, perhaps , for
accommodation, we can examined in Eu rope last
co
uot
in
Belgium
on
charges
Europe
's chances of staving
summer,
the
most
promi
sing
look to England , where, it
of
racism.
and.
if
convicted.
law. Who ·lost
off
Islamic
pains me to write, Sharia ran ge from the sizei\b lc
wi
ll
be
effecti
vely
shut
down
Eu'
m
pe?
If
it
does happen,
courts are now officially part Vlaams Belang in Belgium
tin y Sweden through defundin g · by .the we certainly won't be able
of the Briti sh legal system . to . the
to say we were n't warned. ·
According to press reports Democrats, and inclrode the government.
That
has
n't
stop
ped
!Diana West is a colum:
Leg:i
Nord
in
Italy.
the
Paoty
this week, the British governmeAt has quietly, craven- for Freedom of Geert Dewinter. who. in ~ ~cc eptin g nist .fr1r Tlw Ww:loington
ly elevated five Shari a courts Wilders in Holland , the an award at a memorial Tim es. Slo e is the aurlior of
to the level of tribunal hear- Danish Peop le's Party, the event ded icated to Oriana "Th e Dearlo o( rile Grownongs. thus making their rui- Swiss People's Pao1y and the Fa llaci in Florence , last up : flow Ameiica 's Arrested
Austrian Freedom Party . week. said: " lslamophnhia Dere/of&gt;lll&lt;'lll Is Brii1ging
ongs legally binding.
Such
parties are unknown is not mere!y a phenomenon Do"'"
Western
It may be difficult to quanor
ignored
.
Worse,
they
of
unparal
leled
fear.
but
it
is
...
rmd
has a
here,
Cil'ili:at
ion
ttfy the impact of ·a Voltaire
vacuum on the continent , but are shunned. Why? I believe the duty of every one who h/og at Wallt/1\!I'S/ .net. She
we can instantly see the it's because their respective wants to safeguard Europe's ca n be contacted via
onequities of British Sharia (I political opponents - the fu ture. Europe means Rome, . diauo H't&gt;sf @ 1·eri::.rm .net .)
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t~::J.S:::r:fo~~~
1j W"IIJ
''~' H'i'Nittt•
52 Weeks

'

'32.26
'64 .20
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Outalde Meigs County
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

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WHO?

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'53.55
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Dedicated
Dear Editor:
In a time when senior citizens und
handicapped persons some.times feel
forgotten, it is so uplifting and encouraging to know that there are people
dedicated to the goal of insuring that
quality housing is available for the
elderly and handicapped.
The apartment complex the Maples,
located here in Pomeroy, is owned and
managed . by such dedicated people.
Last year, The Maples had the entire
roof replaced, all the hallways were
painted ·with bright and cheerful colors, new carpeting was installed in &lt;til
the hallways and in the elevator. It was
an exciting time, seeing so many wonderful changes and improve ment s
being m'ade in our home daily.
Beautification , however. is not the
only quality goal made by
Si lverHeels, owners of The Maples
and its em ployees. Safety for all the
lpeop le who live here is alway' on the
flop of the list of priorities. Recently. ·
the Fire Marshal 's Office of Ohio
was contacted and invited to The
Maples for an inspection. There were
a few things that could be impro ve~
upon and SilverHeel's sprang into

action to make our home safer.
We who live at The Maples wish to
publicly express our gratefulness and
our deep appreciation to SilverHeels.
and it 's employees. for the way our •
home is maintained inside and out aod
more importantly, ·for being committed to the goal of insuring the safety of
those who live here at The .Maples!
· Rev. Mury L. Friend ,
·
Preside11t, Te1talll's Orga11izatio11
of The Maples Apartments

out a problem . The last time a group of
·people follow ed the ir chari smatic
leader they ended up drinking KoolAid.aid in South America. ·
In the future , pl ea~e use smaller
words so us lesser people can understand what you're talkin g about with
just one .reading. At least this time I
only had to look up one word and you
are way off the mark on that one!
Dave Warner '
Rutla11d

Here's the point

·Pleased
with change

Dear Editor:
JeiT Fields: In reply to yours of Sept.
15 .
'
'
Jeff. · I think you mi ssed the poini.
Apparently I didn ' t use big enough
words . I had to read your letter three
times ttl make sure I knew what you
were saying.
Now - to the busio1ess at hand . For
sure "WE THE PEOPLE" do not have
oror country anymore. We are paying
roo ' ometlling WC· arc losing. The
media and the lobbyists are runnin g
things currentl y. But at least we agree, ·
I th ink , on takin g a good look at· the
candid ates. You will noti ce I didn ' t
sugges t who to vote for I onlyyointed

Dear Editor:
Recentl y I visited the Riverview
Cemetery and was pleasantly surprised at the condition of the grounds.
I want to thank the Middleport
Cemetery offic ials for a job we ll done.
I visited on Memori al Day th is year
and was d1 sappoonted on the cond ition
of the grounds. and wrote a le tter tn
The Senti ne l rega rdin g my r,·c lings .
You publos hed my letter, and appmentl y th; s troggered a pos iti ve
response .
Betty Allensworth
Groveport

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This year
Ashlyn Wolfe.
12, participated in a youth
hunt on her
· ·
Submllled pholp
grandfather's
Phillip
.Russell
and
Linda
Russell,
center,
represent
members
of
the
Athens
Chapter
175
Order
of
Eastern
Star in donatfarm during
ing
new
stuffed
animals
to
the
Pediatric
Departme'
n
t
at
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital.
The
Eastern
Star
was
able
to purchase
turkey season
and came
· these items with the help of Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouse .and Wai-Mart of Mason, The Russells are currently the worthy
away with this · patron and worthy matron for the Athens Chapter 175. They have devoted 35 years of service to the Eastern Star.
Acceptong the toys for PVH is Denise Queen. RN, Obstetrics &amp; Pediatrics Supervisor.
gobbler. Last
Y!!ar during
deer season,
Ashlyn shot a
button buck
with a muzOlder · adults make up
without food''
badly with someth ing you
zleloader.
nearly 13 percent of the
• When should I stop tak- are already tJkin g: .
Ashlyn is the
ing the medici ne''
population . (21 percent in
Some older adul ts on
daughter of
Meigs
County)
but
they
buy
•
What
side
effects
or
. inmmes may under
fixed
Charlie and
33
percent
of
all
prescripallergic
reactio
ns
can
I
use their medications- split1 1(~:~·.:1.'~ Elizabeth
and
40
perce
nt
or
Barbara
expect'!
What
should
I
do
if
tion
drugs
ting
pills or skipp ing dosesWolfe.,
all
over-the-counter
mediI
have
a
problem
·
&gt;
·
becau'e their prescription s
Submtlled pholo
cines, according to the Ohio
Riley
• Are there foods. drinks, are too expensive to take as
other medi cines or activities directed . Talk to your
Assoc iation of Countv
Hea lth
to avoid while I'm t akin~ hea lthcare provider to see if
Behavioral
Authorities.
thi s medi cine?
' there are lowe r cost alternaStudi es also show that fo llowing the drug's instruc• Will any herbal supple- ti ves to · the drug you've
most older American s live tions about when 10 take it. ments/vitamins/over the · been prescribed. There are
from Page AI
with at least one chronic Adverse dru g interac tions c·ounter medica tions interact also fe deral and state programs available to help with
condition , take multiple occur when a drug interacts wi th this medi cine?
Craig Butler, di strict chief and sent off to Columbus.''
medications, consult several wo·th another drug, food , or
• Where and how should it prescription dru g costs .
of the Ohio EPA's Southeast
Yandrich added: 'Ton healthcare providers and use alcohol and can change the be stored?
Contac t your area agency
Ohio district office.
bound to enforce the ·laws more than one pharmacy.
way the drug acts in the
You can help yo ur health- on aging at 1-866-243-5678
Butler said: "We didn 't do and rules on the books right
If you ac;Id to this_ mi~ a body. For example, grape- care professionals help you· to .learn more.
anything different! y than we · now, beyond that my opin- lack of co~munocatoon fruit juice can change the by making a list of .all the
Ohio' s Best Rx can help
would've done with any ions on .that (the AMP-Ohio between
patoents
and ....way some drugs work .
medication s you are taking, Ohioans of any age save an
other one (SEJ report) . It ·project) really don't matter in heal~hcare provoders abour
The best way to avoid including
prescription average of 33 percent on
goes to the district supervi- terms of personal 'feelings."
medtcauo~s, the stage os set drug-related health prob- drugs, over the counter prescriptions. depending on
sor for approval and then to ·· The physical SEJ report for potenttally senous drug- · Iems is to Jearn all you can medications, dietary supple- the med ication . Ohioans
the central office to put all is not required by Ohio rule related pro~lems , mcludong about the medicines you ments and herbal remedies. may apply by telephone for
the pieces together. Mike did · or law but is a part of the addotoonal ollness, hospotal- use. Your best resources for Be sure to include the the drug discount card at 1what he thought he could get overall review process ozatwn and eve n death. this information are your dosages and how often you 866-923-7879
( I -866done, his supervisor Bruce when it comes to the waste- Nationally, half · of all healthcare providers and take each medication. Your 9BESTRX) or online at
looked at it.. .it was reviewed water permit.
a.dverse med1catoon reac- . phannacist. Ask them :
primary care provider www.OhioBestR x .org .
lions occur among older
• What am 1 taking thi s should re view all of your
The National Council on
adults and more than a quar- medicine for?
medication s ar least annual - Patient Information and
ter (28 percent) of all older
• Does this new prescrip- ly to make sure you are only Ed ucation (NC PIE) develfrom Page Al
adult hos~otalo zat oons result tion mean I should stop tak- taking those you need.
oped the Medication Use
me~ocatoon
problems.
ing
any
other
medi
cine
s
I'm
You
can
also
avoid
Safety
Training (MUST) for
from
Tripp ; Tuppers Plains . Tea;" Sharon Dean, "Rose;"
The agong process , com- taking now ?
·
adverse drug interactions by Seniors,." program to help
"Horse Farm ;" Harold Donna Wilson, Middleport,
boned
woth
changes
111
•
How
should
it
be
taken
fillin
g all your prescriptions ol der adults avoid medicaBumgarner,
" Untitled;" "Nantucket Gate."
metabolism
,
can
have
a
arid
how
much
?
at
one
pharmacy. tion misuse and errors and
Shirley Hamm , Racine,
Drawing:
Elizabeth
• What if I mi ss a dose''
Pharmacies have a built-in manage co·mmon side
"The Rose ."
Hamilton , "Indian;" Vickie tremendous impact on the
• How often and what process of drug interaction effects. Free materi als are
Landscape . Photography : Taylor, Rutland", " Winter way dru gs affect an older
Sharon Dean , Racine , Wonderland ,"
Elizabeth person's body . One out of time of day? For exampl e. alerts. If yo u fill all of your ava ilable from www.mustevery three peopl e ex peri - 'does tl1ree times a day mean · prescription s at one pharma- forseniors.org.
"Moulton Barn ;" Jo Hill , Hamilton, "Flowers."
(Barbara E. Riley is the
Long Bottom, "Lighting the
Mixed Medi a/Other: Cat ence' at least one medicine- with meals or within a 24 cy. they ha ve all the necesrelated
problem
.
such
as
hour
period?
sary
information
to
alert
you
Director
of the Ohio
Way:
Underground Moon , Racine, "Mushroom."
over
use,
under
u~e
or
not
•
Should
I
take
with
or
if
a
medication
will
interact
Depamne11t of Aging.)
Railroad ;"
Constance
Honorable mention honFowler, Racine, "Along the ors were awarded to Lula
Ohio River."
Tobin , Bobbi DeLong. Eric
Photography,
Other: Pierce. Vanessa Folmer and
Peggy Crane , "Two for Donna Wilson .

Responds

BARAC~

'

I

Talk about your prescriptions

NAME.

OUR
READERS' VIEWS
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The Daily Sentinel
Correction Polley

Donating toys

POMEROY ~ . The address of Dale. Riffle , Pomeroy
downtown vil lage worker who is recuperating from auto
accident injuries is 42994 S.R. 124 . Lot 22. Pomeroy. Ohio
45769 . Cards may be sent to him there. It was incorrectl y
listed in a Friday Sentinel story.

I DIDN'T .·

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Correction

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

www.mydailysentinel.com

GALLIPOLIS - Re searchers from The Ohio State
U~ivers ity are seeking women who have been diagnosed
woth breast cancer and have completed treatment within the
last year to partiCipate in a 90-minute focus group to discuss a communication tool that has been developed for
breast cancer patient s. Paoticipants will receive a $25 WalMart gift card for time and participation. The group focus
session woll take place at noon, tomorrow at the Holzer
.Center for Cancer Care. Call Robyn Hauser at 1-877-3042273 for more inform;nion .

IM SORRY...

Letters to the editor are welcome . They should be less
)han 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing , must be
'signed, and include address and tel«phone number. No
·unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
;good taste , addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept.~d for publication.

.

Monday, September 22, 2oo8

Page i\4.

Pink from Page Al
grant to provide qualifying will be available for osteoMeigs County women with porosis. Door prizes will
free mammograms. Meigs also be presented .
County women have an
Annual income guidelines
opportunity to take advan- for the "Think Pink" program
tage 9f these free mammo- for women wishing to receive
grams and other free health a free mammogram a('e: Must
screenings from 9:30 a.m. - . be 3549 ,living in a fanlily of
3 p.m. on Tuesday. Oct. 7 at one with an annual income of
the
Reed sville
Fire up to $31 ,200, or a fainil y of
.two with an. income up ·to
Department.
· A mobile mammography $42 ,000, a family of three
unit from The Ohio State with an income up to
University 's James Cancer · $52 ,800, a family of four
Center will be administer- with an income up to
ing the mammograms and $63,600, a family of live with
those Meigs County women an income up to $74,400.
participating in the free .Women who .can't make the
program Reedsville clinic can still take
mammograp hy
will also receive a $20 gaso- advantage of the free mam. mograms at Holzer Clinic
line card.
In addition to ihe mam- Meigs, O' Bieness Memorial
mograms , other free ser- Hospital or Doctor's Hospital
vices offered at MCCI's in Nelsonville which honor
women 's health clinic will MCCI vo.uchers..
include cholesterol and glu Wo men with Medicare ,
cose with ·on-site results other medical insurance and
· given, a nurse practi tioner those that are self-pay are
providing private clinical . eligible to sched1,1ie appointbreast exams, an exercise ments at the Reedsville clinphysiologist providing body ic . Also, if you don't fall
fat analysis and exercise lit- within the guidelines to
ness information , the coun- receive a free mammogram,
ty extension office wi II pro- there are other programs
vide nutritional inform(l.tion MCCI may refer you to in
on healthy snacks , kits to order to receive one at the
screen for colon cancer will Reedsville clinic or elsebe available along with where .
information on the disease,
Cd/1 992-2161 or 992the Dex -a-Scan screenin g 3853 for more information.

Medicine

Hip replacement usually successful, infection a risk

Question: In March 200/i,
I fell and fractured my left
hip and received a rota/ hip
rep/acemem . I'm 8 / years
old. I have two questions
tJ.!at you could help me with .
What is the average life of
an artificial hip ? I understand artificial hips can
become infected. flow does
this happen ? What can l do .
to avoid inRction ? flow is
infection in hips treated ?
Answer:
More than ·
230 ,000 peopl e have hip
replacement surgeries in the
United States annuall y. It is
most often performed on
patients who have severe
arthritis or those who ha ve
had hip fractures. It restores
mobility in both cases.
Most people who have a
hip arthropl asty do very
well. They are in the hospital for five to seven days ,
and usually begin physical
therapy
shortl y
after
surgery. Physical thenopy is
continued after going .home.
Normal . pain free. activity is
-the outcome in most people
in just a couple of months .
Because the hip is such a
major weight bearing bone. it
is uncommon to see a hip
replacement in a person under
60 years old . Physicall Y,
active people in this age
bracket who have hip problems are often candidates for
another type of surgery called

hip resurfaci ng .
from another part of the
At your age, yoror replace- body that has become iolfectment hip is likely to be good ed. That's why it's important
for the rest of your life. That's for those with gum disease.
because the average "new pneumonia or urinary tract
hip" can last up to 20 years. infections to have prompt
During that time you should · treatment:
have full use of your limb.
It is also a good idea to conBut excessive activity can suit your dentist about using
cause the joint to wear out or antibiotics before routine dendislocate ahead of schedule.
tal work to prevent the spread
You ask about post-opera- of bacteria from your gums to
tivc infections from hip your hip . Patients with dinarthroplasty. Up to 2 percent betes or rheumatoid arthritis
of all initi al hip repl ace ments are twice as likely to get a late
do become infected . The fig- infection.
~re _is sl ightly hi gh~; for
Finally. in an effort at full .
revosoon operatoons
on disclosure , I should menti on
whoch a prevwusly mstalled · that there are other possible
replace ment JOmt wears out complications from ' th is
and os then resurfaced or type of surgery. These
replaced. As the_figures ondo- include blood clots in tl1e
c~_te. onfectoons on the om me- legs. dislocation of ti'le new
doate post-operatove penod joint, as well as fracture in
~re _not a ~o mm on occur- the · femu r.' Fortunately,
oencc. Most. patoents are these problems are also not
goven antobootocs before and very common . .
after surgery to prevent them .
·A late postoperative infection - occurring anywhere
from months to yeurs later
~nlerson 'Mc'DanieC
- is possible. but relatively
'Fuliera( ?fomt
rare . The artificial hip , like
Adam McDaniel
any other foreign tissue. can
&amp; J tun es Ander"S&lt;:m
cause inflam mation and then
DIRECTORS
become infected. Sometimes
this process starts as a result
of bacteria that was introduced at· the time of the operPomeroy
ation and then lays dormant
992-5444
for a lon g period of time. In
"' ": ~., andersonnu·dunit I.e om
other cases. bacteri a travel

Family Medicine® is a
weekly colunm. To' submit
questions, write ro Martha A.
Simpw11, D.O. ; M .B.A.,
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
11ox 110, Athens, Ohio
4570/, or vitt e-maillo readerquestions ®familymedi·
cir~enew.,,org. Medical informatioll in this column is pro'
vided as an educatio11al service o11fy. II does not replace
the judgment of your per.sollal phy.,ician, who should
be relied on to diagnose alld
recommend treatment for
any medical conditions. Past
columns are available online
at
wwwfamilymedicinenews.org.

. Tom Karrof
Karr Contracting
for pu rc~asin~g
my pen of

Mark~t

~-,\, ·

Rabb1ts . 4~ ...~~
&amp;
.Thanks

for supporting the
4-H Youth of Meigs Co.
~KelseY. Johnson

•

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OP-I NION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily -Sentinel

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(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

:------------------------------------Congress shall make no law respecting an
establisl1ment of religion, or prohibiting the
: free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the'
: people peaceably to assemblf!, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

~ TODAY IN HISTORY
: Today is Monday. Sept. 22. the 266th day of 2008. There
are I 00 days left in the year. Autumn arrives at I I :44 a.m.
Eastern time.
' Today's Highlight in History: On Sept. 22, 1776, Nathan
H 1
h
d
·
b h B··h d ·
h
: a e was · ange as a spy Y t e ntos
unng t e
. ·
Revolutionary War.
· On this date : In 17·89, Congress authorized the office of
Postmaster-General.
In 1862 , President Lincoln issued the preliminary
· a11 saves
1
· re be1
Emancipation Proclamation , dec Ianng
on
states should be free as of Jan. I , 1863.
·
.In 1927 , Gene Tunney successfully defended his heavyweight boxing title against Jack Dempsey in the famou s
"long-count" fight in Chicago.
In 1938. the musical comedy revue "Hellzapoppin' ,"
-starring Ole Olsen and Chic Johnson. began a three-year
run on Broadway.
In 1958. President Eisenhower's assistant', Shennan
Adams, resigned amid charges of improperly using his
i nlluence .to help a businessman.
, In 1958, the television show "Peter Gunn," starring Craig
.. ' ·
_Stevens, premiered on NBC.
In 1964, the musical " Fiddler on the Roof' orx:ned on
Broadway, beginning a run of 3,242 performances.
In 1975 . Sara Jane Moore attempted to shoot President
Ford outside a San Francisco hotel, but missed.
· In 19!!0, tlj:: Persian Gulf conllict between Iran and Iraq
erupted into full -scale war. ·
In 1988, Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney apol .ogized for the World War II internment of Japanese.Canadians, and promised compensation ..
Five years ago: A suicide car bombing outside U.N.
offices in Baghdad killed an Iraqi policeman. NATO
. ~llie s picked Dutch Foreign Minister Jaap de Hoop
,Scheffer as the alliance's next secretary-generaL Actor
,Gordon Jump died at age 71.
.
One year ago: Secretary of State Condoleez~a Ric~ rnet
:with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri ai-Maliki at the United
Nations in their first face-to-face talks since a Baghdad
shootout involving guards from aU .S. company protecting
American diplomats. Marcel Marceau. the master of mime.
died in Pari s at age 84.
, Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hal! of Fame manager
;Tommy Lasorda is 81 . NBA Commissioner Dayid Stern is
66. Musi ~ ian King Sunny Ade is 62. Captain Mark Phillips
is 60 . Actress Shari Belafonte is 54. Singer Debby Boone is
52. Country singer June Forester (The Forester Sisters} is
.52. Singer Nick Cave is 51. Rock singer Johnette
Napolitano is 51. Opera singer Andrea Bocelli is 50. Singer.musician Joan 'Jett is 50. Actress Catherine Oxenberg is 47 .
.Actor·Scott Baio is 47 . Actor Rob Stone is 46 . Rock musi.cian Matt Sharp is 39. Rhythni·and-blues singer Big Rube
(Society of Soul) is 37. Actor Tom Felton is 21.
Thought for Today: 'The autumn always gets me badly,
~s it breaks into colours. I want to go south, where there is
no autumn. where the cold doesn't crouch over one like -a
snow-leopard waiting to pounce ." - D.H . Lawrence, ·
_English author (1885- 1930).

-

Monday, September 22, 2008

Local Briefs

Jllle are losing Europe to Islam

Women needed for
breast cancer discussion

leftist media and governing Greece. Enlightenmeiu and
With Wall Street convulsroots :
&lt;'Stablishments that are Judeo-Chri stian
ong. and the White House
increasingly dependent on .Europe is a n111tincnt of casrace intensifying , the quesIslamic suppoo1 . by the way tle' and &lt;:athedral s. not of
tion "\Vho lost Europe" is on
- have succes&gt; fully sian- mosques and mi narets."
no one's lips, let alone minds .
. dered these· parti es as
or ~ nur'~. eve n as
Indeed. the question begs
Dilima
another: "Is Europe lost?"
"extrcm i' '' :· "rae ists :· ''lios- Dewinter admits Ill fearing
cists'' and ''Nazis .''
·
the Islamization of Europe .
West
The answer to the second
Is ad vocati ng freedom of h&lt;: and hi s colleagues act
question is , "No. not yet ."
speech "e xt reone" or "fas- with excepti onal politicul - ·
And losing Europe. I would
cist'"' Is opposing Isla on's and physical - bravery in
add, is by no mean s
onevitable. But that doesn't can't believe I'm writing that law. which knows no race. rallying voters against it.
mean the continent isn't cur- phrase). Among the first ofli- "raci st" '! Is . supporting Thi s comin g weekend . he
Israel (w hich these parties joins seven~! other politirently hell-bent to accommoial verdicts we1e those do far more · than othe r cians on the Sh&gt;1ria-l1ghting
date the dictates of Islao1 ic cupholding
the Islamic belief
law, bit by increasingly larg- in male supremacy. These European parties) " Nazi "~ right in Etirope - among
er bit. Such a· course of incl uded an inheritance deci - The ou trageou sly empty them two other men I interaccommodation.
barring sion in which male heirs epithets of th e Islamo- ''iewed . Mario Borghezio of
reversal, wi ll on ly ·hasten received twice as much as socialist left seem calculat- Lega Nnrd . which is part of
Bernard Lewis' famous pre- female: and several cases of ed to stop thought cold and Italy's ruling coa lition , and
diction that Europe wi ll be domestic violence in which trigger a massive rejection Heinz-Christian Strac he of
Islamic by century's end.
husbands were acqroitted and · re llex. In this way. resis- Austria·_, Freedom Party,
And what do I mean by · wives' charges were dropped. tan~e becomes unatJ1ema . which i' expected to become
"accommod ation"? Well. to
In a decidedly minuscule and Islamic law. unchecked. part ·of Austria's rulin g coalitake one tiny example. one minority. I say we ignore spreads across Em·ope .
ti on after elect ions this
Does
that
sound mon th
snowllake in a blizzard of the spread of Islamic law
in Co logne ~
such examples , there are across Europe, from the " lslamophobic"? You bet. Germany . In that ancient
schools in Belgi um that not schoolroom to the cou rt- How·can anyone who values cathedral city. where the city
onl y serve hala I food ' to room, at our peril . particu' freedom · of conscie nce , council recently approved
Musl im an d non•Muslim larl y given that in so doing . cyuality before the law and the construction of a longalik e (old news) , . but. we .also ig nore the vital other such·Western jewels not .:on troversi al mega-mosque ,
accord ing to a recent Frendo political parties that ha ve have a healthy fear of Islam ic these men wi ll address a
magazine report , no longer arisen in reac tion to this law, which values none of · rally agai nst Eu ropean
teach authors deemed offen- threat to Western civi li za- these things? Incredibly. this Islamizatio n. (Contrary to
sive to Muslims. including tion. Wh y . at our peri(?. is an emotion that is supposed initial repoots. Jean-Marie Le
Voltaire and Diderot; the
Because the same type uf to be suppressed - and, in Pen will not be at the demon.
same is increasiilgly true of liberty-s hrinking. Sharia- Europe. on pain of prosecu- stration.) The Shari a- fighters
Darwin. (Don't ·even ask drivetl aCcommodation is tion . Indeed. because Filij) expect I .500 demonstrators.
Dewinter admitted to such Police
ex pect
40.000
· happening here.
about the Holocaust.)
For a more substantial ,
Of the parties dedicated to "Islamophobia" in an inter- counter-de mons!rators .
These arc frightening odds
ondeed. keystone example of resist ing Islamization that ·I view. his pm1y. the Vlaams
Bclang.
has
been
taken
to
- a metaphor, perhaps , for
accommodation, we can examined in Eu rope last
co
uot
in
Belgium
on
charges
Europe
's chances of staving
summer,
the
most
promi
sing
look to England , where, it
of
racism.
and.
if
convicted.
law. Who ·lost
off
Islamic
pains me to write, Sharia ran ge from the sizei\b lc
wi
ll
be
effecti
vely
shut
down
Eu'
m
pe?
If
it
does happen,
courts are now officially part Vlaams Belang in Belgium
tin y Sweden through defundin g · by .the we certainly won't be able
of the Briti sh legal system . to . the
to say we were n't warned. ·
According to press reports Democrats, and inclrode the government.
That
has
n't
stop
ped
!Diana West is a colum:
Leg:i
Nord
in
Italy.
the
Paoty
this week, the British governmeAt has quietly, craven- for Freedom of Geert Dewinter. who. in ~ ~cc eptin g nist .fr1r Tlw Ww:loington
ly elevated five Shari a courts Wilders in Holland , the an award at a memorial Tim es. Slo e is the aurlior of
to the level of tribunal hear- Danish Peop le's Party, the event ded icated to Oriana "Th e Dearlo o( rile Grownongs. thus making their rui- Swiss People's Pao1y and the Fa llaci in Florence , last up : flow Ameiica 's Arrested
Austrian Freedom Party . week. said: " lslamophnhia Dere/of&gt;lll&lt;'lll Is Brii1ging
ongs legally binding.
Such
parties are unknown is not mere!y a phenomenon Do"'"
Western
It may be difficult to quanor
ignored
.
Worse,
they
of
unparal
leled
fear.
but
it
is
...
rmd
has a
here,
Cil'ili:at
ion
ttfy the impact of ·a Voltaire
vacuum on the continent , but are shunned. Why? I believe the duty of every one who h/og at Wallt/1\!I'S/ .net. She
we can instantly see the it's because their respective wants to safeguard Europe's ca n be contacted via
onequities of British Sharia (I political opponents - the fu ture. Europe means Rome, . diauo H't&gt;sf @ 1·eri::.rm .net .)
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Dedicated
Dear Editor:
In a time when senior citizens und
handicapped persons some.times feel
forgotten, it is so uplifting and encouraging to know that there are people
dedicated to the goal of insuring that
quality housing is available for the
elderly and handicapped.
The apartment complex the Maples,
located here in Pomeroy, is owned and
managed . by such dedicated people.
Last year, The Maples had the entire
roof replaced, all the hallways were
painted ·with bright and cheerful colors, new carpeting was installed in &lt;til
the hallways and in the elevator. It was
an exciting time, seeing so many wonderful changes and improve ment s
being m'ade in our home daily.
Beautification , however. is not the
only quality goal made by
Si lverHeels, owners of The Maples
and its em ployees. Safety for all the
lpeop le who live here is alway' on the
flop of the list of priorities. Recently. ·
the Fire Marshal 's Office of Ohio
was contacted and invited to The
Maples for an inspection. There were
a few things that could be impro ve~
upon and SilverHeel's sprang into

action to make our home safer.
We who live at The Maples wish to
publicly express our gratefulness and
our deep appreciation to SilverHeels.
and it 's employees. for the way our •
home is maintained inside and out aod
more importantly, ·for being committed to the goal of insuring the safety of
those who live here at The .Maples!
· Rev. Mury L. Friend ,
·
Preside11t, Te1talll's Orga11izatio11
of The Maples Apartments

out a problem . The last time a group of
·people follow ed the ir chari smatic
leader they ended up drinking KoolAid.aid in South America. ·
In the future , pl ea~e use smaller
words so us lesser people can understand what you're talkin g about with
just one .reading. At least this time I
only had to look up one word and you
are way off the mark on that one!
Dave Warner '
Rutla11d

Here's the point

·Pleased
with change

Dear Editor:
JeiT Fields: In reply to yours of Sept.
15 .
'
'
Jeff. · I think you mi ssed the poini.
Apparently I didn ' t use big enough
words . I had to read your letter three
times ttl make sure I knew what you
were saying.
Now - to the busio1ess at hand . For
sure "WE THE PEOPLE" do not have
oror country anymore. We are paying
roo ' ometlling WC· arc losing. The
media and the lobbyists are runnin g
things currentl y. But at least we agree, ·
I th ink , on takin g a good look at· the
candid ates. You will noti ce I didn ' t
sugges t who to vote for I onlyyointed

Dear Editor:
Recentl y I visited the Riverview
Cemetery and was pleasantly surprised at the condition of the grounds.
I want to thank the Middleport
Cemetery offic ials for a job we ll done.
I visited on Memori al Day th is year
and was d1 sappoonted on the cond ition
of the grounds. and wrote a le tter tn
The Senti ne l rega rdin g my r,·c lings .
You publos hed my letter, and appmentl y th; s troggered a pos iti ve
response .
Betty Allensworth
Groveport

