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P . 86 • The Daily Sentinel

\

•'

VVednesday,~t~ber1,2003

Wl\!W.mydailysentinel.eom

-~~-~--------~~--------------------------------------~/~_.._:___:'------~------~----------------------------------~-----------

National Scoreboard

PRoB~EBALL
-

-

.._..

Eell Division
W

•-Tampa ~
y-Bostal
--

L

Pet

97 65

599 -

95

.586 2

67

89 73 .549
86 76 .531
Baltimore
88 93 .422
Contn!Dtvlolon
W l
Pet
~
. x.Chicago
89 74 .546

,-oronto

8
11

118 75 .540 1

Cleveland
Kansas City

81

. WHt DtviiiiOn
W ·l
11-Los Angales
100 62
79 83
Texas
75 86
Oaklaoo
51 101

--.OcL1
Milwaukee at Phitadelphia, 3:07p.m.

ThuNday, Ocl2

-

GB
21
24/,
39

, essary
TueOday, OcL 7
M~waukee

PRo FOOTBAlL
National Football league
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

ro-doy'o Gomo

East

Chicago White So.lc: 1. Minnesota 0
End Regular Senon

Wl T Pet
PF PA
0 0 1.000 109 63
1 o .q67 49 58

eutlalo
4
New England2
N.Y. Jets
2
Miami
1

Notlonlll LHgue
East Dlmlon
WLPc1GB

x-Philadelphia

92

70

New York ·
florida
Atlanta

89

73 · .549 3

84

77 .522 1 '11

72

90

Washington

59

102 .366 32!1,

90 .72 .556
66 75 .534

PF

PA

4 0 0 1.000 102 46

79

85

52.
56'

67
99

86

74 88 .457
67 95 .414 30!11

1

WHt DIYI•IOn

Denver
San Diego

' WLPetGB
.:-los Angeles
84 78 .519 Arizona
82 80 .506 2
ColOrado
74 88 .457 10
·san Francisco
72 90 .444 12
.San Diego
83 99 .389 21

West
WL T Pp
3 1 o .750
2 2 0 .500

Oakland
1 3 0 .250
Kansas City 1 3 0 .250

PF

PA .

77

58

65
46
52

43
78
87

PF PA
133' 117
136 112
78 101

55

97

NAnONAL CONFERENCE
Eaet WL T Pet
PF PA
N.'Y. Giants , 3 0 0 1.000 83 43
Washington 3 1 0 .750 86 81

lC-cllnched division
y-clinched Wilct card
2008

South
Wl T Pet

115 116
62 64

Indianapolis 1 2 o .333
HotJston
0 3 0 .000
North
GB
WL T Pet
PittsburgH
3 1 0 .750
7~
2 1 0 .667
11 ·I Baltimore
1 3 0 '.250
Cleveland
11 Yr
Cincinnati
040 .000
23i.

Cincinnati
Pittsburgh

.531

2 0 .500
2 0 .333

JadcsOnville 2 2 0 .500

'Stlouis

76

Tennessee

.444 20

W L ·Pet
97 64 .602

'Houston

'

.568 -

Central DtYI•Ion

.x-Chicago

at Philade!Ph•a. TBA, it nee-

essary

ll-clinched division
y-clinched wild card

·y-Milwaukee

'

Milwaukee at Philack:Hphia. 6:07p.m.
Seturdo¥, OcL 4
Philadelph•a at Milwaukee, 6 ~·37 p.m.
&lt;
Sunday, Qet, 5
Philadelphia at Milwaukee, TBA. if nee-

.500 7'/,

Pet
.617
.488
.466
.377

1 'P"II v• yupaiF•

Ph!'

15 87 .463 13/i.
74 88 .457 14h

Oe1roit

Loa Angeles at Chicago, 9:37 p.m.
Solurdoy, OcL 4
Cl\lcago at Los Angeles, 10:0.7 ~. m .
Sundly, OcL 5
Chicago at Las AnQO!es. TBA. 1f necessa~
n-.s.y, Oet 7
Los Angekts at ChJCago, TBA, ~ necessary

28~

•
Ge ·
-

-Mmnesota .

81

1

GB

Prep Football Notebook

Dallas
3 1 o .750
Philadelphia 2 2 0 .500

PoatHuon Bueball

DIVISION SERIES

South
WL T Pet
3 1 0 .750

(llest-ol-5)

· American League
·
l.p• AnptdM va Boston
Y(ednooday, O&lt;t I
Boston at Los Angeles, 10:07 p.m.
Friday, Oet. 3
Boston al Los Angeles, 9:37 p.m.
Sunday, Oet. 5
Los AngeleS at Boston . TBA .....
Monday, Oet. 8
Los Angeles at Boston, TBA, if nEJCessary
WodnHday, Oet. 8
.Boston at Los Angeles. TBA. if necessary

I

TIDJM Bay ya Cbleego

Tllllrodly, Oet. 2 ,

Carolina ·
Tampa Bay 3 1 0 .750
New Orleans 2 2 0 .500

120 89
1tO 74

PF
80

PA
70

101 78
111 100
90 63

Atlanta

2 2 0 .500
North

Green Bay
Chicogo
Minnesota
Detroit
Wes1

220 .500
2 2 0 .500

94

60

130 .250
030 .000

71
59

82
113

WL T Pet

WL T Pet

Arizona
S. Francisco
Seattle
St.Louis

2 2 0 .500
2 2 0 .500

1 2 0 .333
0 4 0 .000

PF PA
109 101

PF . PA
1\)6 193
94 9?
n 8o
43 147

ChicagQ at Tampa Bay. 2:37p.m.

Friday, Oet. 3
Bay. 6:07p.m.
Surtday, Oct. 5
\
Tampa Bay at Chicago. TBA

Sunday's Games
N.Y. Jets 56, Arizona 35
Tennessee 30, Minnesota 17
Kansas City 33, Denver 19
New Orleans 31, San Fra.ncisco 11·
1
Monday, Oct. B
Tampa Bay at Chicago, if necessary
,. Carolina 24, Atlanta 9 ·
Cleveland 20, Cincinnati 12
Wednesday, Oet. 8
Tampa Bay 30, Green Bay 21 ·-.
Chicago at Tampa Bay, TBA, if -neces·
Jacksonville 30, Houston 27. OT
sary
Buffalo 31 , St. louis 14
National League
San Diego 28, OaklanCI18
Chlt'9Q Yl Los Anat!H
Washington 26, Dallas 24
Wodnetdoy, Oet. 1
Chicago 24. Philadelphia 20
Los Angeles at Chicago, 6.37 p.m.
. Monday's Game
'Thurwdlly. Oct. 2
Pittsburgh 23, Baltimore 20, OT

Chicago at Tampa

J

5 years later,-Elder (mally beats St. Xavier
BY RusTY

•

MtuER

Fourth weekly 2001 AP IJigh
School FootbaU·PoD List

ASSOCIATED PRESS

After a four-year wait,
Elder finally has bragging
ri~hts over St. X in
Cmcinnati.
Elder beat Sl. Xavier 3315 before a sellout crowd of
10,000 at Elder's Pit last
week - Elder's first win in
the series since 2003.
.''People here have been
waitinp for this for five
years.' Elder coach . Doug
Ramsey said. "To break their
streak here, that's a big
deal.''
Sl. X (3-3) had been 12-0
in Greater Catholic League
South games the past four
years under coach Steve
Specht. with two D-1 state
titles along the way.
"I didn't do a very good
job this week," Specht said.
"We weren't ready, and
that's on me.''
·
Mark Miller was 14-for19 passing for 187 yards and
two TDs for the Bombers (5I ).

COL~

tt. a -

A""" jt) 31. 12. Phllade(plllo 'D.
13, COla.~ 25. 1 4 . "' ,.... Ohio high -1 .
21. 15, Chagrin Falls 20.
toams in ~ fow1h ol ~ 18, Gennontown VOlley View 19. 17,
Ailociate&lt;l Pre.. poll of 2001. by BolleYIIo 14.
(AP) -

ponolof_,.,.,ill•und~ot-

liUcing"""'

......atand -~ ,._ (fl..._. - , in

.

OHSAAdMIIons, wi1h

- - - ).

.

.

,

DIVISION IV·
'

2M
213

DIVISION I ,
1, Cln. Colemin (18)U
2, Cle. G - (S) ~

~

3. Pickarington cent (1) ~

o.-

4. Hilliard
t1) ~
5, Dublin Coffman ~

255
2211
214

188

119
106

i38·

• 104
85

135
123

6, BriJiliJWid&lt; ~

7. Cln. Eld!lr 5-1
8, Cle. St ~ (2) 5-1
9,Amhero1St-~

1n

'·113

76

88
35
28

,

10. HIJber Hti.,W.,.Oii-1

'&lt; 1

Olhonlr-..ng 1201.,....'poln1B: 11,

,..,... ~
. 12, llroc&gt;IM1e19. 13

t'•

Othero receMng 12 or....,..poinls: 11

(11e), Can. GlenOak, 'lbungo: ~
21. 13, Lakov!DOCI-St ~. ~9. 14,
Hortioon 16.

DIVISION II ~
1.Cols. DeSale0(15)~
2, Leuisvile

ts) a-o

3, Tel. cent Cath. 11-0
4 , Logan(1)~
S:Cin.l\wpln(l)~

, ·'
254
225
. , 188
'· 154

145

6, Lexingtoh ~

121

7, Sylvania- (2) &amp;0 •104

58

'4

(llo); l.o(Oin
· , Mllion Pleasant
17. 15, Aiel. VSM 16.

.. I'

DIVISIONV
'. •

••

·2. Althbold 6-o

1: '1'oungo.tlroulliMt (20)'~

251

9, Mlnlonl6-o ·
o, Cin. Hlle e-o

64

192 .
3, Hamtir PabldfHerily ~2) 6.0 185
4,U,O.Steln-(~)5-1 147
· . s, Flndtoy Uborty·eenton a-o .125
6, \'IPioolellbUrg (2) 6-0
111
7,KJi111nd&amp;O
107 '
'· 8, Annal;.t
07

33
BULLETIN-BOARD a. New Callisle Tt!C\111100h .&amp;-II 61
MATERIAL: Wyoming and 9, F. Cie. Shaw~
54
Otl!m-.g 12 ormo•epo1111B: 11 •.
Delphco Jaflarilon 3(). 12, Buoyn~s
Middletown each recently 0. Dretden Tri-Volloy ~ . S2
' : " . Wynfurd 22.' 13, w. .leffelliOil- 21 . 14',
won their 600th games; with Qthere recalvlng 12 onno"' pc)ints:
11, F'!lrttmouth W 18. 15 (tie), St. Henry,
a 62-7 drubbing of Norwalk, Medina Highland ,'D . .12, May1!old 22. Nelaorwllle-York 1&amp;. 17, w. Uberty·
(Ito), Cols.Bsilollc,.,~. Cola. Manon- Salem'13. t 8, Hlc:t&lt;SvRIII12. ·
Ed Nasonti passed his own 13
FrankNn 18. 15, Cln. Winton WOOCis 17. , .
former mentor, Lowell 16,Lewif c,...,- Oton~ 15. ·
DIVISION.VI
Schaffer,
to
became
'
Bellevue's winningest coach
DIVISION Ill
1, HOj)OWeii·LOudon (14) 6.0 247
217
with his !45th . victory;
'
•'' 2, Mec:llanlcsoorg (7) 8-{)
1. Poland Seminary (14) &amp;0
250
3, Mogadon! (3) 6.0
210
Columbiana Crestview's 2, St Morya Mamorill ~ e-o. 206
4, NO!w'lk St. Paul (3) 6.0
150
Cameron Reynolds' 31-yard 3, Thornville Shortdon U 189
5, Ada 6-(1
136
City T~ppo&lt;anoe 1) U 174
5, Carey &amp;0
136
field goal as time expired .5.4, Tlpp
Youngs. libtlr1y-(1} ~
124
1. Malvom 6-0
n
handed South Range its first 6, Circleville Logan Elm (1) &amp;0 94
1, Mc:Do111kl 6-0
n
Inter Tri-Counly League loss 7, Cuya-Falla Wallh .lea (2) 4-187
9: Hannloal River 6.0
118
72
10. beiphos StJohn's 5-1
55
since the league formed 8, Canol Fullon NW 5-1
9•.canaJ w-..-~
so
prior to the 2006 season; 10.Deftanc:O""l "'
Others rfJQelvlng 12 or~ polnlll: 11:"
'· 35
Victor Fortkamp booted a
•
BMin Csn1er Western R""~ 32. 12,
74-yard punt agairisl Anna- , Qther.s receiving :12 or more ~niS: 11 , ?ondor•·l'llboa 24, 13. Mln11f114.
on Friday, breaking the oldest record ·in St. Henry's Holdcroft ran another fum- Moody set school records
football history; Coldwater's ble back 65 yardsfor a~core with 341 rushing yards
Mario de Ia Rosa booted a but New Concord John including a 91-yard TD run
47-yard field goal to break Glenn still lost 28-24 to and tied a third with 5 TDs
Thornville in Cortland Litkeview's 42-7
the school record in the unbeaten
win over Newton Falls; Ben
Cavaliers' 51-6 win over Sheridan.
RUSH TO DAYLIGHT: Cline, converted to RB from
Rockford
-Parkway;
Liberty's TE in the oj'fseason, ran .for
Findlay's Joey Powell set up Youngstown
one touchdown with a Fitzgerald Toussaint (who 321 yards and six TDs in
blocked punt and another will play at Michigan next Wooster Triway's 52-7 win
with an interception in a 45- season) rushed 14 times for over Na11arre Fairless; Brent
0 win over Marion Harding; 282 yards and 5 TDs in a 35- Jackson of Vienna Mathews
and Zach Van Wey returned 0 win over Warren rushed for 322 yards on 28
a fumble 94 yards for a TD ,Champion, giving him 1;372 carries and scored 4 TDs in a
and
teammate
Haven yards and 14. TDs; Be.n 40-14 win over Andover

'·

~

~

Pymatuning '
Valle~;
Southington
Chalker s
Jimmy Rasey rushed 38
time' for 335 yards a~d
scored 6 TDs in a 54-34 wm
over Ashtabula Sts. Paul &amp;
John ; top-ranked Cincinnati
Colerain scored 28 unanswered points in the second
half to beat Mason 48-27,
with Tyler Williams rushing
for 249 yards and three TDs
on 18 carries; McDonald
had four players rush_for I 00
yards in a 69-0 wm over
Sebrin11
McKtnley;
Logan
Hicksville's
Battershell has rushed for 5
TDs in each of the last two
games; Justin Buenger of
Hamler Patrick Henry
rushed for 229. yards and 3
TDs in a 53-13 victory over
·Delta; Derrell McCaleb of
Ashtabula Lakeside rushed
for 260 yards on 24 carries
and scored on runs of 27, 68
and 90 yards in a 26-7 victo·
ry
over
Painesville
Riverside;
and · West
Lafayette Ridgewood's Jake
Conrad took over for the
injured Derrick Young and
ran for 330 yards and six
touchdowns in a 39-34. win
over Sugarcreek Garaway
(Garaway's David Gerber
passed for ·365 yards and
three TDs and ran for 2 more
scores in J losing effort). .
ST. IGGY: Seven-time
Associated Press state p6ll .
champion Cleveland St.
Ignatius led 35-0 after one
quarter and 49-0 at halftime
on its way to a 49-7 win at
Massillon
Washington.
Andrew Holland pla,Yed just
the opening two penods but
completed 10-of-11 passes
for 262 yards and three TDs.
St. Ignatius outgained
Massillon 373-22 in the first
half. ·
·
TURN THIS THING .
AROUND: With a 21-7 win
over Willard , Galion (4-2)
surpassed its win / total for
the past five· years combined.
The Tigers, who won a
Division II state champiooship in 1985 under former
Akron an.; ..:utrenl Ashland
University head coach Lee
Owens, were acombined 347 the past five ye~.' . .

•· ·-- -........··•····r·· . , .- •.-, ... ~. •

Reds·at another turning point
BY

CINCINNATI - Biggerbanners greeted
Cincinnati Reds fans enter'
ing the box . seats behind
home plate this season. The
most prominent one showed
Ken Griffey Jr. and Adam
Dunn, running side-by-side
with bemused smiles on their
faces.
At midseason, both players
were gone. A few weeks
later. so were the banners.
Time to start over. Again.
After their eighth_straight
losing season, the Reds find
themselves at yet another one
of those potential tull)ing
points. There have been several of those already during
the eight-year slump, the
third-longest in the history of
baseball's first professional
team.
By trading Griffey and
Dunn, their most prominent
AP photo
hilters during their lost Cincinnati Reds' manager Dusty Baker, center, comes to
decade, the Reds showed the mound to remove starting pitcher Adam Pettyjohn (63)
they're ready for a makeover. io the third inning against the St. Louis Cardinals as Reds'
'They were kind of the catcher Ryan Hanigan (29) looks on in a baseball game
faces of this organization for Sunday in St Louis
a long time," starter Aaron
Harang said. "It's going to of futility, the Reds have RBI) and Bruce (.254, 21,
happen. Team~ change. They been through four general ' 52) were particu[arly imprestry to go in djfferenl direc- manapers and five managers. · sive, gettmg better tQgether
tions when things : l\fen't They ve ·changed philoso- as the season went along.
going right. That's what the phies for developing .players They're good friends· a,nd
Reds are trying to do right and for assembling the major have the same self-effacing
.
demeanbr.
now, bring in the youth league club.
movement."
,
·
The result? Nothing but
There are a lot of holes to
The new faces of the orga- losi n~.
. fill before the Reds can think
mzauon haven't been shavThts time, there's a chance about ending that eight-year
ing for ,all that many years. to get it right - if they don 't streak. Brandon Phillips is a
That alone is a significant get impatient and mess it up given at second base, but
difference .
again, which is a possibility there are questions at catcher,
When the Reds narrowly witlr owner Bob Castellini shortstop, two outfield spots
m1ssed out on the playoffs in itching to win now. There's a and third base, where Edwin
1999, they_ went o~t and trad- foundation for first-year gen- Encarnacion continued to
ed for Gnffey, a hometown eral manager Walt Jocketty struggle
defensively.
favorite wh(} was about to to build upon in the next few Encarnacion had 23 errors,
start. a run of debilitating years.
more than twice as many ,as
lnJUnes. They moved into · They finally. have some anyone e,lse. ·
·
.
Great American Ball Park in young players who appe,ar to , Nine players can become
2003 with a veteran team be the real deal.
free agents. mcludmg cqtcjlexpected to win.
·
Firsl baseman Joey Votto ers Paul Bako and Javier " ·
It flopped. And the flavor- (age 25) and outfielder Jay Valentin and relievers David
of-the-month approach took Bruce (21) gave the Reds Weathers , .1eremy Affeldt
hold. General manager Jim their first set of 20-homer and Mt~e Ljncol~. That g1ves
Bowden and manager Bob rookies.
Right-banders Jocketty a lot of latitude in
Boone were fired, and veter- Johnny Cueto (22) and ' retooling the roster.
an&gt; were traded in an attempt Edinson Volquez (25) draAnd the ' young guys are
to save money.
· matically upgraded a rotation very curious to see how
)(., been never-ending that already mduded Harang many changes the , front , .
change since.
and Bronson Arroyo,
office makes in ' the o(fsea. During their eight-year run' Votto (.297, 24 HR. 84 son.

-· -

'"~"

~

.\o

~

)0 (

I \ Is

.\

0

I. :;X' :\ CJ •

:. High school football
.. previews. See Page B.l

.")&lt;)

.!00

BY BRIAN J.

REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - One of the
largest tasks associated with
implementing
Meigs
Co~ty 's new E-911 service
is now completed. •
The process of creating a
Master Street and Address
Guide has taken months,
and with good .reason. II
was · a very complicated
process, and its accuracy is
extremely important.

OB;rruARIFS
.,.

.

:

:

.

Pale A~

~ .lames Hanihg, 87

'State law requires that the
telephone, address and comin unity informa~ion for
Meigs County's residents be
98' percent accurate before
the new 911 emergency sysc
tern can operate. Emergency
Services Director Doug
Lavender said the database
needed to begin operating is
now considered complett;.
Lavender has · worked
closely with Ed Werry of the
county's ho!)se numbering
department to verify address ·

. ~ rils ope0s season
.at PPHS auditorium.
:See Page A6
·• Point Pleasant
:commemorates Battle

0 Il l

information. Each physical
address required a close
check for a correct five-digit
house number, a post offi,ce
address, a community location and a fire zone.
The men worked with
local fire officials and other
public agencies to comb
through thousands of "white
pages" provided by'Verizon.
Typographical
. · errors
required Correction, old
"Route I " addresses were
replaced , with five-digit

house numbers. and incon- to the residence in order to
sistent spellings in tele- confirm it was accurate.
phone directory addresses
Only abqut three months
were changed.
remain before the 9-11 system
Some townships have the is operational , but Lavender
same road names. For said finalizing .the MSAG
example, Carpenter Road is was the most time consumin Lebanon Township and ing. The county's amended
Carpenter Hill Road is in E-911 Plan is now making
Columbia Township. Those the rounds of townships and
addresses were double and villages for approval , and
triple checked for accuracy. some
renovations
are
Lavender said the final plahned for the conversion of
address verification was a trainin~ room at the EMS .
made through an actual visit building mto the 911 center.

pays. See Page 'A6

AEPto
host open
house.about
technology

to Ceredo, W.Va., to
Buckhannon, W.Va., to
Williamstown , W.Va.
. Sherri Smith of Bruceton
Mills.
W.Va.
(ne'ar
Morgantown, W.Va.) ·lett at
5 a.m. yesterday morning to
be sure and arrive at The
Fabric Shop by afternoon.
"Isn't that crazy?" She
laughed as she grabbed her
map and clue'tO the shop
hop's scavenger hunt which
allows the hunters to' collect
special prizes, along with
the unique quilting square .
Smith, on her fourth stop
to collect the squares, said
this was her second Mystery
Harvest Quilt Shop Hop and
though she didn't get last
year's quilt completed, she
had to have t)lis year's.
Smith does all her quilting
by hand and says she could
open up her own shop from
her house. For Smith it
seemed like gathering the
material was as mu~h fun as
making the quilt.
Mary Ann .Schoultz of
The Fabric.' Shop said they
often have customers, her"

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. Residents in the Bend Area
who would like to learn
more about the new carbon
dioxide capture unit that is
to be constructed at AEP's ·
Mountaineer Plant will have
the opportunity to gel information and ask questions
next week-at an open house.
The informational open
house wi II be 6-8 p.m.
Tuesday. Oct. 7 at New
Hayen Elementary School.
The company will have a
number of information sta·
lions that will discuss the
project's benefits, timeline ,
the capture and storage
process as well as an energy
efficiency program.
"We just wanted to let the
people know what is going
· on with this project." AEP
spokesman Phil Moye said .
Moye said the company
wanted the residents to
know about the new technology and that it is in ihe
11rocess of . being- constructed.
In
2007,
American .
Electric Power announced :
phins to work with Alstom,
a worldwide leader in
equipment and scrvices for
power generation and clean

Ple..e see Qulltlna. AS

PIHI• SH A~P, A5

A·dventures in quilting

Stop in any time between 5:30p.m. and 7:30p.m.
'

...

I '

down to the .river to pray

Tuesday, October 7

Aunit of American Electric Power

II' Ill'

GALLIPOLIS - Longterm investors anxiously
watching the next step after
Monday's huge sell-off on
the stock market are being
told by their financial advi·
sors to reniain calm and
wait for )Vall Street to balance itself once more.
"It's disconcerting. but 1
think in the long run it will
be fine ;'' Jay Caldwell of
Raymond· James Financial
Services in. Gallipolis said .
,.j.;:ll""eU• m}"-clie'M!!"'Io stey ..
the course.''
"It's about all you can do
right now," added Bryce ,
Smith, senior vice presi dent and branch manager
of
Hilliard
Lyons'
Gallipolis office.
The Dow Jones industrial
File photo average plunged 778 poiills
This Sunday is the Fourth Annual Biker Sunday at the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene, a nondenominational, uncon· after the . U.S. House of
ventlonal worship service for bolh those who do and don't ride bi.kes.
Representatives failed to
approve a government rescue
package to prevent fim1Qcial
mstitution.collapse and revitalize the credit market
the first American workinj~·c!ass
Tile package , known as
motorcycle clubs formed in Cahfomia the Emergency Economic
just after World War II. Heldiebaugh is
a foot soldier in Pastor Steve Combs' Ple..e see Investors, AS
yqu rest." Those . wishing to worship army/congregation at the Leave A
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
may find rest dunng servtces set to Mark Church in Columbus. Pastor
begin at 10:30 a.m.
Mike .Adkins of the Syracuse
SYRACUSE - Just as the old
There will be a welcome and regis- Nazarene Church will be delivering
Gospel song invites sinners "down to tration table open at 10 a.m. ;vith free the message while Mike Cadle will be
the river to pray," the organizers of the coffee, cookies and donuts. Once the singing "We Will Ride .~·
.
Syracuse Nazarene Church's Biker service gels started, worshippers will
Immediately following the service,
Sunday invite the "weary and bur- · be treated to testimonies about how all those in attendance will be treated
dened" to join in worship along the God has changed their lives given by to a hog roast and free lunch as well as
river this Sunday.
·
Jack Rhonemus of Shade and Jeff bike games. The G6spel Bluegrass
This year's official creed for Biker Heidlebaugh of Columbus' Leave A Gentlemen will also be performing
Sunday comes from. Matthew II :28 ·Mark Church.
. along the (iver as entertainment.
BY QtANE POTTORFF.
whicb says: "Come to ·me all you who
Rhonemus is a chaplain in the
DPOTTORFF@MYQIIILYREGISTER.COM
are weary and burdened and·I will give Iioozefighters motorcycle club, one of
Pleese - Su-,cley. AS

~et's go

135 Mill Street • New Haven, W Va.

~
AI'PA''CHIAN
_. . . PIJWI• •

d\ ....

Fotl••th Annual Biker S~day

WEATHER

•

I

BY KEVIN KELLY

New Haven Elementary School

Area residents can find additional infonnaiion about the C02
Capture and Stor11ge project online in American Electric Power's
Corporate Sustalnability Report at http://www,aep.conycr. .
Interestcd'parties may also request information or comment on the
project by dialing 1-866-987-8676.

,I

KKELLYOMYOAILYTAIBUNE.COM

If this validation project is successful, it could pave the wily for the
use of similar conmJercial-scale systems at Mountaineer and other
coal-fired power plants across the countiJ.
·

We'll have a number of information stations where you'll have an .
opportunity to h~ar about the project and ask any questions you
may have. We'll share infonnatiori on:
• Project benefits
• Project timeline
• The C02 capture process
• The C02 storage. process
• Appalachian Power's ''Watt. Why and How"
energy efficiency program
Join us on October 7 to learn more and share your input.

I II\

the course

In 2007. we announced plans to work with Alstom - a worldwide
leader in equipment and services tor power generation and clelln
coal- to install post-combustion carbon capture tec\lnology at the
Mountaineer plant. We expect that up to I00,000 metric tons of
C02 will be captured per year using lhc Alstom technology. The
captured C02 will be compressed and pumped more than a mile
below ground into geological storage fonnations at the site. Battelle
Memorial Institute is serving as the consultant on geological storage.

''

\1 \1 I\

D,.

~

Investors
told: Stay

We' re holding an informational .open house to keep you informed
· about our efforts to reduct! carbon dioxide (C02) emissions J'rom .
Appalachian Power's Mountaineer power plant.
"

·;

Prilltedon 100%
Recycled Newoprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
I II t J.( s I ) \' . ( )( I ( J B I R :.! •
K

SPORTS

Learn about Mountaineer Plant's
C02 Capture and Storage Project

Joe KAY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

than ~ life

,. .. "''•

-·~
'

Bailout p~ Senate,
House foes soften, A2

Hanging with Rosie, 1\3.

BY

BETH SERGENT

BSCAGENTiiMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detallo on Page A3

'

INDEX
.,'

., SEcnoNs- 1,a PAGES
~nie's Mailbox . A3

:, a

'

'

.. :¢alendars
•
:classifieds
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A3
B3-4

;obituaries ·

Bs
A4
As

:Places to go

A6

..C. omics
Editorials

:$ports
weather
.
' '

B Section

A3

Beth SergenVphoto

Mary Ann Schoultz of The Fabric Shop gives directions to
S.herri Smith who travele&lt;;l from near Morgantown, W.Va. to
collect a unique quilting square only founo at the shop for
the Mystery Harvest Quilt Shop Hop. Once squares from '11
other shops from West Virginia, Ohio and Kentucky are
assembled, the mystery harvest qunt appears as thQ one
hanging behind the women.

,.

''

POMEROY -Adventures
come in ,all shapes, sizes, colors and quilts?
Through Saturday avid
quitters from Southern
Ohio; West Virginia and
Eastern Kentucky are par- ·
ticipating in the Mystery
Harvest Quilt Shop Hop ,
bringing them to Pomeroy's
The Fabric Shop.
. The Fabric Shop is one of
only 12 quilting shops participating in the custom
quilt shop &lt;flop which has
quitters stopping in to pick
up its qwn unique square
designed in Pomeroy before
moving on to another store
for that store's unique
square. Once all t~e squares
are collected by the quilters
then the unique quill can be
assembled.
The Mystery · Harvest
Quill Shop Hop requires an
adventurous quilter willing
to travel from Ashland, Ky.
. to Logan, to Belpre, to
Nelsonville, to Parkersburg.
W.Va .. to Harrisville, W.Va ..
to Marietta, to South point.

"' .
'I

•

�]

-

ORLD

·NATION

1he. "Qaily Sentinel
·~

Page.A2 ·
Thursday, October 2, 2008

·senate gives fmal OK to US-India nuclear deal
first atomic test in I974; its
most recent nuclear test
blast was in !998.
WASHINGTON - The. , Dorgan said the U.S .. is
Senate on Wednesday voted _telling the· world that,_ like
to oyerturn a three-decade India. "you i:an m1suse
ban . on atom'ic trade with- American nuclear technoloIndia, giving fipal congrcs- gy and secretly develop .
sional approval to a land- nuclear weapons; you can
mark U.S .-India nuclear test those weapons; you can
cooperation accord and build a nuclear arsenal in
handing President Bush a defia nce of . the Umted
rare foreign policy victory Nations resolutions, and you
in his final months in office. will be welcomed as someThe accord. which the one exhibiting good behavior
Senate passed 86- I 3. will with an agreement with the
allow American businesses United States of America."
to begin selling nuclear fuel,
"What message does that
technology and reactors to send to ()thers who want to
India in exchange for safe- . join the nuclear club?"
guards and U.N. inspections Dorg'an said.
.
at India's civilian. but nor , Rep . Ed Ma,rkey, I)military, nuclear plants. The Mass., said, "Now tha! the
pact, which the House nuclear rules have been btu·
approved ~aturday, marks a ken _.for India's sake, ' ~;
major shift 111 U.S. pohcy Pakistan and North Korea
toward nuclear~armed India will be looking for a way to
after -decades of mutual . similarly game the system."
wariness.
The Senate · rejected an
It now goes to Bush for amendment that cal_Ied for
his signature.
the end of U.S. nuclear
Congressional approval trade if india should detocaps an aggressive three- nate a nuclear device, an
year diplomatic and politi- attempt to make sure U.S.
cal push by the Bush admin- nuclear exports do not help
istration , which portrays the boost
India's
nuclear
pact as the cornerstone of weapons program .
new ties with a democratic
Lugar, opposing the
Asian power that long has amendment , pointed to ·
maintained what adminis- Secretary
of
State
tration officials consider a Condoleezza Rice's past
responsible nuclear pro- comments that the deal
gram. Administration offi- would be called off should
cials also have championed India test nuclear weapons.
the opportunities for U.S. The pact's benefits, he said,
companies to do business in "are designed to be a lasting
India's multibillion-dollar incentive for India to
nuclear market.
abstain from further nuclear
Sen. Richard Lugar, R- weapons tests." · '
Ind., said the pact protects
Bush and Indian Prime
U.S. national secunty and Minister Manmohan Singh
nonproliferation efforts while announced their intention to
building "a strategic partner- pursue nuclear cooperation in
ship with a nation th!_lt shares · July 2005. U.S. lawmakers
our democratic values and overwhelmingly approved
will exert increasing influ· the deal in a conditiomil form
ence on the world ·stage."
in late 2006. It then overcame
"With a. well-educated strong political opposition in
middle class that· is larger . India. where crit1cs threatthan the entire U.S. popula- ened to bring down Singh's
tion, India can be an anchor government, denouncing the
of stability in Asia and an accord as a plo~ to make
engine of global economic . India Washington spawn.,
growth.'' Lugar said. "
It received a boost this
Opponents say lawtnak- month when the 45-nation ~ .
ers, eager to
leave Nuclear Suppliers Group of '
Washington to campaign for countries that supply nuclear 1 '
the November elections; material and technolO$Y
rushed consideration of a agreed to lift a ban on civilcomplicated deal that they ian nuclear trade with India,
said could spark a nuclear the final hurdle . before
arms race in Asia. The extra Congress could consider,the
fuel the measure provides, accord for ratification.
they say, could boost ·lndia's
Daryl KimbaU, executive
nuclear bomb stockpile by director of the private Arms
freeing up its domestic fuel Control AssoCiation, said ·
for weapons.
.
. .Congress has "swept sever·
. Sen. Byron Dorgan, D· a! fundamental problems
N.D., said the accord "will with the·deal under the rug,"
almost certainly expand the including India's continued
production of nuclear production of bomb-grade
weapons by India" and help nuclear material and refusal
dismantle the architecture to join I 80 other nations in
of the Nuclear Non- committing to a Iegaily
Proliferation Treaty, the binding nuclear test ban.
global agreement that proBefore nuclear trade
vides civilian nuclear trade could begin , Kimball said,
in exchange for a pledge India has to sign a safefrom nations not to pursue guards agreement with the
nuclear weapons.
U.N. nuclear watchdog
India built its bombs out- agency and a convention
side · the NPT, which ·it that extends protection to
refuses to sign. It has- t:aced nuclear suppliers in case of
a nuclear trade ban since its a nuclear accident.
Bv FOSTER KLUG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·Senate Majority
Leader, Sen.
Harry Reid, D- ·
: Nev., talks with
· reporters dur, ing a news
· conference on
~ the passage of ·
the Senate ver. . sipn of the
pailout package
on Capitol f;lill
Wednesday in
Washington.
AP photo

passes
BY Juue HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
AND CHARLES BABINGTON
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITERS

WASHINGTON - After
:·one spectacular L1ilure. the
'$700 billion financial indus'rry bailout found a ·sec'&lt;lnd
life Wednesda\'. winn i n~
lopsided pa&gt;sage in the
. Senate and gaining ground
111
the House. "Jwrc
' Republi cans
oppo,it ion
softened.
Senators loaded the eL·o-nomic rescue bill "ith r:1x
.breaks and other sweeteners
· before passing it by" a 11 ide
margin. 7-J.-25. a month
· befor~ the presidenti al and
congressional elections.
In the House. leader'
were working feverishly -to
convert enough opponents
of the bill to push it through
by Friday, just days after
lawmakers there stu-nni ngly
rejected an earlier vers ion
and sent markets plunging
around the globe..
The measure didn't cause
the same uproar on the
Senate. where both pao1ies'
pre side nt-ial
candidates.
Republican John McCain
and Democrat Barac k
Obama. made rare appo&lt;trances to cast "ave" votes. as
did Obama 's running mate.
Sen . Joe Biden of Delaware.
In the fi nal vote, 40
. Democra ts, 33 Republicans
· imd independent Sen. Joe
Lieberman of Connecticut
"yes ."
Nine
voted
,Democrats. 15 Republicans
and independent Sen.
Bernie Sanders of Vermont
voted ·'no .''
President Bush issued a
statement · pra1smg the
Senate's move. With rhe
revisions. Bu sh sa id. " I
believe members of both
parties in the House can
support thi s legis lation. The
American people expect
and our economy demands
that the House pass thi s
good bill thi s week and 'end
.it to mv desk.'"
The "rescue package lets
the government spend bil: lions of dollars tl1 buy bad
omortgage-related securities
-and other devalued asset&gt;
-·held by· .troubled finanL' iJI
~nstitutions. If successfuL
advocates Sl)y. that '-"OLJ!d
. allow froLen credi t to begin
. flowing again and pre1ent a
~ deep recession .

toes

approve some version of the impending economic meltbailout measure to sta rt down from Bush's economfor the 12 \'Otcs they would loans flowing and stave off ic chiefs to congressional '
·'
need to ·rum around a potentia l natiohal cco- Ieauers
- was. an .. extraorMonday's 228-205 defeat. 11omic disaster.
dinary experience .H
They were e&gt;pecially target-·'
''This is what we need to
"This is the way governing the 133 Repub lican, do right now to prevent the ment's supposed to work,
who mted ··no::
poss ibility of a cri sis turning folb , ·and it did,:' Gregg
. Their opposition aQpeared into
. a catastrophe," Obama ' said .
. robe easing after the Senate smd on the Senate noor. In
The Senate specializes in
added $ 110 billion in tax Missouri. bei·ore !lying to high -stakes legi slating by
breaks for businesses and the . Washington to vote. McCain enticement , and the long list
middle class. pl_us_a provi- said. "If we fail to act. the of sweeteners it added was
sian to raise. from $100,000 gears of our econom y will d esi~ n ed to attrac t votes
to 5250.000. the cap on fed- grind to a halt.''
fron1 various constituencies.
era! deposit insurance.
Critics· on the right and
In addition to extending
They were also cheering a left assailed the rescue plan, se\'eral tax breaks popular
decision Tue sday by the which has been panned by with businesses, the bill
SeL·urities and Exchange their constituents as a give- . would keep the altemati ve
Commission to case rules away for Wall Street, and minimum tax from hittif~g .
that for,·e companies to has little obvious dinict ben- 20 million middle-income
de val ue assets on theil"bal- efit for ordinary Americans. Americans and prov.ide $8
ance sheets to retlect the
Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C ., billion in tax relief for those
price they can get ·on the a leading conservative; said hit by natural disasters in
the step was ''leading us the Midwest, Texas and
market.
·There were worries. into the pit of socialism." · .Louisiana ..
though, that the rax breaks
Sanders , a self-desqribed
Tax cuts new and old are
would cause some conserv- socia list , said th2 rescue favorites for most House
aiive-leaning "B lue Dog" . was fundamenta_lly unfair . . Republica1!s. Help for rural
Democrats who voted for
"The masters of the uni- schools was aimed mainly
the. rescue Monday to aban- verse, those brilliant Wall at lawmakers in the West,
don .it. The bill doesn't des- Street insiders who have while disaster aid was a top ·
ignate a way to pay for made more money than t~e pri mi ty for lawmakers from
many ·of the tax cuts, and ' average American can eyen .across the Midwest and
Blue. Dogs typic'ally oppose dream of, have brought our South. '· ·
any measure that swells the financial system to the brink
Another addition, to
· deficiL
of collapse." Sanders said , extend the deductibility of
''I'ni concerned about and are demanding that the srate and local taxes for
that." said Rep. Steny Hoyer, middle class -"pick up the people in states without
D-Md .. the majority leader.
pieces that they broke ."
income taxes, helps Florida
Raising the depo&gt; it insurStill. proponents argued and Texas, among others.
ance limit - along with the that the financial sector 's
Increasing the deposit
SEC's accounting change woes were -already ·being insurance cap wasa bid to
helped
House felt by ordi nary people in reassure individuals and
Republicans claim cred it for the form of unaffordable snlall businesses that their
some substantive changes. credit and underperforming money would be safe if
And with constituent feed- retirement savings and their banks collapsed. It
back changing dramatically without the ba ilout wou ld was particularly geared
since Monday 's shocking soon translate into even toward small banks that
House defeat and -the corre- more economic piun for fear customers will pull
' ponding . market plunge , working Americans, includ- their money and park it in
lawmakers' comfort level ing more job losses.
larger institutions seen as
wi th the package increased
"There will be no bal - less likely to fold.
markedly.
loons or buntin g or
The FDIC would be
Rep. John Shadegg, R- parades.'' whe n the l·escue allowed to borrow unlimitAriz .. who voted "no" on becomes law. sa id Sen. ed money from the Treasury
Monday ... said he was Jean- Chris Dodd. 0-Conn .. the Department through the end
ing toward "' itchi nu. and Banking Committee chair· of next year as a way to
Rep . Ste' e LaTourette.R- man. But law makers will cover the increased insurOhio, ·said he " '" "getti ng have "the kn o wled~e that at ance limit. If used, it would
there." Several others were one of ou r ' nation's be the first time the agency
weig hing a nip. said moments of maximum eco- has tapped Treasury for a
Republican officials who noolic peril . we acted - not io'an since the early I990s.
spo ke on condition of for the hend'it of a pa11icuThe .rescue bill hitche.d a
ano nymity because the law- Jar few. but for all ride on .a popular measure
makers . had not yet Americ1111.'&gt;.". ·
that gives people with men:uinounced how they would
Sen. Judd Gregg. R-N.H .. ta l . illness better health
m te.
'aid the in tense. at times insurance coverage. Before
Leaders in both parties. as come ntious. I !-day round passi ng it, senators voted by
well as . private ·economic . of biparti, an ta lb to craft an identical 74-25 margin to
_chic I\ everywhere. said the bai lout - which fol- attach the massive bailout
Congrc&gt;s ·must quickly low ed dire warning~ of and the tax breaks.
Even "' the Senate voted.

Ho.U'&lt;~ leaders were hunt inc

.

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The Dai1y Sentinf./

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EU mo~tors begin patrols in Georgian territory
BY MAn SIEGEL
ASSOCIATED PRESSWAITER
KARALETI. Geomia ·European Lnion monitors in
white shorts Jnd bri ~ht blue
beret's be~a n patrollin g a
. buffer mne Wednesday out· side the hrea~ "" '' v rc ~i on of
: South O, etia tha·t ha, been
: controlled by Ru"ian·troup'
· and separat ists '"Icc an
August war in Cie"r"iu.
The deployment p'avc, the
· way for a prnm "ed Ru'·'ian
: pullback of its remai ning
· troops from '"""" the'
; occupied out"de South
: Ossetia and anot her scparatist region in Gcnrg"'Georgians -in \JIIagc'
beyond Russian chedpoinh
· welcomed the . \\'es tern
; observer:.. who arc t&lt;&gt; moni · tor ' the cease-tire and the
: withdrawa~ of Ru ssian
·troops. Some _frightened rc.sidenb _of vi llages damaged
1Jy arson and looting they
blame on South 0:-sctoans
. said the EU came too ·late .
Rus,iar/ troops had 'aid

Tuesday that none of the EU
observer&gt; wou ld i1T1111ediately be permitted in the buffer
zone outside South OS&gt;etia.
ra os ong
concerns
that
.Moscow v. us backtracking
on·it&gt; commitments. ·
· But EU monitors - whose
job is ro ob,ene the ceasefire and the Russian pul lback
- arrived on schedule. They
were quickl y allowed to pass
through Ru;sian checkpoint_,
ncar . two Georgian \'illage'
on the perimeter of the .socalled security zone.
'The ~ ituation i&gt; '' ~ r~
ca·lm ,"
;aid · Ivan
Kukushk.in, a Rus&gt;ian uffi ccr in charge of the checkpoint near (he Georgian vii !age of Kvcnatkotsa.
RuS&gt;ia still plans tQ keep
around 7.600 troop' in South
(hsctia and the other break""")' region of AbkhaLia .
" hich the EU and U.S. con , idcr to be violations of it;
cca 1 c-firc
commi-lments .
Moscvw ha; refused to allow
ihc El monitor., inside the
regions themselves.

Rthsial1 Pre.&gt;ident Dmitry
\1ed.vede\' said there are no
ideol og ic:d grounds. for, a
nc\1· Cold War or any other
kind of co nflict with the
United States , a staunch
,supponer ·or Georgia's proWestern govern rncnt .
"We donot hu'L' such idenlogical differences around
~&gt;hich a new cold or any
othe r kind of 11·ar coLold
; tal1 :· McdveLlc&gt; sa id at a
new' conference after meeting Spmml1 Prime Minister
Jose
Lu is · Rodrigue7
Zapatero
vut, idc ' SL
Petersburu. Ru" ia.
In Karaldi. &lt;! -Vill age on a
main road lead in~ from
Georgian-controlled' territo1) to South O" etia . Vitaly
Shavishi;h vi li said he and
hi ; rcl:uh es are li vi ng in a
cowshed
after Ionrers
burned down thei r r\l·ostory ho u.1e and stole two of
their vehi cle&gt;.
" We only count on our,elves." _,aid Shavishishvili.
24.
Marauders l1ad set fi re to

more than 30 houses in the
vi llage and looted the local
store, then blew it up with
hand grenades, said Zaira
Mamagulashvili, 62.
"No one is in control. We
are afraid of everyone,"
added Misha Sukhitashvili;
another Karaleti resident. "A
Russian soldier is the kind of
guy who after he has a drink
is capable of anything."
Under cease-fire agreements brokered by french
President Nicolas Sarkozy
on behalf of the EU,Russ1an
troops are to withdraw from
so.called security zones sur' rounding South Ossetia and
the other Russian-backed
separatist region, Abkhazia ,
within 10 days of the EU
deployment Wednesday.
There was no ev1dence of
nn tmmment Russoan wtthdrawal.
.
:'The Russtans gave us
plans for di10111antli ng their
(cneckpoints) b_ut didn 't say
when." EU mission director
H ~ nsjoerg
Haber told
rcport,crs.

