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Pase 88 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, October 8 , 2008

Bosox-Rays renew rivalry, Manny in middle of NLCS

Coach

savshe's.

Bob Evans
Farm Festival this
weekend,A6

Mei~SWCD

receives donation, As

BY BEN WALKER
ASSOCIATED F'RESS

· Exactly why the Boston
CINCINNATI (AP) - bigger role in decision makRed Sox and Tampa Bay Rays
Marvin
Lewis doesn 't plan ing .
tangle so much is hard to tell.
to ·leave one of the NFL's
Th·eir differences came to
Blame it on a high-and-tight
safest
co~ching
jobs.
a
head at their annual endpitch here, a hard slide there.
The
Cincinnati
Ben
gals
of-the-season
meeting, ·
Whatever, this much is true:
coac~ said Monday the where they parted ways.
The teams playin~ in the AL
team
s worst start m SIX ·.Brown, who functions as the
championship senes sure get
years
hasn 't diminished his de facto general manager.
into a lot of scraps.
commitment
to getting it said he had no intention of
''There's no hatred," injured
turned around. A 31 -22. Joss firing Wyche; who had two
Red Sox pitcher Curt
at Dallas left Lewis ' team at years left on his . contract.
·Schilling insisted Thesday in
the bottom of the league, the Brown said that Wyche .
an e-mail to The Associated
Press.
only one with an 0-5 record. resigned during the meeting.
'.'It's more a combination of
Three other teams are 0-4.
Wyche insisted he was fired.
talent/personalities and place
It's a major sl ip from
Three months later, they
than anything, I think. For
2005, when Lewis ·led the reached an agreement over
years Tampa Bay was looked
Bengals to their only win- the final $1 million owed
down on and the Sox were
ning record and playoff Wyche on his contract.
orie of the powerhouSe teams.
Brown hired Dave Shula
appearance since 1991,
The start to respectability is as
when
owner
Mike
Brown
and
later gave him a twomuch an attitude as it is talent
took
over
for
his
father.
year
co·ntract extension
. and a few years ago the Rays,
"Yes. I am very commit- · while he was in the process
I think. got tired of bemg
ted
to doing the right thi~g of losing 50 games faster
pushed around," he wrote ..
here,"
Lewis sa id , when than any coach in NFL hisThat's kind of how Sarah
.
asked
if
he planned to stay tory. Bruce Cos let replaced
AP photo
Palin sees it, too.
"I know that earlier some of In this June 5 file photo, Tampa Bay Rays pitcher James Shields, right, takes a 5Wing at as head coach. "I honestly Shula seven games into the
the experts this year were kind Boston Red Sox's Coco Crisp after Crisp was hit by a pitch and charged the mound in the don 't think anything has I 996 season - the last year
of tough on the Rays. I've second inning of a baseball game in Boston. The Rays have scuffled with the Red Sox at ever changed here . , The on Shula's contract - and
been there," the Republican .least a hall-dozen times this decade, punctuated by the wild brawl in June that resulted in commitment that I made stuck around until 2000,
vice presidential candidate eight players getting suspended.
five years ago here and when he resigned after an 0said Monday durin¥, a speech
(again) three years ago, two 3 start, saving the team
in Clearwater, Aa. 'But what Bank Park.
manager Joe Maddon hardly dustups we've had since I years ago, whenever. is that some money.
a difference a season can · Traded from Boston to Los backed down.
have been here have mostly we'd, see this thing all the
Brown let Dick LeBeau
make, and now the Rays , in Angeles on July 31, Ramirez
"I want to be very clear: I Q!:en due to the competitive way through and get us back complete the final year on
the playoffs for the flrnt time reprised his role as a one-man defend' everythin~ our guys nature of the games more than to where We were."
his contract in 2002 , when
ever."
October wrecking crew in !be did," he said then. 'I feel actu- anything," he wrote. "There .
No matter how bad it gets, the· Bengals went a fran· Eve11 before their rise to. first-round sweep of the ally proud of the way we han- are a lot of players involved
Lewis'
job is one of the chise-worst 2-14. Lewis was
prominence. the Rays were Chicago Cubs. The 2004 dled the · situation · that was ·that know each otlwr and are
safest
around.
Two years hired . led ,the team to that
plenty feisty. They've scuffled World Series MVP went 5- presented."
. good friends, so much like the
with the Red Sox at least a for-10 with two home runs
Before the season began, · Yankees and us." ·
· a~o.. he got a contract exten-. playoff .appearance in 2005,
half-dozen times this decade, and four walks.
Maddon's team showed it
Schilling doesn't · foresee stan through 20 !01 virtually and got a contract extension
punctuated by a wild brawl at
"He could fight a bear with would not be intimidated. any brawls in the next week or a guarantee that he .will be through 20 I0, providing
Fen way Park in June that · a stick and win," praised 'TWice it got into scrapes with so. He'll sit this one out fol- around that long unless he long-term job security.
challenges the front office.
Lewis has publicly disresulted in eight players get- Phillies broadcaster Gary the Yankees in spring training lowing shoulder surgery.
ting suspended.
Matthews, MVP of the 1983 . - back when they-were 200'The game results are far That's how things work in agreed with Brown this sea"You know, we've had NLCS when Philadelphia I underdogs to wm the World more important than any egos Cincinnati.
son over the owner's decisome good battles with them beat the Dodgers.
. Series.
involved, so no," he said.
Brown took'control of the sion to bring back troubled
all year," Boston pitcher Jon
Coming off their ·victory
The trouble between Tampa "I've already seen the team after his father, Paul , receiver Chris Henry. If
Lester said.
over wild-card Milwaukee in Bay and Boston dates to 2000, Coco/Shields match . three died before the start of the Lewis follows Wyche's.
Other matchups · in the the opening round, tl)e when Pedro Martinez hit times today. This series, these I991 season. The Bengals · example an(j presses the
majors get more l\ttention, be Phillies are aiming for their Genild Williams with his fu'st teams, are bigger than that."
have been one of the NFL's owner for more control at
it Yankees-Red Sox or Cubs- first championship since pitch of the game. Williams The ALCS matchup was set worst franchises over that the end of the season' the
Cardinals or Dodgers-Giants. 1980. Torre, no stranger to !be rushed the mound, a brouhaha Monday after the Rays beat span, managing only one dynamic of their relationBut there is no baseball rival- postseason, is hoping to lead ensued and a slew of playen; the Chicago White Sox in winning season. Even when ship could change.
. ry that's more spirited than Los Angeles to Its first title were suspended.
four games and Boston elimi- things have been very bad,
For• now , Lewis is
Tampa Bay-Boston .
since 1988.
In 2002, 2oo4 and ' 2005, nated the Los Angeles Angels the head coach has felt immersed in changing
Funny, know who was
The defending champion Tampa Bay and the Red Sox in four.
things under the system in
often in the middle - some- Red Sox and the Rays begin tangled after pitches either hit
While Boston will !Jr to . secure.
It
takes
more
than
a
bad
place.
how -of those slugfests?
Friday night at Tropicana or were thrown near Ramirez. win its third championship in
"We've taken some lumps
· Manny Ramirez.
Field. James Shields is ·likely After the last of those three five years, the 100-win record to get a Bengals
coach
fired.
this
year, and that doesn't
Yep, the s(lme slugger to start Game I for Tampa scraJ?S. Schilling said tben- Angels can put away their
Sam
Wyche
led
the
change
howl approach what
who's now the main man in Bay- hehitCocoCrispw1th D~1l Rays manager Lou postseason bunting. In fact,
the NL championship series a pitch on June 5, triggering Piniella was trying to tum his that's what doomed them - a Bengals to their second I do," Lewis said. "I'm
between the Los Angeles the bench-clearing fracas in team into "a bunch of tough botched suicide squeeze by Super Bow.! appearance in excited about our football
Dodgers and Philadelphia Boston.
guys." .
. .
. !'!rick Aybar in the ninth the ·1988 season, losing to team. I . actually like
Philhes.
Shields and four other Rays · These·days, Schilhll@ '!lll!.d·, . IJIIIlllg:
·. ·
,.. San Francisco. Then .the fo()tball. team, ·:Qt!!.jf
Ramirez, manager Joe were suspended, while Lester the clubs are not bitter ene"I thought it was a good sit- Bengals slipped to 3-13 in being 0-5.llike·
Torre and the Dodgers open and two oilier Red Sox play- mies.
uation for us,". manager Mike I991, and Wyche began like what we're
the
best-of-seven
set ers were penaliied. A day
"There are very few players Sciascia said. "It didn't work questioning Brown's roster We're working very.
Thursday night at Citizens after the fight,' Tampa Bay left from the earher times. The out."
meves and lobbying for a hard."

Sports Shorts
OJ. Mayo case goes before West Virginia Supreme Court
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)- The Secondary School
· Activities Commission asked the state Supreme Court ·on
Tuesday to reinstate t.wo administrative rules struck down
last year in a case involving former Huntington High bas- .
ketball star 0 J . Mayo.
Cabell County Circuit Judge Dan O'Hanlon overturned
rules that automatically imposed multi-game suspensions
on ejected players and al lowed the SSAC to force teams
with ineligible players to forfeit victories, even if the players win their cases on appeaL
Mayo was ejected from a game against Capital in January
2007 in which he came into contact with a referee after
receiving a second technical fouL O'Hanlon 's injunction
postponed sanctions on Mayo, allowing him to play in a
high-profile game against another nationally ranked team.
Huntington High Principai .Greg Webb eventually sus: _
pended Mayo for three games, which he served concur- ·
rently with the SSAC's two-game suspension. In rum, the
SSAC dropped its inquiry.
,
Mayo's attorney, Mike Woelfel , said athletes must be
allowed to have their say before punishment is invoked,
"especially when ·you have an ejection and a multiple-game ·
suspension."
In a telephone interview with The Associated Press after
the hearing, Woelfel suggested that after the game official
who ejects the athlete files a· report with the SSAC within
24 hours, the athlete and his guardians should appear nt the
SSAC's offices in Parkersburg, the referee's game report
wo~ld be read, and any available video of the game be
revtewed .
.
"That's what we want," Woelfel said.
SSAC lawyer Bill Wooton told the justices the forfeiture
rule was actually a ·moot point in the Mayo case, since
Huntington never forfeited any games:
"That rule had no absolutely no impac;,t on the case,"
Wooton said. "The forfeiture rule has always been inter· ·
·
preted consistently."
O'Hanlon also ,declared. in his injunction that the SSAC
is a state agency, but Wooton referred to Supreme Court
case law that indicated it is not. WOoton contends the SSAC
is a voluntary organization and Woelfel predicted the justices wouldn't go along with the lower court contention.

•

Your money Is safe, and growing at the
Horne National Bank.

We'ft all helt'd the M'ft: Some blg-ttme lendlnt lnatltutlona areln trouble.
but the Home Nattonal a.ntt- your community &amp;.nk- Ia thrivtnv. we•,.
·not buying a_ub-prime mortgage 1o1M. We l*lfte In lendlni money to •
local entrepNneur to .mt a bulln111, to 1 neighbor to buy 1 home or to put
children through college. Buslneaa Ia good .t the Home National Bank.
a.tnv your d1po11ta home and support your IOCid eConomy Mel your community•.

We have money to lend.

to

SPORTS
·• High school football
previews. See Page 81

surer/CFO, reported to the
board that the collection
rate for the current tax year
POMEROY
2007, collected in 2008,
Del.inquent real estate taxes was 84 percent versus a hisdue the Meigs Local School torical collection rate of
District and how to proceed approximately 95 percent
with collections is under rate resulting in an approxidiscussion by the Meigs mate $289,000 decrease in
Local Board of Education . . real estate taxes to the
Mark E. Rhonemus, trea- District. He said that is
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

'Next Gen'
911 now in
research
phase
. BY BRIAN

Colors c

a

SYRACUSE

We've Got·lt·l
••

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•

•

_

receive bookmarks, clown noses
and color sheets. The Ringling
Bros. and Barnum &amp; Bailey circus will perform Oct. 17-19 at
Big Sandy Superstore Arena in
Huntington, W.Va.
For adults, Ann Pancake,
author of "Strange as this
,Weather Has Been ," will visi~
the Pomeroy Library at 2 p.m.
this Sunday for a discussion
about her novel. Pancake is a
native of West Virginia and
"Strange as · this Weather Has
Been" was picked as. the
MCDPL's "one book, one community" read selection. The
novel features a southern West
Viginia family devastated by

Please see Ubrary, AS

Please see Flu shot. AS

Brlan J. Reedfphoto

·•

Leaves are really just beginning to change this week, with maple and ash trees adding
their traditional reds and golds to the ·landscape, according to the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources. The recent onset of cool nights hl!s helped bring out the vibrancy of
color. Maples with their reds are becoming noticeable, as are the bright yellows and golds
of green ash: Southern Ohio woodlands are just in the early stages of change, but are
expected to be more vibrant than last year.

2 SECrrONS -12 PAGES

The circus, the writer, the pumpkins

Annie's Mailbox . A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
83-4

BY ' BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT 0 MYDAILYSEN.TINEL.COM

Bs

Places to go

A6
B Section
Beth S.rgent/photo

4

. Pleilse see Taxes, AS .

POMEROY
- The
announcement of annual flu
shot clinics is a sure sign
autumn has arrived.
The Meigs County Health
Department will administer.
flu shot&gt; to Meigs County
residents aged 65 years or
older or those with high risk
medical conditions from 9
a.m.- II .m. and 1-3 -p.m. ,
Friday, Oct. 17 at the health
department. Hi\lh r.isk medical conditions mclude asth·
rna, diabetes, blood disorders, heart disease , kidney
disease, eic.
Clinics .for th~ general
public will be held from 9
a.m. - noon. Saturday. Oct.
18 at Powell's Food Fair
and from 9-11 a.m. and 1-7
p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 21 at
the health department. .
Sherry Wilcox , RN ,
director of nursing for the
MCHD , said the department has 850 doses for
adults and I00 for children
· this flu season.
Peoplo who· possess
Medicare B, Railroad
Medicare or Medicaid coverage must present the
appropriate healthcare cards
before receiving the flu vaccine. There will be a $15.00
fee for people who do not .
have Medicare B, Railroad
Medicare or Medicaid coverage. Commercial healthcare ·insurance(s) cannot be
accepted, but residents are
encouraged to submit
claims to their respective
companies for possible
reimbursemel)t.
.
Influenza is a serious (but
preventable) disease, whicli
1s caused by a virus that is
transmitted from infected
persons to the nose or throat
of others. Proper handwashing techniques should
be utilized. The "flu season''
in the United States extends
from November through
April each year.
The flu vaccine can prevent influenza but the
viruses tliat cause the dis-.
·ease
often
change .
Therefore, influenza vac'Cine is revised each year by
replacing at least one component of the immunization with a newer version
in an effort to ensure that
the current flu shot is
effective. Protection devel•
ops about two weeks ·after

October library events

Obituaries

When earlier forecasts
indicated that the District
would move into a· deficit
positions. the Board took,
action in an effort to bring
the district into financial
balance through a reduction
in force by eliminating several positions, not filling

BY BETH SERGENT

.-~ ·

A4
As

·"'"lait"•·nlin•·l.mm

Health
department
schedules flu
shot clinics

0BITUAlUFS

Comics
. Editorials

c

BSERGENT@MVDAILVSENTINELCOM

Nathania! Hysell , 4, Pomeroy, caught a ride with
grandmother Patty to the Pomeroy Library y.esterday to participate in fall storytime going on now
through Nov. 20. Several otl1er free events for children as well as adults ·are planned for October by
the Meigs County District Public Library.

er.to
.RACIN' E

equivalent to tbe salary and
"The plan for the District
benefits of seven aides.
is to request q detailed
"Because of the low col- . delinquent tax list. Then as
lection rate, an additional requested by Scott Walton,
$421,695 of real estate Board president, obtain a
t~xes are now delinquent,
'to:,&gt; ten list' of delinquent
which brings the total taxpayers of the School
delinquent real estate taxes District, and hold a meeting
due the District to approxi- with the Meigs County
mately $1 ,523 ,000," said prosecuting attorney to seek
Rhonemus. ·
action toward collection.

J. REED

POMEROY - Meigs
County is implementing its
911 system at a time when a
new internet-based 911 service is being developed.
Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services Director
Doug Lavender said the
new service, designed to
keep up with technological
advances, will likely be
replacing E-9U service
:page AS
across the country by the
time Meigs County's sys:• Carol Johnson, 69
tem is paid for.
Next Generation 911 will
ro\11S..~!'Il~ t!J!9l!&amp;h ~e inlet"
net,.mcreasmg the,nformation that can be sent. It will
allow
those in need of emer• TOPS members
gency assistance to contact
taking exercise
the call center by text meschallenge. See Page A3 sage, or even send photos of
crimes in pro~ss. ·
·
• O'BI8ness offers
"Next Gen' would also
CO!ll!l'Unity CPR training . . accept emergency calls
See Page.AS
directly through in-vehicle
systems such as OnStar. It
is now the subject of
research by the U.S.
WEAmER
Department .
of
Transportation,
the
Federal Communications
Commission and other
agencies.
Meigs County's new 911
system, to be be implemented in January, will be E-911
com{latible. E-911, now
cons1dered · the
most
advanced 911 system available, allows the system to
locate callers usmg GIS
Debtlll on PllQI A3
Pleese see ttl, AS

illl!879
, NATIONAL BANK

1"1"

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

@:) aoo8 Ohio V.Oey Publlohlna Co.

TOLEDO (AP) - A Toledo high school football team is
being forced tb sit out its next game after an on-field fight
last Friday night.
'. Toledo Rogers will forfeit this week's game against
Toledo Whitmer.
Toledo City League officials say they made the decision
after reviewing what happened when Rogers played Toledo
Central Catholic last week. ·
· Officials say nearly 'all of the Rogers players came off the
bem:h dunng a shoving match between the teams.
Coaches ;md game officials stopped the fight from esca·
1ating and no one was seriously injured.

'

Tilt ' I{Sil \\ , 0( ' r&lt; II\ I 1{ 'I · :! ooH

. ;, o ( 'I·: NTS • \'ol. ;; K, Nu. 6 .1

Sports
Weather

.

Printed on tOO %
RE-c:yclrd Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, O~io

INDEX

Ohio football team to sit out 1 game after fight

.