' _,,.
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This year
Ashlyn Wolfe.
12, participated in a youth
hunt on her
· ·
Submllled pholp
grandfather's
Phillip
.Russell
and
Linda
Russell,
center,
represent
members
of
the
Athens
Chapter
175
Order
of
Eastern
Star in donatfarm during
ing
new
stuffed
animals
to
the
Pediatric
Departme'
n
t
at
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital.
The
Eastern
Star
was
able
to purchase
turkey season
and came
· these items with the help of Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouse .and Wai-Mart of Mason, The Russells are currently the worthy
away with this · patron and worthy matron for the Athens Chapter 175. They have devoted 35 years of service to the Eastern Star.
Acceptong the toys for PVH is Denise Queen. RN, Obstetrics &amp; Pediatrics Supervisor.
gobbler. Last
Y!!ar during
deer season,
Ashlyn shot a
button buck
with a muzOlder · adults make up
without food''
badly with someth ing you
zleloader.
nearly 13 percent of the
• When should I stop tak- are already tJkin g: .
Ashlyn is the
ing the medici ne''
population . (21 percent in
Some older adul ts on
daughter of
Meigs
County)
but
they
buy
•
What
side
effects
or
. inmmes may under
fixed
Charlie and
33
percent
of
all
prescripallergic
reactio
ns
can
I
use their medications- split1 1(~:~·.:1.'~ Elizabeth
and
40
perce
nt
or
Barbara
expect'!
What
should
I
do
if
tion
drugs
ting
pills or skipp ing dosesWolfe.,
all
over-the-counter
mediI
have
a
problem
·
&gt;
·
becau'e their prescription s
Submtlled pholo
cines, according to the Ohio
Riley
• Are there foods. drinks, are too expensive to take as
other medi cines or activities directed . Talk to your
Assoc iation of Countv
Hea lth
to avoid while I'm t akin~ hea lthcare provider to see if
Behavioral
Authorities.
thi s medi cine?
' there are lowe r cost alternaStudi es also show that fo llowing the drug's instruc• Will any herbal supple- ti ves to · the drug you've
most older American s live tions about when 10 take it. ments/vitamins/over the · been prescribed. There are
from Page AI
with at least one chronic Adverse dru g interac tions c·ounter medica tions interact also fe deral and state programs available to help with
condition , take multiple occur when a drug interacts wi th this medi cine?
Craig Butler, di strict chief and sent off to Columbus.''
medications, consult several wo·th another drug, food , or
• Where and how should it prescription dru g costs .
of the Ohio EPA's Southeast
Yandrich added: 'Ton healthcare providers and use alcohol and can change the be stored?
Contac t your area agency
Ohio district office.
bound to enforce the ·laws more than one pharmacy.
way the drug acts in the
You can help yo ur health- on aging at 1-866-243-5678
Butler said: "We didn 't do and rules on the books right
If you ac;Id to this_ mi~ a body. For example, grape- care professionals help you· to .learn more.
anything different! y than we · now, beyond that my opin- lack of co~munocatoon fruit juice can change the by making a list of .all the
Ohio' s Best Rx can help
would've done with any ions on .that (the AMP-Ohio between
patoents
and ....way some drugs work .
medication s you are taking, Ohioans of any age save an
other one (SEJ report) . It ·project) really don't matter in heal~hcare provoders abour
The best way to avoid including
prescription average of 33 percent on
goes to the district supervi- terms of personal 'feelings."
medtcauo~s, the stage os set drug-related health prob- drugs, over the counter prescriptions. depending on
sor for approval and then to ·· The physical SEJ report for potenttally senous drug- · Iems is to Jearn all you can medications, dietary supple- the med ication . Ohioans
the central office to put all is not required by Ohio rule related pro~lems , mcludong about the medicines you ments and herbal remedies. may apply by telephone for
the pieces together. Mike did · or law but is a part of the addotoonal ollness, hospotal- use. Your best resources for Be sure to include the the drug discount card at 1what he thought he could get overall review process ozatwn and eve n death. this information are your dosages and how often you 866-923-7879
( I -866done, his supervisor Bruce when it comes to the waste- Nationally, half · of all healthcare providers and take each medication. Your 9BESTRX) or online at
looked at it.. .it was reviewed water permit.
a.dverse med1catoon reac- . phannacist. Ask them :
primary care provider www.OhioBestR x .org .
lions occur among older
• What am 1 taking thi s should re view all of your
The National Council on
adults and more than a quar- medicine for?
medication s ar least annual - Patient Information and
ter (28 percent) of all older
• Does this new prescrip- ly to make sure you are only Ed ucation (NC PIE) develfrom Page Al
adult hos~otalo zat oons result tion mean I should stop tak- taking those you need.
oped the Medication Use
me~ocatoon
problems.
ing
any
other
medi
cine
s
I'm
You
can
also
avoid
Safety
Training (MUST) for
from
Tripp ; Tuppers Plains . Tea;" Sharon Dean, "Rose;"
The agong process , com- taking now ?
·
adverse drug interactions by Seniors,." program to help
"Horse Farm ;" Harold Donna Wilson, Middleport,
boned
woth
changes
111
•
How
should
it
be
taken
fillin
g all your prescriptions ol der adults avoid medicaBumgarner,
" Untitled;" "Nantucket Gate."
metabolism
,
can
have
a
arid
how
much
?
at
one
pharmacy. tion misuse and errors and
Shirley Hamm , Racine,
Drawing:
Elizabeth
• What if I mi ss a dose''
Pharmacies have a built-in manage co·mmon side
"The Rose ."
Hamilton , "Indian;" Vickie tremendous impact on the
• How often and what process of drug interaction effects. Free materi als are
Landscape . Photography : Taylor, Rutland", " Winter way dru gs affect an older
Sharon Dean , Racine , Wonderland ,"
Elizabeth person's body . One out of time of day? For exampl e. alerts. If yo u fill all of your ava ilable from www.mustevery three peopl e ex peri - 'does tl1ree times a day mean · prescription s at one pharma- forseniors.org.
"Moulton Barn ;" Jo Hill , Hamilton, "Flowers."
(Barbara E. Riley is the
Long Bottom, "Lighting the
Mixed Medi a/Other: Cat ence' at least one medicine- with meals or within a 24 cy. they ha ve all the necesrelated
problem
.
such
as
hour
period?
sary
information
to
alert
you
Director
of the Ohio
Way:
Underground Moon , Racine, "Mushroom."
over
use,
under
u~e
or
not
•
Should
I
take
with
or
if
a
medication
will
interact
Depamne11t of Aging.)
Railroad ;"
Constance
Honorable mention honFowler, Racine, "Along the ors were awarded to Lula
Ohio River."
Tobin , Bobbi DeLong. Eric
Photography,
Other: Pierce. Vanessa Folmer and
Peggy Crane , "Two for Donna Wilson .

Responds

BARAC~

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Talk about your prescriptions

NAME.

OUR
READERS' VIEWS
.

• f

1L.-

.Youth hunt

CATCH YOUR

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Art

F~mily

The Daily Sentinel
Correction Polley

Donating toys

POMEROY ~ . The address of Dale. Riffle , Pomeroy
downtown vil lage worker who is recuperating from auto
accident injuries is 42994 S.R. 124 . Lot 22. Pomeroy. Ohio
45769 . Cards may be sent to him there. It was incorrectl y
listed in a Friday Sentinel story.

I DIDN'T .·

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Correction

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Reader Services

www.mydailysentinel.com

GALLIPOLIS - Re searchers from The Ohio State
U~ivers ity are seeking women who have been diagnosed
woth breast cancer and have completed treatment within the
last year to partiCipate in a 90-minute focus group to discuss a communication tool that has been developed for
breast cancer patient s. Paoticipants will receive a $25 WalMart gift card for time and participation. The group focus
session woll take place at noon, tomorrow at the Holzer
.Center for Cancer Care. Call Robyn Hauser at 1-877-3042273 for more inform;nion .

IM SORRY...

Letters to the editor are welcome . They should be less
)han 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing , must be
'signed, and include address and tel«phone number. No
·unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
;good taste , addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept.~d for publication.

.

Monday, September 22, 2oo8

Page i\4.

Pink from Page Al
grant to provide qualifying will be available for osteoMeigs County women with porosis. Door prizes will
free mammograms. Meigs also be presented .
County women have an
Annual income guidelines
opportunity to take advan- for the "Think Pink" program
tage 9f these free mammo- for women wishing to receive
grams and other free health a free mammogram a('e: Must
screenings from 9:30 a.m. - . be 3549 ,living in a fanlily of
3 p.m. on Tuesday. Oct. 7 at one with an annual income of
the
Reed sville
Fire up to $31 ,200, or a fainil y of
.two with an. income up ·to
Department.
· A mobile mammography $42 ,000, a family of three
unit from The Ohio State with an income up to
University 's James Cancer · $52 ,800, a family of four
Center will be administer- with an income up to
ing the mammograms and $63,600, a family of live with
those Meigs County women an income up to $74,400.
participating in the free .Women who .can't make the
program Reedsville clinic can still take
mammograp hy
will also receive a $20 gaso- advantage of the free mam. mograms at Holzer Clinic
line card.
In addition to ihe mam- Meigs, O' Bieness Memorial
mograms , other free ser- Hospital or Doctor's Hospital
vices offered at MCCI's in Nelsonville which honor
women 's health clinic will MCCI vo.uchers..
include cholesterol and glu Wo men with Medicare ,
cose with ·on-site results other medical insurance and
· given, a nurse practi tioner those that are self-pay are
providing private clinical . eligible to sched1,1ie appointbreast exams, an exercise ments at the Reedsville clinphysiologist providing body ic . Also, if you don't fall
fat analysis and exercise lit- within the guidelines to
ness information , the coun- receive a free mammogram,
ty extension office wi II pro- there are other programs
vide nutritional inform(l.tion MCCI may refer you to in
on healthy snacks , kits to order to receive one at the
screen for colon cancer will Reedsville clinic or elsebe available along with where .
information on the disease,
Cd/1 992-2161 or 992the Dex -a-Scan screenin g 3853 for more information.

Medicine

Hip replacement usually successful, infection a risk

Question: In March 200/i,
I fell and fractured my left
hip and received a rota/ hip
rep/acemem . I'm 8 / years
old. I have two questions
tJ.!at you could help me with .
What is the average life of
an artificial hip ? I understand artificial hips can
become infected. flow does
this happen ? What can l do .
to avoid inRction ? flow is
infection in hips treated ?
Answer:
More than ·
230 ,000 peopl e have hip
replacement surgeries in the
United States annuall y. It is
most often performed on
patients who have severe
arthritis or those who ha ve
had hip fractures. It restores
mobility in both cases.
Most people who have a
hip arthropl asty do very
well. They are in the hospital for five to seven days ,
and usually begin physical
therapy
shortl y
after
surgery. Physical thenopy is
continued after going .home.
Normal . pain free. activity is
-the outcome in most people
in just a couple of months .
Because the hip is such a
major weight bearing bone. it
is uncommon to see a hip
replacement in a person under
60 years old . Physicall Y,
active people in this age
bracket who have hip problems are often candidates for
another type of surgery called

hip resurfaci ng .
from another part of the
At your age, yoror replace- body that has become iolfectment hip is likely to be good ed. That's why it's important
for the rest of your life. That's for those with gum disease.
because the average "new pneumonia or urinary tract
hip" can last up to 20 years. infections to have prompt
During that time you should · treatment:
have full use of your limb.
It is also a good idea to conBut excessive activity can suit your dentist about using
cause the joint to wear out or antibiotics before routine dendislocate ahead of schedule.
tal work to prevent the spread
You ask about post-opera- of bacteria from your gums to
tivc infections from hip your hip . Patients with dinarthroplasty. Up to 2 percent betes or rheumatoid arthritis
of all initi al hip repl ace ments are twice as likely to get a late
do become infected . The fig- infection.
~re _is sl ightly hi gh~; for
Finally. in an effort at full .
revosoon operatoons
on disclosure , I should menti on
whoch a prevwusly mstalled · that there are other possible
replace ment JOmt wears out complications from ' th is
and os then resurfaced or type of surgery. These
replaced. As the_figures ondo- include blood clots in tl1e
c~_te. onfectoons on the om me- legs. dislocation of ti'le new
doate post-operatove penod joint, as well as fracture in
~re _not a ~o mm on occur- the · femu r.' Fortunately,
oencc. Most. patoents are these problems are also not
goven antobootocs before and very common . .
after surgery to prevent them .
·A late postoperative infection - occurring anywhere
from months to yeurs later
~nlerson 'Mc'DanieC
- is possible. but relatively
'Fuliera( ?fomt
rare . The artificial hip , like
Adam McDaniel
any other foreign tissue. can
&amp; J tun es Ander"S&lt;:m
cause inflam mation and then
DIRECTORS
become infected. Sometimes
this process starts as a result
of bacteria that was introduced at· the time of the operPomeroy
ation and then lays dormant
992-5444
for a lon g period of time. In
"' ": ~., andersonnu·dunit I.e om
other cases. bacteri a travel

Family Medicine® is a
weekly colunm. To' submit
questions, write ro Martha A.
Simpw11, D.O. ; M .B.A.,
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine, P.O.
11ox 110, Athens, Ohio
4570/, or vitt e-maillo readerquestions ®familymedi·
cir~enew.,,org. Medical informatioll in this column is pro'
vided as an educatio11al service o11fy. II does not replace
the judgment of your per.sollal phy.,ician, who should
be relied on to diagnose alld
recommend treatment for
any medical conditions. Past
columns are available online
at
wwwfamilymedicinenews.org.

. Tom Karrof
Karr Contracting
for pu rc~asin~g
my pen of

Mark~t

~-,\, ·

Rabb1ts . 4~ ...~~
&amp;
.Thanks

for supporting the
4-H Youth of Meigs Co.
~KelseY. Johnson

•

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentine l

www.1i1ydai lysentinel.com

Monday. September 22. 2008

i

'
&lt;,2008 UNIVERSAL
MEDIA SYNDICATE ' INC 'SPECI-AL ADVEIH!SEMENI
HAIURl
------!
.

FORPATEtHHEAiJH.lLcJ09_EVERHARD RD .. CANTON OH 44709

-

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Demand soars for 'fa$t acting' diet pill
Public now facing 48-hour cut of(;· clinical trial shows
participants lost weight without adding exercise or diets
'

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By M.J. MOORE
Universal Media SyFldicate

WHY SO MUCH EXCITEMENT?

Apatrim contains an amazing
compound that has a known ability
to help control hu11ger pangs.*
This allows people to eat the foods
they want, they just eat less. •
Losing weight is hard and anyone
that has struggled \\~th weight loss
will tell you that they would love to
be able to lose weight without changing their daily routine.
That's where Apatrim comes in
since this is exactly what happened
in the clinical trial.
"!took Apatrim and I felt fabulous.
After eating dinner I felt full and not
deprived, I just went about my day
and didn't think about food or eating," said Lori Morrow.'
All of this positive feedback
makes it easy to understand why
there is so much excitement and
optimism surrounding this weight
· loss supplement.
CLINICALRESULTS
The U.S. clinical study was conducted in Los Angeles under the
direction of Dr. Ronald M. Lawrence,'
M.D., Ph.D. a former clinical profes-

f

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Monday, September 22, 2008

locAL

Sc~n:-:DULE

Big third
quarter lifts
Ravens
.
.over
Browns, 28-10

Tyesdav September 23
Soccer
Chillicoth e at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m

Volleyball

Wednesday Seatember 24

Volleyball
Meigs at Federal Hocking , 6 p.m.
South Point at South Gallia, 5:30 p.m.
G;~llia Academy at River Valley,. 5 p.m.
Southern at ~ells ton , 6 p.m..
Thy[Jday September 25
Soccer
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant al OVCS, 4:30p.m

Volleyball
Eastern at Waterford . 6 p.m .
Gallia Acadei'ny at Portsmouth , 5:15

p.m.

.

Chesapeake at Rive r Va lley, 5:30p.m
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.

AP photo

Members ·of the USA team hold up the Ryder Cup trophy after winning the golf tournament at the Valhalla Golf Club, in
Louisville, Ky., on Sunday.

• WORKS FAST: Apatrim'" 1s caus1ng a buu among dieters since they don't have to change their lifestyle and it sta rts work1ng on their appetite just m1nutes after taking it.''
so r at the University of California's
Los Angeles School of Medicine.
The study included healthy, overweight individuals between the ages
of 31 and 73. Their caloric intake and
level of exercise was not disclosed.
The participants were instnrcted
not to change the food they were
eating and not to add any exercise;
i11 other words, no changes to their
daily routine. They were told to ta ke
Apatrim 30 minutes before lunch
and dinner.
An amazing 100% of the participants who took the active ingredient
as instructed either lost weight or
inches off their waistline during
the 4 week study.* In contrast, only
one person taking the placebo lost
weight, just half-a-pound, and not
,
.one reduced their wa istline.'
Sam~ participants experienced
incredible results, losing as much as
8 pounds and up to 3 inches off their
waistline.*'
HOW IT WORKS
The active ingredient in Apatrim
comes from a plant that grows in
India.
This 'miracle' plant is Caralluma
Fimbriata and it has been used by
· native tribes in India for ce'nturies
to reduce hunger and quench thirst
during times of fami ne and
drought.*
Until recently, the only way
'to get these benefits was to eat
the plant.
But scientists have developed a
pro·prietary method of .extraction
that is protected by U.S. Patent

#7,060,308. This process enables
Apatrim's manufacturer to put the
plant's benefits into a pill.
• Scientists believe Apatrim's active
ingredient works by blocking the
hunger .signals that are sent from
. the stomach · to the brain. The
brain then thinks that the stomach is full, causing a reductio~ in
appetite.*
HOW TO GET APATRlM
Initial shipments of Apatrim
have been rushed out to a few select
retail chains across the country.
CVS/pharmacy and 'Rite Aid were
among the first stores to snap up

the entire ini tial production.
The company has also set up a
National Order Hotline just for
Apatrim. This enables people that
don't want to fight the ct·owds 'or run
the risk of not finding it at th e store,
to get Apatrim delivered directly to
their homes.
· Starting at 7:00 am today,
the order line will only be open
for 48 hours. All co nsumers have
to do is call 1-800-782-8750 and
ask for Dept. AP2598; orders will be
filled on . a first -come, first-served
basis.
"We're bracing for the next surge
of calls, we've hi red more people and

the order lines will be fully staffed,''
• said Ken Geis the Manager of Call
Center Operations.
"Even though we weren't able to
take all of th e initia_l calls from p~op le
trying to get Apatrim we're ready
now," said Geis.
Current supplies are limited so
consumers that don't get through to
the order line in the next 48 hours or
can't find Apatrim at the store will
have to wait until more inventory 'is
produced or tnore shipments reach
the national chains. •
www.apatrim.com

1. Primary study based on 26 participants over a 4-wee~ period. Part icipants were directed not to add an y exerc ise or chang e eating habits.
Participants level of caloric intake and exercise were not measured or disclosed. 2. Individual results may vary. 3. Dr. Ronald Lawrer1ce,
M.D., PhD., conpucted the clinical trial and is not affiliated with PatentHEALTH nor endorsing Apatrim. 4~ Available in select store locations.

i *TH ESE STATEMENTS HAWE NOT BEEN EVALUATED BY THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION. THIS PRO DUCT IS ' NOT IN TE NDED 1~ DIAGtWSE , TREAT, CURE OR PRE VENT ANY DISEASE. j
'

''

. He·re·'s how y.ou can,,g,et-Apatrim:
. To make s ure that everyo ne can-get Apatrim whi le the initial s hipments are being rushed out
' to drug stores across the country, a Nat iona.l Order Hot! me has been set-up. Simply follow the
.. instructions listed below to have Apatrim sh ipped di rectly to you r home or you can go to your
local drug store to see if Apatrim has arrived.
,

National Order Hotline; 48-hour cut off
Consumers can begin calli ng at 7:00am today. The order line will only be open for 48 hours.
Call 1·800·782·8750 and ask for Dept, AP2598. All orders will be processed on a first·
. come, first-served basis.
·

Retail Stores:
National chains ac ross the country are wo rkin g around the clock to getthe init ial shipments
of Apatrim onto their shelves. it has been confirmed that CVS/pharmacy and Rite Aid have
placed orders and should have supplies
of Apatrfm ava il able to consumers.
.
'

On the web: www.apatrim.com
c 2008 Patenlhealth, LLC . P42 1•1 OF5600R·I

lubricates the joints, but it also ment found that glucosamine pie who cap't find Ttigosamine
acts as a comfortable shock and chondroitin, similar to or don't want to go to the store,
· UMS-Consumerscan'tseem absorber.
those found in Trigosamine, we've set up a National Order
to get enough of il and drug
"As we age, the body's nat- had a 79.2% effective rate for Hotline so they can have it de•tores are selling it as fast as ural production of this fluid those with moderate to severe livered directly to their home,"
theycangetit.
declines and th is can force joint discomfort.'*
said Woods.
"Unbelievable, that's all I the bones in our _joints to
But it's the results thal
"We'll be offeri n'g a direct
can say," saiq Matthew Woods, grind together which can re- make this joint supplement so delivery discount for the
Director of Business Develop- suit in nagging discom fo rt," impressive.
next 72 hours, and consumers
ment for PatentHEALTH the said Dr. Joseph Dietz'.
"We get messages from con- should know they can't get
company . that developed the
"Using Trigosamine is like sumers all the time telling us this discount at drug stores,"
breakthrough joint supplement. taking a can of oil and applying how great Trigosamine .works he added.
Woods was referring to the 'it directly to your joints," said for them," said Woods.
.,
Otherwi se those living in
fact that in just one day a drug Dr. Dietz'.
"Everybody wants it," addt'&lt;i the local area that miss the
store chain sold 2,000 bottles
Trigusamine combines HA-13 Woods.
deadline won't be able get
ofthepowerfuljointhealthsup- with the essential blend of glu"CVS/phannacy and rui.e Aid the discount. They'll have to
plement called Trigosamine•. cosamine and chondroitin which were one of the first ones to go lo their local drug store to
HEALTHY ~DINTS: X-rays reveal romts thai have the proper amounts of
"We've already shipped over have been clinically shown to order Trigosamine and they've try and get Trigosamine and •sy nO
vial fl u1d to lubrica te the joint s. HA-13. one of Tr1gositmtne's key ingre·
500,000 bottlesofTrigosamine help build healthy cartilage in loaded up their shelves. We've may be hard pressed to find dient s 1s a component of synov1al f lu1d .
and sales just keep growing. it's the joint;; allowing for inereased received reports that show it..,•
been crazy," said Woods.
flexibility and range of motion.* they have some inventory left,"
Scientists have developed
A clinical. study conducted saidWoods.
•
Or, visit us online at:
this amazing oral tablet that by the United States govern'l\nd to make it easier for peowww.tr;gosamine.com
doesn't require a presCription · . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - and is taken only ont'e a day.
1··
Il's so impressive that one
key ingredient has the abil'
ity to retain fluid up to 1000
You may be .;Jble to find ·Trig osamine at CVS/pharmacy and Rite Aid since
times- its own weight; this
they have received shipmen ts . If you want Trigosamine shipped directly to you r
helpsincrease lubrication for
home and would like th e local readers dist!ount, call the National Order Hotline ·
the joints allowing them to
listed below before the 72-hour deaJillne exp1res. Otherwise you'll have to get
move with ease."'
Trigosamine at the drug store and may run .the r~ s k of not being able to find it.
Trigosamine's key ingredient is Hyaluronate also called
. Begin Calling 'a t 8:00AM TODAY
HA-13 which is the building·
.
1·800-924-2109
block of "natural joint fluid,"
Approval Code: TG5641
.. medically known as synovial
Discount Ends in 72 hours ·
: fluid.
Dr. Joseph Dietz. PhD currently conducts lull lime re!Wia rch for PatentH EALTH, LLC. as Director of Health Sc1ance. Researc h Development.
:· This joint fluid reduces fric- 2.1. Statements
h e~ein are based upon publi Shad public mformal 10n and do not im ply affiliatiOn. sponsorship or endorsement ol
• ALMOST GONE: Sa les of the 10int pill Trigosa mine are soarihg wh1 c h~ ould .
Trigosamln&amp; by the Ufllled States Governm111nt.
'
)
tion in the joints allowing for
TEoor0fo DI.AGNOSE' TREAT. cuAeOfiPAeVEN'T~AsQ lead to out o f stoc ks as shown 1n this phot o illust ra ti On . Const.m1 erS unable (o
. effortleis moti&lt;1n, It not only • Tlf.SESTATE!.lNTS tt~\'E NOT BEE.~ EV.I.l.UATE0e~rHi"Fo0o}.No· O~~M~ISTAAiiDN l"i&amp;_ P'IOUOC TIS NOT tN
find 1t can call l-800·924·2109 and have it shipped d~rectly to thei r homes.
&gt;

Bobcats fall to Northwl'Stern, Page B6

G'allia Academy et Fairland. 5:30 p'.m.
Vtnlon County at Meigs , 6 p.m.
Eastern al River Valley, 5:30p.m.
OVC at South Gallia, 5:30p.m.
Eastern at RiYer Valley, 5:30p.m.
Golf
'
River·llalley at Sectional, TBA
Gallia Academy at Sectional, TBA

Local Readers Discount Deadline

:1

Buckeyes beat Trojans, Page B6

.Volleyball
Eastern at Nels-York , 6 p.m.
Jackson at'Gallia Academy, 5:15 p_m
South Gallia at Rock Hill. 5:30 p m;
V1nton County at Sou thern , 6 p.m.
OVCS at Fatrlan(J, 5:30p.m.

By G.W. Napie_r
Universal Media Syndicate

""

Eagles outlast Steelers, Page 82

Mgndav September 22

Sa_les skyrocketing; news of its amazing results .spread across the U.S.

...

The Daily Sentinel

A. schedule of uPc:nm1ng high
· sc hool ~arsitv sportin g events in~olving
teems trom Mei gs and Gallla countie s.

Drug stores load up with powerful joint pill·

•

Inside

POM EROY ~

·-.,

UMS - Thousands of callers
clogged an Ohio company's phone
lines trying to get this breakthrough
diet pill.
The remarkable weight loss supplement that has dieters from all
over .the country calling is called
Apatrim' ", and there are some very
good reasons why people want it.
You see, Apatrim starts working
on your appetite within minutes after taking it, dieters don't have to
starve or suffer th rough intense exercise and its. been clinically shown
to get great results.*
Participants lost an average of
5 times more weight than those
taking a placebo during the 4week clinical.' They got these
results taking Apatrim's active
ingredient as direc ted and without
adding exercise or diets to their daily
routine.*
And people that have used this
weight loss supplement are singing
its praises.
"All I did was take it about 30 min·
utes before I was going to eat and
I didn't feel hungry. It really works
great for me," said Erica Leventhal.'
Researchers believe that Apatrim
can suppress appetite which can
mean fewer calories are being consumed; th is can lead to weight loss.*
Consumers should keep· in mind
that there's no substitute for proper
diet and exer~ise when it comes to
losing weight. Meaningful weigpt
loss requires consuming fewer
calories than the.body burns.

'(

•

..

Southern Americans win the Ryder Cup to end Europe's streak
lOth at
Bob Reali
Invitational
STAFF REPORT "
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

LANCASTER The
Southern boys cross country
team pl aced lOth in the
Divi sion Ill
race at the
2008 Bob
R ·e a I I
In vitational
h e I d
Saturday
on the campu s
of
Laoc.a_s.ter
H i g h
School.
Goode
T h e
Tornadoes
finished the
day with a
team score
of 217 in
the I I-team
race, with
Ca ldw el l
winning the
D-3 eve nt
with a team
Aelker
score of 55.
Liberty Union was th e runner-up with 68 points, with
Barnesville
(77),
Wheelersburg ( 113) and
Johnstown-Monroe ( 128)
rounding out the top-five. ·
Drew McCormick · of
Liberty Union won the indi-.
vidual D-3 race with a time
of 16:53.4. There were also
'72 competitors in the race. ·
Kyle Goode was the top
finisher for the Purple and
Gold, placmg .seventh overall with a time of 17 :42 .9.
Dylan Rou sh was 40th
overall with a time of 19:50,
followed
by
Colby
Roseberry in 42nd with a
time of 19:59.
Andrew Guinther (23:47)
placed 62nd, Chase Graham
(25 :07) was 66th , D'rew
Hoover (26:00 .6) was 68th
and
Ronriie
Wilson
(26:03.8) was 69th as well
for SHS .
Eastern senior Keith
A.eiker also competed at the
event. running m the boys
ppen division rac e. Aeiker
placed seventh overall out
of 155 runners , completing
the comse in a time, of
18:29.
·· Colton Johnso n of Mt.
Gilead .won the open race
wtth a lime of 16:49.9 .
: Complete results of the
2008 Bob Rea li Cross
·country In vitational are
avai lab le on th e web at
www.baumspage.com

CoNTACfUS
1·740-446·2342 ext. 33

..

f•• - 1-740-446-3006
E-1111111- spor tsOmydailysenttnel.com

lll&gt;&lt;l&lt;IIJilalf

bryan Walters, Sports Writer
{740) 446-2342 , ext. 33
bwalters@mydallytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
{740) 446·2342, .... 33
lcrumCmydaUyreglster.com

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
- The Americans didn 't
need a miracle putt or even
the best player in the world
to take back the Ryder Cup .
Strong as a team, strong as
individual s, ·the Americans
rode the emotion of a flag waving crowd and its two
Kentucky players on Sunday
to win the Ryd er Cup for the
first time since 1999 .
Kenny Perry, th e 48-yearold nati ve son who felt thi s
week wo uld define hi s
career, was part of an early
push that swung momentum
toward the Americans. Then
came fellow Kentuckian J.B.

Holmes, blasting drives over
the trees to birdie . hi s last
two holes and position the
United States for a victory it
felt' was overdue.
The Ryder Cu~ was
clinched with a handshake
when Miguel Angel Jimenez
conceded a short par putt to
Jim · Furyk , givin g th e
Americans the 14 1/2 points
they needed to take possession ' of th e !?cinch gold
'
chalice.
Dressed in red shins the Sunday color of Tiger
Woods . who could on Iy
watch from home whi-l e
recovering
from · kn ee

surgery - the Americans Europe II I /2.
erupted into ht1gs and tears
It was the largest margin
behind the 17t h green .
of victory for the Americans
" I poured my hean and since 1981. And it was on ly
soul into thi s_for two years." fitting tha t Furyk won the
U.S. captain Paul Azinger decisive point .
He fe lt hollow six years
said, hi s voice crackin g.
'The players pOllred their ago at The Belfry watching
heart and soul into this for Paul McGinley make a par·
one week. They deserved it . putt that cli nched victory' for
I couldn't be happier."
Europe, the start of three
Ben C urti s and C had straight
victories
tha t
Campbell, the fina l player exiended its domination in
picked for this U.S. team , go lf's most passio nate
won the final two matches . event.
for a lopsided score that for
The only U.S. victory over
the last three years had been th e last 15 years was in
posted in European blue .
Please see Streak, 82
United States 16 112.