'

•

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The·Daily Sentinel

:Paying ex~girlfriend's
· bill? Come on
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR
, Dear
Annie:
My
,boyfriend mid I have been
.together for three years. He
;is wonderful, except he siill
pays the cell phone bill for
his
former
girlfriend,
"Valerie." Val 's mother and
. father are also on the plan
.and can easily afford their
own phone bills .
· At first, 1 was like, OK. I
_:will not be jealous. But it
irks me to write that check
every month. And now all
of a: sudden Valerie needs
, my boyfriend's ~elp finding
a new car. She still calls and
;e-mails him daily.
._ Is toere a way to cut the
. cord? I am getting sick -of
biting my tongue. - Ouch
, Dear Ouch: Stop biting
_and speak up. Unless Val is
· destitute , we can think of no
legitimate reason for your
.boyfriend to eontinue pay. ing her cell phone bill or
r that of her parents. Explain
, that he is only . making
things more \lifficult for
Valerie . She cannot move
· on unless she can be independent of him , and he is
: making that impossible. He
, should not be so enmeshed
, with
an ex-girlfriend,
unless, of course, he doesn't
want her to be so "ex," if
· you get our drift.
: . Dear Annie: October is
.. Breast Cancer Awareness
Month . Last year, at age 32.
__ I was diagnosed with breast
:.cancer. I have no family history of the disease and
would not have censidered
myself to be at risk . My
: gynecologist found the
Jump during a routine exam.
.. Based on my history and
, age, the doctor decided the
Jump was nothing to worry
. about. Several months
. passed before I was concerned enough to make a
·follow-up appointment f~r a
_. mammogram . ~ wh1ch
.showed the cancer.
., Please tell your readers
to do monthly breast self:examinations. It is ,recom- '
·men\led that women start
performing them at age 20.
'If a-lump is discovered, see
·.a health care provider and
insist on a mammogram. In
most cases. it will turn out
:to be nothing, but cancer is
a possibility at any age. It
can and does happen every
day to ordinary, young peo: pie like me. Early detection is the key to survival.
, -Kentucky
Dear Kentucky: Thank
, you for taking the time to
. alert. our readers . There has
been some controversy
, recently about the efficacy
,of self-exams, since they
· can lead to unnecessary

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' Gannett (NYSE)- 17.05
,•G-ral Electric (NYSE) -

(2 -MIIesllbow Mason/Pomeroy Bridge)

State Route

' 304- .

H~~~n:liiL· Tlttn.llll· llpi·Fri.

Mason, WV
00

: 24.50

,Harley·Davldson (NYSE) -

llf':SII.II•· I~

·: 36.73

· JP Morgan (NYSE) - 49.63
; Kroger (NYSE) - 27.58
Limited B111nd1 (NVSE) - 17.32
Norfolk Southern (NVSE) -

•

•

2008

Public meetings

r.

Junior Grange #878 meet in Worship at 9:30a.m .. dinner
regular session, with a at Grange Hall at 12:30 p.m.
potluck supper at 6:30 p.m . . Afternoon program at 2
followed by meetit;lg at 7:30 p.m . will feature Forgiven
p.m. Final plans for chicken Again Trio , wilh other readbarbecue and meet the can- ings and mt,~sic .
didates to be held on
POMERCIY
- The
Wallaces will be in concert at
Octobj:r 5 will be made.
7 p.m., Bradford 'Church of
Monday, Oct. 6
POMEROY
- Meigs Chnst, 3820 Bradbury Rd.
POMEROY
County Cancer Initiative,
regular ·meeting·, noon , Homecoming at the South
Meigs County Health Bethel Community Church
on Silver Ridge across from
Department.
.
Eastern schools. Sunday
Thesday, Oct. 7
POMEROY
- Meigs school at 9 a.m .. worship
High
School
Band service, 10 a.m., dinner at
Boosters, 6 p.m., bandroom , 12 noon . The afternoon serall band parents are urged to vice· will begin at I :30 p.m.
attend tQ discuss and plan to with special music Lisa and
meet the financial needs of Jerry Queen, Tommy Syocc ,
and local singers. Pastor
the band.
Linda Damewood invite s
Wednesday, Oct. 8
the
public. ·
HARRISONVILLE
POMEROY
- World
Past
matrons
of
Communion
Sunday
serHarrisonville Order of
Eastern Star Chapter 255, vices, 1I a,m., Pomeroy
·I2:30p.m., Wild Horse Cafe. . Amphitheater, celebrated by
Pomeroy and Enterprise
Thesday, Oct. 9
CHESTER
Shade United Methodist, First
River Lodge 453 , regular Baptist Church of Pomeroy,
stated meeting, 7 p.m . St. Paul's Lutheran , Grace
Episcopal,
Trinity
Refreshments follow.
Congregational, Common
Grounds Churches. In case
of rain, the event will be
held at Trinity Congregation
Saturday, Oct. 4
Church.
RACINE- Men's prayer · POMEROY -Outdoor
breakfast of Southern celebration of Blessing of
Charge, United Methodist the Animals, 2 p.m ., Grace
Church, 8 a.m., Bethany Episcopal Church , with
United Methodist Church.
Rev. Leslie Flemming. All
Sunday, Oct. 5
are welcome with their pets.
HEMLOCK GROVE POINT ROCK - Point
Homecoming at Hemlock Rock Church of · the
Grove Christian Church. Nazarene, Ohio. 689, will

Church events

celebrate IOOth anniversary
of founding of the Church
of the Nazarene. Rev. Olan
Harvey to speak, 10 a.m.
Dinner following.
MIDDLEPORT
Revival ·
through
Wednesday,
7
p.m.,
Middleport First Baptist
Church. Me~sage by Rev,
Bob Thompson. Special
music: Truly Saved Trio
Sunday; church musicians
Monday; Earthen Vessels
Tuesday; Keith
Elam
Wednesday.

Saturday, Oct. 4
RACINE - The John R.
Dill reunion will be held ·at
the home of Howard and
Sally Ervin, 29753 Oak
Grove Road, Racine. The
meal will be at S f.m. Take
a covered dish . AI relatives
and friends welcome .

Friday, Oct. 3
POMEROY - Coins and
the old photo collection of
· Bob Graham will· be on display in the lobby of Fanners
Bank from 8:30 to 3 p.m .
for the · public to vi.ew.
Graham will be displaying a
I959 picture puzzle of a
Pomeroy scene.
Saturday, Oct. 4
POMEROY - Mulberry
Community Center, 6:30
p.m:, bluegrass gospel
mUSIC,

Hanging with Rosie
Colton
Lavender, son
of Doug and
_Theresa
Lavender,
recently got to
hang out with
"Rosie" at the
Cincinnati Reds ·
game during
Meigs County
Day at the
Great American
Ball Park.
.Submitted photo

Springsteen to perform for Obama in Columbus

65.04

Ohio Valley Bane Corp, (NAS·
DAQ)- 21.20
BBT (NYSE) - 39.34
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 21.74
Pepsico (NYSE) - 71.64
P111mler (NASDAQ) - 9.16
Rockwell (NYSE) - 38.69
ROCky Boola (NASDAQ) - 3.53
Royal Dutch Shell - 59
Seln ltloldlng (NASDAQ) 89.04

Wei·Mitrl (NYSE) - 59.86
Wendy'l (NYSE) - 4.97
We1Banco (NYSE) - 28.13
Worthington (NYSE) - 14.41
Dally stock ...,orta .,. the 4
, p.m. ET cloalng quoin .of
tranaactlon• lor Oct. 1, 2q08,
·provtdac:t by Edward Jonea
· financial 1111vt1ora laaac MUll
ln .Gatllpolllll (740) 441·9441
and Leatey Mttrrero In Point
Pleaaant 11 (304) 674.0174.
Member StPC.
.

"His presence at the rally viewin.g area, preferred tick. will provide . our campa1gn ets Will be d1stnbuted at
with the opportunity to mobi- select Campaign for Change
Iize tens of thousands of our offices. T1ckets w1ll also be
supporters in one place to go distributed at a Campaign fo(
out and vote early, as well as Change table at Genoa Park,
to register new voters and across from the Columbus
sign up new volunteers who Early Vote ·location at
will help 9ur campaign for Frankli,n County Veterans
change send Barack Obama Memonal , begmmng at 8
·to the White House ."
· a.m.- 7 p.m. today and 8 a.m.
For access to the best . - 6 p.m. on Saturday.

-KIPLING SHOE CO.
GAlliPOLIS LOCATION

ss

Name Brand
Shoes lor the entire lam.i ly
.

'

Other events

.

STAFF REPORT
nominee "speaks to the
NEWSCMYDAILYSENTINEL·.coM
America I've envisioned in
,
my musica country that's
COLUMBUS - Bruce interested in its collective
Springsteen will perform an destiny and in the potential
acoustic set as part of a rally of its gathered spirit."
on the campus of 'J'he Ohio
"Senator Obama is a great
State University on Sunday fan of Bruce Springsteen and
encouraging Barack Obama is honored to have his supsupporters to register and port," said Aaron Pickrell ,
take advantage of Ohio's ·the Ohio State Director of the
early voting period.
Obama-Biden campaign.
Tickets to the concert will
not be availabli until 10
a.m. t(Jday with gates opening at 3 p.m. on Sunday followed by the . program
beginning at 4:30 p.m.
Springsteen's appearance
at OSU's Main Oval will
hi~hlight Ohio's early votiJlg
wmdow, which as of yesterday allows for voters to cast
their ballots in person at designated early vote locations ·
across the state. The rally,
held the day before Ohio's
voter registration deadline, will also encourage ~tten­
dees to register to vote for
the first 'time , or update their
. registration .
The Obama camp says it
has already registered and
mobilized' an unprecedented
number of voters in the state.
This year alone, more than
700,000 Ohioans have registered to vote, meaning the
makeup of the electorate will
be . fundamentally different
than it was in 2004. In that
election, George I?ush won
Ohio by only I I 8,000 votes.
Springsteen
endorsed
Senator Obama in April ,
writing that the Democratic

I

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Reunions

.

Highs in the upper 60s,
Saturday night and
Sunday...Mostly
clear.
LOI"S in the upper 40s.
Highs in the upper 60s.
.Sunday
mght
and
Monday ...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 40s .
Highs in the ul,'per 60s.
Monday mght ••• Mostiy
cloudy in the evening ...Then
becoming partly cloudy:
·
Lows in the upper 4j)s.
Tuesday
through
Wednesday...Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Lows in the upper 4Qs. ·

.

'

Clubs and
organizations

~·---------~----------~--~.AkZo

Thu..Sday, October 2,

Community Calendar

Monday, Oct. 6
RUTLAND - Regular
biopsies. Still, any lump meeting
of
Rutland
should be taken seriously. Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
Most private insurance Rutland Fire Station.
plans a,nd Medicare will
LETART FALJ-,S
cover mammogram screen- Letart Township Trustees, 5
ing, and those without p.m. , office building.
insurance should calt the
SYRACUSE . - Sutton
Centers .for Disease Control Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
and Prevention at I -800- Syracuse Village Hall .
232-4636 to find a free or
Thesday, Oct. 7
low-cost screening. Anyone
ALFRED
- Orange
who would like more infor- Township Trustees regular
mation can access the meeting, 7:30p.m .. home of
National Breast Cancer Fiscal Officer Osie Follrod .
Awareness Month website
at nbc am .org.
Dear Annie: "Seattle
Grandmother'' was con·
cerned about an adult man
who liked to play with little
Thursday, Oct. 2
kids . After years .of marTUPPERS PLAINS
riage and three beautiful lit- VFW Post 9053 Auxiliary
tle girls, I grew suspicious carry-in dinner, 6· p.m. ,
of my father-in-law's obses- meeting 7 p.m .
sion w.ith children. I found
RACINE
-· Racine
stashes of toys in his room. American Legion, 6:30p.m.
Once , I let him baby-sit
Friday, Oct. 3
while I went to the grocery
POMEROY - PERI , I
store and came home to find p.m .. Mulberry Community
my little darlings sitting on Center. Insurance representhe couch with Grandpa , tatives !to speak.
.:
watching porn.
POMEROY
My husband didn 't take . Alzheimer's Caregivers supmy concerns seriously, so I port group meets every
acked up my kids and Friday from 1:15 to . 2;!5
eft. The next I 8 years p.m . Organized activities
were tough. I had to deal available during meeting
with anger and denial from time for those with dementia.
my two eldest daughters, 992·2 (6 I for information.
who
remembered
Saturday, Oct. 4
Grandpa 's · lovely house
SALEM CENTER
and whose father told them Star
Grange #778 and Star
after every visit that I
broke up our family .
Last year, my ex-husband
told our grown daughters
that _he di scovered Grandpa
was a convicted child
molester and admitted I had
pone the right thing by leaving. I am happy my girls
know .the truth, but I feel
sad for my ex, as this
destroyed his family. The
grandparents, near 90, no
longer see their children or
grandchildren. Grandma is
desp(sed as well , for she
kept his dirty little secret.
· Remember that the voice
in your head is there for a
reason. Listen to it. - Gut
Instinct
Dear Instinct: It's too
·bad it took your ex so long
to uncover the truth, but the
vindication must be a relief
to you.
.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. P!ease e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox; P.O.
Box JI8190, Chicago, lL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Maill1ox,
and read features by otluir
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

:Local Weather
Thursday...Partly sunny.
.. Highs in the lower 60s.
West winds around 5
mph ...lncreasing to around
10 mph in the· afternoon :
Thursday night. •.Mostiy
cloudy. Lows in the mid
40s. West winds 5 to 10
· mph.
Friday...Partly sunny.
~Highs in the upper 60s.
:West winds 5 to 10 mph. · Friday night ...Mostiy
:cloudy. Lows in the mid ·
·.40s . Northwest winds
.
. around 5 mph.
•. · Saturday.. Mostly sunny.

PageA3
..

BY THE. BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

:Local StOcks

•

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,,...• •.

I

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With New Selection•
added weekly

'KIPLING SHOE·CO.
300 2nd Ave. (across lrom City Park)
Gattipotls,OH 44I-90t0

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ORLD

·NATION

1he. "Qaily Sentinel
·~

Page.A2 ·
Thursday, October 2, 2008

·senate gives fmal OK to US-India nuclear deal
first atomic test in I974; its
most recent nuclear test
blast was in !998.
WASHINGTON - The. , Dorgan said the U.S .. is
Senate on Wednesday voted _telling the· world that,_ like
to oyerturn a three-decade India. "you i:an m1suse
ban . on atom'ic trade with- American nuclear technoloIndia, giving fipal congrcs- gy and secretly develop .
sional approval to a land- nuclear weapons; you can
mark U.S .-India nuclear test those weapons; you can
cooperation accord and build a nuclear arsenal in
handing President Bush a defia nce of . the Umted
rare foreign policy victory Nations resolutions, and you
in his final months in office. will be welcomed as someThe accord. which the one exhibiting good behavior
Senate passed 86- I 3. will with an agreement with the
allow American businesses United States of America."
to begin selling nuclear fuel,
"What message does that
technology and reactors to send to ()thers who want to
India in exchange for safe- . join the nuclear club?"
guards and U.N. inspections Dorg'an said.
.
at India's civilian. but nor , Rep . Ed Ma,rkey, I)military, nuclear plants. The Mass., said, "Now tha! the
pact, which the House nuclear rules have been btu·
approved ~aturday, marks a ken _.for India's sake, ' ~;
major shift 111 U.S. pohcy Pakistan and North Korea
toward nuclear~armed India will be looking for a way to
after -decades of mutual . similarly game the system."
wariness.
The Senate · rejected an
It now goes to Bush for amendment that cal_Ied for
his signature.
the end of U.S. nuclear
Congressional approval trade if india should detocaps an aggressive three- nate a nuclear device, an
year diplomatic and politi- attempt to make sure U.S.
cal push by the Bush admin- nuclear exports do not help
istration , which portrays the boost
India's
nuclear
pact as the cornerstone of weapons program .
new ties with a democratic
Lugar, opposing the
Asian power that long has amendment , pointed to ·
maintained what adminis- Secretary
of
State
tration officials consider a Condoleezza Rice's past
responsible nuclear pro- comments that the deal
gram. Administration offi- would be called off should
cials also have championed India test nuclear weapons.
the opportunities for U.S. The pact's benefits, he said,
companies to do business in "are designed to be a lasting
India's multibillion-dollar incentive for India to
nuclear market.
abstain from further nuclear
Sen. Richard Lugar, R- weapons tests." · '
Ind., said the pact protects
Bush and Indian Prime
U.S. national secunty and Minister Manmohan Singh
nonproliferation efforts while announced their intention to
building "a strategic partner- pursue nuclear cooperation in
ship with a nation th!_lt shares · July 2005. U.S. lawmakers
our democratic values and overwhelmingly approved
will exert increasing influ· the deal in a conditiomil form
ence on the world ·stage."
in late 2006. It then overcame
"With a. well-educated strong political opposition in
middle class that· is larger . India. where crit1cs threatthan the entire U.S. popula- ened to bring down Singh's
tion, India can be an anchor government, denouncing the
of stability in Asia and an accord as a plo~ to make
engine of global economic . India Washington spawn.,
growth.'' Lugar said. "
It received a boost this
Opponents say lawtnak- month when the 45-nation ~ .
ers, eager to
leave Nuclear Suppliers Group of '
Washington to campaign for countries that supply nuclear 1 '
the November elections; material and technolO$Y
rushed consideration of a agreed to lift a ban on civilcomplicated deal that they ian nuclear trade with India,
said could spark a nuclear the final hurdle . before
arms race in Asia. The extra Congress could consider,the
fuel the measure provides, accord for ratification.
they say, could boost ·lndia's
Daryl KimbaU, executive
nuclear bomb stockpile by director of the private Arms
freeing up its domestic fuel Control AssoCiation, said ·
for weapons.
.
. .Congress has "swept sever·
. Sen. Byron Dorgan, D· a! fundamental problems
N.D., said the accord "will with the·deal under the rug,"
almost certainly expand the including India's continued
production of nuclear production of bomb-grade
weapons by India" and help nuclear material and refusal
dismantle the architecture to join I 80 other nations in
of the Nuclear Non- committing to a Iegaily
Proliferation Treaty, the binding nuclear test ban.
global agreement that proBefore nuclear trade
vides civilian nuclear trade could begin , Kimball said,
in exchange for a pledge India has to sign a safefrom nations not to pursue guards agreement with the
nuclear weapons.
U.N. nuclear watchdog
India built its bombs out- agency and a convention
side · the NPT, which ·it that extends protection to
refuses to sign. It has- t:aced nuclear suppliers in case of
a nuclear trade ban since its a nuclear accident.
Bv FOSTER KLUG
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

·Senate Majority
Leader, Sen.
Harry Reid, D- ·
: Nev., talks with
· reporters dur, ing a news
· conference on
~ the passage of ·
the Senate ver. . sipn of the
pailout package
on Capitol f;lill
Wednesday in
Washington.
AP photo

passes
BY Juue HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
AND CHARLES BABINGTON
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITERS

WASHINGTON - After
:·one spectacular L1ilure. the
'$700 billion financial indus'rry bailout found a ·sec'&lt;lnd
life Wednesda\'. winn i n~
lopsided pa&gt;sage in the
. Senate and gaining ground
111
the House. "Jwrc
' Republi cans
oppo,it ion
softened.
Senators loaded the eL·o-nomic rescue bill "ith r:1x
.breaks and other sweeteners
· before passing it by" a 11 ide
margin. 7-J.-25. a month
· befor~ the presidenti al and
congressional elections.
In the House. leader'
were working feverishly -to
convert enough opponents
of the bill to push it through
by Friday, just days after
lawmakers there stu-nni ngly
rejected an earlier vers ion
and sent markets plunging
around the globe..
The measure didn't cause
the same uproar on the
Senate. where both pao1ies'
pre side nt-ial
candidates.
Republican John McCain
and Democrat Barac k
Obama. made rare appo&lt;trances to cast "ave" votes. as
did Obama 's running mate.
Sen . Joe Biden of Delaware.
In the fi nal vote, 40
. Democra ts, 33 Republicans
· imd independent Sen. Joe
Lieberman of Connecticut
"yes ."
Nine
voted
,Democrats. 15 Republicans
and independent Sen.
Bernie Sanders of Vermont
voted ·'no .''
President Bush issued a
statement · pra1smg the
Senate's move. With rhe
revisions. Bu sh sa id. " I
believe members of both
parties in the House can
support thi s legis lation. The
American people expect
and our economy demands
that the House pass thi s
good bill thi s week and 'end
.it to mv desk.'"
The "rescue package lets
the government spend bil: lions of dollars tl1 buy bad
omortgage-related securities
-and other devalued asset&gt;
-·held by· .troubled finanL' iJI
~nstitutions. If successfuL
advocates Sl)y. that '-"OLJ!d
. allow froLen credi t to begin
. flowing again and pre1ent a
~ deep recession .

toes

approve some version of the impending economic meltbailout measure to sta rt down from Bush's economfor the 12 \'Otcs they would loans flowing and stave off ic chiefs to congressional '
·'
need to ·rum around a potentia l natiohal cco- Ieauers
- was. an .. extraorMonday's 228-205 defeat. 11omic disaster.
dinary experience .H
They were e&gt;pecially target-·'
''This is what we need to
"This is the way governing the 133 Repub lican, do right now to prevent the ment's supposed to work,
who mted ··no::
poss ibility of a cri sis turning folb , ·and it did,:' Gregg
. Their opposition aQpeared into
. a catastrophe," Obama ' said .
. robe easing after the Senate smd on the Senate noor. In
The Senate specializes in
added $ 110 billion in tax Missouri. bei·ore !lying to high -stakes legi slating by
breaks for businesses and the . Washington to vote. McCain enticement , and the long list
middle class. pl_us_a provi- said. "If we fail to act. the of sweeteners it added was
sian to raise. from $100,000 gears of our econom y will d esi~ n ed to attrac t votes
to 5250.000. the cap on fed- grind to a halt.''
fron1 various constituencies.
era! deposit insurance.
Critics· on the right and
In addition to extending
They were also cheering a left assailed the rescue plan, se\'eral tax breaks popular
decision Tue sday by the which has been panned by with businesses, the bill
SeL·urities and Exchange their constituents as a give- . would keep the altemati ve
Commission to case rules away for Wall Street, and minimum tax from hittif~g .
that for,·e companies to has little obvious dinict ben- 20 million middle-income
de val ue assets on theil"bal- efit for ordinary Americans. Americans and prov.ide $8
ance sheets to retlect the
Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C ., billion in tax relief for those
price they can get ·on the a leading conservative; said hit by natural disasters in
the step was ''leading us the Midwest, Texas and
market.
·There were worries. into the pit of socialism." · .Louisiana ..
though, that the rax breaks
Sanders , a self-desqribed
Tax cuts new and old are
would cause some conserv- socia list , said th2 rescue favorites for most House
aiive-leaning "B lue Dog" . was fundamenta_lly unfair . . Republica1!s. Help for rural
Democrats who voted for
"The masters of the uni- schools was aimed mainly
the. rescue Monday to aban- verse, those brilliant Wall at lawmakers in the West,
don .it. The bill doesn't des- Street insiders who have while disaster aid was a top ·
ignate a way to pay for made more money than t~e pri mi ty for lawmakers from
many ·of the tax cuts, and ' average American can eyen .across the Midwest and
Blue. Dogs typic'ally oppose dream of, have brought our South. '· ·
any measure that swells the financial system to the brink
Another addition, to
· deficiL
of collapse." Sanders said , extend the deductibility of
''I'ni concerned about and are demanding that the srate and local taxes for
that." said Rep. Steny Hoyer, middle class -"pick up the people in states without
D-Md .. the majority leader.
pieces that they broke ."
income taxes, helps Florida
Raising the depo&gt; it insurStill. proponents argued and Texas, among others.
ance limit - along with the that the financial sector 's
Increasing the deposit
SEC's accounting change woes were -already ·being insurance cap wasa bid to
helped
House felt by ordi nary people in reassure individuals and
Republicans claim cred it for the form of unaffordable snlall businesses that their
some substantive changes. credit and underperforming money would be safe if
And with constituent feed- retirement savings and their banks collapsed. It
back changing dramatically without the ba ilout wou ld was particularly geared
since Monday 's shocking soon translate into even toward small banks that
House defeat and -the corre- more economic piun for fear customers will pull
' ponding . market plunge , working Americans, includ- their money and park it in
lawmakers' comfort level ing more job losses.
larger institutions seen as
wi th the package increased
"There will be no bal - less likely to fold.
markedly.
loons or buntin g or
The FDIC would be
Rep. John Shadegg, R- parades.'' whe n the l·escue allowed to borrow unlimitAriz .. who voted "no" on becomes law. sa id Sen. ed money from the Treasury
Monday ... said he was Jean- Chris Dodd. 0-Conn .. the Department through the end
ing toward "' itchi nu. and Banking Committee chair· of next year as a way to
Rep . Ste' e LaTourette.R- man. But law makers will cover the increased insurOhio, ·said he " '" "getti ng have "the kn o wled~e that at ance limit. If used, it would
there." Several others were one of ou r ' nation's be the first time the agency
weig hing a nip. said moments of maximum eco- has tapped Treasury for a
Republican officials who noolic peril . we acted - not io'an since the early I990s.
spo ke on condition of for the hend'it of a pa11icuThe .rescue bill hitche.d a
ano nymity because the law- Jar few. but for all ride on .a popular measure
makers . had not yet Americ1111.'&gt;.". ·
that gives people with men:uinounced how they would
Sen. Judd Gregg. R-N.H .. ta l . illness better health
m te.
'aid the in tense. at times insurance coverage. Before
Leaders in both parties. as come ntious. I !-day round passi ng it, senators voted by
well as . private ·economic . of biparti, an ta lb to craft an identical 74-25 margin to
_chic I\ everywhere. said the bai lout - which fol- attach the massive bailout
Congrc&gt;s ·must quickly low ed dire warning~ of and the tax breaks.
Even "' the Senate voted.

Ho.U'&lt;~ leaders were hunt inc

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EU mo~tors begin patrols in Georgian territory
BY MAn SIEGEL
ASSOCIATED PRESSWAITER
KARALETI. Geomia ·European Lnion monitors in
white shorts Jnd bri ~ht blue
beret's be~a n patrollin g a
. buffer mne Wednesday out· side the hrea~ "" '' v rc ~i on of
: South O, etia tha·t ha, been
: controlled by Ru"ian·troup'
· and separat ists '"Icc an
August war in Cie"r"iu.
The deployment p'avc, the
· way for a prnm "ed Ru'·'ian
: pullback of its remai ning
· troops from '"""" the'
; occupied out"de South
: Ossetia and anot her scparatist region in Gcnrg"'Georgians -in \JIIagc'
beyond Russian chedpoinh
· welcomed the . \\'es tern
; observer:.. who arc t&lt;&gt; moni · tor ' the cease-tire and the
: withdrawa~ of Ru ssian
·troops. Some _frightened rc.sidenb _of vi llages damaged
1Jy arson and looting they
blame on South 0:-sctoans
. said the EU came too ·late .
Rus,iar/ troops had 'aid

Tuesday that none of the EU
observer&gt; wou ld i1T1111ediately be permitted in the buffer
zone outside South OS&gt;etia.
ra os ong
concerns
that
.Moscow v. us backtracking
on·it&gt; commitments. ·
· But EU monitors - whose
job is ro ob,ene the ceasefire and the Russian pul lback
- arrived on schedule. They
were quickl y allowed to pass
through Ru;sian checkpoint_,
ncar . two Georgian \'illage'
on the perimeter of the .socalled security zone.
'The ~ ituation i&gt; '' ~ r~
ca·lm ,"
;aid · Ivan
Kukushk.in, a Rus&gt;ian uffi ccr in charge of the checkpoint near (he Georgian vii !age of Kvcnatkotsa.
RuS&gt;ia still plans tQ keep
around 7.600 troop' in South
(hsctia and the other break""")' region of AbkhaLia .
" hich the EU and U.S. con , idcr to be violations of it;
cca 1 c-firc
commi-lments .
Moscvw ha; refused to allow
ihc El monitor., inside the
regions themselves.

Rthsial1 Pre.&gt;ident Dmitry
\1ed.vede\' said there are no
ideol og ic:d grounds. for, a
nc\1· Cold War or any other
kind of co nflict with the
United States , a staunch
,supponer ·or Georgia's proWestern govern rncnt .
"We donot hu'L' such idenlogical differences around
~&gt;hich a new cold or any
othe r kind of 11·ar coLold
; tal1 :· McdveLlc&gt; sa id at a
new' conference after meeting Spmml1 Prime Minister
Jose
Lu is · Rodrigue7
Zapatero
vut, idc ' SL
Petersburu. Ru" ia.
In Karaldi. &lt;! -Vill age on a
main road lead in~ from
Georgian-controlled' territo1) to South O" etia . Vitaly
Shavishi;h vi li said he and
hi ; rcl:uh es are li vi ng in a
cowshed
after Ionrers
burned down thei r r\l·ostory ho u.1e and stole two of
their vehi cle&gt;.
" We only count on our,elves." _,aid Shavishishvili.
24.
Marauders l1ad set fi re to

more than 30 houses in the
vi llage and looted the local
store, then blew it up with
hand grenades, said Zaira
Mamagulashvili, 62.
"No one is in control. We
are afraid of everyone,"
added Misha Sukhitashvili;
another Karaleti resident. "A
Russian soldier is the kind of
guy who after he has a drink
is capable of anything."
Under cease-fire agreements brokered by french
President Nicolas Sarkozy
on behalf of the EU,Russ1an
troops are to withdraw from
so.called security zones sur' rounding South Ossetia and
the other Russian-backed
separatist region, Abkhazia ,
within 10 days of the EU
deployment Wednesday.
There was no ev1dence of
nn tmmment Russoan wtthdrawal.
.
:'The Russtans gave us
plans for di10111antli ng their
(cneckpoints) b_ut didn 't say
when." EU mission director
H ~ nsjoerg
Haber told
rcport,crs.

'

•

'•

The·Daily Sentinel

:Paying ex~girlfriend's
· bill? Come on
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR
, Dear
Annie:
My
,boyfriend mid I have been
.together for three years. He
;is wonderful, except he siill
pays the cell phone bill for
his
former
girlfriend,
"Valerie." Val 's mother and
. father are also on the plan
.and can easily afford their
own phone bills .
· At first, 1 was like, OK. I
_:will not be jealous. But it
irks me to write that check
every month. And now all
of a: sudden Valerie needs
, my boyfriend's ~elp finding
a new car. She still calls and
;e-mails him daily.
._ Is toere a way to cut the
. cord? I am getting sick -of
biting my tongue. - Ouch
, Dear Ouch: Stop biting
_and speak up. Unless Val is
· destitute , we can think of no
legitimate reason for your
.boyfriend to eontinue pay. ing her cell phone bill or
r that of her parents. Explain
, that he is only . making
things more \lifficult for
Valerie . She cannot move
· on unless she can be independent of him , and he is
: making that impossible. He
, should not be so enmeshed
, with
an ex-girlfriend,
unless, of course, he doesn't
want her to be so "ex," if
· you get our drift.
: . Dear Annie: October is
.. Breast Cancer Awareness
Month . Last year, at age 32.
__ I was diagnosed with breast
:.cancer. I have no family history of the disease and
would not have censidered
myself to be at risk . My
: gynecologist found the
Jump during a routine exam.
.. Based on my history and
, age, the doctor decided the
Jump was nothing to worry
. about. Several months
. passed before I was concerned enough to make a
·follow-up appointment f~r a
_. mammogram . ~ wh1ch
.showed the cancer.
., Please tell your readers
to do monthly breast self:examinations. It is ,recom- '
·men\led that women start
performing them at age 20.
'If a-lump is discovered, see
·.a health care provider and
insist on a mammogram. In
most cases. it will turn out
:to be nothing, but cancer is
a possibility at any age. It
can and does happen every
day to ordinary, young peo: pie like me. Early detection is the key to survival.
, -Kentucky
Dear Kentucky: Thank
, you for taking the time to
. alert. our readers . There has
been some controversy
, recently about the efficacy
,of self-exams, since they
· can lead to unnecessary

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(2 -MIIesllbow Mason/Pomeroy Bridge)

State Route

' 304- .

H~~~n:liiL· Tlttn.llll· llpi·Fri.

Mason, WV
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· JP Morgan (NYSE) - 49.63
; Kroger (NYSE) - 27.58
Limited B111nd1 (NVSE) - 17.32
Norfolk Southern (NVSE) -

•

•

2008

Public meetings

r.

Junior Grange #878 meet in Worship at 9:30a.m .. dinner
regular session, with a at Grange Hall at 12:30 p.m.
potluck supper at 6:30 p.m . . Afternoon program at 2
followed by meetit;lg at 7:30 p.m . will feature Forgiven
p.m. Final plans for chicken Again Trio , wilh other readbarbecue and meet the can- ings and mt,~sic .
didates to be held on
POMERCIY
- The
Wallaces will be in concert at
Octobj:r 5 will be made.
7 p.m., Bradford 'Church of
Monday, Oct. 6
POMEROY
- Meigs Chnst, 3820 Bradbury Rd.
POMEROY
County Cancer Initiative,
regular ·meeting·, noon , Homecoming at the South
Meigs County Health Bethel Community Church
on Silver Ridge across from
Department.
.
Eastern schools. Sunday
Thesday, Oct. 7
POMEROY
- Meigs school at 9 a.m .. worship
High
School
Band service, 10 a.m., dinner at
Boosters, 6 p.m., bandroom , 12 noon . The afternoon serall band parents are urged to vice· will begin at I :30 p.m.
attend tQ discuss and plan to with special music Lisa and
meet the financial needs of Jerry Queen, Tommy Syocc ,
and local singers. Pastor
the band.
Linda Damewood invite s
Wednesday, Oct. 8
the
public. ·
HARRISONVILLE
POMEROY
- World
Past
matrons
of
Communion
Sunday
serHarrisonville Order of
Eastern Star Chapter 255, vices, 1I a,m., Pomeroy
·I2:30p.m., Wild Horse Cafe. . Amphitheater, celebrated by
Pomeroy and Enterprise
Thesday, Oct. 9
CHESTER
Shade United Methodist, First
River Lodge 453 , regular Baptist Church of Pomeroy,
stated meeting, 7 p.m . St. Paul's Lutheran , Grace
Episcopal,
Trinity
Refreshments follow.
Congregational, Common
Grounds Churches. In case
of rain, the event will be
held at Trinity Congregation
Saturday, Oct. 4
Church.
RACINE- Men's prayer · POMEROY -Outdoor
breakfast of Southern celebration of Blessing of
Charge, United Methodist the Animals, 2 p.m ., Grace
Church, 8 a.m., Bethany Episcopal Church , with
United Methodist Church.
Rev. Leslie Flemming. All
Sunday, Oct. 5
are welcome with their pets.
HEMLOCK GROVE POINT ROCK - Point
Homecoming at Hemlock Rock Church of · the
Grove Christian Church. Nazarene, Ohio. 689, will

Church events

celebrate IOOth anniversary
of founding of the Church
of the Nazarene. Rev. Olan
Harvey to speak, 10 a.m.
Dinner following.
MIDDLEPORT
Revival ·
through
Wednesday,
7
p.m.,
Middleport First Baptist
Church. Me~sage by Rev,
Bob Thompson. Special
music: Truly Saved Trio
Sunday; church musicians
Monday; Earthen Vessels
Tuesday; Keith
Elam
Wednesday.

Saturday, Oct. 4
RACINE - The John R.
Dill reunion will be held ·at
the home of Howard and
Sally Ervin, 29753 Oak
Grove Road, Racine. The
meal will be at S f.m. Take
a covered dish . AI relatives
and friends welcome .

Friday, Oct. 3
POMEROY - Coins and
the old photo collection of
· Bob Graham will· be on display in the lobby of Fanners
Bank from 8:30 to 3 p.m .
for the · public to vi.ew.
Graham will be displaying a
I959 picture puzzle of a
Pomeroy scene.
Saturday, Oct. 4
POMEROY - Mulberry
Community Center, 6:30
p.m:, bluegrass gospel
mUSIC,

Hanging with Rosie
Colton
Lavender, son
of Doug and
_Theresa
Lavender,
recently got to
hang out with
"Rosie" at the
Cincinnati Reds ·
game during
Meigs County
Day at the
Great American
Ball Park.
.Submitted photo

Springsteen to perform for Obama in Columbus

65.04

Ohio Valley Bane Corp, (NAS·
DAQ)- 21.20
BBT (NYSE) - 39.34
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 21.74
Pepsico (NYSE) - 71.64
P111mler (NASDAQ) - 9.16
Rockwell (NYSE) - 38.69
ROCky Boola (NASDAQ) - 3.53
Royal Dutch Shell - 59
Seln ltloldlng (NASDAQ) 89.04

Wei·Mitrl (NYSE) - 59.86
Wendy'l (NYSE) - 4.97
We1Banco (NYSE) - 28.13
Worthington (NYSE) - 14.41
Dally stock ...,orta .,. the 4
, p.m. ET cloalng quoin .of
tranaactlon• lor Oct. 1, 2q08,
·provtdac:t by Edward Jonea
· financial 1111vt1ora laaac MUll
ln .Gatllpolllll (740) 441·9441
and Leatey Mttrrero In Point
Pleaaant 11 (304) 674.0174.
Member StPC.
.

"His presence at the rally viewin.g area, preferred tick. will provide . our campa1gn ets Will be d1stnbuted at
with the opportunity to mobi- select Campaign for Change
Iize tens of thousands of our offices. T1ckets w1ll also be
supporters in one place to go distributed at a Campaign fo(
out and vote early, as well as Change table at Genoa Park,
to register new voters and across from the Columbus
sign up new volunteers who Early Vote ·location at
will help 9ur campaign for Frankli,n County Veterans
change send Barack Obama Memonal , begmmng at 8
·to the White House ."
· a.m.- 7 p.m. today and 8 a.m.
For access to the best . - 6 p.m. on Saturday.

-KIPLING SHOE CO.
GAlliPOLIS LOCATION

ss

Name Brand
Shoes lor the entire lam.i ly
.

'

Other events

.

STAFF REPORT
nominee "speaks to the
NEWSCMYDAILYSENTINEL·.coM
America I've envisioned in
,
my musica country that's
COLUMBUS - Bruce interested in its collective
Springsteen will perform an destiny and in the potential
acoustic set as part of a rally of its gathered spirit."
on the campus of 'J'he Ohio
"Senator Obama is a great
State University on Sunday fan of Bruce Springsteen and
encouraging Barack Obama is honored to have his supsupporters to register and port," said Aaron Pickrell ,
take advantage of Ohio's ·the Ohio State Director of the
early voting period.
Obama-Biden campaign.
Tickets to the concert will
not be availabli until 10
a.m. t(Jday with gates opening at 3 p.m. on Sunday followed by the . program
beginning at 4:30 p.m.
Springsteen's appearance
at OSU's Main Oval will
hi~hlight Ohio's early votiJlg
wmdow, which as of yesterday allows for voters to cast
their ballots in person at designated early vote locations ·
across the state. The rally,
held the day before Ohio's
voter registration deadline, will also encourage ~tten­
dees to register to vote for
the first 'time , or update their
. registration .
The Obama camp says it
has already registered and
mobilized' an unprecedented
number of voters in the state.
This year alone, more than
700,000 Ohioans have registered to vote, meaning the
makeup of the electorate will
be . fundamentally different
than it was in 2004. In that
election, George I?ush won
Ohio by only I I 8,000 votes.
Springsteen
endorsed
Senator Obama in April ,
writing that the Democratic

I

.'

Reunions

.

Highs in the upper 60s,
Saturday night and
Sunday...Mostly
clear.
LOI"S in the upper 40s.
Highs in the upper 60s.
.Sunday
mght
and
Monday ...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 40s .
Highs in the ul,'per 60s.
Monday mght ••• Mostiy
cloudy in the evening ...Then
becoming partly cloudy:
·
Lows in the upper 4j)s.
Tuesday
through
Wednesday...Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Lows in the upper 4Qs. ·

.

'

Clubs and
organizations

~·---------~----------~--~.AkZo

Thu..Sday, October 2,

Community Calendar

Monday, Oct. 6
RUTLAND - Regular
biopsies. Still, any lump meeting
of
Rutland
should be taken seriously. Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
Most private insurance Rutland Fire Station.
plans a,nd Medicare will
LETART FALJ-,S
cover mammogram screen- Letart Township Trustees, 5
ing, and those without p.m. , office building.
insurance should calt the
SYRACUSE . - Sutton
Centers .for Disease Control Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
and Prevention at I -800- Syracuse Village Hall .
232-4636 to find a free or
Thesday, Oct. 7
low-cost screening. Anyone
ALFRED
- Orange
who would like more infor- Township Trustees regular
mation can access the meeting, 7:30p.m .. home of
National Breast Cancer Fiscal Officer Osie Follrod .
Awareness Month website
at nbc am .org.
Dear Annie: "Seattle
Grandmother'' was con·
cerned about an adult man
who liked to play with little
Thursday, Oct. 2
kids . After years .of marTUPPERS PLAINS
riage and three beautiful lit- VFW Post 9053 Auxiliary
tle girls, I grew suspicious carry-in dinner, 6· p.m. ,
of my father-in-law's obses- meeting 7 p.m .
sion w.ith children. I found
RACINE
-· Racine
stashes of toys in his room. American Legion, 6:30p.m.
Once , I let him baby-sit
Friday, Oct. 3
while I went to the grocery
POMEROY - PERI , I
store and came home to find p.m .. Mulberry Community
my little darlings sitting on Center. Insurance representhe couch with Grandpa , tatives !to speak.
.:
watching porn.
POMEROY
My husband didn 't take . Alzheimer's Caregivers supmy concerns seriously, so I port group meets every
acked up my kids and Friday from 1:15 to . 2;!5
eft. The next I 8 years p.m . Organized activities
were tough. I had to deal available during meeting
with anger and denial from time for those with dementia.
my two eldest daughters, 992·2 (6 I for information.
who
remembered
Saturday, Oct. 4
Grandpa 's · lovely house
SALEM CENTER
and whose father told them Star
Grange #778 and Star
after every visit that I
broke up our family .
Last year, my ex-husband
told our grown daughters
that _he di scovered Grandpa
was a convicted child
molester and admitted I had
pone the right thing by leaving. I am happy my girls
know .the truth, but I feel
sad for my ex, as this
destroyed his family. The
grandparents, near 90, no
longer see their children or
grandchildren. Grandma is
desp(sed as well , for she
kept his dirty little secret.
· Remember that the voice
in your head is there for a
reason. Listen to it. - Gut
Instinct
Dear Instinct: It's too
·bad it took your ex so long
to uncover the truth, but the
vindication must be a relief
to you.
.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. P!ease e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox; P.O.
Box JI8190, Chicago, lL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Maill1ox,
and read features by otluir
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

:Local Weather
Thursday...Partly sunny.
.. Highs in the lower 60s.
West winds around 5
mph ...lncreasing to around
10 mph in the· afternoon :
Thursday night. •.Mostiy
cloudy. Lows in the mid
40s. West winds 5 to 10
· mph.
Friday...Partly sunny.
~Highs in the upper 60s.
:West winds 5 to 10 mph. · Friday night ...Mostiy
:cloudy. Lows in the mid ·
·.40s . Northwest winds
.
. around 5 mph.
•. · Saturday.. Mostly sunny.

PageA3
..

BY THE. BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

:Local StOcks

•

•

,,...• •.

I

'

With New Selection•
added weekly

'KIPLING SHOE·CO.
300 2nd Ave. (across lrom City Park)
Gattipotls,OH 44I-90t0

•

�.

OPINION

-The D_aily Sentinel .

::The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
.
(74J)) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

-

··
·

··

·

www.niydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Cq.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
, General Manager-News Editor

.

: Congress shall make no law, respecting an
: establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
lree exercise thereof; or abridging the .freedom o.f
: -~peech, or o.f the press; or the right o.f tire peo: ·pie peaceably to assemble; and tQ petition the
·: · Government for a ·redress o.f grievances.