•

PbMEROY - Several free
events are planned for October
by the Meigs County District
Public Library including tickets
to Ringling Bros .. &amp; Barnum
Bailey Circus, a visit from
author Ann Pancake and the
annual pumpkin painting event
This year the MCDPL. is participating in tbe "Reading with
Ringling Bros" program which
allows kids to earn a free
Ringling Bros. circus ticke.t simply by doing their library reading . Children ages two-12 enroll
in the free progral!l witb their
local librarian and will even

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�..
Jhe Daily Sentinel

NATION • W ORLD

•

PageA2
Thursday, October 9, 2008

Russia, Georgia disagree
over troop pullback

Fed

BY- JEANNINE AVERSA
AP ECONOMI CS WR ITER

KARALETI,
Georgia from the assumption . that
WASHINGTON - Wall
(AP) - Russian troops the process would be comStreet bounced higher and
pulled back from their posi- pleted by Friday, and this is .
lower Wednesday irying to
of
that
tions outside Georgia's confirmation
make up its mind about an
breakaway province of South assumption," Haber told the
unprecedented coordinated
Ossetia but held their ground AP by telephone. speaking
interest rate cut by central
in contested areas, setting the from the buffer zone outside
banks around the world . In
stage for more tension· Abkhazia where he watched .
Jhe end it 'ettled on a fa mil between the two countries the Russian pullout .
iar feeling - fem - and
In Washington, the State
that waged war in August.
plunged again .
welcomed.
Georgian
Interior Department
The Federal Reserve. desRussia's moves but said it
spokesman
Shota
Ministry
peratel y trying to jump-start
Utiashvili
told
The was watching to see if it
the lendi ng that keeps the
Associated
Press
the completed the withdrawals
U.S. economy moving,
Russian withdrawal was a by the deadline .
dropped its closely watched
"Russia is. in fact , starting
positive
move , but he added
.federal fund s rate to I .5 perto
comply with the Sept. 8
that Georgia wouldn ' t con_cent. The cut from 2 percent
sider it complete until the agreement with the EU ,"
1.\)0k the ra te to its lowest ·
Se!in
troops leave the town of spokesman
level in more than four years.
McCormack
said
.
"It
is a
Akhalgori, near South
.. Central banks in England.
Ossetia, and the Kodori positive sign ."
China, Cuplb . Sweden and
Despite the . dispute, the
in another MoscowGorge
Swit zerl and
and
the
Russian
withdrawal paves
backed
breakaway
·European Central Bank also
the way for the return of
province, Abkhazia.
cut rates after a series of
Georgian
authority to a
"We
think
that
it's
a
step
high-stakes phone call s over
AP photo
·
wide
swath
of,. territory beld
seveml da y~ be twe~n Fed · Traders Russel Boose, center, Richard Felman, left, and Michael Carusiello, far right, work in the right direction, but it
doesn 't mean yet that the by Moscow since the war.
Cha irman Ben Bernanke in the Eurodollartading pit Wednesday at the CME Group in Chicago.
·
.
The war erupted when
wi.thdrawal is fulfilled,"
1ind his counterparts.
Georgian
forces launched
·
Utiashvili
said.
· But the Dow Jones indL"- Both Democrat Barack mg. rhe lifeblood of the closed down more than 9
attack
targeting
Russia ,maintains that an
trial average lost another Obama · and Republican economy. is sputtering.
percent. Hong Kong's Hang
on
Aug.
7 in a
Tskhinvali
Akhalgori
is
part
of
South
'189 points. or 2 percent. ro John McCain described the - "The turmoil will not e nd Seng more than 8 percent.
bid
to
take
control
of the
and
considers
the
Ossetia
close ar 9.25R. It was the cri sis as global.
quickl y . and significaJtl
In Britain, the governsixth straight day of losses
The White House wei- challenges remain ahead.'' men! said it would pour Kodori Gorge part . of region, which broke away in
.for the Dbw. The index ha&gt; corned . the cooperation Trea·sury Secretary Henry cash into troubled banks in Abkhazia ~ claims that a . war during . tne early .
1990s. Russian troops.
.shed more than a third of its among central banks to battle Paul son told reporters at a e xchang~ for stakes in them Georgia rejects . .
Russian media carried . a tan)\s and warplanes swiftly
•value . nearly 5,000 points. the crisis . "It's importatit and preview of meetings late'r ~ a partial nationalization.
statement
by Gen . Marat repelled the attack and ·
:,;;nee its all -time high. &gt;et helpful that central banks are this week of the , finance
'This is not a tiqJe for
Kulakhmetov,
who is in drove deep into· Georgia in
:One 'year ago Thursday. ·
working in a coordinated officials of the Group of conventional thinking or
: .The Dow opened down way to deal with stress in the Seven major industrial outdated dogma but for the. charge of Russian troops Moscow's first major milimore than 200 points. Within financial
system ," countries , the 185-nation fresh and innovative inter- near South Ossetia, saying tary offensive beyond its
an hour. it was up almost as spokesman Tony Fratto said. lnternation,al
Monetary vent ion that gets to the heart the pullout had been fully borders since the 1991 col,. ·
lapse of the Soviet Union.
.much. A late morning sell·
But even that may not Fund and the World Bank. of the problem," · said completed.
Georgians terrified by
Moscow must pull its
'Off gave way to an afternoon break the panicky mindset .. The global credit crisis was Britain ' s Prime · Minister
.troops from the buffer zones weeks of arson and looting
:rally. and the Dow was that has gripped investors expected to be the · major Gordon Brown.
:mead for the day in the last across the world as jobs agenda item at those talk~..
Sen . Charles Schumer, D- surrounding the two regions they blame on Russia's
:half-hour of trading - then evaporate and retirement
Paulson spoke after Asian N.Y., suggested the United by Friday under cease-fire South Oss'etian .allies lined
agreements brokered by the roads to watch the with:took .a dive at the close.
savings dry up .. Banks may and European markets States take similar steps.
· · The day 's losses were still be inclined to ho[lrd wrapped . up a bleak day,
The Fed 's interest rate cut French · President Nicolas drawal and welcome return·
.lighter for the Nasdaq com- cash. and until they decide with investors lleeing was a change in course .. It Sarkozy. Earlier Wednesday, ing Georgian police.
. posite index and the to lend again the crisis is not stocks and worrying that had · held rates steady Russia's President Dmitry · As dozens of annored
·Standard &amp; Poor's 500. And likely to let up .
neither the Fed nor other because of inflation con- Medvedev said the pullout personnel carriers, military
:Wall Street as a whole fared
Underlining the seriousness central banks could move cerns. Since the Fed had put from areas outside South trucks and transport vehiJar better than Asia. where of the situation. the Federal fast enough to stop 'the tur- a stop to interest-rate cuts in Ossetia and Abkhazia would cles rolled north past rows
:some stock exchanQcs were Reserve on Wednesday also moil. even considering the June. the economic outlook be completed by midnight.
of destroyed homes, tendown 9 per.:ent, and Europe. agreed ro provide faltering $700 billion U.S. bailout of has deteriorated.
Offictals at the European sions in villages outside
where some lost 5 percent.
insurance g.iant American financial institutions. ,
"The pace of economic Union monitoring mission South Ossetia began to ease.
: The Fed acted in concert International Group Inc. with
"Now I feel safe; I hope
European indexes ended activity has slowed marked- · patrolling .the . buffer zone
:with the European Central another loan . $37.8 billion on lower, too. Britain 's FT'SE- ly in recent months ," the refused to comment on the that life will improve," said
Bank to make emergency top of the $85 billion it prof- 100 finished down about 5.2 Fed said. "Moreover, the latest tontroversy over dis- Meri Khokhashvili, stand·interest rate cuts after the fered the troubled company percent. Germany 's DAX intensification of financial puted areas.
ing outside her destroyed
Sept. 11 terror anack s in last month.
The head of the EU moni- home .in the village of
about 5.9 percent and market turmoil is likely to
2001. Elut. Wednesdav's curs
The moves came as majqr France's CAC-40 6.3 percent. ·exert additional restraint on . toring mission, Hansjorg KitsnisL "l!ve had· nightwere ttnprecedented with American retailers turned in
In Asia, where trading spending, par()y by further Haber, called the Russian mares for the past week
· the 11umber of nations that dismal "sales figures for the ended for the day before the reduc'ing the ability of pullout· as "a very positive because I was afraid someparticipated, the Fed said.
third quarter ~ further rate cuts were announced, households al\d businesses development."
one would attack us. At
For
millions
of proof that consumer spend· the Japanese 'Nikkei 225 to obtain credit.:'
"We always proceeded least now I c.an sleep .safer."
Americans, the Fed's cut
.mean s borrowing money
becomes cheaper. Home
equity loans. credit cards
and other floating-rate loans
all fluctuate depending on
what the Fed does.
Thl&lt;; Is tl)e serond notked pub· :, ·
.. ·- ..
\
. '\ C•LSCS" for case number 06-1357- Ohio Depllrtment of Natural Re· tablished under Chaprer 929 of the
Bank of America. Wells
llshed in regard to this Proposed
,.-. &amp;:.....~. ".r ·; \ EL-BTX.
~~~partment of Transportlltion ~~v;~lftr.!e;,a~oc~~~~~
Fargo and other banks cui
Mujor Utility f'Kility. AMP-Ohio
published the first notke in th• ,.,
their prime rate by half a
~ .I •
Pursuan.t to Rule 4~5-06 of tbe Ohio Environmental Protection faciliry: and
.
Dally Sentinel ne"'&gt;-pi.JM!r, Pumc·
\l j 1 Ohio Administrutive Code. the fol- Agency
• The facility incorpomtes maxipoint to 4 .5 percem. also .the
roy. Ohio' on August 8. 2008. ·
k&gt;wing local government officials Ohio Historical Society
mum feasible wurer C&lt;)Oservation
\owesr· in m,are tha·n four
,.,.,."[,
/
·
in
Meigs
County
have
been
served
practices as detennined by the
years. after the Fed
Name
and
Dtseription
of
the
Pro·
i
wiJh
n
copy
of
the
application:Criteria
Uied
to
Review
the
ApBoard. considering available techannounced its decision early
posed
fudllty
.
·
pH&lt;'llllon
nology and the nature and ec&lt;mom· Wednesday.
j
.
Meigs
County
Commissioners
icsofthc various airernativcs.
. Fed watchers believe the
American MunkiiJ'II Powe~·Ohi n
/ '
Mr. Michael Dnvenp&lt;~1. President The following eighJ criteria are set Section 4906.07 'of Jhe Revised
'central bank might cut rates
iAMP-Ohi&lt;ll pmpo&gt;es to c·on&gt;llliL'I
I ~j
tOO E;!SI S...·ond Street
forth in Section 4906.10 (A) of t1Jc: Code provides !hat:
further when it meets later
anei~&gt;:tric· tran smi s; ion li neand a,
j'
i ' ''" .._,,
Pomen&gt;y. Ohiu45769
Revised Cc:&gt;&lt;k and will be used. (A) Upon the re..-eipt of an apthis month. and perhaps
snciated .intcr~0nncctinn sv. it~'h yard
-e· ;.t": :_, ~.
:' :
along with addi1ionul inrormation. plication complying with Section
again in December. in hopes
1,-.:at&lt;'&lt;l in L&lt;tan To-. nship and StH·
'.;t _, "' ,; i
Meigs Cnunl)' Health Department by the Board in the reviewing of 4906.06 of tile Revised Code, the
of cushioning the blow if
ton Townsh1 p. Mcip Cnumy. Ohio
f-.,.:.
Mr. L:ury Marshall. Health Com- the &lt;1pplication f,.- a certificale to Power Siring Board shall ~mptly
Th i~ prOJC&lt;.'t b known a~ th~ AMfl. /
.....,, ~ _.!· ~ •.., 1\~
mis:-.inner
collSiruct. operate and maintai~ the fix a dute for a public hearing therethe United States falls into
GS
Tr.m~mi.
"
's.i
nn
Line.
A
~
required
~
)ul~
112
Eas1
Memorial
Drive
AMPGS Transmission Line:
on~ not less than sixty m1r more than
recession .
by
the
Ohit&gt;
Rcv1,;.:d
&lt;.'
&lt;
&gt;&lt;
k
t'hap&lt;
cr
o"o
Pnm
croy,
Ohio45771
ninety days al1er such receipt, and
· "Even if the financial cri 4906.
AMP.()hio
seeks
"
Ccr1i
li·
1::''
·
•
The.
basis
of
the
need
for
the
fashall
cooclude the pnx:eeding asexs is was put to bed today,
t:ale df En v i1~ 1nm ent a l Cu mpalihi l-·
.
Mr.
Robert
Morris
.
cilily.
In
the
ca&amp;e
of
a
major
utility'
peditiously
as practicable.
that would still leave the
it~ a ~ ~ublic N~~ from the Sli.lle ~hL! . appliL:HI\lrl f~1r :.t C~ r1i t.ka te · of ,LetaT1 Town~hip Trustee
facility described in division (8)(1)
-econom~ in a probable
ot Oh10 s Power Sr!lng Board.
Envnonmcnwi t ompa(lbtil\y :md 49435 Lighrhouse Road
of Sa:tion 4906.01 of the Revised (B) On an applic.1Iion for an amend- ·
.recession .'' said economi st
PuhtK Need " now pcndmg 1&gt;&lt;- Racine. Ohio 45771
Code. the Board shall presume the ment of a c•·rtificatc. dte Board shall
:Ken Mayland , president of
Date. Tirn• und Location of Pub- '"'~the Stutc of Ohic&gt; l'llwcr Siung
·
need tO. the faciliJy as that need is hola a hearing in the same manner
{:learView Economics.
lie Hearing
Bt•ard. This applic·ation ha; been as- Meig&gt; Cnunry District Library
stated in an application pumiant to as a hearing is held on an applica: One day after a presiden"~neJ C."" Numhcr 06- 1357 -EL- t-h . Krisll Evlin,'Dire&lt;.1ur
divi•ion (AX3) of Section 4906.06 tion for a cenificate if the proposed
:tial debate that foc used
The Ohio Power Snmg Board 11'111 BTX . This nunib&lt;r should I&gt;&lt; in- 216 Wc&gt;t MainStreet
of the Revi..cd Code:
chill1ge in the facility would n:suit
be
holding
hcann
g~
where
the
pubdudl.'!ll
in
:lll
wm.muni~ati
ons
with
Pomcmy.
Ohio
45769
.
•ll:te
~of
the
probable
~vi~~any matcryaJ increase i~ a~y ~
:heav il y on the economy ,
lie
is
invited
to
pru\
ide
\H-illen
or
r~spt.&gt;1,.'l
It!
thi:pnx.·l~d1
ng.
ronrnental
tmpact
of
the
proposed
v•runmentl:lllmp.act
of the tac1lity or·
'both majo r candidates
r&gt;r.!l commenl&gt; regarding Jhis prn·
Meigs SWCD
facility; .
a substanJial change in the lQCar.ion
embraced rhe F~d ' s ac tion .
tx""-"d tmnsmi;,\lnn line. The non- ·n,c acrrun;•mying map Jepim the Mr. Joe ll&lt;llin, Chainnan
• Whether the facility teP!cscnt• of all ·or a portion of such a facility
.
adj ud ica~ory hearing will be held P"1"·'cd onJ :thcrnatc r&lt;&gt;ul~s. The 33 101 Hiland Road
the minimum adverse envin'lnmen- 91ber than as provided in the alteron October 22. 2008. :11 6 p.m. at )"' &gt;JC&lt;I " locatc,t m Mc1g, ( ounty. Porncroy. Ohio 45769
. 'tal impact, considering the state of nares set forth in the application.
Suuthcm High ~hoo l. 920 Elm Ohlll. II should I&gt;&lt; no\Cillhal due ttl
available techoology. the nature and
..
Suect. Racine. Ohio. 4577 1.
thcredu-.·e.l \Calc and Inn ned dew it. Tup;x."Th Plains·
·
e&lt;~momics of various alternatives. (C) The Chainnan of the Power
th1&gt; map should be u;.:d only "' a r:ho,;t&lt;r Warer Distrkt
.
and other peAinent considerntions: Siting Board shall cau'i&lt;: each apAn "JJjudicalt HJ hc&lt;lnng will he gencml gurd&lt;: ( "I''"' nl 1hc actual Mr. Ocmald Poole. Operations Gen- • In the case of electric lt'llnsmission plication filed with the Board to be
lines, Jhat rhe faciliry is C&lt;)Osistent inv.,.tigated and shall. "'~ ies.' than
held Octob&lt;r ~7. 2(XJ8. !&gt;&lt;ginning at '111ng apphcauofl. mdudmg &gt;ll«.'tltc era I Manager
·•· with regional plans for e•pansion · fifteen days pri&lt;..- to the date nf any
10 a.m. ut the ollk~ of rhe Puh lic detaols of l(l(·arron and mnstnR:IIon. 3956 1 Holly Lan&lt;
· NEW YORK (APJ - ln a
of the regional power grid of elec- applicaJion is set fur heming: submit
rt1!itiC!o. Commh~ion of Ohiu. ISO an: ava•labief&lt;lf publ"· m;pc-.·uon u&lt; Pnmcn1y. Ohio 45769
:Sign of the times. the
tric s~stem.• serving this state and a written report 10 Ill&lt; Board and to
Ea:-.1 Rn1ad StrL'l:'f. C'tdumhus. Oh111. the follnwmg loca11nn&gt;:
:N ational Debt Clock in
Meigs Cnumy OOice of E&lt;."oomic i~ted utility systems, and the applicant. A c-opy of such report
4J21~ ·3793. 1 karing R&lt;~&gt;m I iC
;New York City has run out
Mei~:-. CoUnt) Di~trh:t Library
and Wor~ti &gt;rcc Development
tbe fociiity will serve rbe interests of shall be made available to any per~f digits· to record the growMr. Perry Vamadoo. Executive Di· electric sysrem_ ecooomy and reli· son upon request. Such report shall
Thi~ noiKe ~r.·e.."\ ~the sec11nd no· ~b. Krisli Eh.lin. Dlrel:tur
mg figure.
rt.~·tc.ability;
set fonh the nature of the inv.,.tiga·
rice p ubli~hed regarding tha:-. pmJel'l :! I (J W~:-.1 Ma in Strtt!
As a short-tern1 fi x. the
238 Wcsl Main Street
.• The facility wilt comply v.ith tion.andshaUcontainrecommended
and lhi!. JmJjoJ·-, rc....,pec:t t\e hcarin~ Pnmi..Tm' Ofnn 45 7(f&gt;
datt.~
. 17 40,9'ic - 5~ t &lt;
digital dollar sign on the
Pc•mcro). Ohio 45769
Chuprers 3704, 3734. and 61 tl of findings with n:gnrd 10 division (A)
the Rcvi!oed Code and all ru.les and of li&lt;ction 4906.10 of the Revised
:billboard-&gt; tv le clock near
The j)rnject 'in•.:lude\ 'onstrur.:tiun t)hi\ (\~V.er Sittnp Bn,mJ .
Mt:ig.~ Coum y Engineer
~taridardsitdopted u~r~"JSec~. Code and shall bec~me: part of -the
~imes Square has been
nf
:m
.
uppmximately
5-mile
long
~·u
hht·
lflllllit'"
·
C~Hnmi~.,inn
'
l}f
Mr.
Eugene
Triplett
ters
and under Sections 1501.33, m..-ordandserveduponullpurtiesto
~witched to a fisure - the
3-l~
klicwnlt
tr&gt;n,mi"i"n
line
and
Oh1n
106
11olll'
Lane
1501.34,
·and 4561.32 of tb&lt; Re· Jhe pnx:eeding.
·
~ ' 1 " in $10 tnll ion. It 's
rc!atOO
faci
li1
1e~
n&lt;.x.:~"-&lt;lr)
hl
tran\180
F,,..,,
H1
1
lo."ld
SlrL'
C
I
P&amp;1rnetu):.
Ohi1•
45769
.
_
vi.\ed
Code.
In
determining:
Vfhelher
'ffiarking the federal governmu the electricity generated h\ a Columbus. OIH&lt;' ~ 3~ 1.1-.l7Q.'
the fadlity will comply with all rules '
'ment 's current debt at about
prop.»ed
%0
Mcg.awntt
nc\
&lt;1.:&lt;:
lric
{866) 270.h772
Sutwn
Township
Trusl&lt;le
and
sumdards adopted under Sec·
$ 10.2 trillion.
gcncr.uion facili&lt;y. consi&gt;ting of
Mr. Larry Ebt:n;bach
tion 4561.32 of the Revised Code,
· The Durst Organization
two ~80 MWbenet electric gel&gt;erat- AKmLTICan Mun ici1~•l Pcmer-Ohio P.O. Bo.&lt; t47
,
the Board shall consult with the of.
:Says it plans to update the
111 !! umts.. lO
bwlt in the vil'init\ ~ (nt ( 'an.t)n, D1rectnr of Commu- Svra&lt;:usc, Ohin 45779
fice of aviation.ofthe division of the
:Sign next year by adding
of Lctan h it.. Meigs Coumy. Oh•i. nicalinn'
• .'
multi-modal planning and progranlS
;,two digits. That wi ll make it
To hooor its public power function. ~(J()() Airp&lt;•l1 Dri1e
' The Ohio Power Siting Board ha.• of the DepanmentofTmnsplf1ation
-capable df tracking debt up
the pn&gt;pi)Sed gcnemtion f&lt;jCitity ;, c..lumbu,. OhH! 43219
,ce&gt;cd the toll ..wing stale noencies under Section 4561.341 nf lhe Renamed l~e Amem.:an MunkipJJ H1I-H :rn-6~2:
-e
'to a quadrillion dollars.
Pm~ l!r Gi!l'lt.-ratine S!alt{ln 1''AMl··
·
"l1h ~c~)iC!&lt;. ()r Ihe application:
vised Cede;
~
The late Manhattan real
·~ Amcriean Municipal
\ 1
.
..
l'uhlk {illlitic., C(&gt;mmh.sion of • The tacmty will serve the public .
GS' '), rht· han ... ml ...... inn pn ljt.'"CI j, f n e e...·trnmc \~!'IOn of ~~ ilj)- OhlO .
interdt. C&lt;.l!nvcnience. and i"ICICICS·
Power-Ohro
e state de veloper Sey mour
2600 Alrpon Drive
an
incxtm:a~le
c...-ompnnent
~,r
the
pi
H.'&lt;~tton
.c.an
~
lound
at
the
Ohio
Ohto
Department
of
Agriculture
S
ity·
:Ours! put . the s i ~ n up : n
Columbus, Ohio 43219
.~MPGS projc,·t. and i&gt; not reing Power SllmgBnaril'~ Web. &gt;lie at Ohio Dep;u1mCntof0evelopmenJ •Thefacility'iimpactontheviabil··
(614) ~)7- 6222
:1989 to call. attention to
undertaken on "Mantl-&gt;lor.: ha\b. hllp:lior&gt;h ol&gt;ro.gm. 1o rctnc1 e the Ohio t.l&lt;:panm&lt;nl of Health
il)i as agricultural land of any land in
w~w .amp-ohio.org
:What wa~ then a 52.7 t r il ~
..tpfllh:.ltlnn, ;..ear'-·h und~r "Cunt•nt
.
an existing Rgricultural district eslion debt.

Notice or Proposed l\1a_jor Utility Facility

...

·

NYC National
~Debt Clock runs
out of digits

1

•

..

"

The Daily Sentinel

•

BYTHEBEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

· Junior high
.rudeness irks reader
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

PageA3

· smallest amount they could
accept was $15 .
·
This isn't the first time a
Dear Annie: I am a 13- charitable agency turned
:year-old girl living a won- down my offer of a smallderful life. Last year, I start- er amount. lsn ' t $10 betier
ed attending a new school than nothing if they truly
.and . between the huge want to raise money? Now
amounts of homework and· I'm wondering if this is ·
the rui:leness of my class- some sort of scam. Why
mates . it was a terrible do these charities turn
.experience. But it got better down ·money and lie about
over time ,· especially this the previous year's contri.past summer when I had a bution? - Dumbfounded
:Chance to socialize with my . in Florida
·schoolmate·s. In fact , I got
Dear Florida: Not all
so comfortable- with the organizations do this , but
:g!rls in my class that I invit- professional fundraisers
'ed them to a party at m'y who are hired to make
ihese calls are often"
house on a Friday night.
. I was already completely · instructed to apply pressure
prepared for this party, only to get you to donate . more
.to find out the day before money. You are right, how,that' not one of them could ever, that a legitimate orgamake it. When I'm invited nization would accept a
to a party, I always call way smaller amount.
Before agreeing to donate
:in advance to tell them if
:t'm coming or not. Some of to any organization , you
.these girls didn't have the should check it but with The
common decency to tell me American Institute of
· (charitythey couldn't come. The Philanthropy
P.O.
Box
:ones who did call said they watch .org),
were "busy.'"
·
578460. Chicago , IL60657I . don 't know how I'm 8460; Charity ' Navigator
-supposed to feel. Since (charitynavigaior.org), 1200
'school began, no one 's said MacArthur Blvd ., Second
anything about it. but I'm Floor. Mahwah , NJ 07430;
still embarrassed. Can. you GuideStar (g'uidestar.org),
'help? ~ Jumbled in 480 I Courthouse St., Suite
220, Williamsburg, VA
Junior High
, Dear Jumbled: Junior 23188; and The Better
,high can be tough on the Business Bureau Wise
emotions. You were raised Giving Alliance (give.org),
:to respond promptly to invi- listed irt your phone book.
Dear Annie: I read the
'tations , but many kids that
age haven't a clue. And you letter from "Ravenna,
· ·were a bit optimistic to pre- Neb .." who said anyone
.pare for a party .without who wants to lose weight
.'knowing if any of the guests should .eat slowly.
I'd like to add a piece of
were going to be attending.
information
to her excelWe don't know why all
'these girls turned you down lent suggestion: Our brain
at the last minute, but it takes about 20 minutes to
·obviously was quite hurtful. register that you are full .
Your best bet is to act is if it Imagine _how many more
:was no big deal, but we calories you can cram into
'wouldn't invite them ·to . your mouth in 20 minutes if
,another party anytime soon. you e~t quickly 1 - San
Get to know them on an Franctsco ·
Dear San Francisco:
'individual basis so these
'friendships can bond a little Hippocrates once said, "If
·better, and make the next we -could gi·ve every indi. vidual the right amount of
get-together more casual.
: Dear Annie: I just got off nourishment and exercise ,
the phone with a fund-raiser not too little and not. top
for a charitable organization much. we would have found
:and was asked if 1 would the safest way to health."
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
;give the same amount as
;last year. I asked how much ten by Kathy Mitchell and
·I gave before and was told Marcy Sugar, longtime edi:$25. (I have since looked up tors of the Ann Lan.ders
;my receipt from last year cplumn. Please e-ntail your
·and I only gave $20.)
g::estions to anniesmail: . I was asked to give the
:sar:ne .$25 again this year
;and when I said I couldn't Box 118190, Chicago, IL.
;afford that because of my 60611. To find out more
-current financial situation, about Annie's Mailbox, ·
:the fundraiser suggested and read features by other
;$20 or $18. I rejected that Creators Syndicate writers
·also and said the most I and cartoonists, visit the
:could send was $10. I was Creators Syndicate Web
:then informed that the page at www.creators .com.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
. Thursday, Oct. 9
. POMEROY
- Meigs
· County
Commissioners
meet at 11 a.m ., due to
scheduling conflict.
Tuesday,Oct. 14
SHADE · - Bedford
Township . Trustees ,. regular
meeting. 7 p.m ., town hall .

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Oct. 9
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453 , regular
stated meeting, 7 p.m.
Refreshments follow.
RUTLAND
- Meigs
Local Archery Boosters
meet . at
the
Meigs
Intermediate School, 6 p.m .
.
. POMEROY
Wildwood · Garden Club,
6:30 p.m., at the home of
Betty
Milhoan
on
Flatwoods Road. Rich and
Ann Tomsu will speak on
organic
gardening.
Installation of new officers;
Saturday, Oct. 11
-CHESTER
-:- Special

breakfast meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453, to confer
Entered Apprentice degree
on one candidate, and
Fellowcraft degree on one
candidate. Breakfast at 7:30
a.m., followed by degree
work , 8:30.
POMEROY
~ Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Daughters of the American
Revolution, I p.m ., at home
of Betty Milhoan . Guest
speaker will be Amy
Abercrombie of Athens ,
author and movie producer
of "The Other House."
Other . hostesses are Mary
Rose, Cleo Smith, Peggy
Moore.
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Chapter Christian
Motorcycle
Association
"Delivered," regular meeting, 5 p.m., ConimQn
. Grounds, nomination of
officers .
Monday, Oct.I3
POMEROY - Big Bend