SprucelUDiber
Cash &amp; t:srrr Bnlrt
10'

12'

14'

BALTIMORE (AP) - In
less than a minute. the Baltimore Raven s scored
two touchdowns and further
damaged an already agon izing season for the Cleve land
Browns.
Baltimore tu rned tw o of
Derek Anderson's interceptions i!lto a pair of touchdown s' durin~ a 50-second
span of the' thi rd quarter,
·and the rested Raveils
staved unbeaten with a 2810 'victory Sunday.
Ed Reed returned one of
the intercep ti ons 32 yard s
for a score. and Le' Ron
McC lai n "ored his first twd
NFL tou chdowns on a pair
of ]-yard runs - both during a 21 -point th ird q'uarter
that turned a 3- point half·
time deficit inti1 a 2R-IO
lead .
Back from a knee injmy.
Willis McGahee rushed fm
64 ya rds and a S('Ore for the
Ravens (2-0), who were
forced to take last week off
when Hu rricane lk ~ postponed their ga me at
Houston.
Ai1clerson had anothe r trying da y in an effort to ge n·
erate so me offense for
Cleve land . . whicl1 was
picked by many to be a conte nder in the AFC North.
.Anderso.n went 1-1 -for-37
for 125 yards ,' was sacked
four times and t~ rcw three
interce ptions .
The Brown s (0-3) have
sco red only two touch Pleas~

see Browns, Bl

Treated lumller
t:&amp;Sh &amp; t:&amp;TrJIIIRIJII

11'

I'

11'

12'

11'

11'

214" $2.11 $3.54 $4.28 $5.8:1 18.18
AP photo

5/ld" SU5 $5.00 $8.119 Slotl Sl50

New York Giants' Steve Smith, left, tries to · push past
'Cincinnati Bengals' Marvin White dur:ing the second half of
an NFL football game at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford,
N.J ., on Sunday. The Giants won in overtime, 26·23.
&gt;

2ldll·

•

Giants beat Bengals in OT
EAST RUTHERFORD,
NJ . (AP) -The New York
Giants are off to their best
start since 2000, thanks in
large part to a little tipt oei n ~
in overtime by Amam
Toomer and the sure' leg of
44-year-old John Carney.
&lt;;:arney kicked a 22-yard
field goal with 8:39 left in
the extra sess ion after
Toomer danced the sideline
on a 31-yard reception, .and
the Super Bowl champions
overcame a strong effort by
the winless Cincinnati
Bengals for a 26-23 victory
on Sunday.
" My message today was
... it ended up being really
the power of the will,"
coach Tom Coughlin said.
" It wasn't our best game, by
any me'VJS, but we hun g in
there, we kept battling and
scrapping, .and in what was .
not our best game, we found
a way to win against a good
.
football team."

2ldl" $3.84 $4.12 $1.34 S1JI3 $1.20

The play that set · 'up
Carney 's fourth field goal
was the long pass from Eli
Manni.og to Toomer down
the left sideline on a thirdand-10 from the Bengals 38.
It was difficult to tell
whet her Toomer got both
feet in bounds. The Giants
hustled to the line of scrimmage and handed the ball to
Derrick Ward· for a 3--yard
run to the Bengals 4, precluding a video rev iew.
" I cou ldn't tell." Toomer
said when asked if he was in
bounds . "I just got as many
feet down as I could ."
Toomer is one of the best
in the league at getting both ·
feet down , said Manning,
who hit 26 of 43 passes for
289 yards.
·Coughlin sa id that the
umpire moved off the ball so
the Giants knew that the
replay official had allowed

Please see Ben1els, Bl

$5.14 $1.511 $1.20 $11.04 $11.22

2xll" $1.11

OSB

l/16" X4~ X8'

. . . .,... 55.99 ·~

~11.12

arvwa11
1/2" X4' X8'
•4.99'

.

-Premium Grade
2"x4"xT
81.15 88
t:asll &amp;t:Btlf tlnlll

111.01 11UG 111.11

501b.Box

Bee linker IIIII $35
t:BSII &amp; t:BTI1/IIRIJII

lllver 11111r

Flbared Aluminum Real CDIIIIII .

839.00
(bucket)

1.99

8

sqn.
t:BBII &amp; t:BttJ lln,l

Cash &amp; CBtfN IJn&amp;l
_..:::..
ICI.ft.

S45.00

�Page A6 • The Daily Sentine l

www.1i1ydai lysentinel.com

Monday. September 22. 2008

i

'
&lt;,2008 UNIVERSAL
MEDIA SYNDICATE ' INC 'SPECI-AL ADVEIH!SEMENI
HAIURl
------!
.

FORPATEtHHEAiJH.lLcJ09_EVERHARD RD .. CANTON OH 44709

-

'

.,

Demand soars for 'fa$t acting' diet pill
Public now facing 48-hour cut of(;· clinical trial shows
participants lost weight without adding exercise or diets
'

r '

By M.J. MOORE
Universal Media SyFldicate

WHY SO MUCH EXCITEMENT?

Apatrim contains an amazing
compound that has a known ability
to help control hu11ger pangs.*
This allows people to eat the foods
they want, they just eat less. •
Losing weight is hard and anyone
that has struggled \\~th weight loss
will tell you that they would love to
be able to lose weight without changing their daily routine.
That's where Apatrim comes in
since this is exactly what happened
in the clinical trial.
"!took Apatrim and I felt fabulous.
After eating dinner I felt full and not
deprived, I just went about my day
and didn't think about food or eating," said Lori Morrow.'
All of this positive feedback
makes it easy to understand why
there is so much excitement and
optimism surrounding this weight
· loss supplement.
CLINICALRESULTS
The U.S. clinical study was conducted in Los Angeles under the
direction of Dr. Ronald M. Lawrence,'
M.D., Ph.D. a former clinical profes-

f

. II •

•

•

Monday, September 22, 2008

locAL

Sc~n:-:DULE

Big third
quarter lifts
Ravens
.
.over
Browns, 28-10

Tyesdav September 23
Soccer
Chillicoth e at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m

Volleyball

Wednesday Seatember 24

Volleyball
Meigs at Federal Hocking , 6 p.m.
South Point at South Gallia, 5:30 p.m.
G;~llia Academy at River Valley,. 5 p.m.
Southern at ~ells ton , 6 p.m..
Thy[Jday September 25
Soccer
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant al OVCS, 4:30p.m

Volleyball
Eastern at Waterford . 6 p.m .
Gallia Acadei'ny at Portsmouth , 5:15

p.m.

.

Chesapeake at Rive r Va lley, 5:30p.m
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.

AP photo

Members ·of the USA team hold up the Ryder Cup trophy after winning the golf tournament at the Valhalla Golf Club, in
Louisville, Ky., on Sunday.

• WORKS FAST: Apatrim'" 1s caus1ng a buu among dieters since they don't have to change their lifestyle and it sta rts work1ng on their appetite just m1nutes after taking it.''
so r at the University of California's
Los Angeles School of Medicine.
The study included healthy, overweight individuals between the ages
of 31 and 73. Their caloric intake and
level of exercise was not disclosed.
The participants were instnrcted
not to change the food they were
eating and not to add any exercise;
i11 other words, no changes to their
daily routine. They were told to ta ke
Apatrim 30 minutes before lunch
and dinner.
An amazing 100% of the participants who took the active ingredient
as instructed either lost weight or
inches off their waistline during
the 4 week study.* In contrast, only
one person taking the placebo lost
weight, just half-a-pound, and not
,
.one reduced their wa istline.'
Sam~ participants experienced
incredible results, losing as much as
8 pounds and up to 3 inches off their
waistline.*'
HOW IT WORKS
The active ingredient in Apatrim
comes from a plant that grows in
India.
This 'miracle' plant is Caralluma
Fimbriata and it has been used by
· native tribes in India for ce'nturies
to reduce hunger and quench thirst
during times of fami ne and
drought.*
Until recently, the only way
'to get these benefits was to eat
the plant.
But scientists have developed a
pro·prietary method of .extraction
that is protected by U.S. Patent

#7,060,308. This process enables
Apatrim's manufacturer to put the
plant's benefits into a pill.
• Scientists believe Apatrim's active
ingredient works by blocking the
hunger .signals that are sent from
. the stomach · to the brain. The
brain then thinks that the stomach is full, causing a reductio~ in
appetite.*
HOW TO GET APATRlM
Initial shipments of Apatrim
have been rushed out to a few select
retail chains across the country.
CVS/pharmacy and 'Rite Aid were
among the first stores to snap up

the entire ini tial production.
The company has also set up a
National Order Hotline just for
Apatrim. This enables people that
don't want to fight the ct·owds 'or run
the risk of not finding it at th e store,
to get Apatrim delivered directly to
their homes.
· Starting at 7:00 am today,
the order line will only be open
for 48 hours. All co nsumers have
to do is call 1-800-782-8750 and
ask for Dept. AP2598; orders will be
filled on . a first -come, first-served
basis.
"We're bracing for the next surge
of calls, we've hi red more people and

the order lines will be fully staffed,''
• said Ken Geis the Manager of Call
Center Operations.
"Even though we weren't able to
take all of th e initia_l calls from p~op le
trying to get Apatrim we're ready
now," said Geis.
Current supplies are limited so
consumers that don't get through to
the order line in the next 48 hours or
can't find Apatrim at the store will
have to wait until more inventory 'is
produced or tnore shipments reach
the national chains. •
www.apatrim.com

1. Primary study based on 26 participants over a 4-wee~ period. Part icipants were directed not to add an y exerc ise or chang e eating habits.
Participants level of caloric intake and exercise were not measured or disclosed. 2. Individual results may vary. 3. Dr. Ronald Lawrer1ce,
M.D., PhD., conpucted the clinical trial and is not affiliated with PatentHEALTH nor endorsing Apatrim. 4~ Available in select store locations.

i *TH ESE STATEMENTS HAWE NOT BEEN EVALUATED BY THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION. THIS PRO DUCT IS ' NOT IN TE NDED 1~ DIAGtWSE , TREAT, CURE OR PRE VENT ANY DISEASE. j
'

''

. He·re·'s how y.ou can,,g,et-Apatrim:
. To make s ure that everyo ne can-get Apatrim whi le the initial s hipments are being rushed out
' to drug stores across the country, a Nat iona.l Order Hot! me has been set-up. Simply follow the
.. instructions listed below to have Apatrim sh ipped di rectly to you r home or you can go to your
local drug store to see if Apatrim has arrived.
,

National Order Hotline; 48-hour cut off
Consumers can begin calli ng at 7:00am today. The order line will only be open for 48 hours.
Call 1·800·782·8750 and ask for Dept, AP2598. All orders will be processed on a first·
. come, first-served basis.
·

Retail Stores:
National chains ac ross the country are wo rkin g around the clock to getthe init ial shipments
of Apatrim onto their shelves. it has been confirmed that CVS/pharmacy and Rite Aid have
placed orders and should have supplies
of Apatrfm ava il able to consumers.
.
'

On the web: www.apatrim.com
c 2008 Patenlhealth, LLC . P42 1•1 OF5600R·I

lubricates the joints, but it also ment found that glucosamine pie who cap't find Ttigosamine
acts as a comfortable shock and chondroitin, similar to or don't want to go to the store,
· UMS-Consumerscan'tseem absorber.
those found in Trigosamine, we've set up a National Order
to get enough of il and drug
"As we age, the body's nat- had a 79.2% effective rate for Hotline so they can have it de•tores are selling it as fast as ural production of this fluid those with moderate to severe livered directly to their home,"
theycangetit.
declines and th is can force joint discomfort.'*
said Woods.
"Unbelievable, that's all I the bones in our _joints to
But it's the results thal
"We'll be offeri n'g a direct
can say," saiq Matthew Woods, grind together which can re- make this joint supplement so delivery discount for the
Director of Business Develop- suit in nagging discom fo rt," impressive.
next 72 hours, and consumers
ment for PatentHEALTH the said Dr. Joseph Dietz'.
"We get messages from con- should know they can't get
company . that developed the
"Using Trigosamine is like sumers all the time telling us this discount at drug stores,"
breakthrough joint supplement. taking a can of oil and applying how great Trigosamine .works he added.
Woods was referring to the 'it directly to your joints," said for them," said Woods.
.,
Otherwi se those living in
fact that in just one day a drug Dr. Dietz'.
"Everybody wants it," addt'&lt;i the local area that miss the
store chain sold 2,000 bottles
Trigusamine combines HA-13 Woods.
deadline won't be able get
ofthepowerfuljointhealthsup- with the essential blend of glu"CVS/phannacy and rui.e Aid the discount. They'll have to
plement called Trigosamine•. cosamine and chondroitin which were one of the first ones to go lo their local drug store to
HEALTHY ~DINTS: X-rays reveal romts thai have the proper amounts of
"We've already shipped over have been clinically shown to order Trigosamine and they've try and get Trigosamine and •sy nO
vial fl u1d to lubrica te the joint s. HA-13. one of Tr1gositmtne's key ingre·
500,000 bottlesofTrigosamine help build healthy cartilage in loaded up their shelves. We've may be hard pressed to find dient s 1s a component of synov1al f lu1d .
and sales just keep growing. it's the joint;; allowing for inereased received reports that show it..,•
been crazy," said Woods.
flexibility and range of motion.* they have some inventory left,"
Scientists have developed
A clinical. study conducted saidWoods.
•
Or, visit us online at:
this amazing oral tablet that by the United States govern'l\nd to make it easier for peowww.tr;gosamine.com
doesn't require a presCription · . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - and is taken only ont'e a day.
1··
Il's so impressive that one
key ingredient has the abil'
ity to retain fluid up to 1000
You may be .;Jble to find ·Trig osamine at CVS/pharmacy and Rite Aid since
times- its own weight; this
they have received shipmen ts . If you want Trigosamine shipped directly to you r
helpsincrease lubrication for
home and would like th e local readers dist!ount, call the National Order Hotline ·
the joints allowing them to
listed below before the 72-hour deaJillne exp1res. Otherwise you'll have to get
move with ease."'
Trigosamine at the drug store and may run .the r~ s k of not being able to find it.
Trigosamine's key ingredient is Hyaluronate also called
. Begin Calling 'a t 8:00AM TODAY
HA-13 which is the building·
.
1·800-924-2109
block of "natural joint fluid,"
Approval Code: TG5641
.. medically known as synovial
Discount Ends in 72 hours ·
: fluid.
Dr. Joseph Dietz. PhD currently conducts lull lime re!Wia rch for PatentH EALTH, LLC. as Director of Health Sc1ance. Researc h Development.
:· This joint fluid reduces fric- 2.1. Statements
h e~ein are based upon publi Shad public mformal 10n and do not im ply affiliatiOn. sponsorship or endorsement ol
• ALMOST GONE: Sa les of the 10int pill Trigosa mine are soarihg wh1 c h~ ould .
Trigosamln&amp; by the Ufllled States Governm111nt.
'
)
tion in the joints allowing for
TEoor0fo DI.AGNOSE' TREAT. cuAeOfiPAeVEN'T~AsQ lead to out o f stoc ks as shown 1n this phot o illust ra ti On . Const.m1 erS unable (o
. effortleis moti&lt;1n, It not only • Tlf.SESTATE!.lNTS tt~\'E NOT BEE.~ EV.I.l.UATE0e~rHi"Fo0o}.No· O~~M~ISTAAiiDN l"i&amp;_ P'IOUOC TIS NOT tN
find 1t can call l-800·924·2109 and have it shipped d~rectly to thei r homes.
&gt;

Bobcats fall to Northwl'Stern, Page B6

G'allia Academy et Fairland. 5:30 p'.m.
Vtnlon County at Meigs , 6 p.m.
Eastern al River Valley, 5:30p.m.
OVC at South Gallia, 5:30p.m.
Eastern at RiYer Valley, 5:30p.m.
Golf
'
River·llalley at Sectional, TBA
Gallia Academy at Sectional, TBA

Local Readers Discount Deadline

:1

Buckeyes beat Trojans, Page B6

.Volleyball
Eastern at Nels-York , 6 p.m.
Jackson at'Gallia Academy, 5:15 p_m
South Gallia at Rock Hill. 5:30 p m;
V1nton County at Sou thern , 6 p.m.
OVCS at Fatrlan(J, 5:30p.m.

By G.W. Napie_r
Universal Media Syndicate

""

Eagles outlast Steelers, Page 82

Mgndav September 22

Sa_les skyrocketing; news of its amazing results .spread across the U.S.

...

The Daily Sentinel

A. schedule of uPc:nm1ng high
· sc hool ~arsitv sportin g events in~olving
teems trom Mei gs and Gallla countie s.

Drug stores load up with powerful joint pill·

•

Inside

POM EROY ~

·-.,

UMS - Thousands of callers
clogged an Ohio company's phone
lines trying to get this breakthrough
diet pill.
The remarkable weight loss supplement that has dieters from all
over .the country calling is called
Apatrim' ", and there are some very
good reasons why people want it.
You see, Apatrim starts working
on your appetite within minutes after taking it, dieters don't have to
starve or suffer th rough intense exercise and its. been clinically shown
to get great results.*
Participants lost an average of
5 times more weight than those
taking a placebo during the 4week clinical.' They got these
results taking Apatrim's active
ingredient as direc ted and without
adding exercise or diets to their daily
routine.*
And people that have used this
weight loss supplement are singing
its praises.
"All I did was take it about 30 min·
utes before I was going to eat and
I didn't feel hungry. It really works
great for me," said Erica Leventhal.'
Researchers believe that Apatrim
can suppress appetite which can
mean fewer calories are being consumed; th is can lead to weight loss.*
Consumers should keep· in mind
that there's no substitute for proper
diet and exer~ise when it comes to
losing weight. Meaningful weigpt
loss requires consuming fewer
calories than the.body burns.

'(

•

..

Southern Americans win the Ryder Cup to end Europe's streak
lOth at
Bob Reali
Invitational
STAFF REPORT "
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

LANCASTER The
Southern boys cross country
team pl aced lOth in the
Divi sion Ill
race at the
2008 Bob
R ·e a I I
In vitational
h e I d
Saturday
on the campu s
of
Laoc.a_s.ter
H i g h
School.
Goode
T h e
Tornadoes
finished the
day with a
team score
of 217 in
the I I-team
race, with
Ca ldw el l
winning the
D-3 eve nt
with a team
Aelker
score of 55.
Liberty Union was th e runner-up with 68 points, with
Barnesville
(77),
Wheelersburg ( 113) and
Johnstown-Monroe ( 128)
rounding out the top-five. ·
Drew McCormick · of
Liberty Union won the indi-.
vidual D-3 race with a time
of 16:53.4. There were also
'72 competitors in the race. ·
Kyle Goode was the top
finisher for the Purple and
Gold, placmg .seventh overall with a time of 17 :42 .9.
Dylan Rou sh was 40th
overall with a time of 19:50,
followed
by
Colby
Roseberry in 42nd with a
time of 19:59.
Andrew Guinther (23:47)
placed 62nd, Chase Graham
(25 :07) was 66th , D'rew
Hoover (26:00 .6) was 68th
and
Ronriie
Wilson
(26:03.8) was 69th as well
for SHS .
Eastern senior Keith
A.eiker also competed at the
event. running m the boys
ppen division rac e. Aeiker
placed seventh overall out
of 155 runners , completing
the comse in a time, of
18:29.
·· Colton Johnso n of Mt.
Gilead .won the open race
wtth a lime of 16:49.9 .
: Complete results of the
2008 Bob Rea li Cross
·country In vitational are
avai lab le on th e web at
www.baumspage.com

CoNTACfUS
1·740-446·2342 ext. 33

..

f•• - 1-740-446-3006
E-1111111- spor tsOmydailysenttnel.com

lll&gt;&lt;l&lt;IIJilalf

bryan Walters, Sports Writer
{740) 446-2342 , ext. 33
bwalters@mydallytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
{740) 446·2342, .... 33
lcrumCmydaUyreglster.com

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
- The Americans didn 't
need a miracle putt or even
the best player in the world
to take back the Ryder Cup .
Strong as a team, strong as
individual s, ·the Americans
rode the emotion of a flag waving crowd and its two
Kentucky players on Sunday
to win the Ryd er Cup for the
first time since 1999 .
Kenny Perry, th e 48-yearold nati ve son who felt thi s
week wo uld define hi s
career, was part of an early
push that swung momentum
toward the Americans. Then
came fellow Kentuckian J.B.

Holmes, blasting drives over
the trees to birdie . hi s last
two holes and position the
United States for a victory it
felt' was overdue.
The Ryder Cu~ was
clinched with a handshake
when Miguel Angel Jimenez
conceded a short par putt to
Jim · Furyk , givin g th e
Americans the 14 1/2 points
they needed to take possession ' of th e !?cinch gold
'
chalice.
Dressed in red shins the Sunday color of Tiger
Woods . who could on Iy
watch from home whi-l e
recovering
from · kn ee

surgery - the Americans Europe II I /2.
erupted into ht1gs and tears
It was the largest margin
behind the 17t h green .
of victory for the Americans
" I poured my hean and since 1981. And it was on ly
soul into thi s_for two years." fitting tha t Furyk won the
U.S. captain Paul Azinger decisive point .
He fe lt hollow six years
said, hi s voice crackin g.
'The players pOllred their ago at The Belfry watching
heart and soul into this for Paul McGinley make a par·
one week. They deserved it . putt that cli nched victory' for
I couldn't be happier."
Europe, the start of three
Ben C urti s and C had straight
victories
tha t
Campbell, the fina l player exiended its domination in
picked for this U.S. team , go lf's most passio nate
won the final two matches . event.
for a lopsided score that for
The only U.S. victory over
the last three years had been th e last 15 years was in
posted in European blue .
Please see Streak, 82
United States 16 112.

SprucelUDiber
Cash &amp; t:srrr Bnlrt
10'

12'

14'

BALTIMORE (AP) - In
less than a minute. the Baltimore Raven s scored
two touchdowns and further
damaged an already agon izing season for the Cleve land
Browns.
Baltimore tu rned tw o of
Derek Anderson's interceptions i!lto a pair of touchdown s' durin~ a 50-second
span of the' thi rd quarter,
·and the rested Raveils
staved unbeaten with a 2810 'victory Sunday.
Ed Reed returned one of
the intercep ti ons 32 yard s
for a score. and Le' Ron
McC lai n "ored his first twd
NFL tou chdowns on a pair
of ]-yard runs - both during a 21 -point th ird q'uarter
that turned a 3- point half·
time deficit inti1 a 2R-IO
lead .
Back from a knee injmy.
Willis McGahee rushed fm
64 ya rds and a S('Ore for the
Ravens (2-0), who were
forced to take last week off
when Hu rricane lk ~ postponed their ga me at
Houston.
Ai1clerson had anothe r trying da y in an effort to ge n·
erate so me offense for
Cleve land . . whicl1 was
picked by many to be a conte nder in the AFC North.
.Anderso.n went 1-1 -for-37
for 125 yards ,' was sacked
four times and t~ rcw three
interce ptions .
The Brown s (0-3) have
sco red only two touch Pleas~

see Browns, Bl

Treated lumller
t:&amp;Sh &amp; t:&amp;TrJIIIRIJII

11'

I'

11'

12'

11'

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214" $2.11 $3.54 $4.28 $5.8:1 18.18
AP photo

5/ld" SU5 $5.00 $8.119 Slotl Sl50

New York Giants' Steve Smith, left, tries to · push past
'Cincinnati Bengals' Marvin White dur:ing the second half of
an NFL football game at Giants Stadium in East Rutherford,
N.J ., on Sunday. The Giants won in overtime, 26·23.
&gt;

2ldll·

•

Giants beat Bengals in OT
EAST RUTHERFORD,
NJ . (AP) -The New York
Giants are off to their best
start since 2000, thanks in
large part to a little tipt oei n ~
in overtime by Amam
Toomer and the sure' leg of
44-year-old John Carney.
&lt;;:arney kicked a 22-yard
field goal with 8:39 left in
the extra sess ion after
Toomer danced the sideline
on a 31-yard reception, .and
the Super Bowl champions
overcame a strong effort by
the winless Cincinnati
Bengals for a 26-23 victory
on Sunday.
" My message today was
... it ended up being really
the power of the will,"
coach Tom Coughlin said.
" It wasn't our best game, by
any me'VJS, but we hun g in
there, we kept battling and
scrapping, .and in what was .
not our best game, we found
a way to win against a good
.
football team."

2ldl" $3.84 $4.12 $1.34 S1JI3 $1.20

The play that set · 'up
Carney 's fourth field goal
was the long pass from Eli
Manni.og to Toomer down
the left sideline on a thirdand-10 from the Bengals 38.
It was difficult to tell
whet her Toomer got both
feet in bounds. The Giants
hustled to the line of scrimmage and handed the ball to
Derrick Ward· for a 3--yard
run to the Bengals 4, precluding a video rev iew.
" I cou ldn't tell." Toomer
said when asked if he was in
bounds . "I just got as many
feet down as I could ."
Toomer is one of the best
in the league at getting both ·
feet down , said Manning,
who hit 26 of 43 passes for
289 yards.
·Coughlin sa id that the
umpire moved off the ball so
the Giants knew that the
replay official had allowed

Please see Ben1els, Bl

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�'
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 22,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

- Monday, September 22,

I

2ooa

www.mydailysentinel.com

Swarming defense lifts Eagles over Steelers

AP photo

Greg Btffle, lower center, celebrates wtth champaign in victory lane after wtnning the
NASCAR Campmg World RV 400 Spnnt Cup Senes a uto race at Dover International
Speedway tn Dover, Del , on Sunday.

'Biffle wins second straight Chase race
' DO VER. D.:l (APJ - hun as hts Roush Fenway
Gteg Rtllle Jmi shed" mtd- Rac ing teammates Kenseth
d lttH!
Jt.'i!Uiat
~Cd~O il .1~ a d t t· and Edwmds were ove r the
c
•
, ver \\ ho Ill\( uw ldn t \\ 111
fin aL thrilling laps at Dover
Nov.. he\ the one who International Speedway.
:~ 1mpl: L'.Jll-t lo:-.e
While Bifne has been able
. Btft k tt.tded ,, lengthy to drive that No. 16 Ford
w tnles .... "il tedk lo t d \\ l l li1 1TI!.! mto Vtetory Lane . he sttll
one "hen 11 mal le ted n1&lt;"l ca n' t maneuv e r tnto first
He made 11 d spat k l11i~ 2- for- pl ace 111 the Ch&lt;1se pomh
2 111 the Ch.tse fot the c h.tm- standm gs Rtffl e and twoPIIllhht p Sund a)
ustn~ ltmc dclendmg Cup champtannt het l.tk Jl•'" - th ts time un Junmie Joh thnn at e both
wit h ntnL' l.tps to gu - to 10 potnt s behmd Edward'
hol d oil M,tlt Kcn s,· th .tnd Jut the ove tc~ll lead. but
Carl Ed\\ .trds .md h&lt;11stet his Joh nson holds th e tiebreakbtd lor the Spnntl'Ltp lt tlc
er.
Btftl e knows the onl y way
"I feel
thts has been
conun g lot ,, whtk.'' Biflle to c.uch Edwards IS to keep
'&lt;lid "Thet e ' " lot of con- wmmng wee~
centrati on nght nov. It uoes'· We' ve got to bear the 99
n't ge t mote tm portan t than car somehow:: B1tllc satd .
tim "
·'We've got to stat! stretchUp ahead for Btlfl c " a mg it out "
IIIJl to Kansas City .•1 11 dek
That 's ex,tctl y what he dtd
where he won l.tst se.tson with th e lead once he ca ught
belore st,utmg a 3~- t.tce Kcnse rh and pu t a~ay
wtnle" slleak · That &lt;.lt&gt;mal Edw.Jrd s The t11o engaged
sk td seem' .ts much behtnd 111 a famas tt c run over the

' 'c

Bengals

.viii go b.tck to the bullpen
•tnd hope for anothet uppm tunll y somewhe re arou nd
the league," Carney satd .
Braildon Jaco bs scored
on I-yard 1un and Manntng
threw a 4-vard touchdow n
pass to Kevin Boss to
seemingly gtve New York a
23-20 VICtory with I :50 to
play.
But the Be ngals (0-3)
drove 7 1 yards and got H
2 1-y ard fteld goa l from
Shayne Graham on the fmal
pl ay of regulatio n
There were three scores
in the fma14 39 . A 17-yard
pa ss ft om Cat son Palmer to
Hou shmand zadch
gave
Cincmnatt a 20- 16 ad~an ­
tage Then the Giants went
68 yw us 111 nme play s to
retake the lead.
But Palmer d10ve the
Benga ls aga tn . htttlll!l'
Houshmandzadeh on passes of 20, 8, 16 and 9 yards
to set uf Graham's tying
fteld goa
Graham also ktcked field
goal s of 22 and 30 yards for
the Bengals, who are 0-3
for th e fitst time since
2003, coach Marv m Lew ts'
ftrst season. C hri s Peny,
who rushed for 74 ya rds on
20 carnes, also scmed on a
25-) ard tun
" It 's deftnttelv a tou~h
situlUton , a sitltation We

fmal 20 laps that h.td to have
tu gged at owner Jack
Roush 's loya lttcs. Btfflc. the
winnet last week at New
Hampshtre after passmg
Johnson wtth 12 laps left ,
made another tex tbook
mo ve to th e outstde pas t
Kenscth to pu ll aw.ly.
" I thought I tm ght be ab le
In hdng o n bu t I w~t~ n · t
sure ," Kcnscth sa td
Kcn seth was seumd,

dllU

Edwar&lt;.ls tht rd 111 " wildlv
succe"ful day fm Rou'h
Fenway. Kenseth hdd ,\ cl tsas trOLIS Chase opener when
an .teudenl forced hnn out
of th e race and he entered
12th 111 the sta ndm~ s He
moved to lOth
Other Chase dnvcr results
saw Ton y Stev.atllll l it h.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. was 24th .
and benny Hamlm was
3Rth Hamlin 's car .lisa w.ts
pushed to tl1e garage. mak mg 11 " bleak Jay fot Juc
Gtbbs Rac ing.
" We go t to keep

con1 111 g

toget her .1 ~ d team It may
sou nd cntty but we hav.;
improved. but not enou gh.:'
. from Page 8 l
Until th e overtim e, the
Beng.tb appeared ready tu
the pl ay to stand
borrow a page trom the
The Bengals wanted refG i,mts' path to th e Supet
eree Jeff Ttiplette to tev tew
Bowl l,tst season Afte t .lll
the play. He could not do tt
0-2 start . the Gmnts we nt
in overtime unless asked by
on th e road and beat
the tep ldy offtci al
Washin gton 1&lt;1 turn around
"I don' t know tf th at was
thet r se.tson New Y01k
a completton or not," satd
end ed that game wtth a
Benga ls recetver
T.J.
goal-line stand.
Houshmand zade h. who had
The Ben gals. who sc01ed
12 c.ttches tor I46 ya t Lis
a total of 17 pomts 111 losmg
and a touchdown . " Bttt
to
Baltimore
and
yea h, man. yo u have 10
Tennes.1ee . took a 13- 10
re vtew that It 's too close. I
halfttme lead by scot mg on
don't know I was on th e
theu· fma l three possess ions
side I thought 11 was .111
of the halt
' tncomp leti on. obv tous ly.
Graham sand.v t~ h ed I ield
But ~ ed h , 1t WdS close
goals ol 22 and ~0 ym ds
"( thou ght they wou ld
.tround a 25-yard touchre&gt;tew tt: thev &lt;.lidn't It was
down run by Pen y The key
a care h. They- won "
to the success was Palmer's
NFL spokes man Greg
abtltty to htt .qutck swt ng
Atell o said the replay offtpasses . cross mg patterns
and flanker screej1 s agamst
cta l looked at th e pl .1y and
an all -o ut pass rush that
ru led 1t legal. Aiello sa td the
sacked htm four times 111
offtctal ~vould have pteve nt,
th e ftrst half - and stx
ed th e ball from bemg
ttmes overall .
snapped tf he had any
New York , which squ .tndoubts
dered early fteld posttion,
Carney. who .vas stgned
answered Ctncmna!l 's hl"t
before th e season to fill m
two sCores wtth Jacobs'
for the IOJured Lawrence
shot! TD and Carne y's 2-t Ty nes. has h1t &lt;~l ln t ne of hts
ya rd field goal.
ftelcl goal .ntemph th" seaCtuney tied the game .tt
son.
"I realize .tt thts pomt in never envisioned o ur ~elvcs 13 111 the tlmd quarte r wtth a
my c.treer ami tim opport u- be mg 111 ." satd quarterback 46-y,ud fiel&lt;.l goal. an&lt;.l he
1111) . I am a re lief pttchcr Carson Palmer. who was
pu t New York ahead 16- I3
and whe n my joh is !lone I 27-n f-39 for 2R6 ya t ~s
with a 26-yard er.