--

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
"

READER'S

PageA4

VIEW

Lower
Property taxes slwuld decrease
-· Dear Editor:
In the Sept. 30 Bloomberg report, "House prices in 20
U.S. cities declined in July at the fastest pace on record,
signaling the wor't housing recession in a generation had
yet to trough even before this month's credit crisis.
"The S&amp;P/Case-Shiller home-price index dropped 16.3 per~e nt from a year earlier. more than forecast, after a 15.9 percent decline in June . The gauge has fallen every month since
January 2007. an&gt;t year-over-year records began in 2001 ," .
So after l'cading this. the value of all homes across
America have fallen. A lot. So I expect my state and county of Ohio to adjust the home and/or property tax to reflect
1hat loss of value. So our taxes should be_- at least 16.3 pel'~ent le ss and more likely 25 percent.
You cannot tax citizens on what their home is NOT worth
anymore, but the current value of that home : Better get that
c.alculator nut , taxman, or I think a lot of Ohioans will be
pretty upset.
•
Greg Weinfurtner
;\/bally .

Thursday, October 2, 2008 .
~'

.

•

books until it was too late. of admitting it was built on accou~ting,M Floyd Stoner,
N' BUSINESS WRITER
The result: A massive gov- their own excessive risk- the organization's exec~uve
ernment intervention and taking and poor investment director for congressiOnal
relations and public policy,
NEW YORK- How can what the Japanese call the decisions.
said
in a telephone interlawmakers make the finan- "lost decade'' of economic
The government's now
view
Tuesday,
cial crisis disal'pear stagnation.
defeated bailout plan called
SEC spokesman John
withc:1Ut a $700 b1llio!Y ta~ - · Sti II,
some
House for the Treasury to buy
payer bailout and all those Republicans and financial those distressed assets. at Nester said the agency was
pesky · political ramifica- industry groups have argued . above-market prices . That working with the Financi~i
Standards
tions?
that so called "mark-to-mar- meant · taxpayer's money Accountin~
Suspend accounting rules ket'' rules. also know as would have been put at risk, Board on 1ssues related to
that are forcing financial fair-value accounting, force without any guarantee for . the , accounting rules. He
declined further comment.
firms to ·give a fair-market banks to report huge paper positive return.
If the SEC suspended the '
value to their assets even losses on mortgage-backed
Some say that would have
when there 's not a buyer in securities.
led to "tossing good money rules , it could force compasight. That's one idea being
"Suspend · Mark-To- at bad," and cited that flaw nies that want to drop their
considered to rescue the Market Now!" is the head- as a primary reason for fair-value measurements to
bailout bill that lawmakers line .from a commentary on Monday's vote in the House follow government guidedefeated Monday.
Forbes.com by former against the "Troubled.Asset lines and · succumb to
increased .regulatory overBanks wouldn't have to House
Speaker Newt Relief Program."
make massive writedowns Gingrich .
Now til at Iawmakers sight, said Robert Brusca,
as housing prices plunge or · Fair-value accounting has defeated Plan A, they need a who runs Fact and Opinion
scramble to raise new capi- been in the spot! ight Plan B - and fast . The Ecooomics.
tal or even tap taxpayers for throughout · this market already fragile financial ·' But don't look at this as a
a handout .
.meltdown. As the housing system is working on bar- quick fix to the current
Problem ' solved? Not market
collapsed, · it r&lt;Owed time: Lending has all financial woes. Knowing
exactly. It 's more like depressed the value of mort- but shut down and stock how much bad stuff was on
sweeping it under the rug.
gage-related asseis on the prices shed $1.2 trillion in · financial companies' books,
If we start allowing com- banks' books. And those value - the day the House investors might not feel
much relief when suddenly
panies to dump this declines have been reported vote failed.
accounting requirement, it to investors each step of the
The banking industry has things look better.
obscures the rules' inten- way, because that's what the · been lobbying Congress and
"The accounting is a }leUtions: To reflect reality accounting rules require.
the Securities and Exchange tnil tool to assess a financial
not what something was
Trade in those mortgage- Commission for a suspen- condition of a company, and
worth or what someone backed
securities has sion of the mark-to-market that's exactly what it is
hopes it would be worth.ll's dropped to almost nil, how- rules. New bailout legisla- doing,"
said
Patrick
an easy way out that ulti· . ever, making it difficult to tion technically wouldn't be Finnegan, director of the
mate)~ would carry a huge ·place a value on them. Bank .needed to ·alter the rules financial reporting group at
cost: mvestor confidence.
leaders have had to rely on the SEC already has the the CFA Institute, a trade
Look no further than financial models· or their authority to do that
group ·representing investJapan in the 1990s, when a best guesswork.
.
Representatives of the ment professionals.
lack
of
transparency
Financial
company American
Bankers · Mark to market accountallowed finahcial institu- CEOs have spent the last Association recently have ing forces companies to be.
tions to hide their bad debt . year trying to blame mark discussed with the SEC accountable. Investors are
Investors had no idea what to market accounting for "ways to address concerns better off with the rules than
was lu~king behind the causing this mess, instead with
mark-to-market without them.

• ALBANY,- James Max Haning, 87, Albany, died Oct.
', 20&lt;!8 at 0 Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
He IS s~rv1ved by w1fe, Malune Cline Haning.
Graves1de service will be ·at I p.m. Friday, Oct. 3, 2008
at School Lot Cemetery.
·
'
~gemeots are by Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home.

I'M60/~6

~AHLER.
. . '20c8
.

TO VOTE
.NoW WHILE

I'M STILL

AN0RY!

•

Local Briefs
Coin.show
~ALLIPOLIS - The OH-KAN coin club will hold a
fro!ll 9 a.m.- 3 p.m., Sunday at the Holiday Inn
m Galhpolts.

~om sh~w

For the Record
'

..

·,

F~reclosures

POMEROY ·- Foreclosure actions have bee~ filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court to: United States ·
Departmem of Agriculture, Columbus, against Marian
Durh~, deceased , and others; GMAC Mortgage, Fort
Washmgton , Pa., agamst Matthew T. Gilmore, Middleport,
and other~; Wachovia Bank, Raleigh, N.C., against Mike
Wills, M1d~leport, and others; Hocking Valley Bank,
Athens, agamst Dmesh K. Patel , Athens, and others. ·
Chase Home Finance, Columbus, against David L.
Cottnll, Plattsburgh, N.Y., and others; Countrywide Home
Loans, . Inc., Sun Valley, Calif., aj;ainst Melinda S.
McCallister, Middleport, and others-; Cttizens Banking Co:,
Urbana, again·st Joni Avetion, Coconut Creek, Fla .. and
otben;; 11nd LaSalle Bank, Pittsburgh, Pa., against Angel£S.
Spires, Rutland.
·

Civil suitS
POMEROY- A civil judgment action was filed inMeig
County Common Pleas Court by TAMMAC Corp., WilkesBarre, Pa., against Toiy Swartz, Middleport.
A suit alleging personal injury was filed by Keith Crank,
Chester, and others, agaimt General Motors Corp.,
Cleveland.
·

·Divorces
POMEROY - An action for divorce was filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Robert A.
Marcinko, Tuppers Plains, against Nancy R. Marcinko,
Tuppers Plains.
A divorce was granted to Jack L. Day from Amanda D. Day.

Dissolutions
POMEROY - Actions for dissolution of marriage were
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas -Court by Kathie Lee
Williamson, Pomeroy, and Charles Brian Williamson,
Pomeroy; and Reiger Edward Partlow, Pomeroy, and Sheila
Marie Partlow, Pomeroy. .
·
.
.
A dissolution was granted to Sandra R. Carnahan and
James A. Carnahan.
·

· Today is Thursday, Oct. 2. the 276th day of 2008. There
arc 90 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History: On Oct. 2, 1967, Thurgood
JY1arsh~\ll was sworn in as an associate justice of the U.S.
Supreme Court.
· On this date: In 1780, British spy John Andre was hanged
rn Tappan, N.Y. ·
In 1835. the first battle of the Texas Revolution took
place as American settlers fought Mexican soldiers near the
Guadalupe River;· the Me,'(icans ended up withdrawing.
Thought for Today: "Heresy is another word for freedom
Df thought." - Graham Gr~ene. English writer (1904-1991).

Leiters dealing with the Nov. 4 election are welcome and
will he &lt;iccepred up ullli15 p.m. m1 Friday, Ocr. 24. Letters
receiw·d after that deadline will not be published. Letters
shoald he 300 words in length or less a11d must address
issw's, nor personalities. Leiters endorsing local or 11ation·
a/ cmrdidates. or crmraining personal attach, will11ot be
uccepred.

.Deaths
Ja1nes Haning

BY RACHEL BECK

Bid of $1.75 on eBaygets
abandoned Saginaw home

Adult ~upewision required

If the headline on a recent
Associated Press dispatch
failed to alarm you, you
can't have been paying
attention: "Bush Confident
Sweeping ·Measure Will
Gene
Stabilize Economy." That
Lyon~
was scant hours ,before the
LETTERS TO THE
House · rejected Treasury
EDITOR
Secretary Henry P~ulso~ 's
Wall Street rescue plan ,
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less thrashed out over a long
system at its absolute worst.
rlran J.OO 11'ords. AU/etters are subject to editing, must be
weekend
of
intense
conAs recently as Sept.15,GOP
signed, a11d include addresi and telephone number, No
gressional
negotiations.
As
presidential nominee John
llll.l'lglled /etten will he published. Leiters should be in ·
a
rule,
the
more
confidence
McCain, who has manfully
good 11/s/i' , addressing issues , 1101 personalities. Letters of
tlrwrks to or~&lt;mi:arions and individuals will not be accept· President Bush expresses, admitted (and just as man~d ji&gt;r p11blication.
· the worse things are.
fully denied admitting) that
How and why the admin· he k.nows very little about
-·-·-'-·-=~--::----------,
istration allowed what even economics, was assuring
cautious
commentators audiences that "the fundadescribe as "the worst mentals of our economy are
financial crisis since the strong." On Republican talk
Great Depression'; to deteri- · radio, see, it's been an article
(USPS
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Reader Services
Ohio Vallet:ubllshlng
orate until stopgap emer- of faith for inonths that
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Correction Polley
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impending failures of lation even as heedless
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Mall Subscription
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··· Inside Meigs County
limping
past the November · campaigning as champions
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13 Weeks
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in the hope that a of Main Street.
26 Weeks
' 64.20
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Week·s
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newly
elected
Congress and
Conservative New York
E-mail:
president-elect might deal Tirnes columnist David
news@ rnydailysentinel.r::om
Outside Meigs Coun)y
with the ]&gt;niblem in a less Brooks got it right: In their
13 Weeks
'53.55
fevered
climate.
"single-minde!l mission to
Web:
26 Weeks
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Instead, we get to watch . destroy the Republican
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our 4y~functional political Party,' he wrote,. GOP con-

The Daily Sentinel

•

gressmen "have once again one in five jobs being, creat;
confused talk radio with ed in the trade sector today;
reality."
we've got to look at tha:t as.
Live by Limbaugh, die by more opportunity. All those
Limbaugh . In the bombastic things under the umbrella of
radio host's upside-down job creation. This bailout is
world, it's not Pallison ,and a part of that"
the White House who are
II! short, sheer gibberish.
responsible for the bailout Palin has no clue .
bill,
but
Democratic
What with McCain ·don"thieves" scheming to use ning his Mighty Mouse costhe crisis to raise taxes on tume, pretending to suspend
the "little guy." Is it neces- his campaign for all of 36
sary to point out that · hours, and rushing to
Paulson's bailout proposal Washington to save the day
contains no taxe-s at all?
by championing a threeMeanwhile,
there 's page proposal it's been reliRepublican vice-presiden- ably reported he hadn't actutial nominee Sarah Palin's ally read, his hand-picked
· contribution to the debate. vice-presidential candidate
It's worthwhile quoting in turns out to be somebody
full . Pressed by CBS's you wouldn't h'ire to prepare
Katie Couric, who asked if your own tax return.
it might not be a better idea
Not that, the Democrats
to· help middle-class fami- have covered themselves
lies than rescue the big with glory. Pelosi ought to
financial instituti9ns that have known better than to
created this· mess, Palin schedule a vote on the
responded as follows :
bailout plan without know'That's why I say I, like ing whether she had the
every American I'm speak- votes .. It might have been
ing with, were ill about this smarter to ' Jet the Senate,
position that we have been where passage is all but cerput in where it is the tax- . tain, vote first. Barack
payers look. ing' to bail out: . Obama has been something
But -ultimately, what the ' less than scintillating, cool· bailout -.does is help those ly ·keeping his distance
who are concerned about while Sen. Chris Dodd and
the healthcare reform that is Rep. Barney ·Frank do all
needed to help shore up our the heavy lifting,
economy, helping the -it's
One · thing's
clear:
got to be all aboljt job ere- Republican ideologues have
ation, too, shoring up our -created yet another fiscal
economy and putting it back disaster; adult supervision
on the right track. So will again be required. healthcare reform. and
(Arka11sas
Democratreducing taxes and reining Gazette columnist Gene
in spending has got to Lyons is a National
·accompany tax reductions Magazine . Award wi 1111 er
and
tax
relief
for · · and co·allthor of "The
American's. And trade, Hunting of rile President"
we've got ·to see trade as (St. Martin's Press, 2000).
opportunity, not as a com-. You ca11 e•mail Lyons at
petitive, scary thing. ,Bull' eugenelymls2@yahoo.com.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALL B·USINESS: .Fair-value aaounting rnles a must

TODAY IN H'ISTORY

Elections letters advisory

Thursday, October 2, ~oo8

SAGINAW, Mich. (AP)
- With a winning bid .of
just $1.75, a Chicago
woman has· won an auction
fo~ liJI abandoned home in
Saginaw.
· Joanne Smith, 30, reCently was the top biddedor ~e
home. during an auction on
eBay, The Sa~inaw News
reported. Her b1d was one of
ei~ht for the home.
· 'I am going to try and sell
it," she told the newspaper.
"I don't have any plans to
move to Saginaw."

· ,Sunday
Last year a record 171
bikes and 331 people
attended the event, nearly
doubling the size of
Syracuse in one afternoon.
.The · affects of Biker
Sunday will linger into next
week with special evening
services planned for 7 p.m.,
Monday-Wednesday at the
church· as a sort of ·"pep
rally" and "celebration" for
those who attended 'the
Sunday service and ~ish to
.make s11iritual changes in
their lives.
Organizers of the event
hope to reach out' to 'those
who mi$ht not feel comfortable gomg to a traditional
chllfch yet feel as though
they are searching, for

answers when · finding
God's place in their life.
The event is for the "sinners" mentioned earlier in
that old Gospel song. It's for
the lost and the less than
perfect people that Jesus
ministered to in his day in a
less than perfect world.
The event isn't only for
those who ride a bike and all
are iilyited , including those
in everything from jeans,
tshirts, leather chaps and
· bike ves.ts.
Whether arriving on a bike,
in a car or oo foot, all will
atrive along the river to pray
in their own words or in the
words of that old Gospel
song which ends with: "Good
Lord show me the way." .

colors imfrinted with the
states o Ohio, West
Virginia and Kentucky as
well as cardinals which are
the state bird,s of all three
states.
The Fabric Shop assembled their mystery harvest
quilt with not only their
unique square but the
squares of . the II other
shoP,~ and it'~ now hanging
near Uie front entrance for
all those quilter collectors.

•

Cincinnati bids to lead gre~n roof movement
It was installed in 2000.
.Center, which plans to begin
"We were inspired by what . a roof garden early · next
we saw in Chicago during a year. She said the Council's
CINCINNATI
pubJic library conference," plan should jumpstart a
Cincinnati officials want to said Charlie Oswanski, who movement that has taken
see more green roofs on heads the library's facilities hold in a few cities, such as
building tops.
and operations. "It 's per·. Chicago, Milwaukee and
The City Council on forming . very well - very Seattle, but has generally
Wednesday became the first low maintenance, and it does been slow to grow.
in the state with a plan to benefit us in cooling and
"It's been slow just
channel grants and loans to heating costs."
because it's such a new 1dea
residents and businesses to
The
plan
approved for us ," Ciotti said."They've
replace tar and · shingles Wednesday in Cincinnati is been doing green roofs for
w1th vegetation.
. the first of its kind in Ohio, years in Germany." •
· Supporters of the idea said Bob Monsarrat, managA report by the Green
want to see Cincinnati er of the environmental Roof Research Program at
lleeome a leader in the green planning se~tion ofthe Ohio Michigan State University
roof movement, a European- EPA, which directs certain estimates that 12 percent of
born idea that has spread to federal grant · funds toward all flat-roofed buildings in
only a few U.S. cities.
Germany are covered with
such programs,
Backers say. the greenery
"We have wanted to sup- vegetation, But it noted sevnot only is pleasing estheti. port green infrastructUre ini- era! barriers to widespread
cally but reduces stormwa- · tiatives in the state directed acceptance in the · United
ter runoff, filters . pollutants toward improving water States, including lack of
and cuts heating and cool- quality ," Monsarrat sai(!. government incentives or
·
"So this was a fairly easy tax breaks.
ing costs.
In Ohio, pioneering pas- sen to us. They ·.seem to · "It's still pretty much in
toilll roofs grace the tops of have a fairly good handle on its · infancy at this point,"
the Toledo public library, the · 't'hat ,they, wan.tto do." . . Monsarrat said. "What. the
· He satd the handful of city of Cincinnati is doing is
Ohio
Envifomfiental
Protection Agency building in green roofs in Ohio have the largest effort I have
Columbus and the Cleveland generally been on govern- heard of. It will be interestEnvironmental Center, home ment ·buildings, while the ing to watch that and see
of the Greater Cleveland Cincinnati program is main- how it works ."
Councilman Chris Bortz,
ly aimed at commercial
Green Building Coalition.
the chief backer of the
"We call it our civic plaza buildings. ·
"It's very exciting," said Cinl!innati plan, thinks the
rooftop," said Toledo
approved
library
srokeswoman ·Vicki Ciotti , director of the measures
nonprofit Civic ·Garden Wednesday will get the
Rhonda Sewel . .
BY TERRY KINNEY
1\SSOCIA'rED PRESS WAITER

movement rolling .
··we are in the forefront
and have the opportunity to
leap in front of the line ,"
Bortz said.
Environmentalist&gt; con·tend that green roofnesolvc
some of the urban water
runoff problems created by
expanses of wncrete and
asphalt and little greenspace. They require premium waterproofing and
·drainage systems, and use~
lightweight soil or growiog ·
medium and plants.
·
Bortz attributes the impetlls in Cincinnati to a consent
decree that binds the city t.J
find a way to reduce
storm water runoff, which
could
overwhdm
the
Metropolitan Sewer District
and cause raw sewage to be
expelled into the Ohio River.
"The Metropolitan Sewer
District issue has really slimul&amp;ed us to action." Bortz
.said. "This is a Qatu(a\ flt."
About $5 million a year in
below-market-rate loans
· through the U.S. EPA Cle~n
Water State Revolving Fund
will be available starting ip
2009 for green roof pro_jeers. city officials estimate,
along with an undetermined
amount of graill money
from other U.S. EPA funds.

AEP from Page AI
Institute is serving ·as the
consultant on geological
stor_age. If this validation
proJeCt IS suc.cessful , it
could pave the way for the
use of similar commercialscale
systems
at
Mountaineer and other coalfired power phmt&amp; ac~oss
the country.
In laboratory testing, the
process nas demonstrjlted
the potential to capture
more than 90 . percent of
C02 at a cost that is far less
expensive than other carbon

gas is captured by coldwater wash and returned to
the absorber. The C02 then
i~ compressed for enhanced
oil recovery or storage.
Officials
with AEP
e~pect up to 100,000 metric tons of C02 will be captured per year using the
Alstom technology. The
captured C02 will be ~om­
pressed and pumped more
than · a mile below ground
into geological storage formations at the site.
Memorial
Battelle

.Investors rrom Page Al
Stabilization Act of 2Q08,
was narrowly defeated and
as President Bush called for
action Tuesday to protect
Americans' . investments
and retirement funds,
Congress went back to
work to revise the package
for another vote this week.
"We
made
critical
improvements .to this plan
since it was first _presented
by the Bush admimstration,"
U.S.. Rep. Charlie Wilson ef
Ohio's Sil(th Congressional
District, which includes
Gallia and Meigs counties,
said after the vote. "I'm disappointed that so many
members of the House put
their own political futures
ahead of America's future."
Wilson , a · first-term
Democrat from Bridgeport;
was among the W5 House
members supporting passage .
"What we really need is a
· bill to be passed," Smith said.
"They· have to pass something because the liquidity of
banks will freeze up.
"It's really beginning to
affect people here and it will
affect !!'!em dramatically if
something isn't done," he
added .
Local financial advi$Ors .

capture ·technologies. It is
applicable for use on new
power plants as well as for ·
the retrofit of existing coalfired power plants.
Mountaineer Plant is one
of the first electric plants to
feature thi &gt; type of new
technology that is designed
to decrease ·greenhouse gas
emissions . .
The project is expected to
complete its product valida:tion ph.ase this year and
begin commercial operation
in 20i I.

..

like . Smith, Caldwell and·· -ing that biding time until the stake. to share in profits and
Isaac Mills of Edward Jones· last day of a recession. rather , .to be given a priority position
Investments in . Gallipolis than buy on the first , yields to recover assets in a failure.
have fielded calls from more money for the investor.
The taxpayers· insurance
clients about their accounts
For example. an individ- guarantee also would have
and portfolios and have ual who invests $10,000 on directed a future president to
urged calm for those invest- the recession's first day will deli ver a plan after five years
ing for the long haul.
see the 'value increase to to recover any · potential
When stock prices fall, only $10,877 iri one year. ·remaining costs from Wall
investors can benefit from But another who invests the Street firms. not taxpayers ,
buying such stocks at a low same amount of the last day
·"I be!ie·ve I stood up for
price and watch the value rise ofthe recession will realize America and voted for the
after the crisis has passed, a value of $11,662 in a year. country with this vote,"
and such was the case :-with That value increases as time Wilson said. " I supported
the market Tuesday when it passes for both kinds of this emergency legislation
regained some of the previ- u1vestors, but more so for because it was crafted and
ous day's losses.
.
the one who waits.
supported by a group of
"For the more adventureWhen the market declines Democrats and Republicans,
some, · it could be a great and bargains seem to multiply it ·was not a gift to Wall
buying
opportunity," for investors, Mills suggested Street and because it would
Caldwell said. ·
a closer look at what you're have protecte'd Main Street.
Mills said standing pat on buying and the stock's quality. Our plan required that every
investments in times of crisis . "I wouldn't risk my reputa- dollar be paid back."
works to a point. But if your tion or your money on a ques·
Other key improvements
portfolio contains invest- tionable investment dunng Wilson backed include:
ments whose value ·has good times or bad," he said, . • Banning multi-million;
Meanwhile. Rep. Wilson dollar $Olden parachutes for
shrunk •. then it's time to
review and consider changes. noted in a press release that execuuves who retire from
When reviewing invest-'· the original proposal from failing companies.
ments and their perfor- Bush
and . Treasury
• Tough independent
mance, the investor must ask Secretary Henry . Paulson to oversight and transparency:
if the account meets his or rescue. financial institutions
• Preventing home foreher goals, is. diversified and was rewritten in bipa1tisan closures crippling the.
''makes sense,'' Mills sa.id.
negotiations to include key American economy, allow-·
When asked what the best protections for taxpayers.
· ing the govemment to work:
time is to buy, Mills points to
The bill called for taxpa~- with loan servicers on new
an Edward Jones chart shqw- ers to secure an ownership mortgage terms.

'

1
'

I

'

.

•

•

'

AP photo

David Hart, left, with Tremco Inc., talks with Rahn Wuest , a supervisor for the Metropolitan Sewer District of Cincinnati,
on a green roof sown with plants at a sewer distriCt station, Wednesday, in Cincinnati. Hart designed the roof plan.
Cincinnati wants to see green roofs on building tops and plans to offer financial incentives to property owners to replace
tar and shingles with Vegetation.

Smith said she hasn't seen
the property or visited
Saginaw, which has been
hard-hit by economic trouI
bles in recent years.
coal, to install post-combusThere's a notice on the tion carbon captute technoldoor of the home saying a ogy at Mountaineer.
foreclosure hearing is pendAlstom 's system captures
ing. the newspaper said. She -carbon dioxtde (C02) by
must pay about $850 )n isolating gas from the
back taxes and yard cleanup power plant's other flue
costs.
j;ases and can significantly
The Saginaw News said it mcrease the efficiency of
could not reach the seller. the C02 ·capture process.
Southern Investments LLC, The system chills the flue
for comment.
gas, recovering large quantities of water for recycling,
then.utilizes a C02 absorber
in a similar concentration of
ammonia, and the clean fl.ue
rromPageAt

Quilting from Page AI
self included, who are affec·iionately referred to as "fabriholics."
"Once you get involved,
you don't want to stop,"
· Schoultz said about the
addicting nature of assembling fabric and quilts .
This year the fabriG for
the harvest quilt made by
Hoffman of California sold
The Fabric Shop on once
again participaung in the
quilt shop hop with autumn

,

�.

OPINION

-The D_aily Sentinel .

::The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
.
(74J)) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

-

··
·

··

·

www.niydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Cq.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
, General Manager-News Editor

.

: Congress shall make no law, respecting an
: establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
lree exercise thereof; or abridging the .freedom o.f
: -~peech, or o.f the press; or the right o.f tire peo: ·pie peaceably to assemble; and tQ petition the
·: · Government for a ·redress o.f grievances.

--

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
"

READER'S

PageA4

VIEW

Lower
Property taxes slwuld decrease
-· Dear Editor:
In the Sept. 30 Bloomberg report, "House prices in 20
U.S. cities declined in July at the fastest pace on record,
signaling the wor't housing recession in a generation had
yet to trough even before this month's credit crisis.
"The S&amp;P/Case-Shiller home-price index dropped 16.3 per~e nt from a year earlier. more than forecast, after a 15.9 percent decline in June . The gauge has fallen every month since
January 2007. an&gt;t year-over-year records began in 2001 ," .
So after l'cading this. the value of all homes across
America have fallen. A lot. So I expect my state and county of Ohio to adjust the home and/or property tax to reflect
1hat loss of value. So our taxes should be_- at least 16.3 pel'~ent le ss and more likely 25 percent.
You cannot tax citizens on what their home is NOT worth
anymore, but the current value of that home : Better get that
c.alculator nut , taxman, or I think a lot of Ohioans will be
pretty upset.
•
Greg Weinfurtner
;\/bally .

Thursday, October 2, 2008 .
~'

.

•

books until it was too late. of admitting it was built on accou~ting,M Floyd Stoner,
N' BUSINESS WRITER
The result: A massive gov- their own excessive risk- the organization's exec~uve
ernment intervention and taking and poor investment director for congressiOnal
relations and public policy,
NEW YORK- How can what the Japanese call the decisions.
said
in a telephone interlawmakers make the finan- "lost decade'' of economic
The government's now
view
Tuesday,
cial crisis disal'pear stagnation.
defeated bailout plan called
SEC spokesman John
withc:1Ut a $700 b1llio!Y ta~ - · Sti II,
some
House for the Treasury to buy
payer bailout and all those Republicans and financial those distressed assets. at Nester said the agency was
pesky · political ramifica- industry groups have argued . above-market prices . That working with the Financi~i
Standards
tions?
that so called "mark-to-mar- meant · taxpayer's money Accountin~
Suspend accounting rules ket'' rules. also know as would have been put at risk, Board on 1ssues related to
that are forcing financial fair-value accounting, force without any guarantee for . the , accounting rules. He
declined further comment.
firms to ·give a fair-market banks to report huge paper positive return.
If the SEC suspended the '
value to their assets even losses on mortgage-backed
Some say that would have
when there 's not a buyer in securities.
led to "tossing good money rules , it could force compasight. That's one idea being
"Suspend · Mark-To- at bad," and cited that flaw nies that want to drop their
considered to rescue the Market Now!" is the head- as a primary reason for fair-value measurements to
bailout bill that lawmakers line .from a commentary on Monday's vote in the House follow government guidedefeated Monday.
Forbes.com by former against the "Troubled.Asset lines and · succumb to
increased .regulatory overBanks wouldn't have to House
Speaker Newt Relief Program."
make massive writedowns Gingrich .
Now til at Iawmakers sight, said Robert Brusca,
as housing prices plunge or · Fair-value accounting has defeated Plan A, they need a who runs Fact and Opinion
scramble to raise new capi- been in the spot! ight Plan B - and fast . The Ecooomics.
tal or even tap taxpayers for throughout · this market already fragile financial ·' But don't look at this as a
a handout .
.meltdown. As the housing system is working on bar- quick fix to the current
Problem ' solved? Not market
collapsed, · it r&lt;Owed time: Lending has all financial woes. Knowing
exactly. It 's more like depressed the value of mort- but shut down and stock how much bad stuff was on
sweeping it under the rug.
gage-related asseis on the prices shed $1.2 trillion in · financial companies' books,
If we start allowing com- banks' books. And those value - the day the House investors might not feel
much relief when suddenly
panies to dump this declines have been reported vote failed.
accounting requirement, it to investors each step of the
The banking industry has things look better.
obscures the rules' inten- way, because that's what the · been lobbying Congress and
"The accounting is a }leUtions: To reflect reality accounting rules require.
the Securities and Exchange tnil tool to assess a financial
not what something was
Trade in those mortgage- Commission for a suspen- condition of a company, and
worth or what someone backed
securities has sion of the mark-to-market that's exactly what it is
hopes it would be worth.ll's dropped to almost nil, how- rules. New bailout legisla- doing,"
said
Patrick
an easy way out that ulti· . ever, making it difficult to tion technically wouldn't be Finnegan, director of the
mate)~ would carry a huge ·place a value on them. Bank .needed to ·alter the rules financial reporting group at
cost: mvestor confidence.
leaders have had to rely on the SEC already has the the CFA Institute, a trade
Look no further than financial models· or their authority to do that
group ·representing investJapan in the 1990s, when a best guesswork.
.
Representatives of the ment professionals.
lack
of
transparency
Financial
company American
Bankers · Mark to market accountallowed finahcial institu- CEOs have spent the last Association recently have ing forces companies to be.
tions to hide their bad debt . year trying to blame mark discussed with the SEC accountable. Investors are
Investors had no idea what to market accounting for "ways to address concerns better off with the rules than
was lu~king behind the causing this mess, instead with
mark-to-market without them.

• ALBANY,- James Max Haning, 87, Albany, died Oct.
', 20&lt;!8 at 0 Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
He IS s~rv1ved by w1fe, Malune Cline Haning.
Graves1de service will be ·at I p.m. Friday, Oct. 3, 2008
at School Lot Cemetery.
·
'
~gemeots are by Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home.

I'M60/~6

~AHLER.
. . '20c8
.

TO VOTE
.NoW WHILE

I'M STILL

AN0RY!

•

Local Briefs
Coin.show
~ALLIPOLIS - The OH-KAN coin club will hold a
fro!ll 9 a.m.- 3 p.m., Sunday at the Holiday Inn
m Galhpolts.

~om sh~w

For the Record
'

..

·,

F~reclosures

POMEROY ·- Foreclosure actions have bee~ filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court to: United States ·
Departmem of Agriculture, Columbus, against Marian
Durh~, deceased , and others; GMAC Mortgage, Fort
Washmgton , Pa., agamst Matthew T. Gilmore, Middleport,
and other~; Wachovia Bank, Raleigh, N.C., against Mike
Wills, M1d~leport, and others; Hocking Valley Bank,
Athens, agamst Dmesh K. Patel , Athens, and others. ·
Chase Home Finance, Columbus, against David L.
Cottnll, Plattsburgh, N.Y., and others; Countrywide Home
Loans, . Inc., Sun Valley, Calif., aj;ainst Melinda S.
McCallister, Middleport, and others-; Cttizens Banking Co:,
Urbana, again·st Joni Avetion, Coconut Creek, Fla .. and
otben;; 11nd LaSalle Bank, Pittsburgh, Pa., against Angel£S.
Spires, Rutland.
·

Civil suitS
POMEROY- A civil judgment action was filed inMeig
County Common Pleas Court by TAMMAC Corp., WilkesBarre, Pa., against Toiy Swartz, Middleport.
A suit alleging personal injury was filed by Keith Crank,
Chester, and others, agaimt General Motors Corp.,
Cleveland.
·

·Divorces
POMEROY - An action for divorce was filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Robert A.
Marcinko, Tuppers Plains, against Nancy R. Marcinko,
Tuppers Plains.
A divorce was granted to Jack L. Day from Amanda D. Day.

Dissolutions
POMEROY - Actions for dissolution of marriage were
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas -Court by Kathie Lee
Williamson, Pomeroy, and Charles Brian Williamson,
Pomeroy; and Reiger Edward Partlow, Pomeroy, and Sheila
Marie Partlow, Pomeroy. .
·
.
.
A dissolution was granted to Sandra R. Carnahan and
James A. Carnahan.
·

· Today is Thursday, Oct. 2. the 276th day of 2008. There
arc 90 days left in the year.
. Today's Highlight in History: On Oct. 2, 1967, Thurgood
JY1arsh~\ll was sworn in as an associate justice of the U.S.
Supreme Court.
· On this date: In 1780, British spy John Andre was hanged
rn Tappan, N.Y. ·
In 1835. the first battle of the Texas Revolution took
place as American settlers fought Mexican soldiers near the
Guadalupe River;· the Me,'(icans ended up withdrawing.
Thought for Today: "Heresy is another word for freedom
Df thought." - Graham Gr~ene. English writer (1904-1991).

Leiters dealing with the Nov. 4 election are welcome and
will he &lt;iccepred up ullli15 p.m. m1 Friday, Ocr. 24. Letters
receiw·d after that deadline will not be published. Letters
shoald he 300 words in length or less a11d must address
issw's, nor personalities. Leiters endorsing local or 11ation·
a/ cmrdidates. or crmraining personal attach, will11ot be
uccepred.

.Deaths
Ja1nes Haning

BY RACHEL BECK

Bid of $1.75 on eBaygets
abandoned Saginaw home

Adult ~upewision required

If the headline on a recent
Associated Press dispatch
failed to alarm you, you
can't have been paying
attention: "Bush Confident
Sweeping ·Measure Will
Gene
Stabilize Economy." That
Lyon~
was scant hours ,before the
LETTERS TO THE
House · rejected Treasury
EDITOR
Secretary Henry P~ulso~ 's
Wall Street rescue plan ,
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less thrashed out over a long
system at its absolute worst.
rlran J.OO 11'ords. AU/etters are subject to editing, must be
weekend
of
intense
conAs recently as Sept.15,GOP
signed, a11d include addresi and telephone number, No
gressional
negotiations.
As
presidential nominee John
llll.l'lglled /etten will he published. Leiters should be in ·
a
rule,
the
more
confidence
McCain, who has manfully
good 11/s/i' , addressing issues , 1101 personalities. Letters of
tlrwrks to or~&lt;mi:arions and individuals will not be accept· President Bush expresses, admitted (and just as man~d ji&gt;r p11blication.
· the worse things are.
fully denied admitting) that
How and why the admin· he k.nows very little about
-·-·-'-·-=~--::----------,
istration allowed what even economics, was assuring
cautious
commentators audiences that "the fundadescribe as "the worst mentals of our economy are
financial crisis since the strong." On Republican talk
Great Depression'; to deteri- · radio, see, it's been an article
(USPS
213..gso)
,
Reader Services
Ohio Vallet:ubllshlng
orate until stopgap emer- of faith for inonths that
gency measures couldn't Democrats have.beiln falsely
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon, Monday
wait would appear some- talking down the economy
Our main c,oncern in all storieS is to
through Friday, • 111 Court Street ,
thing
of a · mystery. Even for political purposes.
· be accurate. If you know of an error
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·class postage
with a manifeSt incompetent
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) pa1d at Pomeroy.
So wlien Speaker Nancy
992·2 156 .
like Bush in the White Pelosi correctly, if someMember': The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
House, if there's anything what intemperately, under
•
Poatm..ter : Send address correc·
Republicans are expected to the circumstances, pointed
•
Our main number Is
lions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
understand , it's money.
(740) 992-2156.
out that Bush inherited budStreet. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Well , think again. In the get surpluses, turned them
Department extensions are:
short term , it's actually not into massive deficits and
Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
so mysterious. Until the continued to preach dereguNews
One month ·
'10.27
impending failures of lation even as heedless
, Edllor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
One year
'115.84
Lehman Brothers and insur- speculators turned the U.S.
Dally
50'
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
ance
giant A.I.G. t)lreatened banking system into the
Senror Citizen rates
·
· Repor!Br: Beth Sergent, E,r;t. 13
a
meltdown
of the entire world's largest ' roulette
One month
'1 0.27
'1 03.90
, One year
Wall Street credit market, wheel, GOP congressmen
Subscrt&gt;ers should remit in advrinoe
Advertising
with potentially catastroph- got petulant and killed the
·Oulelde Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 c:firect to the Oaity Sentinel. No s ubic effects on the U.S. and bailout plan. · The poor
scription by mail penlli"ed in areas
eutalde Sales: Brenda Davis, Ell:t 16 where OOme carrier service is avail·
world economies , it appears babies got their feelings
·CtaaaJCtrc.: Judy Clark, E•t 10
able.
'
that Pau Ison and Federal hurt . Then they . went ·runReserve chairman · Ben ning back to their districts
Mall Subscription
Bernanke were counting on to spend the Jewish holiday
General Manager
··· Inside Meigs County
limping
past the November · campaigning as champions
Charlene Hoeflich, E•t. 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
election
in the hope that a of Main Street.
26 Weeks
' 64.20
I·
,
52
Week·s
'
127.11
newly
elected
Congress and
Conservative New York
E-mail:
president-elect might deal Tirnes columnist David
news@ rnydailysentinel.r::om
Outside Meigs Coun)y
with the ]&gt;niblem in a less Brooks got it right: In their
13 Weeks
'53.55
fevered
climate.
"single-minde!l mission to
Web:
26 Weeks
' t07 .10
Instead, we get to watch . destroy the Republican
www.mydailysentlnel.com
52 Weeks
'214.2 1
'
our 4y~functional political Party,' he wrote,. GOP con-

The Daily Sentinel

•

gressmen "have once again one in five jobs being, creat;
confused talk radio with ed in the trade sector today;
reality."
we've got to look at tha:t as.
Live by Limbaugh, die by more opportunity. All those
Limbaugh . In the bombastic things under the umbrella of
radio host's upside-down job creation. This bailout is
world, it's not Pallison ,and a part of that"
the White House who are
II! short, sheer gibberish.
responsible for the bailout Palin has no clue .
bill,
but
Democratic
What with McCain ·don"thieves" scheming to use ning his Mighty Mouse costhe crisis to raise taxes on tume, pretending to suspend
the "little guy." Is it neces- his campaign for all of 36
sary to point out that · hours, and rushing to
Paulson's bailout proposal Washington to save the day
contains no taxe-s at all?
by championing a threeMeanwhile,
there 's page proposal it's been reliRepublican vice-presiden- ably reported he hadn't actutial nominee Sarah Palin's ally read, his hand-picked
· contribution to the debate. vice-presidential candidate
It's worthwhile quoting in turns out to be somebody
full . Pressed by CBS's you wouldn't h'ire to prepare
Katie Couric, who asked if your own tax return.
it might not be a better idea
Not that, the Democrats
to· help middle-class fami- have covered themselves
lies than rescue the big with glory. Pelosi ought to
financial instituti9ns that have known better than to
created this· mess, Palin schedule a vote on the
responded as follows :
bailout plan without know'That's why I say I, like ing whether she had the
every American I'm speak- votes .. It might have been
ing with, were ill about this smarter to ' Jet the Senate,
position that we have been where passage is all but cerput in where it is the tax- . tain, vote first. Barack
payers look. ing' to bail out: . Obama has been something
But -ultimately, what the ' less than scintillating, cool· bailout -.does is help those ly ·keeping his distance
who are concerned about while Sen. Chris Dodd and
the healthcare reform that is Rep. Barney ·Frank do all
needed to help shore up our the heavy lifting,
economy, helping the -it's
One · thing's
clear:
got to be all aboljt job ere- Republican ideologues have
ation, too, shoring up our -created yet another fiscal
economy and putting it back disaster; adult supervision
on the right track. So will again be required. healthcare reform. and
(Arka11sas
Democratreducing taxes and reining Gazette columnist Gene
in spending has got to Lyons is a National
·accompany tax reductions Magazine . Award wi 1111 er
and
tax
relief
for · · and co·allthor of "The
American's. And trade, Hunting of rile President"
we've got ·to see trade as (St. Martin's Press, 2000).
opportunity, not as a com-. You ca11 e•mail Lyons at
petitive, scary thing. ,Bull' eugenelymls2@yahoo.com.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALL B·USINESS: .Fair-value aaounting rnles a must

TODAY IN H'ISTORY

Elections letters advisory

Thursday, October 2, ~oo8

SAGINAW, Mich. (AP)
- With a winning bid .of
just $1.75, a Chicago
woman has· won an auction
fo~ liJI abandoned home in
Saginaw.
· Joanne Smith, 30, reCently was the top biddedor ~e
home. during an auction on
eBay, The Sa~inaw News
reported. Her b1d was one of
ei~ht for the home.
· 'I am going to try and sell
it," she told the newspaper.
"I don't have any plans to
move to Saginaw."

· ,Sunday
Last year a record 171
bikes and 331 people
attended the event, nearly
doubling the size of
Syracuse in one afternoon.
.The · affects of Biker
Sunday will linger into next
week with special evening
services planned for 7 p.m.,
Monday-Wednesday at the
church· as a sort of ·"pep
rally" and "celebration" for
those who attended 'the
Sunday service and ~ish to
.make s11iritual changes in
their lives.
Organizers of the event
hope to reach out' to 'those
who mi$ht not feel comfortable gomg to a traditional
chllfch yet feel as though
they are searching, for

answers when · finding
God's place in their life.
The event is for the "sinners" mentioned earlier in
that old Gospel song. It's for
the lost and the less than
perfect people that Jesus
ministered to in his day in a
less than perfect world.
The event isn't only for
those who ride a bike and all
are iilyited , including those
in everything from jeans,
tshirts, leather chaps and
· bike ves.ts.
Whether arriving on a bike,
in a car or oo foot, all will
atrive along the river to pray
in their own words or in the
words of that old Gospel
song which ends with: "Good
Lord show me the way." .

colors imfrinted with the
states o Ohio, West
Virginia and Kentucky as
well as cardinals which are
the state bird,s of all three
states.
The Fabric Shop assembled their mystery harvest
quilt with not only their
unique square but the
squares of . the II other
shoP,~ and it'~ now hanging
near Uie front entrance for
all those quilter collectors.

•

Cincinnati bids to lead gre~n roof movement
It was installed in 2000.
.Center, which plans to begin
"We were inspired by what . a roof garden early · next
we saw in Chicago during a year. She said the Council's
CINCINNATI
pubJic library conference," plan should jumpstart a
Cincinnati officials want to said Charlie Oswanski, who movement that has taken
see more green roofs on heads the library's facilities hold in a few cities, such as
building tops.
and operations. "It 's per·. Chicago, Milwaukee and
The City Council on forming . very well - very Seattle, but has generally
Wednesday became the first low maintenance, and it does been slow to grow.
in the state with a plan to benefit us in cooling and
"It's been slow just
channel grants and loans to heating costs."
because it's such a new 1dea
residents and businesses to
The
plan
approved for us ," Ciotti said."They've
replace tar and · shingles Wednesday in Cincinnati is been doing green roofs for
w1th vegetation.
. the first of its kind in Ohio, years in Germany." •
· Supporters of the idea said Bob Monsarrat, managA report by the Green
want to see Cincinnati er of the environmental Roof Research Program at
lleeome a leader in the green planning se~tion ofthe Ohio Michigan State University
roof movement, a European- EPA, which directs certain estimates that 12 percent of
born idea that has spread to federal grant · funds toward all flat-roofed buildings in
only a few U.S. cities.
Germany are covered with
such programs,
Backers say. the greenery
"We have wanted to sup- vegetation, But it noted sevnot only is pleasing estheti. port green infrastructUre ini- era! barriers to widespread
cally but reduces stormwa- · tiatives in the state directed acceptance in the · United
ter runoff, filters . pollutants toward improving water States, including lack of
and cuts heating and cool- quality ," Monsarrat sai(!. government incentives or
·
"So this was a fairly easy tax breaks.
ing costs.
In Ohio, pioneering pas- sen to us. They ·.seem to · "It's still pretty much in
toilll roofs grace the tops of have a fairly good handle on its · infancy at this point,"
the Toledo public library, the · 't'hat ,they, wan.tto do." . . Monsarrat said. "What. the
· He satd the handful of city of Cincinnati is doing is
Ohio
Envifomfiental
Protection Agency building in green roofs in Ohio have the largest effort I have
Columbus and the Cleveland generally been on govern- heard of. It will be interestEnvironmental Center, home ment ·buildings, while the ing to watch that and see
of the Greater Cleveland Cincinnati program is main- how it works ."
Councilman Chris Bortz,
ly aimed at commercial
Green Building Coalition.
the chief backer of the
"We call it our civic plaza buildings. ·
"It's very exciting," said Cinl!innati plan, thinks the
rooftop," said Toledo
approved
library
srokeswoman ·Vicki Ciotti , director of the measures
nonprofit Civic ·Garden Wednesday will get the
Rhonda Sewel . .
BY TERRY KINNEY
1\SSOCIA'rED PRESS WAITER

movement rolling .
··we are in the forefront
and have the opportunity to
leap in front of the line ,"
Bortz said.
Environmentalist&gt; con·tend that green roofnesolvc
some of the urban water
runoff problems created by
expanses of wncrete and
asphalt and little greenspace. They require premium waterproofing and
·drainage systems, and use~
lightweight soil or growiog ·
medium and plants.
·
Bortz attributes the impetlls in Cincinnati to a consent
decree that binds the city t.J
find a way to reduce
storm water runoff, which
could
overwhdm
the
Metropolitan Sewer District
and cause raw sewage to be
expelled into the Ohio River.
"The Metropolitan Sewer
District issue has really slimul&amp;ed us to action." Bortz
.said. "This is a Qatu(a\ flt."
About $5 million a year in
below-market-rate loans
· through the U.S. EPA Cle~n
Water State Revolving Fund
will be available starting ip
2009 for green roof pro_jeers. city officials estimate,
along with an undetermined
amount of graill money
from other U.S. EPA funds.