Farm Antique Club. 7:30
p.m .. Mulberry Community
Center. , . .
·
Tuesday, Oct. 14
HARRISONVILLE
#255 Order of Eastern Star,
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.,

Thursday, October 9,

2008

.
•
practice for installation of
officers following .
Wednesday Oct. 15
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middlepon Literary Club
will meet at the Pomeroy
Library. Leah Ord will
review "Hope ' s Boy" by
Andrew Bridge. Hostess
will be Olita Heighton.
HARRISONVILLE
#255 Order of Eastern Star.
annual installation of officers, 7:30 p.m .. members
furnish pot luck, refreshments .
Thursday, Oct. 16
POMEROY
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic
Lodge #164 regular meeting, 7:30 p.m .. at the lodge
in Racine. Taking donations
for Operation Christmas
Child. Bring dish towel for
.pimtry project. Call Randy
Smith at 508-0816.

Church events

CHESHIRE ~ Cheshire
Baptist Church will host a
benefit gospel sing . 7 p.m..
to benefit Fall Harvest
Gospel Sing. Featured will
be Dan Hayman and
Country Hymntimers, Faith
Hayman. Sid and Carol
Hayman, Carlie and Sand[a
Wi se, . Priscilla Dodrill and
Ann Sayre. Cheryle Knight,
Debbie Dodrill, Jerry and
Diana .Frederick. Brian &amp;
· Family Connection s. Rita
Oliver.
Sunday, Oct. 12
POMEROY - Carleton
Church homecoming. with
Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. ,
followed by dinner at noon .
Afternoon service to include
"Dayspring Singers" and
church singers . Church
located on Kingsbury Road.
Robert Vance. is pastor.
.

Birthdays

Sunday, Oct. 12
Saturday, Oct. II
REEDSVILLE - Ruth
REEDSVILLE - Soup Koenig will celebrate her
supper, 5 p.m., "Dayspring" 85th birthday on Oct. 12.
gospel group, 7 p.m ., Cards may be sept to 39054
Reedsville
United Silver
Ridge
Rd .,
Methodist Church.
Reedsville, Ohio 45774 .

Submitted photo
Barbara Gump Brown talks about the quilt she and others created in memory of Erma Stevens, long-time member of the Sew
'n Sews Quilt Guild and the O'Bieness Memorial Hoppltal Guild. At far right, Erma's widower, Howard Stevens; watches.

O'Bleness holds quilt dedication .
ATHENS ~ A dedication ceremony Cardiovascular and Diabetes Care at
was held Tuesday for a. custom- O'Bleness, . where the hand-crafted
designed quilt honoring the memory of quilt, named "Flowers for Erma," now
Erma Stevens, past president of the hangs. O'Bleness president Rick
Guild ofO'Bleness Memorial Hospital. Castrop dedicated the quilt.
Quilt designers are Barbara Gump
The ceremony was held in the waiting area of' the Cornwell Cente~ for Brown, Mary Day and Judy Billups,

io:x~~~';:st.":fl,!;, "'t.lf. ·TOPS

members o'f the Sew 'n Sews Quilt
Guild. of which Erma was also a
me111ber. Pat Skinner of Sew 'n Sew's
helped with planning the quilt desjgn.
Also attending the event were many
members of the Guild and other
friends of Erma.

members taking exercise challenge

Gal!ipolis, co-leader Dottie ue to collect non-perishable Cindy Hyde runner-up.
COOLVILLE
Participation in the TOPS Bond won second place in items for the food pantry KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
members
Sensibly)
1,000-mile challenge was · both the centerpiece and through November.
Marie LaChance was LaChresia
Bogardus.
discussed and members wreath categories and first
were reminded to continue place in the decorated veg- namep weekly best weight- Cleland, Henderson and
collecting non-perishable etable category. LaChance loss winner at the Sept. 30 Richmond were in leeway. ·
The group meets every
items for the food pantry won first place in the deco- meeting. KOPS (Keep Off
Pounds
Sensibly)
members
at . Torch Baptist
Tuesday
rated
garden
implement
cat. through November at
recent . meeting of the egory. Leader Pat Snedden Mary peland. Roberta Church. Weigh-in is from
TOPS (Take Off Pounds began an article on 50 slim; . Henderson and Patricia 5:15 to 6:15p.m. with meetSensibly) Chapter OH down tips titled Easy Richmond were in leeway. ings at 6:30 p.m. For inforStrategies for Weight Loss," At the Oct. 7 meeting, Pat mation, call Pat Snedden at
2013, Coolville.
.It was noted that during followed by an open discus- Hall was weekly best 662-2633 or attend . a free
Friday
night ...Ciear.
: Thursday .•• Mostly
the
recent fall rally held in sion . Members will eontin- weight-loss winner and meeting.
·cloudy
in
the . Lows in the mid 50s. East
:morning ...Then becoming winds around 5 mph.
Saturday
through
:mostly sunny. Highs in the
night .••Mostly
·mid 70s . Northwest winds Monday
clear. Highs around 80.
:around 5 mph.
Thursday night ••.Mostly Lows in the lower 50s.'
GALLIPOLIS - Strange Director, Joseph Wright 26, and Thursday-Saturaay,
Thesday...Mostly sunny. sounds and . frjghtening says, "Our selection of the Oct. 30-Nov. I . Box office
:clear. Lows in the upper
• creatures are . filling the nightmare theme allows ·will opep nightly at 7 p.m.
40s. North winds around 5 Highs in the mid 70s.
Thesday
night
and
mph
in
the
Ariel - Dater Hall, in · many options for inspira, Admission is $7 per person.
:evening ... Becoming light Wednesday .•• Mostly Gallipolis, as the perform- tion, from . psychological The Haunted Ariel is not
The Daily Sentinel
. cloudy with a 30 percent ing arts center prepares to thrills · to over-the-top ter- recommended for young
:and variable .
in
chance
of
showers.
Lows
Friday...Sunny. Highs in
open, its creaky doors for the ror." He continues, "what children. For more informa·the upper 70s . Northeast the .upper 40s. Highs in the fourth-annual Haunted Ariel· scares one person, may not tion, contact the Ariel • Sul:lscribe today
upper 60s.
'
·winds around 3 mph.
. 992-2155
Theatre Halloween attrac- scare another. Some are Dater Hall at 740-446tion. The Haunted Ariel will afraid of clowns, while oth- ARTS (2787).
be ojJen weekends, begin- ers may be afraid of snakes:
fortunately, we have both,
ning October 17.
Al'\!a· actors, a~ well as and much, much more!"
Before Old Man Winter
Various area businesses
youth and adult volunteers
Norfolk
Soulhern
(NYSE)
~
.AEP (NYSE) - 31.86
Arrives, Prepare.wlth
will have the enjoyable are supporting the Ariel
Stt.81
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 41.90
efforts
challenge of scaring the organization's
Ohio Valley Bane Corp•
Oh~o's Home Energy
.Ashland Inc. (NYSE) th'rough
.
.
sponsorship,
wits
out
of
brave
explorers
(NASDAQ)
20.60
.26.25
Assistance Programs
BBT (NYSE) - 33.01
who dare to journey through including; Big Country
·Big Lola (NYSE) - 23.86
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 20.99
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) many roo'!ls and hallways 99.5, 101.5 Bob FM. Sunny
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.61
25.66
·
designed to return guests to 93 .I , and Pepsi-Cola.
For an "
• Home Energy Assistance.
·BorgWarner (NYSE) - 26. t8 Premlar (NASDAQ) - 8.80
The
Haunted
Ariel
will
night.their
most
fearful
Application
Rockwell (NYSE) - 29.25
Century Aluminum (NA$• Percentage of Income
operate
weekends,
Fridaymares
.
Rocky
Boots
(NASDAQ)
DAQ)- 17.38
Location Near You,
Payment Plans
Executive and Artistic Sunday Oct. 17-19 and 24Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.64 2.67
Call1·800·331·2644
Royal Dutch Shell - 52.31
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
• EmergencyHeating
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) or visit:
- 4.11
Assistance
76.23
.
.
City Holding (NASDAQ) www.are\'agency8.org
Waj.:Mart (NYSE) - 54.55
40.53
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4
Collins (NYSE) - 40.38
Programs for Eligible Low-income Ohioans
Benefit Oasis Foster Care. Based on 100 players,
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 25
DuPont (N:t"SE)- 36.12
top
prizes
$t600.00.
Initial
buy
in
$50.00
.
Worthington
(NYSE)
12.52
US Bank (NYSE) - 30.83
Dally stock teporta are the 4
Re buys $20.00 with unlimitied re buys
Gannett (NYSE) - 14.61
/""'\.'
p.m. ET closing quotas of
General Electric (NYSE) during
the
first
blind
levels.
.
1 "~ '~-.r; Al't"a Agency on. Ag·in!; ·
transactions for Oct. 8, 2008,
20.65
piovlded by Edward .Jones
~i
..
Harley-Davidson (NYS.E) Octobclr 10 &amp; 11th at
financial advisors ls811C ·
A Program of Buckeye Hllls-Hocklng
29.03
American Legion Hall
.
Mills In Gallipolis at .(740)
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 39.30
Valley Regional Development District
520
West
Union
St.,
Athena,
OH
441·9441 and Lesley Marrero
Kroger (NYSE) - 24.88
Serving Seniors in Athehs, Hcict&lt;~ng , Meigs , Monroe,
7:00 Pm Sharp
In Point Pleasant at (304)
Limited Brands (NYSE) Morgan, Noble: Perry &amp; Washington Counties
Call:
674-0174. Member SIPC. .
14.11

:Local Weather ·

Haunted house at Ariel opens Oct. 17

:Local Stocks

TEXAS HOLD EM'
.

Keeping
Meigs County
informed

�..
Jhe Daily Sentinel

NATION • W ORLD

•

PageA2
Thursday, October 9, 2008

Russia, Georgia disagree
over troop pullback

Fed

BY- JEANNINE AVERSA
AP ECONOMI CS WR ITER

KARALETI,
Georgia from the assumption . that
WASHINGTON - Wall
(AP) - Russian troops the process would be comStreet bounced higher and
pulled back from their posi- pleted by Friday, and this is .
lower Wednesday irying to
of
that
tions outside Georgia's confirmation
make up its mind about an
breakaway province of South assumption," Haber told the
unprecedented coordinated
Ossetia but held their ground AP by telephone. speaking
interest rate cut by central
in contested areas, setting the from the buffer zone outside
banks around the world . In
stage for more tension· Abkhazia where he watched .
Jhe end it 'ettled on a fa mil between the two countries the Russian pullout .
iar feeling - fem - and
In Washington, the State
that waged war in August.
plunged again .
welcomed.
Georgian
Interior Department
The Federal Reserve. desRussia's moves but said it
spokesman
Shota
Ministry
peratel y trying to jump-start
Utiashvili
told
The was watching to see if it
the lendi ng that keeps the
Associated
Press
the completed the withdrawals
U.S. economy moving,
Russian withdrawal was a by the deadline .
dropped its closely watched
"Russia is. in fact , starting
positive
move , but he added
.federal fund s rate to I .5 perto
comply with the Sept. 8
that Georgia wouldn ' t con_cent. The cut from 2 percent
sider it complete until the agreement with the EU ,"
1.\)0k the ra te to its lowest ·
Se!in
troops leave the town of spokesman
level in more than four years.
McCormack
said
.
"It
is a
Akhalgori, near South
.. Central banks in England.
Ossetia, and the Kodori positive sign ."
China, Cuplb . Sweden and
Despite the . dispute, the
in another MoscowGorge
Swit zerl and
and
the
Russian
withdrawal paves
backed
breakaway
·European Central Bank also
the way for the return of
province, Abkhazia.
cut rates after a series of
Georgian
authority to a
"We
think
that
it's
a
step
high-stakes phone call s over
AP photo
·
wide
swath
of,. territory beld
seveml da y~ be twe~n Fed · Traders Russel Boose, center, Richard Felman, left, and Michael Carusiello, far right, work in the right direction, but it
doesn 't mean yet that the by Moscow since the war.
Cha irman Ben Bernanke in the Eurodollartading pit Wednesday at the CME Group in Chicago.
·
.
The war erupted when
wi.thdrawal is fulfilled,"
1ind his counterparts.
Georgian
forces launched
·
Utiashvili
said.
· But the Dow Jones indL"- Both Democrat Barack mg. rhe lifeblood of the closed down more than 9
attack
targeting
Russia ,maintains that an
trial average lost another Obama · and Republican economy. is sputtering.
percent. Hong Kong's Hang
on
Aug.
7 in a
Tskhinvali
Akhalgori
is
part
of
South
'189 points. or 2 percent. ro John McCain described the - "The turmoil will not e nd Seng more than 8 percent.
bid
to
take
control
of the
and
considers
the
Ossetia
close ar 9.25R. It was the cri sis as global.
quickl y . and significaJtl
In Britain, the governsixth straight day of losses
The White House wei- challenges remain ahead.'' men! said it would pour Kodori Gorge part . of region, which broke away in
.for the Dbw. The index ha&gt; corned . the cooperation Trea·sury Secretary Henry cash into troubled banks in Abkhazia ~ claims that a . war during . tne early .
1990s. Russian troops.
.shed more than a third of its among central banks to battle Paul son told reporters at a e xchang~ for stakes in them Georgia rejects . .
Russian media carried . a tan)\s and warplanes swiftly
•value . nearly 5,000 points. the crisis . "It's importatit and preview of meetings late'r ~ a partial nationalization.
statement
by Gen . Marat repelled the attack and ·
:,;;nee its all -time high. &gt;et helpful that central banks are this week of the , finance
'This is not a tiqJe for
Kulakhmetov,
who is in drove deep into· Georgia in
:One 'year ago Thursday. ·
working in a coordinated officials of the Group of conventional thinking or
: .The Dow opened down way to deal with stress in the Seven major industrial outdated dogma but for the. charge of Russian troops Moscow's first major milimore than 200 points. Within financial
system ," countries , the 185-nation fresh and innovative inter- near South Ossetia, saying tary offensive beyond its
an hour. it was up almost as spokesman Tony Fratto said. lnternation,al
Monetary vent ion that gets to the heart the pullout had been fully borders since the 1991 col,. ·
lapse of the Soviet Union.
.much. A late morning sell·
But even that may not Fund and the World Bank. of the problem," · said completed.
Georgians terrified by
Moscow must pull its
'Off gave way to an afternoon break the panicky mindset .. The global credit crisis was Britain ' s Prime · Minister
.troops from the buffer zones weeks of arson and looting
:rally. and the Dow was that has gripped investors expected to be the · major Gordon Brown.
:mead for the day in the last across the world as jobs agenda item at those talk~..
Sen . Charles Schumer, D- surrounding the two regions they blame on Russia's
:half-hour of trading - then evaporate and retirement
Paulson spoke after Asian N.Y., suggested the United by Friday under cease-fire South Oss'etian .allies lined
agreements brokered by the roads to watch the with:took .a dive at the close.
savings dry up .. Banks may and European markets States take similar steps.
· · The day 's losses were still be inclined to ho[lrd wrapped . up a bleak day,
The Fed 's interest rate cut French · President Nicolas drawal and welcome return·
.lighter for the Nasdaq com- cash. and until they decide with investors lleeing was a change in course .. It Sarkozy. Earlier Wednesday, ing Georgian police.
. posite index and the to lend again the crisis is not stocks and worrying that had · held rates steady Russia's President Dmitry · As dozens of annored
·Standard &amp; Poor's 500. And likely to let up .
neither the Fed nor other because of inflation con- Medvedev said the pullout personnel carriers, military
:Wall Street as a whole fared
Underlining the seriousness central banks could move cerns. Since the Fed had put from areas outside South trucks and transport vehiJar better than Asia. where of the situation. the Federal fast enough to stop 'the tur- a stop to interest-rate cuts in Ossetia and Abkhazia would cles rolled north past rows
:some stock exchanQcs were Reserve on Wednesday also moil. even considering the June. the economic outlook be completed by midnight.
of destroyed homes, tendown 9 per.:ent, and Europe. agreed ro provide faltering $700 billion U.S. bailout of has deteriorated.
Offictals at the European sions in villages outside
where some lost 5 percent.
insurance g.iant American financial institutions. ,
"The pace of economic Union monitoring mission South Ossetia began to ease.
: The Fed acted in concert International Group Inc. with
"Now I feel safe; I hope
European indexes ended activity has slowed marked- · patrolling .the . buffer zone
:with the European Central another loan . $37.8 billion on lower, too. Britain 's FT'SE- ly in recent months ," the refused to comment on the that life will improve," said
Bank to make emergency top of the $85 billion it prof- 100 finished down about 5.2 Fed said. "Moreover, the latest tontroversy over dis- Meri Khokhashvili, stand·interest rate cuts after the fered the troubled company percent. Germany 's DAX intensification of financial puted areas.
ing outside her destroyed
Sept. 11 terror anack s in last month.
The head of the EU moni- home .in the village of
about 5.9 percent and market turmoil is likely to
2001. Elut. Wednesdav's curs
The moves came as majqr France's CAC-40 6.3 percent. ·exert additional restraint on . toring mission, Hansjorg KitsnisL "l!ve had· nightwere ttnprecedented with American retailers turned in
In Asia, where trading spending, par()y by further Haber, called the Russian mares for the past week
· the 11umber of nations that dismal "sales figures for the ended for the day before the reduc'ing the ability of pullout· as "a very positive because I was afraid someparticipated, the Fed said.
third quarter ~ further rate cuts were announced, households al\d businesses development."
one would attack us. At
For
millions
of proof that consumer spend· the Japanese 'Nikkei 225 to obtain credit.:'
"We always proceeded least now I c.an sleep .safer."
Americans, the Fed's cut
.mean s borrowing money
becomes cheaper. Home
equity loans. credit cards
and other floating-rate loans
all fluctuate depending on
what the Fed does.
Thl&lt;; Is tl)e serond notked pub· :, ·
.. ·- ..
\
. '\ C•LSCS" for case number 06-1357- Ohio Depllrtment of Natural Re· tablished under Chaprer 929 of the
Bank of America. Wells
llshed in regard to this Proposed
,.-. &amp;:.....~. ".r ·; \ EL-BTX.
~~~partment of Transportlltion ~~v;~lftr.!e;,a~oc~~~~~
Fargo and other banks cui
Mujor Utility f'Kility. AMP-Ohio
published the first notke in th• ,.,
their prime rate by half a
~ .I •
Pursuan.t to Rule 4~5-06 of tbe Ohio Environmental Protection faciliry: and
.
Dally Sentinel ne"'&gt;-pi.JM!r, Pumc·
\l j 1 Ohio Administrutive Code. the fol- Agency
• The facility incorpomtes maxipoint to 4 .5 percem. also .the
roy. Ohio' on August 8. 2008. ·
k&gt;wing local government officials Ohio Historical Society
mum feasible wurer C&lt;)Oservation
\owesr· in m,are tha·n four
,.,.,."[,
/
·
in
Meigs
County
have
been
served
practices as detennined by the
years. after the Fed
Name
and
Dtseription
of
the
Pro·
i
wiJh
n
copy
of
the
application:Criteria
Uied
to
Review
the
ApBoard. considering available techannounced its decision early
posed
fudllty
.
·
pH&lt;'llllon
nology and the nature and ec&lt;mom· Wednesday.
j
.
Meigs
County
Commissioners
icsofthc various airernativcs.
. Fed watchers believe the
American MunkiiJ'II Powe~·Ohi n
/ '
Mr. Michael Dnvenp&lt;~1. President The following eighJ criteria are set Section 4906.07 'of Jhe Revised
'central bank might cut rates
iAMP-Ohi&lt;ll pmpo&gt;es to c·on&gt;llliL'I
I ~j
tOO E;!SI S...·ond Street
forth in Section 4906.10 (A) of t1Jc: Code provides !hat:
further when it meets later
anei~&gt;:tric· tran smi s; ion li neand a,
j'
i ' ''" .._,,
Pomen&gt;y. Ohiu45769
Revised Cc:&gt;&lt;k and will be used. (A) Upon the re..-eipt of an apthis month. and perhaps
snciated .intcr~0nncctinn sv. it~'h yard
-e· ;.t": :_, ~.
:' :
along with addi1ionul inrormation. plication complying with Section
again in December. in hopes
1,-.:at&lt;'&lt;l in L&lt;tan To-. nship and StH·
'.;t _, "' ,; i
Meigs Cnunl)' Health Department by the Board in the reviewing of 4906.06 of tile Revised Code, the
of cushioning the blow if
ton Townsh1 p. Mcip Cnumy. Ohio
f-.,.:.
Mr. L:ury Marshall. Health Com- the &lt;1pplication f,.- a certificale to Power Siring Board shall ~mptly
Th i~ prOJC&lt;.'t b known a~ th~ AMfl. /
.....,, ~ _.!· ~ •.., 1\~
mis:-.inner
collSiruct. operate and maintai~ the fix a dute for a public hearing therethe United States falls into
GS
Tr.m~mi.
"
's.i
nn
Line.
A
~
required
~
)ul~
112
Eas1
Memorial
Drive
AMPGS Transmission Line:
on~ not less than sixty m1r more than
recession .
by
the
Ohit&gt;
Rcv1,;.:d
&lt;.'
&lt;
&gt;&lt;
k
t'hap&lt;
cr
o"o
Pnm
croy,
Ohio45771
ninety days al1er such receipt, and
· "Even if the financial cri 4906.
AMP.()hio
seeks
"
Ccr1i
li·
1::''
·
•
The.
basis
of
the
need
for
the
fashall
cooclude the pnx:eeding asexs is was put to bed today,
t:ale df En v i1~ 1nm ent a l Cu mpalihi l-·
.
Mr.
Robert
Morris
.
cilily.
In
the
ca&amp;e
of
a
major
utility'
peditiously
as practicable.
that would still leave the
it~ a ~ ~ublic N~~ from the Sli.lle ~hL! . appliL:HI\lrl f~1r :.t C~ r1i t.ka te · of ,LetaT1 Town~hip Trustee
facility described in division (8)(1)
-econom~ in a probable
ot Oh10 s Power Sr!lng Board.
Envnonmcnwi t ompa(lbtil\y :md 49435 Lighrhouse Road
of Sa:tion 4906.01 of the Revised (B) On an applic.1Iion for an amend- ·
.recession .'' said economi st
PuhtK Need " now pcndmg 1&gt;&lt;- Racine. Ohio 45771
Code. the Board shall presume the ment of a c•·rtificatc. dte Board shall
:Ken Mayland , president of
Date. Tirn• und Location of Pub- '"'~the Stutc of Ohic&gt; l'llwcr Siung
·
need tO. the faciliJy as that need is hola a hearing in the same manner
{:learView Economics.
lie Hearing
Bt•ard. This applic·ation ha; been as- Meig&gt; Cnunry District Library
stated in an application pumiant to as a hearing is held on an applica: One day after a presiden"~neJ C."" Numhcr 06- 1357 -EL- t-h . Krisll Evlin,'Dire&lt;.1ur
divi•ion (AX3) of Section 4906.06 tion for a cenificate if the proposed
:tial debate that foc used
The Ohio Power Snmg Board 11'111 BTX . This nunib&lt;r should I&gt;&lt; in- 216 Wc&gt;t MainStreet
of the Revi..cd Code:
chill1ge in the facility would n:suit
be
holding
hcann
g~
where
the
pubdudl.'!ll
in
:lll
wm.muni~ati
ons
with
Pomcmy.
Ohio
45769
.
•ll:te
~of
the
probable
~vi~~any matcryaJ increase i~ a~y ~
:heav il y on the economy ,
lie
is
invited
to
pru\
ide
\H-illen
or
r~spt.&gt;1,.'l
It!
thi:pnx.·l~d1
ng.
ronrnental
tmpact
of
the
proposed
v•runmentl:lllmp.act
of the tac1lity or·
'both majo r candidates
r&gt;r.!l commenl&gt; regarding Jhis prn·
Meigs SWCD
facility; .
a substanJial change in the lQCar.ion
embraced rhe F~d ' s ac tion .
tx""-"d tmnsmi;,\lnn line. The non- ·n,c acrrun;•mying map Jepim the Mr. Joe ll&lt;llin, Chainnan
• Whether the facility teP!cscnt• of all ·or a portion of such a facility
.
adj ud ica~ory hearing will be held P"1"·'cd onJ :thcrnatc r&lt;&gt;ul~s. The 33 101 Hiland Road
the minimum adverse envin'lnmen- 91ber than as provided in the alteron October 22. 2008. :11 6 p.m. at )"' &gt;JC&lt;I " locatc,t m Mc1g, ( ounty. Porncroy. Ohio 45769
. 'tal impact, considering the state of nares set forth in the application.
Suuthcm High ~hoo l. 920 Elm Ohlll. II should I&gt;&lt; no\Cillhal due ttl
available techoology. the nature and
..
Suect. Racine. Ohio. 4577 1.
thcredu-.·e.l \Calc and Inn ned dew it. Tup;x."Th Plains·
·
e&lt;~momics of various alternatives. (C) The Chainnan of the Power
th1&gt; map should be u;.:d only "' a r:ho,;t&lt;r Warer Distrkt
.
and other peAinent considerntions: Siting Board shall cau'i&lt;: each apAn "JJjudicalt HJ hc&lt;lnng will he gencml gurd&lt;: ( "I''"' nl 1hc actual Mr. Ocmald Poole. Operations Gen- • In the case of electric lt'llnsmission plication filed with the Board to be
lines, Jhat rhe faciliry is C&lt;)Osistent inv.,.tigated and shall. "'~ ies.' than
held Octob&lt;r ~7. 2(XJ8. !&gt;&lt;ginning at '111ng apphcauofl. mdudmg &gt;ll«.'tltc era I Manager
·•· with regional plans for e•pansion · fifteen days pri&lt;..- to the date nf any
10 a.m. ut the ollk~ of rhe Puh lic detaols of l(l(·arron and mnstnR:IIon. 3956 1 Holly Lan&lt;
· NEW YORK (APJ - ln a
of the regional power grid of elec- applicaJion is set fur heming: submit
rt1!itiC!o. Commh~ion of Ohiu. ISO an: ava•labief&lt;lf publ"· m;pc-.·uon u&lt; Pnmcn1y. Ohio 45769
:Sign of the times. the
tric s~stem.• serving this state and a written report 10 Ill&lt; Board and to
Ea:-.1 Rn1ad StrL'l:'f. C'tdumhus. Oh111. the follnwmg loca11nn&gt;:
:N ational Debt Clock in
Meigs Cnumy OOice of E&lt;."oomic i~ted utility systems, and the applicant. A c-opy of such report
4J21~ ·3793. 1 karing R&lt;~&gt;m I iC
;New York City has run out
Mei~:-. CoUnt) Di~trh:t Library
and Wor~ti &gt;rcc Development
tbe fociiity will serve rbe interests of shall be made available to any per~f digits· to record the growMr. Perry Vamadoo. Executive Di· electric sysrem_ ecooomy and reli· son upon request. Such report shall
Thi~ noiKe ~r.·e.."\ ~the sec11nd no· ~b. Krisli Eh.lin. Dlrel:tur
mg figure.
rt.~·tc.ability;
set fonh the nature of the inv.,.tiga·
rice p ubli~hed regarding tha:-. pmJel'l :! I (J W~:-.1 Ma in Strtt!
As a short-tern1 fi x. the
238 Wcsl Main Street
.• The facility wilt comply v.ith tion.andshaUcontainrecommended
and lhi!. JmJjoJ·-, rc....,pec:t t\e hcarin~ Pnmi..Tm' Ofnn 45 7(f&gt;
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tion 4561.32 of the Revised Code,
· The Durst Organization
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the Board shall consult with the of.
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of Lctan h it.. Meigs Coumy. Oh•i. nicalinn'
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-capable df tracking debt up
the pn&gt;pi)Sed gcnemtion f&lt;jCitity ;, c..lumbu,. OhH! 43219
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interdt. C&lt;.l!nvcnience. and i"ICICICS·
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Columbus, Ohio 43219
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(614) ~)7- 6222
:1989 to call. attention to
undertaken on "Mantl-&gt;lor.: ha\b. hllp:lior&gt;h ol&gt;ro.gm. 1o rctnc1 e the Ohio t.l&lt;:panm&lt;nl of Health
il)i as agricultural land of any land in
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.
an existing Rgricultural district eslion debt.