Browns
from Page 81
doo,;ns 111 thetr th ree defeats
The last team to reach the
pla)offs after losing its first
three games wa, the 1998
Buffalo Btll s.
Balti more we nt ahead 1410 by cashmg m a turnover
on the Brow ns' f1rst possesSIOn of the third quarter.
Kellen Wtnslow was htt by
Ray Lewts while lry mg to
catch ,&lt;1 pass. and Chris
McAit ster plucked the ball
from the air and took the
interceptiOn
to
the
Cleveland 12. Four pl ays
later, McClain scored .
Reed then stepped 111 front
of tight end Steve Heiden.
cau ght Anderson's pass ·and
spnnted into the end zone
for hts fourth career interceptio n return for a touchdown .
Later 111 the quarter. a 2 1yard punt return by Jim
Leonhard and a roughness

penalty 'on Mtke Adam s ing hi s first cmeer tntergave Bal tunore the ball at cepl ton
D ' Qwel l
the Cleveland 35. The ftv e- Jackson 's prckoff set up a
play drive ended with a 19-yard touchd ow n pass
to uchdown run by McClam from Anderson to Jetome
That all but ass ured the Hanison, who took "toss
Ravens another wtn under 111 th e n ght fl at and weaved
ft rst-year coac h , John hts way mto the end zo ne.
The score . on th e fi rst
Harbaugh
Last
year,
Balttmore lo st tw'tce to play of the second penod.
ended Cleveland's run of
Cleveland.
Rave ns safety Dawan seven straigh t qu arte rs
Landry was taken from the without a touchdown .
Baltimore's next possesfield by a cart in the second
quarter after bemg struck Sion ended m another tnrerception, thi s one during a
10 the helmet wtth a kn, ·e
by Jamal Lewi s. Landry t ri~k play. McGahe e. took a
was trymg to make a tack- han doff and ran to ht s nght
le on the play, and immedi- before sending a lateral to
ately slumped to the Fiacco. wliosc puss in the
end zone· was wrestled
grou nd .
Landry never lost con- away from De rrick Mason
sc iousness and had move- by Adams.
But a 31-yard punt by
ment in all hi s ex tremities,
Dave
Zastudil
gave
according to Ravens orthopedtsl Leigh Ann Curl. A .Baltimore the ball ai the
CT scan at a nearby hospi- Cleveland 43, which led to
McGahee's touchdow n ru n.
tal indicated he was OK.
Cleve land took a I 0-7
Ravens rooki e quarterback Joe Fiacco comp leted lead with a 13-play, 76-yard
hi s first seven passes, hit- dn ve that ended wtth a 38ting frve different receivers · yard field goal by Phil
for 74 yards before throw- Dawson

PH ILADELPHIA (A P) Bn:m Westbrook ltmped off
th e ftdd m th e firs t half.
Dnnm,m M,Nabh mt&gt;sed
p.1 1t nl the thtrd yu arter
\Vnh rh~ tr be,r pla)er stdelme&lt;l dlltl sr,tr 4uarterback
hu111 ~ . the Ph!ladelph!U
E.tglcs dtd It wtth defense .•
A ~\\ a1 llll iH! D had nine
sacks . l ntced~" safety and
got thrcL' turnovers. and the
E.1gles bcitl the Ptttsburgh
Steebs 15-6 Su nday.
''"' stx davs ea rlter,
Phd!\ 's defense co ul&lt;.ln 't
'tnp -anybody The Dallas
Cowboys moved the ball at
will 111 a -tl -37 vtcto'ry last
Moncl.ty.
But tim untt was rejuvenated agatnst the Steelet s (21) Ben Roethltsberger had
no 11111e to throw and Willie
Parker cou.ldn ' t fmd any
room to run . Juqua Parker
had 2 I/2 sacks as the Eagles
banged around Btg Ben,
eventually knocking him ou r
of the ga me.
Cl tn gmg to a 10-6 lead,
the Eagles pmned Pittsburgh
at the 6 followmg a 54-yard
punt by Sav Rocca Three,
play' later, Roethlisberger
wa' undet heavy pressure
whe n he threw the ball away
m the end zo ne for a safety.
On Ptttsbut gh's next pos-

sessio n. Brian Dawkins
made a tlymg sack , swatting
the
ball
out
of
RoethltSberger's hand and
recove nn g at the Steelers
18. David Akers ktcked a
31-yard fteld goal to tee it.
Roeth Itsberger
wa'
replaced by Byron Leftwtch
when the Stee lers got the
ball wtth JU SI over 2 mmutes
left. There was no word on
his injury
West brook InJured ht s
ri (Sht ankle on the tlrst play
of the second quartet The
All-Pro
1unmn g
back
appeared to ge t hurt while
hurdlmg a team mate on a 2yard run. He walked to the
locker room wt thout help.
but dtdn 't return .
Coach Andy Reid sattl Xrays showed the ank le wasn' t broken,, but Westbrook
will have an MRI on
Monday.
One play earlt er, McNabb
was visibl y shaken up after
getting sacked . He played
the rest of th e half and took
a hard htt to the chest late in
the second qu arter McNabb
stayed in th e locker room
alter the hal f. but returned
dunng Philadelphi a's second senes 111 the thtrd quarter.
Backup Kevin Kolb was

.streak

Valhalla without losmg
Even so. the btggest star
mi ght have been Azmger
It wns ht s tdea to ~over­
from Page 81
haul the qualifymg system.
which he felt was keeping
I999, and only .tfter Justin th e Amencans f10m fteld Leo nard knocked m a 45- mg thctr best team . He also
foot btrdie pu tt to complete doubl e.d his captain' s ptcks.
the gtcatc'l comebac k ever and they all brought some111
the
"Mtracl e
at thm g.
Btook) inc"
"If we win , I' ll go down
fllt&gt;. tt me 11 was the as havmg the lowest IQ of
Amcnc.t ns wl1o produced any ge ntus who ever
unltkely stars
Boo lived," Az inge t said tim
Weekley, ftom the back- summer
woo ds of th e Flonda
European captain ' Nick
Panhandle . Anthony Kun , Faldo won't get oft that
the bt.tsh ktcl tram the easy.
sucets of LA: and Hunrer
The Bnti s'h press blisM.1 han. who !ted a U.S tered him for benchin g
1cc'lmt by wmnmg 3 1/2 Garcta and Lee Westwood
plllllls as a captam's ptck.
th e most success ful
M,than was the on ly player European tandem - on
to pl.ty all ft ve matches at Saturday, th e ftrst lime

urrtbune - Sentinel - l\egtster

intetceptcd
by
Troy
Pol amalu on hi s first pass,
whteh wa' dellected. The
Steele" took ove r at the
E.tgl cs -t'i. bu t we nt
no~hett'.
McN&lt;ibb ~ot a ntce ovalton when he ret111ned to the
stdelmc and he repi'aced
Kolh after the second-year
pm compl eted two st1 aight

CLASSIFIED

OH

McNabb co mpleted hts
2-t- fnr-35 for 196 yards and
one TD Roethli sberger was
13-ot-25 tor I 3 1 yurds . Both
QBs th rew their first tnterceptto ns of the season,
Parker. who had 243 yards
rushi ng 111 the ftrst two
games~ w;" held to 20 yards
on U carnes.
On the same dnve
We stbrook left the game . the
Eag les we nt ahead 7-3 on
McN.tbb's 20-yatd pass to
COJrell Buckhalter. McNabb
completed " 20-yard pass to
H.mk B.1 skett on third-and15 to the SteeleJS 46
Buckhalter ca ught a short
pass. e luded ,, tack let and
hurdled ,mother ftom the 4
to teach th e end zone.
McNa bb moved ahead of
Ron Jaworkot fo r ftrst on the
team's ,111-rime ltst with 176
TD p.1sses

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POLICIES OhiO Valley Publishing rese rves the rlg11tto edit. reject , or cancel any ad at any time Errora must De reported on th e 11 rs1 day ol pubtlca1ion and the
Tribune-Sentinel-Register wiU be raaponlibla lor no mora than the cos t of the space occ upied by the error and only the Ural Insertion We shalt not be lta bte for
any loll or eJtpanae that results from the publicati on or om ts ~ton ot an advertisement Correction wiU be made In the ttrst available edltton ·Box number ads
are always co nlh'lentt&amp;t · Current rat&amp; c&amp; rd appt1111 · AU real estate advflf'ltaements are subject to the Federa l Fetr Housing Act of 1969
Thts newspaper
qcc epts only help wanted ada meeting EOE etandar ds We wilt not knowin gly accept any advertising In violation of the law Wil l not be responsible lor any
errors In an ad taken over the phone

Description • Include A Pnce • Avoid Abbreviations

• Include Phone Number And Address W/'ten Needed
~
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Ohio Valley
Publislllng reserves
the right to edit,
reJect or cancel any
ad at any time
Errors
Must B
eported on the tlrs
of publlcatlo
nd the
Tribune
nllnei-Reglster wit
responsible tor n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
y the error and onl
he tlrst lnsenion W
hall not be liable to
ny loss or expens
at results from th
ubllcatlon

kttncarlyte@comcast net

Wan ted

. • Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• Lol~l SJ»tts .

•

••

We
wtll
no
nowingly accept an
dver11sement
I
iolatlon of the law.

))

,talendar: '
... and
mucl;t mor~~
'

•,
'•
•
•',

:.a

•

'

;'i ~

:,oint

'·

'

· . The Daily SentiJ!el

Legals ........ ........................................... 100
Announcements ..................... .. ................... 200
Blrthday/Anntversary ............... :.................. 205
Happy Ads ................................................ .... 210
Lost &amp; Found .................... .. .................... 215
Memory/Thank You ........ , ....... ,.................... 220
Notices .......... ........................................... 225

'

'

,

'. ..'

, : Catering .................. .... ...................... . ... 310
•, Child/Elderly Care .................................... . 312
~· Compu1ers .................................................. 314
Con1ractors .........................: ........................ 316
, Domestlca/Janltorlat ................................... 318
', Electrical .................. ................................ 320
, • Financial. .................... ... ................
.. .. 322
; : Heanh ....... ................................................ 326
• Heating &amp; Coollng ......... .. ........................ .... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ........ . ............. .... ......................... 332
, Lawn Service ............... ............................. 334
•; Muslc/Dancfl/Drama .. .......................... ..... 336
' Olher Services ........ ........................ ............338
Plumblng/Eioctrlcal ....................................340
Professional Servlces ................................. 342
Repairs .................... .. .............................. 344
Roofing ..................... ............................ 346
, Security ....................... .... .. ................... 348
' Ta&gt;&lt;iAccoun11ng ............. . .. . ...................... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ................... ............... 352
FinanciaL. .............. .......................................400
Financ ial Services.. ................... .
........ 405
, Insurance ............................................. 410
: : Money to Lend ........ ................... ............... 415
' Education..................................... .... .. ..... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
1no1ruciton &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
' . Lessona ..................................................... 515
' Personal .................... ... .............. . .. .. 520
Animals .................... .. .... ..............
.. ... 600
• Animal Supplies .......................................... 605
~: Horses ............... .. ...................................... 610
~· Livestock .................................................... 615
Pets................... . ........................................ 620
Want to buy ....... .... .......................... ........ 625
Agriculture ................................ ............. 700
.• Farm Equipment. ...................................... 705
.• Garden &amp; Produce ...................................... 710
~' Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hun1tng &amp; Land ......................................... 720
wan1 to buy .................................................. 725
• Merchandise ............................... ................ 900
· : • Antiques ....................................................... 90S
Appllonce ..................................................... 910
Auctions ........ ........................... ..................915
.. Bargain Basement .................. ..................... 920
Collectibles ..... ......... ................................ 925
.... Computers ............................................... 930
~• Equlpment!Suppliea............... . ................. 935

..: Flea Markets ........................................... 940

Mechanics .............. ....................................6036

, • Buslness ...................................................... 308

740-MJ-2827

Recreational Vehicles .. ............................. 1000
ATV .............. .... ... .............. .. ... .. ............. I 005
Bicycles
.................. . .............. . ... 1010
Boats/Accessories............ .. ........ ..... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ....... .................. 1020
Motorcucles
1025
'
.................. .... ...................... ..,
Other ................................................... 1030
want to buy ............. .... .............. . .... ,,, 1035
Automotive ...................... .............. 2000
Auto RentaVLease .. . .... ................... . 2005
Autos ............................ .............................. 20111
Classlc/Antlq es
2015
u ......................................
Comm8rclalllndustrlal
.. .. .. ........... .... 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ................... ........... 2025
Sports Ut11/ty............ .... .................. .. ....... 2030
TPJCks ................. ...... ..................................2035
Utility Trailers ................. ..... ...................... 2040
Vans ............................. ......................... 2045
Want to buy............... .....................
2050
Real Estate Sales ........ ......................... 3000
Cemetery Plots.......... ......................... .. 3005
Commerclal ................ ................................ 3010
Condominiums .............. .................. ........ 3015
For Sale by Owner . .................... ..
.3020
Houses tor Sale..... .. ... ............... ... . 3025
Land (Acreage) ........ . .. ................ .
. 3030
Lois ................................................. ,...... 3035
Want to buy ............................................... 3040
Real Es1ate Rentals ................................ 3500
Apartmentatrownhouses ... .. ......... . .. 3505
Commerclel.... .. . .. .................. .. .. ..... 3510
Condominiums ........ ............................. 3515
Houses1or Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) ......................................... 3525
Storage ............ .. ......................................... 3535
Wont to Rent ............................... ............. 3540
Manufactured Housing ........................... 4000
Lots ...................... .. ............................... 4005
Movers .......................................................4010
Rentals .. .................... .. ............................... 4015
Soles ...... ............ ....... .................... .............. 4020
Supplies .................. ............................... 4025
Want to Buy ....................................... 4030
Res ort Property ......... ........................... 5000
Resort Property lor sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property lor rent ........................... 5050
Employmeni:.......................... :...................&amp;OOO
AccountingiFi nanclal . .............................. 6002
Ad min tstratlve/Prolessl on at.. ... .. ............ 6004
Cashier/Clerk ......................................... 6006
Child/Elderly Cere ............................ . 6008
Clerical ..................................................... 6010
Constructlon .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..... ................... ........ 6014
Education ..................................... , ......... 6016
Electrical Plumbing .................................601 8
Employment Agenctes .............................. 6020
Entertalnment ............................. ............... 6022
Food Servlces ........................ ...... .............. 6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................. 6026
Help anted- General ................................6028
Law Enforcement ................................ 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................ 6032
ManagemenVS,.,perv lsory ........................ 6034

Services ...............................................,.... 300

l:

• , Fuel

011 Cool/Wood/Gas ................. ........... 945

: .... Furniture ............, ........................................ 950
•'
'":
:'
•:
~·

Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................... :............... 955
Kid' s Corner ................................................ 960
Mtscellanoouo ............................ .'................. 955
Want to buy ........ .......................................... 970
Yard Sale .. ................................................... 975

@

200

Free
Indoor
740-336-0663

loot &amp; Foond

MonoyTo lond

Found 1 bla ck' puppy on NOTICE Borrow Smart
Shoes1rmg
Rtdge Contact the Ohto 01V1·
s•on of FinanCial lnstttu
441 · 1501
hans OHtce of Consumer
M!sstng
Atfat rs BEFORE you rcft
Black male dog, medttJm nance your home or ob·
s•ze. short·ha•r gray on tatn a loan BEWARE ol
lace, brown co llar LaS1 requests lor any large
seen Oshel Rd . At 2 advance
payments
ol
stde
Reward lees or tnsurance Call
304-675-4027
the O«•ce of Consumer
Atf•ars
1011
free
al
Notices
1-866·278 0003 to learn
1f the mongage broker or
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
lender IS properly 11PUBLISHING CO
reccensed (Tht s IS a public
ommends that you do
ser.nce
announcement
bus1ness With people you
from
the
Ohto Valley
know and NOT to send
money through the matl Publlshmg Company)
unt•l you have tnvesttgat·
mg the oHenng
Skaggs Appliances
moved
740 379·9034

has
Call

Ser~tces

300

·L---------------------------------~

500

Ed ucallon

Busineu &amp; Trade
School
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;==;;;;;;
Gallipolis Career
College

Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing

Uncond•IIOnal lifetime
guara ntee Local refer·
ences furntshed Estab·
llshed 1975 Call24 Hrs
740·4 46·0870 Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

Lawns.,...;..

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today 1 740 446-4367
1 800·214-0 452
galltpotscaree1conegeedu
Accred~ed Member Accret111
1ng Counc 111or lndepanden1
Colleges and Schools 12748
lnJtruc:Hon &amp; Training
WV BOhr Underground
Mi ners Class
starttng
Sepl
22nd
Whi!-Co-Tralntng
304·372·8346

D &amp; A .Lawn care mow- ~:;;:.;~;::,:~~~~
lng weed eating hedge
tnmmtng, fall clean up
and leaf removal Day
740-853-1702 or N'ghl
;,74;;:0;,;·3;;,
79:;,·2;,;5;;;99::;.,""'""'=
U..atoc:k

~~=-i--'!o=;;;;;=

Pet
Cremat10ns
740·446-3745
Prof111ional

Charoia•s &amp; Red Angus
3 Angus
breed
Call he11ers, cows
3 Angus bull
Jeeders 304 675·2274

Service•

Poh

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL ~ECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Wlri1
1-888·582-3345

6 week old fluffy k•ttens
some are calico some
are ye IIow 446 ·0585 ca II
between 4PM &amp; 6PM

on
SAVINGS

2 female cats to gtve
away 1 gray and one
black 446·3732
AKC mtntature Schpau·
zers
now
available,
while
or
sail/pepper,
(740)992 1328
AKC Yorkte pupptes 10
wks old, Females $600,
Males
$450
304 895 3926

......... 6040

Part-Time-Temporar ies ........................... 6042
Restaurants ............... :....................,...... 6044
Sates .......~ .......................... .........................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textlleolfactory .... ................... .............. 605~

Poh

Announccmenl5

Medlca1.......................................................6038

Muaicat .................................. .

~

2008 by NEA 1 Inc

..,===""'==""'
-

&amp;unbaP. t!tim~ -~erttintl

• Appliance Service ..................................... 302
• • Automotive ......... ..................................... 304
• •• Building Materlals ..................................... .. 30ti

740-5~3-J27'1/800-71ll-1~17

)

~'

~aUipoH~ Jlatfp ilfdbtutt
.'''
. ' .~
~lea-ant ,l\egt~t~t
''

~: ~'!:~~~&amp;~~ ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~~

~
,•

Buy-

Shop

Classifleds!

1000

~or sale AKC Reg Pomerantan
pupp1es
Vet
checked and up 10 date
shots/wormed
Call
740·379·2886
leave
msg Wtll return call asap

K11tenst

~~~~~--:-FREE Ktnens 1 male orange/whlte,
1-lemale
gray/whtte
call
Kelly
304-593-3822
FREE Ktttens 2 orange 1
black &amp; 1 calrco? 7 wks
old wormed &amp; de-11eed
304-675-8164

Recreational
Vehtc les

Paw ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;

ATVr.

900

Par-Mar Golf Cart. camoflaoe pa1nt, kn obby tires
$1 500 304-882·3237 or
304-593-2443

Merc h andt se

Campen/ RVa &amp;
Trailers

Antique a

www comtcs com
"

Want To Buy

Pa~~s

0

'1' J.'l.

:.~
: ~~=========~
CLASSIFIED INDEX

·,•.

()

(

This
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standards

•
•
•

•

• comniun'ity

rate car

Real
vertlsementa
ar
ubject to the Federa
Fair Housing Act o
1968

to

Gmseng

Black
Walnuts.
Call 740 698-6060

Box number ads ar
!ways confidential
Current
plies

Gram

10 acres of good Hay Absolute Top Dollar · s•l·
ready to cut tn
Leon ver/gold
co•ns
any
IOK! 14KJ 18K gold jew304·458-1661
elry dental gold
pre
US
currency
Square bale s of Hay &amp; 1935
sets
ella
Ftrewood
lor
Sale proof/mtn1
304 882-2537
or monds MTS Co•n Shop
151 2nd Aven ue Ga1h·
304 882 272 1
polls 446-2842
WontTo Buy
Now
buymg
740·274·0326

orrectlons wtll
acle
In the firs
vaUable edition .

••
•

i.ANCAS I ER. OH

Hay, Feed, Seed,

av

Poulter closed out Steve
Stncker, 3 and 2. to go 4-1
for the week and validate
Faldo picking hrm over
Datt en Clarke Eve n so ,
Europe dtdn ' t qutte have
the team sptrit that carried
it to 1ecord vtctories over
the Am ericans th e last two
tunes. And s ure dtdn 't get
the perf01 m.mce from some
of lis best players.
Garc ta . Wes twood and
H:\ rnn gton failed to wm a
match all week.

VI~IT OU J~ N£1Y£!iT LOCA f ION
BUS RT ~~SOUTH OF l."-NCASTER

Now you can have borders end graphics
~
added to your classified ads
j~
1
m
Borders$3.00/ perad
~
Graphics 504 for small
S1.00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid•

« POLICIES«

over

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

word Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Succes!?u Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Gel Response ...

etthet of them had ever
mt ssecl a m.t tc h. Even more
pecultat v,.as p).ltttng double
maJOI
wtnner Padraig
Harnngton. We stwood and
ian Poulte1 in th e final
tflree m.ttehes Sunday
The Rydet Cup was over
hefore thet r matches were

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

Websttes:
www.mydatlytnbune com
www mydatlysenhnel com
www.mydatlyregtsler com

l\egtster
To Place
urrthune '
Sentinel
Your Ad~ · (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
CCIII TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
675-5234

:-••

ATHENS,OH

. Gallia
County,

liN 15 p&lt;~sses and hmshed

~.

ROUl E 50/32

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

pas~es.

'

ON F. MII.E WEST OF ATHENS ON

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

GIBBS
ANT IQUES
Also resTore furntture lo
cated on Tornado Rd oft
Rt
33,
Ractne
(Park&amp;Rtde)
e:-.1T
740 949 2246

5th

Wheel frame new
and nms $400 5\h
wheel htTch $100 ca ll
304·882-3237
or
30 4 593 2443
t~res

tables
&amp; AV
coke
cases SeN1ce a1 Carmtchael
ShO\V
Tratlers
trunks 011 lamps cups 74 4 4 6 38 2 5
and
sa ucers
M•ckey ;,:?0:;;·:0:::0:·;;:~"~~~~
Mouse
ttems
Ch1lds RV SeN tce at Carmt•
wtcke rrocker
old chael
Tratlers
pressed glass ware, Far- ~
74;;;0;;;4;;;4,;;
6·,;;38
;:;2,;5===""'
ber Ware coke s•gn =
clocks
"'"ales
electnc ••="M;;;o;;;lo;;;r;;r:y;;d;;;•;;;•==
""'
patno mthlary foldtng or- 03 Kawasaki KX 65 low
gan ftre place grate hours Jtke new SISOO
Delta Queen posters &amp; obo
740-446-6865
or
pafnt tngs
Mtsstsstppt 740·645-5736
Q
c
ueen
ommerattve ~~-~-:---~
C
"
hampatgn bottle 8 &amp; 2001
Yamaha
R6
16 mm prOJectors ca r- bluelwh1te approx 3500
11
toon
1ms
mtscellane· mtles Yosh p1pe ta 11 ktt
ous 17401992-4197
$4500
Call
740 645-7471
Fuel Oil Coal
05 Hayabusa low m1les
Wood Gco
ong owner many e:..tras
Seasoned Firewood all don't try to l1t 1n. s1and
load out S7,900 446-2254
hardwood
S55

I r c~ 1o ..&lt;&gt;oW home Bl,l~~
lth pup' -. wnk' unnncd
'O-' r;•~ 11'ih
M•ntture
Dachshund
CKC regrste red, shots.
wormed
Males &amp; Fe·
males
longha•r
&amp; 304 682 2567
shOrthatr red &amp; b!f.ckltan
2000
Au1o mol• ~e
$300 each 304·593·3820
Miscellaneous
Neuter Scooter
ts commg to Athens Co . t2xl 4 carpet med•um
Autos
6,7
Monday Sept 29th Cat btow n $150 00
$5000 01 Honda C1v1c LX 5
rug
Only Spay/Neu ter CliniC, area
6pm spd 98,000 m1les ovet
at1er
$40ica1 &amp; Free shots, Call
740-446
,
423
pay on line $50/cat pay
5 000 tn extras Lambo
S7,700
OBO
at
c_hnlc,
Go
To ~'!'""~~-~'!'""~ · Doors
www neutersc ooter com
2000
Honda
400 4 740 709 1398
or
call
Tell
Free Wheeler
Commerctal
I 866-662-5838
tanntng bed Couch (Tan) 2006 Dodge Stratus 4
~~~~~~~~ 1 yr old 304·895-3129
cyl auto 68 000 mtles
$4 500 080 256 ·9031 or
Berbe.r Carpet $6 95 yd 256·1233
carpet remnants $40 00
&amp; up Mollohan carpet 2007 Hqnda VTX 1300R
f
E .
t
2212 Eastern Ave Galli· 1800 miles black 57800
366 8360
--=a•rm;;;;;;;;iq;;;uli;;p;;;m;;;tn=;;;;;
~
pohs, Oh10 740 446 7444
2007 Honda VTX 1300R
Ford 4000, h1gh clear·
m1tes.
black
ance tractor wtlh Free· Jet Aeratton Motors re- 1BOO
patred
new
&amp;
rebUih
tn
57800
388-8380
mans loader frame
no
stock Call Ron Evans
bucket $3800 446·2801
1·800-537·9528
Trucks
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
BabystuH
tor
sale 2006 Chevy Stlverado
KIEFER BUILT,
and
tnlant low m11es
4· WD
VALL EY
HORSE/LIVE· Stroller
carsea
1
playpen
and
lois
304
593
0876
or
STOCK
TRAILER S
Call
Jod•
at 304-593-0959
LOAO
MAX
EQUIP· more
MENT
TRAILER S, 740-446·7473
1988 - E-350 Bo• Truck
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
Coleman
70 OOOBTU runs tJ•.Jt needs work
~OMESTEADER
natural gas furnace pur- 339 0885
CARGO/CONCESSION
chased new-used' only 5 ;;,;;;;,:;:;;:,;:,====""'
TRAILE AS
8, W months
$500
Kenny
Van1
GOOSENECK FLATBED W1ggens
M•ners~!lle
$ 3999 VIEW OUR EN ·
1987 Chevy 112 ton Van
17 40)992·5002
TIRE TRAILER INVEN
auto V·6 good ttres
TORY AT
Complete eleetnc temp runs good, good work
WWW CARMICHAELserv1ce
on
20
6)(6 van
$675,
TRAILERS COM
treated post new usee (740)992 0255
740·446-3825
one
t1 me
S275
~6 ~~l~
rn~
rs~
h -mo
_we
_
r w~
,h-.,- (7 40)992·0255
-..=W;;;;;iai;;n;;;tT;;;o;;;i;Bu.;y;;;;;;=
Ira belts &amp; blades $750 :'::':::"':~~~~~.,. •
NEW AND USEO STEEL
Wanl to buy Junk Cars,
obo 379-2706
;;;;;;;,;.;,;;.;;;,;.;...___ Steel Beams Ptpe Rebar· call 740-388·0884
Have you pnced a John tor
Concre1e
A'ngle
Rea l Estate
Deere lately? You 11 be Channel Flal Bar Steel 3000
Sales
surpnsedl Check out our Gral•ng lor Dratns Dnve·
used
at ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
1nventory
www CAREQ com
Car· Scrap Metals Open Mor ~
Commeroa
· J
'chael
Equ1pment
Tue.
Wed
&amp;
Fr~
m
•=;;i;;i;;;;;i;;;.,i;;i;;==
74().446·2412
Bam-4 30pm
Closed ~
-;...~--~~~- ThUrs
Sat
&amp;
Sun For
sale
or
lease
John Deere 2010 Farm 740·446·7300
offtcelwarehouse/slorage
Tractor. Row Crop, Gas ,..,_,,...._ _ _.__ great 1ocat1on •n Gall•po·
45HP. 3pt h•lch, L1ve Pole Bam 30x40•10 only hs
1800
sq
tt
PTO very mce shape $6 995 other stzes Free S.tOOimonth Call Wayne
$3995
OBO Oel"ery 877- 773·8356
404-456·3802

I

I
I

I

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

~7~4,;.01:;;3;;
67~0;;;5:;;9~
6 ~~~-

• Wonllo Buy
Housoa for Solo
One etghty AH 1s Charmers
tractor.
d•esel, George's Portable Saw· Must sell 3 bd . 2 bth
$4,500
OBO m1U don t haul your Logs home Ill. Syracuse Call
(740)985 4291
or to the Mtll JUSt call t740 )949 _2513
740-416-9995
304 675· 1957

,.