AEP from Page AI
Institute is serving ·as the
consultant on geological
stor_age. If this validation
proJeCt IS suc.cessful , it
could pave the way for the
use of similar commercialscale
systems
at
Mountaineer and other coalfired power phmt&amp; ac~oss
the country.
In laboratory testing, the
process nas demonstrjlted
the potential to capture
more than 90 . percent of
C02 at a cost that is far less
expensive than other carbon

gas is captured by coldwater wash and returned to
the absorber. The C02 then
i~ compressed for enhanced
oil recovery or storage.
Officials
with AEP
e~pect up to 100,000 metric tons of C02 will be captured per year using the
Alstom technology. The
captured C02 will be ~om­
pressed and pumped more
than · a mile below ground
into geological storage formations at the site.
Memorial
Battelle

.Investors rrom Page Al
Stabilization Act of 2Q08,
was narrowly defeated and
as President Bush called for
action Tuesday to protect
Americans' . investments
and retirement funds,
Congress went back to
work to revise the package
for another vote this week.
"We
made
critical
improvements .to this plan
since it was first _presented
by the Bush admimstration,"
U.S.. Rep. Charlie Wilson ef
Ohio's Sil(th Congressional
District, which includes
Gallia and Meigs counties,
said after the vote. "I'm disappointed that so many
members of the House put
their own political futures
ahead of America's future."
Wilson , a · first-term
Democrat from Bridgeport;
was among the W5 House
members supporting passage .
"What we really need is a
· bill to be passed," Smith said.
"They· have to pass something because the liquidity of
banks will freeze up.
"It's really beginning to
affect people here and it will
affect !!'!em dramatically if
something isn't done," he
added .
Local financial advi$Ors .

capture ·technologies. It is
applicable for use on new
power plants as well as for ·
the retrofit of existing coalfired power plants.
Mountaineer Plant is one
of the first electric plants to
feature thi &gt; type of new
technology that is designed
to decrease ·greenhouse gas
emissions . .
The project is expected to
complete its product valida:tion ph.ase this year and
begin commercial operation
in 20i I.

..

like . Smith, Caldwell and·· -ing that biding time until the stake. to share in profits and
Isaac Mills of Edward Jones· last day of a recession. rather , .to be given a priority position
Investments in . Gallipolis than buy on the first , yields to recover assets in a failure.
have fielded calls from more money for the investor.
The taxpayers· insurance
clients about their accounts
For example. an individ- guarantee also would have
and portfolios and have ual who invests $10,000 on directed a future president to
urged calm for those invest- the recession's first day will deli ver a plan after five years
ing for the long haul.
see the 'value increase to to recover any · potential
When stock prices fall, only $10,877 iri one year. ·remaining costs from Wall
investors can benefit from But another who invests the Street firms. not taxpayers ,
buying such stocks at a low same amount of the last day
·"I be!ie·ve I stood up for
price and watch the value rise ofthe recession will realize America and voted for the
after the crisis has passed, a value of $11,662 in a year. country with this vote,"
and such was the case :-with That value increases as time Wilson said. " I supported
the market Tuesday when it passes for both kinds of this emergency legislation
regained some of the previ- u1vestors, but more so for because it was crafted and
ous day's losses.
.
the one who waits.
supported by a group of
"For the more adventureWhen the market declines Democrats and Republicans,
some, · it could be a great and bargains seem to multiply it ·was not a gift to Wall
buying
opportunity," for investors, Mills suggested Street and because it would
Caldwell said. ·
a closer look at what you're have protecte'd Main Street.
Mills said standing pat on buying and the stock's quality. Our plan required that every
investments in times of crisis . "I wouldn't risk my reputa- dollar be paid back."
works to a point. But if your tion or your money on a ques·
Other key improvements
portfolio contains invest- tionable investment dunng Wilson backed include:
ments whose value ·has good times or bad," he said, . • Banning multi-million;
Meanwhile. Rep. Wilson dollar $Olden parachutes for
shrunk •. then it's time to
review and consider changes. noted in a press release that execuuves who retire from
When reviewing invest-'· the original proposal from failing companies.
ments and their perfor- Bush
and . Treasury
• Tough independent
mance, the investor must ask Secretary Henry . Paulson to oversight and transparency:
if the account meets his or rescue. financial institutions
• Preventing home foreher goals, is. diversified and was rewritten in bipa1tisan closures crippling the.
''makes sense,'' Mills sa.id.
negotiations to include key American economy, allow-·
When asked what the best protections for taxpayers.
· ing the govemment to work:
time is to buy, Mills points to
The bill called for taxpa~- with loan servicers on new
an Edward Jones chart shqw- ers to secure an ownership mortgage terms.

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AP photo

David Hart, left, with Tremco Inc., talks with Rahn Wuest , a supervisor for the Metropolitan Sewer District of Cincinnati,
on a green roof sown with plants at a sewer distriCt station, Wednesday, in Cincinnati. Hart designed the roof plan.
Cincinnati wants to see green roofs on building tops and plans to offer financial incentives to property owners to replace
tar and shingles with Vegetation.

Smith said she hasn't seen
the property or visited
Saginaw, which has been
hard-hit by economic trouI
bles in recent years.
coal, to install post-combusThere's a notice on the tion carbon captute technoldoor of the home saying a ogy at Mountaineer.
foreclosure hearing is pendAlstom 's system captures
ing. the newspaper said. She -carbon dioxtde (C02) by
must pay about $850 )n isolating gas from the
back taxes and yard cleanup power plant's other flue
costs.
j;ases and can significantly
The Saginaw News said it mcrease the efficiency of
could not reach the seller. the C02 ·capture process.
Southern Investments LLC, The system chills the flue
for comment.
gas, recovering large quantities of water for recycling,
then.utilizes a C02 absorber
in a similar concentration of
ammonia, and the clean fl.ue
rromPageAt

Quilting from Page AI
self included, who are affec·iionately referred to as "fabriholics."
"Once you get involved,
you don't want to stop,"
· Schoultz said about the
addicting nature of assembling fabric and quilts .
This year the fabriG for
the harvest quilt made by
Hoffman of California sold
The Fabric Shop on once
again participaung in the
quilt shop hop with autumn

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Inside

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Bl

The Daily S.e ntinel
.
.

' The Extra Point, Page B2

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Thursday, October 2, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A6 ·The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 2, 2008 .
•

POINT COM1\1EMORATES BA'I'I'IE DAYS
.

.

· POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - It is once again
time to commemorate one
Of the most monumental
events in Point Pleasant and
American history with the
annual Battle Days Festival
slated Oct. 3-5.
: Battle Days was created as
observation of the Battle
of Point Pleasant, which is a
· Conflict that is considered by
many as . the start of the
.American Revolution . The
·event is sponsored by the
'Battle Days Committee and
ihe
Point
Pleasant
Daughters of the American
Revolution and Sons of the
American Revolution.
: The cele' .ration kicks off
·Friday with encampments
:and craft demonstrations at
Tu-Endie-Wei State Park as
well as crafts on Main
Street. In addition, an art
show is scheduled for noon
.at Gallery at 409 on Main
.Street. The Mansion House
·Museum will be open 10
\l.m.-4:30 p.m·.
• The Lantern Tour slated
for 7:30 p.m . at Tu-EndieWei State Park will wrap up
Friday's activities . The tour
will feature re-enactors such
as Benjamin Franklin,
"Mad" Anne Bailey, Chief
Cornstalk and Gen. George
· :Washington. Refreshments
·provided by the DAR will
be available at the Mansion
:House after the tou~
Crafts, actiV!IIes and
·entertainment will jump
.&amp;tart Saturday's activities.
The annual parade will folK&gt;w at II a.m. on Main
Street. The parade will fea-

an

.

..

~

·

ture several participants and
entertainment.
New to this year's festival
will be the official dedication of the battle scene on
the flO(),\~ Wall murals.
Beginning at I p.m.
Saturday 'at the riverfront ·
park, the City of, Point
Pleasant and Main Street
organization will sponsor
the dedication. and recognize financial contributors
to the large-scale painting.

$ol.\•'•'t''

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Biker..Sunday

SYRACUSE .,- Syracuse
Nazarene Church's fourth
annual Biker Sunday will
begin with registration.at 1.0
a.m . and complimentary
donuts and coffee . .
~ Then at 10:30 a.m., the
outdoor worship service
begins featuring various
~peakers , music and a hog
roast/lunch afterwards. Also
afterthe service, a bluegrass
band will perforni. and. bike
games will be held.
In case of rain , the service
will be held inside Jhe
church along Ohio 124.

;Awareness walk
: POMEROY
The
Down .
Syndrome
Association of Southeastern
Ohio will hold a ·"walk for
awareness" ·on Sunday on
(he Pomeroy Parking Lot.
; List of activities include
12:30-1:30 p.m ., walker
registration (registration fee
$10 per person or $20 per
family); I :30-2 p.m., wel9ome; . 2 p.m. , balloon
launch and open walk; 3-4
p.m., Paul Doeffinger performs; 3:30 p.m., comhole
t'oumament with $300 payout (must register by 2:30);
4 :30-5:30 p.m. , Oasis performs ; 5 p.m. meatball eat. i.ng contest; 5-:30 p.m., clos.
i.ng and special recognition.

Buddy Bass
tournament
POMEROY - Kickin'
Bass for Seniors Buddy Bass
Tournament will be held from

-

Additional activiiJes on
tap Saturday include the
John Marshall Fife and
Drum Corps, a cannon firing demonstration, children's colonial games, militia drilling and recruitm~nt
of volunteers .and ladies'
colonial tea. The Colonial
Governors Reception will
f91low from 6-8 p.m. and is
only open to SAR members.
The Colonial Ball, scheduled for 8-'10 p.m. at the

· l.'I!MveJ~bested ,by ihe
Meigs County Collncil on
Aging Inc. Entry fee is $70
per boat, includes big bass,
based on a 50 boat field 80
percent payback, paying
five . :places, first place
$1 ,200\i econd place, $720.
third place, $400, fourth
place, $320, . fifth place ,
$160. Proceeds will benefit
the MCCaA's Meals on
Wheels Program.

Auditions set

.

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'._.1-.(.

plan to at'live a bit' early to, Yi¥_d 'ale iteqis for the fund· .
·coltiplete·' l!udition fonnt• . ~s-,h~uld prop, ·them off
No advance preparation ..W. · at' Wo.odland ·(:eqters.... on,
required.
, Friday, Oct. 10. ·
· Perfoimances of "Aesop's
(Oh So Slightly) Updated
Fables" will be Friday and
Saturday, Nov. 21 and 22 at
OAK HILL - The Oak
7 p.m., and Sunday, Nov. 23
Hill
Community Relay for
at 3 p.m.
For more information, Life Team will sponsor a
contact the Ariel- Dater poker run on Saturday, Oct.
Hall box office at (740) ll. Registration will begin
at ll a.m. at'Aetna Park in
446-ARTS (2787).
Oak Hill .
· Registr~tion will be . $10
per biker and $j for an additional rider. Door prizes,
MILTON , W.Va. ·
live entertainment and plenSpring
Creek
from ty of food will be available.
Colorado will perform
This event will be in conSaturday at 7:30p.m. at the junction with t~e · Oak Hill
Mountaineer Opry House,I- Community Relay for Life
64 Exit 28 at Milton.
Team Day at the park .
Standard admission is $12 Crafts, food, live entertainfor adults, $10 for seniors 55 ment, and a sweet shop will
and over, and $5 for children be available.
12 and under. Concessions
All ·crofters are welcome
are offered and tickets are to contact Pam Ramsey at
sold the day of the show.
(740) .418-2552 to sell their
For information , call crafts at tht! event.
I 304I 743-5749.

Poker run

To perform

GALLIPOLIS - ArielDater Hall will hold auditions for "Aesop's (Oh So
Slightly) Updated Fables"
to be presented by The Ariel
Jr. Theatre. .
Auditions will be held in
the Ariel's auditorium
Sunday, Oct..5 from l to 3
p.m. and Monday, Oct. 6
from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. More
than 30 roles are available f~
youth actors , grades 2-12."0ur presentation of
'Aesop's Fables' will offer
family audiences updated
versions of the stories, told
with heart and humor," says
'
returning Ariel Executive
.GALLIPOLIS :._ Galliaand Artistic Directorloseph Jackson-Meigs Continuum .
Wright. "This is a perfect, · of Care will be hosting a
creative opportunity for sea- . fund-raiser titled "2nd
soned, young performers or Chance Yard Sale." · .
those that are brand-new to
It is a benefit to raise
the stage."
..
.
funds to give persons who
The J'roduction will be are homeless -or at risk of
directe by Christina Cogar being homeless a second
and Lori Sanders. Recent chance. It will be held
projects by the eagar- Saturday, Oct. II from 8
Sanders team include · a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
"Charlotte's Web" and "A Woodland Centers buildThousand Cranes."
ing/parking lot located at
Those wishing to audition 3086 Ohio 160, Gallipolis.
Persgns wishing to donate
for "A~sop's Fables" should

'2nd Chance'
yard sale

Tickets on sale ·
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Tickets to the induction ceremony for the West
Virginia Music I-I all of Fame
are on sale online and at
Charleston's Taylor Books.
General admission to the
Nov. 6 event at the Cultutal
Center Theater is $38.
It will air live on West
Virginia Public Television.
VIP seating tic-kets and
access to a gala at the
Governor :s Mansion cost
$250.
Oti
the
Net:
http://www.wvmusichalloffame.com .

•

fl1dlr. CHat

740-446~5381 .·

Point Pleasant at Wayne, 7:30p.m.
iJIJefty Raleigh at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
..

, .. ,,....Oc;totw.
8occOr

Richard Glazier
America's own music reflects
the OVS mission to bring
great music played by g~at
artists - aU while making
orchestral music easy to love.
The pub)ic is also encouraged
to attend OVS rehearsals for
free at 7 to lO p.m. Friday,
Oct. 3, and l to 4 p.m. Oct. 4.
Open rehearsals are an excellent way to grow comfortable
with symphonic music.
Young children unable to sit
through an entire concert can
benefit from time spent at the
open rehearsal.
Tickets ro "America the
Beautiful" are available
through rhe.Ariel-Ann Carson
Dater Perfonning Arts Centre
at 426 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis. The box office is
open 9 a.m. to 4 pm. Monday
through Friday. Tickets at
Wedge Auditorium will be
available bf!ginning at 6:30
p m. Oct 4. PriceS' are $22 ,
$20 for seniors and $10 for
students. Call (740) 446ARTS (2787). Tickets are also
available online at www.ohiovaUeysymphony.org.

lytractorclub.org, .
the
Gravely Tractor Club of
America was formed in 1996 ·
as the Model D&amp;L Gravely
Network but was ·renamed to
reflect the fact that is represimts enthusiasts interested
in all Gravely garden tractors and attachments.
· The purpose of t11e club is
to facilitate the exchange of
information about the history of the Gravely company,
tractor serial numbers, production changes, restoration
information and details,
parts ·and literature sources
and attachments.
Museum staff estimated
that more than 200 Gravely
Tractor Club members will
be in attendance. Aside from
the tractor club, there are several other activities on tap,
including the CEOS quilt
show, antique bottle show, ·
antique tractor pull, entertain- .
ment, the Gun Slinger Show,
sawmill
demonstrations,
apple cider making and apple
butter making. .
In addition, there will be
church services at noon
Sunday followed by a
gospel sing at l :30 p.m.
Those featured in the gospel
sing will be the Sheltons,
the Lightners, Gloryland
Believers and Mercy. The
couQtry kitch~n and · store
also will be open throughout the weekend.
According to museum
staff, this year's festival will
be a ·large event and will
. have something to offer
everyone. For more information , call (304)675-5737.

Medical Excellence.

,Local Caring:

•

·· www.holzerclinic.com

.~------------~~~~~--~----------~
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FGotiJolt
GaiHa Academy at ChilliCothe, 7:30 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocldng, 7:30. p.m.
Miller at Southern , 7:30p.m.
Melgo 01 Vinton County. 7:30 P·"'·
Fai~and at Ri&gt;or Valley, 7:30p.m.
Greon at South Gallla, 7:30 p.m.

At Holzer Clinic, You·Can Always_Count o_n .•.

HOLZER
CLINIC

B'o'IALTERSiiMYDAILYTRIBUNECOM

aves at SOutl\ Point, e:ao p.m.
Valioybeii
.
Galia Academy at Jaclcaoo, 5:t 5 p.m.
Nals.-York at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Eaatem II Miller, 6 p.m. '
Ri&gt;or.VIIIoy at Sooth Point, 5:30p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.

Farm ·Museum hosts
.Coimtry Fall Festiv&amp;l
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Now that the fall
season is here, comforting
thoughts of warm foods and
colorful leaves come to mind.
Tasty apple butter, homemade soup and hot cider are
perfect ways to treat the
stomach and keep warm on
a crisp autumn day. These
fall specialties as well as
· several other tasty treats can
be found at this weekend's
Country Fall Festival at the
West Virginia State Farm
Museum.
The festival begins at 9
a.m. Sat11rday. Perhaps one
of the biggest draws for the
weekend will be the
Gravely .Tractor Club of
America, which will do its
Mow-In 2008 in conjunction with the festi·v~l's
steam and gas engine show.
According to museum
staff, people in . attendance
will have the chance to see
Gravely tractors represimting all years and models.
They expect the show to be
a big draw because the
inventor of the Gravely
tractor, Benjamin Franklin
Gravely, was from · Mason
County and resided in what
is now the ·TNT area. In
fact, the first patent for the
Gravely tractor was in 1916.
There also will be new
and used Gravely parts fo~
sale and trade: Museum
staff encouraged visitors to
bring their Gravely tractors ,
attachments and parts to be
part of the steam and gas
engine show.
. According to www.grave-

Bv BRYAN WALTERS

DwmtM· Octot 2

GAI..~IPOLIS

Entertain.._.t Briefs
•

PPHS

'- They
may be "in different states,
but Gallipolis and Point
Pleasant are neighbors. So as ·
Point Pleasant celebrates the
new Lillian and Paul Wedge
Auditorium at the new Point
'Pleasant Junior/Senior High
School , the Ohio Valley
Symphony - based at the
Ariel-Ann . Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre ' in
downtown Gallipolis decided to congratulate their
neighbors the way they
know best, with music .
As part of a weekend of
arts events that culminate
with a dedication ceremony
Oct. 4, the OVS will open its
19th season with an allAmerican program ~t Wedge
Auditorium. Under the direction 'of Music director Ray ·
Fowler, the orchestra wiII
carry listeners on a whirlwind
tour of the United States ...:..
all from the comfort of their
· seats in the new, state-of-the:
art facility. Dubbed "America
the Beautiful," the music will
take you to destinations as
close as the barnyard and as
American Legion, will close . far away as Jazz Age
out the evening. The ball is Manhattan.
free and open to the public.
Centerpiece of the proSunday's
activities gram is George Gershwin' s
include the annual colonial Concerto in F, one of the first
church service at 10 a.rri. American pieces to se~ure
. The art show also will be · its place in the world's conavailable, as well as the cert halls. Pianist Richard
Mansion House Museum, Glazier is soloist.
·
which will be open l-4:30
Also at the auditorium
p.m. The 11nnual memorial will 'be a special art exhibit
service will take place at 2 provided
by
Point
p.m. to cap off the festival Pleasant's own Gallery at
weekend .
· 409. A reception follows the
concert at the auditorium.
October's celebration . of

GA golfer~ end season at districts·

. POMEROY - A tctwdule ot upcoming h~
school vertlty t!)Ofling 6\lenlt lnvotvinQ
••amalr~m Melg• lnd Ga!lla eount1...

'

Gallla Academy at Day of Champions, 1
p.m.

.

·Crau Country
Gania AcadBmy, River Valley a1 Piketon
Invite, 10 a.m.

FRIDAY NIGHT
t

F()()'J'IiAu.
. ~.._
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Bryan
Wattera
/lite photo

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WEEKZGAMES
·1

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tog,lln ai Mlrlella

p;&gt;·t:l'''

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Gallia
Academy
senior
Kamal
• Dayal
watches
a putt go
· in the
hole during this
Septemb
er 27 file
photo at
Riverside
Golf Club
in Mason,
W.Va.

t.

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MARIETI'A - All good
things must come to an end,
as was the case for 'the Galli a
Academy golf team Monday
afternoon at the Division II
Southeast District Golf
Championships held at
Marietta Country Club i'n
Washington County.
The Blue Devils finished
fifth overall as a team with a
score of 330, niissing the
two-team cut by a slim four
strokes.
Meadowbrook
(324) and Tuscarawas Valley
(326) finished one-two to
advance to state, while
Logan Elm (328) missed the
cut by placing third .
Ironton the 2008
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League champ10ns - alsy
had a team score of 330, but
Jllact:d fourth due .to . a
· tiebreaker. Wheelersburg
(340) • was. sixth behind
GAHS, with Sheridan (343),
Philo (343), West Union
(343) and Cambndge (345)
roundtng out the top-10.
Coshocton (354') was llth
tn the 15-team field, fol-

lowed by Unioto (357),
Westfall (358), Lucasville
Valley (361) and Circleville
(391).
.
Mark Scott of Tuscarawas
Valley was the individual
medalist with a par round of
72. but will be advancing to
the state tournament with
his team. Nathan Kerns (77)
of Ironton and Michael
Huey (78) of Philo were the
two individual state qualifiers.
·.
·
· The Blue Devils were also
close to having an individual
qualify for state, as junior
Jordan Cornwell just missed
out after firing a team-best
score of 79. Kyle Rhodes
and Nick Saunders were
next for the Blue and White
·with matching rounds of 83 ,
while senior Kamal Dayal
completed the team score
with his round of 85. Corey .
Hamilton also shot a 93 .
. The day was bittersweet
for Galli a Academy, which
finished fifth at the sectiona! tournament. On the
one hand, the young Devils
managed to beat or tie
every team - Ironton,
Wheelersburg, West Union

Ohio Prep Football -Week 7 Previews

Point travels
to Wayne

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Wahamabos~
~iberty Raleigh
STAFF REPORT
:J!PORTSG MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

. MASON, W.Va.
Following an off week
d!lring the regular season
football card the Wahama
,. -~~~ E~c1!llqu;,c:,J.1111',e. .
a'·: rlleling finish to
2 8 ' grid campaign with
six extremely tough opponents awilitmg the Bend
Area team ~ginning with
a homecoming date at the
Mason County . School
against 18th ranked, Class
t,.A, Liberty Raleigh.
&gt; Like Wahama , Liberty
Raleigh was also involved
a one-point decision in
ils last gridiron contest
i!fter the Raiders dropped a
l*7-46 decision to Sherman.
The setback severely ·hampered the southern West
Yiq;inia teams playoff
aspirations with Liberty
Raleigh tumbling five
spots among Class AA
teams frqm an II th place
rating to its current· 16th
J:?OSition.
·. The
brief
history
between the two schools
show the White Falcons
ai)d Raiders meeting for
the third .time. with the two
teams splitting two previous encounters. WHS
claimed a 14-0 win over
Uberty Raleigh in the
opening . contest of the
I 988 season before the
Raiders evened the series
with a 30-0 shutout during
the opening game of the
i989 campaign.
-::Liberty Raleigh will
earry a 3-2 record · to the
IZend_ Area with wiqs over
&amp;lmmers County (36-26),
tikeview (20- I 5) and
.Mount View (40-26). The
Riaiders lone two losses
· ~~ ve ·been by a total of
three points in a 'season
opening, two ·point, overtime setback to Westside
(16-14) and last weeks disappointing loss to Sherm
. an
L47-46). The Raiders have}
· scored 40 a11d 46 points in
tl;le past two weeks to push
Us season offensive scarpig average to 31.2 points
per game while giving up
26.0 points per contest.
~ · Wahama averages near! y
300 yar:ds and 43 .7 points
per game offensively while
the Bend Area defensive
unit is giving up an averdge of 152 ' yards on the
ground and I 3.0 points per
Jame.
•. Kickoff time for the
Homecoming tilt at the
Bend Area school is sched· ·
qled to begin at 7:30p.m.

in

I

and Lucasville Valley that finished ahead of them .
at' the Portsmouth sectional.
On the other hand ,
GAHS has to say goodbye
to its lone senior Kamal
Dayal . - who has been a
driving force in the Devils'
remarkable season.
"We really wanted to get .
this one for Kamal. He's
been a great leader for us
this year and we are certainly going to miss him ," .
GAHS golf coach Corey ·
Luce commented. "On the ·
other hand, evervone else _.
should be back 'next season, and they have all had a
taste of being real close to
qualifying for state. I think
- after today - ·that they :
all now realize why every ·
single shot is important. I
also think that it will be a
little motivating for them
going into next year."
The Division II state
championships will be held
on Friday. O&lt;;t. 11, and
Sat~rday, Oct. 12, at the
Ohio State University
Scarlet Golf Course in
Columbus.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTSiiMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

WAYNE, W.Va.
Finally, the wait is. over Point Pleasant and Wayne
is here.
Since the start of the
2008 high school football
season, no game has been
anticipated more by the
Point Pleasant (3~ 2 . 1-0 :
Cardinal) faithful than the.,
matchup witli Class AA .
powerhouse .Wayne (5-0 ,
2-0 Cardinal) who has traditionally run over the Big·
Blacks for years.
Wayne. the two-time
defending Class AA champions, currently sits at No.
I in the latest• SSAC ratings at 5-0 and has beat the
Big Blacks in four consecutive outings. In fact, the
last PPHS victory over the
Pioneers came way back in
I 934 as Wayne holds a 5.
Larry Crumlllte photo 7- I advantage in the allSouthern quarterback Dustin Salser, middle, runs between a pair of Federal Hocking defenders during last week's TVC time series .
Hocking football opener at Roger Lee Adams Field in Racine,
And to make matters
even worse Friday 's game
between the two Cardinal
Conference foes w iII be
played at Wayne during .
'
.
homtlfoming festivities .
Playing at Wayne , where
the Pioneers haven't lost
since
2005, is already bad
STAFF REPORT
biter against South Gallia
PREP HO&lt;lTBALL STANDINGS
SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
(14-0) in Week 4.
enough, , but facing the
Sout~~Meteni'. oh~c:~ Ath~" ~.~~~~~...
Pioneers on homecoming
So far Southern's schedule
. '/)··
·~_. ,8EOAL :.':·
'/r . ALL
RACINE - For one .has produced a 16-16 record
night?
team, Friday night is goirig for its opponents.
Wayne's top threat is
WoL PF ' M .~ W-1. . PI' M
to play a big parr in the final
Miller, on the other hand, ChiHicothe ................ ,.';, ...34l ....~5 ...;44 " ..~ .4-2 ··"" tt9 ..112 Corey Damron . who has
L&lt;igan .............. , .. ·, .......2.0 .. , ~1 .. ;24 ... , ..6.() .... t92 ..55
third of the season.
comes into Friday's contest . Jackson
.. l .....................2'1 ....Sol'. . ,84 .. , . ..5-t ::, .179 ..118 rushed 59 times this seaFor two teams coming off with a quartet of losses and a GallaAcad&amp;my .. .......... ..... o .~·1 ....49 ... 70 .... u 4·2 .... 115 ..153 son for 5.80 yards and
of emba:rrassing losses, resume that hasn't shown Marlelta .............. : . • . . . . ...1-1 . ...54 ...56 ... . : .2-4 .... 167 ..210 seven touchdowns. He is
Ironton ......... .. ..............1-:! ....61 .. ·;58 .... ...:!-3.. .. t55 ..113
Friday's matchup will go a much promise. The only Zanesville
by
Jason
. ..... .' ....... ..... : .•1-2 ....84 ... ~ ...... 2-L .. 134 : .118 followed
long way in determining victory for the Falcons came Warren ........................0-2 ....24 ...75 . ;' ...3-3 .' .••86 ...134 Thompson who has 286
who avOids the bottom of against winless Millersport l'ortsmo~!th ........ .. ....... : ...00 ....34 .. .62. "" ,1-5 ....68 ... 139 yards and four scores and ·
the TVC-Hocking standings (20-3), but was followed up
Josh Meddings ha s 195
· OhloNalley Conference
as Southern hosts Miller ~ith four-straight losses to
.
ave
. ALL
yards and three touch ·.
'
.
W,\. PI' M"
W.L · PI' . M downs in only II carries.
Friday night at ~oger ~e Fairfield Christian (38-34),
PQlnL ... .'. .... ......... ,,,. .1,0 .. ; . of2 , •. 6 ... L ' ' ,:).3. ; ,.146 . ,12'3
Adams Fteld m Meigs · Frontier (28-8), Grove City South
Overall Wayne is allowCOli Grow ....... . ; ... ; ........ 1.() .... Ol7 ' .. 13 ......3-3 ....107 . ,79
County. . .
Christian
(39-0)
and F~Jrid :&gt;.' . ~ . :,. • ": 1 .l , .•• .' ,.. • .•• , , !1:;o .. ~ ·. 49 .d ' .26.'~"~ . , .14, , . ~i14 · ·~122 ing 19 points per game
The Tornadoes (2:4, 0-1 Waterford (35-7). Miller's · ·PhP\Ipea~&lt;B .. , : . ~•• ~·, .... . ,. ·'·, .Q.t. •. , 1a.. . .21 ~ .:.... .~ .. .-.1.112 . .t$9 with 57 of the 96 points
Valley .... : . .. ; ..... ' I" ·' ...0.1. •. : 6 .. , 142·.. .., ,, .M. :..73 .. .171
TVC-Hocking) are coming other
loss came to Rl'ltr
fl9cik Hill . ...·.: .... •' .............().1, .. . 26 ...o4Q. .... , .•••().8 ....?6 •.. 252 given up this season comoff of a big loss at the hands Beallsville (56-0) to open
ing in the fourth quarter.
'
.. · irt.v'llllv,con...nc. . •
.
of Federal 'Hocking, but won the season.
.
The Pioneers are averaging
. . OliiO~,
.,
., ALL
their previous two games in The Falcons are averaging
42 points per game on
impressive fashion. And just ll.5 points per contest
offense
.
·'
w-1.
'
...
""
w-1.•
P.l'
""
.
with homecoming festivities while giving up a whopping Ntitonvllle-'lbtk . :·....... ......... .:!-0 ... ,107' ..83 ......5o! .. ' .182 . .t1$
Point Pleasant is averag~· ...... .. .. ... ........... .2·1 .. .. 72 ...39 ...... 2-4 ....107 .. 113
underway on the SHS cam- 33.1 points per ,game. Their Welllton
....... , .... ' ........... .2-t .. ..10 ...55 ... .. .2-1 ....128 .. 152 ing 39 points per outing
pus, the Tornadoes will be . schedule has produced a 17- r.tolga ....... .' ...'.... . ...... : ...1-t ; ...54,. ,.~ .. ....4-2 .. ,.173 .. 124 thanks, in large part, to the
even more motivated to pull 15 ·record for its opponents. Belpre ..... ' .. , .......... , .....1-2 ....48 ...85 ......2-4 ....113 . , .t34 64 put up against Midland ·
:, ..... : .. .. ........ ..o-2 ....20 ...60 . , ....3-3 ....146 .. 107
Southern won fast year's Attxa~r
out the win.
\linton Coonly ... c, ..... .... : .. ..().2 .. .'.1 6 ...49 .... , .1·5 ....118 ... 1118 Trail last week . On defense
'
............. Olvlllon
.
.
So far this season - matchup 14-6. and. will be . . • .
the Big Blacks are giving
..
, """:''"" 1VC
'
ALL
.
Southern. is averaging 16.5 trying to make it three
up 21 points per game .
'
.
.
. w.L PF.,. M
w.L. : PF M
points per game while giv- straight over the Falcons ~ral Hocking , ........ .. ,,..... 1oQ .. , .50 ...8 . , .. ...4-2 ....134 ..96
While turnovers will
mg up 28.6 points per out- when the two teams kick•off 'I'H~ ..... .,·....... , .•......... Hl ..·..47•...0. , ... , .4-2 ....154 , ,.107
play
a big part in the final
Watelforo ' •. ~ .•• : ......... ...... 1.0 ... .35 ..7 .......3-3 ....114 .. tat
ing. The. Tornadoes are led Friday at 7:30p.m. ·
Scuthern .... ·..... ; .............o-1 ....8 ... .50 ...... 2-1 ....119 ... t72 outcome , as Point Pleasant
py Greg Jenkins ; Michael
En!arn ....... , .. , .-:.......... •o-1 .:. o... .47 ...... 2-4 ....117 .. 175
EAGLES HEAO TO FH
Mlllir ... " ," ...................().1 .. ..1 .. ..35 .. ~ -5 ....81 .. .202 has already given away
Manuel and Eric Buzzard
several game changing
r
. .
,
who provide most of the
turnovers
this season, getSTEWART - It is safe to
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offen&amp;e on the· ground and
ting off to a good start will
·
,
W-L PI' M
through the air, although the say that last Friday was not
be the biggest key to sucthe
kind
of
performance
'Wahama
..
·:
......
·
............
4-0
:
...
17!1
..
52
Purple and Gold struggled in
Hannan .. .'..................... H ....74 . • .216
cess
for the Big Blacks. On
its passing game last week . Eastern had hope d f or.
South GaJIIa .............. : ..... 1-5 ....ae ... 192
the season Wayne has
The pair of Southern wins The Eagles (2-4, 0- 1
outsco·red
its opponents
TVC
-Hocking)
came
mto
,Cardinal~
ALL
came against Green (31-14)
and Hannan (57 -0) which last weekend's contest
W-L PI' M
W-L ""
M 77-7 in the first quarter
offset a trio of big losses to against rival Trimble hoping Ch,apmanvilte ........... , .......s-o .... 113 ...31 . , .... 15.() ... ,1!30 . ,144 and a strong start could go
Federal Hocking (50-8), to make it two-in-a-row, but · Wa)&lt;IMI ........................2.0 .... 102 ..38 ......15.() ... .211 .. 96 . a long way for the·visitors .
Wahama
(59-0)
and instead found themselves on . Pt&gt;lntPieesan1 ........ .. .........t.CJ .... 42 .. .10 ·......3-2 ....194 ..106
The two teams will
Poca .......... ........... " ... .0.1 .... 12 ' . .28 ......1-4 ....124 ..1113
Symmes' Valley (35-5). Its
square
off at 7:3(') p.m , on
Helbert l:toovot ..... : ..... , ......0-2 .... 24 ...75 ......2-3.. ..97 .. .137
Please see Ohio, Bl
other loss came in a nailSillonvllte . : ....... . : . .'.... :.... .oo .... 43 ••. 134 ....•1-4 ....85 ...1a1 Friday night.

Tornadoes host Miller on Homecoming

Eagles tra:vel to Fed Hock; Marauders head to Vinton County
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Thursday, October 2, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A6 ·The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 2, 2008 .
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POINT COM1\1EMORATES BA'I'I'IE DAYS
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· POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - It is once again
time to commemorate one
Of the most monumental
events in Point Pleasant and
American history with the
annual Battle Days Festival
slated Oct. 3-5.
: Battle Days was created as
observation of the Battle
of Point Pleasant, which is a
· Conflict that is considered by
many as . the start of the
.American Revolution . The
·event is sponsored by the
'Battle Days Committee and
ihe
Point
Pleasant
Daughters of the American
Revolution and Sons of the
American Revolution.
: The cele' .ration kicks off
·Friday with encampments
:and craft demonstrations at
Tu-Endie-Wei State Park as
well as crafts on Main
Street. In addition, an art
show is scheduled for noon
.at Gallery at 409 on Main
.Street. The Mansion House
·Museum will be open 10
\l.m.-4:30 p.m·.
• The Lantern Tour slated
for 7:30 p.m . at Tu-EndieWei State Park will wrap up
Friday's activities . The tour
will feature re-enactors such
as Benjamin Franklin,
"Mad" Anne Bailey, Chief
Cornstalk and Gen. George
· :Washington. Refreshments
·provided by the DAR will
be available at the Mansion
:House after the tou~
Crafts, actiV!IIes and
·entertainment will jump
.&amp;tart Saturday's activities.
The annual parade will folK&gt;w at II a.m. on Main
Street. The parade will fea-

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ture several participants and
entertainment.
New to this year's festival
will be the official dedication of the battle scene on
the flO(),\~ Wall murals.
Beginning at I p.m.
Saturday 'at the riverfront ·
park, the City of, Point
Pleasant and Main Street
organization will sponsor
the dedication. and recognize financial contributors
to the large-scale painting.

$ol.\•'•'t''

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Biker..Sunday

SYRACUSE .,- Syracuse
Nazarene Church's fourth
annual Biker Sunday will
begin with registration.at 1.0
a.m . and complimentary
donuts and coffee . .
~ Then at 10:30 a.m., the
outdoor worship service
begins featuring various
~peakers , music and a hog
roast/lunch afterwards. Also
afterthe service, a bluegrass
band will perforni. and. bike
games will be held.
In case of rain , the service
will be held inside Jhe
church along Ohio 124.

;Awareness walk
: POMEROY
The
Down .
Syndrome
Association of Southeastern
Ohio will hold a ·"walk for
awareness" ·on Sunday on
(he Pomeroy Parking Lot.
; List of activities include
12:30-1:30 p.m ., walker
registration (registration fee
$10 per person or $20 per
family); I :30-2 p.m., wel9ome; . 2 p.m. , balloon
launch and open walk; 3-4
p.m., Paul Doeffinger performs; 3:30 p.m., comhole
t'oumament with $300 payout (must register by 2:30);
4 :30-5:30 p.m. , Oasis performs ; 5 p.m. meatball eat. i.ng contest; 5-:30 p.m., clos.
i.ng and special recognition.

Buddy Bass
tournament
POMEROY - Kickin'
Bass for Seniors Buddy Bass
Tournament will be held from

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Additional activiiJes on
tap Saturday include the
John Marshall Fife and
Drum Corps, a cannon firing demonstration, children's colonial games, militia drilling and recruitm~nt
of volunteers .and ladies'
colonial tea. The Colonial
Governors Reception will
f91low from 6-8 p.m. and is
only open to SAR members.
The Colonial Ball, scheduled for 8-'10 p.m. at the

· l.'I!MveJ~bested ,by ihe
Meigs County Collncil on
Aging Inc. Entry fee is $70
per boat, includes big bass,
based on a 50 boat field 80
percent payback, paying
five . :places, first place
$1 ,200\i econd place, $720.
third place, $400, fourth
place, $320, . fifth place ,
$160. Proceeds will benefit
the MCCaA's Meals on
Wheels Program.

Auditions set

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plan to at'live a bit' early to, Yi¥_d 'ale iteqis for the fund· .
·coltiplete·' l!udition fonnt• . ~s-,h~uld prop, ·them off
No advance preparation ..W. · at' Wo.odland ·(:eqters.... on,
required.
, Friday, Oct. 10. ·
· Perfoimances of "Aesop's
(Oh So Slightly) Updated
Fables" will be Friday and
Saturday, Nov. 21 and 22 at
OAK HILL - The Oak
7 p.m., and Sunday, Nov. 23
Hill
Community Relay for
at 3 p.m.
For more information, Life Team will sponsor a
contact the Ariel- Dater poker run on Saturday, Oct.
Hall box office at (740) ll. Registration will begin
at ll a.m. at'Aetna Park in
446-ARTS (2787).
Oak Hill .
· Registr~tion will be . $10
per biker and $j for an additional rider. Door prizes,
MILTON , W.Va. ·
live entertainment and plenSpring
Creek
from ty of food will be available.
Colorado will perform
This event will be in conSaturday at 7:30p.m. at the junction with t~e · Oak Hill
Mountaineer Opry House,I- Community Relay for Life
64 Exit 28 at Milton.
Team Day at the park .
Standard admission is $12 Crafts, food, live entertainfor adults, $10 for seniors 55 ment, and a sweet shop will
and over, and $5 for children be available.
12 and under. Concessions
All ·crofters are welcome
are offered and tickets are to contact Pam Ramsey at
sold the day of the show.
(740) .418-2552 to sell their
For information , call crafts at tht! event.
I 304I 743-5749.

Poker run

To perform

GALLIPOLIS - ArielDater Hall will hold auditions for "Aesop's (Oh So
Slightly) Updated Fables"
to be presented by The Ariel
Jr. Theatre. .
Auditions will be held in
the Ariel's auditorium
Sunday, Oct..5 from l to 3
p.m. and Monday, Oct. 6
from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. More
than 30 roles are available f~
youth actors , grades 2-12."0ur presentation of
'Aesop's Fables' will offer
family audiences updated
versions of the stories, told
with heart and humor," says
'
returning Ariel Executive
.GALLIPOLIS :._ Galliaand Artistic Directorloseph Jackson-Meigs Continuum .
Wright. "This is a perfect, · of Care will be hosting a
creative opportunity for sea- . fund-raiser titled "2nd
soned, young performers or Chance Yard Sale." · .
those that are brand-new to
It is a benefit to raise
the stage."
..
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funds to give persons who
The J'roduction will be are homeless -or at risk of
directe by Christina Cogar being homeless a second
and Lori Sanders. Recent chance. It will be held
projects by the eagar- Saturday, Oct. II from 8
Sanders team include · a.m. to 4 p.m. at the
"Charlotte's Web" and "A Woodland Centers buildThousand Cranes."
ing/parking lot located at
Those wishing to audition 3086 Ohio 160, Gallipolis.
Persgns wishing to donate
for "A~sop's Fables" should

'2nd Chance'
yard sale

Tickets on sale ·
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Tickets to the induction ceremony for the West
Virginia Music I-I all of Fame
are on sale online and at
Charleston's Taylor Books.
General admission to the
Nov. 6 event at the Cultutal
Center Theater is $38.
It will air live on West
Virginia Public Television.
VIP seating tic-kets and
access to a gala at the
Governor :s Mansion cost
$250.
Oti
the
Net:
http://www.wvmusichalloffame.com .

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fl1dlr. CHat

740-446~5381 .·

Point Pleasant at Wayne, 7:30p.m.
iJIJefty Raleigh at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
..

, .. ,,....Oc;totw.
8occOr

Richard Glazier
America's own music reflects
the OVS mission to bring
great music played by g~at
artists - aU while making
orchestral music easy to love.
The pub)ic is also encouraged
to attend OVS rehearsals for
free at 7 to lO p.m. Friday,
Oct. 3, and l to 4 p.m. Oct. 4.
Open rehearsals are an excellent way to grow comfortable
with symphonic music.
Young children unable to sit
through an entire concert can
benefit from time spent at the
open rehearsal.
Tickets ro "America the
Beautiful" are available
through rhe.Ariel-Ann Carson
Dater Perfonning Arts Centre
at 426 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis. The box office is
open 9 a.m. to 4 pm. Monday
through Friday. Tickets at
Wedge Auditorium will be
available bf!ginning at 6:30
p m. Oct 4. PriceS' are $22 ,
$20 for seniors and $10 for
students. Call (740) 446ARTS (2787). Tickets are also
available online at www.ohiovaUeysymphony.org.

lytractorclub.org, .
the
Gravely Tractor Club of
America was formed in 1996 ·
as the Model D&amp;L Gravely
Network but was ·renamed to
reflect the fact that is represimts enthusiasts interested
in all Gravely garden tractors and attachments.
· The purpose of t11e club is
to facilitate the exchange of
information about the history of the Gravely company,
tractor serial numbers, production changes, restoration
information and details,
parts ·and literature sources
and attachments.
Museum staff estimated
that more than 200 Gravely
Tractor Club members will
be in attendance. Aside from
the tractor club, there are several other activities on tap,
including the CEOS quilt
show, antique bottle show, ·
antique tractor pull, entertain- .
ment, the Gun Slinger Show,
sawmill
demonstrations,
apple cider making and apple
butter making. .
In addition, there will be
church services at noon
Sunday followed by a
gospel sing at l :30 p.m.
Those featured in the gospel
sing will be the Sheltons,
the Lightners, Gloryland
Believers and Mercy. The
couQtry kitch~n and · store
also will be open throughout the weekend.
According to museum
staff, this year's festival will
be a ·large event and will
. have something to offer
everyone. For more information , call (304)675-5737.