Notice or Proposed l\1a_jor Utility Facility

...

·

NYC National
~Debt Clock runs
out of digits

1

•

..

"

The Daily Sentinel

•

BYTHEBEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

· Junior high
.rudeness irks reader
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

PageA3

· smallest amount they could
accept was $15 .
·
This isn't the first time a
Dear Annie: I am a 13- charitable agency turned
:year-old girl living a won- down my offer of a smallderful life. Last year, I start- er amount. lsn ' t $10 betier
ed attending a new school than nothing if they truly
.and . between the huge want to raise money? Now
amounts of homework and· I'm wondering if this is ·
the rui:leness of my class- some sort of scam. Why
mates . it was a terrible do these charities turn
.experience. But it got better down ·money and lie about
over time ,· especially this the previous year's contri.past summer when I had a bution? - Dumbfounded
:Chance to socialize with my . in Florida
·schoolmate·s. In fact , I got
Dear Florida: Not all
so comfortable- with the organizations do this , but
:g!rls in my class that I invit- professional fundraisers
'ed them to a party at m'y who are hired to make
ihese calls are often"
house on a Friday night.
. I was already completely · instructed to apply pressure
prepared for this party, only to get you to donate . more
.to find out the day before money. You are right, how,that' not one of them could ever, that a legitimate orgamake it. When I'm invited nization would accept a
to a party, I always call way smaller amount.
Before agreeing to donate
:in advance to tell them if
:t'm coming or not. Some of to any organization , you
.these girls didn't have the should check it but with The
common decency to tell me American Institute of
· (charitythey couldn't come. The Philanthropy
P.O.
Box
:ones who did call said they watch .org),
were "busy.'"
·
578460. Chicago , IL60657I . don 't know how I'm 8460; Charity ' Navigator
-supposed to feel. Since (charitynavigaior.org), 1200
'school began, no one 's said MacArthur Blvd ., Second
anything about it. but I'm Floor. Mahwah , NJ 07430;
still embarrassed. Can. you GuideStar (g'uidestar.org),
'help? ~ Jumbled in 480 I Courthouse St., Suite
220, Williamsburg, VA
Junior High
, Dear Jumbled: Junior 23188; and The Better
,high can be tough on the Business Bureau Wise
emotions. You were raised Giving Alliance (give.org),
:to respond promptly to invi- listed irt your phone book.
Dear Annie: I read the
'tations , but many kids that
age haven't a clue. And you letter from "Ravenna,
· ·were a bit optimistic to pre- Neb .." who said anyone
.pare for a party .without who wants to lose weight
.'knowing if any of the guests should .eat slowly.
I'd like to add a piece of
were going to be attending.
information
to her excelWe don't know why all
'these girls turned you down lent suggestion: Our brain
at the last minute, but it takes about 20 minutes to
·obviously was quite hurtful. register that you are full .
Your best bet is to act is if it Imagine _how many more
:was no big deal, but we calories you can cram into
'wouldn't invite them ·to . your mouth in 20 minutes if
,another party anytime soon. you e~t quickly 1 - San
Get to know them on an Franctsco ·
Dear San Francisco:
'individual basis so these
'friendships can bond a little Hippocrates once said, "If
·better, and make the next we -could gi·ve every indi. vidual the right amount of
get-together more casual.
: Dear Annie: I just got off nourishment and exercise ,
the phone with a fund-raiser not too little and not. top
for a charitable organization much. we would have found
:and was asked if 1 would the safest way to health."
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
;give the same amount as
;last year. I asked how much ten by Kathy Mitchell and
·I gave before and was told Marcy Sugar, longtime edi:$25. (I have since looked up tors of the Ann Lan.ders
;my receipt from last year cplumn. Please e-ntail your
·and I only gave $20.)
g::estions to anniesmail: . I was asked to give the
:sar:ne .$25 again this year
;and when I said I couldn't Box 118190, Chicago, IL.
;afford that because of my 60611. To find out more
-current financial situation, about Annie's Mailbox, ·
:the fundraiser suggested and read features by other
;$20 or $18. I rejected that Creators Syndicate writers
·also and said the most I and cartoonists, visit the
:could send was $10. I was Creators Syndicate Web
:then informed that the page at www.creators .com.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
. Thursday, Oct. 9
. POMEROY
- Meigs
· County
Commissioners
meet at 11 a.m ., due to
scheduling conflict.
Tuesday,Oct. 14
SHADE · - Bedford
Township . Trustees ,. regular
meeting. 7 p.m ., town hall .