�'
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 22,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2008

- Monday, September 22,

I

2ooa

www.mydailysentinel.com

Swarming defense lifts Eagles over Steelers

AP photo

Greg Btffle, lower center, celebrates wtth champaign in victory lane after wtnning the
NASCAR Campmg World RV 400 Spnnt Cup Senes a uto race at Dover International
Speedway tn Dover, Del , on Sunday.

'Biffle wins second straight Chase race
' DO VER. D.:l (APJ - hun as hts Roush Fenway
Gteg Rtllle Jmi shed" mtd- Rac ing teammates Kenseth
d lttH!
Jt.'i!Uiat
~Cd~O il .1~ a d t t· and Edwmds were ove r the
c
•
, ver \\ ho Ill\( uw ldn t \\ 111
fin aL thrilling laps at Dover
Nov.. he\ the one who International Speedway.
:~ 1mpl: L'.Jll-t lo:-.e
While Bifne has been able
. Btft k tt.tded ,, lengthy to drive that No. 16 Ford
w tnles .... "il tedk lo t d \\ l l li1 1TI!.! mto Vtetory Lane . he sttll
one "hen 11 mal le ted n1&lt;"l ca n' t maneuv e r tnto first
He made 11 d spat k l11i~ 2- for- pl ace 111 the Ch&lt;1se pomh
2 111 the Ch.tse fot the c h.tm- standm gs Rtffl e and twoPIIllhht p Sund a)
ustn~ ltmc dclendmg Cup champtannt het l.tk Jl•'" - th ts time un Junmie Joh thnn at e both
wit h ntnL' l.tps to gu - to 10 potnt s behmd Edward'
hol d oil M,tlt Kcn s,· th .tnd Jut the ove tc~ll lead. but
Carl Ed\\ .trds .md h&lt;11stet his Joh nson holds th e tiebreakbtd lor the Spnntl'Ltp lt tlc
er.
Btftl e knows the onl y way
"I feel
thts has been
conun g lot ,, whtk.'' Biflle to c.uch Edwards IS to keep
'&lt;lid "Thet e ' " lot of con- wmmng wee~
centrati on nght nov. It uoes'· We' ve got to bear the 99
n't ge t mote tm portan t than car somehow:: B1tllc satd .
tim "
·'We've got to stat! stretchUp ahead for Btlfl c " a mg it out "
IIIJl to Kansas City .•1 11 dek
That 's ex,tctl y what he dtd
where he won l.tst se.tson with th e lead once he ca ught
belore st,utmg a 3~- t.tce Kcnse rh and pu t a~ay
wtnle" slleak · That &lt;.lt&gt;mal Edw.Jrd s The t11o engaged
sk td seem' .ts much behtnd 111 a famas tt c run over the

' 'c

Bengals

.viii go b.tck to the bullpen
•tnd hope for anothet uppm tunll y somewhe re arou nd
the league," Carney satd .
Braildon Jaco bs scored
on I-yard 1un and Manntng
threw a 4-vard touchdow n
pass to Kevin Boss to
seemingly gtve New York a
23-20 VICtory with I :50 to
play.
But the Be ngals (0-3)
drove 7 1 yards and got H
2 1-y ard fteld goa l from
Shayne Graham on the fmal
pl ay of regulatio n
There were three scores
in the fma14 39 . A 17-yard
pa ss ft om Cat son Palmer to
Hou shmand zadch
gave
Cincmnatt a 20- 16 ad~an ­
tage Then the Giants went
68 yw us 111 nme play s to
retake the lead.
But Palmer d10ve the
Benga ls aga tn . htttlll!l'
Houshmandzadeh on passes of 20, 8, 16 and 9 yards
to set uf Graham's tying
fteld goa
Graham also ktcked field
goal s of 22 and 30 yards for
the Bengals, who are 0-3
for th e fitst time since
2003, coach Marv m Lew ts'
ftrst season. C hri s Peny,
who rushed for 74 ya rds on
20 carnes, also scmed on a
25-) ard tun
" It 's deftnttelv a tou~h
situlUton , a sitltation We

fmal 20 laps that h.td to have
tu gged at owner Jack
Roush 's loya lttcs. Btfflc. the
winnet last week at New
Hampshtre after passmg
Johnson wtth 12 laps left ,
made another tex tbook
mo ve to th e outstde pas t
Kenscth to pu ll aw.ly.
" I thought I tm ght be ab le
In hdng o n bu t I w~t~ n · t
sure ," Kcnscth sa td
Kcn seth was seumd,

dllU

Edwar&lt;.ls tht rd 111 " wildlv
succe"ful day fm Rou'h
Fenway. Kenseth hdd ,\ cl tsas trOLIS Chase opener when
an .teudenl forced hnn out
of th e race and he entered
12th 111 the sta ndm~ s He
moved to lOth
Other Chase dnvcr results
saw Ton y Stev.atllll l it h.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. was 24th .
and benny Hamlm was
3Rth Hamlin 's car .lisa w.ts
pushed to tl1e garage. mak mg 11 " bleak Jay fot Juc
Gtbbs Rac ing.
" We go t to keep

con1 111 g

toget her .1 ~ d team It may
sou nd cntty but we hav.;
improved. but not enou gh.:'
. from Page 8 l
Until th e overtim e, the
Beng.tb appeared ready tu
the pl ay to stand
borrow a page trom the
The Bengals wanted refG i,mts' path to th e Supet
eree Jeff Ttiplette to tev tew
Bowl l,tst season Afte t .lll
the play. He could not do tt
0-2 start . the Gmnts we nt
in overtime unless asked by
on th e road and beat
the tep ldy offtci al
Washin gton 1&lt;1 turn around
"I don' t know tf th at was
thet r se.tson New Y01k
a completton or not," satd
end ed that game wtth a
Benga ls recetver
T.J.
goal-line stand.
Houshmand zade h. who had
The Ben gals. who sc01ed
12 c.ttches tor I46 ya t Lis
a total of 17 pomts 111 losmg
and a touchdown . " Bttt
to
Baltimore
and
yea h, man. yo u have 10
Tennes.1ee . took a 13- 10
re vtew that It 's too close. I
halfttme lead by scot mg on
don't know I was on th e
theu· fma l three possess ions
side I thought 11 was .111
of the halt
' tncomp leti on. obv tous ly.
Graham sand.v t~ h ed I ield
But ~ ed h , 1t WdS close
goals ol 22 and ~0 ym ds
"( thou ght they wou ld
.tround a 25-yard touchre&gt;tew tt: thev &lt;.lidn't It was
down run by Pen y The key
a care h. They- won "
to the success was Palmer's
NFL spokes man Greg
abtltty to htt .qutck swt ng
Atell o said the replay offtpasses . cross mg patterns
and flanker screej1 s agamst
cta l looked at th e pl .1y and
an all -o ut pass rush that
ru led 1t legal. Aiello sa td the
sacked htm four times 111
offtctal ~vould have pteve nt,
th e ftrst half - and stx
ed th e ball from bemg
ttmes overall .
snapped tf he had any
New York , which squ .tndoubts
dered early fteld posttion,
Carney. who .vas stgned
answered Ctncmna!l 's hl"t
before th e season to fill m
two sCores wtth Jacobs'
for the IOJured Lawrence
shot! TD and Carne y's 2-t Ty nes. has h1t &lt;~l ln t ne of hts
ya rd field goal.
ftelcl goal .ntemph th" seaCtuney tied the game .tt
son.
"I realize .tt thts pomt in never envisioned o ur ~elvcs 13 111 the tlmd quarte r wtth a
my c.treer ami tim opport u- be mg 111 ." satd quarterback 46-y,ud fiel&lt;.l goal. an&lt;.l he
1111) . I am a re lief pttchcr Carson Palmer. who was
pu t New York ahead 16- I3
and whe n my joh is !lone I 27-n f-39 for 2R6 ya t ~s
with a 26-yard er.

Browns
from Page 81
doo,;ns 111 thetr th ree defeats
The last team to reach the
pla)offs after losing its first
three games wa, the 1998
Buffalo Btll s.
Balti more we nt ahead 1410 by cashmg m a turnover
on the Brow ns' f1rst possesSIOn of the third quarter.
Kellen Wtnslow was htt by
Ray Lewts while lry mg to
catch ,&lt;1 pass. and Chris
McAit ster plucked the ball
from the air and took the
interceptiOn
to
the
Cleveland 12. Four pl ays
later, McClain scored .
Reed then stepped 111 front
of tight end Steve Heiden.
cau ght Anderson's pass ·and
spnnted into the end zone
for hts fourth career interceptio n return for a touchdown .
Later 111 the quarter. a 2 1yard punt return by Jim
Leonhard and a roughness

penalty 'on Mtke Adam s ing hi s first cmeer tntergave Bal tunore the ball at cepl ton
D ' Qwel l
the Cleveland 35. The ftv e- Jackson 's prckoff set up a
play drive ended with a 19-yard touchd ow n pass
to uchdown run by McClam from Anderson to Jetome
That all but ass ured the Hanison, who took "toss
Ravens another wtn under 111 th e n ght fl at and weaved
ft rst-year coac h , John hts way mto the end zo ne.
The score . on th e fi rst
Harbaugh
Last
year,
Balttmore lo st tw'tce to play of the second penod.
ended Cleveland's run of
Cleveland.
Rave ns safety Dawan seven straigh t qu arte rs
Landry was taken from the without a touchdown .
Baltimore's next possesfield by a cart in the second
quarter after bemg struck Sion ended m another tnrerception, thi s one during a
10 the helmet wtth a kn, ·e
by Jamal Lewi s. Landry t ri~k play. McGahe e. took a
was trymg to make a tack- han doff and ran to ht s nght
le on the play, and immedi- before sending a lateral to
ately slumped to the Fiacco. wliosc puss in the
end zone· was wrestled
grou nd .
Landry never lost con- away from De rrick Mason
sc iousness and had move- by Adams.
But a 31-yard punt by
ment in all hi s ex tremities,
Dave
Zastudil
gave
according to Ravens orthopedtsl Leigh Ann Curl. A .Baltimore the ball ai the
CT scan at a nearby hospi- Cleveland 43, which led to
McGahee's touchdow n ru n.
tal indicated he was OK.
Cleve land took a I 0-7
Ravens rooki e quarterback Joe Fiacco comp leted lead with a 13-play, 76-yard
hi s first seven passes, hit- dn ve that ended wtth a 38ting frve different receivers · yard field goal by Phil
for 74 yards before throw- Dawson

PH ILADELPHIA (A P) Bn:m Westbrook ltmped off
th e ftdd m th e firs t half.
Dnnm,m M,Nabh mt&gt;sed
p.1 1t nl the thtrd yu arter
\Vnh rh~ tr be,r pla)er stdelme&lt;l dlltl sr,tr 4uarterback
hu111 ~ . the Ph!ladelph!U
E.tglcs dtd It wtth defense .•
A ~\\ a1 llll iH! D had nine
sacks . l ntced~" safety and
got thrcL' turnovers. and the
E.1gles bcitl the Ptttsburgh
Steebs 15-6 Su nday.
''"' stx davs ea rlter,
Phd!\ 's defense co ul&lt;.ln 't
'tnp -anybody The Dallas
Cowboys moved the ball at
will 111 a -tl -37 vtcto'ry last
Moncl.ty.
But tim untt was rejuvenated agatnst the Steelet s (21) Ben Roethltsberger had
no 11111e to throw and Willie
Parker cou.ldn ' t fmd any
room to run . Juqua Parker
had 2 I/2 sacks as the Eagles
banged around Btg Ben,
eventually knocking him ou r
of the ga me.
Cl tn gmg to a 10-6 lead,
the Eagles pmned Pittsburgh
at the 6 followmg a 54-yard
punt by Sav Rocca Three,
play' later, Roethlisberger
wa' undet heavy pressure
whe n he threw the ball away
m the end zo ne for a safety.
On Ptttsbut gh's next pos-

sessio n. Brian Dawkins
made a tlymg sack , swatting
the
ball
out
of
RoethltSberger's hand and
recove nn g at the Steelers
18. David Akers ktcked a
31-yard fteld goal to tee it.
Roeth Itsberger
wa'
replaced by Byron Leftwtch
when the Stee lers got the
ball wtth JU SI over 2 mmutes
left. There was no word on
his injury
West brook InJured ht s
ri (Sht ankle on the tlrst play
of the second quartet The
All-Pro
1unmn g
back
appeared to ge t hurt while
hurdlmg a team mate on a 2yard run. He walked to the
locker room wt thout help.
but dtdn 't return .
Coach Andy Reid sattl Xrays showed the ank le wasn' t broken,, but Westbrook
will have an MRI on
Monday.
One play earlt er, McNabb
was visibl y shaken up after
getting sacked . He played
the rest of th e half and took
a hard htt to the chest late in
the second qu arter McNabb
stayed in th e locker room
alter the hal f. but returned
dunng Philadelphi a's second senes 111 the thtrd quarter.
Backup Kevin Kolb was

.streak

Valhalla without losmg
Even so. the btggest star
mi ght have been Azmger
It wns ht s tdea to ~over­
from Page 81
haul the qualifymg system.
which he felt was keeping
I999, and only .tfter Justin th e Amencans f10m fteld Leo nard knocked m a 45- mg thctr best team . He also
foot btrdie pu tt to complete doubl e.d his captain' s ptcks.
the gtcatc'l comebac k ever and they all brought some111
the
"Mtracl e
at thm g.
Btook) inc"
"If we win , I' ll go down
fllt&gt;. tt me 11 was the as havmg the lowest IQ of
Amcnc.t ns wl1o produced any ge ntus who ever
unltkely stars
Boo lived," Az inge t said tim
Weekley, ftom the back- summer
woo ds of th e Flonda
European captain ' Nick
Panhandle . Anthony Kun , Faldo won't get oft that
the bt.tsh ktcl tram the easy.
sucets of LA: and Hunrer
The Bnti s'h press blisM.1 han. who !ted a U.S tered him for benchin g
1cc'lmt by wmnmg 3 1/2 Garcta and Lee Westwood
plllllls as a captam's ptck.
th e most success ful
M,than was the on ly player European tandem - on
to pl.ty all ft ve matches at Saturday, th e ftrst lime

urrtbune - Sentinel - l\egtster

intetceptcd
by
Troy
Pol amalu on hi s first pass,
whteh wa' dellected. The
Steele" took ove r at the
E.tgl cs -t'i. bu t we nt
no~hett'.
McN&lt;ibb ~ot a ntce ovalton when he ret111ned to the
stdelmc and he repi'aced
Kolh after the second-year
pm compl eted two st1 aight

CLASSIFIED

OH

McNabb co mpleted hts
2-t- fnr-35 for 196 yards and
one TD Roethli sberger was
13-ot-25 tor I 3 1 yurds . Both
QBs th rew their first tnterceptto ns of the season,
Parker. who had 243 yards
rushi ng 111 the ftrst two
games~ w;" held to 20 yards
on U carnes.
On the same dnve
We stbrook left the game . the
Eag les we nt ahead 7-3 on
McN.tbb's 20-yatd pass to
COJrell Buckhalter. McNabb
completed " 20-yard pass to
H.mk B.1 skett on third-and15 to the SteeleJS 46
Buckhalter ca ught a short
pass. e luded ,, tack let and
hurdled ,mother ftom the 4
to teach th e end zone.
McNa bb moved ahead of
Ron Jaworkot fo r ftrst on the
team's ,111-rime ltst with 176
TD p.1sses

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Legals ........ ........................................... 100
Announcements ..................... .. ................... 200
Blrthday/Anntversary ............... :.................. 205
Happy Ads ................................................ .... 210
Lost &amp; Found .................... .. .................... 215
Memory/Thank You ........ , ....... ,.................... 220
Notices .......... ........................................... 225

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, : Catering .................. .... ...................... . ... 310
•, Child/Elderly Care .................................... . 312
~· Compu1ers .................................................. 314
Con1ractors .........................: ........................ 316
, Domestlca/Janltorlat ................................... 318
', Electrical .................. ................................ 320
, • Financial. .................... ... ................
.. .. 322
; : Heanh ....... ................................................ 326
• Heating &amp; Coollng ......... .. ........................ .... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ........ . ............. .... ......................... 332
, Lawn Service ............... ............................. 334
•; Muslc/Dancfl/Drama .. .......................... ..... 336
' Olher Services ........ ........................ ............338
Plumblng/Eioctrlcal ....................................340
Professional Servlces ................................. 342
Repairs .................... .. .............................. 344
Roofing ..................... ............................ 346
, Security ....................... .... .. ................... 348
' Ta&gt;&lt;iAccoun11ng ............. . .. . ...................... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ................... ............... 352
FinanciaL. .............. .......................................400
Financ ial Services.. ................... .
........ 405
, Insurance ............................................. 410
: : Money to Lend ........ ................... ............... 415
' Education..................................... .... .. ..... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
1no1ruciton &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
' . Lessona ..................................................... 515
' Personal .................... ... .............. . .. .. 520
Animals .................... .. .... ..............
.. ... 600
• Animal Supplies .......................................... 605
~: Horses ............... .. ...................................... 610
~· Livestock .................................................... 615
Pets................... . ........................................ 620
Want to buy ....... .... .......................... ........ 625
Agriculture ................................ ............. 700
.• Farm Equipment. ...................................... 705
.• Garden &amp; Produce ...................................... 710
~' Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hun1tng &amp; Land ......................................... 720
wan1 to buy .................................................. 725
• Merchandise ............................... ................ 900
· : • Antiques ....................................................... 90S
Appllonce ..................................................... 910
Auctions ........ ........................... ..................915
.. Bargain Basement .................. ..................... 920
Collectibles ..... ......... ................................ 925
.... Computers ............................................... 930
~• Equlpment!Suppliea............... . ................. 935

..: Flea Markets ........................................... 940

Mechanics .............. ....................................6036

, • Buslness ...................................................... 308

740-MJ-2827

Recreational Vehicles .. ............................. 1000
ATV .............. .... ... .............. .. ... .. ............. I 005
Bicycles
.................. . .............. . ... 1010
Boats/Accessories............ .. ........ ..... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ....... .................. 1020
Motorcucles
1025
'
.................. .... ...................... ..,
Other ................................................... 1030
want to buy ............. .... .............. . .... ,,, 1035
Automotive ...................... .............. 2000
Auto RentaVLease .. . .... ................... . 2005
Autos ............................ .............................. 20111
Classlc/Antlq es
2015
u ......................................
Comm8rclalllndustrlal
.. .. .. ........... .... 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ................... ........... 2025
Sports Ut11/ty............ .... .................. .. ....... 2030
TPJCks ................. ...... ..................................2035
Utility Trailers ................. ..... ...................... 2040
Vans ............................. ......................... 2045
Want to buy............... .....................
2050
Real Estate Sales ........ ......................... 3000
Cemetery Plots.......... ......................... .. 3005
Commerclal ................ ................................ 3010
Condominiums .............. .................. ........ 3015
For Sale by Owner . .................... ..
.3020
Houses tor Sale..... .. ... ............... ... . 3025
Land (Acreage) ........ . .. ................ .
. 3030
Lois ................................................. ,...... 3035
Want to buy ............................................... 3040
Real Es1ate Rentals ................................ 3500
Apartmentatrownhouses ... .. ......... . .. 3505
Commerclel.... .. . .. .................. .. .. ..... 3510
Condominiums ........ ............................. 3515
Houses1or Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) ......................................... 3525
Storage ............ .. ......................................... 3535
Wont to Rent ............................... ............. 3540
Manufactured Housing ........................... 4000
Lots ...................... .. ............................... 4005
Movers .......................................................4010
Rentals .. .................... .. ............................... 4015
Soles ...... ............ ....... .................... .............. 4020
Supplies .................. ............................... 4025
Want to Buy ....................................... 4030
Res ort Property ......... ........................... 5000
Resort Property lor sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property lor rent ........................... 5050
Employmeni:.......................... :...................&amp;OOO
AccountingiFi nanclal . .............................. 6002
Ad min tstratlve/Prolessl on at.. ... .. ............ 6004
Cashier/Clerk ......................................... 6006
Child/Elderly Cere ............................ . 6008
Clerical ..................................................... 6010
Constructlon .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..... ................... ........ 6014
Education ..................................... , ......... 6016
Electrical Plumbing .................................601 8
Employment Agenctes .............................. 6020
Entertalnment ............................. ............... 6022
Food Servlces ........................ ...... .............. 6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................. 6026
Help anted- General ................................6028
Law Enforcement ................................ 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................ 6032
ManagemenVS,.,perv lsory ........................ 6034

Services ...............................................,.... 300

l:

• , Fuel

011 Cool/Wood/Gas ................. ........... 945

: .... Furniture ............, ........................................ 950
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Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................... :............... 955
Kid' s Corner ................................................ 960
Mtscellanoouo ............................ .'................. 955
Want to buy ........ .......................................... 970
Yard Sale .. ................................................... 975

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lng weed eating hedge
tnmmtng, fall clean up
and leaf removal Day
740-853-1702 or N'ghl
;,74;;:0;,;·3;;,
79:;,·2;,;5;;;99::;.,""'""'=
U..atoc:k

~~=-i--'!o=;;;;;=

Pet
Cremat10ns
740·446-3745
Prof111ional

Charoia•s &amp; Red Angus
3 Angus
breed
Call he11ers, cows
3 Angus bull
Jeeders 304 675·2274

Service•

Poh

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL ~ECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Wlri1
1-888·582-3345

6 week old fluffy k•ttens
some are calico some
are ye IIow 446 ·0585 ca II
between 4PM &amp; 6PM

on
SAVINGS

2 female cats to gtve
away 1 gray and one
black 446·3732
AKC mtntature Schpau·
zers
now
available,
while
or
sail/pepper,
(740)992 1328
AKC Yorkte pupptes 10
wks old, Females $600,
Males
$450
304 895 3926

......... 6040

Part-Time-Temporar ies ........................... 6042
Restaurants ............... :....................,...... 6044
Sates .......~ .......................... .........................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textlleolfactory .... ................... .............. 605~

Poh

Announccmenl5

Medlca1.......................................................6038

Muaicat .................................. .

~

2008 by NEA 1 Inc

..,===""'==""'
-

&amp;unbaP. t!tim~ -~erttintl

• Appliance Service ..................................... 302
• • Automotive ......... ..................................... 304
• •• Building Materlals ..................................... .. 30ti

740-5~3-J27'1/800-71ll-1~17

)

~'

~aUipoH~ Jlatfp ilfdbtutt
.'''
. ' .~
~lea-ant ,l\egt~t~t
''

~: ~'!:~~~&amp;~~ ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~~

~
,•

Buy-

Shop

Classifleds!

1000

~or sale AKC Reg Pomerantan
pupp1es
Vet
checked and up 10 date
shots/wormed
Call
740·379·2886
leave
msg Wtll return call asap

K11tenst

~~~~~--:-FREE Ktnens 1 male orange/whlte,
1-lemale
gray/whtte
call
Kelly
304-593-3822
FREE Ktttens 2 orange 1
black &amp; 1 calrco? 7 wks
old wormed &amp; de-11eed
304-675-8164

Recreational
Vehtc les

Paw ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;

ATVr.

900

Par-Mar Golf Cart. camoflaoe pa1nt, kn obby tires
$1 500 304-882·3237 or
304-593-2443

Merc h andt se

Campen/ RVa &amp;
Trailers

Antique a

www comtcs com
"

Want To Buy

Pa~~s

0

'1' J.'l.

:.~
: ~~=========~
CLASSIFIED INDEX

·,•.

()

(

This
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standards

•
•
•

•

• comniun'ity

rate car

Real
vertlsementa
ar
ubject to the Federa
Fair Housing Act o
1968

to

Gmseng

Black
Walnuts.
Call 740 698-6060

Box number ads ar
!ways confidential
Current
plies

Gram

10 acres of good Hay Absolute Top Dollar · s•l·
ready to cut tn
Leon ver/gold
co•ns
any
IOK! 14KJ 18K gold jew304·458-1661
elry dental gold
pre
US
currency
Square bale s of Hay &amp; 1935
sets
ella
Ftrewood
lor
Sale proof/mtn1
304 882-2537
or monds MTS Co•n Shop
151 2nd Aven ue Ga1h·
304 882 272 1
polls 446-2842
WontTo Buy
Now
buymg
740·274·0326

orrectlons wtll
acle
In the firs
vaUable edition .

••
•

i.ANCAS I ER. OH

Hay, Feed, Seed,

av

Poulter closed out Steve
Stncker, 3 and 2. to go 4-1
for the week and validate
Faldo picking hrm over
Datt en Clarke Eve n so ,
Europe dtdn ' t qutte have
the team sptrit that carried
it to 1ecord vtctories over
the Am ericans th e last two
tunes. And s ure dtdn 't get
the perf01 m.mce from some
of lis best players.
Garc ta . Wes twood and
H:\ rnn gton failed to wm a
match all week.

VI~IT OU J~ N£1Y£!iT LOCA f ION
BUS RT ~~SOUTH OF l."-NCASTER

Now you can have borders end graphics
~
added to your classified ads
j~
1
m
Borders$3.00/ perad
~
Graphics 504 for small
S1.00 for large

• All ads must be prepaid•

« POLICIES«

over

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

word Ads

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Succes!?u Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Gel Response ...

etthet of them had ever
mt ssecl a m.t tc h. Even more
pecultat v,.as p).ltttng double
maJOI
wtnner Padraig
Harnngton. We stwood and
ian Poulte1 in th e final
tflree m.ttehes Sunday
The Rydet Cup was over
hefore thet r matches were

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

Websttes:
www.mydatlytnbune com
www mydatlysenhnel com
www.mydatlyregtsler com

l\egtster
To Place
urrthune '
Sentinel
Your Ad~ · (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
CCIII TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
675-5234

:-••

ATHENS,OH

. Gallia
County,

liN 15 p&lt;~sses and hmshed

~.

ROUl E 50/32

We Cove
Meigs, Gallla,
And Mason
Counties Like
NoOne
Else Can!

pas~es.

'

ON F. MII.E WEST OF ATHENS ON

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

GIBBS
ANT IQUES
Also resTore furntture lo
cated on Tornado Rd oft
Rt
33,
Ractne
(Park&amp;Rtde)
e:-.1T
740 949 2246

5th

Wheel frame new
and nms $400 5\h
wheel htTch $100 ca ll
304·882-3237
or
30 4 593 2443
t~res

tables
&amp; AV
coke
cases SeN1ce a1 Carmtchael
ShO\V
Tratlers
trunks 011 lamps cups 74 4 4 6 38 2 5
and
sa ucers
M•ckey ;,:?0:;;·:0:::0:·;;:~"~~~~
Mouse
ttems
Ch1lds RV SeN tce at Carmt•
wtcke rrocker
old chael
Tratlers
pressed glass ware, Far- ~
74;;;0;;;4;;;4,;;
6·,;;38
;:;2,;5===""'
ber Ware coke s•gn =
clocks
"'"ales
electnc ••="M;;;o;;;lo;;;r;;r:y;;d;;;•;;;•==
""'
patno mthlary foldtng or- 03 Kawasaki KX 65 low
gan ftre place grate hours Jtke new SISOO
Delta Queen posters &amp; obo
740-446-6865
or
pafnt tngs
Mtsstsstppt 740·645-5736
Q
c
ueen
ommerattve ~~-~-:---~
C
"
hampatgn bottle 8 &amp; 2001
Yamaha
R6
16 mm prOJectors ca r- bluelwh1te approx 3500
11
toon
1ms
mtscellane· mtles Yosh p1pe ta 11 ktt
ous 17401992-4197
$4500
Call
740 645-7471
Fuel Oil Coal
05 Hayabusa low m1les
Wood Gco
ong owner many e:..tras
Seasoned Firewood all don't try to l1t 1n. s1and
load out S7,900 446-2254
hardwood
S55

I r c~ 1o ..&lt;&gt;oW home Bl,l~~
lth pup' -. wnk' unnncd
'O-' r;•~ 11'ih
M•ntture
Dachshund
CKC regrste red, shots.
wormed
Males &amp; Fe·
males
longha•r
&amp; 304 682 2567
shOrthatr red &amp; b!f.ckltan
2000
Au1o mol• ~e
$300 each 304·593·3820
Miscellaneous
Neuter Scooter
ts commg to Athens Co . t2xl 4 carpet med•um
Autos
6,7
Monday Sept 29th Cat btow n $150 00
$5000 01 Honda C1v1c LX 5
rug
Only Spay/Neu ter CliniC, area
6pm spd 98,000 m1les ovet
at1er
$40ica1 &amp; Free shots, Call
740-446
,
423
pay on line $50/cat pay
5 000 tn extras Lambo
S7,700
OBO
at
c_hnlc,
Go
To ~'!'""~~-~'!'""~ · Doors
www neutersc ooter com
2000
Honda
400 4 740 709 1398
or
call
Tell
Free Wheeler
Commerctal
I 866-662-5838
tanntng bed Couch (Tan) 2006 Dodge Stratus 4
~~~~~~~~ 1 yr old 304·895-3129
cyl auto 68 000 mtles
$4 500 080 256 ·9031 or
Berbe.r Carpet $6 95 yd 256·1233
carpet remnants $40 00
&amp; up Mollohan carpet 2007 Hqnda VTX 1300R
f
E .
t
2212 Eastern Ave Galli· 1800 miles black 57800
366 8360
--=a•rm;;;;;;;;iq;;;uli;;p;;;m;;;tn=;;;;;
~
pohs, Oh10 740 446 7444
2007 Honda VTX 1300R
Ford 4000, h1gh clear·
m1tes.
black
ance tractor wtlh Free· Jet Aeratton Motors re- 1BOO
patred
new
&amp;
rebUih
tn
57800
388-8380
mans loader frame
no
stock Call Ron Evans
bucket $3800 446·2801
1·800-537·9528
Trucks
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
BabystuH
tor
sale 2006 Chevy Stlverado
KIEFER BUILT,
and
tnlant low m11es
4· WD
VALL EY
HORSE/LIVE· Stroller
carsea
1
playpen
and
lois
304
593
0876
or
STOCK
TRAILER S
Call
Jod•
at 304-593-0959
LOAO
MAX
EQUIP· more
MENT
TRAILER S, 740-446·7473
1988 - E-350 Bo• Truck
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
Coleman
70 OOOBTU runs tJ•.Jt needs work
~OMESTEADER
natural gas furnace pur- 339 0885
CARGO/CONCESSION
chased new-used' only 5 ;;,;;;;,:;:;;:,;:,====""'
TRAILE AS
8, W months
$500
Kenny
Van1
GOOSENECK FLATBED W1ggens
M•ners~!lle
$ 3999 VIEW OUR EN ·
1987 Chevy 112 ton Van
17 40)992·5002
TIRE TRAILER INVEN
auto V·6 good ttres
TORY AT
Complete eleetnc temp runs good, good work
WWW CARMICHAELserv1ce
on
20
6)(6 van
$675,
TRAILERS COM
treated post new usee (740)992 0255
740·446-3825
one
t1 me
S275
~6 ~~l~
rn~
rs~
h -mo
_we
_
r w~
,h-.,- (7 40)992·0255
-..=W;;;;;iai;;n;;;tT;;;o;;;i;Bu.;y;;;;;;=
Ira belts &amp; blades $750 :'::':::"':~~~~~.,. •
NEW AND USEO STEEL
Wanl to buy Junk Cars,
obo 379-2706
;;;;;;;,;.;,;;.;;;,;.;...___ Steel Beams Ptpe Rebar· call 740-388·0884
Have you pnced a John tor
Concre1e
A'ngle
Rea l Estate
Deere lately? You 11 be Channel Flal Bar Steel 3000
Sales
surpnsedl Check out our Gral•ng lor Dratns Dnve·
used
at ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
1nventory
www CAREQ com
Car· Scrap Metals Open Mor ~
Commeroa
· J
'chael
Equ1pment
Tue.
Wed
&amp;
Fr~
m
•=;;i;;i;;;;;i;;;.,i;;i;;==
74().446·2412
Bam-4 30pm
Closed ~
-;...~--~~~- ThUrs
Sat
&amp;
Sun For
sale
or
lease
John Deere 2010 Farm 740·446·7300
offtcelwarehouse/slorage
Tractor. Row Crop, Gas ,..,_,,...._ _ _.__ great 1ocat1on •n Gall•po·
45HP. 3pt h•lch, L1ve Pole Bam 30x40•10 only hs
1800
sq
tt
PTO very mce shape $6 995 other stzes Free S.tOOimonth Call Wayne
$3995
OBO Oel"ery 877- 773·8356
404-456·3802

I

I
I

I

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

~7~4,;.01:;;3;;
67~0;;;5:;;9~
6 ~~~-

• Wonllo Buy
Housoa for Solo
One etghty AH 1s Charmers
tractor.
d•esel, George's Portable Saw· Must sell 3 bd . 2 bth
$4,500
OBO m1U don t haul your Logs home Ill. Syracuse Call
(740)985 4291
or to the Mtll JUSt call t740 )949 _2513
740-416-9995
304 675· 1957

,.