Medical Excellence.

,Local Caring:

•

·· www.holzerclinic.com

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FGotiJolt
GaiHa Academy at ChilliCothe, 7:30 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocldng, 7:30. p.m.
Miller at Southern , 7:30p.m.
Melgo 01 Vinton County. 7:30 P·"'·
Fai~and at Ri&gt;or Valley, 7:30p.m.
Greon at South Gallla, 7:30 p.m.

At Holzer Clinic, You·Can Always_Count o_n .•.

HOLZER
CLINIC

B'o'IALTERSiiMYDAILYTRIBUNECOM

aves at SOutl\ Point, e:ao p.m.
Valioybeii
.
Galia Academy at Jaclcaoo, 5:t 5 p.m.
Nals.-York at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Eaatem II Miller, 6 p.m. '
Ri&gt;or.VIIIoy at Sooth Point, 5:30p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.

Farm ·Museum hosts
.Coimtry Fall Festiv&amp;l
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Now that the fall
season is here, comforting
thoughts of warm foods and
colorful leaves come to mind.
Tasty apple butter, homemade soup and hot cider are
perfect ways to treat the
stomach and keep warm on
a crisp autumn day. These
fall specialties as well as
· several other tasty treats can
be found at this weekend's
Country Fall Festival at the
West Virginia State Farm
Museum.
The festival begins at 9
a.m. Sat11rday. Perhaps one
of the biggest draws for the
weekend will be the
Gravely .Tractor Club of
America, which will do its
Mow-In 2008 in conjunction with the festi·v~l's
steam and gas engine show.
According to museum
staff, people in . attendance
will have the chance to see
Gravely tractors represimting all years and models.
They expect the show to be
a big draw because the
inventor of the Gravely
tractor, Benjamin Franklin
Gravely, was from · Mason
County and resided in what
is now the ·TNT area. In
fact, the first patent for the
Gravely tractor was in 1916.
There also will be new
and used Gravely parts fo~
sale and trade: Museum
staff encouraged visitors to
bring their Gravely tractors ,
attachments and parts to be
part of the steam and gas
engine show.
. According to www.grave-

Bv BRYAN WALTERS

DwmtM· Octot 2

GAI..~IPOLIS

Entertain.._.t Briefs
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PPHS

'- They
may be "in different states,
but Gallipolis and Point
Pleasant are neighbors. So as ·
Point Pleasant celebrates the
new Lillian and Paul Wedge
Auditorium at the new Point
'Pleasant Junior/Senior High
School , the Ohio Valley
Symphony - based at the
Ariel-Ann . Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre ' in
downtown Gallipolis decided to congratulate their
neighbors the way they
know best, with music .
As part of a weekend of
arts events that culminate
with a dedication ceremony
Oct. 4, the OVS will open its
19th season with an allAmerican program ~t Wedge
Auditorium. Under the direction 'of Music director Ray ·
Fowler, the orchestra wiII
carry listeners on a whirlwind
tour of the United States ...:..
all from the comfort of their
· seats in the new, state-of-the:
art facility. Dubbed "America
the Beautiful," the music will
take you to destinations as
close as the barnyard and as
American Legion, will close . far away as Jazz Age
out the evening. The ball is Manhattan.
free and open to the public.
Centerpiece of the proSunday's
activities gram is George Gershwin' s
include the annual colonial Concerto in F, one of the first
church service at 10 a.rri. American pieces to se~ure
. The art show also will be · its place in the world's conavailable, as well as the cert halls. Pianist Richard
Mansion House Museum, Glazier is soloist.
·
which will be open l-4:30
Also at the auditorium
p.m. The 11nnual memorial will 'be a special art exhibit
service will take place at 2 provided
by
Point
p.m. to cap off the festival Pleasant's own Gallery at
weekend .
· 409. A reception follows the
concert at the auditorium.
October's celebration . of

GA golfer~ end season at districts·

. POMEROY - A tctwdule ot upcoming h~
school vertlty t!)Ofling 6\lenlt lnvotvinQ
••amalr~m Melg• lnd Ga!lla eount1...

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Gallla Academy at Day of Champions, 1
p.m.

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·Crau Country
Gania AcadBmy, River Valley a1 Piketon
Invite, 10 a.m.

FRIDAY NIGHT
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F()()'J'IiAu.
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Wattera
/lite photo

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WEEKZGAMES
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tog,lln ai Mlrlella

p;&gt;·t:l'''

al

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Gallia
Academy
senior
Kamal
• Dayal
watches
a putt go
· in the
hole during this
Septemb
er 27 file
photo at
Riverside
Golf Club
in Mason,
W.Va.

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MARIETI'A - All good
things must come to an end,
as was the case for 'the Galli a
Academy golf team Monday
afternoon at the Division II
Southeast District Golf
Championships held at
Marietta Country Club i'n
Washington County.
The Blue Devils finished
fifth overall as a team with a
score of 330, niissing the
two-team cut by a slim four
strokes.
Meadowbrook
(324) and Tuscarawas Valley
(326) finished one-two to
advance to state, while
Logan Elm (328) missed the
cut by placing third .
Ironton the 2008
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League champ10ns - alsy
had a team score of 330, but
Jllact:d fourth due .to . a
· tiebreaker. Wheelersburg
(340) • was. sixth behind
GAHS, with Sheridan (343),
Philo (343), West Union
(343) and Cambndge (345)
roundtng out the top-10.
Coshocton (354') was llth
tn the 15-team field, fol-

lowed by Unioto (357),
Westfall (358), Lucasville
Valley (361) and Circleville
(391).
.
Mark Scott of Tuscarawas
Valley was the individual
medalist with a par round of
72. but will be advancing to
the state tournament with
his team. Nathan Kerns (77)
of Ironton and Michael
Huey (78) of Philo were the
two individual state qualifiers.
·.
·
· The Blue Devils were also
close to having an individual
qualify for state, as junior
Jordan Cornwell just missed
out after firing a team-best
score of 79. Kyle Rhodes
and Nick Saunders were
next for the Blue and White
·with matching rounds of 83 ,
while senior Kamal Dayal
completed the team score
with his round of 85. Corey .
Hamilton also shot a 93 .
. The day was bittersweet
for Galli a Academy, which
finished fifth at the sectiona! tournament. On the
one hand, the young Devils
managed to beat or tie
every team - Ironton,
Wheelersburg, West Union

Ohio Prep Football -Week 7 Previews

Point travels
to Wayne

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Wahamabos~
~iberty Raleigh
STAFF REPORT
:J!PORTSG MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

. MASON, W.Va.
Following an off week
d!lring the regular season
football card the Wahama
,. -~~~ E~c1!llqu;,c:,J.1111',e. .
a'·: rlleling finish to
2 8 ' grid campaign with
six extremely tough opponents awilitmg the Bend
Area team ~ginning with
a homecoming date at the
Mason County . School
against 18th ranked, Class
t,.A, Liberty Raleigh.
&gt; Like Wahama , Liberty
Raleigh was also involved
a one-point decision in
ils last gridiron contest
i!fter the Raiders dropped a
l*7-46 decision to Sherman.
The setback severely ·hampered the southern West
Yiq;inia teams playoff
aspirations with Liberty
Raleigh tumbling five
spots among Class AA
teams frqm an II th place
rating to its current· 16th
J:?OSition.
·. The
brief
history
between the two schools
show the White Falcons
ai)d Raiders meeting for
the third .time. with the two
teams splitting two previous encounters. WHS
claimed a 14-0 win over
Uberty Raleigh in the
opening . contest of the
I 988 season before the
Raiders evened the series
with a 30-0 shutout during
the opening game of the
i989 campaign.
-::Liberty Raleigh will
earry a 3-2 record · to the
IZend_ Area with wiqs over
&amp;lmmers County (36-26),
tikeview (20- I 5) and
.Mount View (40-26). The
Riaiders lone two losses
· ~~ ve ·been by a total of
three points in a 'season
opening, two ·point, overtime setback to Westside
(16-14) and last weeks disappointing loss to Sherm
. an
L47-46). The Raiders have}
· scored 40 a11d 46 points in
tl;le past two weeks to push
Us season offensive scarpig average to 31.2 points
per game while giving up
26.0 points per contest.
~ · Wahama averages near! y
300 yar:ds and 43 .7 points
per game offensively while
the Bend Area defensive
unit is giving up an averdge of 152 ' yards on the
ground and I 3.0 points per
Jame.
•. Kickoff time for the
Homecoming tilt at the
Bend Area school is sched· ·
qled to begin at 7:30p.m.

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and Lucasville Valley that finished ahead of them .
at' the Portsmouth sectional.
On the other hand ,
GAHS has to say goodbye
to its lone senior Kamal
Dayal . - who has been a
driving force in the Devils'
remarkable season.
"We really wanted to get .
this one for Kamal. He's
been a great leader for us
this year and we are certainly going to miss him ," .
GAHS golf coach Corey ·
Luce commented. "On the ·
other hand, evervone else _.
should be back 'next season, and they have all had a
taste of being real close to
qualifying for state. I think
- after today - ·that they :
all now realize why every ·
single shot is important. I
also think that it will be a
little motivating for them
going into next year."
The Division II state
championships will be held
on Friday. O&lt;;t. 11, and
Sat~rday, Oct. 12, at the
Ohio State University
Scarlet Golf Course in
Columbus.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTSiiMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

WAYNE, W.Va.
Finally, the wait is. over Point Pleasant and Wayne
is here.
Since the start of the
2008 high school football
season, no game has been
anticipated more by the
Point Pleasant (3~ 2 . 1-0 :
Cardinal) faithful than the.,
matchup witli Class AA .
powerhouse .Wayne (5-0 ,
2-0 Cardinal) who has traditionally run over the Big·
Blacks for years.
Wayne. the two-time
defending Class AA champions, currently sits at No.
I in the latest• SSAC ratings at 5-0 and has beat the
Big Blacks in four consecutive outings. In fact, the
last PPHS victory over the
Pioneers came way back in
I 934 as Wayne holds a 5.
Larry Crumlllte photo 7- I advantage in the allSouthern quarterback Dustin Salser, middle, runs between a pair of Federal Hocking defenders during last week's TVC time series .
Hocking football opener at Roger Lee Adams Field in Racine,
And to make matters
even worse Friday 's game
between the two Cardinal
Conference foes w iII be
played at Wayne during .
'
.
homtlfoming festivities .
Playing at Wayne , where
the Pioneers haven't lost
since
2005, is already bad
STAFF REPORT
biter against South Gallia
PREP HO&lt;lTBALL STANDINGS
SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
(14-0) in Week 4.
enough, , but facing the
Sout~~Meteni'. oh~c:~ Ath~" ~.~~~~~...
Pioneers on homecoming
So far Southern's schedule
. '/)··
·~_. ,8EOAL :.':·
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RACINE - For one .has produced a 16-16 record
night?
team, Friday night is goirig for its opponents.
Wayne's top threat is
WoL PF ' M .~ W-1. . PI' M
to play a big parr in the final
Miller, on the other hand, ChiHicothe ................ ,.';, ...34l ....~5 ...;44 " ..~ .4-2 ··"" tt9 ..112 Corey Damron . who has
L&lt;igan .............. , .. ·, .......2.0 .. , ~1 .. ;24 ... , ..6.() .... t92 ..55
third of the season.
comes into Friday's contest . Jackson
.. l .....................2'1 ....Sol'. . ,84 .. , . ..5-t ::, .179 ..118 rushed 59 times this seaFor two teams coming off with a quartet of losses and a GallaAcad&amp;my .. .......... ..... o .~·1 ....49 ... 70 .... u 4·2 .... 115 ..153 son for 5.80 yards and
of emba:rrassing losses, resume that hasn't shown Marlelta .............. : . • . . . . ...1-1 . ...54 ...56 ... . : .2-4 .... 167 ..210 seven touchdowns. He is
Ironton ......... .. ..............1-:! ....61 .. ·;58 .... ...:!-3.. .. t55 ..113
Friday's matchup will go a much promise. The only Zanesville
by
Jason
. ..... .' ....... ..... : .•1-2 ....84 ... ~ ...... 2-L .. 134 : .118 followed
long way in determining victory for the Falcons came Warren ........................0-2 ....24 ...75 . ;' ...3-3 .' .••86 ...134 Thompson who has 286
who avOids the bottom of against winless Millersport l'ortsmo~!th ........ .. ....... : ...00 ....34 .. .62. "" ,1-5 ....68 ... 139 yards and four scores and ·
the TVC-Hocking standings (20-3), but was followed up
Josh Meddings ha s 195
· OhloNalley Conference
as Southern hosts Miller ~ith four-straight losses to
.
ave
. ALL
yards and three touch ·.
'
.
W,\. PI' M"
W.L · PI' . M downs in only II carries.
Friday night at ~oger ~e Fairfield Christian (38-34),
PQlnL ... .'. .... ......... ,,,. .1,0 .. ; . of2 , •. 6 ... L ' ' ,:).3. ; ,.146 . ,12'3
Adams Fteld m Meigs · Frontier (28-8), Grove City South
Overall Wayne is allowCOli Grow ....... . ; ... ; ........ 1.() .... Ol7 ' .. 13 ......3-3 ....107 . ,79
County. . .
Christian
(39-0)
and F~Jrid :&gt;.' . ~ . :,. • ": 1 .l , .•• .' ,.. • .•• , , !1:;o .. ~ ·. 49 .d ' .26.'~"~ . , .14, , . ~i14 · ·~122 ing 19 points per game
The Tornadoes (2:4, 0-1 Waterford (35-7). Miller's · ·PhP\Ipea~&lt;B .. , : . ~•• ~·, .... . ,. ·'·, .Q.t. •. , 1a.. . .21 ~ .:.... .~ .. .-.1.112 . .t$9 with 57 of the 96 points
Valley .... : . .. ; ..... ' I" ·' ...0.1. •. : 6 .. , 142·.. .., ,, .M. :..73 .. .171
TVC-Hocking) are coming other
loss came to Rl'ltr
fl9cik Hill . ...·.: .... •' .............().1, .. . 26 ...o4Q. .... , .•••().8 ....?6 •.. 252 given up this season comoff of a big loss at the hands Beallsville (56-0) to open
ing in the fourth quarter.
'
.. · irt.v'llllv,con...nc. . •
.
of Federal 'Hocking, but won the season.
.
The Pioneers are averaging
. . OliiO~,
.,
., ALL
their previous two games in The Falcons are averaging
42 points per game on
impressive fashion. And just ll.5 points per contest
offense
.
·'
w-1.
'
...
""
w-1.•
P.l'
""
.
with homecoming festivities while giving up a whopping Ntitonvllle-'lbtk . :·....... ......... .:!-0 ... ,107' ..83 ......5o! .. ' .182 . .t1$
Point Pleasant is averag~· ...... .. .. ... ........... .2·1 .. .. 72 ...39 ...... 2-4 ....107 .. 113
underway on the SHS cam- 33.1 points per ,game. Their Welllton
....... , .... ' ........... .2-t .. ..10 ...55 ... .. .2-1 ....128 .. 152 ing 39 points per outing
pus, the Tornadoes will be . schedule has produced a 17- r.tolga ....... .' ...'.... . ...... : ...1-t ; ...54,. ,.~ .. ....4-2 .. ,.173 .. 124 thanks, in large part, to the
even more motivated to pull 15 ·record for its opponents. Belpre ..... ' .. , .......... , .....1-2 ....48 ...85 ......2-4 ....113 . , .t34 64 put up against Midland ·
:, ..... : .. .. ........ ..o-2 ....20 ...60 . , ....3-3 ....146 .. 107
Southern won fast year's Attxa~r
out the win.
\linton Coonly ... c, ..... .... : .. ..().2 .. .'.1 6 ...49 .... , .1·5 ....118 ... 1118 Trail last week . On defense
'
............. Olvlllon
.
.
So far this season - matchup 14-6. and. will be . . • .
the Big Blacks are giving
..
, """:''"" 1VC
'
ALL
.
Southern. is averaging 16.5 trying to make it three
up 21 points per game .
'
.
.
. w.L PF.,. M
w.L. : PF M
points per game while giv- straight over the Falcons ~ral Hocking , ........ .. ,,..... 1oQ .. , .50 ...8 . , .. ...4-2 ....134 ..96
While turnovers will
mg up 28.6 points per out- when the two teams kick•off 'I'H~ ..... .,·....... , .•......... Hl ..·..47•...0. , ... , .4-2 ....154 , ,.107
play
a big part in the final
Watelforo ' •. ~ .•• : ......... ...... 1.0 ... .35 ..7 .......3-3 ....114 .. tat
ing. The. Tornadoes are led Friday at 7:30p.m. ·
Scuthern .... ·..... ; .............o-1 ....8 ... .50 ...... 2-1 ....119 ... t72 outcome , as Point Pleasant
py Greg Jenkins ; Michael
En!arn ....... , .. , .-:.......... •o-1 .:. o... .47 ...... 2-4 ....117 .. 175
EAGLES HEAO TO FH
Mlllir ... " ," ...................().1 .. ..1 .. ..35 .. ~ -5 ....81 .. .202 has already given away
Manuel and Eric Buzzard
several game changing
r
. .
,
who provide most of the
turnovers
this season, getSTEWART - It is safe to
~..
• .
offen&amp;e on the· ground and
ting off to a good start will
·
,
W-L PI' M
through the air, although the say that last Friday was not
be the biggest key to sucthe
kind
of
performance
'Wahama
..
·:
......
·
............
4-0
:
...
17!1
..
52
Purple and Gold struggled in
Hannan .. .'..................... H ....74 . • .216
cess
for the Big Blacks. On
its passing game last week . Eastern had hope d f or.
South GaJIIa .............. : ..... 1-5 ....ae ... 192
the season Wayne has
The pair of Southern wins The Eagles (2-4, 0- 1
outsco·red
its opponents
TVC
-Hocking)
came
mto
,Cardinal~
ALL
came against Green (31-14)
and Hannan (57 -0) which last weekend's contest
W-L PI' M
W-L ""
M 77-7 in the first quarter
offset a trio of big losses to against rival Trimble hoping Ch,apmanvilte ........... , .......s-o .... 113 ...31 . , .... 15.() ... ,1!30 . ,144 and a strong start could go
Federal Hocking (50-8), to make it two-in-a-row, but · Wa)&lt;IMI ........................2.0 .... 102 ..38 ......15.() ... .211 .. 96 . a long way for the·visitors .
Wahama
(59-0)
and instead found themselves on . Pt&gt;lntPieesan1 ........ .. .........t.CJ .... 42 .. .10 ·......3-2 ....194 ..106
The two teams will
Poca .......... ........... " ... .0.1 .... 12 ' . .28 ......1-4 ....124 ..1113
Symmes' Valley (35-5). Its
square
off at 7:3(') p.m , on
Helbert l:toovot ..... : ..... , ......0-2 .... 24 ...75 ......2-3.. ..97 .. .137
Please see Ohio, Bl
other loss came in a nailSillonvllte . : ....... . : . .'.... :.... .oo .... 43 ••. 134 ....•1-4 ....85 ...1a1 Friday night.

Tornadoes host Miller on Homecoming

Eagles tra:vel to Fed Hock; Marauders head to Vinton County
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P~tge 82 • The ifaily Sentinel

Thursday, October 2, 2008 ·

www.m ydailysentinel.com

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_Thursday, .October 2, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B;J

t!r:ribune .. Sentinel - l\egister
C_·L A S S I F I E D
OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S HIGH SCH OOL FOOTBALL GAMES

C harlie Shepherd

Larry Cru m

, Brya n Walten

'-'~l'tln'

Sports Wnrn
R ecord: -N - 11

[{. L·, urd JX - ~~

la~t

IN

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(wmner~ 111 bo ld 1

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,JL Chillicothe

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G:llliJ Ac:Jdt•ttt\
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Ft•tll'ra l H 9rki ne
\ illl n tr

\h·igs

· H. l·l nrd . 42- 1~
l.t't \'A· ~k t· - ~
( W IIllll'f~ Ill bold )

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Fairl an d .11·
lttl'\'r \'.illc \

tairlaml .1 1
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Fed eral Hocking

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Fairland .l l
R1 u1 \ '. dln

I 1ha n \Col ~·~~~~

f',K l ,lt

Poca .11

Hoover

l ktbo:rt l tL"l\l'r

.11

G reen

11

( ;,1\11,1

! 1heny R.tktJ,!;h
.If Waha nia
Con i Gro\'c

Beth Sergent

Pa~in;~l or

Record: 37-23
Last Week : 5-5
(winne~ in h2ld)

R t'Cord: -U-17
L1 s1 Week : 6-4
(wmul."rs in h2ld)

R&lt;.:ord: 37-23
Lasr Week; 6-4
(winners in luWl)

Ga!liJ Aolklll\

Ga. llia Academy

.11 ~

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Sm;c h Pu1nt
l' o.d ( ;nwe

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Pot.·a Jt
I krhcrt H q&lt;'\W

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.It

Coa l Groye
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Hoover

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.;: Place

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at

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~

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Miller :lt

Southern

:i&lt;wllw:n

Mrip at

Mri&amp;t .at

M.ti.&amp;t Jt

Map :~t

Vimon Counry

Vinton Cou my

Vunon CuuUt)'

{[ribune

.,.- - ' - - - - - - -·_ _ __::O::.,r:,;
Fa:.;,x To

VintOn County

!lttm"

S01uh Ga.Uta
l'.mlt Pleasmt

Green at
South Go!lja

Somh Galha

Grt't'U at
Soytb Gallja

Ponll

Point P ko~s.tnt

Point

Pleasant

!iinn"

L ih ~rtY.

Libert}' Ra leigh
at Wahama

R.a ll·igh ,

at Wtihama

South Point

Soytb Pojnt

at

at Coal Cro\'t'

Cml Grove

Poca at

Poi:J ar •

Herbert Hoover

H erbert Hoonr

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

Jt ~):Dl

liherry R.tleigh
.tt Wahama

L1bcr.t)' Raleigh

So uth Poinl
Coal Cro\'t'

,1{

'· pol·.t at
Hcrbe[l Hooytr

HOW I.0 WRliE

Monday.:Frlday for Jnaertlon
Jn Next Day•a Paper

Sunday ln ..Column : ti:oo a .m .
flor S"nd•y• Paper

at

·100

r

•

fromPageBl

the receiving end of a 47-0
- beatdown at the hands of
the Tomcats.
Now Eastern will try to
: regroup and turn things
. around when i: takes on
.Federal Hocking (4-2. 1-0
. TVC-Hocking) Fnday night
-in Stewart.
·• The Lancers are comi ng
o ff of a sim ilar night.' but
they were on the giv1 ng end
_o f a massive 50 point night
. - their biggest offensive
outing of the ycur. Federa l
·Hocking put up some big
numb,e rs on Southern last
week in a 50-8 TVC. Hocking victory.
So fa r th is season th e
~ La n ce r s have beett very
. consistent on both 'ide&gt; of ·
· the ball , scoring and allow-ing 16 points pe r game. Fed
Hock has victories over
:Athens' ( 16-0). Fort ' Frye
(28-20 OT J. St. Peter
: C hanel 03-8 ) and Southem
~5 0 -8) whi le sufferi ng set. b ac ks to Alexander (27 -01
.. and C~ld wel l (32-7). '
Federal Hocking is 1- 1
·aga inst Divi,ion IV pro. g rams this yea r and has
played a ~chedu l e with a
• combined record ol If&gt;-20.
The La n ~ers are led by
· Burke and Wilder who had
a ni ce ni ght las·t week
agains t th e Tornadoes .
Burke carried the ball HI
ti mes for 6 7 y'ards ;md
_Wilder had ni ne caiTies lo r
54 yards. Torrence led
_F I-ll-I S throug h the ai r with
52 yards on a perfect 5-nf-5
-passing.
· Eastem. on the ot her
hand . wi ll be "ttymg to eve n
:thi ngs out after two very
• dtfferent outings. The
_. Eag les came into last
Friday's contest riding a 49·8 victory over Hannan
before turning around and
gtvmg up similar numbe rs
to Trimble.
Eastern 's other win came
. against South Gallia (35-8)
while giving up losses to
. Alexander
(4R-14),
Wahama (47-19) and River
, Valley ( 14:0). The Eag les
: are averagmg. 19.5 points
. per game wh1le giving up
28.6.
Eastern 's opponents so far
:th is season are a combined
15- 18. Kitk' off is sched·uled for 7:30p.m.
MEIGS TRAVELS TO

VC

'·

1 1, 1 ,

for sundaye

..

•el l

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Waterproofing

"Saturday Morning Sports Clinics"
9:00 am
:· : ·

·Ohio

B~o~alneaa Daya Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00

a.-t

C•

Divi sion IV, Region 15
playoff rankings.
GAHS , however, will not
be the only team with playoff considerations in this
matchup, as the C~valiers
(4-2 , 3-0 SEOAL) enter
Friday fresh off a 17-9 victory over Ironton - which
catapulted them to seventh
in Division Ill, Region 12.
CHS is also - along with
Logan - the only remaining SEOAL programs without a league loss this season.
The Cavaliers are averaging 19.8 points per game
offensively and allowing
18.7 points as a defense
overall, but CHS has fared
agai'nst
much
better
SEOAL foe s - surrendering just 14.7 points per .
game defensively while
scoring 25 pomts on
offense.
The Cavs have played
opponents that have combined to go 21- 15 overall .
this fall . CHS is also 1-1 at
Hernnstein Field this season and has won .its last
three contests overall '
Chillicothe has wins over
Big
Walnut
(24-20) ,
Zanesville .
. (24-21),
PortSfTlOUth (34- 14) and
Ironton . CHS also has losses against Brook:haven (147) and Sheridan (34-14) .
Senior quarterback Caleb
Knights (6-foot-2, . 181
pounds) is the catalyst of
th e
offense .
Knights
amassed 155 total yar~s of
offense last week - including ll9 ru shing · yards
against Ironton . Knights is
Chillicothe 's all-time leading passer in 'school history,
Senior running back Enc
Young (5-10 , 171). also
churne~ out 141 rushing
yards in last week's win as
well.
. ·
The . Devils enter Friday
averaging 19 .2 points and
227 total yards per game
of(en sively, while allowing
25 .5 points and 288 .8
yards as a defensive unitGallia Academy's opponents are ,also a combined
20-15 this season . GAHS
is also 1-2 on the road this
year.
This will be the fifth
consecuti ve
meeting
between Chillicothe and
Gallia Academy, with CHS
holding a 3- 1 advantage
over that span - including
two straight wins. GAHS
has yet to win in two trips
to Hernnstein Field since
the latest series began back
in 2004.

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

«POLICIES«

Herbert Hgoyer

Get back into action with
Dr. Kelly Roush, Certified Chiropractic Sports Physician.

Those }asses came against
Tolsia , W.Va. (21 - 14) ,
Sheldon Clark, Ky. {29-28) ,
and
Meigs
(26-23)
Portsmouth West (21-0).
Despite the . 1-4 record ,
Fairland is still racking up
an impressive 22 .8 points
per game while surrendering 24.4 points .
The ·Dragons are led on
the season by running backs
Alec
Warner,
Blayne
· Cornwell , Matt Bloqmfield
and Chad Fisher who have
·all surpassed 100 yards on
the season . Cornwell leacls
•·Bryan Waltol'llllle photo · the backfield in scc:&gt;ring
South Gallia nead football coach Justy. Burleson, right, talks with three touchdowns
with his Rebels during a timeout during last Friday night's while Warner has chipped in
footb a ll contes t agai nst Buffa lo at Reb el Field in a pair of scores .
But while Fairland has
Me rce rville.
shown it can have success
when it hosts Frankli n · 11 6-24 over the past three running the ball , the
Furn ace Gree n on Senior weeks . .
Dragons spend most of their
Night du ring a Week 7 n(ln' It will be the final home time going to the air.
grictimn ga me fo r seniors BJ. Quarterback Cole Hatfield
co nfe re nce
matc hu p. ·
Stanley, Aaron Gwinn, has thrown for 622 .yards
The Re bels ( 1-5) are 0-3 Skylar Wilford , Jacob and five touchdowns on the
fi t home this vear and arc Dotson
and
Caleb year 'on 28-of-59 passing
c urre ntl y riding a three- McClanahan.
.with a majority of those
SGI-I S has also played passes finding Aaron Ward
game los1 ng sk id h cadi n ~
into
thi s
wee kend 's opponents with a combined who has 16 receptions for
matc hu p. The Bobcats. (2-3 ) record of J 7- 16 this season . 343 yards and two scores.
abo enter Friday night wilh Kickoff is sc'heduled for
River Valley will be try· a three-game los in g streak 7:30 p.m.
ing to snap an 18-game losand are 0-2 on the ,;,)ad this
ing streak in OVC play
year.
DRAGONS COME TO RV
when it faces the Dragons
G HS i.s ave rag in g 26.4
Friday -night. The Raiders
poi nts per game offensive ly
CHES HIRE - After a are averaging 12. I points
and al lowing 25.6 poi llt s as d isappointing loss at the
a defe nsive unit. After start - hands of South Po int last per ganie while giving up
ing the season 2-0 with wins week, th e Rive r Valley 29 .5 points per outing . Still ,
(&gt;ve r Mancheste r (55-301 Raiders will try to turn despite the big 'numbers
und 13 mch 135-6), the Green · things arouAd in a bi g way given up , the Silver a11d
and White have since gone 'when it, wraps up a three- Black have won two of t~e ir
in a' dow nward sp iral - . game home stand against last three.
Those .wins came against
dropp ing decisions to (] rove Fairland Friday night.
( 14-0)
and
Ci ty C hristian
(27 -6).
The Raiders (2-4, 0- 1 Eastern
(27,
7)
with
lossWaterford
Sou thern
(:1 1- 14)
and OVC) did not have the outSymmes Val ley (34-22).
ing they had hoped for last es to South Point (42-6),
Gree n's opponents have a weekend, fa lling 42-6 to the Meigs (53-20) , Oak · Hill
combi ned reco rd of 11 -18 visiting' Pointers in a game (33-0) and Minford (42:6).
overal l. Green also had a where nothing seemed to ·go Those or.ponents are a combye on its schedule in Week right. RVI-IS did manage to bined 2 -15 on the year.
Kick-off for Friday's
2.
. rack' up over 200 yards in
game
is scheduled for 7:30
The Bobcats· offen.se is offense, but couldn' t turn
p.m.
led by senior quarterback that into points.
Matt Clarke (5-foor- 11. 165
-Fairland ( 1-4, 1-0 OVC) .
pounds), who amassed 122 on the other hand, is coming DEVILS INVADE CHtLLtCQTHE
of Green's 202 total . yards off of its firs t win of the seaCHILLICOTHE
of o ffense last weekend son " 49-25 over winless
Viki ngs , Rock 1-lill last Friday. But Gallia Academy football
aga inst
the
Sophomore running back appearance can be deceiv- will make its final road trip
Chad Lew is {5- I0, 195) and ing as three of Fairland's of the 2008 gridiron season
junior tight end Caleb fo ur losses were by ·Jess this Friday night when it
Lewis (6-2. 165) are also than a touchdown with two travels to Hemnstein Field
formidab le weapons in the of those games decided by in ' Ohio 's First Capital
City' to battle Chillicothe in
Bobcat attack.
three points or less.
. The Red and Gold enter
Fairland has also faced a pivotal Southeastern Ohio
Friday's home finale aver- some stiff competiti&lt;m with Athletic League contest. .
The Blue Devils (4-2, 2· 1
ag ing I I points per game its currents opponents rackSEOAL)
have won two
up
a
combined
1810
offensively
and
are
also
ing
REB ELS HOST GREEN
straight
decisions
overall
allowing 32 points per game record on the year. Take out
as a defense. Si nce their Rock 1-lil l's .winless season - both of wh ich have been
'
MERCERV ILLE
South- Gal lia footbal l will lone win { 14-0) in Week 3 and Fairland's four losses SEOAL games - and enter
make its fin&lt;tl appearance a1 agains t .' Southern, · the came agpi nst teams a com- Week 7 currentl y sitting .
fourth overall' in the
Rebel Field this Friday Rebels have been outscored b i n~d 18-4.

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off Centenary Ad. Name
brand ladies, men and lit·
tie gn1s clothing, horrie
decor, dinette se t, other
kitchen items, toys, misc.
9am-?

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740-446-3825
.,..-----~
RV

Service at carmichael
Trailers
740·446-3825

Garage sale- Oct. 2-4th,
M
d
01
9-? , at Jeremy Rose's on ~~~oto~rcy~~~~
CR2e. 1 mile from , '2oo7 ~onda VTX 1300R,
Racine, baby girl clothes, 1800
miles, black,
boys size 5. women &amp; $7800. 388-8380
mens c!ott1es. (all good ~~~--.~~~
bl'ands) toys, Christmas 2007 Kawasaki Ninja
decorations, · lots of 250 under 1500 miles
household, b~by items, red helmet and tank bag
much misc. G~al Prices! $2,800 740-645·1912
.,..-.,----..,..- 2007 Kawasaki Ninja
Garage/Moving
Sale- 250 under 1500 miles
Fifth &amp; Cedar. Oct. 1' 5• red helmet and tank bag
9am-6pm.
Chnstmas $2,800. 740-645-1912
items, counter stools, table &amp; chairs, computer
Atlli 11HJIII'I'
'hems, kitchen Items, 20Uil
charcoal gnll. m1sc items

"

•-~-, .