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Oct. 9
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453 , regular
stated meeting, 7 p.m.
Refreshments follow.
RUTLAND
- Meigs
Local Archery Boosters
meet . at
the
Meigs
Intermediate School, 6 p.m .
.
. POMEROY
Wildwood · Garden Club,
6:30 p.m., at the home of
Betty
Milhoan
on
Flatwoods Road. Rich and
Ann Tomsu will speak on
organic
gardening.
Installation of new officers;
Saturday, Oct. 11
-CHESTER
-:- Special

breakfast meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453, to confer
Entered Apprentice degree
on one candidate, and
Fellowcraft degree on one
candidate. Breakfast at 7:30
a.m., followed by degree
work , 8:30.
POMEROY
~ Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter.
Daughters of the American
Revolution, I p.m ., at home
of Betty Milhoan . Guest
speaker will be Amy
Abercrombie of Athens ,
author and movie producer
of "The Other House."
Other . hostesses are Mary
Rose, Cleo Smith, Peggy
Moore.
POMEROY
- Meigs
County Chapter Christian
Motorcycle
Association
"Delivered," regular meeting, 5 p.m., ConimQn
. Grounds, nomination of
officers .
Monday, Oct.I3
POMEROY - Big Bend
Farm Antique Club. 7:30
p.m .. Mulberry Community
Center. , . .
·
Tuesday, Oct. 14
HARRISONVILLE
#255 Order of Eastern Star,
regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.,

Thursday, October 9,

2008

.
•
practice for installation of
officers following .
Wednesday Oct. 15
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middlepon Literary Club
will meet at the Pomeroy
Library. Leah Ord will
review "Hope ' s Boy" by
Andrew Bridge. Hostess
will be Olita Heighton.
HARRISONVILLE
#255 Order of Eastern Star.
annual installation of officers, 7:30 p.m .. members
furnish pot luck, refreshments .
Thursday, Oct. 16
POMEROY
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic
Lodge #164 regular meeting, 7:30 p.m .. at the lodge
in Racine. Taking donations
for Operation Christmas
Child. Bring dish towel for
.pimtry project. Call Randy
Smith at 508-0816.

Church events

CHESHIRE ~ Cheshire
Baptist Church will host a
benefit gospel sing . 7 p.m..
to benefit Fall Harvest
Gospel Sing. Featured will
be Dan Hayman and
Country Hymntimers, Faith
Hayman. Sid and Carol
Hayman, Carlie and Sand[a
Wi se, . Priscilla Dodrill and
Ann Sayre. Cheryle Knight,
Debbie Dodrill, Jerry and
Diana .Frederick. Brian &amp;
· Family Connection s. Rita
Oliver.
Sunday, Oct. 12
POMEROY - Carleton
Church homecoming. with
Sunday school at 9:30 a.m. ,
followed by dinner at noon .
Afternoon service to include
"Dayspring Singers" and
church singers . Church
located on Kingsbury Road.
Robert Vance. is pastor.
.

Birthdays

Sunday, Oct. 12
Saturday, Oct. II
REEDSVILLE - Ruth
REEDSVILLE - Soup Koenig will celebrate her
supper, 5 p.m., "Dayspring" 85th birthday on Oct. 12.
gospel group, 7 p.m ., Cards may be sept to 39054
Reedsville
United Silver
Ridge
Rd .,
Methodist Church.
Reedsville, Ohio 45774 .

Submitted photo
Barbara Gump Brown talks about the quilt she and others created in memory of Erma Stevens, long-time member of the Sew
'n Sews Quilt Guild and the O'Bieness Memorial Hoppltal Guild. At far right, Erma's widower, Howard Stevens; watches.

O'Bleness holds quilt dedication .
ATHENS ~ A dedication ceremony Cardiovascular and Diabetes Care at
was held Tuesday for a. custom- O'Bleness, . where the hand-crafted
designed quilt honoring the memory of quilt, named "Flowers for Erma," now
Erma Stevens, past president of the hangs. O'Bleness president Rick
Guild ofO'Bleness Memorial Hospital. Castrop dedicated the quilt.
Quilt designers are Barbara Gump
The ceremony was held in the waiting area of' the Cornwell Cente~ for Brown, Mary Day and Judy Billups,

io:x~~~';:st.":fl,!;, "'t.lf. ·TOPS

members o'f the Sew 'n Sews Quilt
Guild. of which Erma was also a
me111ber. Pat Skinner of Sew 'n Sew's
helped with planning the quilt desjgn.
Also attending the event were many
members of the Guild and other
friends of Erma.

members taking exercise challenge

Gal!ipolis, co-leader Dottie ue to collect non-perishable Cindy Hyde runner-up.
COOLVILLE
Participation in the TOPS Bond won second place in items for the food pantry KOPS (Keep Off Pounds
members
Sensibly)
1,000-mile challenge was · both the centerpiece and through November.
Marie LaChance was LaChresia
Bogardus.
discussed and members wreath categories and first
were reminded to continue place in the decorated veg- namep weekly best weight- Cleland, Henderson and
collecting non-perishable etable category. LaChance loss winner at the Sept. 30 Richmond were in leeway. ·
The group meets every
items for the food pantry won first place in the deco- meeting. KOPS (Keep Off
Pounds
Sensibly)
members
at . Torch Baptist
Tuesday
rated
garden
implement
cat. through November at
recent . meeting of the egory. Leader Pat Snedden Mary peland. Roberta Church. Weigh-in is from
TOPS (Take Off Pounds began an article on 50 slim; . Henderson and Patricia 5:15 to 6:15p.m. with meetSensibly) Chapter OH down tips titled Easy Richmond were in leeway. ings at 6:30 p.m. For inforStrategies for Weight Loss," At the Oct. 7 meeting, Pat mation, call Pat Snedden at
2013, Coolville.
.It was noted that during followed by an open discus- Hall was weekly best 662-2633 or attend . a free
Friday
night ...Ciear.
: Thursday .•• Mostly
the
recent fall rally held in sion . Members will eontin- weight-loss winner and meeting.
·cloudy
in
the . Lows in the mid 50s. East
:morning ...Then becoming winds around 5 mph.
Saturday
through
:mostly sunny. Highs in the
night .••Mostly
·mid 70s . Northwest winds Monday
clear. Highs around 80.
:around 5 mph.
Thursday night ••.Mostly Lows in the lower 50s.'
GALLIPOLIS - Strange Director, Joseph Wright 26, and Thursday-Saturaay,
Thesday...Mostly sunny. sounds and . frjghtening says, "Our selection of the Oct. 30-Nov. I . Box office
:clear. Lows in the upper
• creatures are . filling the nightmare theme allows ·will opep nightly at 7 p.m.
40s. North winds around 5 Highs in the mid 70s.
Thesday
night
and
mph
in
the
Ariel - Dater Hall, in · many options for inspira, Admission is $7 per person.
:evening ... Becoming light Wednesday .•• Mostly Gallipolis, as the perform- tion, from . psychological The Haunted Ariel is not
The Daily Sentinel
. cloudy with a 30 percent ing arts center prepares to thrills · to over-the-top ter- recommended for young
:and variable .
in
chance
of
showers.
Lows
Friday...Sunny. Highs in
open, its creaky doors for the ror." He continues, "what children. For more informa·the upper 70s . Northeast the .upper 40s. Highs in the fourth-annual Haunted Ariel· scares one person, may not tion, contact the Ariel • Sul:lscribe today
upper 60s.
'
·winds around 3 mph.
. 992-2155
Theatre Halloween attrac- scare another. Some are Dater Hall at 740-446tion. The Haunted Ariel will afraid of clowns, while oth- ARTS (2787).
be ojJen weekends, begin- ers may be afraid of snakes:
fortunately, we have both,
ning October 17.
Al'\!a· actors, a~ well as and much, much more!"
Before Old Man Winter
Various area businesses
youth and adult volunteers
Norfolk
Soulhern
(NYSE)
~
.AEP (NYSE) - 31.86
Arrives, Prepare.wlth
will have the enjoyable are supporting the Ariel
Stt.81
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 41.90
efforts
challenge of scaring the organization's
Ohio Valley Bane Corp•
Oh~o's Home Energy
.Ashland Inc. (NYSE) th'rough
.
.
sponsorship,
wits
out
of
brave
explorers
(NASDAQ)
20.60
.26.25
Assistance Programs
BBT (NYSE) - 33.01
who dare to journey through including; Big Country
·Big Lola (NYSE) - 23.86
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 20.99
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) many roo'!ls and hallways 99.5, 101.5 Bob FM. Sunny
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.61
25.66
·
designed to return guests to 93 .I , and Pepsi-Cola.
For an "
• Home Energy Assistance.
·BorgWarner (NYSE) - 26. t8 Premlar (NASDAQ) - 8.80
The
Haunted
Ariel
will
night.their
most
fearful
Application
Rockwell (NYSE) - 29.25
Century Aluminum (NA$• Percentage of Income
operate
weekends,
Fridaymares
.
Rocky
Boots
(NASDAQ)
DAQ)- 17.38
Location Near You,
Payment Plans
Executive and Artistic Sunday Oct. 17-19 and 24Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.64 2.67
Call1·800·331·2644
Royal Dutch Shell - 52.31
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
• EmergencyHeating
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) or visit:
- 4.11
Assistance
76.23
.
.
City Holding (NASDAQ) www.are\'agency8.org
Waj.:Mart (NYSE) - 54.55
40.53
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4
Collins (NYSE) - 40.38
Programs for Eligible Low-income Ohioans
Benefit Oasis Foster Care. Based on 100 players,
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 25
DuPont (N:t"SE)- 36.12
top
prizes
$t600.00.
Initial
buy
in
$50.00
.
Worthington
(NYSE)
12.52
US Bank (NYSE) - 30.83
Dally stock teporta are the 4
Re buys $20.00 with unlimitied re buys
Gannett (NYSE) - 14.61
/""'\.'
p.m. ET closing quotas of
General Electric (NYSE) during
the
first
blind
levels.
.
1 "~ '~-.r; Al't"a Agency on. Ag·in!; ·
transactions for Oct. 8, 2008,
20.65
piovlded by Edward .Jones
~i
..
Harley-Davidson (NYS.E) Octobclr 10 &amp; 11th at
financial advisors ls811C ·
A Program of Buckeye Hllls-Hocklng
29.03
American Legion Hall
.
Mills In Gallipolis at .(740)
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 39.30
Valley Regional Development District
520
West
Union
St.,
Athena,
OH
441·9441 and Lesley Marrero
Kroger (NYSE) - 24.88
Serving Seniors in Athehs, Hcict&lt;~ng , Meigs , Monroe,
7:00 Pm Sharp
In Point Pleasant at (304)
Limited Brands (NYSE) Morgan, Noble: Perry &amp; Washington Counties
Call:
674-0174. Member SIPC. .
14.11

:Local Weather ·

Haunted house at Ariel opens Oct. 17

:Local Stocks

TEXAS HOLD EM'
.

Keeping
Meigs County
informed

�0PNI0

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing .Co.
'

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting atr
_ establishment of religiotr, or prohibiting the
ftee exercise thereof; or abridging tile freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Govertrmetlt for a redress ofgrievatlces.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

Pagei\4

VIEW

Low grade
McCain wins 1W points with veterans
Dear Editor:
Jeff Fields'. assertion that John McCain has not been a
friend to veterans during his time in the Senate is absolutely correct. .
.
.. Every year between 2004 and 2007, McCain voted
~gains! a Republican-proposed Veterans Administration
~ealth -care bill for troops coming back from Iraq and
Afghanistan .
In 2008, he did not vote at all on the Pqst-9111
Veterans Education Assistance Act , yet spoke .oLit against
it. This bill was a biparti san effort by Sens. Jim Webb.
D-Va ., and Chuck Hagel , R-Neb., and would have paid a
veteran's tuition rather than on ly· some of it, as the GI
Bill does today.
McCain swears that the bill would "hurt milit;~ry
retention ," yet that comment is not echoed by the
. Department of Defense.
McCain loves to espouse that he has been awarded a per.fect voting record by veterans groups. hi 2008, the
Disabled American Veterdns gave McCain a 20 percent ratmg out of 100 percent. The Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans
of America gave McCain aD rating. The Vietnam Veter~ns
of America have McCain down for nine votes with them ,
15 vo(es against them .
ln contrast, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama ha.s an80 percent
rating from the DAY and a B-plus from the lAVA. Anyone
looking for a comprehensive list of McCain's anti-veteran
record can find it at www.huffingtonpost.com. It's far too
long to reprint here.
Americans support .the troops daily with letters, prayers
~nd calls. Maybe McCain could support us with a vote
every once in a while.
Ben Bryant
Lancaster

Elections letters advisory

Analysis: Obama gains, McCain seeks game-changer
with til~ dismayed public .
ASSOCIATED PRE SS WRITER
The drama wa~ Jm.1 in part And th~y tried It&gt; go negabecause he didn ' t pro,v1de tive without being 'overly
WASHINGTON
detail,. leaving those to his obvious about it.
"Thi&gt; is a fina l verdict on
Barack Obama made strides aides to deliver in a stream
the fail ed economic policies
toward ~asing voters' con- of new' releases.
ccrns about his candidacy in
Said MtCain : " It'&gt; mv ,,f the last eight years.
Tuesdai night's debate. pr(l)l\&gt;Sal. It's not Sc1i . slr(mgly promoted by
Preside)lt Bush and supportJohn McCain. despite rais- Obama's proposal."
ing pointed qwstions about
True , though Ohama said · ed bv Sc1wtor McCain.''
his rival's readiness . didn 't i&lt;1s1 m(Jnth that suc h a plun Oililnia said of the cconomil· cri.,is. the firs t of several
create the game-changing shou ld be l"&lt;msidcrcd.
mome.nt he 'll need between
Later. McCain 'ecnied time&gt; when ' the Democrat
now and Election Dar:_
unwilling t\&gt; utter Obama's linked McCain to the
There are sti ll four weeks · name. referrinc to him as unpopular president,
But. tryi ng to connect
to go. but time is running "That one" wh~ e debatin~ a
wi th hi s audience. Obama
out on McCa in.
vo te 011 an energy hill. "
Poised and confident,
The debate boiled down also said: "You 're not interObanm directly confronted to two ques tions: Could ested in hearing politicians
his greatest hurdle ~ and Obama c lose the sa le'! pointinc fim!~:rs:·
did il by turning tl.• tables Could McCai n change the
Ml·Cain. in turn . repeaton McCain during a foreign game? The answer to both edly ca lled Obama a "taxpolicy question .
· is no. but Obama 1m1y have and-spend" lil&gt;eral . and
" Now Senator ·McCain helped himself the most ~ rai ,~d questions about the
suggests that somehow. you if onl y l&gt;ecau sc \lc came first-term . Illinois senator :s
know. I'm green behind the ' into the debate ahead and qualification s to serve. say ears and I'm just spout ing witll a political landscape inc: "We don 't l1 avc time
off. and he 's somber and dramati ca ll y
in
the li1r oi1 the job training , my
friend."
responsible .'' Obama said as Democrats· favor.
And. he said: ''Nailing
McCain laughed ami said:
Th~ cand idaies d~hated
"Thank ym1very_muth.''
on a day in whi d1 stocb down Sena tor Obi.) Ina 's vm:-::
Obama then bluntly chal- plunged ;mew and a Q;tllup im1 ~ to.tx proposal." is like
lenged McCain's stead i- Poll showed that just 9 per- nailing .lc ll -0 to the wall.
ness: ''Thi s is a guy who ce nt of Amerkans think the There has been five or six of
sang bomb. homh, bomb cmmtry is he;1ded in the them and if yllll wai t long
Iran , who called for the right direction . the lowest' enou gh. there will probably
annihilation or · North level ever recorded in the 29 be anoth~r nne·."
Eve n wi th .. the political
Korea - that I don 't think · · years the question h;ls been
is an example of speaking asked. Nearly 7 in I 0 voters environ ment · tailor made
softl y.''
say the economy is their for a Democratic victory.
biggest issue.
Need ing a big moment. Obama bas had trouble
he trails in key state polling
With that bleak backJrop . 1.:onviuci ng skeptics who
- McCain tried to stage Obama and McCuin each have difficulty imagining
one by say ing he would sought to show he alone tl1c 47 -ycar-old freshman
order
the
Treasury would change Washington. senato r. ,·yi ng to be the
Department to e nact a In the onl y town hall of the fi rst bla ck president. in the
sweepi ng $300 billion pro- debate series, both candi - White llouse. A recent
gram to shield homeowners dates tried to show empathy AP- Yahoo · New&lt; poll
fnnn m~u1 gagc fore"-·losure .

BY LIZ SIDOTI

-

The Daily S~ntinel

showed that doubts abo ut
Obama ·s
competency
loomed eve n larger than
the color &lt;!f hi s skin.
Thus, Obama looked to
use the debate as an opportunity to try to reassure voters. connect with them and solidify his adv&lt;intage .He wa:~ out of his scripted
comfort · zone in the townhall style ' confrontation ;
though he avoided a major
misstep that could have set
him back.
·
Facing dwindling options
in a strik ingly poor environment for Republicans ,
McCain
sought to shift the
·
dynamics 'of the race in his·
favor in large part by stoking voters' concerns about
Obama, raising ques tio~ s
about how well the public
. ~nows him and questioning
·his experience to serve.
But he w&lt;~sn' t nearl y as
pointed as he and running
mate Sarah Palin had been
in recent days.
In talking about the mortgage cri sis. McCain referred
to "Senator Obarna and his
cronies and hi s friends in
Washington" who supported "risky loans ." He also
referred to Obama 's "secret
that you don 't know·.· and
claimed that it was that he
would increase t'lxes on ~0
per('eilt of small business
revenue.

In the end . Obama didn't
seal the deal and McCain
didn 't ha ve a game-changing moment'.·

They'll have another
chance in eight days.

www.rnydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
•

NEW5, SIR ... YoU
DIDN'T WINTHE

Meigs SWCD receives donation·

·Carol JOhnson

' Credit Services of
Farm
Mid-America's Gallipolis
office donated $1,000 to
the Meigs. Soil and Water
Conservation District during the Meigs ~WCD's
. recent annual meeting.
The donation is part of
• FCS's Support for ·
Agricultural Stewardship ·
Program and represents
a commitment to allocate
stewardship dollars to
programs that build leadership and encouragl!'
teamwork in America's
rural communities.The
(jonation will primarily be
used for youih outdpor ·
educational programs at •
the Me igs SWCD
Conservation Area.
Shown are FCS representative Chris Smalley,
right, presenting a check :
to Ed Gibbs, chairman of
the Meigs SWCD Board
of Supervisors.
Submitted photo

POMEROY - Carol Jean (Andre) Johnson , 69,
Pomeroy, passed awly at her residence on Tuesday Oct
7, 2008.
.
• . .
Born on Jan. 16, 1939 in Green Bay, Wise., she was the
daugh~r of the late Crril John and Betty Jane, (Wicker)
Andre. (:arol was a ded1cated m1htary wife of30 years and
an avid Green Bay Packers fan.
She is survived by her husband, of 44 years, Larry
Johnson, Pomeroy; daught~rs, Debbie (Donald) Spears
of Texas , M1chelle (Bobby) Owens of South Carolina
Karen Johnso~ of Virginia; seven grandchildren; thre~
great grandch!ldren; brother, David (Carol) Andre of
Green Bay, Wtse. ;· s1ster, Mary Lou (Andre) Hussin and
husband Lee of Nashville, Tenn .; aunts, Jackie
Kulhanek and. Delores Andre of Green Bay, Wise .;
numerous lovmg s1sters and brothers-in-law, nieces ;
nephews and cousins; and special friend Kay Cawley of
Chesapeake, Va .
.
·
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by:
Maternal and paternal grandparents; sister~in-law; Marilyn
(Cornette) Andre of Green Bay, Wise.; numerous paternal
and maternal aunts and uncles.
·
A funeral service will be held at2 p.m., Saturday, Oct.
I I, 2008 at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Re.v. Father Walter Heinz officiating,
Visitation will be held 2 hours prior to the funeral service. A graveside service will be conducted at I p.m .,
Tuesday, Oct: 14~ 2008 in the Allouez Catholic Cemetery
·
m Green Bay, Wtsc.
Online condolences may be sent to www .andersonrncdanieLcom.

POMEROY - Pat~ick Tyler Carey will receive his Eagle
Scout at the Eagle Court of Honor to be held ar 2 p.m. ·,
Sunday at Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
A reception will follow.
.

Thanksgiving dinner

Public Rosary

ECONOMICS.