�"
;

-~For Sale

Townhou-

2-3 Bedroom hOIJSB, Sin-

3 llod. HUD Homes'
011ty $15,300 for ltstings
)!00-62Q-4946 e&gt; R019
3--4

BR 2 bath family
'rOom bonus room over
'garag8 approx. 3 acres
partial~

wooded. Cherry

Ridge Rd. RK&gt; Grande
area.

740-245·54 16

740-645-2226

or

Leave

message.

1 Yr old SA 588 for more
info and. pictures go to
www.orvb.com
1.0.
Browr~ing

740-446·7204

3BR.2BA,

2

car

gar

patio: OR/FA. Relocating

$1 15,000.

740-446-0617

·· · lea~e msg

Brick home 2 112 bath.
6BR. FA , LR, 4 fireplaces, huge detached
garage,

4+

acres

v•_n

Clip this AD arid take it
with you when you visit
our community to gel
this special discount
Move-in in Oct and get

$100.00 your 2BR Apt.
off Nov rent. CunenUy
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR units
Spacious floor piB.ns.
ranch &amp; townhome style
living, playground &amp;
basketba ll court on·stle
laundry facility. 24 hr
emergency maintenance , quiet country location close to major
facilities,
medical
pharmacies, grocery
store ...jUst minutes
away from· other major
shOpping in the area.
Hon6ysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colonial Drive •113
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
740-446·3344
Office Hours M, W, F

Now accepting
applicat1ons at·
Valley View Apartments
BOO State Route 325 '
Th unnan, Ohio 45685 '

740-245-9170
1·2 Bedroo m Apartments
with appliances furnished
On site laundry facility.
Call for deta ils or pick up
application at rental
office.
Possibility of rental
assistance.
Equal Housing
Opportunity

pond,
fenced.
VERY
NtCEt Catt 740-379-9667

. TOO# 419-526-0466
'1"hls Institution is an
Equal Opportunity
Provider and Employer"

For sale by owner. 3/2

home on 112 acre level
.lot. Located at 3089 Bu·
Iaviiie Pike. At1ached ga.rage.

Appraised

$110,000.

Asking

. Home

Nice
Clean
Ground
Floor, 2br, W/0 hookup,
ReferencestDepositJNo
Pets 304-675·5162

9AM · 5PM

and

2BA at Johnsons Mobile $17.89-$28 .27/HR.,

now
Call hirtng.
For
applicalton
or and free government. job
----~~-~
Nke Ibr. Applianet&gt;s, Fur- 740·645·0500
info, call American As·
740-446-2003
nished. S375 -t- deposit. n~;~r.
soc .
J of
Labor
PPHS
304 -675-.l!OO
ur
•
F
ede
-ra
"
I
"""
F
"
unds
...,.~ju-s"
t
re
·1·913-599·8226,
24/hrs.
]{}4-675-5509
leased for Land Owners . amp. serv.

740-992.0165

lb=------1

'$96,500.

Call tBR Apt, WID hookups.
740-446-4910
satellite TV incl. w/rent,
;,.;.;;...~~;...~-~- close to hospital. Call
Foreclosure

4br.

2ba.

740-339.0362

No

ParK,

closing

cost

and

ZERO DOWN! Will do

Help Wanted,·

1722B Chatham Ave.
$250 Sign an Bonus

Sales

Ten positions need filled
by next week!
No experience required!
No Sales!
No Colleclionsl

19BO t4x70, 1 112 bath,
2br with small lol.. Apple
Tree
Dr
· $12,000

304-576-2096
304-674-5513

or

2 2006 16x80 Clayton 3
bed 2 balh, 200 16x70
Fleetwood 2 bed 1 bath.
1999 Fortune . 3 bed 2
bath. We deliver block
level and anchor. We
ca n do the toote rs also.
Daytime
740-JBB-0000
or
740·38B·8513
Evenings 740.388-8017 or
740·245-921 3.

Full and Part-lime
Positions
Day and Evening
Shifts
Professional Work
Environment!
MediCal, Dental, EAP,
401KI
• On-site Doctor
Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

1nctuded

$500

;160. Will

consider · land Ca11304-593·5169

-contract
~79·2923

441 -5062

Of

Brand new 3bed 2bath
tor on + -half acre in Pl.
month. Rent , Main St. Pt. Pleas. Pleasant.
OWNER
Fl·

2 bedroom apartment in

$400/mo.
2000
703-501-4606

sqlfl NANCE '
AVAILABLE.
(740) 446-3570

utilities ~-~--=~~~~ ~~~~~:-:;::--;:~
·
Downtown
Middlepoort Mobile Home lor Sale
excep 1 91ec 1nc ·
N
F
·
14 60

Centenary,

all

Nk:e 4 . br, 2 ba home on paid
t&lt;lneon Dr In Gallipolis. $350. a month Call 740 across street from
ew 1988
tem1ng
x ,
mes- Family Healttl care, 1600 2br. 1ba 304 -675 -3 656
256-!135 le ave
Quite neighQorhood on
·sq. ft. · (retaiVshowroom, after 5:3opfn
.dead end street. large 2 sage
oftice,
backroom,
ear garage and finished 3 rooms and bath up· restroom) 700+ car count New 3 Bedroom homes
:basement. 740·256-1109
· stairs.
Completely
lur- per business hour, tree from $2~ 4.36 per month,
9n-lavel brick/cedar on nished with W/D. No on
street
pa rking, includes many upgrades,
delivery
&amp;
se t-up.
pets.
Ref.
AB&lt;I441-0245
(740)992-1900
days
·.98 acres, Au'Ian d, Oh .
740-365•2434'
private
settin g,
eat-in CONVENIENTLY
LOkilchen, 3 br., 2 f~ll CAT ED
&amp;
AFFORD·
Houses for Rent
600 0
Emp'oymen t
baths, lg . livingroom , lg. ABLE' Townhouse apart·
$238/mo! 4 bed. 2 batl1.
.family room , out of flood ments,
and/or
small R;mk Repo! (5% down. 20
-plain, (740)742·2404 or houses lor rent. Call years, 'g~,t- APR ) for lisl ing~
74Q--949-2930
-740·441-1111 fo r appli- 800-620-4946 u R027
Driven &amp; Delivery
catio n &amp; information.
Delivery Drivers needed
Land (Acreage)
~~~~~~~
~--""-~;.i;;;;;;;;; FREE RENT SPECIAL ·1br House in . New Ha· for Community Program
+1on Jordan Landing 2br. 3br ven, WV, total electric,
200ac.
cash paid weekly, must
Gallla/Meigs o., OH bor- &amp; 4br. Available No Pets, Bllerything in walking dis· be neat In appeara nce.
dar. Great hunting land. Tenant· Responsible lor tance $300 month, $300
Retires Welcome.
Con ·
$210,000
neg Rent
&amp;
Electric deposit.
No ·
·Pets
tact
Dave
at

304,593-5260
304-674-0023
~""'!"............~............ 304-610-0776

pr 304-662-3652
304-675-4693
::-:~......~~~=
2 BA house in Gallipolis,
WID
conn.
$415/mo
$150/dep. You pay · all
utilities. No "section 8 or
HUD.
Gall
Wayne
404·456-3802

~~-~~~:""':~
Driver's Edul:alion pos1·
liOn open in the Gallipolis
and Meigs arec\. Flexible
hours. Must be ab le to
work
even1ngs
ancl
weekends.
Job entails

Twin Rivers Tower is ac· 3 bd., 2 bath, Pomeroy,
basement .
wtgaragfi-1,
A-~~j
cepting applications tor
~l"llt-.n
handicap
accessible,
waiting list lor HUD sub·
TownhOUMI
$650 ·
per
mo.,
"!"".'"-~::-;;;;':'""~~ sidized, 1·BR apartment
':"'
lor the elderlyfdisabled, -7~40":"·-94·9--2-3":"0':3~~~~
::
Modern 1 BR apt Call call 675--6679
740-446-0390
Taking applications on

'classroom
and
behind
the. wheel instruction lor
new
drivers.
Qualified
ca ndidates mu st · have a

10
Acres/garage/camper
contact
Free
Rent
Special\!!
shroese@yahoo.com
or 2&amp;3BR and up, Central
740-245-9015
Air, WID .hookup, tenant
pays electric. EHO Elm
A~ ill Estille
·View
Apts.
3500
Rcnli!IS (304)882·3017

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

high
valid
pass

school
drivers

diploma,
license,
backgro und

~~~~--~~- Gractoua Living 1 and 2 nice home on SA 160, checks, ex p.- preferred in
Beautiful Apts. at Jack· Bedroom Apls. at VIllage 12 mo. lease ,at $650 per traffic safety, law .enand
Riverside mo. plus sec. dep. No forcement, Or teaching,
son Estates. 52 West- Manor
wood Dr.. tram $365 to Apts. In Middleport , from pets.
441 -5062
or or we will train. EOE

$560.

740-446-2566, $327

to

$592. 379-2923

Equal Housing Oppm1u- 740·992-5064.
Equal
nity. This Institution is an Housing Opportunity.
Equal Opportunity ProMiddleport N. 4th Ave., 2
vider and Employer. ·
bedroom furnished apart·
2BA APT CIA. (740) ment, no pets, dep. &amp;
441-0194
ref., 740·992·01 65

Experienced
driver
Land (Acnago)
needed. Must be 24
Wanted To Lease. Bow years old and have 2
need years experience. Apply
hunting
land
enough lor 3 people. in pe rson at 2204 Jack·
son Pike
(626)-380-0594

. ld.·er.rr
oro

'

If so, you qualify far a

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription oli your
home delivered .sul_Jscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the c·o upon below .
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

•a:UipoH• J9ailp Ul;ribune
J)otnt ~lea•ant ltegi11ter
The Daily Senti~el •
&amp;unbap Ql:ime~ -6entinel
p•••••~--~·•••••••••••••••••••••

Subscriber's Name
Address
City/State/Zip

contacted

lor

ployment

assessments/

• Room Addttions &amp;

Remodeling

·NewGaragn
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
·Patio ar~d Pon;:h O.Cks

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy Olrto
25 Years Local Experrenct'

IO"IIIYSillS
a
GIIIAGI
Slit 1U ,...,..,n
·

740-992-5682

Apple

service

Service Manager &amp; Serv·
ice Technician positions
available. Health care &amp;
Retirement plans available . Please send · resu me
to

LLC@CAREO COM

· Comptete Tree Care
lniUIId • FrM EIUIII"U
741J-441 -9317

fa ... to 740-446-9 t 04

Fed.Ben, OT. Place by

South
· 1•

i •

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com
www.auctionzip.com

'~

\'

Points)

New &amp; Used Tires.

Hardwood Cabine1ry And Furnicure

alignments.li£hl

1-888-IMC·PAYU

MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC

-.v-ww~t'hnh-u::!"-eekcahln.etry.com

worker,

*Insured

maintenance
25-30hrs
per

week, Pay based on · experience.
Call
(740)379-9083
Mon-Frl
between 9am-3pm

Medical

The Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Co. is seeking motivated, people-oriented
individualti till a vacancy
in the news dept: as a
Sportswriter. The successful ca ndidate will
cover_high school athletics in lhe area for the
daily edition ol the news:
. paper. as well as assist
with the production of
sports pages. Excetlenl
, writing and English skills.
photography skills and
know ledge of desktop
publishing are sought.
The position Is 'ull time.
40 hours a week , w1th
benetitS. Interested parties can send resumes to
Kevin Kelty. Managing
Editor, Ohio Valley Pub·
lishing Co.. 825 Third
Ave. , Gallipolis, Ohio
4563~ or kkelly@my· ·
daitytribune.com. No
phone calls please.

677-552-1663
9000

References Available!

THAT'S A LIE -. WE NEVER REPEAT
GOSSIP 1!

SNOOTY OL' MAI3EL
ACCUSED US OF

REPEATIN'
GOSSIP !!

I
~

~
I

l
THE BORN LOSER
f'"tx&gt;1-n W~'&lt; I-SOU'i G(.TI\~0...,. 'W1-1rn 1 wt-6 '&lt;ou~&lt;:. W£, Kit&gt;)
Wl-'.0 WORE.
~ E.'&lt;E. E.'l.~-r----..--:--~

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

'

Cell : 740-416-5047
email:
jrshadlrm@aol.com

6~'Nt.~t...A

I F '( 0\J I--lE-EI&gt;

~ co~~~ I)E.RE!&gt;

&lt;.&gt;LP,~t.J, 1\'~

p-Al-It&gt; '(OIJI&lt;:.I&gt;M:&gt;t&gt;'&lt; 1-\1&gt;..1&gt; TI-\E.
&amp;.)\ 1/1)10~
\-\ 1:) E:t'\TI !&lt;:.£.
~1\00L!

iO&amp;. ~p~~

Rubber Roofing. Room Additions. Decks. Shingles
Siding, Windows. Pole Bnrns. Gnmgcs.
Insurance Work, Residcn ti nl &amp; Corn mere till
710 -245 -0 437
ll l ~Hisl'd &amp; Bo nded
30 V!"'nrs
r rec Est, males
Ex.prrirncc

Cmnnwrdol &amp; Rnidf" llliflf
Vin yl

S iding/Rcplacement
Window ~/ Remodeli ng

Insured
740-992-1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell
B o nded &amp;

Free Estimated
Pomeroy. Ohio

•

BIG NATE

BAD CREDIT'
NO CREDI T?
BANKRUPTCY?
We ca11 IH~I~1 1
C;:'l ~H II Tull hr't '

866-564-8 6 79
LUV IIOM LS

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding. Gutters

~

.

Insured &amp; Bonded

....._,...__,_,___.,;o..._,__.,

:PEANUTS

740-653-9657 .

WHEN ~E CATC&gt;IE~ COMES
OUT iO T~E MOUND FOR A
CONFERENCE, IT'S USUALL'(

Manley's.

a-.c:yc:llng

A DRAMATIC MOMENL

503 Mill SL• llddlepon,OH 45160
1..982-3894

BEET~OVEN

_

HAD A BLUE

COAT WITH METAL 9UTTON5
LIKED VER'( MUCJ.I ......

T~AT HE

PAYINGTOP PRICES FOI
Mlml•mllln

·•-•m~-··

WIIMII

CllllldC
CIMIIWS
...IIIM'IIIIIIIInl

ICIII ltr Clrrtlt Pr'-1

NOMA
WHAT TUU.KI
STYlE...

PSI CONSTRUCTION

I ME;W, YOU ONLY
REALLY EVER BEFRIEND
SOMEONE IF YOU BO:rH
SHARE ACOMMON llll'El2EST
OR ARE UNITED AGAINST
ACOMMON
ENEMY.

YOU EVER
WONDER HOW
WE BECAME·
SUCH GOOD
FRIENDS?

RICK PRICE

New Homes. Room Additions. Remodeling,
Mclal &amp; · i
Roors,
Decks,

OH, I ALWAYS THOUGHT
IT WAS OUR MUTUAL
FEAR OF ORCAS.
THAT'S TRUE, I'M
FRitNDS WITH YOUCUZ
OF SHAMU AND PITY.

-~ Construction

...THE
NEWSPA
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

Roofing, Sid1ng,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

• Garages

Remodeling, Room
Additions

• Pale Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner :
James Keesee II
742-2332

,,_

I

· Vinyl Siding
· -Replacement
Windows
•.Roallt.g
·Decks

i.

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Pursuant lo Section
121 .22 of the Ohio Revised Code, the Meigs
County Budget Cam·
mission will meet at
2:30 pm on September
29th, 2008, In lhe Audl·
tar's Ofllce ol lhe
Meigs County Court·
house.
Meigs County Budget
Commission
Mary T. ByM·HIII, Secretary
{9) 22

GARFIELD

Drywall,

1'HE5f NfW L.APfOP
COMPllffR&amp; l-OOK·
PRe1'TY COOL.

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740.367-0536

Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room At.lditiuns • Gmages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

GRIZZWELLS

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebt:l Ruad. Long BouortJ. OH

740-985-4141

'$16tll ! l 'N\5\l

"'

,...,.,__.~-~

50 Tarzan 's

pals

15 Duck Or hue 51 Mother lode

16 Got
18 Young

20

52 Give
a ticket

p igeons
More,

53 Wagon train
dir ection

to some
21 Negative
prefix
22 Wernher
-Braun
23 Having

54

at.

10 Famous

fractions
55 Bohall
DOWN

weapons

1 Shook

26 Go softly
29 Fragrant

hands

30
31
33

run
19 Facilitate
22 French
wines

2 Cenain
necklaces
votes
Type of eagle 3 Jordan
Catch
. neighbor
a crook
4 Misleads
Aggregate
5 Restrains
of two
6 Sporty ·
numbers
vehicles
Snake eyes 7 "-·Man

34
35 Tijuana

38 Most

fo rmer
26 Low card
27 Singles

marble
47 Caveman
from Moo

28 Go slowly

49 Once called

30

9 Dallas

excellent

'blr 'Birthday:

By Bernice Bede Oscl
You're a person who likes par tnership
arrangements. and you may get a rail of
opportunities lor Joint proposals in the
year ahead. The ones you choose should
depend upon th e caliber of those persons Involved.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23)- Even though
your motill'es might be legitim ate for
going alter what you hope to achieve,
you must Still be care fu l about the
actions you take. Using the wrong tactics
could make you look self·serving.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) :._ AI trmes,
you hall'e a tendency to say-thin gs blunt·
ly without regard lor how it makes you
look. Be ca reful because th at loo t you
put in your mouth will be too big to swal·
low.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) ~ It
might be more importa nt lhan usua l to
be prudent when handling business
affairs . If you make lhe ' wrong move, it
could prove cos tly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- Don't
lei pride be your Achilles' heel. If you
treat the slightest disagre ement as &amp;n
affront, you"ll look like an overbearing
bore wh.o wants to push people aroUnd .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Alt hough you are an easygoing person,
you might turn a blind eye and de af ear .
to colleagues' pleas lor understanding .
How you "treat olh ers is how you'll be
trealed back.
PISCES (Feb. 20· March 20) -. It's not
like you' to split hairs in your involvements wi th olh ers, ye t you might make a
big hullabal oo o'o'e r how something
should be divided ·and create some serious' complications .
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - It goes
without saying that , if you hoPe to be
effe:ct1ve, you must be focused and single-mmded. II you anempt to do one
thing wh1le your thoughts are preoccu·
pied, you'll tail.
TAURU S (Ap ni 20·May 20)- If you can
escape the control ol another. you .w1ll be
a better performer and far more prodll c·
tive when lett to your own devices. I! this
tsn'tlikely the case . do your best anyway.
GEMINI {May 21 -June 20) - Patience
will be re quired when it comes to your
financial affairs. If you get restles!l and
frazzled, you could take erratic actions in '
order to stimulate things that might result
in a big loss.
CANCER (Jun e 21-July 22) - Try to be
unbia.sed when it comes to dealing with
those with whom you have little in com·
mon. II . you get 100 demanding, your
undisciplined action could boomerang .
I..EO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Thai which you
usuBIIy ta ke In stride might be over·
whelming to handle. Th is could be es pecially true if you !lire forced to work In
conjunction with an lneffeCII ve aide.
VI~GO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Don 't play
the· biQ·IPtnder role ano pick up the
check for p1oplt who havt already
agrud to psy their lair lhart - unltll
yoU have money to txJrn , II won't do a
tllln'g for you r Image ,
·

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeor!)' G1one1 CI'/C!Ograms are creatoo 'rom ouota!IOns 0\' tamoLs Pt:1JOie oa!ilal\ll ~esent
Eacn letter tn tne cophe· steM; lor ~r otne·

Today"s clue: Gequals M

"P R PW

VMXF

RSZ

CHPRSCOXXF
RSZ

CHEGZE

LXHMRW

WLEPMY , JSV

SHEUZWR

PM

-----·~- -~-

PM

H

HOROGM .''

A.l,

CVEAZW
PREVIOUS SO LUTION - "I am told tha11 1alk
smudge it. ~· J.R.R Tolkien

1n

shorthand and lhen I

are cool, man." · Orland o Bloom

"Elves

~:~~:t~~T S©\\~~-~'£~~"
Eilt1d by CLAY R. P0 ll4N
0. Rec rrange leth"' of the

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GAMI

tour scrcmb!ed wctGs be low lo form fcur simple word5.

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5

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''I hm ' I :;it armmd waiting
1!,[ you sh.ip to come n," the
TlllHil tuld her glum teen,
"swun out "' ---- .. t·•

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Complete rh e chuckl ~ quored

Q

by f1lllng 111 ri- o m1s.~1119 words

L......!.-.l--l-.J.....J-..J you ac~e ioo from s1ep No. 3 below

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SCRAM LETS ANSWI, KS '1/ 19/0K

Skewer -- Testy - Whi ch - V on ex -· THE ROCKS

"You will have problems in life ."

~ram ps

"rememhc-r th e bub b l in g brcwl&lt; wnlllt.J lose

remo\•~d
'

T HF ROCKS."
'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

PROe&gt;AeL.Y C~A.MMII.l().
fOR AIJ Wilt illDAY.
If J Kl.lOW HIM i '

Advertise
in this spac£ for
$64 per month
.• 1 1 .

JSV

WZZKW

EZHLW

~6

-

Resound

32 Physique
34 Throbbed

cagers

61fl'~

. 25+ years ~xperie11cc Free E.,·timates

shelters
41 Gas main
42 Hera' s son
43 Round tent

23 Capp and 44 Essay
•
Jolson
byline
24 Enlisl again 45 Cold and
(hyph.)
damp
25 Silsnt per- 46 Playtng

Fever"
8 Far East

coin

35 Excuses

lithographer 37 Detain
I I Turner or
38 Spend
Koppel
money
17 Wed on the 40 Dove

SOUP TO NUTZ

I \\At&gt; A

Cell : 740-416-1 834

•

" ·

.,,,,'

'

Concrete

Astro-_.
Graph
Tuesda~Sept.23 , 2008

For Remodelin g and New House Huilding

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

.

II. . . .dltfriii1111:081A1-5:80 Ill
11111111111:81&amp;1Z:08111

Bus
Dt'ectory

304-593-6421

. .

MIKE MARCUM
i!HOIINI, &amp; I!INClllHINC, ( Cl .

740·444·5152

Ser~rce

All types Masonry, brick,
block, s1one, Free Esti·
mate ,
740-416·7305,

SAME
WAY TWICE!!

AT LEAST , NOT TH'

•
~'-'-'-' A

leave messa c -

Topped. Take tlm,,,,...
&amp; Removnl
· Affordable ,
Rensonable Price

\\I I

J
r

740-5 91 - ~1144

Please

'

2459 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis
CALL FOR FREE
·I

Call Gary Stanley @

TREE WORK

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

Sportswriter

*Experienced

'~

:BARNEY

740.446.9200

Gutters
Maintenance Plus

Pa ss
Pa ss
Pa ss

one spade. showing four or more spades
with 0·8 po1ntS. After the opener passes,
your partner raises 10 1wo spades. How
would you interprel tha t bid?
The answer comes !rom the basic' cor·
nerstone of bidding: II game is still possible,"keep the auction open; bul if game
is impossible. slop as quickly as possible
in as sensible a contraci as possible,
Here, one spade must be a playable
c,ontract. North promised three or four
spades with his double, and you have
four or fi ve for your bid . So. when partn er
. ra ises, he is saytng that game is still possible. And since you cannot have more
than eight points, he must h8ve 18·20 {a
greal 17 10 a middling 20) and lour-card
support.
When you get th at good news, you jump
to lour spades. II is a tad pushy. but you
now know ol a ni~e-card til and may add
one shortage point tor your doubleton
club. Also, you will know where the mtss·
ing high cards lie : in the West hand .
West leads the heart queen. How woul d
Y.OU plan the play ?
.
The car,ele ss declarer takes trick one
and immed iately plays a !rump.
However, W~sl w1ns and returns a heart.
Sudden ly Soulh -has lour unaliOidable
losers: one in each suit. But you are
more thoughtlUI. You carefu lly wi n th e
fir~! trick with yo~ r heart ace and play a
club. You win the second he art on the
boar'd and finish the clubs. discardin g
your las t he art. Then you play on
spades, and eventually you will lead dia·
monds tw1ce through West.

'
' ,._
\o\
·,

.Qunlity Seamless

East

Dbl
2 I.
PallS

kids
Frat Ieder
Prune back
Fix apples
Vacillated
Bushed
(2 wds.)
48 Custard
dessert

39
40
41
43
46

West opens one heart. your partner dr)u.bles, East passes, and you advance wilh

ill~
·
.
. .......

#5548

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

North

1 'I
Pass
P01ss

Bid twice with
a strong double

fvlt..ISHE~

10
®

Pomeroy, OH

medtani t.: work .

Wesl

Opening lead: ¥ Q

compu ter wheel

Part-~me

+

44087 Wlpple Rd .
(5

8 7 '5
9 •

Dealer: West

We buy used tires.

Mon-Fri

•

.L &amp; L Tire Barn

WV BOhr Underground
MinerS
Class.
starting
soon .
Whi! -Co-Training

Qam_- 3 pm.

adSource, not affiliated
with USPS who hires.

Stop &amp; Compare

'I A 6 3

,·

or

Stanley Tree-.
Trimming
&amp; Removal

NOW

740-992-1611

BiiiV R. Goble Jr.
140-416-1164

,.n.""

740-992-6971

HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
or
%57Kiyr,
includes

• Complete
Remodelin g

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES
Auctioneer:

20 )'Hill ••
S.nlor t;lrlzen
&amp; cnurcn Dlteormt

David Lewis

2006,

• New Homes

Maintenance/
Domootic

(740)379-90B3

38 Transponed

1 Motel
stsHer
5 Trophy.
· often
8 Skip
t2 Fictional
governess
13 Ms. Hagen
14 Stellar
review

Vulnerable: Neither

Johnson's Tree

Grove. WV 25502

MONTY

111411 mo pd

.. 'l 'll

.kObo

1-666-403-2582

Hours
7:00AM • 8:0Q. PM

9-12 Sat

complete serv ice oil
A lu ll ume employment
http:l~obs . lnfoclslon . c
change~. small eugine
opportunity for a mainte·
om
nance mechanic is being
repU ir.
Delivery/Warehouse
per· offered by M&amp;G PolyWe service anJ
son needed, full time , im- mars in Mason Cou nty,
winterize boats and
mediate opening, must WV.
Candidates must
Rv·s
halle goOd driving re- posses a high school di(740) 992-5344
cord. Apply-Lifestyle Fur· ploma or equiValent GEO
Mon·Fri .
niture B56 Third Ave and be wtlling and availGallipolis, 9:30-5:00 No .able to "work rotating
8:06 am - 4:30pm
shifts .
Th e preferred
Phone Ca lls
Snt. R:OO am - 12
candidates shall possess
We
appreciate yo11r
AesCare Home Care is
and be able to demonbw;illtSS
app lica tions strate mechanical . skill s
accepting
f6 r Support Associates ,
includ ing but not limited
CNA &amp; STNA. MA/00 to : we lding, abi lity to'
I I \\'IS
exp. preferred. Apply at
(()',
( fOi l
troubl6shoot and repair
8204 Carli! Drive, Galli· pumps; and the · knowll () ', S II( I l II() \
polis , Mo n - Fri. 8-4 edge and ability to use
Email resume to: rharri· all fo rmS of precision
Concrete Removal
son@ rescare.yom.
and Replacement
measurement tools. ln di·
viduals
meeting
these
reAn Exc ellent way to eam
Typn Of ' '
money. The New AVon. quirementS must submit
Call
. Marilyn a resume postmarked by _~ 'Concret~ ~rk '
T-uesday, Septembe r 30,
304-662-2645
2008 to the address be· 28 Years Experience .
AVON! All Areas!
To low, provid ing contact inBuy
or
Sell
Shirley formation,
employment
Spears 304-6751429
histqry and descriptions
Insure
of · ·any
Ce r1ifications.
Custodran
for
local
traini ng_ courses· or· rele- WV0421B2 Free Estimate&amp;
cll urch.
Mon-Fri 8:30am
vant
programs
com·
to 2Pm. $10/hour. Send
plated.
.Candidat'es
of
in~
reume to Minister, PO
terest will be con ta cted
Box 228, Point Pleasant,
lor pre-employment aswv 25550
sessments/ intervi ews.
Direct Care Staff -in ' resi · Reply to: M&amp;G Polymers
Human Resources * Prompt and Qm1lity
dential
youth program . Attn·
Must be 21 years 01age. - Maintenance Mechanic
Wt1rk
Ap-1
Pay based on experi· P. 0. Box 8
*Reasonabl e Rates
ence.
Call pie Grove, WV 25502

4 :30 p.m. However, the
posllng will remain open
until filled , The AMESC
is "an equal opportunity
Employer/Provider.