!O - 1~

Indoor 3 tamil'l yartl sale,
NJN
t-8a8-5S2-J34S
Oct 3-4, 8:30-4, Red ""'"""'-"iiii""'""';;;;;
Rose Greenhouse, Tor- 03 Stratus Automatic 4
.,.0!'--~---Galllpallt
Carew
All types home remode~
COI!tgl
C&gt; 2008 by NEA, Inc .
www.comlca.com
nado Rd. !off New High· cy.
$3000
OBO
Inn• from leaky ,taucats 1o (Careers Close To Home)
wau)
Racifle,
men's.
256-1
652
or
256-1233
r
·
new construction, 15+yrs Call Today! 740446-4387
women's, bbys 3T..:ST,
""---'--&amp; ..........
M•--•-vard
•-'Honda black
VTX $1300R
experience call MattD
1-800-2t4.Q452
....,_.
"""" -- ·
,. ...,.
namebrand Jr. gin's 2007
1800 miles
7800
M-N·S
Construction, · galllpoliSeiiMercoltege.&amp;dt.J
clothes, Antiques, guns, 388
(740}992·3437
01
Acc redn.dMember Accredl1Pick your own' canning Jet Aeration Motors re- 3 Family Yard Sale Oct. fumltufe &amp; lots o~ misc., ; :;;.;-83110:,;;;..._...,._ _
740-444-1308
~"'l~Coo;""~'"~·'~'"';;pond~"~
" tomatoes 7 peppers paired, new &amp; rebuiH in 3&amp;4, 9-?: t74 Salem watch tor siQns
97 Chrysler LHS autor-:-::-::=-:-::::-::::-., ~
SchOOls 1 2748 (Bell, Swael1 Banana &amp; stock. Call Fton Evans, St,Auuand,Bob Eads
matic, air. $1800 080 .
BARGAINS
Hot, Red, YellOw or 1-800-537,9526.
~~~~-""!:"~ Indoor ESiate Sale Fn &amp; 256-6002 or 256-1233
Oreen) $4 a bucket. - - - - - - - - 4 Family Garage Sale 2 Set Oct 3-4 741 Adams- 02 Honda Acoor&lt;l EX, 4
IN THE
Bring your own contain- H&amp;R Single BarrEH,"Long
20 &amp;p rt3. 2112 miles
554 East01.~1of ville Rd.· Mason, wv. dOor,
auto,
loaded,
ers or buy ours for $1 GA · Sportsman
.
o er on
· ' s, Bedroom suites, Hull &amp; 92,000 miles. 245-5526
.
Uvutoc::k
each. Troyers Produce, Aangeft 32~ Barre!, Rare, boys, babies, men &amp; McCoy Pottery, Oepres·
wood, wv, . References .~ CLASSifiEDS
17.1 Lakin Ad, Gallipolis, $195; Also have 12 Sil· women clothing &amp; coats. slon " Glass, Fostoria, 96 Caviler 2 door 4 cyl. 5
Required. E.O.E.
Black· pure bread Lirhou-· Oh : 9 miles West of Gal- ver
Dollars. Household Jtems.
Blinko and Fenton, other speed with ,.ar spoliel &amp;
sin heifers $700 each Upolis .. off St Rt . 141 (740}533-3870
glassware and crocks, sun roof, AJC, CD. Extra
~.._~..,.--....- Garage Sale 211 B Sl At
,
clean looks and runs
.
.
caJI JR 740256-8160 or Wate h lor canning toma· House Shutters, various 141 Oct. 2, 3, 4. Mens Household
furniture, great, with a 3 monttl
CLASSIFIED INDEX
304·751-6872
toes signs, Closed Sun- sizes $80, Whirlpool winter jacket, SlJ!ts, some antiques. . office warranty $2500. S &amp; S
IAgltl.........._......................................_...... 100 RtcrllliGftlt-....-....,_..................11100
days.
Washer
$75 sweaters, tee shirts. Mili· equipmenllmedical
Auto
8ai&amp;S
AnllOII-IIID .... - .................._,,.;.......... 200 ATV ...........................--......................... -...1005
Polled
Hereford
Bulls
&amp;
•
-....
304-675-5015
tary
clothing,
boots.
A
n·
equipment,
antique
pic·
tures and mirrors, wood 740·669·4605 call anyBlrtlldoyl~ .......-····-.....-.....-205 .. lllt:yetot......... _... _,. ............... ,_,............... 1010
4 to•• 5. ·months
p
klns an d Fa11 deoo- NEW AND USED STEEL tique furniture. Hartey bumer,gas
11
Htlt&gt;P'I Adl,,.,_,.,_,,.,_,..... ...... - ..........._ .... ,.210 . ._,~ ...-.......-..........-..........1015 Hefers. ""
n
ump
heating ;m
..•;_·-~..,..~-~
Old. call ~~ 2 2 4
·rat'JOns tor sa1e at ~u1e 51ee1 •p
A
b
DavidsOn
leather
jackets,
LOlli Found ...-...............-.......................... 2t5 c..por!RYI I Trtin .........-... --.-· ..·-·1D21i
!;J~Jams ,
lpe
e ar
stove,
decorative
waH fire
"
Mottooryllttonli You .. ,...._.....-....-............... 220 llotO! CjCIM ,_..............._.........................1025 .
a
Melon pateh on SR 141 , for Concrete Angle, sh1ns, helmets. Com- "'ace, ,.ewerly, 1925 8&amp;0 Pomeroy Police "Dept.will
ott
• ·111
9
1 1
G
1
11""'
1
Ch
1
Fl
e
s
puler
desks , sweeper, ""'
be a,uctionJng on
Nolloel .....................,,_,,,_,,,_...._.. , , _,,, ,_.~ Other ._,, .. ,_,,,,...,... ,,,,,.,,,,_,,,,_,,, ....... -.....1030
~~;;;;;;:;~....;;;;;~;;;;;
m1 es rom a ~ s. anne , at ar, leel
Aaitroati
lamp, tools, 2000 Jeep Grand Chero·a
Penonllt ...............................-....-............-230 Wlnt10 buy .......,_,_, ............ ,_,,,.,_,......1035
FREEitl Adult mother Open Thur . Sat.
Grating ~or Drains, Drive· ~m~isc~·~-:::'~~~~ camera's, gas grill, ~ee on OCt. 11,080
Warrtecl ... ,.- .......................................... ,,... 235 AutornotiVI ....... ,..,;,,,.,.,,.,..,,,,.,,,.,..,,, ,.,_.,2QOO
and
5
ptJpS, adul1 Masliff
__
•
d G
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Garage Sale flat 1op smoker, many o1her 10OOAM 81 Pomeroy Vii·
.....-.........................-...........-.....-.300 Auto -~;.. _...;......-·-··· ...-.........2005
with
5 r-r.ups, 3 American Hay, F...., S.. ' rain Scrap Metals Open Mon,
F stove, tables, home lnte- Items. All Sale Final Not lege Hali.Staning bid will
Appt~nceSeMoe .. _.............-......... ,.-.....-302 Autot ..............-... -...... ,, ... _,,_,.,.,..._... , .._20tO
Bul
l
dOg
pups. Hay sq. bales, 1st &amp; 3rd Tue,. Wed
&amp;
ri, rior,
longaberger, kids Responsible for AcCI· be $1500.Contact Chief
Automollve ......_..,,.........-... ·-···-""'-'""'-304 ClaAtc/Anttquo ........ -...-............ -......._,2015
4:30pm. · Closed clothes &amp; a k&gt;t more, Oct dents
740
669
42~
eam
·
BuHcllng Matlrllts ....,...,.._....-....-....._,,,.. 306 Corn-.:~t.lndltllrltt ..._..............,.......... 2020
• vu
cutting orchard grass mix Thurs, Sat &amp; sun. 1·3, 9 til 6, 576 Orcl'lard
Mark Proffitt lor details.
Busl.........-... ,_..,_.. ,,.._...._,,,_,,__,....-308 P11ti &amp;Accouo!tel,,_,.,,, _,,,, ,_,, ..... ......... -2025
~~":"!".,.....,.":""-~ ~xS
rolls
ins1
de
7
.4;:;
0
;.;·4;;46;.
·7;,;3;;;00::..,___
Hill
Ad.
GallipoliS.
~-~-"""!:~-.~ We have quality SUV's
Cttertng ............................._.........................310 Sporll Ulltty ........................... _......,_,, ......21130
9 wk. old puppies,free · to 740-446-2075
•
~~~~~:"""~~ Large Garage Sale. 11 3 with warranty Pnced to
Chtltl'liklorty Ctre ,,,_,,,.,_,........-....._..,..-3t 2 Truckt,_......-........ -.... -..... -.....-..... ,._, ......2035
good ~orne, 2 female . &amp; 1
Pole Bamh30x40x10 Fonly Winler clothes, Home In- Garfield His, Fri &amp; Sat. Sell Blazer, Saturn Vue,
C&lt;lmpulerl ...-...-.... ,_,,,.,_, ........._,,............3t4 Utility Trottors ............................................ 2040
mQ.Ie Will make good
Want To luv
$6,995,
ot er sizes,
ree len·or, tools, $3 a bag. 1 9am-4pm,
Household, Buick Rendezvous. VIsit
.,
... .t
........ 6
· ' Contractort ..................................................318· vn ................................................. ,_,......2045
farm dogs 304-812.()183 .
Lltllivery 877- 773-~
mile belowdam. Oct. 1-4 Kids, Tools, Pfaltzgraff us
a1
Jinllorlot_............-.......,.. ,_..,...3t8 'Hint to lHty ,,,_,,_,.,, .........................,,_,,2Q50
Wanted to Buy- Paw Remlng1on
Vlllan.a
Model
Ya~ Sale Oct. 4-S Knick
•··
(~ ookmo10rs.com) . qal\
_ Ellctrfclt ......-...-.................-.............._,_, .32Q W E11111 llslel._....... _ ............ -.......... 3000
CKC Registered Mini Paws, Black Walnuts, 11 12
~..;..-~~""!"~~ •. F1nlnctlt.-.... ,_....,...,.,_........................_. ...322 ~ Ptots.............,,,_,,,_,,,.,._,,..._30Q5
Dachshulldf! 2 long- ~C~al~l7~4~0-i:698~-606~0== ' ga. $30tl. Aeming- Knacks Curtains bed- Moving sale Oct. 3rd-41h, Slop
or
nd
ton
M
odel
1148-12ga.
spreads
etc.
Hem- 1Oa .,
v
Ad 740-446-0t03, 328 JackHoolttl ...................... ,,_............-.......... ,_,,, ...326 Cornmsrctlt ......_,_, ___,_, .. ,..............-..!OtO
199
haIred Ierne le 8 .,
50
a
$275. Both have 30 ln.
m-.....,m ance
:, son Pike.
...,
Hoitlng' Cootlng ..................-................:•.326 Condomlntuntl..--, .. ,_,_,, ..,_,,,,,._,,. ..... 3015
4 shorthaired males
full choke, nice guns. lock Ad. out Evergreen signs w111 be posted, 3
Home lmpnwtrntn11330
Far S. by Ownor..,..._ .. ,_......................3020
$300
First shots and
740-379.2660, if nc an- 4 family, 'rylurs-Sat. be- family. nice clean misc.
tiiiUIInct ................................ -....-............. 332 Houla fol' Slttl,.,_,, ,,.,,.,. ,.,,..,,.,,.,.,_, ..... ..3025 WOfmed. Please call
swer
, \eave message
side Meigs Carpet, Mld· items, (740l992·6833
Trvc:b
Lion SeMoe.......................... -,,.._,,,_,....:.334 Unci (ActMgi) .... -....-..............................!030
740·388-8445
· or
._.__,
dleport, Oh
~~~~~--~
.......,._.,,..................................331 Loll ..:.._......;.............................................. 3035
740-645-2396 may leave \
-·~
Stand·up tanning bed ~:;;;;;~~:""::'~~~ Oct. 1-5, 9am til ?, fum\- ~
Othtr Servtctl.. --............. -........ ,_,..... -..... 331 -to lHty ......- ...............-....._......._......3040
a message.
51200 740.367 7762
5·Family Yard Sate. Oct ture, cfothes, etc., 2nd 1986 Chevy 1 ton dump
",, PtumbfntQclttcll.... ; .... ,_.... _.................. ~ Reot Eollte Aonllts.........._.....-......._......35111
!!'"'-"!~-...,..-'""!'. Antique Aea Mai'Xet, Pt.
•
•
Syracuse. truck 4WO crew cab 460
3 &amp; 4. Rain or shine. Street. .
- Pi oll&amp;llanal Strnctt .....'....................... ;..... 342 Aplrtmenltffownhoullt ......................... 3505
eng&gt;ne call after 4PM
Free- , potbelly pigle1 Pleasant, Wl/ at 1he
WantTaluy
2534 Georges Ck. ~d. 740.992-7181
Roptlfl ....... ,.. _,,,_,,.. ,_...... -.......... _,,,.,,.,,.,,344 Cornrnorcllt .................. -......_,.. ,_.. ,, .. ,_,,.,,35t0
housebroken, has shot~ West Virginia State farm
La.dles 3 thru plus, mens ::-.~~"':':"~'""':~~ 441-Q568 or700-1744
Rooftng.... -......,,,,_,,,,,_, ...-.........._.. ,,....... 346 Co-umt--.......-.....-......................35t5
Museum, October 4th &amp; Buying tO?Is sell or trade lg. thru 2x. infant boy, girl saturday, Home Decor,
• · Securitj ,,_........... -............. -.... -.... -............ 346 HOUMI fol' ftont, .......................... ,_,,. ..... 3520
~~!'!' 5th hours:9-4, Advertis- mechanic-carpenter lawn 9-18 mo, 8·10 clothing. nice women's clothes ;i;;;;;;;;;Utll~ly~Trall~on~;;;;;;;;
• . Tu/A-ntlng ................ -......................... 350 Lind (Acrolgi)_.. ,_ ..,_.... ,.......-............... :J525
inll, Stoneware, Milk Bot· &amp; garden power tools. Curtains, Queen bed set, (16426), men~V- baby Utility Trailer $400 tmn.
T-ntertalnlllltlt ...-.............................352 Storegs••• ,...._,,,,. ............................... -...... 3535
ties, Collectibles, Free . Call 740~388· t 51 5 or cell rock. cassettes, west- Jtems 123 South ~arX
74().4 41.0988
l'tntnelot ....-..........-......_......,...._,,.,_,,, ,_,,,~ Willi to Alnt ....-...-... ·-··..·-···................... 3540
admission &amp; appraJsals, 74C·206·0320
ems, lots of misc.
l'tnoncllt S«YYcH-·····""'"'""'-····-···· ..-· . 405 Mlnuflctund Hou~ng ....................._,,,., ,41100
Dealer Space Available, ·- - - - - - - - ~~~~~-= Screws. nails, e leCt. sup·
~ , tnsullnct .......................... _,,.,_,.,, ....... _,,.,, 41 o Laii .............. _,, .. _.,_,,.,_,, .. ,,.......- ............ 4G05
Form Equipment
Contact Charlie Pari)', Absolute Top Dollar - sn- Combined Family Yard plies, toOls &amp; more, Oct. ~_.W;;;ant~;;Ta~luy.;;;~·;;;;;
llollly to Llnd,_,, ....,...._....................... ,_,.. l15 - ................................ ,,,_,,.,............... 4010
:=::-;;;;;;;;;;i;~==· ~ · (740)992-5088,
perry- verlgokl
coins any Sale October 4th 9-?? 3-4, 9am!3pm, 45555 SR Want to buy Junk Cars,
EduCIIton.-...- ... --.............-...·-····-·.. --... 500 lllnllll-··'" ""' '-"'-"'""'"'-'"' """'"'" ''''" 4015
ElY,
. INTEGRITY, colaCsuddenllnk.net
KI
K/
g~d jew· Parkin~ lot o1 the Mason 124, Racine,Oh
call 740_388-0884
eK
10 14 1
Butt.... ' Tracie Schaol .. -:..._,,,,_,.,,,...... 505 St!lol........... ,_,,.,,... ,_,,.,_,,.,_,,,, _,., ..~..... .
KIEFER BUILT,
airy dental gold pre .lao, V&gt;and St. Pt. Pleas· :!"'"...~~~~~ ~,;,;;;;,.:;;:;;,;;;~.,.....,....,.
· · • tnlln!Ciion l Tlllnlng ..-..........-...._...,_, .. 510 Sujlf&gt;llol..............,_,,,_,., ,................-..... 41125 VALLEY HORSE/LIVE·
19 35 US eu'rreney, ant. Plus size clOthes, Tuppe" Plains St. Paul
' - - t ,.....- ..............:,..._,,, ,_,.. ,....,....,_,_,,515 Ia Buy ,.,,_,.,_,_,.......-.....-............... 4030
STOCK
.TRAILERS, GIBBS
ANTIQUES· proot/mln1 sets, dla- household goods: baby UM.Ch. basement &amp;
Perlonl1 ....................................................... 520 Relort Proptrty......................................... 5000
LOAD MAX EQUIP· Also, restore tumiture, lo- moods, MTS Coin Shop. clothes, items, children yard
sale,
Oct.
Anlmlll ... ,_... ,.........................................-...100 AM«~ Proporiy tor ....,.,,._,,,_,.,,,_, .... 1015
MENT
TRAILERS,
cated
on
T
ornado
Ad
off
151
.2nd
Avenue,
G
alli·
clOthes
ot
all
s~es.
deco·
3rd-9am-7pm,
·
Oct
.
,4111 :=~=~=~=
Animal Suppltu ... _.. ,,,_............,..._........... eos P!opofty tor rent ....-.....-.............. 5050
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; At.
33,
Racine
rations, Home Interior, &amp; 9am-2pm, cloth1ng, fum1Commerdal
446 2842
... .......-..................-..........-................ 610 Emptoymont. ...................-............ -.:.....-..eooo
HOMESTEADER
(Par11:&amp;Ride)
exit,
polif.
"
m
ore,
m
ore,
m
ore.
lure,
dishes.
books
&amp;
Ll'llltoctt.....-....-..... _.....-... -....-...............615 -.ntlf9!'1nonctot ... ,_.....................-... 6008
CARGO/CONCESSION
740-949-2246
Yord Sale
mise
For sale or lease
~ Pets ................................................:........:.....620 AdrnlnillrltlvtiProfHionat .....................6004
TRAILERS.
· S.W
Fnday, Oct. 3 at 48 N41&amp;h ~":""-~...-~ oHicelwarah~useis1orage
Wont to buy......_,,,.,_,...........-..................-.625 Cuhlor/Ctertc................._...............,_.,_.. ,.611Q6
GOOSENECK FLATBED Fuel/ 011/ Coal/ 1.2 miles out Route 218. Ave. Middlepart, infant Wln1er Garage Sale greaj loca11on In GslllpoAgrtculture............._,, .................................. 700 CNfciiEiderly Corti ................-................... 6008
1oddle&amp;
$3999,
· VIEW OUR EN.Wood/ Gat
Oct. I , 2, 3. 4.
r . 1 c 101shln~m m;as~ SatOct.•.9:00Caldwelld's, lis. 1g00 sq. ft.
• Form Equlplllltlt....._, ....,......-•..•-... ··-· .. ··-·705 Citltcat ................................._................... 60t o
1
TIRE TRAILER INVENoys I em .
' ! VineSt,Racine.coats,MI , $400/month. Call W!i!yne
, .. a.dln &amp; Procluce.....:....................... ,_.....-710 CcJIII1ructlon.-.........-....._............ -......,.... 60t2
Seasoned FirewOOd, all 2 Family Yard Sale E. ~ca~nce
~ls~~~":"'':':::' s clotheS,crafts
404-451).3802
.. Hly, Food, St!ett, Grsln-.....-......................7t5 DrlYOrt! l Ootln!y .................................... 60t4 , TORYAT
WWW.CAAMICHAE Lhardwood $55 load Main Street, Pomeroy. Friday, Saturday &amp; Mon· -----""'!"--""'!"~~,;,;,;;;;;,,;;;;;;;,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hunting' Lind .............-....-......... ,_,,., _,. 720 Educattan......_, .. _, ..........-........................ 60t6
Yard
Sale
Fr(
&amp; Sa1 Oct •
._._
" Willi to buy-.. ,_... ~...... ,_,., ..,...._,;, .._.....-725 Ellclrlcll PlumtltttQ ...........:.. ,_,,,,_,.,.,.••6018
TRAILEAS.COM
304-882-2567
Oc1Hhru0ct.4 Wed.- Sat. day. Edrth Adklns, 56
Hous. FarPleasanl
Ridge Ad ~~~!1'".110!!;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;
MlrcttlndtN,., __,,..,......-....-.....,.... _.... ,.... 100 Em~Agonclol.....--.-·..·-·-·..··-6020 740-446-3825
2 laml~ yard sale, an- Hlld4, 9am·?, Glasstop 3&amp;4,
Galllnnils
Forry, WV
AnllqUII............................,_ ...... :........_.......tOS Ellllrtlit~~Nd.... - ................................ - 1022
Fvnoluro
llq . Na
""""' tables, Ubrary · tab~. ,-·-186 North Park Dr. call
~.
~~s
• ·· ~-~-"!~ 304~
m
Aflpttlnct,.,_,,,_..,.._,,............................. --110 FOCid SIIVIcM..... _,_,,.,_,_,_,,.._,_,,___IQ24
Have
you
priced
a
John
E
tHan
A
llen
Classic
Xmas,
Longaberger,
H
.H
~~
o
~y•
;
.;.
•
;;
btCyele
;;:.;;;;;
s
~-~~
Y
S
6
M!
out
Jerrys
R
un
304-593·
1204 Will sell on
Aucttons. ...........-..,..__ ,_,.........,_.,............115 • eo.....,.,,'-- ....... -........... 11021
Deere lately? You'll be M!J.nor dining table and Items,
Teny McGuire Garage sale, Oct. 1st-4th Ad. Apple Grove Oct 2-4 land Contract or." Out
B11911t1 Bllllllltlt.........:._..........................l20 Hltp lnfld. .......- .......................-11021
surprised' Check out our tour cha&gt;rs,n.
...... . . Anne 40720 Laurel Cliff Rd., Whites H1ll Ad .. Rutland, 9-? Lot of Misc. Items Right. Also a We!Hngton
Cottootlblol ............................ -...... -...-.. -·-925 Low Ettlaicomont ........................ _, ........ l030
~·
used
Inventory
at style trom 1970's, $450, Tl'l urs., Fri &amp; Sat, 9-?
9-?, rain orsh1ne
Plano ~II for appointCornputlil ..-......................................-.......930 - -•. -........... -............11032
EqutpmtrtVS!Ippttu.........-................ ,__,,..135
IOM . www. CAREO.com.
Car- (?40)992·7536
3 Family Yard Sale 2209. Garage Sale, Rain or
ment to see ltl&amp;m bOth.
~ F1o1 Mlrktiii ..................... :....................... ,,MO Mec!Mllcl.-... ·-·· ..................,_..,, ....._.......103&amp;
mtcliael
Equipment
Jefferson Ave. 9·5, Shine,. Oct. 3 &amp; 4. Home
, FUll 011 COIVW~ ............................. 1145 Mldlclt ......-.................... ,_....,.........-........11038 • 740-446-2412
MiiCttkmiOUI
ThurfFriiSat.,·
furniture, Decor, Americana, cloth·
1 Yr old SR 588 tor more
Furniture .....-................:..............-........... ,_ 960 Mulilclt ......-...-............... -..... -........_.......6040
exercise bi~e,high chair, lng. toys, DVD's, VHS, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Info and pictures go to
Berber Ca'POI $6.95 yd. baby clothes,household lots o1 misc. 650 Trails
.Hobby.liunt l Spolt ......... -.........................955 Ptrt-Titnt-Tomporlliol ... -....._.................1012
Garden . &amp;~ ...
ATV•
www.orvb.com
1.0.
carpet remnants $40.00
Kld't Comer·-····-·.................. -......,.... _,.,.,,110 R1111Urt1nt1 ..._,,,_ .. ,,....,................._.. ,......6044
items,
crafts.
mens
&amp; End Ad (Co. Rd 444) 1 =~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-:=~ Brownlns 740.4*7204
- -.... -............._.... -...........-.....916 Stlol ...-.............. _,,.,,.,_, ..........._...,.. ,_,,....1114t
Kiwi lust E. of Syracuse &amp; up. Mollohan carpet womens name brand mite off Buckeye Hills ,4 Wheeler, Honda For- 3br. 1 bath, Needs-some
Wont to lHty............,..._.,......... -.... -.....,_.....170 Ttchtllclt TrociM_,,, __ ,,_,,.,_..... ,...........IOSO
on St.
Rt.
124, 2212 Eastem Ave. Galli· clothes. tots of good Rd. Thurman, Follow man ES, shift , exce l\~ Work, large lol, $25LOOO
• Ylrd Silo ..... -.... -...,._,,,,.,_................. _, .....175 Tslllloi'F-, ........ ~.............................. 8052
(740)992-7449
polls, Ohio 740-446·7444 stuff.
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condition. 304-812-5105 304-862-2688

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YGUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

6fi A2

Previous C hampions - 2001: Butch Coope r. 2002: Bu tch Cooper. 200.&gt;: Brad Sherman. 2004: Brad Sherman , 2005 : Bryan Walters, 2006 : Brad Shennan, 2007: Dave Harris.

McART HUR - The road
has not hee n kind to Meigs
football over the past two
weeks, and. this Friday will-,
mark the e nd of a threegame · road stretch for the
Marauders when they travel
north to take on Vinton
C6 unty during a · Week 7
Tri -Valley Conference Ohio
Division grid iron contest.
· The Marauders (4-2, 1- 1
TVC Ohio) ~ who started
th e year 4-0
have
dropped back-to-back road
heartbreakers .
to
Ne lsonville-York ·· (30-28)
and Warren (3 1-22) a11d
now face a yo11ng Vikings
squ ad that in the midst of
some stru gg les.,of their ow n.
. VCI-I S ( 1-5, 0 -2) has
d1;op pcd live stra ight decisions after opening the year
w i t~ a 39- 19 victory over
Un ioto, hu t has bee n
o utscored hy a combined
total of .150-40 over the last
ri ve weeks in losses to
IJloom Carroll (39-8),
Jackson (27-0), Waverl y
(35-7). At hen., (25- 17) and
We l!ston (24-H). Tnose si x
opponent s also have a combined overal l record of 1422 this year.
The Maroon and Gray are
ave ragi ng j ust .11 .5 points
per game while allowing
28.2 points as a defense.
Las t week a1o ne. the
Vikin~' allowed 274 total
yards 'defensively - all but
six
of
which , came
We llston\ rushi ng attack.
The V1 kes are led offensively by junior'quarterbac k
Andy' Grill o. who had ~5 of
the team 's 154 tota l yards
last week against WI-IS.
The Marauders, enter
Friday ave rag ing 28.8
points and 324.3 total yards
offensively and are giving
up 20 .7 poin ts and 268.3
total yards defensively.
Meigs' opponents are also a
co mbined 16- 19 overall.
MI-lS is currently· lOth in
the Division II, Region 15
playoff ran kings.
Vinton County does have
history on its' side goi ng
into this Homecom ing
weekend as MHS is just 1-5
in the last six contes ts .
VCHS has also won the last
two meetings · overall, as
well a; the las t three in
McArthur. Kickoff is scheduled for 7JO_p.Jtt.

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Should lnc:lude These Items
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C oal Grove
PocJ

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157 .

1UccenruTA'ds -

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Dally In-Colun,n: 9 :00 a .m .

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· call~::;... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

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Stacey Walton

Rt'porter

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· Record: 5-5
L rt~ r Week: 40-20
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In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR
OW ONLINE

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�•

;

P~tge 82 • The ifaily Sentinel

Thursday, October 2, 2008 ·

www.m ydailysentinel.com

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•

_Thursday, .October 2, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B;J

t!r:ribune .. Sentinel - l\egister
C_·L A S S I F I E D
OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S HIGH SCH OOL FOOTBALL GAMES

C harlie Shepherd

Larry Cru m

, Brya n Walten

'-'~l'tln'

Sports Wnrn
R ecord: -N - 11

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.If Waha nia
Con i Gro\'c

Beth Sergent

Pa~in;~l or

Record: 37-23
Last Week : 5-5
(winne~ in h2ld)

R t'Cord: -U-17
L1 s1 Week : 6-4
(wmul."rs in h2ld)

R&lt;.:ord: 37-23
Lasr Week; 6-4
(winners in luWl)

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Ga. llia Academy

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Herbert Hoover

H erbert Hoonr

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

Jt ~):Dl

liherry R.tleigh
.tt Wahama

L1bcr.t)' Raleigh

So uth Poinl
Coal Cro\'t'

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'· pol·.t at
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HOW I.0 WRliE

Monday.:Frlday for Jnaertlon
Jn Next Day•a Paper

Sunday ln ..Column : ti:oo a .m .
flor S"nd•y• Paper

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·100

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fromPageBl

the receiving end of a 47-0
- beatdown at the hands of
the Tomcats.
Now Eastern will try to
: regroup and turn things
. around when i: takes on
.Federal Hocking (4-2. 1-0
. TVC-Hocking) Fnday night
-in Stewart.
·• The Lancers are comi ng
o ff of a sim ilar night.' but
they were on the giv1 ng end
_o f a massive 50 point night
. - their biggest offensive
outing of the ycur. Federa l
·Hocking put up some big
numb,e rs on Southern last
week in a 50-8 TVC. Hocking victory.
So fa r th is season th e
~ La n ce r s have beett very
. consistent on both 'ide&gt; of ·
· the ball , scoring and allow-ing 16 points pe r game. Fed
Hock has victories over
:Athens' ( 16-0). Fort ' Frye
(28-20 OT J. St. Peter
: C hanel 03-8 ) and Southem
~5 0 -8) whi le sufferi ng set. b ac ks to Alexander (27 -01
.. and C~ld wel l (32-7). '
Federal Hocking is 1- 1
·aga inst Divi,ion IV pro. g rams this yea r and has
played a ~chedu l e with a
• combined record ol If&gt;-20.
The La n ~ers are led by
· Burke and Wilder who had
a ni ce ni ght las·t week
agains t th e Tornadoes .
Burke carried the ball HI
ti mes for 6 7 y'ards ;md
_Wilder had ni ne caiTies lo r
54 yards. Torrence led
_F I-ll-I S throug h the ai r with
52 yards on a perfect 5-nf-5
-passing.
· Eastem. on the ot her
hand . wi ll be "ttymg to eve n
:thi ngs out after two very
• dtfferent outings. The
_. Eag les came into last
Friday's contest riding a 49·8 victory over Hannan
before turning around and
gtvmg up similar numbe rs
to Trimble.
Eastern 's other win came
. against South Gallia (35-8)
while giving up losses to
. Alexander
(4R-14),
Wahama (47-19) and River
, Valley ( 14:0). The Eag les
: are averagmg. 19.5 points
. per game wh1le giving up
28.6.
Eastern 's opponents so far
:th is season are a combined
15- 18. Kitk' off is sched·uled for 7:30p.m.
MEIGS TRAVELS TO

VC

'·

1 1, 1 ,

for sundaye

..

•el l

kltnclrlylegcomcast .net

Money Ta Lend

guarantee Local references furn1shed. Established t975. Call 24 Hrs.
740-44&amp;0670, Roge&lt;s
Basement WaterprOOfing.

4 small dogs found in
NGTtCE Borrow Smart
Crown City area . 3 w11t1
Contact the Ohio Divicollars. 2 white 2 black,
sion of Finclnclal Institu2 look li ke they have
tions Office of Consumer
poodle
In
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Affairs BEFORE you re~i­
Superior . Home Malnte- nance your home or ob740·256-6515
nanoo.
,. Carpentry; tain a loan. BEWARE ol
Plumbing,
Electrical, requests tor any ~ttrge
Rentals, ,No JOb to Small advance payments . · ot
NOTICE . OHIO VALLEY Aeasooabfe
Prices.· tees or msurance. Call
PUBLISHING CO. rae- 339-3442 or 446-2805 ,
the Office of consumer
ommends that you do
Attiars toll free at "
business with people you
Olhtr Selftcls
1-866-278-0003 to learn
know, and NOT to send
money throunh the mail P'et Cremations. Cal if the mortgage broker qr
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740-446-3745
lender is proper1y li~ntll you ~ve lnvestlgat· .
cen&amp;ed. (This 18 a public
George's Portable Saw- service
announcement
mill, dool haul your Logs
1he Ohio Valley
to the Mill just call P~~:;;g;eom~pany)
304-675-1957
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Thurt~dav

Waterproofing

"Saturday Morning Sports Clinics"
9:00 am
:· : ·

·Ohio

B~o~alneaa Daya Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00

a.-t

C•

Divi sion IV, Region 15
playoff rankings.
GAHS , however, will not
be the only team with playoff considerations in this
matchup, as the C~valiers
(4-2 , 3-0 SEOAL) enter
Friday fresh off a 17-9 victory over Ironton - which
catapulted them to seventh
in Division Ill, Region 12.
CHS is also - along with
Logan - the only remaining SEOAL programs without a league loss this season.
The Cavaliers are averaging 19.8 points per game
offensively and allowing
18.7 points as a defense
overall, but CHS has fared
agai'nst
much
better
SEOAL foe s - surrendering just 14.7 points per .
game defensively while
scoring 25 pomts on
offense.
The Cavs have played
opponents that have combined to go 21- 15 overall .
this fall . CHS is also 1-1 at
Hernnstein Field this season and has won .its last
three contests overall '
Chillicothe has wins over
Big
Walnut
(24-20) ,
Zanesville .
. (24-21),
PortSfTlOUth (34- 14) and
Ironton . CHS also has losses against Brook:haven (147) and Sheridan (34-14) .
Senior quarterback Caleb
Knights (6-foot-2, . 181
pounds) is the catalyst of
th e
offense .
Knights
amassed 155 total yar~s of
offense last week - including ll9 ru shing · yards
against Ironton . Knights is
Chillicothe 's all-time leading passer in 'school history,
Senior running back Enc
Young (5-10 , 171). also
churne~ out 141 rushing
yards in last week's win as
well.
. ·
The . Devils enter Friday
averaging 19 .2 points and
227 total yards per game
of(en sively, while allowing
25 .5 points and 288 .8
yards as a defensive unitGallia Academy's opponents are ,also a combined
20-15 this season . GAHS
is also 1-2 on the road this
year.
This will be the fifth
consecuti ve
meeting
between Chillicothe and
Gallia Academy, with CHS
holding a 3- 1 advantage
over that span - including
two straight wins. GAHS
has yet to win in two trips
to Hernnstein Field since
the latest series began back
in 2004.

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

«POLICIES«

Herbert Hgoyer

Get back into action with
Dr. Kelly Roush, Certified Chiropractic Sports Physician.

Those }asses came against
Tolsia , W.Va. (21 - 14) ,
Sheldon Clark, Ky. {29-28) ,
and
Meigs
(26-23)
Portsmouth West (21-0).
Despite the . 1-4 record ,
Fairland is still racking up
an impressive 22 .8 points
per game while surrendering 24.4 points .
The ·Dragons are led on
the season by running backs
Alec
Warner,
Blayne
· Cornwell , Matt Bloqmfield
and Chad Fisher who have
·all surpassed 100 yards on
the season . Cornwell leacls
•·Bryan Waltol'llllle photo · the backfield in scc:&gt;ring
South Gallia nead football coach Justy. Burleson, right, talks with three touchdowns
with his Rebels during a timeout during last Friday night's while Warner has chipped in
footb a ll contes t agai nst Buffa lo at Reb el Field in a pair of scores .
But while Fairland has
Me rce rville.
shown it can have success
when it hosts Frankli n · 11 6-24 over the past three running the ball , the
Furn ace Gree n on Senior weeks . .
Dragons spend most of their
Night du ring a Week 7 n(ln' It will be the final home time going to the air.
grictimn ga me fo r seniors BJ. Quarterback Cole Hatfield
co nfe re nce
matc hu p. ·
Stanley, Aaron Gwinn, has thrown for 622 .yards
The Re bels ( 1-5) are 0-3 Skylar Wilford , Jacob and five touchdowns on the
fi t home this vear and arc Dotson
and
Caleb year 'on 28-of-59 passing
c urre ntl y riding a three- McClanahan.
.with a majority of those
SGI-I S has also played passes finding Aaron Ward
game los1 ng sk id h cadi n ~
into
thi s
wee kend 's opponents with a combined who has 16 receptions for
matc hu p. The Bobcats. (2-3 ) record of J 7- 16 this season . 343 yards and two scores.
abo enter Friday night wilh Kickoff is sc'heduled for
River Valley will be try· a three-game los in g streak 7:30 p.m.
ing to snap an 18-game losand are 0-2 on the ,;,)ad this
ing streak in OVC play
year.
DRAGONS COME TO RV
when it faces the Dragons
G HS i.s ave rag in g 26.4
Friday -night. The Raiders
poi nts per game offensive ly
CHES HIRE - After a are averaging 12. I points
and al lowing 25.6 poi llt s as d isappointing loss at the
a defe nsive unit. After start - hands of South Po int last per ganie while giving up
ing the season 2-0 with wins week, th e Rive r Valley 29 .5 points per outing . Still ,
(&gt;ve r Mancheste r (55-301 Raiders will try to turn despite the big 'numbers
und 13 mch 135-6), the Green · things arouAd in a bi g way given up , the Silver a11d
and White have since gone 'when it, wraps up a three- Black have won two of t~e ir
in a' dow nward sp iral - . game home stand against last three.
Those .wins came against
dropp ing decisions to (] rove Fairland Friday night.
( 14-0)
and
Ci ty C hristian
(27 -6).
The Raiders (2-4, 0- 1 Eastern
(27,
7)
with
lossWaterford
Sou thern
(:1 1- 14)
and OVC) did not have the outSymmes Val ley (34-22).
ing they had hoped for last es to South Point (42-6),
Gree n's opponents have a weekend, fa lling 42-6 to the Meigs (53-20) , Oak · Hill
combi ned reco rd of 11 -18 visiting' Pointers in a game (33-0) and Minford (42:6).
overal l. Green also had a where nothing seemed to ·go Those or.ponents are a combye on its schedule in Week right. RVI-IS did manage to bined 2 -15 on the year.
Kick-off for Friday's
2.
. rack' up over 200 yards in
game
is scheduled for 7:30
The Bobcats· offen.se is offense, but couldn' t turn
p.m.
led by senior quarterback that into points.
Matt Clarke (5-foor- 11. 165
-Fairland ( 1-4, 1-0 OVC) .
pounds), who amassed 122 on the other hand, is coming DEVILS INVADE CHtLLtCQTHE
of Green's 202 total . yards off of its firs t win of the seaCHILLICOTHE
of o ffense last weekend son " 49-25 over winless
Viki ngs , Rock 1-lill last Friday. But Gallia Academy football
aga inst
the
Sophomore running back appearance can be deceiv- will make its final road trip
Chad Lew is {5- I0, 195) and ing as three of Fairland's of the 2008 gridiron season
junior tight end Caleb fo ur losses were by ·Jess this Friday night when it
Lewis (6-2. 165) are also than a touchdown with two travels to Hemnstein Field
formidab le weapons in the of those games decided by in ' Ohio 's First Capital
City' to battle Chillicothe in
Bobcat attack.
three points or less.
. The Red and Gold enter
Fairland has also faced a pivotal Southeastern Ohio
Friday's home finale aver- some stiff competiti&lt;m with Athletic League contest. .
The Blue Devils (4-2, 2· 1
ag ing I I points per game its currents opponents rackSEOAL)
have won two
up
a
combined
1810
offensively
and
are
also
ing
REB ELS HOST GREEN
straight
decisions
overall
allowing 32 points per game record on the year. Take out
as a defense. Si nce their Rock 1-lil l's .winless season - both of wh ich have been
'
MERCERV ILLE
South- Gal lia footbal l will lone win { 14-0) in Week 3 and Fairland's four losses SEOAL games - and enter
make its fin&lt;tl appearance a1 agains t .' Southern, · the came agpi nst teams a com- Week 7 currentl y sitting .
fourth overall' in the
Rebel Field this Friday Rebels have been outscored b i n~d 18-4.

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SchoDI
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· Yard Sale

Garage sate, Sat! Oct. 4.
at 45 Porterbrook Lane
off Centenary Ad. Name
brand ladies, men and lit·
tie gn1s clothing, horrie
decor, dinette se t, other
kitchen items, toys, misc.
9am-?

Campen I RVs &amp;

Trailen
;;;;;;;;;;;..;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•
RV Serv~e at CafTI\1chael
TraileJS
740-446-3825
.,..-----~
RV

Service at carmichael
Trailers
740·446-3825

Garage sale- Oct. 2-4th,
M
d
01
9-? , at Jeremy Rose's on ~~~oto~rcy~~~~
CR2e. 1 mile from , '2oo7 ~onda VTX 1300R,
Racine, baby girl clothes, 1800
miles, black,
boys size 5. women &amp; $7800. 388-8380
mens c!ott1es. (all good ~~~--.~~~
bl'ands) toys, Christmas 2007 Kawasaki Ninja
decorations, · lots of 250 under 1500 miles
household, b~by items, red helmet and tank bag
much misc. G~al Prices! $2,800 740-645·1912
.,..-.,----..,..- 2007 Kawasaki Ninja
Garage/Moving
Sale- 250 under 1500 miles
Fifth &amp; Cedar. Oct. 1' 5• red helmet and tank bag
9am-6pm.
Chnstmas $2,800. 740-645-1912
items, counter stools, table &amp; chairs, computer
Atlli 11HJIII'I'
'hems, kitchen Items, 20Uil
charcoal gnll. m1sc items

"

•-~-, .

!O - 1~

Indoor 3 tamil'l yartl sale,
NJN
t-8a8-5S2-J34S
Oct 3-4, 8:30-4, Red ""'"""'-"iiii""'""';;;;;
Rose Greenhouse, Tor- 03 Stratus Automatic 4
.,.0!'--~---Galllpallt
Carew
All types home remode~
COI!tgl
C&gt; 2008 by NEA, Inc .
www.comlca.com
nado Rd. !off New High· cy.
$3000
OBO
Inn• from leaky ,taucats 1o (Careers Close To Home)
wau)
Racifle,
men's.
256-1
652
or
256-1233
r
·
new construction, 15+yrs Call Today! 740446-4387
women's, bbys 3T..:ST,
""---'--&amp; ..........
M•--•-vard
•-'Honda black
VTX $1300R
experience call MattD
1-800-2t4.Q452
....,_.
"""" -- ·
,. ...,.
namebrand Jr. gin's 2007
1800 miles
7800
M-N·S
Construction, · galllpoliSeiiMercoltege.&amp;dt.J
clothes, Antiques, guns, 388
(740}992·3437
01
Acc redn.dMember Accredl1Pick your own' canning Jet Aeration Motors re- 3 Family Yard Sale Oct. fumltufe &amp; lots o~ misc., ; :;;.;-83110:,;;;..._...,._ _
740-444-1308
~"'l~Coo;""~'"~·'~'"';;pond~"~
" tomatoes 7 peppers paired, new &amp; rebuiH in 3&amp;4, 9-?: t74 Salem watch tor siQns
97 Chrysler LHS autor-:-::-::=-:-::::-::::-., ~
SchOOls 1 2748 (Bell, Swael1 Banana &amp; stock. Call Fton Evans, St,Auuand,Bob Eads
matic, air. $1800 080 .
BARGAINS
Hot, Red, YellOw or 1-800-537,9526.
~~~~-""!:"~ Indoor ESiate Sale Fn &amp; 256-6002 or 256-1233
Oreen) $4 a bucket. - - - - - - - - 4 Family Garage Sale 2 Set Oct 3-4 741 Adams- 02 Honda Acoor&lt;l EX, 4
IN THE
Bring your own contain- H&amp;R Single BarrEH,"Long
20 &amp;p rt3. 2112 miles
554 East01.~1of ville Rd.· Mason, wv. dOor,
auto,
loaded,
ers or buy ours for $1 GA · Sportsman
.
o er on
· ' s, Bedroom suites, Hull &amp; 92,000 miles. 245-5526
.
Uvutoc::k
each. Troyers Produce, Aangeft 32~ Barre!, Rare, boys, babies, men &amp; McCoy Pottery, Oepres·
wood, wv, . References .~ CLASSifiEDS
17.1 Lakin Ad, Gallipolis, $195; Also have 12 Sil· women clothing &amp; coats. slon " Glass, Fostoria, 96 Caviler 2 door 4 cyl. 5
Required. E.O.E.
Black· pure bread Lirhou-· Oh : 9 miles West of Gal- ver
Dollars. Household Jtems.
Blinko and Fenton, other speed with ,.ar spoliel &amp;
sin heifers $700 each Upolis .. off St Rt . 141 (740}533-3870
glassware and crocks, sun roof, AJC, CD. Extra
~.._~..,.--....- Garage Sale 211 B Sl At
,
clean looks and runs
.
.
caJI JR 740256-8160 or Wate h lor canning toma· House Shutters, various 141 Oct. 2, 3, 4. Mens Household
furniture, great, with a 3 monttl
CLASSIFIED INDEX
304·751-6872
toes signs, Closed Sun- sizes $80, Whirlpool winter jacket, SlJ!ts, some antiques. . office warranty $2500. S &amp; S
IAgltl.........._......................................_...... 100 RtcrllliGftlt-....-....,_..................11100
days.
Washer
$75 sweaters, tee shirts. Mili· equipmenllmedical
Auto
8ai&amp;S
AnllOII-IIID .... - .................._,,.;.......... 200 ATV ...........................--......................... -...1005
Polled
Hereford
Bulls
&amp;
•
-....
304-675-5015
tary
clothing,
boots.
A
n·
equipment,
antique
pic·
tures and mirrors, wood 740·669·4605 call anyBlrtlldoyl~ .......-····-.....-.....-205 .. lllt:yetot......... _... _,. ............... ,_,............... 1010
4 to•• 5. ·months
p
klns an d Fa11 deoo- NEW AND USED STEEL tique furniture. Hartey bumer,gas
11
Htlt&gt;P'I Adl,,.,_,.,_,,.,_,..... ...... - ..........._ .... ,.210 . ._,~ ...-.......-..........-..........1015 Hefers. ""
n
ump
heating ;m
..•;_·-~..,..~-~
Old. call ~~ 2 2 4
·rat'JOns tor sa1e at ~u1e 51ee1 •p
A
b
DavidsOn
leather
jackets,
LOlli Found ...-...............-.......................... 2t5 c..por!RYI I Trtin .........-... --.-· ..·-·1D21i
!;J~Jams ,
lpe
e ar
stove,
decorative
waH fire
"
Mottooryllttonli You .. ,...._.....-....-............... 220 llotO! CjCIM ,_..............._.........................1025 .
a
Melon pateh on SR 141 , for Concrete Angle, sh1ns, helmets. Com- "'ace, ,.ewerly, 1925 8&amp;0 Pomeroy Police "Dept.will
ott
• ·111
9
1 1
G
1
11""'
1
Ch
1
Fl
e
s
puler
desks , sweeper, ""'
be a,uctionJng on
Nolloel .....................,,_,,,_,,,_...._.. , , _,,, ,_.~ Other ._,, .. ,_,,,,...,... ,,,,,.,,,,_,,,,_,,, ....... -.....1030
~~;;;;;;:;~....;;;;;~;;;;;
m1 es rom a ~ s. anne , at ar, leel
Aaitroati
lamp, tools, 2000 Jeep Grand Chero·a
Penonllt ...............................-....-............-230 Wlnt10 buy .......,_,_, ............ ,_,,,.,_,......1035
FREEitl Adult mother Open Thur . Sat.
Grating ~or Drains, Drive· ~m~isc~·~-:::'~~~~ camera's, gas grill, ~ee on OCt. 11,080
Warrtecl ... ,.- .......................................... ,,... 235 AutornotiVI ....... ,..,;,,,.,.,,.,..,,,,.,,,.,..,,, ,.,_.,2QOO
and
5
ptJpS, adul1 Masliff
__
•
d G
ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Garage Sale flat 1op smoker, many o1her 10OOAM 81 Pomeroy Vii·
.....-.........................-...........-.....-.300 Auto -~;.. _...;......-·-··· ...-.........2005
with
5 r-r.ups, 3 American Hay, F...., S.. ' rain Scrap Metals Open Mon,
F stove, tables, home lnte- Items. All Sale Final Not lege Hali.Staning bid will
Appt~nceSeMoe .. _.............-......... ,.-.....-302 Autot ..............-... -...... ,, ... _,,_,.,.,..._... , .._20tO
Bul
l
dOg
pups. Hay sq. bales, 1st &amp; 3rd Tue,. Wed
&amp;
ri, rior,
longaberger, kids Responsible for AcCI· be $1500.Contact Chief
Automollve ......_..,,.........-... ·-···-""'-'""'-304 ClaAtc/Anttquo ........ -...-............ -......._,2015
4:30pm. · Closed clothes &amp; a k&gt;t more, Oct dents
740
669
42~
eam
·
BuHcllng Matlrllts ....,...,.._....-....-....._,,,.. 306 Corn-.:~t.lndltllrltt ..._..............,.......... 2020
• vu
cutting orchard grass mix Thurs, Sat &amp; sun. 1·3, 9 til 6, 576 Orcl'lard
Mark Proffitt lor details.
Busl.........-... ,_..,_.. ,,.._...._,,,_,,__,....-308 P11ti &amp;Accouo!tel,,_,.,,, _,,,, ,_,, ..... ......... -2025
~~":"!".,.....,.":""-~ ~xS
rolls
ins1
de
7
.4;:;
0
;.;·4;;46;.
·7;,;3;;;00::..,___
Hill
Ad.
GallipoliS.
~-~-"""!:~-.~ We have quality SUV's
Cttertng ............................._.........................310 Sporll Ulltty ........................... _......,_,, ......21130
9 wk. old puppies,free · to 740-446-2075
•
~~~~~:"""~~ Large Garage Sale. 11 3 with warranty Pnced to
Chtltl'liklorty Ctre ,,,_,,,.,_,........-....._..,..-3t 2 Truckt,_......-........ -.... -..... -.....-..... ,._, ......2035
good ~orne, 2 female . &amp; 1
Pole Bamh30x40x10 Fonly Winler clothes, Home In- Garfield His, Fri &amp; Sat. Sell Blazer, Saturn Vue,
C&lt;lmpulerl ...-...-.... ,_,,,.,_, ........._,,............3t4 Utility Trottors ............................................ 2040
mQ.Ie Will make good
Want To luv
$6,995,
ot er sizes,
ree len·or, tools, $3 a bag. 1 9am-4pm,
Household, Buick Rendezvous. VIsit
.,
... .t
........ 6
· ' Contractort ..................................................318· vn ................................................. ,_,......2045
farm dogs 304-812.()183 .
Lltllivery 877- 773-~
mile belowdam. Oct. 1-4 Kids, Tools, Pfaltzgraff us
a1
Jinllorlot_............-.......,.. ,_..,...3t8 'Hint to lHty ,,,_,,_,.,, .........................,,_,,2Q50
Wanted to Buy- Paw Remlng1on
Vlllan.a
Model
Ya~ Sale Oct. 4-S Knick
•··
(~ ookmo10rs.com) . qal\
_ Ellctrfclt ......-...-.................-.............._,_, .32Q W E11111 llslel._....... _ ............ -.......... 3000
CKC Registered Mini Paws, Black Walnuts, 11 12
~..;..-~~""!"~~ •. F1nlnctlt.-.... ,_....,...,.,_........................_. ...322 ~ Ptots.............,,,_,,,_,,,.,._,,..._30Q5
Dachshulldf! 2 long- ~C~al~l7~4~0-i:698~-606~0== ' ga. $30tl. Aeming- Knacks Curtains bed- Moving sale Oct. 3rd-41h, Slop
or
nd
ton
M
odel
1148-12ga.
spreads
etc.
Hem- 1Oa .,
v
Ad 740-446-0t03, 328 JackHoolttl ...................... ,,_............-.......... ,_,,, ...326 Cornmsrctlt ......_,_, ___,_, .. ,..............-..!OtO
199
haIred Ierne le 8 .,
50
a
$275. Both have 30 ln.
m-.....,m ance
:, son Pike.
...,
Hoitlng' Cootlng ..................-................:•.326 Condomlntuntl..--, .. ,_,_,, ..,_,,,,,._,,. ..... 3015
4 shorthaired males
full choke, nice guns. lock Ad. out Evergreen signs w111 be posted, 3
Home lmpnwtrntn11330
Far S. by Ownor..,..._ .. ,_......................3020
$300
First shots and
740-379.2660, if nc an- 4 family, 'rylurs-Sat. be- family. nice clean misc.
tiiiUIInct ................................ -....-............. 332 Houla fol' Slttl,.,_,, ,,.,,.,. ,.,,..,,.,,.,.,_, ..... ..3025 WOfmed. Please call
swer
, \eave message
side Meigs Carpet, Mld· items, (740l992·6833
Trvc:b
Lion SeMoe.......................... -,,.._,,,_,....:.334 Unci (ActMgi) .... -....-..............................!030
740·388-8445
· or
._.__,
dleport, Oh
~~~~~--~
.......,._.,,..................................331 Loll ..:.._......;.............................................. 3035
740-645-2396 may leave \
-·~
Stand·up tanning bed ~:;;;;;~~:""::'~~~ Oct. 1-5, 9am til ?, fum\- ~
Othtr Servtctl.. --............. -........ ,_,..... -..... 331 -to lHty ......- ...............-....._......._......3040
a message.
51200 740.367 7762
5·Family Yard Sate. Oct ture, cfothes, etc., 2nd 1986 Chevy 1 ton dump
",, PtumbfntQclttcll.... ; .... ,_.... _.................. ~ Reot Eollte Aonllts.........._.....-......._......35111
!!'"'-"!~-...,..-'""!'. Antique Aea Mai'Xet, Pt.
•
•
Syracuse. truck 4WO crew cab 460
3 &amp; 4. Rain or shine. Street. .
- Pi oll&amp;llanal Strnctt .....'....................... ;..... 342 Aplrtmenltffownhoullt ......................... 3505
eng&gt;ne call after 4PM
Free- , potbelly pigle1 Pleasant, Wl/ at 1he
WantTaluy
2534 Georges Ck. ~d. 740.992-7181
Roptlfl ....... ,.. _,,,_,,.. ,_...... -.......... _,,,.,,.,,.,,344 Cornrnorcllt .................. -......_,.. ,_.. ,, .. ,_,,.,,35t0
housebroken, has shot~ West Virginia State farm
La.dles 3 thru plus, mens ::-.~~"':':"~'""':~~ 441-Q568 or700-1744
Rooftng.... -......,,,,_,,,,,_, ...-.........._.. ,,....... 346 Co-umt--.......-.....-......................35t5
Museum, October 4th &amp; Buying tO?Is sell or trade lg. thru 2x. infant boy, girl saturday, Home Decor,
• · Securitj ,,_........... -............. -.... -.... -............ 346 HOUMI fol' ftont, .......................... ,_,,. ..... 3520
~~!'!' 5th hours:9-4, Advertis- mechanic-carpenter lawn 9-18 mo, 8·10 clothing. nice women's clothes ;i;;;;;;;;;Utll~ly~Trall~on~;;;;;;;;
• . Tu/A-ntlng ................ -......................... 350 Lind (Acrolgi)_.. ,_ ..,_.... ,.......-............... :J525
inll, Stoneware, Milk Bot· &amp; garden power tools. Curtains, Queen bed set, (16426), men~V- baby Utility Trailer $400 tmn.
T-ntertalnlllltlt ...-.............................352 Storegs••• ,...._,,,,. ............................... -...... 3535
ties, Collectibles, Free . Call 740~388· t 51 5 or cell rock. cassettes, west- Jtems 123 South ~arX
74().4 41.0988
l'tntnelot ....-..........-......_......,...._,,.,_,,, ,_,,,~ Willi to Alnt ....-...-... ·-··..·-···................... 3540
admission &amp; appraJsals, 74C·206·0320
ems, lots of misc.
l'tnoncllt S«YYcH-·····""'"'""'-····-···· ..-· . 405 Mlnuflctund Hou~ng ....................._,,,., ,41100
Dealer Space Available, ·- - - - - - - - ~~~~~-= Screws. nails, e leCt. sup·
~ , tnsullnct .......................... _,,.,_,.,, ....... _,,.,, 41 o Laii .............. _,, .. _.,_,,.,_,, .. ,,.......- ............ 4G05
Form Equipment
Contact Charlie Pari)', Absolute Top Dollar - sn- Combined Family Yard plies, toOls &amp; more, Oct. ~_.W;;;ant~;;Ta~luy.;;;~·;;;;;
llollly to Llnd,_,, ....,...._....................... ,_,.. l15 - ................................ ,,,_,,.,............... 4010
:=::-;;;;;;;;;;i;~==· ~ · (740)992-5088,
perry- verlgokl
coins any Sale October 4th 9-?? 3-4, 9am!3pm, 45555 SR Want to buy Junk Cars,
EduCIIton.-...- ... --.............-...·-····-·.. --... 500 lllnllll-··'" ""' '-"'-"'""'"'-'"' """'"'" ''''" 4015
ElY,
. INTEGRITY, colaCsuddenllnk.net
KI
K/
g~d jew· Parkin~ lot o1 the Mason 124, Racine,Oh
call 740_388-0884
eK
10 14 1
Butt.... ' Tracie Schaol .. -:..._,,,,_,.,,,...... 505 St!lol........... ,_,,.,,... ,_,,.,_,,.,_,,,, _,., ..~..... .
KIEFER BUILT,
airy dental gold pre .lao, V&gt;and St. Pt. Pleas· :!"'"...~~~~~ ~,;,;;;;,.:;;:;;,;;;~.,.....,....,.
· · • tnlln!Ciion l Tlllnlng ..-..........-...._...,_, .. 510 Sujlf&gt;llol..............,_,,,_,., ,................-..... 41125 VALLEY HORSE/LIVE·
19 35 US eu'rreney, ant. Plus size clOthes, Tuppe" Plains St. Paul
' - - t ,.....- ..............:,..._,,, ,_,.. ,....,....,_,_,,515 Ia Buy ,.,,_,.,_,_,.......-.....-............... 4030
STOCK
.TRAILERS, GIBBS
ANTIQUES· proot/mln1 sets, dla- household goods: baby UM.Ch. basement &amp;
Perlonl1 ....................................................... 520 Relort Proptrty......................................... 5000
LOAD MAX EQUIP· Also, restore tumiture, lo- moods, MTS Coin Shop. clothes, items, children yard
sale,
Oct.
Anlmlll ... ,_... ,.........................................-...100 AM«~ Proporiy tor ....,.,,._,,,_,.,,,_, .... 1015
MENT
TRAILERS,
cated
on
T
ornado
Ad
off
151
.2nd
Avenue,
G
alli·
clOthes
ot
all
s~es.
deco·
3rd-9am-7pm,
·
Oct
.
,4111 :=~=~=~=
Animal Suppltu ... _.. ,,,_............,..._........... eos P!opofty tor rent ....-.....-.............. 5050
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; At.
33,
Racine
rations, Home Interior, &amp; 9am-2pm, cloth1ng, fum1Commerdal
446 2842
... .......-..................-..........-................ 610 Emptoymont. ...................-............ -.:.....-..eooo
HOMESTEADER
(Par11:&amp;Ride)
exit,
polif.
"
m
ore,
m
ore,
m
ore.
lure,
dishes.
books
&amp;
Ll'llltoctt.....-....-..... _.....-... -....-...............615 -.ntlf9!'1nonctot ... ,_.....................-... 6008
CARGO/CONCESSION
740-949-2246
Yord Sale
mise
For sale or lease
~ Pets ................................................:........:.....620 AdrnlnillrltlvtiProfHionat .....................6004
TRAILERS.
· S.W
Fnday, Oct. 3 at 48 N41&amp;h ~":""-~...-~ oHicelwarah~useis1orage
Wont to buy......_,,,.,_,...........-..................-.625 Cuhlor/Ctertc................._...............,_.,_.. ,.611Q6
GOOSENECK FLATBED Fuel/ 011/ Coal/ 1.2 miles out Route 218. Ave. Middlepart, infant Wln1er Garage Sale greaj loca11on In GslllpoAgrtculture............._,, .................................. 700 CNfciiEiderly Corti ................-................... 6008
1oddle&amp;
$3999,
· VIEW OUR EN.Wood/ Gat
Oct. I , 2, 3. 4.
r . 1 c 101shln~m m;as~ SatOct.•.9:00Caldwelld's, lis. 1g00 sq. ft.
• Form Equlplllltlt....._, ....,......-•..•-... ··-· .. ··-·705 Citltcat ................................._................... 60t o
1
TIRE TRAILER INVENoys I em .
' ! VineSt,Racine.coats,MI , $400/month. Call W!i!yne
, .. a.dln &amp; Procluce.....:....................... ,_.....-710 CcJIII1ructlon.-.........-....._............ -......,.... 60t2
Seasoned FirewOOd, all 2 Family Yard Sale E. ~ca~nce
~ls~~~":"'':':::' s clotheS,crafts
404-451).3802
.. Hly, Food, St!ett, Grsln-.....-......................7t5 DrlYOrt! l Ootln!y .................................... 60t4 , TORYAT
WWW.CAAMICHAE Lhardwood $55 load Main Street, Pomeroy. Friday, Saturday &amp; Mon· -----""'!"--""'!"~~,;,;,;;;;;,,;;;;;;;,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hunting' Lind .............-....-......... ,_,,., _,. 720 Educattan......_, .. _, ..........-........................ 60t6
Yard
Sale
Fr(
&amp; Sa1 Oct •
._._
" Willi to buy-.. ,_... ~...... ,_,., ..,...._,;, .._.....-725 Ellclrlcll PlumtltttQ ...........:.. ,_,,,,_,.,.,.••6018
TRAILEAS.COM
304-882-2567
Oc1Hhru0ct.4 Wed.- Sat. day. Edrth Adklns, 56
Hous. FarPleasanl
Ridge Ad ~~~!1'".110!!;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;
MlrcttlndtN,., __,,..,......-....-.....,.... _.... ,.... 100 Em~Agonclol.....--.-·..·-·-·..··-6020 740-446-3825
2 laml~ yard sale, an- Hlld4, 9am·?, Glasstop 3&amp;4,
Galllnnils
Forry, WV
AnllqUII............................,_ ...... :........_.......tOS Ellllrtlit~~Nd.... - ................................ - 1022
Fvnoluro
llq . Na
""""' tables, Ubrary · tab~. ,-·-186 North Park Dr. call
~.
~~s
• ·· ~-~-"!~ 304~
m
Aflpttlnct,.,_,,,_..,.._,,............................. --110 FOCid SIIVIcM..... _,_,,.,_,_,_,,.._,_,,___IQ24
Have
you
priced
a
John
E
tHan
A
llen
Classic
Xmas,
Longaberger,
H
.H
~~
o
~y•
;
.;.
•
;;
btCyele
;;:.;;;;;
s
~-~~
Y
S
6
M!
out
Jerrys
R
un
304-593·
1204 Will sell on
Aucttons. ...........-..,..__ ,_,.........,_.,............115 • eo.....,.,,'-- ....... -........... 11021
Deere lately? You'll be M!J.nor dining table and Items,
Teny McGuire Garage sale, Oct. 1st-4th Ad. Apple Grove Oct 2-4 land Contract or." Out
B11911t1 Bllllllltlt.........:._..........................l20 Hltp lnfld. .......- .......................-11021
surprised' Check out our tour cha&gt;rs,n.
...... . . Anne 40720 Laurel Cliff Rd., Whites H1ll Ad .. Rutland, 9-? Lot of Misc. Items Right. Also a We!Hngton
Cottootlblol ............................ -...... -...-.. -·-925 Low Ettlaicomont ........................ _, ........ l030
~·
used
Inventory
at style trom 1970's, $450, Tl'l urs., Fri &amp; Sat, 9-?
9-?, rain orsh1ne
Plano ~II for appointCornputlil ..-......................................-.......930 - -•. -........... -............11032
EqutpmtrtVS!Ippttu.........-................ ,__,,..135
IOM . www. CAREO.com.
Car- (?40)992·7536
3 Family Yard Sale 2209. Garage Sale, Rain or
ment to see ltl&amp;m bOth.
~ F1o1 Mlrktiii ..................... :....................... ,,MO Mec!Mllcl.-... ·-·· ..................,_..,, ....._.......103&amp;
mtcliael
Equipment
Jefferson Ave. 9·5, Shine,. Oct. 3 &amp; 4. Home
, FUll 011 COIVW~ ............................. 1145 Mldlclt ......-.................... ,_....,.........-........11038 • 740-446-2412
MiiCttkmiOUI
ThurfFriiSat.,·
furniture, Decor, Americana, cloth·
1 Yr old SR 588 tor more
Furniture .....-................:..............-........... ,_ 960 Mulilclt ......-...-............... -..... -........_.......6040
exercise bi~e,high chair, lng. toys, DVD's, VHS, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Info and pictures go to
Berber Ca'POI $6.95 yd. baby clothes,household lots o1 misc. 650 Trails
.Hobby.liunt l Spolt ......... -.........................955 Ptrt-Titnt-Tomporlliol ... -....._.................1012
Garden . &amp;~ ...
ATV•
www.orvb.com
1.0.
carpet remnants $40.00
Kld't Comer·-····-·.................. -......,.... _,.,.,,110 R1111Urt1nt1 ..._,,,_ .. ,,....,................._.. ,......6044
items,
crafts.
mens
&amp; End Ad (Co. Rd 444) 1 =~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-:=~ Brownlns 740.4*7204
- -.... -............._.... -...........-.....916 Stlol ...-.............. _,,.,,.,_, ..........._...,.. ,_,,....1114t
Kiwi lust E. of Syracuse &amp; up. Mollohan carpet womens name brand mite off Buckeye Hills ,4 Wheeler, Honda For- 3br. 1 bath, Needs-some
Wont to lHty............,..._.,......... -.... -.....,_.....170 Ttchtllclt TrociM_,,, __ ,,_,,.,_..... ,...........IOSO
on St.
Rt.
124, 2212 Eastem Ave. Galli· clothes. tots of good Rd. Thurman, Follow man ES, shift , exce l\~ Work, large lol, $25LOOO
• Ylrd Silo ..... -.... -...,._,,,,.,_................. _, .....175 Tslllloi'F-, ........ ~.............................. 8052
(740)992-7449
polls, Ohio 740-446·7444 stuff.
Signs.
condition. 304-812-5105 304-862-2688