POMEROY - Parishoners of Sacred Heart Church will
pray the Rosary at noon Saturday in the center gazebo in
downtown Pomeroy. as part of Am&lt;;lrica Needs Fatima,
honoring the anniversary of the apparitions of Mary in
.Fatima, Portugal.
"
The prayer will last one hour, and the public is invited to
, join i~ this Catholic devotion.
·

T~eSrromPageAt _.

n
The devil made them ·do it
rowed mO!lCY in fa shionable to be forced to bail out the
Harlem, Watts and the Democrats' two most imporSouth Side of Chicago. Also tant constituent groups: rich
downtown Atlanta. Newark; Wall Street bankers and weiSt. Louis. Detroif. Memphi s fare recipients ."
and
Philadelphia.
In
The brutality of this arguGene
"Monopoly " terms, the ment is matched only by its
Lyons
U.S.
economy stup1_d1ty. An alert child
entire
drained into a black hole of would wonder why a 31dcfaultcd loans on Baltic . year-old law suddenl y startand Mediterranean. :.
ed causing trouble in 2008..
So how come yo u haven't Wouldn 't a lot of those
front door. You 'd think that
heard
this before'! Maybe loans already be paid offl
any adult who'd· eve r
.
because
you don't spend Wouldn 't the same apply. to
bought real estate, avoided
, losing hi s or 11er life saviilgs enough time watching Fox actrons President Clinton
to Nigerian e-mail scams or News or listening to GOP supposedly took 13 years
In
those ago'' Republicans have coneven spent rainy afternoons talk-radio.
as
a . ch ild
playing precincts. the real cause· of trolled the government for
''Monopol y" wo uld under- the national (and .world) the past eight years. So why
stand this fundamental fact financial delude turn s out didn 't they fi x it ?
Mainly because it 's utter
of human natui·e: ' If yo u . to be an obsc ure 1977 law
'k
nown
as
the
Community
nonsense.
CRA regulations .
make it easy f(u· people 10
Reinvestment
Act,
or
CRA.
apply
only
to FDIC-insured.
stea l, they' II , teal everylntende.t
to
end
the
pracbank
s,
not
. the mortgage
'
thing. including the, sil verware and grtltulma ·s den- lice of . "redlining," i.e. companies and investment
refu sing tci make credit-war- banks , which made 83.4
tures .
thy
loans in "bad" neighbor- percent of the "subprime"
Alas , too many hetded
pie-in-the-sky GOP theolo- , 11oods. the CRA was enacted Jo,.ns responsible foF the
gy. The miracle-working under President Carter. To crisis. The 1977 law also
market absolved us all from conservative pundits such as has nothing whatsoever to
sin . Hence. from the Char)es Krauthammer, Jell dci with fraudulent packages
·Reagan-t:realed Savi ngs &amp; Jacoby and Laura Ingraham, of "securiti zed" mortgage
Loan crisis onward. corpo- that's where all the trouble debt takrng down investors
worldwide. Those are
rate financial sc;mdals have stmted.
Supposedly. "left-wing Bush:era innovation.
grown steadily larger and
intimidated
Rick Perlstein, author of
more dangerous . But aban - activists"
hank
ers
into
making
risky
the
. bri lliant
hi story
don dogma'' Never.
loans
to
improvident
"
Nixonland"
(Scribner
So now come GOP apologists to id entify the real nlinorities. which caused 2008), calls this ugly fabl~
whole
debacle. "a modern day equivalent
perps of the Wall Street lhc
Supposedly,
too,
President
of the ' Protoco ls of the
meltdown: Jimmy Carter,
Bill Cli nt on. feckless Clinton made things worse Elders of Zion ,' a Big Lie
black. fo lks. Mexican - by revi sing the rules ba~k narrati ve that blames a
·despised, outcast soc ial
Americans and chairman in 1995.
Leave it to Ann Coulter to gro up for problems they
of ·the House Financia l
spell thing&gt;out most clearl y. had nothrng to do with ."
S~rvices Committee Rep.
A · nai ve person might
Barney Frank , D-Mass., Thanks to Democmtic interferencc
witl1
free
markets
.
imagine
these people would
who's evident ly been
covertly running ,Wall see. sound methods of ha ve some shame.
appraising · mo11gage appli (Arkansas
DemocratStreet all this time .
See , while you fretted cants' ability to repay loans Ga~e lle coilmrnist Gene
over Bu sh &gt;crew-ups in were replaced by "nontradi - Lyons is a National
Iraq . Afghani stan and l'it'IV tinn;d lllC.il\l.l l~es of credjl- Maga zine Award winner
Orleans. a ' sini ster. dtrsl..y \Vorlhinc~:-.. :-.ul.'h a~ having a , and ClJ·author of "Th e
caba l built a speculati ve gnod ·•jttmp shot "01' i·wving· a .·- .Humin g .of the·· Pi·esidem "
bubble in ghetto rea l estate. mis!. ng
child
named (St. Marrin:,- Press, 2000).
Overpriced luxury condi1s ·caylee."' As a result. "mid- y,lll can e-mail Lmns ar
were constructed with bor- dle:class taxpayers are going eugelll'lyons2@ya/t()(l.co 111 ,)

a

others in cases of resignation or retirement, and rear.
ranging bus mutes .
That action resulted in
cuts · of $500,000, according to Rhonemus who
commented "A~· it stands
right now, we're looking to
break even at the end of
'this fiscal year (2008-09).
Our bu.dget will be balanced."
However, he. noted, the
governor is cutting ~II agen~
cies, which includes the
Ohio
Department
of
Education, by 4.75 percent.
The only cut so far has been
in a pre -s~ hool program

O'Bieness offers COI1Jn1unity CPR training:.
ATHENS - O'Bieness skills needed to administe'r
Memorial Hospital in Athens CPR to adults, children
will offer a Cardiopulmonary and infants . Participants
Resuscitation (CPR) course also learn how· to recogWednesday, Oct. 15, from nize a life-threaten,ing
6:30 p.m. until 9:30 p.m. in :emergency, how to proO'Bieness' Lower Level vide basic life support,
and what to do in the case
room 010.
This American Safety &amp; of an ·airway obstruction
·
H.ealth Institute course or choking.
Upon successful completeaches participants the

MIDDLEPORT - Rita
Bailey Ball retired Oct. I
from the Meigs County
Department of Job and
Family Services as business
administrator with 30 years
of service. Ball began her
career/ ·in finance with
Meigs County at the Meigs
County Auditor's Office on
Sept. 6, 1978 . She was
·employed there for six years ·
before joining the MCDJFS
on April I , 1985 as the busine ss
service
officer.

term care facilitie~ that
house persons w.ith chronic
' medical conditions , persons suffering from serious, extended -health problems or a weakened
immune system, chUI!ren
Rita Bailey Ball
. aged six months to 18 years
on long-term aspirin treatment, pregnan.t women
who will be past the third
from Page Al
(fi~ester during flu season,
workers who will be in · technology when they call be identified at ·the dispatch
contact' with ~ople at risk on cellular telephones.
desk, as could a residence
· of , developmg serious '
E-911 also provides the where domestic violence or
influenza complications.
means to flag locations, drug investigations have
·
with information pertinent taken place.
" In five years, the equrpto dispatchers , such as prior
medical ·situations or past ment to be installed for
Page At .
criminal activity. For Meigs County's new system
be
obsolete," .
example, a 'patient with could
mountaintop removal min- . Book Club's next meeting is past cardiac ·events could Lavender said.
ing and was one of KiJkus at 6:30 p.m., Oct. 27 at the
Review's Top 10 Fiction Pomeror Library. The club
Books .of 2007, .won the will rev1ew "Outlander" by
Br:dbury Learning
Expansion
2007 Weatherford Prize and Diana Gabaldon . Anyone
was a finalist for the 2008 i:nterested in participating in
Childcare Classroom
has limited
Orion Book Award.
this club is welcome .to
'
The MCDPL will then attend. For more inforrnaamount of immediate openings. It is
host Family Movie Night, 6 tion please contact Brenna
full day full year child care to families
. ,
p.m., Oct.l7atthePomemy . Call at992-5~13 .
Library, presenting the film · Fall st~ryllme for ·chtlwho work prat time, full time, or
"lndiana Jones and the dren, wh1ch mcludes crealKingdom of the Crystal · ing a craft ite·m, runs
attend school or job training.
Skull." Refreshments will through Nov. 20 and is set
be provided.
for : 2 p .m., Mondays,
The hours of operatimt for this
Then beginning at 6 p.m., Racine · Library, 2:30 p.m.,
.classroom are 7:00 am - 5:30 pm .
Thur·sday, Oct. 23 at the Tuesdays, Eastern- Library,
Pomeroy l:ibrary, wear your 2
p.m. , . Wednesdays,
Transportation is not provided.
, old .-, pa1nt1ng . Cloth~s }Q~ .- .~on;~emy . L1~rary. , . p,ll) .., .
·information contact
pumpkin
parnhng . Thursdays,
Mtddleport
Pumpkins will be provided Library. For more informa- .
Lori at 740-992-4202
by area businesses.
,
· tion contac.t Emily Sanders
The . MCDPL Library at 992-5813 .

..

911

Librmjrro~

Ce~ter

z.

•.

lion of the course, participants receive a card to confirm that they attended and
completed tlie course. This
is ·not a professional rescuer
CPR course. but it is
intended for community or
lay. persons .
.
To register for the course,
visit O'Bleness' community
relations office. The course

fee of $I 5 per person is
payable with registratiOI!
and covers the cost of a
CPR instruction book ,
which must be read before
attending. The fee is waived
for anyone unable to pay.
For more information ,
call O'Bieness ' community
re lariorts .depa rrmenr at
(740) 566-4814.

Ball retires·from MCDJFS

FlU.ShOt from Page Al
the vaccine is administ~red
an!l may last for a year, A
new shot is needed on an
annual basis.
People at risk for contractirtg ·a serious case of
influenza or related complications and peollle who
· are in close contlc:t with
• some'one with a chronic
medical condition should
receive the . vaccine.. The
following are more susceptible to flu complications:
People aged 50 years or
older, resi!lents of long-

..'

-·

'

grant which dropped from ·
$199,480 to $Ioo:ooo. But
there has been some discussion about a cut in the bus ·
subsidy.
· . Also affecting the funding of 80 percent from the
State . is the pupil count
which varies from time to
time ,
accqrding
to
Rhonemus. If .the count
goes up it brin~s in more
state money; ' 1f it ~oes
down, the amount rece1ved
is reduced. He noted that
only 20 percent ·of school
operational expenses come
from money collected in
Meigs County.

' '

Ever wonder just who
keeps the hall fields .
maintained and concession stands stocked in .
Racine? These types of
things just don't ·happen
by themselves and
recently volunteers Paul
Cardone , Gary Evans
and the Wild Horse Cafe
and Manager Dave
:
Berry were honored with
plaques for the work ·
they did to keep the ,
Racine Youth League qn
top of their game this ·
_year. Pictured.on the ·
tractor is Cardone being·
given his plaque by
Jonah Hoback. Also pic-.
lured with the plaques
for Evans and Berry are
(from left) Garrett and
Ashlyn Wolfe. Hoback
and the Wolfes are all
players in the Racine
Youth League.
Both Sergont/photo

.Scout ceremony

.

'

Volunteers honored

Local Briefs

NOl?&gt;EL PRIZE FOR

n

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

POMEROY - Community youth group at Mulberry
Community Center will sponsor a free community
Thanksgiving dinner at 5:45 p.m ., Nov. 23, at Mulberry
Community Center. ·The Thanksgiving worship service
sponsored by the Meigs Ministerial Association will follow.
A community choir is being organized for the ~rvice,
and details will be finalized and announced at a later date.

A BIT OF BAD

If the economic situation
weren't so grim . it'd be
darkly amusing watching
conservatives hunting··for a
scapegpat other than Bush
admimstration
True
Believers. (They ' re all
Brownies now. Heckuva
JOb, ·e h?) For a generation,
•
devotees of . the very bad
Jl
ovelist Ayn Rand have
LETTERS TO THE
assured us that greed is a
EDITOR
virtue and government
oversight
of financial insti ' Leiters to .the editur are J\'elcome , Th ev should be /e.;,.
tuti ons an impediment to
than 300 words. All leiters are ·subject to -edirir1g .musr be
genius. In the "Ownership
signed , and imlude address and telephone nwnher. No Society.'· financial regula.unsigned lerren ·viii be published . Leiters should be in tions were for pantywaists.
good taste. addressing iss&lt;w~ . nO/ personalities. Leiters of
In GOP-think , governthanks to urganizarim1s and individuals will not he accept- ments exist purely to drop
bombs and monitor other
ed for publication,
people's sex lives. Financial
..
•
deregulation has been th e
Republkan miracle elixir
since Ronald Reagan. In
March 2008 , Sen. John
McCa in reassured ·the Wall
Reader Services
(USPs 213-960)
Street Journal that despite
. Ohlo . Valle~ Publishing
bl' ing "awlire &lt;lf the view
Correction Polley
·
o.
. ·
.
Put:Jiished every afternoon, Monday
that
there is a need for govOur mam concern m all stories is to through Friday. 111 Court Street ,
ernment
oversight ," in
be accllrate. If you know of an error · Pomeroy, Ohio. secoild·class postage
debacles like the subpri'mc
. in a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
lending crisis."] am funda992·2t56.
Member: The Associated Press and
mentally a dcregLi lator:: ·
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
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Our main number Is · · tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
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viceDepartment extensions are:
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, Letters dealing with the Nov. 4 eleclion are welcome and
will be accepted up until 5 p.m. on Fridi•y. Oct. 24. Letters
received after that deadline will not be publiohed. Letters
· should be 300 words in le1111th or les.~ and must c1ddress
issues . not personalities. Lerters endorsing /o m / or nariona/ candidates, or co11taining personal attacks, will mil be
accep1ed.

Thursday, October 9, 2008'

Thursday, October 9, 2008

--- ,.. For

Administration With the immediate retirement plan s
MCDJFS said Ball is well include devoting more time
known · · and
respected to family and friends artd
throughout the region for developing her hobby of
her knowledge of county antiguing and . atter\ding
auct1ons.
and state finance.
, Bail resides on ·Noble :
The MCDJFS employees '
Summit Road. Middleport held a retirement luncheon
·with her husband Larry and for her on Sept. 26 which
son Wyatt. She and her hus- was her last official day at
band celebrated her retire- the office where she was
men! with a beach trip to presented· with a retirement
Topsail Island. NC. Her cake and gifts.

r----------------------,

I

.

!

I

Coupon

!

Greeting Cards
I· BuyOneand
1
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1 Get Two Free . 1
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RUSSEll .STOVER .HAllOWEEN
CANDIES NOW IN STOCK
'

a

... ,

EdZata, -RPh
Kenneth.McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-29SS
ll2 EastMairtS\r.~t .·.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Open Weeknights 'Tlll9

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The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing .Co.
'

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting atr
_ establishment of religiotr, or prohibiting the
ftee exercise thereof; or abridging tile freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Govertrmetlt for a redress ofgrievatlces.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

Pagei\4

VIEW

Low grade
McCain wins 1W points with veterans
Dear Editor:
Jeff Fields'. assertion that John McCain has not been a
friend to veterans during his time in the Senate is absolutely correct. .
.
.. Every year between 2004 and 2007, McCain voted
~gains! a Republican-proposed Veterans Administration
~ealth -care bill for troops coming back from Iraq and
Afghanistan .
In 2008, he did not vote at all on the Pqst-9111
Veterans Education Assistance Act , yet spoke .oLit against
it. This bill was a biparti san effort by Sens. Jim Webb.
D-Va ., and Chuck Hagel , R-Neb., and would have paid a
veteran's tuition rather than on ly· some of it, as the GI
Bill does today.
McCain swears that the bill would "hurt milit;~ry
retention ," yet that comment is not echoed by the
. Department of Defense.
McCain loves to espouse that he has been awarded a per.fect voting record by veterans groups. hi 2008, the
Disabled American Veterdns gave McCain a 20 percent ratmg out of 100 percent. The Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans
of America gave McCain aD rating. The Vietnam Veter~ns
of America have McCain down for nine votes with them ,
15 vo(es against them .
ln contrast, Illinois Sen. Barack Obama ha.s an80 percent
rating from the DAY and a B-plus from the lAVA. Anyone
looking for a comprehensive list of McCain's anti-veteran
record can find it at www.huffingtonpost.com. It's far too
long to reprint here.
Americans support .the troops daily with letters, prayers
~nd calls. Maybe McCain could support us with a vote
every once in a while.
Ben Bryant
Lancaster

Elections letters advisory

Analysis: Obama gains, McCain seeks game-changer
with til~ dismayed public .
ASSOCIATED PRE SS WRITER
The drama wa~ Jm.1 in part And th~y tried It&gt; go negabecause he didn ' t pro,v1de tive without being 'overly
WASHINGTON
detail,. leaving those to his obvious about it.
"Thi&gt; is a fina l verdict on
Barack Obama made strides aides to deliver in a stream
the fail ed economic policies
toward ~asing voters' con- of new' releases.
ccrns about his candidacy in
Said MtCain : " It'&gt; mv ,,f the last eight years.
Tuesdai night's debate. pr(l)l\&gt;Sal. It's not Sc1i . slr(mgly promoted by
Preside)lt Bush and supportJohn McCain. despite rais- Obama's proposal."
ing pointed qwstions about
True , though Ohama said · ed bv Sc1wtor McCain.''
his rival's readiness . didn 't i&lt;1s1 m(Jnth that suc h a plun Oililnia said of the cconomil· cri.,is. the firs t of several
create the game-changing shou ld be l"&lt;msidcrcd.
mome.nt he 'll need between
Later. McCain 'ecnied time&gt; when ' the Democrat
now and Election Dar:_
unwilling t\&gt; utter Obama's linked McCain to the
There are sti ll four weeks · name. referrinc to him as unpopular president,
But. tryi ng to connect
to go. but time is running "That one" wh~ e debatin~ a
wi th hi s audience. Obama
out on McCa in.
vo te 011 an energy hill. "
Poised and confident,
The debate boiled down also said: "You 're not interObanm directly confronted to two ques tions: Could ested in hearing politicians
his greatest hurdle ~ and Obama c lose the sa le'! pointinc fim!~:rs:·
did il by turning tl.• tables Could McCai n change the
Ml·Cain. in turn . repeaton McCain during a foreign game? The answer to both edly ca lled Obama a "taxpolicy question .
· is no. but Obama 1m1y have and-spend" lil&gt;eral . and
" Now Senator ·McCain helped himself the most ~ rai ,~d questions about the
suggests that somehow. you if onl y l&gt;ecau sc \lc came first-term . Illinois senator :s
know. I'm green behind the ' into the debate ahead and qualification s to serve. say ears and I'm just spout ing witll a political landscape inc: "We don 't l1 avc time
off. and he 's somber and dramati ca ll y
in
the li1r oi1 the job training , my
friend."
responsible .'' Obama said as Democrats· favor.
And. he said: ''Nailing
McCain laughed ami said:
Th~ cand idaies d~hated
"Thank ym1very_muth.''
on a day in whi d1 stocb down Sena tor Obi.) Ina 's vm:-::
Obama then bluntly chal- plunged ;mew and a Q;tllup im1 ~ to.tx proposal." is like
lenged McCain's stead i- Poll showed that just 9 per- nailing .lc ll -0 to the wall.
ness: ''Thi s is a guy who ce nt of Amerkans think the There has been five or six of
sang bomb. homh, bomb cmmtry is he;1ded in the them and if yllll wai t long
Iran , who called for the right direction . the lowest' enou gh. there will probably
annihilation or · North level ever recorded in the 29 be anoth~r nne·."
Eve n wi th .. the political
Korea - that I don 't think · · years the question h;ls been
is an example of speaking asked. Nearly 7 in I 0 voters environ ment · tailor made
softl y.''
say the economy is their for a Democratic victory.
biggest issue.
Need ing a big moment. Obama bas had trouble
he trails in key state polling
With that bleak backJrop . 1.:onviuci ng skeptics who
- McCain tried to stage Obama and McCuin each have difficulty imagining
one by say ing he would sought to show he alone tl1c 47 -ycar-old freshman
order
the
Treasury would change Washington. senato r. ,·yi ng to be the
Department to e nact a In the onl y town hall of the fi rst bla ck president. in the
sweepi ng $300 billion pro- debate series, both candi - White llouse. A recent
gram to shield homeowners dates tried to show empathy AP- Yahoo · New&lt; poll
fnnn m~u1 gagc fore"-·losure .