OFFICE

to 1D'x30'

North
llH2UB
• K J 98
¥ K5 4
o K Q3
.. K Q J
West'
Jo:a.llt
.. A
• 65 3
'1 QJ9B7
'I I 0 2
t A 6 2
• J 10 9 4
... 1086· 5
+ A-732
South
. Q I 0742

• Garages

Sizes 5'x10'

Operator

P.O. Box 8

Ext. 1901

resu me, references, and
copies ot all current Ohio
Certillca tesllicenses
to
John D. •Constanzo. Superintendent,
Educa·
Athens-Meigs
tiona!
SeNice
Center.
507
Richland Aven ue,
Suite #108 , Athens, OH
45701,
Responses
should tte received by

POST

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
740.949·2217

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRimON

TOMORROW/I
Work NEXT WEEKm

-

30,

.Storage

Oten!HM.f

Polymers
Human Resources

A
Ce lebration
of
Ufe .... Overbrook
Center,
localed · at 333 Page
Street, Middleport . Ohio
is pleased to . announce
thai
due
to
internal
cha nges in ou r facility,
we are accepting applications
lor
full
time
Ohio certification or li· -:'":"':"~~~:::":~=- 7P-7A LPN'S, part tim e
censure; technology ex- I need to find (2) people 7A-7P ~PN 's and full
·
(I .e.,
on ·11
·ne
needing
time
and
pa rt
time
penance
. a lull time job.
management
system.
You need to be honest, a STNA's
to
join
OlJr
person or integrity, with
friendly
and dedicated
email , eleCtronic prese n·
gOO d people skills. You
staH.
Applican l's must
tation); an d access to
also nead to be able to
be
dependable , · team
technology alter school
hours.
Additional
Pre follow instructions and
playets with positive atti·
'have an ability to listen
tudes
lnteresled appli ·
Ierred: Previous experi·
ante as a SiAl instructor
and lead people in th~
cants can pick up an apor participant: and adult
rig-ht direc tion . I need
plication
M·F
8:30
instructional experience. people-who want to work AM-4:30 PM All "e ligible ,
Expectations: Participate
and will show up lor
applicants will then bf!
In all state sponsored work. If you a1e a recent co ntacted by Hollie Bumtrainings; participate in college grad an d cannot gamer, LPN, Staff Deve1·
a-learning
trainings lind employmen t and fee l opment
tfaCe:to-face ,
online,
that you are qualified,
COordina tor@ 740·992digital) ; commit to maingive us a chance until a
6472 . EOE &amp; A Partici·
tainlng fidelity to the Ohio
job in your career pa th
pant of the Drug-Free
titeracy Initiatives design , becomes available. Call
workplace program .
content, te)(tS and time
Pat Hill. New Car Man·
age r tor an interview at
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
commi tment;
web-based
446-9800
.
IN
THE
TRI-STATE
session checkli st; co rreAREA
Occu pation~ !
spond • daily · ·· through
Medicine
Nurses
A N's
email
com munication;
and
LPN's
Competitive
and hold · v_
irtual olfice
salary and ben~fits de·
hours. Length of co ntract
termined by expe rience
and salary Will be deter.and qualifications Please
mlned upon employ ment
call at 740-574-1770 or
Submit tetter of 1nterest,

S.~tember

Hil l's Self

.

'

'r-:::::::::o::=:::::::-,

pre-ern·

Alln :
Production

Hair Dresser Wanted at
The Athens-Meigs . Edu- Shae's
Beauty
Salon
cational Service Ce nter co ntact
Karrie
has a position opening 304-675-2828
Regional
Literacy
as
consultant - lor Region 16 House parents t2)wanted
Team. for boys group home to tate
Support
This Is a Full Time Posi· cated in southe rn Ohio
r10n. Qualifications·: AI 27-7 care .for 2 weeks on·
le3st live years of suc ,~ ~ -2 weekS off. Expe rience
cessful reading lnslruc- raising teens or foster
. li on in a classroom; Mas· ca re preferred. We proters degree In educa lion vide traini ng. fnlerested?
Oasis
IReading, Special Edu- . Call
cation or concentration in t -877-325- 1588 fo r more
appropriate inlormation.
Literacy);

Phone

------------------·-·----------·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

interviews.

·t ntervfew·

Gowmmont &amp; federal

Mall or drop aft this coupon along
with a copy ol your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45.631

YOUNG'S

grams completed . Candi·
dales ot interest wHI be

s

•

Phillip
Alder

304-372-6346

CSII TODAY!

Education

Are you ~ 65·

cer1ifications.
training.
courses or relevant pro·

M&amp;G

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

industrial ·
envi ronment
and prio r chemical plant
experience is preferred
Individuals
meeting
these req uirements must
subm1t a resume post· marked
bY Tuesday,
September 30. 2008 to
the address below, pro·
viding con tacl infOrrnation , employment history
end description s of any

Recruit vo lunteers for
. non -profit organizations
such as st". Jude
Children's Research
Hospital
Get paid to make a
difference!

only $29,900! Prices to
Commercial
.Sell!
For
listings 1br Apartment lor rent in
'800-620-4646 ex T462
Pt Pleasant, all utilities Comme rical Space

'House witt) 2 acres in SA

G•n•raI

land
improvements.
Bankrvplcy &amp; Bad ·Credit ·A Place to Call HOME'
OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed- Foster Parents Needed!!!
rooms
available. $30-$48 a day with pd .
respite. Training begins
740-446-3384
in September. Call oasis
Double wide 3" BA 2 bath to help a child ·find a
to
ca ll
home,
$575 deposit $575 rent place
per mlh plus utls. Ready 1-Bn-325·1558.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BRIDGE

Full lime employment opportunities for entry level
cht::m•cal operators are
being ollered by M&amp;G
Polymers
in
MasOn
County, wv. Candidates
must have a high school
diploma
or
equivalen t
GED and be Willing and
available to wotk rotating
12 hour shit1s . Demon·
strated expeiience in an

POSTAL JOBS

references.

&amp;

www.mydailysentinel.com

PRODUCTION
OPERATORS

FEDERAL

New Haven, one bed·
room apartment, depoSit

a

Monday, September 22, 2008
ALLEYOOP

Help Wa!'fwd - Gonoral

Govemmont &amp; federal
Jobo

Apamn-/

gle car detacl1ed garage,
_
outbuilding on app. 1
acre. A1 •2 North.
304.895.3129

Monday, September 22, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

____ _._

,

told me,
its son g if you

�"
;

-~For Sale

Townhou-

2-3 Bedroom hOIJSB, Sin-

3 llod. HUD Homes'
011ty $15,300 for ltstings
)!00-62Q-4946 e&gt; R019
3--4

BR 2 bath family
'rOom bonus room over
'garag8 approx. 3 acres
partial~

wooded. Cherry

Ridge Rd. RK&gt; Grande
area.

740-245·54 16

740-645-2226

or

Leave

message.

1 Yr old SA 588 for more
info and. pictures go to
www.orvb.com
1.0.
Browr~ing

740-446·7204

3BR.2BA,

2

car

gar

patio: OR/FA. Relocating

$1 15,000.

740-446-0617

·· · lea~e msg

Brick home 2 112 bath.
6BR. FA , LR, 4 fireplaces, huge detached
garage,

4+

acres

v•_n

Clip this AD arid take it
with you when you visit
our community to gel
this special discount
Move-in in Oct and get

$100.00 your 2BR Apt.
off Nov rent. CunenUy
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR units
Spacious floor piB.ns.
ranch &amp; townhome style
living, playground &amp;
basketba ll court on·stle
laundry facility. 24 hr
emergency maintenance , quiet country location close to major
facilities,
medical
pharmacies, grocery
store ...jUst minutes
away from· other major
shOpping in the area.
Hon6ysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colonial Drive •113
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
740-446·3344
Office Hours M, W, F

Now accepting
applicat1ons at·
Valley View Apartments
BOO State Route 325 '
Th unnan, Ohio 45685 '

740-245-9170
1·2 Bedroo m Apartments
with appliances furnished
On site laundry facility.
Call for deta ils or pick up
application at rental
office.
Possibility of rental
assistance.
Equal Housing
Opportunity

pond,
fenced.
VERY
NtCEt Catt 740-379-9667

. TOO# 419-526-0466
'1"hls Institution is an
Equal Opportunity
Provider and Employer"

For sale by owner. 3/2

home on 112 acre level
.lot. Located at 3089 Bu·
Iaviiie Pike. At1ached ga.rage.

Appraised

$110,000.

Asking

. Home

Nice
Clean
Ground
Floor, 2br, W/0 hookup,
ReferencestDepositJNo
Pets 304-675·5162

9AM · 5PM

and

2BA at Johnsons Mobile $17.89-$28 .27/HR.,

now
Call hirtng.
For
applicalton
or and free government. job
----~~-~
Nke Ibr. Applianet&gt;s, Fur- 740·645·0500
info, call American As·
740-446-2003
nished. S375 -t- deposit. n~;~r.
soc .
J of
Labor
PPHS
304 -675-.l!OO
ur
•
F
ede
-ra
"
I
"""
F
"
unds
...,.~ju-s"
t
re
·1·913-599·8226,
24/hrs.
]{}4-675-5509
leased for Land Owners . amp. serv.

740-992.0165

lb=------1

'$96,500.

Call tBR Apt, WID hookups.
740-446-4910
satellite TV incl. w/rent,
;,.;.;;...~~;...~-~- close to hospital. Call
Foreclosure

4br.

2ba.

740-339.0362

No

ParK,

closing

cost

and

ZERO DOWN! Will do

Help Wanted,·

1722B Chatham Ave.
$250 Sign an Bonus

Sales

Ten positions need filled
by next week!
No experience required!
No Sales!
No Colleclionsl

19BO t4x70, 1 112 bath,
2br with small lol.. Apple
Tree
Dr
· $12,000

304-576-2096
304-674-5513

or

2 2006 16x80 Clayton 3
bed 2 balh, 200 16x70
Fleetwood 2 bed 1 bath.
1999 Fortune . 3 bed 2
bath. We deliver block
level and anchor. We
ca n do the toote rs also.
Daytime
740-JBB-0000
or
740·38B·8513
Evenings 740.388-8017 or
740·245-921 3.

Full and Part-lime
Positions
Day and Evening
Shifts
Professional Work
Environment!
MediCal, Dental, EAP,
401KI
• On-site Doctor
Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives!

1nctuded

$500

;160. Will

consider · land Ca11304-593·5169

-contract
~79·2923

441 -5062

Of

Brand new 3bed 2bath
tor on + -half acre in Pl.
month. Rent , Main St. Pt. Pleas. Pleasant.
OWNER
Fl·

2 bedroom apartment in

$400/mo.
2000
703-501-4606

sqlfl NANCE '
AVAILABLE.
(740) 446-3570

utilities ~-~--=~~~~ ~~~~~:-:;::--;:~
·
Downtown
Middlepoort Mobile Home lor Sale
excep 1 91ec 1nc ·
N
F
·
14 60

Centenary,

all

Nk:e 4 . br, 2 ba home on paid
t&lt;lneon Dr In Gallipolis. $350. a month Call 740 across street from
ew 1988
tem1ng
x ,
mes- Family Healttl care, 1600 2br. 1ba 304 -675 -3 656
256-!135 le ave
Quite neighQorhood on
·sq. ft. · (retaiVshowroom, after 5:3opfn
.dead end street. large 2 sage
oftice,
backroom,
ear garage and finished 3 rooms and bath up· restroom) 700+ car count New 3 Bedroom homes
:basement. 740·256-1109
· stairs.
Completely
lur- per business hour, tree from $2~ 4.36 per month,
9n-lavel brick/cedar on nished with W/D. No on
street
pa rking, includes many upgrades,
delivery
&amp;
se t-up.
pets.
Ref.
AB&lt;I441-0245
(740)992-1900
days
·.98 acres, Au'Ian d, Oh .
740-365•2434'
private
settin g,
eat-in CONVENIENTLY
LOkilchen, 3 br., 2 f~ll CAT ED
&amp;
AFFORD·
Houses for Rent
600 0
Emp'oymen t
baths, lg . livingroom , lg. ABLE' Townhouse apart·
$238/mo! 4 bed. 2 batl1.
.family room , out of flood ments,
and/or
small R;mk Repo! (5% down. 20
-plain, (740)742·2404 or houses lor rent. Call years, 'g~,t- APR ) for lisl ing~
74Q--949-2930
-740·441-1111 fo r appli- 800-620-4946 u R027
Driven &amp; Delivery
catio n &amp; information.
Delivery Drivers needed
Land (Acreage)
~~~~~~~
~--""-~;.i;;;;;;;;; FREE RENT SPECIAL ·1br House in . New Ha· for Community Program
+1on Jordan Landing 2br. 3br ven, WV, total electric,
200ac.
cash paid weekly, must
Gallla/Meigs o., OH bor- &amp; 4br. Available No Pets, Bllerything in walking dis· be neat In appeara nce.
dar. Great hunting land. Tenant· Responsible lor tance $300 month, $300
Retires Welcome.
Con ·
$210,000
neg Rent
&amp;
Electric deposit.
No ·
·Pets
tact
Dave
at

304,593-5260
304-674-0023
~""'!"............~............ 304-610-0776

pr 304-662-3652
304-675-4693
::-:~......~~~=
2 BA house in Gallipolis,
WID
conn.
$415/mo
$150/dep. You pay · all
utilities. No "section 8 or
HUD.
Gall
Wayne
404·456-3802

~~-~~~:""':~
Driver's Edul:alion pos1·
liOn open in the Gallipolis
and Meigs arec\. Flexible
hours. Must be ab le to
work
even1ngs
ancl
weekends.
Job entails

Twin Rivers Tower is ac· 3 bd., 2 bath, Pomeroy,
basement .
wtgaragfi-1,
A-~~j
cepting applications tor
~l"llt-.n
handicap
accessible,
waiting list lor HUD sub·
TownhOUMI
$650 ·
per
mo.,
"!"".'"-~::-;;;;':'""~~ sidized, 1·BR apartment
':"'
lor the elderlyfdisabled, -7~40":"·-94·9--2-3":"0':3~~~~
::
Modern 1 BR apt Call call 675--6679
740-446-0390
Taking applications on

'classroom
and
behind
the. wheel instruction lor
new
drivers.
Qualified
ca ndidates mu st · have a

10
Acres/garage/camper
contact
Free
Rent
Special\!!
shroese@yahoo.com
or 2&amp;3BR and up, Central
740-245-9015
Air, WID .hookup, tenant
pays electric. EHO Elm
A~ ill Estille
·View
Apts.
3500
Rcnli!IS (304)882·3017

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

high
valid
pass

school
drivers

diploma,
license,
backgro und

~~~~--~~- Gractoua Living 1 and 2 nice home on SA 160, checks, ex p.- preferred in
Beautiful Apts. at Jack· Bedroom Apls. at VIllage 12 mo. lease ,at $650 per traffic safety, law .enand
Riverside mo. plus sec. dep. No forcement, Or teaching,
son Estates. 52 West- Manor
wood Dr.. tram $365 to Apts. In Middleport , from pets.
441 -5062
or or we will train. EOE

$560.

740-446-2566, $327

to

$592. 379-2923

Equal Housing Oppm1u- 740·992-5064.
Equal
nity. This Institution is an Housing Opportunity.
Equal Opportunity ProMiddleport N. 4th Ave., 2
vider and Employer. ·
bedroom furnished apart·
2BA APT CIA. (740) ment, no pets, dep. &amp;
441-0194
ref., 740·992·01 65

Experienced
driver
Land (Acnago)
needed. Must be 24
Wanted To Lease. Bow years old and have 2
need years experience. Apply
hunting
land
enough lor 3 people. in pe rson at 2204 Jack·
son Pike
(626)-380-0594

. ld.·er.rr
oro

'

If so, you qualify far a

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription oli your
home delivered .sul_Jscription!
Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the c·o upon below .
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

•a:UipoH• J9ailp Ul;ribune
J)otnt ~lea•ant ltegi11ter
The Daily Senti~el •
&amp;unbap Ql:ime~ -6entinel
p•••••~--~·•••••••••••••••••••••

Subscriber's Name
Address
City/State/Zip

contacted

lor

ployment

assessments/

• Room Addttions &amp;

Remodeling

·NewGaragn
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
·Patio ar~d Pon;:h O.Cks

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Pomeroy Olrto
25 Years Local Experrenct'

IO"IIIYSillS
a
GIIIAGI
Slit 1U ,...,..,n
·

740-992-5682

Apple

service

Service Manager &amp; Serv·
ice Technician positions
available. Health care &amp;
Retirement plans available . Please send · resu me
to

LLC@CAREO COM

· Comptete Tree Care
lniUIId • FrM EIUIII"U
741J-441 -9317

fa ... to 740-446-9 t 04

Fed.Ben, OT. Place by

South
· 1•

i •

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com
www.auctionzip.com

'~

\'

Points)

New &amp; Used Tires.

Hardwood Cabine1ry And Furnicure

alignments.li£hl

1-888-IMC·PAYU

MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC

-.v-ww~t'hnh-u::!"-eekcahln.etry.com

worker,

*Insured

maintenance
25-30hrs
per

week, Pay based on · experience.
Call
(740)379-9083
Mon-Frl
between 9am-3pm

Medical

The Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Co. is seeking motivated, people-oriented
individualti till a vacancy
in the news dept: as a
Sportswriter. The successful ca ndidate will
cover_high school athletics in lhe area for the
daily edition ol the news:
. paper. as well as assist
with the production of
sports pages. Excetlenl
, writing and English skills.
photography skills and
know ledge of desktop
publishing are sought.
The position Is 'ull time.
40 hours a week , w1th
benetitS. Interested parties can send resumes to
Kevin Kelty. Managing
Editor, Ohio Valley Pub·
lishing Co.. 825 Third
Ave. , Gallipolis, Ohio
4563~ or kkelly@my· ·
daitytribune.com. No
phone calls please.

677-552-1663
9000

References Available!

THAT'S A LIE -. WE NEVER REPEAT
GOSSIP 1!

SNOOTY OL' MAI3EL
ACCUSED US OF

REPEATIN'
GOSSIP !!

I
~

~
I

l
THE BORN LOSER
f'"tx&gt;1-n W~'&lt; I-SOU'i G(.TI\~0...,. 'W1-1rn 1 wt-6 '&lt;ou~&lt;:. W£, Kit&gt;)
Wl-'.0 WORE.
~ E.'&lt;E. E.'l.~-r----..--:--~

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

'

Cell : 740-416-5047
email:
jrshadlrm@aol.com

6~'Nt.~t...A

I F '( 0\J I--lE-EI&gt;

~ co~~~ I)E.RE!&gt;

&lt;.&gt;LP,~t.J, 1\'~

p-Al-It&gt; '(OIJI&lt;:.I&gt;M:&gt;t&gt;'&lt; 1-\1&gt;..1&gt; TI-\E.
&amp;.)\ 1/1)10~
\-\ 1:) E:t'\TI !&lt;:.£.
~1\00L!

iO&amp;. ~p~~

Rubber Roofing. Room Additions. Decks. Shingles
Siding, Windows. Pole Bnrns. Gnmgcs.
Insurance Work, Residcn ti nl &amp; Corn mere till
710 -245 -0 437
ll l ~Hisl'd &amp; Bo nded
30 V!"'nrs
r rec Est, males
Ex.prrirncc

Cmnnwrdol &amp; Rnidf" llliflf
Vin yl

S iding/Rcplacement
Window ~/ Remodeli ng

Insured
740-992-1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell
B o nded &amp;

Free Estimated
Pomeroy. Ohio

•

BIG NATE

BAD CREDIT'
NO CREDI T?
BANKRUPTCY?
We ca11 IH~I~1 1
C;:'l ~H II Tull hr't '

866-564-8 6 79
LUV IIOM LS

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding. Gutters

~

.

Insured &amp; Bonded

....._,...__,_,___.,;o..._,__.,

:PEANUTS

740-653-9657 .

WHEN ~E CATC&gt;IE~ COMES
OUT iO T~E MOUND FOR A
CONFERENCE, IT'S USUALL'(

Manley's.

a-.c:yc:llng

A DRAMATIC MOMENL

503 Mill SL• llddlepon,OH 45160
1..982-3894

BEET~OVEN

_

HAD A BLUE

COAT WITH METAL 9UTTON5
LIKED VER'( MUCJ.I ......

T~AT HE

PAYINGTOP PRICES FOI
Mlml•mllln

·•-•m~-··

WIIMII

CllllldC
CIMIIWS
...IIIM'IIIIIIIInl

ICIII ltr Clrrtlt Pr'-1

NOMA
WHAT TUU.KI
STYlE...

PSI CONSTRUCTION

I ME;W, YOU ONLY
REALLY EVER BEFRIEND
SOMEONE IF YOU BO:rH
SHARE ACOMMON llll'El2EST
OR ARE UNITED AGAINST
ACOMMON
ENEMY.

YOU EVER
WONDER HOW
WE BECAME·
SUCH GOOD
FRIENDS?

RICK PRICE

New Homes. Room Additions. Remodeling,
Mclal &amp; · i
Roors,
Decks,

OH, I ALWAYS THOUGHT
IT WAS OUR MUTUAL
FEAR OF ORCAS.
THAT'S TRUE, I'M
FRitNDS WITH YOUCUZ
OF SHAMU AND PITY.

-~ Construction

...THE
NEWSPA
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

Roofing, Sid1ng,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,

• Garages

Remodeling, Room
Additions

• Pale Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner :
James Keesee II
742-2332

,,_

I

· Vinyl Siding
· -Replacement
Windows
•.Roallt.g
·Decks

i.

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Pursuant lo Section
121 .22 of the Ohio Revised Code, the Meigs
County Budget Cam·
mission will meet at
2:30 pm on September
29th, 2008, In lhe Audl·
tar's Ofllce ol lhe
Meigs County Court·
house.
Meigs County Budget
Commission
Mary T. ByM·HIII, Secretary
{9) 22

GARFIELD

Drywall,

1'HE5f NfW L.APfOP
COMPllffR&amp; l-OOK·
PRe1'TY COOL.

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740.367-0536

Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room At.lditiuns • Gmages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

GRIZZWELLS

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebt:l Ruad. Long BouortJ. OH

740-985-4141

'$16tll ! l 'N\5\l

"'

,...,.,__.~-~

50 Tarzan 's

pals

15 Duck Or hue 51 Mother lode

16 Got
18 Young

20

52 Give
a ticket

p igeons
More,

53 Wagon train
dir ection

to some
21 Negative
prefix
22 Wernher
-Braun
23 Having

54

at.

10 Famous

fractions
55 Bohall
DOWN

weapons

1 Shook

26 Go softly
29 Fragrant

hands

30
31
33

run
19 Facilitate
22 French
wines

2 Cenain
necklaces
votes
Type of eagle 3 Jordan
Catch
. neighbor
a crook
4 Misleads
Aggregate
5 Restrains
of two
6 Sporty ·
numbers
vehicles
Snake eyes 7 "-·Man

34
35 Tijuana

38 Most

fo rmer
26 Low card
27 Singles

marble
47 Caveman
from Moo

28 Go slowly

49 Once called

30

9 Dallas

excellent

'blr 'Birthday:

By Bernice Bede Oscl
You're a person who likes par tnership
arrangements. and you may get a rail of
opportunities lor Joint proposals in the
year ahead. The ones you choose should
depend upon th e caliber of those persons Involved.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23)- Even though
your motill'es might be legitim ate for
going alter what you hope to achieve,
you must Still be care fu l about the
actions you take. Using the wrong tactics
could make you look self·serving.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) :._ AI trmes,
you hall'e a tendency to say-thin gs blunt·
ly without regard lor how it makes you
look. Be ca reful because th at loo t you
put in your mouth will be too big to swal·
low.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) ~ It
might be more importa nt lhan usua l to
be prudent when handling business
affairs . If you make lhe ' wrong move, it
could prove cos tly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)- Don't
lei pride be your Achilles' heel. If you
treat the slightest disagre ement as &amp;n
affront, you"ll look like an overbearing
bore wh.o wants to push people aroUnd .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Alt hough you are an easygoing person,
you might turn a blind eye and de af ear .
to colleagues' pleas lor understanding .
How you "treat olh ers is how you'll be
trealed back.
PISCES (Feb. 20· March 20) -. It's not
like you' to split hairs in your involvements wi th olh ers, ye t you might make a
big hullabal oo o'o'e r how something
should be divided ·and create some serious' complications .
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - It goes
without saying that , if you hoPe to be
effe:ct1ve, you must be focused and single-mmded. II you anempt to do one
thing wh1le your thoughts are preoccu·
pied, you'll tail.
TAURU S (Ap ni 20·May 20)- If you can
escape the control ol another. you .w1ll be
a better performer and far more prodll c·
tive when lett to your own devices. I! this
tsn'tlikely the case . do your best anyway.
GEMINI {May 21 -June 20) - Patience
will be re quired when it comes to your
financial affairs. If you get restles!l and
frazzled, you could take erratic actions in '
order to stimulate things that might result
in a big loss.
CANCER (Jun e 21-July 22) - Try to be
unbia.sed when it comes to dealing with
those with whom you have little in com·
mon. II . you get 100 demanding, your
undisciplined action could boomerang .
I..EO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Thai which you
usuBIIy ta ke In stride might be over·
whelming to handle. Th is could be es pecially true if you !lire forced to work In
conjunction with an lneffeCII ve aide.
VI~GO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)- Don 't play
the· biQ·IPtnder role ano pick up the
check for p1oplt who havt already
agrud to psy their lair lhart - unltll
yoU have money to txJrn , II won't do a
tllln'g for you r Image ,
·

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeor!)' G1one1 CI'/C!Ograms are creatoo 'rom ouota!IOns 0\' tamoLs Pt:1JOie oa!ilal\ll ~esent
Eacn letter tn tne cophe· steM; lor ~r otne·

Today"s clue: Gequals M

"P R PW

VMXF

RSZ

CHPRSCOXXF
RSZ

CHEGZE

LXHMRW

WLEPMY , JSV

SHEUZWR

PM

-----·~- -~-

PM

H

HOROGM .''

A.l,

CVEAZW
PREVIOUS SO LUTION - "I am told tha11 1alk
smudge it. ~· J.R.R Tolkien

1n

shorthand and lhen I

are cool, man." · Orland o Bloom

"Elves

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SCRAM LETS ANSWI, KS '1/ 19/0K

Skewer -- Testy - Whi ch - V on ex -· THE ROCKS

"You will have problems in life ."

~ram ps

"rememhc-r th e bub b l in g brcwl&lt; wnlllt.J lose

remo\•~d
'

T HF ROCKS."
'

ARLO &amp; JANIS

PROe&gt;AeL.Y C~A.MMII.l().
fOR AIJ Wilt illDAY.
If J Kl.lOW HIM i '

Advertise
in this spac£ for
$64 per month
.• 1 1 .

JSV

WZZKW

EZHLW

~6

-

Resound

32 Physique
34 Throbbed

cagers

61fl'~

. 25+ years ~xperie11cc Free E.,·timates

shelters
41 Gas main
42 Hera' s son
43 Round tent

23 Capp and 44 Essay
•
Jolson
byline
24 Enlisl again 45 Cold and
(hyph.)
damp
25 Silsnt per- 46 Playtng

Fever"
8 Far East

coin

35 Excuses

lithographer 37 Detain
I I Turner or
38 Spend
Koppel
money
17 Wed on the 40 Dove

SOUP TO NUTZ

I \\At&gt; A

Cell : 740-416-1 834

•

" ·

.,,,,'

'

Concrete

Astro-_.
Graph
Tuesda~Sept.23 , 2008

For Remodelin g and New House Huilding

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

.

II. . . .dltfriii1111:081A1-5:80 Ill
11111111111:81&amp;1Z:08111

Bus
Dt'ectory

304-593-6421

. .

MIKE MARCUM
i!HOIINI, &amp; I!INClllHINC, ( Cl .

740·444·5152

Ser~rce

All types Masonry, brick,
block, s1one, Free Esti·
mate ,
740-416·7305,

SAME
WAY TWICE!!

AT LEAST , NOT TH'

•
~'-'-'-' A

leave messa c -

Topped. Take tlm,,,,...
&amp; Removnl
· Affordable ,
Rensonable Price

\\I I

J
r

740-5 91 - ~1144

Please

'

2459 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis
CALL FOR FREE
·I

Call Gary Stanley @

TREE WORK

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

Sportswriter

*Experienced

'~

:BARNEY

740.446.9200

Gutters
Maintenance Plus

Pa ss
Pa ss
Pa ss

one spade. showing four or more spades
with 0·8 po1ntS. After the opener passes,
your partner raises 10 1wo spades. How
would you interprel tha t bid?
The answer comes !rom the basic' cor·
nerstone of bidding: II game is still possible,"keep the auction open; bul if game
is impossible. slop as quickly as possible
in as sensible a contraci as possible,
Here, one spade must be a playable
c,ontract. North promised three or four
spades with his double, and you have
four or fi ve for your bid . So. when partn er
. ra ises, he is saytng that game is still possible. And since you cannot have more
than eight points, he must h8ve 18·20 {a
greal 17 10 a middling 20) and lour-card
support.
When you get th at good news, you jump
to lour spades. II is a tad pushy. but you
now know ol a ni~e-card til and may add
one shortage point tor your doubleton
club. Also, you will know where the mtss·
ing high cards lie : in the West hand .
West leads the heart queen. How woul d
Y.OU plan the play ?
.
The car,ele ss declarer takes trick one
and immed iately plays a !rump.
However, W~sl w1ns and returns a heart.
Sudden ly Soulh -has lour unaliOidable
losers: one in each suit. But you are
more thoughtlUI. You carefu lly wi n th e
fir~! trick with yo~ r heart ace and play a
club. You win the second he art on the
boar'd and finish the clubs. discardin g
your las t he art. Then you play on
spades, and eventually you will lead dia·
monds tw1ce through West.

'
' ,._
\o\
·,

.Qunlity Seamless

East

Dbl
2 I.
PallS

kids
Frat Ieder
Prune back
Fix apples
Vacillated
Bushed
(2 wds.)
48 Custard
dessert

39
40
41
43
46

West opens one heart. your partner dr)u.bles, East passes, and you advance wilh

ill~
·
.
. .......

#5548

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

North

1 'I
Pass
P01ss

Bid twice with
a strong double

fvlt..ISHE~

10
®

Pomeroy, OH

medtani t.: work .

Wesl

Opening lead: ¥ Q

compu ter wheel

Part-~me

+

44087 Wlpple Rd .
(5

8 7 '5
9 •

Dealer: West

We buy used tires.