._.,. .

_,k..

1

............,.ponlloty . . . . . . _,. . . .

~

'

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslftedads
_;,;.
""
Borders $3.0()/perad
l!i
Graphics SOC for small
SI .00 for Iaroe

~

ads must be prepaid'

Uncondlt lonal l i~etime

•

YGUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

6fi A2

Previous C hampions - 2001: Butch Coope r. 2002: Bu tch Cooper. 200.&gt;: Brad Sherman. 2004: Brad Sherman , 2005 : Bryan Walters, 2006 : Brad Shennan, 2007: Dave Harris.

McART HUR - The road
has not hee n kind to Meigs
football over the past two
weeks, and. this Friday will-,
mark the e nd of a threegame · road stretch for the
Marauders when they travel
north to take on Vinton
C6 unty during a · Week 7
Tri -Valley Conference Ohio
Division grid iron contest.
· The Marauders (4-2, 1- 1
TVC Ohio) ~ who started
th e year 4-0
have
dropped back-to-back road
heartbreakers .
to
Ne lsonville-York ·· (30-28)
and Warren (3 1-22) a11d
now face a yo11ng Vikings
squ ad that in the midst of
some stru gg les.,of their ow n.
. VCI-I S ( 1-5, 0 -2) has
d1;op pcd live stra ight decisions after opening the year
w i t~ a 39- 19 victory over
Un ioto, hu t has bee n
o utscored hy a combined
total of .150-40 over the last
ri ve weeks in losses to
IJloom Carroll (39-8),
Jackson (27-0), Waverl y
(35-7). At hen., (25- 17) and
We l!ston (24-H). Tnose si x
opponent s also have a combined overal l record of 1422 this year.
The Maroon and Gray are
ave ragi ng j ust .11 .5 points
per game while allowing
28.2 points as a defense.
Las t week a1o ne. the
Vikin~' allowed 274 total
yards 'defensively - all but
six
of
which , came
We llston\ rushi ng attack.
The V1 kes are led offensively by junior'quarterbac k
Andy' Grill o. who had ~5 of
the team 's 154 tota l yards
last week against WI-IS.
The Marauders, enter
Friday ave rag ing 28.8
points and 324.3 total yards
offensively and are giving
up 20 .7 poin ts and 268.3
total yards defensively.
Meigs' opponents are also a
co mbined 16- 19 overall.
MI-lS is currently· lOth in
the Division II, Region 15
playoff ran kings.
Vinton County does have
history on its' side goi ng
into this Homecom ing
weekend as MHS is just 1-5
in the last six contes ts .
VCHS has also won the last
two meetings · overall, as
well a; the las t three in
McArthur. Kickoff is scheduled for 7JO_p.Jtt.

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Should lnc:lude These Items
To Help Get Response ...

So uth Poim
C oal Grove
PocJ

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157 .

1UccenruTA'ds -

:li·Wahama

,1\

l\egt~ter

Oea.d'tir~ .

Pleasant

J[ ~)!llt

at ~XD.I

ill ~l!D.C

Sentinel

Dally In-Colun,n: 9 :00 a .m .

Bi=YJilll'

Riw rVJlJey

446-3008

~

fJLrl. md at

.Ea.irlArul at

~

www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysenlinel .com
www.mydailyregister.col]l

· call~::;... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

at ~

Millt&gt;r at
~

. H~)n@

\\',tym·

·•r Wah .un a

l'k. 1~;m1

Ea st~m Jt

E·mall
classified@ mydailytribune.com

Stacey Walton

Rt'porter

Souther•

.11

\Li(lih (:,till,(

H ope Roush ·

Reporter

Millu at

;\ \iller .tl

Sout l)(•rn

.11

Pui nt P leasiffi!

. _, &gt;L1rh PnJnl
H ~· rb er l

Eastern ·at

~ .It
\ l tttnn { ' null!~

I'&lt;&gt;Hit P l~.,,, ,l; t
. ll~~

.It

.11 { 11

Pora .• r
f-krbo.:rt,lltH&gt;H'l

E.!\11.'1 1! .n

Rn ~·r \ .tlk~

So uth Poj n t
II ( ;n &gt;I \'

Sourh Poinr
.11 l'o.tllo tO\'&lt;..'

.h.W..d)

(1Vlllllt'l'\ Ill

~vt1\kr .1r
· Soulht·rn ·

Green

.tt~XD£

!\d . Rl'j' !'l''l' IJ;l(l \\'
1-!.l'nml: -LL 17
I .1~t \'(le d. ~ 7-3

Dianei'Ottortf
Reporter
· Record: 5-5
L rt~ r Week: 40-20
(wmncrs m b2.kl)
a t ~'

~outb

l'o1111

Harris

Callia Academy

'Fa irl;md

.1[

l'n)IH l' k.t,,IIH

hilld.J

M£W ,tt
\ 'tl lttlll l ' tJliiU\

\ ,11\n

Pnint J•J.-a,.uu

~ .lt

~

\ 'tJ J(&lt; •ll , .,, ll!lh

South Ga ll ia

Hl·rht• t r HIHl\'l'r

H. euml: .\(J- ]-1
1,J\f w~d·.; : :i-2

I ole' &lt; II I(

.11

lt.dm:.h
.tt Waha m &lt;l

. F..l~ll' rtl .11

Fedl.'ral Htwking

Rtll'T

\pt l rl' { ' t&gt; frl'~J'U I I(ktU

D~tve

.It~

l·.hfl'l'll .)t

birl..lrn..!1

hYJd)

. Gary C lark

l;,diu .'\ 1·.nknn

t;ilhJ ·\ , hll- 11 1\

South Ga lli a

lth ~ n,·

(\~ ltllll'T~ Ill

Mei1•s .If

.If

Vttttrln ( tlltnt\

Gn:c r~

:-. pt •rt ~ ( :ur r~·~ 1,, llld t' m
H.,,·curd · .17 - ~ \
IN We ~· \.. . f1 - -t

ll . t~tll.H I "

\l ti\&lt;.'1 ,: t
Sout hl'f!!

So ut her n

M.riaJ .11

Scott Wolte

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
YOUR
OW ONLINE

"'

..

�II-. for Sale
LOW 2BR 2 bath oo 3 ac.
-

.. 1
n

Rent

Free

Washer lnctuded 575,000

Clip this AD and take K

2&amp;38A
Air.

3BR.

with you when you visit
our comm·-· to get

..'40·446·7029

. . R.,
rhis special discount

2BA,

Many up·
Gf8"des , 5 mlhutes 1rom
new

Md11e-in in Oct and

GAHS

f139,()J(). 7411-245·5707
j!BR,2BA. 2 car gar
patio, ORIFR Relocating
J115.000. 741).446.()817

Apt 1n Nov. Currenlty
rent1ng 1 &amp; 2 BA units
SpaciOUS floor plans,
ranch &amp; townhOme style
living, playgroun d &amp;
basketball court. on-site
lau~llty, 24 hr
emergency maintenance, quiet country k&gt;cation close to major

mss

leave
FOr sale by owner. 312
tj&gt;me on 1/2 acre level
lot. Located at 3089 Bu·
Iaviiie Pike. At;rached ga·
Appraised
rage. .
$11·0,000
Asking
$98.500.
Call
~41!-446·4910

med1tal

~ree

faciht1es.

pharmacies, grocery
store ...just minutes
away from oltler major

Mouse lor sale in Chesler, 3 br.. · separate garage,
contact
&lt;
(740)98...-4
13 t
•
House With 2 acres in SA
•,60. Will consider l&lt;~nd
contract
441 -5062
or
3"'9-2923
'·
Nice 4 br, 2 ba -home qn
Kineon Dr In Gallipolis.
Quite neighborhood on
dead. end street. large 2
bar. garage and finished '
baSement. 740·256· 11 09

gei

$100.00 off your 2BA

shopping in the area.
Honeysuckle Hills

Apartments

266 Colonel Dnve N113
S.dwell. Oh1o 45614
740-446-3344

Office9AM
Hours
M, W, F
· 5PM

fi)
•

.

.

'-------...1

pays -..:. EHO Em HUO.
Vifiw

(304~-3017

Call

OWNER Ft· Call
AVAILABLE. 304-682-2645

Apts. 404-456-3802

ll Pt. Pt S45n'mo.,
(lap. req.. no pcttl, detached
garage,
wid
hookup :)04-8 12_5030 ()(
,
304-6 75-647•

Twin Rivers Tower Is accepting ajlplcalions . tor
waiting liSt 1or. HUO subsidized, 1-BR apanment
for . the elder1y/disabled, 3 Bd. house Jn Pomeroo;
can 675-6679
$400 dep . $400 a M,
S.utllul _,.., M Jlck- must

have 'good

refer- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

ton · EltiM. 52 wesr- ~e"""":.::e::;;·:7;4;::1!-;:7~42~·,;;1903~~~ &lt;llrioal
wood Or., fr6m $365 to 3 bd., 2 bllth, Po1Tl8foy, "!";;;;;;~;;;;;;!!""';;;~;;; (740)379-9083
$560 .
740-446-2568. basemer~t
wlgarage,' Clerical &amp; offioe posklooa 9am-3pm.

Equal Housing Opportun;:y. This institution is an
Equal OWortunity Provider and Employer.

~H;ou:;,se;;::.:.:.pa-ren~ts(~2~)w_a_m-.:ed

1624 rent
$400
deposit.
Chatham
A.ve.
(rear). 256-6408 or 441-0583 in
E ;;ka , ~~.,-~5325 (water. _sewer &amp; _,.;;Ur:e~
:garbage
includedl- New 2BR 2 bath Ul'\lor
,..,...
740-446-4234
or choic:D of ranting corn.
740-208-7861
plelely tum1shed &amp; all
Groclout Living 1 and 2 utilities paid or ·you proBedroom Apts. at ·Village
furn iture &amp; utilities.
M30or
and Riverside
Apts. in Middleport trom
$327
to
$592.
74D-992-5064.
Equal
Housing Opportunity

Land IACfla90)

~,....,.,....,.-~--~ References/DeposiVNo

2 bedroom Apartment &amp; Pets304- 675 _ 5 ~ 62
2 bedroom House on 5th ;..::;:.;;::.;,;:;:.:..;;.;,:;:;.._ _
St . 3048'
24350 ask. tor
Nowaccep"ng
- • ·
u
Don
applications at
~.-~.-~~~~
:
Valley View Apartmenls
2BA APT. CIA. (740)
BOO State Aoute 325
441 ;{) 194
Thurman, Ohio 45685
740-245--9170

2BA,

1.5 bath, back
~ooac .
+1- ·
on pa t1o, pOoL playground,
pallia/Meigs
Co..
OH (trash,
sewage,
water
.eorder.
Greal hunting pd .) $425/rent, $425/sec.

Tand.
1210.000 neg. dep. Caii740·3S7·0547
004·593·5260
,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ 3 rooms and bath upApprox. ·25 acres m/! re- slairs.
Completely fur·
mote.
rough
access. nished with WID . No
.$40K. Buyer must Sur- pels. Ref. Aeq. 44 1-0245
'Vey
Call after 5pm

Apanment available now
Riverbend Apis. New
Haven WV. Now acceptIng · applications
lor
Campers
&amp;
Motor HUb-subsidized.
one
HOmes lots for Rem · year Bedroom Apts. Utilities
304·895·3390

·round

1·2 Bedroom Apenments
with appliances furnished
On site laundry facility.
Call tor details or pick up
appliCation at rental

offloe

Possibility ol rental
assistance.
Equal Housing

Opportunity

;1:-8:8:8~61~~:953;

5

~~~===~~:!:::'

~a;;;t;;.
ioo;;;·,...,..,.-..,...
0_in~o
t ;;.rm
1need to fjnd (2) people
Jobs
needing a full lime job.
=a;;;;;~ !"!~;;;;; You need to be hohes1, a
Gow•nmMt &amp;

f~

$17.89-$28.27/HR.,

now

3500

up included. Based on 30%
of adjustOO income. Call
304-882-3121, available
Real Eslale
for
Senior and Disabled
RenliiiS

psopte.

·~

Apartmonll/

'Federal Funds ·Just re~ HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
teased for Land Owne·rs. or
%57Kfyr,
includes
N
1 ·
d Fed.Ben, OT. Piece by
o .c osmg cost an
ZERO DOWN I Will clo adSource, not affiliateC
land
improvements. with . USPS who hires.

3BA tocatec;f

!1!!-8!!66;,-40,;;3;,;·2;;;582=!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Holp -~~·' "-nora!
w·

$250 Sign on

3br, 2ba, Pt. Pleasant
area 304-273-6622 or
3br,

M-Home

on

Gun

Club Rd. New Haven.
$400 month, .$250 de-

posl1304·682·3121
$425 a mo., 1br.
$295 a rrio. plus dep ..
utiUtles &amp; references, -3rd
Racine,

St.,

(740)241-4292

·-·---·-

right direction. l need
people whO want10 wortt
and will show up for
work. II you are a-recent .
cOllege grad and cannel
finclemploymentandfeel
th 1
l'l~
a you~requal-...,
·
eh
gobrvelus a· ance until a
1 n your career path
becomes available. Call
Pat Hill, New

Car Man-

ager tor an Interview at

446·9800.

Votod TOP RVE Bell
to Wort In Ohio
for 20071

- a..............

ComoSHWhy
No Sales! No
_ColleclionS! Recruit
volunteers for non-profit
organizations that help
save lives and prevent
diseases such as cftncer.
lung and heart disease!
Get paid lo make a·

Service Managef &amp; Serv·
ice Techniclan positions
available. Health care &amp;
Retirement
able.

sume

plans availsend reto

Please

LLC @CAAEQ.OOM
fax to

740-44~~i104

or

-tng

apt.

S;o'age

·~·-""
• Polio .... """' DookO

4sm

740.949-2217

• V1nyt SOling I -

V C YOUNG Ill

...

l,'.
'

'l
r'

'

West

• as

HOurs
7:00AM· 8:00PM

• Garages

........,

14f.ll2-1112

__
.

Complete Tree Ctre
lr'oeinl • frM EIIIIMtM
ltG-Ut-&amp;111'

.,

_.....,
"""""'-

• Complete

• A7
• A J ~
+KQ I09854

741-992·1111

"' s

Stop &amp; Compare

South
6•

IUCIIoaaar:
IIIII R. Goble Jr.
740-416·1164

T'fXTING

' "'

Obi.

PaM

Pass

Pass

"'K

e.ntor

network
42 Tall bird
43 Warrior
jlrincess

www.tte' !'uaebaltlaet.,.....

I
J
I
i

\---, r--.

I

BUT M'Y MAW
SEZ TH'
LOQD MAD
ADAM ' FURST
'CUZ ...

HE WUZ JEST ·

PRACTICIN' !!

How does the advancer (doubler's partner) react? He bids a long suh, perhaps
with a jump H he has a strong hand: or
ht;~ passes, hoping to extract a pleasant
penalty. It is a good moment lor some
inspired guesswork.
·
In today's deal, South has to guQSS after
West's annoying four-club opening bid
. and North's here's-hoping-lor-the-best
takeout double. However. six diamonds

I

,.

f

No

Pets

·Free Green Fees

~t Riverside Golf Club
Mon 10·6 after 12 pm

Auction

Auction

TREE WORK
Thpped, Take Down

ESTATE AUCTION
Call for tee time
Saturday. Odober 4, 2008 10:00 AM
&amp; Removal
304· 773·5354
LOCA1'10N: On the Premises at
Affordable,
34114 Fairgrounds Rood. Pomeroy. Ohio
· Re85011oble Prl&lt;e
Quality Andqtlll! ·Collectibles • Antique
·740-444-5152
·
Furnl'fllre • Household
To settle the Estate of Frdnces Gocglein. ~e ig s
County Probate #20071062 . The Goe~lei n
Qualiiy Seamless
Family is.well- known thrnughnql Southem
Gutters·
Ohio. Some item~ dute back to C. Frcdcrkk
Maintenance Plus
Goeglein.
1~
Glassware/Collectibles: Fenton; ·Depression:
COtnltlefl"ial &amp;: Rnidt/1/i(l/'
Crystal;
Peach Luster; Open/Covered
Vinyl
Compotes; Pressed/Cut Glass; Reverse ResQ:are Home Care Is
Siding/Replacement
8ppllcations
Thumbprint Pc 's; Nice collection of Royal accepting
Windows/Remodeling
Ironstone, to include: Alfred Meak in . J &amp; G tor Support Associates,
Bonded &amp; Insured
M eakin and Johnson Brothers: Nice Ironstone CNA &amp; STNA. MR/00
e_
x
p.
preferred.
Apply
at
740-992-1493
Offic.:
pitcher &amp; Bowl; Milk Glass; K&lt;~ysons -china8204
Ca!la
Onve,
Galli·
740-416-8339 Celi
Japan ; Fiesta ·Pattern (Serv. 8); Svl Nice
poliS, Mon - Fri, 8--(
Free Estimated .
Crocks. Jugs: Brown (Grape) Stone Pitcher; Email resurrie to: rharrlBlue Ston·e Pitcher (Sailboat); Green Hull sonOrescare.com.
Pomeroy. Ohio
•
Pilch_
e r: Svl Nice Hand-paimcd Chinit, Pc"s:
Public Notice
Blinko: Oil Lights; Wood Carved Owl Door
Public Notice
Stop; Painled Coal Huud ; C/1 Bank; Tin Bunk:
NOTICE OF LIEN SALE PUBLIC NOTICE
2 Nice Mantle Clocks: Wood Collee Grinder;
ihe personal property NOTICE: Is hereby Bird
Toothpick Holder, si~ncd Marietta , Ohio;
-and contents of the lol- given that on Saturday.
Meat
Grinder; Ladies' , Wi1lthan 17· jewel
lowlng storage units October 4, 2008 at
will be auct16ned for 10:00 a.m., e public Watch; Vintage Linen. Doilies. etc. Way too
Sale lo Sallsfy the lien sale will be held a1 211 much to list.
of Hartwell Storage.
W
Second
St., FurnitUre: Oak Bow -Fr,ont China W/Ciaw
The sale will be held al Pomeroy; Ohio. The Feet: Square Oal&lt; Table: 6 Oak Pressed-Back
the Hartwell Storage fa· Farmers Bank and Sav- Chairs: Round Oak Table; 6 Nice ·Walnut
clllty, 34055 Googlien Ings Company lo oell· Cha irs: Beauti ful WalnUI Knock Down
Rd ., Pomeroy, Ohio on lng for cash In hand or
October 1t, 2008 at certified cheek the fol· Annour; 2 Early Poplu~ Dressers; Approx . 7'
Painted Port:h Rocker Bench; Ouk Washstand:
)O:OOa.m.
lowing collateral:
.Unit 147
· 2000 Chevrolet S1 o . 3-pc Parlor Set (Couch, Lovcscat &amp; Rocker): I·
'!{oily Miller
drw Nighlstand: Cupboard Top ; Painted Jelly
tGCCS1949YB132948
P.O. Box 884
t998 Ford Wlndstar SW Cupboard~ Painted Oak Dresser: Nice Walnut
Ntw Haven, WV 25265 2FMOA5t 49WBA36687 5- Tier Comer Stand : 2. Walnut Stands·
Unlt'l59
The Farmers Bank and Mahogany Chest &amp; V•nity: Green Painted
KollyMIIIer
Savings
.Cornpany, Sideboanl ; ~arly Rocker: Sv l. Antq Chairs.
~.0. Box884
Pomeroy, Ohio re- Child'.: Walnut Crib: Pressed-Back Hi gh
Now Haven, WV 25265 serves lhe right to bid
Ch~ i r ; Wicker Potty Chair: Youth Bed.
Unltl72
at this sale, and to
Kelly Miller
withdraw the above Modern: 1940's Full Bed: 2 Swivel Rockers;
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
('.0. Box 884
collateral prior to aale. Recliners; Queen Anne CO ·ir; Maple
accepting resumes for a full-time
New Haven, WV 25265 Further, The Farmers Co!Tee/End Tables; Magnavox Color TV and
Unltl76
Bank and Savings Hitachr VCR; Whirlpool Dryer: Roper Washer. ·
Physician Office Manager. Must have prior
Kolly Miller
Company reserves the Food: Hemlock Grove Grange
office management experience and at
p.o. Box884
right to reject any or all Terms: ca,h or G01xl State of Ohio Check.
least
3 years in a physician office setting.
New Haven, WV 25265 bids submlttad.
Ex"\'utor
for
the
Estatt:
Mr.
William
Radford
J,Jnltl17
The above described
Send resumes to:
Auctioneer: Terry! A. Queen
JaM Jennings
collateral will be sold
PleaAnl Vallef Hospital
Amanda , Ohio
1457 Hocking Rd. .
"as la-where Ia", with
C/o Hum•n Ruources
. 7407969-2983
little Hocking, Ohio no expresaed or lm2520 Valley Drive
45742
Thomas G. Brewster
pllad warranty given.
Unit 145
For further lnlortn!ltlon, Statements made d11v of s:tk: ..,h;11l take
Point Pleasant. WV 15550
To.rra Hart .
or for an appointment precedence uver primer matter.
(J04) 675-4340
BOak St.
to Inspect collateral, Auc_tiont:er is lken_si:d by _OhiO Dt.!pt. of
•
Or fax: 304-67$-6975
Ppmeroy, Ohio 45769 prior to sale data con· Agnculture &amp; part~t:1~a~es m the Auction
(9) 25 (10) 2
tact Cyndlo or Ken at Recovery Fund. Vis1t our
Or apply online at: -pv•Piey.ora
wcbsite..-t: AVON! A!l Areas!
To
.'
740-992·2136.
www.taqueenuuctions.com or www.auctionBuy or Sell Shirley
EOE
zi .com.
/
)1: 2, 3
Spears 304-67514~9
1...-----~~~------'

Fried Chicken &amp;
Noodle Dinner
Sunday, October 5 .
:00-?
$6.00
Racine American
Legion

.

57 Sixth """

antelope

•

12 Surfing

35 Quash
39 .. Late
Show" fea·

13
17
19
20

41 Soft fabrics
44 Fit inside '
46 Dough
raiser?

article

mecca

lures

Trial VIPs
lens type
8rawl
Principle

~~~~~~~~A~.
~'&lt;

FII.'IO!tllt. LUt;&lt;.l\
!&gt;POT, {.J.\It.F. &lt;ARt.
"--"' JOt~ ~'?

email:

Celebrttv Cctl111 cryploQrans •t CtUed lrom QOOialiOil! bylamous peop·e paSI aM present
·
Each le!ler miN c1~er stands kn another
·

· Ones tllere, how should South plan the
TcxJ;y's clue· Haqu~s K
Ptav lifter West leads the club king?
Declarer should see 12 top tricks: ihree
· .. N P T P 0 G D A ·s V 0 Y U H . A I. H. A V V S V t ;
t 00 t«&gt;T t&gt;l~ II.T ~ I'Ptldes. ooe heart, ~even diamonds and
one club. But assuming West has an
• PSAIUA8P PSAIS .. KVG ROLKS
llfSI'I&gt;.U~T~ 'I\&gt;JI.T
eight-card su~ lor his lour-club opening,
AA'It I'LI&gt;.'(~to South knoWs thai East is vo1d. This PODW 0 D ·AS AV TNUVS ,GPOI 0 USO~
means thai declarer must play a low club
-.d~;..:'liiE PR£.11\0C'l! lrom the board at tncl&lt; one. And do it D AS . "
DAODAOI PSDOROI

,...,......,..B....,ORN LOSER,
I'lo\·~Q&gt;,tll~ OO"i TO-..
Cell: 740-416-5047

by Luis Campos

.

cannot be lar wrong.

again .at trick two if necessary.

jrshadfrm@aol.com

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'To me. a lush carpel of prne needles or spongy

Note that pla~ng lhe club ace costs 100
contract. East ruffs, and South has an

.

ftH

deposit.

33 Large

CELEBRITY CIPHER

grass is mor:e welcome than the most luxurious Persian rug.' - Helen Keller

T~~~~~T S©~1A-~ttf~'
low to. form four simple

"iilurCJirthdlr:

I

aecte

Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded

going places.
LIBRA (~t. 23-Qcf. 23)

740·653-9657

words.

NACHUH

You are wry
capable of ma~lng a profit, but only
throlJSih gains that you devise independently, nQ1: through lhe good auspices of
others. Rely only upon yourself.
7

Afamous politidan once said.

SCORPIO !Oct. 2•-Nov. 22) _.: Stiok to
actlviUes where you can take· the lead
and personally manage, rather than
going along with someone else's pet
project. You won't like playing second fk;tdle.

,.
SOMETIMES I
WONDER ..

Manley'&amp;
Recycling

..
...........,..._..

3FJJIMII . . . I.M.
1111111. . . .1Z:II ..
PIYIIIIIP ...CR FDI .

WELL. 1 LIKE TO TI·IINK I
CAME UP T~E HARD WAI( ..

SAGITTARIUS

.if···
.. ' .

4

.. ·. . . . .

•••

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

CAN BE M.OOF AW OOLOLY
REIAARK ~ THE
Of MANJ(itl), .

RICK PRICE

BECAUSE. AT

New Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp;
Roofs, Siding, Decks,

THEOOOF
THE.OAY, THEY
HAVELITTL£

lnslartd

WHILE. FlERHAPS
WE'RE FRIENDS,
IT HELPS II£
fEEL SAFER.

~

Construction

Owner:
JamtiSKMaeell
742·2332

7

UNSCiAMBl .E lETTERS TO

GET ANSWER

1

I II I IIl

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS !Oil/08

From

Switch - Begun -· Guest -Captor · THAT'S NEW
"An echo," my pt'ofes~or lectured, '~may have the.last word,
b · ·
'b
h 'l'll r·sNEW"'

whensomeonetaysdownthegauntlet.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Men:h 20) - You're
wise to be roocemed about tar-reaching
matters by planning ahead and not wor·
rying abOut momentary ooncems. You

·

U(

.

t( doesn't cootn ute muc

.A

. .

ARLO &amp; JANIS
'

Innately know that long-range'feVerbera·
t!ons are of equal signlticance.
ARIES (March 21-A.prit 19) :---Change
should be anticipated at any given
moment because everything iS constantly _lranstorming itself, so It doesn't make
sense to think things will nevar alter. Be
ready to '"'Just to shifts In oondnlorni.
TAURUS (April 21!-May 20) Becausa
· you can ge1 so Intensely lnvolvud with
your work, you dqn't' take kindty ·to being

THAiS WHY

BOVINE·KW.

·Room AddHions

..,

THERE'SII Sf\FENESS IN
BEING YOU. II SECUIIITY
!VE NOT FELT IN ALDNG

TOOOWITH

•Deck•
•Giragett
·Pole Buildinga

e

of those moments. You'll come alive

ILWERSTANOWHY YOU

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
·
Plumbing,

8 PRINT
NUMBmO lETrERS
IN THESE SQUARES

time to time, e gOOd challenge c&amp;n get ·
your juices flowing, and this may be one

COWandBOY

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Licensed &amp;

23-Dec. 21) - 11

you have a complicated problem to
resolve, remember'fhat in quiet places
reason abounds, so seek an- environ-·
ment that is free from outside Influences .
CAPRI COR~ (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Being
around fun people will be Important to
you, so select companions who are
always oplfml~lic and outgoing. Avoid
those who cai"ry the weight of the world
on their shoulders.

53 3 ·-·II 3 ••lftlllll
7 7 .........
-JirJIIII&amp;Ifrlc&amp;l

(Nov.

·"Too often we enJOY the

7

. . . 7

• Vinyl Siding
•Repl,cement ·
Wlridows
·Roofing

GAMI '

Rtorrange !,ttor1 of iho
0 four
"rombled word• be·

FriUy, Oct. 3, 2001
By lemloo
0001
In the year ahead, thoSe wlth whom you
associate will have a major Influence
over various departments of yoor life, so
It behOOves you to be selective about
your companions. Pick winners who are

H&amp;H

wou .

ldltod loy CLAY ~· POLLAN

·VGraph

304·882·3652

husk
56 Graesy field

four-no-trump oV8ft811 is not natural, bUt
is usually treated as showing a big twosuited hand. This means that a takeout
doubte jusl says lhal you had too many
points to pass, but had no betti:lr intervention to make. You have anything lrom
a three·suiter short in the opener's su~ .
to a balanced hand with at least. say. 15 ·
high-card points.
•

~Astro­

tance $300 month, PJO

~lendar

abbr.

lour·level opening in a su~? What does
lhat mean?
1
~ we are enlering ve~ murky waters.

apartsmall
. Call
appW-

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable ~ales
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591·8044
Please leave messa e

metal
9 Mulhor't
vehicle
11 Bertin

Fleming •
55 Prickty

oppo~.ng pre-empt at the threelevel. But what about your double over a

CONVENIENTLY
W·
CATED
&amp; AFFORD·

everything in walking dis·

3t

8 Enameled

53 Holm or

Yesternay we looi&lt;ed at takeout douNes

M'r' PAW SEZ .TH' LORD MADE
ADAM FURST 'CUZ MEN ARE .
MOQE IMPORTANT!! ,.----'-1

Hl'ftood Cab~ And Futlliiure

Owners:
Jon Van f.leter &amp;
Paul Rowe

1bl:, House in New. Haven, WV, total electric,

ner seH

shout

47 E•ecs
48 Piclclad
veggle
•.
49 cato'1 year. •
51 Ma~
beverage

over an

BARNEY ·

Racine, Ohio 740.247-2019

Hou111 For Ron!

-

2 Comlc..aip 22 Pen
prince
contenfl
3 Eur. airline 23 8 o l y 4 More lfool 25 Realty
5 Calm
offering
6 Pepsin,
27 Matterhorn
echo
e.g.
· 7 Gleeful
28 Jung's in·

The first thing 10 bear in mind is that a

business

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

upon

40 ''CSI"

at the four-level

• HA~&amp;&gt;WA{Zf •
• SoFTWAfi!E •
Pi.ANS ~

E·mail: captbill65@yahoo.com
viww.auctlonzlp.com
#5548

Mon-Fri.
8:00am ·4:30pm
Sat. 8:00am . 12
Wt Dpprtclolt JI&gt;Ur

Call

East

Takeout doubles

(740) 992-5344

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Cammon:ial

North

Opening lead:

44087 Wlpple Rd.

diff~rencel

Wtst
Pass

(2wds.)

14 OMp- &amp;o cargo15 Showy
61 Thong
flower
16 Uninhibltad
DOWN
18 .jQmtrt YFs
19-Rotail
1 Kimono

7

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

1lt411 mo. pd

10 Propped up 58 lMM
12 In pl1ono
oignor
timbo
58 F -

unavoidable hea~ lose~.

-ABLE! Townhouse
. fnents ,
and/or
houses !Or rent.
740.44,1·1 111 tor
catlon &amp; information.

52 -giant
54 p""'"

21 Sulfmystlc
poet
23Hosslo
24 Ivy ~aguer
26 Gaelic pap
star
29Foreman
foe
30
thewall
32 King
of gorillas
34 FI"""V sl~n
36 Bunion 111e
37 loud
clamor
38 Qstar ruler

• 7 3

South

L &amp; L Tire Barn
Pomeroy,OH
(5 Points) ··
New &amp; Used Tires,
. We buy used tires.
computer ":heel
alignments , light
mechanic work ,
complete service oil
changes. small engine
repair.
We service and
winterize boats und
RV 's

• J I 0 .962
• 8 76532

o!oKQ JtQ9672 • -.

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES
ll.k1MPI•IIIlM

10--02-N

• KQ• 3
• Q tO
t AJ 2
.A 6 0
Eul

WK4
• 6

• New Homes

Rem~def ing

W¥038725

Townhauoeo .
Modern 1BR
740·446-0390

H1li s Self
2$670 Elashan Road
Racine, Ohio

•tto.n 'ddNoi•A

service

Plt~t»~

"

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Johnson's Tree

Bonus!

$475/rent

741).367·7762

person ot·integrity, with
good people skills. You
also need to be able ~
follow instructions and
have. an ability to ~sten
and IP::id people in the

unr.u '"'

on Bulaville . No experienoe required!

Pike.

~br.

ho.ok

304-675-6908

~~-~~.-~~
""''!""~~'!"'~----POST OFFICE
NOW

R.ntah

Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Cri:tdit
OK. 2. 3, 4 and 5 bed·
rOoms
available.
740 _44 6--3384

YOUNG'S

:: ·2

weeks oft. Experience
raiSing teens or laster
Co~tlhdi' "'ft
care preferred. We pmLa•--r~·rpen~er~·Me
vide training. Interested?
.......,.,.,\.fa
1nvv1
Call
Ossis
r,
local
work, • 8
588 for more
1· 77·325-1
7.n 992. 7943

304·674-6204

TOO# 419·526·0466
"This ins~tution is an
EQual Opportunity
Provider and Employer"

Mon-fri

handicap
accessible, available, paid training
$650
per
mo., starts immedia1ely, no for boys groop home lo740-949-2303
.experience needed, na cated irl southern Ohio.
2B~ house for rent $400 sales,
call 27·7 care tor 2 w&amp;eks on

Apt.

Nordl

-768~

Direct Care Staff. in residential youth program.
Must be 21 year~ .ot'age.
Pay based on t~
.ence .
cau

hlloine

. half
6 'Refreoh.

J

3 Bedroom homes
from 5214.36 per month, Butlalo. Full-time, Must
~A-.~.....~ many u~r~. have driver's ric. &amp; pus
"""'""""""
..-y _ .
de"·
&amp;
.~
bad&lt;ground ·
tned&lt;.
"vet)'
-~'1JP. ~
.a~
EOE

45 J - Auel
47 CEO degrlo
SO Tell

1 C..Von
mentS

•
lmmed .... O,.•ll•

::""~.-:~=-':"!'!~- New
2br

Phillip
Alder

Marilyn

~c·

house
Two .Bed· ..