BY LIZ SIDOTI

-

The Daily S~ntinel

showed that doubts abo ut
Obama ·s
competency
loomed eve n larger than
the color &lt;!f hi s skin.
Thus, Obama looked to
use the debate as an opportunity to try to reassure voters. connect with them and solidify his adv&lt;intage .He wa:~ out of his scripted
comfort · zone in the townhall style ' confrontation ;
though he avoided a major
misstep that could have set
him back.
·
Facing dwindling options
in a strik ingly poor environment for Republicans ,
McCain
sought to shift the
·
dynamics 'of the race in his·
favor in large part by stoking voters' concerns about
Obama, raising ques tio~ s
about how well the public
. ~nows him and questioning
·his experience to serve.
But he w&lt;~sn' t nearl y as
pointed as he and running
mate Sarah Palin had been
in recent days.
In talking about the mortgage cri sis. McCain referred
to "Senator Obarna and his
cronies and hi s friends in
Washington" who supported "risky loans ." He also
referred to Obama 's "secret
that you don 't know·.· and
claimed that it was that he
would increase t'lxes on ~0
per('eilt of small business
revenue.

In the end . Obama didn't
seal the deal and McCain
didn 't ha ve a game-changing moment'.·

They'll have another
chance in eight days.

www.rnydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
•

NEW5, SIR ... YoU
DIDN'T WINTHE

Meigs SWCD receives donation·

·Carol JOhnson

' Credit Services of
Farm
Mid-America's Gallipolis
office donated $1,000 to
the Meigs. Soil and Water
Conservation District during the Meigs ~WCD's
. recent annual meeting.
The donation is part of
• FCS's Support for ·
Agricultural Stewardship ·
Program and represents
a commitment to allocate
stewardship dollars to
programs that build leadership and encouragl!'
teamwork in America's
rural communities.The
(jonation will primarily be
used for youih outdpor ·
educational programs at •
the Me igs SWCD
Conservation Area.
Shown are FCS representative Chris Smalley,
right, presenting a check :
to Ed Gibbs, chairman of
the Meigs SWCD Board
of Supervisors.
Submitted photo

POMEROY - Carol Jean (Andre) Johnson , 69,
Pomeroy, passed awly at her residence on Tuesday Oct
7, 2008.
.
• . .
Born on Jan. 16, 1939 in Green Bay, Wise., she was the
daugh~r of the late Crril John and Betty Jane, (Wicker)
Andre. (:arol was a ded1cated m1htary wife of30 years and
an avid Green Bay Packers fan.
She is survived by her husband, of 44 years, Larry
Johnson, Pomeroy; daught~rs, Debbie (Donald) Spears
of Texas , M1chelle (Bobby) Owens of South Carolina
Karen Johnso~ of Virginia; seven grandchildren; thre~
great grandch!ldren; brother, David (Carol) Andre of
Green Bay, Wtse. ;· s1ster, Mary Lou (Andre) Hussin and
husband Lee of Nashville, Tenn .; aunts, Jackie
Kulhanek and. Delores Andre of Green Bay, Wise .;
numerous lovmg s1sters and brothers-in-law, nieces ;
nephews and cousins; and special friend Kay Cawley of
Chesapeake, Va .
.
·
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by:
Maternal and paternal grandparents; sister~in-law; Marilyn
(Cornette) Andre of Green Bay, Wise.; numerous paternal
and maternal aunts and uncles.
·
A funeral service will be held at2 p.m., Saturday, Oct.
I I, 2008 at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with the Re.v. Father Walter Heinz officiating,
Visitation will be held 2 hours prior to the funeral service. A graveside service will be conducted at I p.m .,
Tuesday, Oct: 14~ 2008 in the Allouez Catholic Cemetery
·
m Green Bay, Wtsc.
Online condolences may be sent to www .andersonrncdanieLcom.

POMEROY - Pat~ick Tyler Carey will receive his Eagle
Scout at the Eagle Court of Honor to be held ar 2 p.m. ·,
Sunday at Sacred Heart Catholic Church.
A reception will follow.
.

Thanksgiving dinner

Public Rosary

ECONOMICS.

POMEROY - Parishoners of Sacred Heart Church will
pray the Rosary at noon Saturday in the center gazebo in
downtown Pomeroy. as part of Am&lt;;lrica Needs Fatima,
honoring the anniversary of the apparitions of Mary in
.Fatima, Portugal.
"
The prayer will last one hour, and the public is invited to
, join i~ this Catholic devotion.
·

T~eSrromPageAt _.

n
The devil made them ·do it
rowed mO!lCY in fa shionable to be forced to bail out the
Harlem, Watts and the Democrats' two most imporSouth Side of Chicago. Also tant constituent groups: rich
downtown Atlanta. Newark; Wall Street bankers and weiSt. Louis. Detroif. Memphi s fare recipients ."
and
Philadelphia.
In
The brutality of this arguGene
"Monopoly " terms, the ment is matched only by its
Lyons
U.S.
economy stup1_d1ty. An alert child
entire
drained into a black hole of would wonder why a 31dcfaultcd loans on Baltic . year-old law suddenl y startand Mediterranean. :.
ed causing trouble in 2008..
So how come yo u haven't Wouldn 't a lot of those
front door. You 'd think that
heard
this before'! Maybe loans already be paid offl
any adult who'd· eve r
.
because
you don't spend Wouldn 't the same apply. to
bought real estate, avoided
, losing hi s or 11er life saviilgs enough time watching Fox actrons President Clinton
to Nigerian e-mail scams or News or listening to GOP supposedly took 13 years
In
those ago'' Republicans have coneven spent rainy afternoons talk-radio.
as
a . ch ild
playing precincts. the real cause· of trolled the government for
''Monopol y" wo uld under- the national (and .world) the past eight years. So why
stand this fundamental fact financial delude turn s out didn 't they fi x it ?
Mainly because it 's utter
of human natui·e: ' If yo u . to be an obsc ure 1977 law
'k
nown
as
the
Community
nonsense.
CRA regulations .
make it easy f(u· people 10
Reinvestment
Act,
or
CRA.
apply
only
to FDIC-insured.
stea l, they' II , teal everylntende.t
to
end
the
pracbank
s,
not
. the mortgage
'
thing. including the, sil verware and grtltulma ·s den- lice of . "redlining," i.e. companies and investment
refu sing tci make credit-war- banks , which made 83.4
tures .
thy
loans in "bad" neighbor- percent of the "subprime"
Alas , too many hetded
pie-in-the-sky GOP theolo- , 11oods. the CRA was enacted Jo,.ns responsible foF the
gy. The miracle-working under President Carter. To crisis. The 1977 law also
market absolved us all from conservative pundits such as has nothing whatsoever to
sin . Hence. from the Char)es Krauthammer, Jell dci with fraudulent packages
·Reagan-t:realed Savi ngs &amp; Jacoby and Laura Ingraham, of "securiti zed" mortgage
Loan crisis onward. corpo- that's where all the trouble debt takrng down investors
worldwide. Those are
rate financial sc;mdals have stmted.
Supposedly. "left-wing Bush:era innovation.
grown steadily larger and
intimidated
Rick Perlstein, author of
more dangerous . But aban - activists"
hank
ers
into
making
risky
the
. bri lliant
hi story
don dogma'' Never.
loans
to
improvident
"
Nixonland"
(Scribner
So now come GOP apologists to id entify the real nlinorities. which caused 2008), calls this ugly fabl~
whole
debacle. "a modern day equivalent
perps of the Wall Street lhc
Supposedly,
too,
President
of the ' Protoco ls of the
meltdown: Jimmy Carter,
Bill Cli nt on. feckless Clinton made things worse Elders of Zion ,' a Big Lie
black. fo lks. Mexican - by revi sing the rules ba~k narrati ve that blames a
·despised, outcast soc ial
Americans and chairman in 1995.
Leave it to Ann Coulter to gro up for problems they
of ·the House Financia l
spell thing&gt;out most clearl y. had nothrng to do with ."
S~rvices Committee Rep.
A · nai ve person might
Barney Frank , D-Mass., Thanks to Democmtic interferencc
witl1
free
markets
.
imagine
these people would
who's evident ly been
covertly running ,Wall see. sound methods of ha ve some shame.
appraising · mo11gage appli (Arkansas
DemocratStreet all this time .
See , while you fretted cants' ability to repay loans Ga~e lle coilmrnist Gene
over Bu sh &gt;crew-ups in were replaced by "nontradi - Lyons is a National
Iraq . Afghani stan and l'it'IV tinn;d lllC.il\l.l l~es of credjl- Maga zine Award winner
Orleans. a ' sini ster. dtrsl..y \Vorlhinc~:-.. :-.ul.'h a~ having a , and ClJ·author of "Th e
caba l built a speculati ve gnod ·•jttmp shot "01' i·wving· a .·- .Humin g .of the·· Pi·esidem "
bubble in ghetto rea l estate. mis!. ng
child
named (St. Marrin:,- Press, 2000).
Overpriced luxury condi1s ·caylee."' As a result. "mid- y,lll can e-mail Lmns ar
were constructed with bor- dle:class taxpayers are going eugelll'lyons2@ya/t()(l.co 111 ,)

a

others in cases of resignation or retirement, and rear.
ranging bus mutes .
That action resulted in
cuts · of $500,000, according to Rhonemus who
commented "A~· it stands
right now, we're looking to
break even at the end of
'this fiscal year (2008-09).
Our bu.dget will be balanced."
However, he. noted, the
governor is cutting ~II agen~
cies, which includes the
Ohio
Department
of
Education, by 4.75 percent.
The only cut so far has been
in a pre -s~ hool program

O'Bieness offers COI1Jn1unity CPR training:.
ATHENS - O'Bieness skills needed to administe'r
Memorial Hospital in Athens CPR to adults, children
will offer a Cardiopulmonary and infants . Participants
Resuscitation (CPR) course also learn how· to recogWednesday, Oct. 15, from nize a life-threaten,ing
6:30 p.m. until 9:30 p.m. in :emergency, how to proO'Bieness' Lower Level vide basic life support,
and what to do in the case
room 010.
This American Safety &amp; of an ·airway obstruction
·
H.ealth Institute course or choking.
Upon successful completeaches participants the

MIDDLEPORT - Rita
Bailey Ball retired Oct. I
from the Meigs County
Department of Job and
Family Services as business
administrator with 30 years
of service. Ball began her
career/ ·in finance with
Meigs County at the Meigs
County Auditor's Office on
Sept. 6, 1978 . She was
·employed there for six years ·
before joining the MCDJFS
on April I , 1985 as the busine ss
service
officer.

term care facilitie~ that
house persons w.ith chronic
' medical conditions , persons suffering from serious, extended -health problems or a weakened
immune system, chUI!ren
Rita Bailey Ball
. aged six months to 18 years
on long-term aspirin treatment, pregnan.t women
who will be past the third
from Page Al
(fi~ester during flu season,
workers who will be in · technology when they call be identified at ·the dispatch
contact' with ~ople at risk on cellular telephones.
desk, as could a residence
· of , developmg serious '
E-911 also provides the where domestic violence or
influenza complications.
means to flag locations, drug investigations have
·
with information pertinent taken place.
" In five years, the equrpto dispatchers , such as prior
medical ·situations or past ment to be installed for
Page At .
criminal activity. For Meigs County's new system
be
obsolete," .
example, a 'patient with could
mountaintop removal min- . Book Club's next meeting is past cardiac ·events could Lavender said.
ing and was one of KiJkus at 6:30 p.m., Oct. 27 at the
Review's Top 10 Fiction Pomeror Library. The club
Books .of 2007, .won the will rev1ew "Outlander" by
Br:dbury Learning
Expansion
2007 Weatherford Prize and Diana Gabaldon . Anyone
was a finalist for the 2008 i:nterested in participating in
Childcare Classroom
has limited
Orion Book Award.
this club is welcome .to
'
The MCDPL will then attend. For more inforrnaamount of immediate openings. It is
host Family Movie Night, 6 tion please contact Brenna
full day full year child care to families
. ,
p.m., Oct.l7atthePomemy . Call at992-5~13 .
Library, presenting the film · Fall st~ryllme for ·chtlwho work prat time, full time, or
"lndiana Jones and the dren, wh1ch mcludes crealKingdom of the Crystal · ing a craft ite·m, runs
attend school or job training.
Skull." Refreshments will through Nov. 20 and is set
be provided.
for : 2 p .m., Mondays,
The hours of operatimt for this
Then beginning at 6 p.m., Racine · Library, 2:30 p.m.,
.classroom are 7:00 am - 5:30 pm .
Thur·sday, Oct. 23 at the Tuesdays, Eastern- Library,
Pomeroy l:ibrary, wear your 2
p.m. , . Wednesdays,
Transportation is not provided.
, old .-, pa1nt1ng . Cloth~s }Q~ .- .~on;~emy . L1~rary. , . p,ll) .., .
·information contact
pumpkin
parnhng . Thursdays,
Mtddleport
Pumpkins will be provided Library. For more informa- .
Lori at 740-992-4202
by area businesses.
,
· tion contac.t Emily Sanders
The . MCDPL Library at 992-5813 .

..

911

Librmjrro~

Ce~ter

z.

•.

lion of the course, participants receive a card to confirm that they attended and
completed tlie course. This
is ·not a professional rescuer
CPR course. but it is
intended for community or
lay. persons .
.
To register for the course,
visit O'Bleness' community
relations office. The course

fee of $I 5 per person is
payable with registratiOI!
and covers the cost of a
CPR instruction book ,
which must be read before
attending. The fee is waived
for anyone unable to pay.
For more information ,
call O'Bieness ' community
re lariorts .depa rrmenr at
(740) 566-4814.

Ball retires·from MCDJFS

FlU.ShOt from Page Al
the vaccine is administ~red
an!l may last for a year, A
new shot is needed on an
annual basis.
People at risk for contractirtg ·a serious case of
influenza or related complications and peollle who
· are in close contlc:t with
• some'one with a chronic
medical condition should
receive the . vaccine.. The
following are more susceptible to flu complications:
People aged 50 years or
older, resi!lents of long-

..'

-·

'

grant which dropped from ·
$199,480 to $Ioo:ooo. But
there has been some discussion about a cut in the bus ·
subsidy.
· . Also affecting the funding of 80 percent from the
State . is the pupil count
which varies from time to
time ,
accqrding
to
Rhonemus. If .the count
goes up it brin~s in more
state money; ' 1f it ~oes
down, the amount rece1ved
is reduced. He noted that
only 20 percent ·of school
operational expenses come
from money collected in
Meigs County.

' '

Ever wonder just who
keeps the hall fields .
maintained and concession stands stocked in .
Racine? These types of
things just don't ·happen
by themselves and
recently volunteers Paul
Cardone , Gary Evans
and the Wild Horse Cafe
and Manager Dave
:
Berry were honored with
plaques for the work ·
they did to keep the ,
Racine Youth League qn
top of their game this ·
_year. Pictured.on the ·
tractor is Cardone being·
given his plaque by
Jonah Hoback. Also pic-.
lured with the plaques
for Evans and Berry are
(from left) Garrett and
Ashlyn Wolfe. Hoback
and the Wolfes are all
players in the Racine
Youth League.
Both Sergont/photo

.Scout ceremony

.

'

Volunteers honored

Local Briefs

NOl?&gt;EL PRIZE FOR

n

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

POMEROY - Community youth group at Mulberry
Community Center will sponsor a free community
Thanksgiving dinner at 5:45 p.m ., Nov. 23, at Mulberry
Community Center. ·The Thanksgiving worship service
sponsored by the Meigs Ministerial Association will follow.
A community choir is being organized for the ~rvice,
and details will be finalized and announced at a later date.

A BIT OF BAD

If the economic situation
weren't so grim . it'd be
darkly amusing watching
conservatives hunting··for a
scapegpat other than Bush
admimstration
True
Believers. (They ' re all
Brownies now. Heckuva
JOb, ·e h?) For a generation,
•
devotees of . the very bad
Jl
ovelist Ayn Rand have
LETTERS TO THE
assured us that greed is a
EDITOR
virtue and government
oversight
of financial insti ' Leiters to .the editur are J\'elcome , Th ev should be /e.;,.
tuti ons an impediment to
than 300 words. All leiters are ·subject to -edirir1g .musr be
genius. In the "Ownership
signed , and imlude address and telephone nwnher. No Society.'· financial regula.unsigned lerren ·viii be published . Leiters should be in tions were for pantywaists.
good taste. addressing iss&lt;w~ . nO/ personalities. Leiters of
In GOP-think , governthanks to urganizarim1s and individuals will not he accept- ments exist purely to drop
bombs and monitor other
ed for publication,
people's sex lives. Financial
..
•
deregulation has been th e
Republkan miracle elixir
since Ronald Reagan. In
March 2008 , Sen. John
McCa in reassured ·the Wall
Reader Services
(USPs 213-960)
Street Journal that despite
. Ohlo . Valle~ Publishing
bl' ing "awlire &lt;lf the view
Correction Polley
·
o.
. ·
.
Put:Jiished every afternoon, Monday
that
there is a need for govOur mam concern m all stories is to through Friday. 111 Court Street ,
ernment
oversight ," in
be accllrate. If you know of an error · Pomeroy, Ohio. secoild·class postage
debacles like the subpri'mc
. in a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
lending crisis."] am funda992·2t56.
Member: The Associated Press and
mentally a dcregLi lator:: ·
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaeter:
Send
address correc·
In between wi nks and
Our main number Is · · tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
to
"Joe
shout-outs
(740) 992-2156.
StreEtt. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Sixpack,"
during
the
viceDepartment extensions are:
presidential debate, Sarah
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Pali11 also wanted it both
By carrier or motor route
News
One month
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ways. She praised McCain
Editor: Charlene Hoef1i~l'l , E&gt;«t. .12 . One year
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for "pushing t&lt;w eve n hardDally
· SO•
R•porter: Brian Reed, EKI. 14
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sc ription l1f 'mall permitted in areas
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Cl110o./Circ. : Judy Clark, Ext 10
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get out of the way and let
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they needed locks on the

, Letters dealing with the Nov. 4 eleclion are welcome and
will be accepted up until 5 p.m. on Fridi•y. Oct. 24. Letters
received after that deadline will not be publiohed. Letters
· should be 300 words in le1111th or les.~ and must c1ddress
issues . not personalities. Lerters endorsing /o m / or nariona/ candidates, or co11taining personal attacks, will mil be
accep1ed.

Thursday, October 9, 2008'

Thursday, October 9, 2008

--- ,.. For

Administration With the immediate retirement plan s
MCDJFS said Ball is well include devoting more time
known · · and
respected to family and friends artd
throughout the region for developing her hobby of
her knowledge of county antiguing and . atter\ding
auct1ons.
and state finance.
, Bail resides on ·Noble :
The MCDJFS employees '
Summit Road. Middleport held a retirement luncheon
·with her husband Larry and for her on Sept. 26 which
son Wyatt. She and her hus- was her last official day at
band celebrated her retire- the office where she was
men! with a beach trip to presented· with a retirement
Topsail Island. NC. Her cake and gifts.

r----------------------,

I

.

!

I

Coupon

!

Greeting Cards
I· BuyOneand
1
I
· .
I
1 Get Two Free . 1
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RUSSEll .STOVER .HAllOWEEN
CANDIES NOW IN STOCK
'

a

... ,

EdZata, -RPh
Kenneth.McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles Riffle, R. Ph.
Prescription Ph. 992-29SS
ll2 EastMairtS\r.~t .·.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Open Weeknights 'Tlll9

••..

,

'
HOURS

Man - Frl8am- 9pm
. Sot. Bam - 5 pm
Su". (lo!Oed ,

• · Friendly Service

.. ..'