Mon-Fri

•

.L &amp; L Tire Barn

WV BOhr Underground
MinerS
Class.
starting
soon .
Whi! -Co-Training

Qam_- 3 pm.

adSource, not affiliated
with USPS who hires.

Stop &amp; Compare

'I A 6 3

,·

or

Stanley Tree-.
Trimming
&amp; Removal

NOW

740-992-1611

BiiiV R. Goble Jr.
140-416-1164

,.n.""

740-992-6971

HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
or
%57Kiyr,
includes

• Complete
Remodelin g

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES
Auctioneer:

20 )'Hill ••
S.nlor t;lrlzen
&amp; cnurcn Dlteormt

David Lewis

2006,

• New Homes

Maintenance/
Domootic

(740)379-90B3

38 Transponed

1 Motel
stsHer
5 Trophy.
· often
8 Skip
t2 Fictional
governess
13 Ms. Hagen
14 Stellar
review

Vulnerable: Neither

Johnson's Tree

Grove. WV 25502

MONTY

111411 mo pd

.. 'l 'll

.kObo

1-666-403-2582

Hours
7:00AM • 8:0Q. PM

9-12 Sat

complete serv ice oil
A lu ll ume employment
http:l~obs . lnfoclslon . c
change~. small eugine
opportunity for a mainte·
om
nance mechanic is being
repU ir.
Delivery/Warehouse
per· offered by M&amp;G PolyWe service anJ
son needed, full time , im- mars in Mason Cou nty,
winterize boats and
mediate opening, must WV.
Candidates must
Rv·s
halle goOd driving re- posses a high school di(740) 992-5344
cord. Apply-Lifestyle Fur· ploma or equiValent GEO
Mon·Fri .
niture B56 Third Ave and be wtlling and availGallipolis, 9:30-5:00 No .able to "work rotating
8:06 am - 4:30pm
shifts .
Th e preferred
Phone Ca lls
Snt. R:OO am - 12
candidates shall possess
We
appreciate yo11r
AesCare Home Care is
and be able to demonbw;illtSS
app lica tions strate mechanical . skill s
accepting
f6 r Support Associates ,
includ ing but not limited
CNA &amp; STNA. MA/00 to : we lding, abi lity to'
I I \\'IS
exp. preferred. Apply at
(()',
( fOi l
troubl6shoot and repair
8204 Carli! Drive, Galli· pumps; and the · knowll () ', S II( I l II() \
polis , Mo n - Fri. 8-4 edge and ability to use
Email resume to: rharri· all fo rmS of precision
Concrete Removal
son@ rescare.yom.
and Replacement
measurement tools. ln di·
viduals
meeting
these
reAn Exc ellent way to eam
Typn Of ' '
money. The New AVon. quirementS must submit
Call
. Marilyn a resume postmarked by _~ 'Concret~ ~rk '
T-uesday, Septembe r 30,
304-662-2645
2008 to the address be· 28 Years Experience .
AVON! All Areas!
To low, provid ing contact inBuy
or
Sell
Shirley formation,
employment
Spears 304-6751429
histqry and descriptions
Insure
of · ·any
Ce r1ifications.
Custodran
for
local
traini ng_ courses· or· rele- WV0421B2 Free Estimate&amp;
cll urch.
Mon-Fri 8:30am
vant
programs
com·
to 2Pm. $10/hour. Send
plated.
.Candidat'es
of
in~
reume to Minister, PO
terest will be con ta cted
Box 228, Point Pleasant,
lor pre-employment aswv 25550
sessments/ intervi ews.
Direct Care Staff -in ' resi · Reply to: M&amp;G Polymers
Human Resources * Prompt and Qm1lity
dential
youth program . Attn·
Must be 21 years 01age. - Maintenance Mechanic
Wt1rk
Ap-1
Pay based on experi· P. 0. Box 8
*Reasonabl e Rates
ence.
Call pie Grove, WV 25502

4 :30 p.m. However, the
posllng will remain open
until filled , The AMESC
is "an equal opportunity
Employer/Provider.

OFFICE

to 1D'x30'

North
llH2UB
• K J 98
¥ K5 4
o K Q3
.. K Q J
West'
Jo:a.llt
.. A
• 65 3
'1 QJ9B7
'I I 0 2
t A 6 2
• J 10 9 4
... 1086· 5
+ A-732
South
. Q I 0742

• Garages

Sizes 5'x10'

Operator

P.O. Box 8

Ext. 1901

resu me, references, and
copies ot all current Ohio
Certillca tesllicenses
to
John D. •Constanzo. Superintendent,
Educa·
Athens-Meigs
tiona!
SeNice
Center.
507
Richland Aven ue,
Suite #108 , Athens, OH
45701,
Responses
should tte received by

POST

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio
45771
740.949·2217

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRimON

TOMORROW/I
Work NEXT WEEKm

-

30,

.Storage

Oten!HM.f

Polymers
Human Resources

A
Ce lebration
of
Ufe .... Overbrook
Center,
localed · at 333 Page
Street, Middleport . Ohio
is pleased to . announce
thai
due
to
internal
cha nges in ou r facility,
we are accepting applications
lor
full
time
Ohio certification or li· -:'":"':"~~~:::":~=- 7P-7A LPN'S, part tim e
censure; technology ex- I need to find (2) people 7A-7P ~PN 's and full
·
(I .e.,
on ·11
·ne
needing
time
and
pa rt
time
penance
. a lull time job.
management
system.
You need to be honest, a STNA's
to
join
OlJr
person or integrity, with
friendly
and dedicated
email , eleCtronic prese n·
gOO d people skills. You
staH.
Applican l's must
tation); an d access to
also nead to be able to
be
dependable , · team
technology alter school
hours.
Additional
Pre follow instructions and
playets with positive atti·
'have an ability to listen
tudes
lnteresled appli ·
Ierred: Previous experi·
ante as a SiAl instructor
and lead people in th~
cants can pick up an apor participant: and adult
rig-ht direc tion . I need
plication
M·F
8:30
instructional experience. people-who want to work AM-4:30 PM All "e ligible ,
Expectations: Participate
and will show up lor
applicants will then bf!
In all state sponsored work. If you a1e a recent co ntacted by Hollie Bumtrainings; participate in college grad an d cannot gamer, LPN, Staff Deve1·
a-learning
trainings lind employmen t and fee l opment
tfaCe:to-face ,
online,
that you are qualified,
COordina tor@ 740·992digital) ; commit to maingive us a chance until a
6472 . EOE &amp; A Partici·
tainlng fidelity to the Ohio
job in your career pa th
pant of the Drug-Free
titeracy Initiatives design , becomes available. Call
workplace program .
content, te)(tS and time
Pat Hill. New Car Man·
age r tor an interview at
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
commi tment;
web-based
446-9800
.
IN
THE
TRI-STATE
session checkli st; co rreAREA
Occu pation~ !
spond • daily · ·· through
Medicine
Nurses
A N's
email
com munication;
and
LPN's
Competitive
and hold · v_
irtual olfice
salary and ben~fits de·
hours. Length of co ntract
termined by expe rience
and salary Will be deter.and qualifications Please
mlned upon employ ment
call at 740-574-1770 or
Submit tetter of 1nterest,

S.~tember

Hil l's Self

.

'

'r-:::::::::o::=:::::::-,

pre-ern·

Alln :
Production

Hair Dresser Wanted at
The Athens-Meigs . Edu- Shae's
Beauty
Salon
cational Service Ce nter co ntact
Karrie
has a position opening 304-675-2828
Regional
Literacy
as
consultant - lor Region 16 House parents t2)wanted
Team. for boys group home to tate
Support
This Is a Full Time Posi· cated in southe rn Ohio
r10n. Qualifications·: AI 27-7 care .for 2 weeks on·
le3st live years of suc ,~ ~ -2 weekS off. Expe rience
cessful reading lnslruc- raising teens or foster
. li on in a classroom; Mas· ca re preferred. We proters degree In educa lion vide traini ng. fnlerested?
Oasis
IReading, Special Edu- . Call
cation or concentration in t -877-325- 1588 fo r more
appropriate inlormation.
Literacy);

Phone

------------------·-·----------·

CARPENTER
SERVICE

interviews.

·t ntervfew·

Gowmmont &amp; federal

Mall or drop aft this coupon along
with a copy ol your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45.631

YOUNG'S

grams completed . Candi·
dales ot interest wHI be

s

•

Phillip
Alder

304-372-6346

CSII TODAY!

Education

Are you ~ 65·

cer1ifications.
training.
courses or relevant pro·

M&amp;G

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

industrial ·
envi ronment
and prio r chemical plant
experience is preferred
Individuals
meeting
these req uirements must
subm1t a resume post· marked
bY Tuesday,
September 30. 2008 to
the address below, pro·
viding con tacl infOrrnation , employment history
end description s of any

Recruit vo lunteers for
. non -profit organizations
such as st". Jude
Children's Research
Hospital
Get paid to make a
difference!

only $29,900! Prices to
Commercial
.Sell!
For
listings 1br Apartment lor rent in
'800-620-4646 ex T462
Pt Pleasant, all utilities Comme rical Space

'House witt) 2 acres in SA

G•n•raI

land
improvements.
Bankrvplcy &amp; Bad ·Credit ·A Place to Call HOME'
OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed- Foster Parents Needed!!!
rooms
available. $30-$48 a day with pd .
respite. Training begins
740-446-3384
in September. Call oasis
Double wide 3" BA 2 bath to help a child ·find a
to
ca ll
home,
$575 deposit $575 rent place
per mlh plus utls. Ready 1-Bn-325·1558.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BRIDGE

Full lime employment opportunities for entry level
cht::m•cal operators are
being ollered by M&amp;G
Polymers
in
MasOn
County, wv. Candidates
must have a high school
diploma
or
equivalen t
GED and be Willing and
available to wotk rotating
12 hour shit1s . Demon·
strated expeiience in an

POSTAL JOBS

references.

&amp;

www.mydailysentinel.com

PRODUCTION
OPERATORS

FEDERAL

New Haven, one bed·
room apartment, depoSit

a

Monday, September 22, 2008
ALLEYOOP

Help Wa!'fwd - Gonoral

Govemmont &amp; federal
Jobo

Apamn-/

gle car detacl1ed garage,
_
outbuilding on app. 1
acre. A1 •2 North.
304.895.3129

Monday, September 22, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

____ _._

,

told me,
its son g if you

�Page B6 · ·The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Monday, September 22, 2008
'

·Pryor's four TD passes lead Buckeyes, 28-10

CoLLEGE FOOTBAlL AP ToP 25.
The Top 25 teams 1n The Associated

COLUMBUS (APJ Terrelle Pryor took charge
of Ohio Srare·s offense.
·fhrowing four rouchdow n
passes lo lead the slugg ish
Buckeyes to a 28-10 vic!O·
ry over Troy on Sa!urday.
· In rhe wake of an ugly
~5-3 defeat a! lop- ranked
5ourhern
Ca lifornia .
coach
Jim
Buckeyes
Tress~! had said !hat the
narion 's wp quarterba&lt;.:k
recruit last spring and fifth year senior Todd Boe&lt;.:kman
would sp lit the job 50-50
against rhe Trojans (2- 1). · ·
Pryor became !he firs!
rrue freshfluw to st~t rt for
the Buckeyes in 30 years.
since Art Schlichrer in
1978 . He played all but rwo
snaps umil the game was
. decided - and an undercapacitY . crowd ' loudl y
booed Boeckman when he
threw a first-half incompletion on one of those.
Pryor's 1ouchdown pass·
es covered 39 and 16 yards
to Brian Hanline , 13 yards
to Rorv Nichol anti 38
yards to Brian Robiskie.
AP photo
The 6-foot-6 standout from Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor (2) runs against the Troy defense during the first
Jeannette . Pa., who won'! quarler of an NCAA college football game Saturday in Columbus.
attend his first college class·
until nex t week. completed more likely, it was the trois. the Buckeyes punted Jermal e· Hines all missed
10 of 16 passes for I :19 Buckeyes· dismal showing on their nexr three posses- clear shots .at Jernigan on
yards with one interception . in Los Angeles that damp· sion s after Nichol\ catch. th~ play.
wilh Troy responding with
Pryor made several big
He also ran 14 rimes for 66 ened the fans' spirits.
Web
sites
were
selling
Sam
Glusman\
22-yard
plays
. but wasn't perfect.
yards.
He was sacked for a 16Still. the Buckeyes (3-1) tickets all week at around field goal.
half
the
$62
face
value.
Kurt
Coleman's
firs!
of
yard
loss on the nex t-to-last
Jed just "14-10 all he srart of
There
was
a
large
palch
of
two
·
interception
s
he
play
of the half. then .was
the fourth quarrer, at which
poinl Troy had more firS! empty seats in the so uth took theball right our uf the intercepted by Tavares
end . zone. and manv other hands of receiver Gerald Williams in the end zone on
downs and total yards.
empty
seats could be seen Tare - set up Ohio State\ a desperation heave on !he
But Ohio State turned
two punts from the Trqy around the stadium. The second score. On th ird and nex! play . Two of his touchend zone in the fourth quar- announced attendance 'fig- 12 froni the Troy 39, Pryor · down passes were looped in
te r into short touchdown ure of I02,989 was the threw a pa ss high over the !he air, with the defense
drives. Pryor's four TD Ohio Stare's ,smallest home middle ro a wide-open failing to recover after the
passes set a. school fresh- crowd in more than ·six Hartline at !he 5. and receivers were open by sev1T)Un record for one game - , years -- since a 2002 game Han line fell into the end era I yards.
aga ;mt Ken! State drew zone to make it 14-3.
A 60-yard punt by A.J ..
and for a season.
· Af!er another Ohio State Trapasso
pinned
the
If thi s was the coming out 2002.
The
Buckeyes
led
14-10
punt.
the
Trojans
needed
Trojans
at
their
own
2
to
parry for a star. it sure
at !he half and looked our of just five plays to cover 80 start the fourth quarter.
arrived quierly.
Maybe it was a fallout sync on both sides of the yards. Jamie Hampton After. a 40-yard punt , Pryor
flipped a shan pass to arched a TD pass to
from Sunday's arrival of ball .
Pryor hi! Nichol for a Jcrrel Jernigan : who cov- Robiskie a! th.e goal line.
Hurricane Ike that knocked
After a 17-y ai·d punt,
out the power to thousands score on Ohio State's first ered . the fin al 45 yards for
of homes in Columbus. possess ion, bur tht;n the the touchdown. Coleman. Pryor hit Hartline for his
· Washington. s~c on"d rouchdown recepDonald
some of which remain offense floundered.
With Pryo\ at the con- Ma.rcus
Freeman
and tion of !he day.
withour elecrricity. Or.

Press colt&amp;ge football poll, with firstplace votes In parenJheses, records
through $apt. 20, total points based on
25 points lor a first-place vote through

one point lor a 25th-place vote. and
previous ranking:

Rec · Pts

1. usc (621
2. Oklahoma
3 Georgia (2)

2·0
3-0
4·0
4 , Florida (1)
3·0
S. LSU
3·0
6. Missouri
4·0
7 . TBX8$
3·0
4-0
a. Alabama
g_Wisconsin
3-0
10 Te~~:as Tech 4-0
11 . BYU
4-0
4-0
12. Penn St.
13. Souih Florida 4·0

Pvs

1,621

1

1,464 2
1,475~ 3
1,442 4

1,363
1,360

6
7

9
8
11
14 ,
16
12

1,091

962

919
891
796

790
785
711
574
555
363
300
242
224
201
117
105

.EVANSTON, Ill. (APt Northwestern got off to a 4-0
start for the firs! time since
1962 by blocking two field
goa ls. recoveri ng rwo fum·
bles and holding pesky Ohio
to four yards rushmg in a 168 win Saturday ..
The Wildcats survived an
offensive drought in the second half and four intercep- ·
tions hy CJ . Bacher. as well
us an injtuy to starting rail back Tyrell Sutton.
In . the third quarter,
Northwestern ru shed for
minus-4 yards and failed to
pick up a first down wi th
Sutton on the bench because
of a leg injury. But they did
enough on defense and special teams 10 hold down the
Bobcats (0-4) - who pu! a
scare into Ohio State two
,

Amado Villarreal niacle
rhree field goals and Omar
Comeh had a 1-yard touchdown run in the second quarter to give the Wildcats a 160 lead ar halftime.
It turned out to be en()llgh
because Ohio couldn't establish any kind of a runni.ng
game against

~u11hweslern ..

The Bobca!s had 14 plays of
negative yardage.
Ohio.'s Barrel! Way was
without usual Ion~ snapper
Kyle.Robbins and rt showed.
He missed a 42 -yard field
goal in the firs! qumter and
had attempts blocked in the
third and fourrh quarrers .

22

•·

15
25

OthEfrS r~eiving votes:
100,
Oklahoma St 98, Virginia ec_h 63,
Colorado 39, Nebraska 32. Connecticut
26, TulSa 19. Miami 17, Michigan St H .
Georgia Tech B. Kentucky 7,
Northwestern 7, Ball 51. 6, South
Carolina 3. Florida St. 2. North Carolina
2, Wes~ Virginia 2. Minnesota 1.

1\ ,.rrhwestem hadn't blocked
a field lioal in four years.
Late 111 the second quarter,
Vince
Browne
sacked
Jackson fo r a nine,yard loss
on 4!h and 5. giving the
Wildcats the ball back near
midfield wirh. just under 2
minutes left. On 3rd and I,
Sutton broke free for a 31yard gain Ia the II, and
Comeh scored with 13 seconds left to make it 16-0.
Sutton left ufler the lo;1g
curry and didn ' t return. ·
Sulton .ran for 76 yards on .
nine can·ies and caught three
pa&gt;Ses for 27 yards, going ·
over I .000 yards receiving in
his career. The senior is the
second in school to . have
more !han I .000 yards rush-"
ing and receiving in a career,
joining Ricky Edwards from
1979-84 .
Lare in the third quar!er,
Ohio scored on Jackson·'s 12yard pass to Andrew
Mooney. followed by a pass
to LaVon Brazill for a 2poi nt conversion lo make it
16-8.
Bacher went 18-for- 35 fo r
133 yards , and ran for anoth·
er 37. Conteh ran for 35
yards in relief of Sutton, who
missed time last year wilh an
ankle injury.
Lickson went 27-for-42 for
228 yards and two interceptions . and ran for minus-28
yards. including the five
sacks. Harden led Ohio with
19 yards rushing.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

.

•~ Meigs competes
at Jackson Invite.
SeePage 81

'At last night's regular
meeting , council passed the
second reading and took a
POMEROY .,.. Pomeroy unanimous vote on the new
Village
Council has ordinance which will lower
taken another srep in low-. the speed limit and in fm;r
ering . the speed limit extend the downtown busidowntown from 35 miles ness district. The ordinance
per hour to 25 miles per requires one more reading
hour from Fisher Funeral and vote to become effective.
Home on East Main Street
Also receiving its second
to the corporation limit reading and vote, though
with Middleport on West not unanimous, was an ordiMain Street.
nance to place a $10 comBv BETH SERGENT

BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• large

flvwhe~

for smoofher,

more sustiined horsepower
• Curved boom loader witl'l excellent
¥isibility and rnodtrn design

Allechmeilho sold uparately.

.•.................................................................
3· YC.AR 1200 0 ! W ltR
111.11!

Sc2400 SUB-COMPACT TRACTOR

LOW MONIHlY I'AYMENI

• 24 HP' diesel ensine
• Hydrosta1ic transmission with selectable 4WO
• Shift-On-The-Go• range cantrot. lats you shift from
low to f1iBh without stoppina
• Highest loader lift capacity in its class.....
.
• Dual hydraulic pumps to ma.::imize attachMtnt pl!!rformance
• Comfortab\e and open operator s.tation
• Eraonomically dtsigntd arab handles allow the op~rator

$151
·

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• David Shamblin, 74

INSIDE

f'011~

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•

Ex3200 COMPACT TRACTOR

$219
·
/MONTH*

• Hydrostatic t!'tllnsmis.sicn with selectable 4WQ
• Large flywheel toi tmoother,
mor1 sustained horsepower
• Curved boom lqader with excellent
viaibility and rnodern deaian

SERVICE AND SUPPORT•. EXPECT IT WHEN YOU VISIT

CUB CADET• VANMAR•

At11thman1s sold

sepltale!~.

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FAMILY 01\NED SINCE 1996
"1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE • RT. 33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
8880 UNITED LANE • ONE MI LE WEST OF ATHENS ON RT. 50/32
ATHENS, OH 45701 • (740) 593-l279
, LANCASTER. OH 43130 • (740)653-2827
STORE HOURS MONDAY-FR IDAY 9:00-6:00, SATURDAY 900-5:00
..
()I·!' '$ I• ~..:.• t ~" ""' Cl'''' ' ; I G~ lol0~1 1!.1• t II: ~ ·· ~ '&lt;l •\"' •,•' .-,. f' ~ td ~! ~~ ' •'' t "'f.. ·-;)-• !'·' ; I ' '&lt;';J •· ·.o, ~~ ) ~ ~~ '1' l i.' " OC • ( &lt;,&gt; CI~" &lt;'I'·' ''f'' &gt;I" •
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Weather
© aoo8 Ohio Valley Publlohlni; C&lt;&gt;.

BE'IOHD TIE EXPECTE!r

•

.

'

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.

"

.

. ..

purer free on mayor 's court
costs. Councilwoman Mary
McAngus once again voted
against the fee which would
raise courr cosrsfrom $65 to
575. The fee would be used
to cover upgrades and maintainence for the mayor 's
court computer program
called GBC.
Council granted permission to the Meigs County
Right to Life members. who
are reaming up with Mid-

www.m~d:oil~"·nlirwl.cmn

Ohio Valley Christian
SchooL to have a right to
life rally along the public
sidewalks in Pomeroy near
the Firs! Baptist Church
from 2-3 p.m .. Sunday. Ocr. ,
5. Adam Will from !he
MCRTL presented council
with the idea and was joined
by Brenda Barnharr .
Council approved the E 91-1 second draft as presented .
Clerk Tre a ~u rer · Kathy
Hysell repmted the . village

sal ! thi s
canna! . get
year ro rreat the roads for
winter. However. the vi II age
does have some in storage
and . workers ·are to use
it sparingly.
Hysell also brought Lrp the ·
issue of !he parking meter
money and the iss ue of
council's ordinance which
states it was to be removed
weekly . Chief Mark E.

Please see Speed limit. AS

storv

ing :which is _permitted to
cont111ue until Aug. 21,
2009, if necessary. This
means the proceedings have
been pushed back by six
months.
The official· ruling on the
changes gives no reason for
them, only stating ERAC
received the .appellants' (the
Natural Resources Defense:
. Ohio
Council,
Environmental
Council ,
Sierra Club, the National
Parks
Conservation
Association) proposed case
management schedule and
the appellees ' proposed case
management schedule on
Sept. 8 after which the
Commission made the t'ol·
lowing changes. No word
yet on how or if the delay
will affect the $2.9 billion
project though AMP-Ohio
will be making a stalement

on the matter for an upcom111g story 111 The Darly
Sentinel.
Expert reports shall be
exchanged by Jan. 30, 2009 ,
supplemental witness lists
shall be filed by April 3.
2009, the deadline to serve
written discovery shall be
April 10. 2009, discovery
cut-off shall be April 30,
2009. final witness lists
shall be filed by May 15 ,
2009; dispositive motions
deadline shall be May 27,
2009. pre-hearing · briefs
(25-page limit) shall be
filed simultaneously on July
20, 2009, exchange of
exhibits shall be July 20.
2009.
The final prehearing conference on . July 27, 2009
will be held via telephone
with counsel for appellee
diretor initialing the tele-

phone call. The de novo
heanng on . Aug. 3, 2009
will be held at ERAC's
.offices in Columbus at 309
South Founh Street. Room
222. A de novo hearing is a
rrial or a heming rhat is
ordered ' by an appellate
courr that has reviewed the
record of a hearing in a
lower court and sen! the
matter back to !he original
courr for a new trial , as if it
had no! been previously
heard nor decided .
The appeal was filed by
the NRDC, OEC, Sierra
Club and the National Parks
Conservation Association ,
Knoxville. Tenn. (which is
not to be confused with the
federal
government :s
National Park Service) in
March
agai.nst
OEPA .
Director Chris Korlenski
and AMP~Ohio.

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

DEALER.

ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT

'

Details on !;'age A3 ·

AS LOW AS ·

.• FuUy hydraulic power steering

h'l-'1, :~~ !\.&gt;

COLUMBUS
- The
Ohio
Environmental
Review
Appeals
Commission has pushed
back both a prehearing conference and de novo hearing on the appeal of the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency's
issuance of a final air permit-to-install for the coalfired power plant proposed
by American Munia.ipal
Power-Ohio.
The original preheadng
conference was set for 10
a.m., Jan . 27, 2009 while
the de novo hearing was set
for !0 a.m., Feb. 9, 2009.
.The new dates are July 27,
2009 for the final prehearing conference and Aug. 3,
2009 for the de novo hear-

Attachmtnh sold separately.

• 32 HP' 3-cylind.,. direct
futt injection diestl engin. .

~g

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELGOM

WEATHER

3 YEAR /1 000

~

·. .

AMP hearing pushed back six months

/MONTH*

L&gt; W '

· ~VE ~ ~ . :;;"

• More anxiety on Wall
St.: Stocks dive, oil
soars. See Page A2
• 5-K Fox Trot set for
Oct 4. See Page A3
• Wii go bowli~g.
See Page A6 ·

AS LOW AS

to aet orl" and off the tracto~ easily

•

'

POMEROY
The
charges contained in an
indictment agarnsl Keilh
Ridenour. filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court. on Aug. Rare: aggravated vehicular homicide.
Ohio Revised Code 2903.06
(A)(2)(a): aggravated vehicular homicide. O.R.C.
2903.06(A)(I )(a): improp·
erly handling firearms in a
motor ve hicle. O.R.C.
2923.16(0): opera ting a
vehicle under the intluence.
O.R.C. 4511.19(AJ(I)(a):
operating a vehide under
the
influence , O.R .C.
4511.19(A)(I)(b).
Ridenour was released at
arraignment on a personal .
recognizance bond and
charges are pending.
.
According to the Ohio
State High way Patrol,
Ridenour was driving a
vehicle which struck ;mother on Ohio 24R on Aug. 13.
2007. Devi~ Riggs, 15. a
passenger 111 the second
vehicle, driven by his father.
Kenneth , died at !he scene.
Kenneth Riggs has not
Charlene Hoelltchlpholo been charged and has Q\lt
Chrysanthemums in an array of colors filling the shelves of local ·markets and flower shops is a sure sign that fall has , appeared on any charges
arrived. To usher in the new season , pots of yellow, white, maroon and lilac mums are beginning to replace containers of relating to !he case.
tired summer flowers around many homes.
The
Daily
Seniinel
regrets an error in n previ -

• V •o Wt~l'"h v.•ou~•·

~

~· ~

·I

corrected

I

AS LOW AS

. ...:!i:, ·:··~
'

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Fall colors

Ex2900 COMPACT TRACTOR

$209/MONTH*

'

;'

Prin fed on 1041'1 { )
Newsprilll

R~c.nled

Pomeroy closer to .lowering speed limit

SPORts

.

• Fully h~draulic power steenng

TUESDAY, SEYl'EMBER 23.'2008 '
,.

Llloll flO PT WI ~T~~IIi 0'/A ~ ~ ·IO t•

LOWMClNfl · YPA'f'M(Nl

.

511 CENTS • Vol. 5H, No. 52

3 " VE
. AR/2000. -HOUR

• 28.7 HP' 3 ~ cylinder direct
fuet injectipn diesel eniliMI
• Hydrostatic transmission with seleCtable 4WD

Making a donation, As

23

Northwestern 4-0 for
time since 1962

\\'eeks ago.

Hits for Hospice
tournament a hit, A3

13'
10
18
20
19

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s

1 ' 174
1'132

3-1
3-1
16. Wake Forest 3-0
4-0
17. Utah
3-1
18. Kansas
19. Boise St.
3-0
3-1
20. Clemson
21 . Vanderbilt
4.0
22 . Illinois
2·1
23. Eas~ Carolina 3-1
4-0
24. TCU
2-1
25. Fresno St.
14 . Ohio 51.
15 Auburn

Survey: Voters continue to support smoke-free workplaces
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Smokers
may grumble about Ohio's
Smoke-Free Workplace Act,
but the public overwhelmingly supports the state's
smoking )&gt;an, according to a
by
survey
conducted
SmokeFreeOhio.
The coalition which campaigned to pass State Issue
5 two years ago conducted
a survey in response to a
proposed ,Senate Bill which
would exempt certain businesses from it. That survey
shows that those who sup-

ported the ban at the polls . According to the survey the Ohio. Senate, would
in November, 2006 intend- recently conducted, 74 per- exempt such private clubs
ed for all restaurants and cenr of the voters surveyed and businesses owned and
bars to be smoke-free agree that bar employees, completely staffed by a
places . even bars and pri- roo. should be protected family from the law.
Meigs County's business
from second-hand smoke .
vate clubs.
Further, 85 percent of 72 percent agree that community has, ,by and
voters agreed that all work- employees in private clubs . large, come into compliance
ers , should be protected should be protected, and 66 with ,the law after a year of
from second-hand smoke. percent of veterans and enforcement by the local
department.
While many smokers per- those serv ing in the mili- heal!h
bars contin However,
some
ceive the law as an infringe- tary bel ievc thai private
ment on their rights, irs aim clubs. such -as Ameri can ue to be _subject to comwas to create smoke-free Legion and Veterans of plaint s from the public
job environments for those Foreign Wars clubs. should abour non-compliance. and
who work in places where protect their employees Hcal!h Commissioner Larry
smoking was once still from the dangers of sec- Marshall said earlier this
monrh th"ey may soon be
common, such .as bars and ond-hand smoke.
restaurants,
SB 346, now pending in subject to fines.
l

ous edition.

.

•

•

Perspective.
E
t" .
XeCU 1Ve ·
power teSt
under way
Bv STEPHEN MAJORS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

COLUMBUS - Gov. Ted
Strickland has proved him- ·
self adept at wielding execulive power to ~ichreve
Democratic goals. despite
the obstacle of a Republican·
controlled Legislarure.
But his recent decision on
when union-scale prevailing
wage should be paid on pri·
vate projects receiving
some state money has raised
·tensions to a new level, and
Republican lawmakers are
preparing for a fight.
Goverhors pushing the
envelope on execu tive
power crin go only so far.
said Grant Neeley. a polirical science professor a! the
University of Dayton.
"You can do i! as much as
the Legislature will allow
you to do that. until they
smack you down." he said.
While Strickland says his
ruling is meant ro clarify
w·hen prevailing wage should
be used. Republicans say he
is changing the rules so that it
is used more often. They fear
that if businesses have 10 pay ·
prevailing wage more frequently, the state's already
shaky business climate will
be further damaged.

Plene see Power, AS

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