•.96 acres. RtJtland. Oh.
~vate
sening,
eat-in
tltchen, 3 br.. 2 full
•~ths
- , lg. ·livingroom, lg
{!mity room, out ot flood
'ptain, (740)742-2404 or
740·949-2930

AC,ROSS

·c;;;;;;:;:;;;'Ci;;::;••

Wayne (740) 446·3570

'
NEA Cro1.1word
Puzzle

BRIDGE

2 BA house In Galtlpoiio, Brand ,_ 3bed 2bath An Exoeltent way 10 eam
conn.
$oi15Jmo on + ·half a«e in Pt. money. The New AVoo.

New Haven, · one bed- ~--~~Lals~;;;;;;;;;;;"'!!:: hiring. For · appllcatlon
.,,N 2 North.
.;.,~ ~·1
room apa rtmen t, .................
and Iree govei"Mlent job
TOOm
Mobne
Home
&amp;
relerences, 1 mile from town on SR info, call American Asbamp
Conley 1BA Apt, WID hookups, ?An992·0165
141.
Water
furnished.
satellite TV 1ncl. Wtrent. ....,.
~
--.----;...
of
labor
304·895·3129
"
$175/mo.t (740)446'-0761 soc.
1 9t o5~ ~6
24/h
close to hOspllal. Call Nice
. Clean
Ground
• oF ~ •
rs.
0 !!!16;;7!!
Jri-level brick/ceda. r on 74Q-339 -v.J&lt;X.
"'"'
Fioor. 2br, W/0 hookup, ;- ;,r1!!304
• • 5·,;;2!!32!!9e!!!!!!!! omp · ser( · """
Bedroom

The Daily sentinel • Page BS

Sp&amp;clatll! W/0

and up, Cetltrat $150/dep. You pay . aH Ptoasant.
W/0 hookup, tenant udlities. No section 8 or NANCE

Efficiency

www.mydailysentinel.com

Holp W...W • o.-.1

Townhottl
. . ..

relHg, range &amp; dish·

tie

=•a/

Thul'lday, OCtober 2, 2008
ALLEYOOP

Thur~ay, October 2, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

7

..
GARFIELD

lnterruptad, whiCh Is Wflal ts l l k~ty to hap·

•

pen. Be prepared for dlsl'uptlons.
GEMINI (May 21-Juns 20) Two factors
7

thai keep 1lio wlleeta of ~lendshtp rOlling
are gratlluat and roclprcctty, so should
someone ask tor a bll ot assistance, be
ready to pnell in.
CANCER (June .21.July 22) - 'ollur
biggest fault ~that you gal too prolee11ve
and posaesaiVe with those In your

Remodeling: ROrQm I
Additions
LOe.i Cont,...ctor

74G-367.()544

charge. Such could be the case at thts
Uma. Be nurturing,'not amotharing.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Persons In your

F..,. Eollmateo

740·367.()536

·Chsrgt are tortuneto, lndHd. You'll glva
them plenty or apace to do thtlr own

For Remodeling and New House Building

lhlng. llUI bt ready 10 pounct af10Uid

Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

1omeont try to tlkt advllntlge

ot them.

VIAOO (Aug . 23·Sopt. 22) - Evon
lt'lougll you Itt dllctrnlng anct oan
improve your ldeu when called fer, you
may be a bH olfendld If IO!Tleone maktl

• Room f'dditions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

I ...,.lructiVI reOitiOn.

IIUW.IIRCII, t•o

(;I "-

~

"f! ' ,;,... t,;'.;.'_"·~·'--..S.....I-....:.....,.~ ·.t!:r:::::.?m!L.LJ.LlJ

SQUP TO NU'i'z ~ tl ., ..~

I •

. ,.

47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom. OH

740-985.4141
Cell: 740-416·1834

25+ yean experience Frt• Eslilllllles

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

'.

••

'

'

\
-

�II-. for Sale
LOW 2BR 2 bath oo 3 ac.
-

.. 1
n

Rent

Free

Washer lnctuded 575,000

Clip this AD and take K

2&amp;38A
Air.

3BR.

with you when you visit
our comm·-· to get

..'40·446·7029

. . R.,
rhis special discount

2BA,

Many up·
Gf8"des , 5 mlhutes 1rom
new

Md11e-in in Oct and

GAHS

f139,()J(). 7411-245·5707
j!BR,2BA. 2 car gar
patio, ORIFR Relocating
J115.000. 741).446.()817

Apt 1n Nov. Currenlty
rent1ng 1 &amp; 2 BA units
SpaciOUS floor plans,
ranch &amp; townhOme style
living, playgroun d &amp;
basketball court. on-site
lau~llty, 24 hr
emergency maintenance, quiet country k&gt;cation close to major

mss

leave
FOr sale by owner. 312
tj&gt;me on 1/2 acre level
lot. Located at 3089 Bu·
Iaviiie Pike. At;rached ga·
Appraised
rage. .
$11·0,000
Asking
$98.500.
Call
~41!-446·4910

med1tal

~ree

faciht1es.

pharmacies, grocery
store ...just minutes
away from oltler major

Mouse lor sale in Chesler, 3 br.. · separate garage,
contact
&lt;
(740)98...-4
13 t
•
House With 2 acres in SA
•,60. Will consider l&lt;~nd
contract
441 -5062
or
3"'9-2923
'·
Nice 4 br, 2 ba -home qn
Kineon Dr In Gallipolis.
Quite neighborhood on
dead. end street. large 2
bar. garage and finished '
baSement. 740·256· 11 09

gei

$100.00 off your 2BA

shopping in the area.
Honeysuckle Hills

Apartments

266 Colonel Dnve N113
S.dwell. Oh1o 45614
740-446-3344

Office9AM
Hours
M, W, F
· 5PM

fi)
•

.

.

'-------...1

pays -..:. EHO Em HUO.
Vifiw

(304~-3017

Call

OWNER Ft· Call
AVAILABLE. 304-682-2645

Apts. 404-456-3802

ll Pt. Pt S45n'mo.,
(lap. req.. no pcttl, detached
garage,
wid
hookup :)04-8 12_5030 ()(
,
304-6 75-647•

Twin Rivers Tower Is accepting ajlplcalions . tor
waiting liSt 1or. HUO subsidized, 1-BR apanment
for . the elder1y/disabled, 3 Bd. house Jn Pomeroo;
can 675-6679
$400 dep . $400 a M,
S.utllul _,.., M Jlck- must

have 'good

refer- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

ton · EltiM. 52 wesr- ~e"""":.::e::;;·:7;4;::1!-;:7~42~·,;;1903~~~ &lt;llrioal
wood Or., fr6m $365 to 3 bd., 2 bllth, Po1Tl8foy, "!";;;;;;~;;;;;;!!""';;;~;;; (740)379-9083
$560 .
740-446-2568. basemer~t
wlgarage,' Clerical &amp; offioe posklooa 9am-3pm.

Equal Housing Opportun;:y. This institution is an
Equal OWortunity Provider and Employer.

~H;ou:;,se;;::.:.:.pa-ren~ts(~2~)w_a_m-.:ed

1624 rent
$400
deposit.
Chatham
A.ve.
(rear). 256-6408 or 441-0583 in
E ;;ka , ~~.,-~5325 (water. _sewer &amp; _,.;;Ur:e~
:garbage
includedl- New 2BR 2 bath Ul'\lor
,..,...
740-446-4234
or choic:D of ranting corn.
740-208-7861
plelely tum1shed &amp; all
Groclout Living 1 and 2 utilities paid or ·you proBedroom Apts. at ·Village
furn iture &amp; utilities.
M30or
and Riverside
Apts. in Middleport trom
$327
to
$592.
74D-992-5064.
Equal
Housing Opportunity

Land IACfla90)

~,....,.,....,.-~--~ References/DeposiVNo

2 bedroom Apartment &amp; Pets304- 675 _ 5 ~ 62
2 bedroom House on 5th ;..::;:.;;::.;,;:;:.:..;;.;,:;:;.._ _
St . 3048'
24350 ask. tor
Nowaccep"ng
- • ·
u
Don
applications at
~.-~.-~~~~
:
Valley View Apartmenls
2BA APT. CIA. (740)
BOO State Aoute 325
441 ;{) 194
Thurman, Ohio 45685
740-245--9170

2BA,

1.5 bath, back
~ooac .
+1- ·
on pa t1o, pOoL playground,
pallia/Meigs
Co..
OH (trash,
sewage,
water
.eorder.
Greal hunting pd .) $425/rent, $425/sec.

Tand.
1210.000 neg. dep. Caii740·3S7·0547
004·593·5260
,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ 3 rooms and bath upApprox. ·25 acres m/! re- slairs.
Completely fur·
mote.
rough
access. nished with WID . No
.$40K. Buyer must Sur- pels. Ref. Aeq. 44 1-0245
'Vey
Call after 5pm

Apanment available now
Riverbend Apis. New
Haven WV. Now acceptIng · applications
lor
Campers
&amp;
Motor HUb-subsidized.
one
HOmes lots for Rem · year Bedroom Apts. Utilities
304·895·3390

·round

1·2 Bedroom Apenments
with appliances furnished
On site laundry facility.
Call tor details or pick up
appliCation at rental

offloe

Possibility ol rental
assistance.
Equal Housing

Opportunity

;1:-8:8:8~61~~:953;

5

~~~===~~:!:::'

~a;;;t;;.
ioo;;;·,...,..,.-..,...
0_in~o
t ;;.rm
1need to fjnd (2) people
Jobs
needing a full lime job.
=a;;;;;~ !"!~;;;;; You need to be hohes1, a
Gow•nmMt &amp;

f~

$17.89-$28.27/HR.,

now

3500

up included. Based on 30%
of adjustOO income. Call
304-882-3121, available
Real Eslale
for
Senior and Disabled
RenliiiS

psopte.

·~

Apartmonll/

'Federal Funds ·Just re~ HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
teased for Land Owne·rs. or
%57Kfyr,
includes
N
1 ·
d Fed.Ben, OT. Piece by
o .c osmg cost an
ZERO DOWN I Will clo adSource, not affiliateC
land
improvements. with . USPS who hires.

3BA tocatec;f

!1!!-8!!66;,-40,;;3;,;·2;;;582=!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Holp -~~·' "-nora!
w·

$250 Sign on

3br, 2ba, Pt. Pleasant
area 304-273-6622 or
3br,

M-Home

on

Gun

Club Rd. New Haven.
$400 month, .$250 de-

posl1304·682·3121
$425 a mo., 1br.
$295 a rrio. plus dep ..
utiUtles &amp; references, -3rd
Racine,

St.,

(740)241-4292

·-·---·-

right direction. l need
people whO want10 wortt
and will show up for
work. II you are a-recent .
cOllege grad and cannel
finclemploymentandfeel
th 1
l'l~
a you~requal-...,
·
eh
gobrvelus a· ance until a
1 n your career path
becomes available. Call
Pat Hill, New

Car Man-

ager tor an Interview at

446·9800.

Votod TOP RVE Bell
to Wort In Ohio
for 20071

- a..............

ComoSHWhy
No Sales! No
_ColleclionS! Recruit
volunteers for non-profit
organizations that help
save lives and prevent
diseases such as cftncer.
lung and heart disease!
Get paid lo make a·

Service Managef &amp; Serv·
ice Techniclan positions
available. Health care &amp;
Retirement
able.

sume

plans availsend reto

Please

LLC @CAAEQ.OOM
fax to

740-44~~i104

or

-tng

apt.

S;o'age

·~·-""
• Polio .... """' DookO

4sm

740.949-2217

• V1nyt SOling I -

V C YOUNG Ill

...

l,'.
'

'l
r'

'

West

• as

HOurs
7:00AM· 8:00PM

• Garages

........,

14f.ll2-1112

__
.

Complete Tree Ctre
lr'oeinl • frM EIIIIMtM
ltG-Ut-&amp;111'

.,

_.....,
"""""'-

• Complete

• A7
• A J ~
+KQ I09854

741-992·1111

"' s

Stop &amp; Compare

South
6•

IUCIIoaaar:
IIIII R. Goble Jr.
740-416·1164

T'fXTING

' "'

Obi.

PaM

Pass

Pass

"'K

e.ntor

network
42 Tall bird
43 Warrior
jlrincess

www.tte' !'uaebaltlaet.,.....

I
J
I
i

\---, r--.

I

BUT M'Y MAW
SEZ TH'
LOQD MAD
ADAM ' FURST
'CUZ ...

HE WUZ JEST ·

PRACTICIN' !!

How does the advancer (doubler's partner) react? He bids a long suh, perhaps
with a jump H he has a strong hand: or
ht;~ passes, hoping to extract a pleasant
penalty. It is a good moment lor some
inspired guesswork.
·
In today's deal, South has to guQSS after
West's annoying four-club opening bid
. and North's here's-hoping-lor-the-best
takeout double. However. six diamonds

I

,.

f

No

Pets

·Free Green Fees

~t Riverside Golf Club
Mon 10·6 after 12 pm

Auction

Auction

TREE WORK
Thpped, Take Down

ESTATE AUCTION
Call for tee time
Saturday. Odober 4, 2008 10:00 AM
&amp; Removal
304· 773·5354
LOCA1'10N: On the Premises at
Affordable,
34114 Fairgrounds Rood. Pomeroy. Ohio
· Re85011oble Prl&lt;e
Quality Andqtlll! ·Collectibles • Antique
·740-444-5152
·
Furnl'fllre • Household
To settle the Estate of Frdnces Gocglein. ~e ig s
County Probate #20071062 . The Goe~lei n
Qualiiy Seamless
Family is.well- known thrnughnql Southem
Gutters·
Ohio. Some item~ dute back to C. Frcdcrkk
Maintenance Plus
Goeglein.
1~
Glassware/Collectibles: Fenton; ·Depression:
COtnltlefl"ial &amp;: Rnidt/1/i(l/'
Crystal;
Peach Luster; Open/Covered
Vinyl
Compotes; Pressed/Cut Glass; Reverse ResQ:are Home Care Is
Siding/Replacement
8ppllcations
Thumbprint Pc 's; Nice collection of Royal accepting
Windows/Remodeling
Ironstone, to include: Alfred Meak in . J &amp; G tor Support Associates,
Bonded &amp; Insured
M eakin and Johnson Brothers: Nice Ironstone CNA &amp; STNA. MR/00
e_
x
p.
preferred.
Apply
at
740-992-1493
Offic.:
pitcher &amp; Bowl; Milk Glass; K&lt;~ysons -china8204
Ca!la
Onve,
Galli·
740-416-8339 Celi
Japan ; Fiesta ·Pattern (Serv. 8); Svl Nice
poliS, Mon - Fri, 8--(
Free Estimated .
Crocks. Jugs: Brown (Grape) Stone Pitcher; Email resurrie to: rharrlBlue Ston·e Pitcher (Sailboat); Green Hull sonOrescare.com.
Pomeroy. Ohio
•
Pilch_
e r: Svl Nice Hand-paimcd Chinit, Pc"s:
Public Notice
Blinko: Oil Lights; Wood Carved Owl Door
Public Notice
Stop; Painled Coal Huud ; C/1 Bank; Tin Bunk:
NOTICE OF LIEN SALE PUBLIC NOTICE
2 Nice Mantle Clocks: Wood Collee Grinder;
ihe personal property NOTICE: Is hereby Bird
Toothpick Holder, si~ncd Marietta , Ohio;
-and contents of the lol- given that on Saturday.
Meat
Grinder; Ladies' , Wi1lthan 17· jewel
lowlng storage units October 4, 2008 at
will be auct16ned for 10:00 a.m., e public Watch; Vintage Linen. Doilies. etc. Way too
Sale lo Sallsfy the lien sale will be held a1 211 much to list.
of Hartwell Storage.
W
Second
St., FurnitUre: Oak Bow -Fr,ont China W/Ciaw
The sale will be held al Pomeroy; Ohio. The Feet: Square Oal&lt; Table: 6 Oak Pressed-Back
the Hartwell Storage fa· Farmers Bank and Sav- Chairs: Round Oak Table; 6 Nice ·Walnut
clllty, 34055 Googlien Ings Company lo oell· Cha irs: Beauti ful WalnUI Knock Down
Rd ., Pomeroy, Ohio on lng for cash In hand or
October 1t, 2008 at certified cheek the fol· Annour; 2 Early Poplu~ Dressers; Approx . 7'
Painted Port:h Rocker Bench; Ouk Washstand:
)O:OOa.m.
lowing collateral:
.Unit 147
· 2000 Chevrolet S1 o . 3-pc Parlor Set (Couch, Lovcscat &amp; Rocker): I·
'!{oily Miller
drw Nighlstand: Cupboard Top ; Painted Jelly
tGCCS1949YB132948
P.O. Box 884
t998 Ford Wlndstar SW Cupboard~ Painted Oak Dresser: Nice Walnut
Ntw Haven, WV 25265 2FMOA5t 49WBA36687 5- Tier Comer Stand : 2. Walnut Stands·
Unlt'l59
The Farmers Bank and Mahogany Chest &amp; V•nity: Green Painted
KollyMIIIer
Savings
.Cornpany, Sideboanl ; ~arly Rocker: Sv l. Antq Chairs.
~.0. Box884
Pomeroy, Ohio re- Child'.: Walnut Crib: Pressed-Back Hi gh
Now Haven, WV 25265 serves lhe right to bid
Ch~ i r ; Wicker Potty Chair: Youth Bed.
Unltl72
at this sale, and to
Kelly Miller
withdraw the above Modern: 1940's Full Bed: 2 Swivel Rockers;
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
('.0. Box 884
collateral prior to aale. Recliners; Queen Anne CO ·ir; Maple
accepting resumes for a full-time
New Haven, WV 25265 Further, The Farmers Co!Tee/End Tables; Magnavox Color TV and
Unltl76
Bank and Savings Hitachr VCR; Whirlpool Dryer: Roper Washer. ·
Physician Office Manager. Must have prior
Kolly Miller
Company reserves the Food: Hemlock Grove Grange
office management experience and at
p.o. Box884
right to reject any or all Terms: ca,h or G01xl State of Ohio Check.
least
3 years in a physician office setting.
New Haven, WV 25265 bids submlttad.
Ex"\'utor
for
the
Estatt:
Mr.
William
Radford
J,Jnltl17
The above described
Send resumes to:
Auctioneer: Terry! A. Queen
JaM Jennings
collateral will be sold
PleaAnl Vallef Hospital
Amanda , Ohio
1457 Hocking Rd. .
"as la-where Ia", with
C/o Hum•n Ruources
. 7407969-2983
little Hocking, Ohio no expresaed or lm2520 Valley Drive
45742
Thomas G. Brewster
pllad warranty given.
Unit 145
For further lnlortn!ltlon, Statements made d11v of s:tk: ..,h;11l take
Point Pleasant. WV 15550
To.rra Hart .
or for an appointment precedence uver primer matter.
(J04) 675-4340
BOak St.
to Inspect collateral, Auc_tiont:er is lken_si:d by _OhiO Dt.!pt. of
•
Or fax: 304-67$-6975
Ppmeroy, Ohio 45769 prior to sale data con· Agnculture &amp; part~t:1~a~es m the Auction
(9) 25 (10) 2
tact Cyndlo or Ken at Recovery Fund. Vis1t our
Or apply online at: -pv•Piey.ora
wcbsite..-t: AVON! A!l Areas!
To
.'
740-992·2136.
www.taqueenuuctions.com or www.auctionBuy or Sell Shirley
EOE
zi .com.
/
)1: 2, 3
Spears 304-67514~9
1...-----~~~------'

Fried Chicken &amp;
Noodle Dinner
Sunday, October 5 .
:00-?
$6.00
Racine American
Legion

.

57 Sixth """

antelope

•

12 Surfing

35 Quash
39 .. Late
Show" fea·

13
17
19
20

41 Soft fabrics
44 Fit inside '
46 Dough
raiser?

article

mecca

lures

Trial VIPs
lens type
8rawl
Principle

~~~~~~~~A~.
~'&lt;

FII.'IO!tllt. LUt;&lt;.l\
!&gt;POT, {.J.\It.F. &lt;ARt.
"--"' JOt~ ~'?

email:

Celebrttv Cctl111 cryploQrans •t CtUed lrom QOOialiOil! bylamous peop·e paSI aM present
·
Each le!ler miN c1~er stands kn another
·

· Ones tllere, how should South plan the
TcxJ;y's clue· Haqu~s K
Ptav lifter West leads the club king?
Declarer should see 12 top tricks: ihree
· .. N P T P 0 G D A ·s V 0 Y U H . A I. H. A V V S V t ;
t 00 t«&gt;T t&gt;l~ II.T ~ I'Ptldes. ooe heart, ~even diamonds and
one club. But assuming West has an
• PSAIUA8P PSAIS .. KVG ROLKS
llfSI'I&gt;.U~T~ 'I\&gt;JI.T
eight-card su~ lor his lour-club opening,
AA'It I'LI&gt;.'(~to South knoWs thai East is vo1d. This PODW 0 D ·AS AV TNUVS ,GPOI 0 USO~
means thai declarer must play a low club
-.d~;..:'liiE PR£.11\0C'l! lrom the board at tncl&lt; one. And do it D AS . "
DAODAOI PSDOROI

,...,......,..B....,ORN LOSER,
I'lo\·~Q&gt;,tll~ OO"i TO-..
Cell: 740-416-5047

by Luis Campos

.

cannot be lar wrong.

again .at trick two if necessary.

jrshadfrm@aol.com

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'To me. a lush carpel of prne needles or spongy

Note that pla~ng lhe club ace costs 100
contract. East ruffs, and South has an

.

ftH

deposit.

33 Large

CELEBRITY CIPHER

grass is mor:e welcome than the most luxurious Persian rug.' - Helen Keller

T~~~~~T S©~1A-~ttf~'
low to. form four simple

"iilurCJirthdlr:

I

aecte

Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded

going places.
LIBRA (~t. 23-Qcf. 23)

740·653-9657

words.

NACHUH

You are wry
capable of ma~lng a profit, but only
throlJSih gains that you devise independently, nQ1: through lhe good auspices of
others. Rely only upon yourself.
7

Afamous politidan once said.

SCORPIO !Oct. 2•-Nov. 22) _.: Stiok to
actlviUes where you can take· the lead
and personally manage, rather than
going along with someone else's pet
project. You won't like playing second fk;tdle.

,.
SOMETIMES I
WONDER ..

Manley'&amp;
Recycling

..
...........,..._..

3FJJIMII . . . I.M.
1111111. . . .1Z:II ..
PIYIIIIIP ...CR FDI .

WELL. 1 LIKE TO TI·IINK I
CAME UP T~E HARD WAI( ..

SAGITTARIUS

.if···
.. ' .

4

.. ·. . . . .

•••

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

CAN BE M.OOF AW OOLOLY
REIAARK ~ THE
Of MANJ(itl), .

RICK PRICE

BECAUSE. AT

New Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,
Metal &amp;
Roofs, Siding, Decks,

THEOOOF
THE.OAY, THEY
HAVELITTL£

lnslartd

WHILE. FlERHAPS
WE'RE FRIENDS,
IT HELPS II£
fEEL SAFER.

~

Construction

Owner:
JamtiSKMaeell
742·2332

7

UNSCiAMBl .E lETTERS TO

GET ANSWER

1

I II I IIl

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS !Oil/08

From

Switch - Begun -· Guest -Captor · THAT'S NEW
"An echo," my pt'ofes~or lectured, '~may have the.last word,
b · ·
'b
h 'l'll r·sNEW"'

whensomeonetaysdownthegauntlet.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Men:h 20) - You're
wise to be roocemed about tar-reaching
matters by planning ahead and not wor·
rying abOut momentary ooncems. You

·

U(

.

t( doesn't cootn ute muc

.A

. .

ARLO &amp; JANIS
'

Innately know that long-range'feVerbera·
t!ons are of equal signlticance.
ARIES (March 21-A.prit 19) :---Change
should be anticipated at any given
moment because everything iS constantly _lranstorming itself, so It doesn't make
sense to think things will nevar alter. Be
ready to '"'Just to shifts In oondnlorni.
TAURUS (April 21!-May 20) Becausa
· you can ge1 so Intensely lnvolvud with
your work, you dqn't' take kindty ·to being

THAiS WHY

BOVINE·KW.

·Room AddHions

..,

THERE'SII Sf\FENESS IN
BEING YOU. II SECUIIITY
!VE NOT FELT IN ALDNG

TOOOWITH

•Deck•
•Giragett
·Pole Buildinga

e

of those moments. You'll come alive

ILWERSTANOWHY YOU

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
·
Plumbing,

8 PRINT
NUMBmO lETrERS
IN THESE SQUARES

time to time, e gOOd challenge c&amp;n get ·
your juices flowing, and this may be one

COWandBOY

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Licensed &amp;

23-Dec. 21) - 11

you have a complicated problem to
resolve, remember'fhat in quiet places
reason abounds, so seek an- environ-·
ment that is free from outside Influences .
CAPRI COR~ (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Being
around fun people will be Important to
you, so select companions who are
always oplfml~lic and outgoing. Avoid
those who cai"ry the weight of the world
on their shoulders.

53 3 ·-·II 3 ••lftlllll
7 7 .........
-JirJIIII&amp;Ifrlc&amp;l

(Nov.

·"Too often we enJOY the

7

. . . 7

• Vinyl Siding
•Repl,cement ·
Wlridows
·Roofing

GAMI '

Rtorrange !,ttor1 of iho
0 four
"rombled word• be·

FriUy, Oct. 3, 2001
By lemloo
0001
In the year ahead, thoSe wlth whom you
associate will have a major Influence
over various departments of yoor life, so
It behOOves you to be selective about
your companions. Pick winners who are

H&amp;H

wou .

ldltod loy CLAY ~· POLLAN

·VGraph

304·882·3652

husk
56 Graesy field

four-no-trump oV8ft811 is not natural, bUt
is usually treated as showing a big twosuited hand. This means that a takeout
doubte jusl says lhal you had too many
points to pass, but had no betti:lr intervention to make. You have anything lrom
a three·suiter short in the opener's su~ .
to a balanced hand with at least. say. 15 ·
high-card points.
•

~Astro­

tance $300 month, PJO

~lendar

abbr.

lour·level opening in a su~? What does
lhat mean?
1
~ we are enlering ve~ murky waters.

apartsmall
. Call
appW-

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable ~ales
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591·8044
Please leave messa e

metal
9 Mulhor't
vehicle
11 Bertin

Fleming •
55 Prickty

oppo~.ng pre-empt at the threelevel. But what about your double over a

CONVENIENTLY
W·
CATED
&amp; AFFORD·

everything in walking dis·

3t

8 Enameled

53 Holm or

Yesternay we looi&lt;ed at takeout douNes

M'r' PAW SEZ .TH' LORD MADE
ADAM FURST 'CUZ MEN ARE .
MOQE IMPORTANT!! ,.----'-1

Hl'ftood Cab~ And Futlliiure

Owners:
Jon Van f.leter &amp;
Paul Rowe

1bl:, House in New. Haven, WV, total electric,

ner seH

shout

47 E•ecs
48 Piclclad
veggle
•.
49 cato'1 year. •
51 Ma~
beverage

over an

BARNEY ·

Racine, Ohio 740.247-2019

Hou111 For Ron!

-

2 Comlc..aip 22 Pen
prince
contenfl
3 Eur. airline 23 8 o l y 4 More lfool 25 Realty
5 Calm
offering
6 Pepsin,
27 Matterhorn
echo
e.g.
· 7 Gleeful
28 Jung's in·

The first thing 10 bear in mind is that a

business

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

upon

40 ''CSI"

at the four-level

• HA~&amp;&gt;WA{Zf •
• SoFTWAfi!E •
Pi.ANS ~

E·mail: captbill65@yahoo.com
viww.auctlonzlp.com
#5548

Mon-Fri.
8:00am ·4:30pm
Sat. 8:00am . 12
Wt Dpprtclolt JI&gt;Ur

Call

East

Takeout doubles

(740) 992-5344

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Cammon:ial

North

Opening lead:

44087 Wlpple Rd.

diff~rencel

Wtst
Pass

(2wds.)

14 OMp- &amp;o cargo15 Showy
61 Thong
flower
16 Uninhibltad
DOWN
18 .jQmtrt YFs
19-Rotail
1 Kimono

7

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

1lt411 mo. pd

10 Propped up 58 lMM
12 In pl1ono
oignor
timbo
58 F -

unavoidable hea~ lose~.

-ABLE! Townhouse
. fnents ,
and/or
houses !Or rent.
740.44,1·1 111 tor
catlon &amp; information.

52 -giant
54 p""'"

21 Sulfmystlc
poet
23Hosslo
24 Ivy ~aguer
26 Gaelic pap
star
29Foreman
foe
30
thewall
32 King
of gorillas
34 FI"""V sl~n
36 Bunion 111e
37 loud
clamor
38 Qstar ruler

• 7 3

South

L &amp; L Tire Barn
Pomeroy,OH
(5 Points) ··
New &amp; Used Tires,
. We buy used tires.
computer ":heel
alignments , light
mechanic work ,
complete service oil
changes. small engine
repair.
We service and
winterize boats und
RV 's

• J I 0 .962
• 8 76532

o!oKQ JtQ9672 • -.

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES
ll.k1MPI•IIIlM

10--02-N

• KQ• 3
• Q tO
t AJ 2
.A 6 0
Eul

WK4
• 6

• New Homes

Rem~def ing

W¥038725

Townhauoeo .
Modern 1BR
740·446-0390

H1li s Self
2$670 Elashan Road
Racine, Ohio

•tto.n 'ddNoi•A

service

Plt~t»~

"

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Johnson's Tree

Bonus!

$475/rent

741).367·7762

person ot·integrity, with
good people skills. You
also need to be able ~
follow instructions and
have. an ability to ~sten
and IP::id people in the

unr.u '"'

on Bulaville . No experienoe required!

Pike.

~br.

ho.ok

304-675-6908

~~-~~.-~~
""''!""~~'!"'~----POST OFFICE
NOW

R.ntah

Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Cri:tdit
OK. 2. 3, 4 and 5 bed·
rOoms
available.
740 _44 6--3384

YOUNG'S

:: ·2

weeks oft. Experience
raiSing teens or laster
Co~tlhdi' "'ft
care preferred. We pmLa•--r~·rpen~er~·Me
vide training. Interested?
.......,.,.,\.fa
1nvv1
Call
Ossis
r,
local
work, • 8
588 for more
1· 77·325-1
7.n 992. 7943

304·674-6204

TOO# 419·526·0466
"This ins~tution is an
EQual Opportunity
Provider and Employer"

Mon-fri

handicap
accessible, available, paid training
$650
per
mo., starts immedia1ely, no for boys groop home lo740-949-2303
.experience needed, na cated irl southern Ohio.
2B~ house for rent $400 sales,
call 27·7 care tor 2 w&amp;eks on

Apt.

Nordl

-768~

Direct Care Staff. in residential youth program.
Must be 21 year~ .ot'age.
Pay based on t~
.ence .
cau

hlloine

. half
6 'Refreoh.

J

3 Bedroom homes
from 5214.36 per month, Butlalo. Full-time, Must
~A-.~.....~ many u~r~. have driver's ric. &amp; pus
"""'""""""
..-y _ .
de"·
&amp;
.~
bad&lt;ground ·
tned&lt;.
"vet)'
-~'1JP. ~
.a~
EOE

45 J - Auel
47 CEO degrlo
SO Tell

1 C..Von
mentS

•
lmmed .... O,.•ll•

::""~.-:~=-':"!'!~- New
2br

Phillip
Alder

Marilyn

~c·

house
Two .Bed· ..

•.96 acres. RtJtland. Oh.
~vate
sening,
eat-in
tltchen, 3 br.. 2 full
•~ths
- , lg. ·livingroom, lg
{!mity room, out ot flood
'ptain, (740)742-2404 or
740·949-2930

AC,ROSS

·c;;;;;;:;:;;;'Ci;;::;••

Wayne (740) 446·3570

'
NEA Cro1.1word
Puzzle

BRIDGE

2 BA house In Galtlpoiio, Brand ,_ 3bed 2bath An Exoeltent way 10 eam
conn.
$oi15Jmo on + ·half a«e in Pt. money. The New AVoo.

New Haven, · one bed- ~--~~Lals~;;;;;;;;;;;"'!!:: hiring. For · appllcatlon
.,,N 2 North.
.;.,~ ~·1
room apa rtmen t, .................
and Iree govei"Mlent job
TOOm
Mobne
Home
&amp;
relerences, 1 mile from town on SR info, call American Asbamp
Conley 1BA Apt, WID hookups, ?An992·0165
141.
Water
furnished.
satellite TV 1ncl. Wtrent. ....,.
~
--.----;...
of
labor
304·895·3129
"
$175/mo.t (740)446'-0761 soc.
1 9t o5~ ~6
24/h
close to hOspllal. Call Nice
. Clean
Ground
• oF ~ •
rs.
0 !!!16;;7!!
Jri-level brick/ceda. r on 74Q-339 -v.J&lt;X.
"'"'
Fioor. 2br, W/0 hookup, ;- ;,r1!!304
• • 5·,;;2!!32!!9e!!!!!!!! omp · ser( · """
Bedroom

The Daily sentinel • Page BS

Sp&amp;clatll! W/0

and up, Cetltrat $150/dep. You pay . aH Ptoasant.
W/0 hookup, tenant udlities. No section 8 or NANCE

Efficiency

www.mydailysentinel.com

Holp W...W • o.-.1

Townhottl
. . ..

relHg, range &amp; dish·

tie

=•a/

Thul'lday, OCtober 2, 2008
ALLEYOOP

Thur~ay, October 2, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

7

..
GARFIELD

lnterruptad, whiCh Is Wflal ts l l k~ty to hap·

•

pen. Be prepared for dlsl'uptlons.
GEMINI (May 21-Juns 20) Two factors
7

thai keep 1lio wlleeta of ~lendshtp rOlling
are gratlluat and roclprcctty, so should
someone ask tor a bll ot assistance, be
ready to pnell in.
CANCER (June .21.July 22) - 'ollur
biggest fault ~that you gal too prolee11ve
and posaesaiVe with those In your

Remodeling: ROrQm I
Additions
LOe.i Cont,...ctor

74G-367.()544

charge. Such could be the case at thts
Uma. Be nurturing,'not amotharing.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Persons In your

F..,. Eollmateo

740·367.()536

·Chsrgt are tortuneto, lndHd. You'll glva
them plenty or apace to do thtlr own

For Remodeling and New House Building

lhlng. llUI bt ready 10 pounct af10Uid

Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

1omeont try to tlkt advllntlge

ot them.

VIAOO (Aug . 23·Sopt. 22) - Evon
lt'lougll you Itt dllctrnlng anct oan
improve your ldeu when called fer, you
may be a bH olfendld If IO!Tleone maktl

• Room f'dditions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

I ...,.lructiVI reOitiOn.

IIUW.IIRCII, t•o

(;I "-

~

"f! ' ,;,... t,;'.;.'_"·~·'--..S.....I-....:.....,.~ ·.t!:r:::::.?m!L.LJ.LlJ

SQUP TO NU'i'z ~ tl ., ..~

I •

. ,.

47239 Riebel Road. Long Bottom. OH

740-985.4141
Cell: 740-416·1834

25+ yean experience Frt• Eslilllllles

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

'.

••

'

'

\
-

�•
•

.·.Page B6- The Daily
' Sentinel

Thwsday. October 2; 2008

www.mydailysentioel.com

Palin, Bideit spar on
Iraq, economic crisis, A3

Nazarene Day, A2

•

There "IS" Such A Thing As
flFree Lunch!

•

Entl!r Here For A

Sodexo Dinning
Services

$30 Gift Certificate

Rio Gr1111de'• eampui In F. van

To One Of These Great Restaura11ts
. Drawing Each Week! ·

~led 1111

The \lnlvenolty of

and Elizabeth J)avlll!nlvmlty
Center Invites you to our
Sunday brunch buffet. We
· havt many ltemM to ehllO!ie·from
lncludtn~r: made to order
omelet., putricit, qJad har,
b~ktast and luneh, destrt,
· lee cream bar, aoup, pizza,
and much mare.

Printed on IOU%
Recyded Newsprint

.•

Name:·----~------------------/~

I •

a

DV .

SPORTS

'' ~
~ .~beals Bud&lt;eyes .
in four; See Page Bl

Ph~na#__~~~~--~----------MaU .Io: ·Free Lunch
GalHpolls Dally Tribune
1125 3rd Ave. Gallipolis, Off 45631
,,

BY BAlAN

J.

REED

BR~OMYDAILYSENTINEI..COM

POMEROY -

Funds

from ·a state grant will help
protect sheriff's deputies on

•

the· road in rural Meigs
Coljllty, improving their
oormnunications with the dispaJch desk and other officeiS.
1be new system is like
that used by Ohio State
Highway Patrol, and is
expected to serve the sheriff's deJ!rtment for 20 years.
Slienff Robert Beegle

Our brunch houl'!i are
11 a.m. to I p.m.

Bring your famlly and join us.
'

$7.95 for Rdulls and we otTer
diMCounted rates for children.

received a $93.500 grant , Beegle said, will allow offi- .
Commul)ity
Oriented cers to activate repeaters ,
Policing Servi~s grant to allowing . officers ·to compurchasetheradiosandother municate . with the office
equipment, He discussed lhe dispatcher while out of the
new grant with County vehicle.
Commissioners
during
"When officers are in a
Thursday's regular meeting. house out in .the county,
B~gle will purchase 13 they cannot directly talk to
MARC system radios and the office," Beegle told ·
13 mobile repeaters for commissioners, "This will
department cruisers, a base enable ·us to communicate
station, two handheld radios like the State Patrol: handand reprogramming for . held to repeater to cruiser to
existing handheld radios. mobile in cruiser to the
Reprogrl!ffiming
them, . sheriff's office,"

-Ohio MARC Director
Darryl AndersQn will assist
Beegle in implementing the
system.
·
.
The ·current system will
remain in cruisers to allow
deputies contact with other
local departments, Beegle
said, but the new system
will even allow deputies to
contact other sheriff's
offices across the state.
Deputies can now only com·
municate in Meigs County.
The grant program was
only available to certain

·Southern Homecoining tonight .

departme~lls

in the state. .
Commtsstoners autho- ·
rized a pavement marking
project and agreed to cooperate in its completion
through' federal aid funds:
Engineer Eugene Triplett
was authorized to execute
contracts for the projects.
Commissioners also:
• Approved payment of
bills, in the amount of
$60,150.35 .
• Approved an animal
, daim of $150 for Gordon
Winebrenner, Racine.

Local churches
celebrate ,World
Communion Sunday
this .weekend
STAFF. REPORT
NEWSO MY.OAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BmJARIFS

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992-5432

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: •.· fiSh "¥ lund-raiser
slated at W~kesville.

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• Judge rejects Ohio
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• Fools rush in.
See Page A6
, • A Hunger For More.
.; See Page A6
i • Memories of school
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: •. PreaChing clinic
: coining to region.
: See Page A7
: • Going in with no
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Detalll

on ..... A2

.a SEC11CINS -

16 PAGES

POMEROY ~ On the first
·sunday · in October, this Sunday.
churches from around the world.
including those in Pomeroy, will
celebrate World Communion
Sunday and the sacrament that
Jesus has given to all his followers
to remember him and his sacrifice
on the cross for all people.
Churches in the Pomeroy area have
been coming together for six or seven
years · to celebrate their unity in
Christ. This Sunday the churches will
be canceling nonnal morning wor- .
ship services Wld instead will worship
'togethet atlllt rlverfrom am!llilthe1
ater, and aecording to P.astor Brian
Dunham of Pomeroy/Enterprise
United Methodist
Church ,
will"enjoy God's creation and the
beauty he ·brings when 'God's people
live together in unity' (Psalm 133: 1)."
.Coffee and donuts will be available at 10:30 a.m. at the riverfront,
followed by worship at 11 a.m. The
,
~h~ienl~h•~o• churches participating this year are
First Baptist Church of Pomeror,
The SOuthern Tornadoes will celebrate homecoming festivities when a new homecoming queen is crowned half· Grace
Episcopal, St. Paul s
time during tonight's home football game·against the Miller Falcons. Homecoming queen candidates, in front, and Lutheran, Trinity Congregational,
their escorts, in back, are from left, Metri Collins, daughter of Beverly Collins with esco_rt Jordan Pickens, son of &amp;lterprise/Pomeroy
United .
Eber Pickens Jr. and Velessa Hunnel; Tiffanie Deem, daughter of Tim and Stephanie Deem, with escort Kyle Methodist, and Common Grounds .
Goode, son of Susan Goode and~J!Iff Hayes; Chelsea Pape, daughter of Allen and Kelly Pape an~ Carol Pape, Special music will be shared by
with escort Chris Holter, son of Stanley Holter and Tanya Holter; Emma Hunter, daughter of Doug and Tonja Dennis Moore, and a combined
Hunter, with escort Weston Roberts, son of Mike and Rhonda Roberts; Samantha Patterson, daughter of Jim choir from the churches, under the
Pl;ltterson and Barb Johnson, with escort JD Whittington, son of Melissa Downing and Dean Whittington; and direction of Dixie Sayre, will share
Rashell Boso, daughter ofTom Boso and Teresa Barber, with escort Bryan Harris, son of Paul and Kristine Harris. a rendition of "This Little Light of
Mille." Rev. Leslie Flemming from
Grace Episcopal. wi[l bring the
morning message, and everyone
Also pictured (front row) crown will be invited to share in open
communion with the option oJ
bearer Matthew Hall, son of
grape juice or wine. In case of
James and Tracy Hall, and
flower girl Abigail Riser, daugh· inclement weather, the sefVice will
be held at Trinity Congregational
tar of James and Melissa
Church.
,
Riser. Second row (from
Dunham
added,
"even
though
ow:
left) Ethan Martin, freshman ·
traditions are different, the richness
escort, son of Jeff and Lou
of
those traditions can more fully
Martin, Cyle ·Rees, junior
· speak to ·our experience in follow·
escort, son of Jay and Tina
ing Christ as we come together in
Rees, Cody Tucker,
him . We celebrate our diversity,
sophomore escort, son of
made in God's image but looking
· Rusty and Connie Tucker. Third and
acting in many different ways
row (from left) Katelyn Hill,
as parts of the body of Christ,"
·
freshman attendant, daughter
The churches invite anyone who
of Jarrod and Leigh Hill,
desires to come together ,in this
·ereanna Taylor, junior allen·
spirit of worship, to come and enjoy
dant, daughter of Greg .and
the Lord's presence. As Dunham
Patty Taylor, Tiffany Cundiff,
said, the day is about churches eel- .
sophomore attendant, daughter ebrating the unity they have· in
of David and Karen Cundiff.
Christ as they recognize there i&amp;
. "one Lord, one faith, one baptism:•
(Ephesians 4:5). ·

'

.

Annie's
Mailbox
,
Puckeye Edition
'Calendars ·
'
.
.
PJ,&amp;ssifieds
'
Comics
·
,.

All

crediJ cards accepted

A2

Walk to raise awareness
'!bout Down Syndrome·

Finding little resources in
Southeastern Ohio tO help ·
their family understand ju~t
POMEROY - Many what Gianna was up against,
people have heard the term the two decided to educate ·
88 Down Syndrome but don't themselves and planned to
know exactly what it means raise as much local aware·
A3 for those living with the ness about Down Syndrome
'
B Section birth defect which is what a as possible. ·
~ports
'A2 special event hopes to
Enter
the , .Down
change
this
Sunday
on
the
"Syndrome
Assoc1at10n
of
:Weather
Pomeroy Parking Lot.
• Sout~eastern · .
. Oh1o
C oool Ohio Volley Publlohlna co.
In 2007, Dave and Lisa (DS~SSO) wh1ch wtll ben·
Averion of Pomeroy wei- efif"from the walk to rruse
comed the birth of daughter a~areness th1s weekend _and
Gianna who was diagnosed will k~p dollars raised
• with Down Syndrome.
PleaH- Wille. AJ

Editorials
'
:Faith
• Values
•
Movies
~AS CAR
Obituaries
'
2208 ..Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant,WV
304-675-5427

AS

.,

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYCAII.YSENTINEL.COM

•

"(From left) "
Brianne Crisp,
Gianna Averlon ,
and Garrett
Howard are all :
local faces of :
those living with ..
Down Syndrome:
. and will be hop· :
lng to raise
awareness
.
about their lives·.
and the lives- of &gt;
others during a ';
Down Syndrome:
. Awareness Walk·
· on Sunday in th&amp;
Pomeroy
·
Parking Lot
Stall photo

'

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