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel
'

•

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Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

ThUrsday. October 9, 2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

--

---Harvest Festival .
offers new activities

MASON, W.Va. - The · p.m. The hayba.le toss is
Town of Mason wi II be open to men ages 18 and up
'transfonned into a haven of and teenage boys between
· fun fall and Halloween the ages of 13 and 17. The
activities with this week- skillet fling is open to
end's fourth annual Mason women ages 18 and up as
Harvest Festival at .Stewart- well as teena~e ~iris ages
Johnson
Veterans
of 13-17. The ·obJeCtive of the
Foreign Wars/Lottie Jenks game is to see who can
Memorial Park.
throw or "fling" the iron
)'he event boasts a variety skillet the farthest. Winners
·of activities for all ages to of both games wtll rece1ve
enjoy. In fact, festival plan- cash prizes.
·
·
ners added several new age
Following this , the Ma~ic
groups for various activities of Carl Michael will begm.
in order to encourage more According to a news
teenage participation.
release. Micllael, a native of
The festival starts at II Mason County, will perform
a.m. Saturday and continues a stage show and do walkthroughout the day. New around magic throughout
events on tap this year the crowd. Michael has perinclude a magic show, chi!- formed in various places
dren 's biathlon, corn hol-e such as Pigeon Forge,
tournament, skillet fling and Tenn., Gatlinburg, Tenn .,
and Myrtle Beach, S.C.
·
cookie
stacking col)test.
.
.
Submitted photos
The
children's
biathlon
A
pumpkin
seed
spitting
The Bob Evans Farm festival celebrates its 38th year of re-creating Ute "down on the farm" with demonstrations, activiwill kick off the day with contest, cookie stacking
. ties and entertainm'ent !his Friday through Sunday, 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. each day.
.·
.
·
event registration slated for contest; sack races and nee10: 15 a .m. Children first die in a haystack also are
•
will bike along a designated . scheduled for the day. In
course, followed by running addition, there will be a perthe course. All participants formance from Hanging
must wear helmets for the Rock Junction, a bluegrass
bike ride. There will be !!roup. They will start playthree age divisions, with mg at 2:30p.m.
~ach -having a boy's and
The . "carry-your-partner"
.R
IO GRANDE - Three days of musical enterWinners
will
contest
will close the day.ln
girl's
division
.
;
tainment, traditional craft demonstratimis, chilreceive
awards
at the con- the contest, the man must
dren 's ac.tivities and unique attractions are
elusion of the event.
· carry his wife or girlfriend
planned for the Bob Evans Fann Festival this: Friday
cornhole
tourn~y
will
along the race .course, and
The
through Sunday.
begin
at
noon.
The
~inning
the first pair to finish will
The annual celebration of the harvest season includes
team will receive $100. receive the woman's weijlht'
square-dancing tractors, chainsaw carvers, a horseSecond and third places will in money. A junior divis1oti
mounted drill team, a timber show and farm demonstrareceive $50 and $25. Also for ages 13-17 also will take .
iions and contests. In addition, more than 100 artisans
set for noon is the costume place, and winners will
demonstrate anp sell their wares, many· made with tools
)udging, inflatables and Tejl· receive a set cash prize.
and techniques of yesteryear.
1stration for the pumpkm
Hungry
festival-goers
The festival will be held at the Bob Evans Farm in Rio
decorating
contest.
will
benefit
from a free
Grande, Ohio, from9 a.m.to 5 p.m. each day. Admission
Pumpkins should be deco- lunch of a hot dog, bag of
is $5 for adults, $3 for children ages six to 13, and free
rated prior to registration popcorn and • drink, which
for children age five and under. School groups are also
and
cannot be carved.
will be served at 12:30 p.m.
admitted free . A complete schedule of activities, enterThe hay bile toss and ski!For more information,
tainment and demo.nstrations is available i\t
let fling will follow at l call (304) 773-5200.
http://www.bobevans.co·m.
Headlining the musical entertainment on the Homestead ·
stage this year are Doyle Lawson &amp; Quicksilver, winners
of the "2007 Vocal Group of the Year Award" given by the
International Bluegrass Music Association.
Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver
"We're excited to bring this group to the Bob Evans
Fann Festival this year," said Bob Evans Farm·Manager
' .
Ray McKinniss. "Their smooth vocal harmonies, innovative song arrangements and instrumental prowess will
I·
·,,, .•
.0: -~
_
' ~-~
,~
t • ,
RIO GRANDE - In an a live band scheduled to
make them a festival favorite."
effort
to bring entertain- perform directly. after,
Also new to the featured musical entertainment this
Tnlc:ior~~...:
·t p:iii.~d lp.m.:,.
ment to as many people as dependent on the weather.
dail
·"-· ·· ... ·
. ·."':- ·
·-&lt;.·~
__
"'-"
· •
year is the addition of two acts featuring talented teenage
possible,
second annual The fireworks display, put
country and bluegrass players - South of the River
~uJnt~M:o.m;ted
·;Diill
Jl ' a.t\1: an~.'~ ·.· :~· Rockets the
dail
t._
'•
'
.
.
.'
·:L,
'
•
Over
Rio Fall on by Premier Pyrotechmcs,
Band and Little Mill Creek Boys, as well .as Hastily
•
Fireworks Extravaganza will go off rain or shine.
Assembled Bluegrass Band, and Melvin Goins &amp; Windy
$.
h
ow
onNa
,
has been scheduled to coin"We wanted the town to··
Mountain.
cide
with
the
Bob
Evans
have
a fireworks show, but
Returning favorites The Clark Family (gospel and
10;3o' •
country), Johnny Staats' Bluegrass Band (progressive
12:30 p.m\ anlj2:30 p.l)l. daily , . · · • ·. :. . .
. . · Farm Festival this Saturday, we didn't want to compete
Oct. I I.
with Fourth of July shows
·bluegrass), and Joe Freeman Band (bluegrass/comedy)
Bonier Collle Herding Demonstrations :- l0:30
The
village
of
Rio
or
other festivals," ·.said
will appear throughout .the weekend ;
.
a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.Jil. daily~:
'
.•
..
Grande,
in
conjunction
with
Mayor
Matt Easter. "This
More than 700 cloggers and line dancers also perform
Sheep ~heariug 'ud Qmsesliodq - 9:30 a.m.. •
continuously on the Clogging stage. The University of
12:~ a:~· daily .
.
•
. . . . the University of Rio way we can provide some
Grande entertainment for the people
Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College's 'Grande
C
w
. , corn shelllq _.. &amp;riJidlqa,•Pfle Grande/Rio
Community College, is host- camping at Bob's Fest, plus
Chorale will appear on stage and as roving minstrels
butter sad sorxbum making. ~t the (liy,
~
ing the event in the Bob students, members of the
throughout the event.
Evans Farm Hall parking lot. community, and anyone else
Craft demonstrations include blacksmithing. folk toy
~~Will ~Dte.' 1.UUIII14CU
...~..:...l.'-'tt' · !!!''~.
.
The 38th annual . Bob who would like to · see a
making, leatherworking, sorghum making, quilting, soap ·
•·.!j.,_ . . . •
.•
._.
Evans Farm Fetsival is Oct. good show."
making, weaving and many more, according to McKinniss.
'
.
. . Frida·y · ,-;,:..:·:~,0· ...... •~"' ,,; ,,~
,•
·
_ '~'•J!. r·
~t.,.
~
10-12.
According to Easter, this
"Favorites like the world-renowned Reno Family
Homestead Stage ,... "Young F.un:~y!?i, ., " ,·~ · . · · ·
The festivities will .start year's fireworks show will
· Horseshoe Pitchers, border collie herding de!Ilonstrations , sheep shearing, horseshoeing and other old-time . lO.a.m. ~ t p.m. ·• South)lf!\li:Riv.e t 'Ban4 05-' '' early with the Rio Grande be bigger thlm last year
year-old boys playingtodafs ~ttY· music~ . . . ·. Volunteer Fire Department thanks to numerous local
fann demonstrat,ions will be back this year," he said.
· 11 a.DI.ud 2 pm. -:- t.i.ttle fdijl creetC. Boys (tale,nted,
Children's activities include an interactive barnyard,
selling concessions during business donations nearly
teenageu
take
bluegrass
to
a·who)e.~
~ven
.
three Red Stonn soccer doubling the b,udget, a Jist he
;platter painting. lead horseback rides , a hay bale maze,
Noon sad 3 p.m. - Joe Freeman •88Jid (lJiueps and
wagon rides , a game tent arid face painting. Re!listration
games,
scheduled to begin at hopes will continue to grow.
Comedy) . . ' • .
. '
•. .
.
begins each day at 9 a.m. for contests which mclude a
3
pro.,
5 pro., aitd 7 p.m.
The live entertainment
. . ,·
Saturday Qd;
Firefighters will be serving will · be performed by
chi ldren's pedal tractor pull; and corn shelling. cow chip
Homestead S - - "Dow'n pn die Farm Day'~
,
t_o&gt;;ing, apple peeling, hog calling, feed sack races and
veg~ble soup cooked over a Smokestack Lightning, a
18 a.m. IUld 1 p.m. - Hastily As!lanbled Bluegrass · fire
egg tos; for those of all ages.
along with hotdogs, other bluesyl.,jam band out of
Band (talented pickers with a style all ibem own) ,. l
Traditional foods offered at the Bob Evans Fann
concessions, and non-alco- Colum~s. which includes
11 a.m. and l p.m. ,.... 1oe Free,D14!1 Band (bluegra4~ . holic beverages. They will member Dan Rees, who
Fe&gt;ti val inclade bean soup. com bread, kettle com , pies,
aqd
comedy)
.
·. ,
. · · ·
" _.
apple dumplings, ice cream and Ohio-made cheeses and .
also be raffling off gas cards~ hails from Galli a County.
• NOI)n and 3 p.m. - ·Melvm Goins &amp;W'mdy Mountain·
trail bologna. as well as the Bob Evans Restaurant and
: The Rio Grande Police
This. event will provide
&lt;.legen&lt;lary K&gt;e~t,ucky,_!lluepass .IIJ1ists for o~er .~·~~~.;'.
food tent on site .
Department will be i-affiing ' fun for families; studeJil!i,
,~.~.-12 .
! \
: Primitive tent and RV camping for the weekend is
off a village of Rio Grande and community members of
Homestead
Slaft.
_,
''QOspel
&amp;
Bluegr8as
Pay"
c~ . i'··,
ava•lable at the farm. For additional information about
comhole set and two $50 all ages. No alcohol will be
11 a.in. -·~ nlti Clarlc Family· (harmonizeS ·a mix 9f'· gift certificates from Temple served. I'eople are ·encourcamping or the festival, visitors may call (800) 994-3276.
country
and gospel)" ·
. ,
.
..
·
Tattoo. The fire department . aged to bring lawn chairs
The Bob Evans Farm in southeastern Ohio was home
12:30
p~. - Joe Freeman B8n(l (bluegrass and COQI•
to Bob Evans, founder of Bob Evans Farms Inc., and his
will hold gas card raffles.
and blankel!i, .find a good
edy)
., .
l
.
•
.
•
'1
wife Jewell for nearly 20 years. They raised their six
The 15- to 20-minute fire- place to watch the show,
l p.m. - ,Jobnny S.tllllts Bluegrass ·Band · , ,
. work display is set to music, and enjoy themselves.
children in the large. brick farmhouse known as the
3:30
p.m.
boyle
Lawson
(2007
International
which listeners can tune · "Where else can you see
tiornestead . The Homestead , once a stagecoach stop and
Bluegrass Music Association Vocal Cbuup of the Year)
an mn , IS now a corporate museum and historical center.
into on Sunny 93.1, and will · fireworks in October?"
ft is open daily during the festival and admission is free .
kick off around 9 p.m. with Easter said.

Bob Evans Farm Fesdval
notes 38th year this weekend

·Rockets·over Rio
slated for Farm Fest

Demcmstration·sdledule ; .
1

'

·

'O'a.'m .•

Team ....:

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l
l
'

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,I
'

pJP. '
d'reat Lak"'Uni:b.et 8J!d
Water~~
-i!!~-n:.s~~- ~~ :, --· .m~:·

M ...:--• .

Thursday, October 9, 2008

l..ocA.L ScHEDULE

-

. ...... Thul'ld8y,Octoberl
OI'CS at Elk Vatlev. 5 p.m.
•
Votloybotl

)Migs at Belpi'e, 6 p.m.
.Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.

- n a t Fed Hock, 6 p.m.

~iver VaUlly at Fairland, 5.30 p.m.

•OI'CS al Ell&lt; Vatlev. 6 p.m

Frld.oy, October 10

•

Foott&gt;otl

.Wehama at Wirt County, 7:30p.m.
-&lt;Gllmet County at Harman, 7:30 p.m.
'Wellston at Gallia Academy, 7:30p.m.
)Aelgs at Alexander, 7:30p.m.
.River Valley at Ctlesapeake, 7:30p.m.
Miller at Eastern. 7:30p.m.
"South GaKia al Sclolovllle East, 7:30
~.m.
.
.
.
.SOutham at Water1ord, 7:30p.m.
Solurday, ~ 11
Volloyball
.Gallla Academy at Day or Champions,

•

TBA
•

At Holzer Clinic, You Can Always Count on ...

HOLZER
CLINIC
.

740-446-5381

Medical Excellence.
· Local Caring:
www.holzerclinic.-com
•

CroatCO&lt;Inlry

a.m.

Ohio high .
school
association
looks
at 7th
.
division
'

: COLUMBUS (AP) - A
has recommended to the Ohio High
School
Athletic
Association that a seventh
division be added in football, addressing the large
ilisparity in enrollments
· among the biggest schools ·
in the state.
The l?roposal would
divide Dtvision I in half,
with the •top four teams
from each region qualify. i~t6eaiKJi1..play­
otfs, the association said
Wednesday.
·
· But officials said it was
merely a proposal and no
timetable has been set for
action on it. They added
that even if it were accepted, it would not be implemented . for the next few
years, .
HiJ!h school enrollments
in Dtvision I vary' in size
between 528 boys and
• 1,246 boys. The . proposal
would place schools with ·
similar enrollments in the
same division.
Divisions II through VI
would remai'n relatively
unchanged .
~ubc&lt;immittee

·

.

.

.

Bryan Waltaro/llle photo

Meigs head coach Mike Chancey gives instruction to his team during a high school football game against Coal Grove in this Week 1 ·tile photo. Meigs
will try keep its postseason hopes alive whef1 it travels to Alexander while Eastern and Southern battle Miller and Wate~ord respectively. All three ·games
will get underway Friday at 7:30p.m.

Meigs, Southern hit the road; Eastern hos~ Miller
STAFF REPORT

SPORTSOMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM '
- Things
ALBANY
looked pretty grim for the
Meigs football teamjust two
weeks ago after the
Marauders dropped back-tobacls:
games
against
and
Nelsonville-York
Warren .
But after getting back on
track last week with a domi~
nating 41-7 victory over
Vinton
County,
the
Marauders are starting to see
a little light at the end of the
tunneL
Meigs (5-2, 2-1 TVCOhio) currently sits in ninth
place in Division IV, Region
15, one spot outside of the
playoff hunt behind Bishop
Hartley and GalliaAcademy.
And with a remaining schedule very favorable to the
Marauders, Meigs still holds
out hope that it can still
make a run a1 its first ever

postseason appearance.
·And that all starts this
weekend against ·TVC-Ohio
·foe Alexander.
Meigs destroyed struggling Vinton County last
week to the tune of 540
yll.l"ds of qffense, with Jeremy

SO&gt;itll;.-~~el~ c0m-

birilng 'fot most of that
yardage. Smith toted the ball
13 times for the Marauders
for 175 yards and three
touchdowns while Well
completed 6-of-14 passing
for a whopping 254 yards
and two t&lt;Juchdowns.
Well and Smith also combined for a score when
Smith took a Well pass 85
yard. io the house. The other
passes found
With last weeks big win
the Marauders·are now averaging 30.5 points per game
while the defense surrenders
18.7 points 'per outing.
Meigs' other wins came
against Athens (26-13),

River Valley
(53-20), it hopes to get past the high- Wildcats .
. Adversely
Fairland (26-23) and Coal scoring Marauder team.
Waterford, after a 2-0 start ,
Grove (18-7) while its two
Friday's
TVC-Ohio has since dropped four of its
losses
came . against matchu[} is scheduled to get last five contests Including a
Nelsonville-York (30-28) underway at 7:30p.m.
38-0 beatdown at the hands
and Warren .(31-22). The
of Trimble a week ago .
combined recorc! of Meigs'
Southern at Waterford
Waterford's other losses
oppo~nts. is 21-27, .
·
·
·
· came. against River Valley
. .i~er (3-4;8.3--1'1(€-,.;;,,-WATERFORD - It has · (27-7), Fort Frye (14-0) atld
Ohio),cln the other haitd; has been a long time since the Grove City Christian (33-3)
dropr.ed two straight and Southern football team has while its three wins came
hasn t been very consistent been off to a start like this.
against Miller· (35-7),
so fat this year. The Spartan
And they aren't done just Frontier (28-20) and South
losses have come against yet.
Gallia (41-20). The comNelsonville- York (40-19),
The Tornadoes (3-4, 1-1 bined record of Waterford's
Athens (34-6), Belpre (26- TVC-Hocking) have already opponents is 21-28.
14) and Trimble (21-7) surpassed their · win total
Waterford's offense is .
while their wins came from a year ago and are hop- paced by quarterback Cody
against Eastern (48-14), ing to adilto that total when Strahler who provides a duel
Unioto (40-12) and Federal they meet Waterford (3-4, 1- threat to run the ball as well
Hocking (27-0). The com- I TVC-Hocking)) in TVC- . as pass it. Jarrod Eichorn is
bined record of Alexander's Hocking action Friday night the team's other running
at Waterford High SchooL
back while receivers Cody
opponents is 22-27.
So far this ·season the
After an 0-3 start, Hall and Levi McCuthcheon
Spartans have surrendered Southern has since fired off pace the air attack.
21 points pe~ game while three wins in its past four
The Wildcats are averagsconng 23 poml!i per game games and are hopmg to ing 16 points per game and
and will need to find a wax carry that momentum into
Plene see Footb1ll, B:Z
to put up big points Friday 1f ·the Week 8 matchup with the

West Virginia Football Previews

Point ~le,asant looking for big encore
STAFF REPORT

SPOATSOMYDAILVTAieUNE.COM
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va . - Prior to last
Friday's · game against
Wayne, Point Pleasant head
football coach Dave Darst
said that before his team can
be counted among the best
of Class AA, they would
first need to get a si~nature
win against a team hke the
Pioneers.
·
Mission accomplished.
After falling behind 21-6
with seemingly little hope of
victory, ' Pomt Pleasant
began a wild comeback that
included 16 points in the
final six minutes to cap one
of the biggest upset victories
in the team's storied past
when kicker Justid Weaver
booted a 32-yard field goal
to give the Red and Black a
stunning 22-21 win over
Wayne last Friday.
One win and sudtlenly the
Big Blacks have gone from
the opening ac\-to the main
event - bu(it didn't always
look that way.
In· a season that began like
many others at Point
Pleasant - 1-2 with bad
luck and mistakes domina!ing game nights - things
have turned around in a
hurry with three straight
road wjns highlighted by the
shocking upset of the fourth
.
ranked Pioneers at horne
.
.
Larry Crumlllt. pholo · during homecoming . last
Point Pleasant running back Derek Mitchell rushes lor a first down in a high school football week . •
QBme·against Sissonville in this Friday, September Stile photo.
Now me Big Blacks (4-2)
1

•

.

.SEOAL Championships at Warren, 10

I

.. ·.,; . . '

·-

. Acachtmy al Point Pleasant,
:oama

QOOI1

1'

. ...

.

:Poca al Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.

,, .

u

Ohio Football Previews

POMEROY - A .ctwdule or upcoming high
fi:Chool v1rslty tportlng eventa involving
llan\f from Meigs end Gallla co untltoa .

will get to showcase their
newfound p'ride in the··
friendly confines of Sanders
Stadium with their first
home game since · midSeptember a~ainst another
surging team m Poca.
The Dots (2-4) began the
season 0-4 but have since
fired off .two straight wins
over Tolsia (54-42) and
Herbert Hoover (30-20) riding the back of running back
Caleb Arthur. Arthur has
rushed for.J50ormore yards
in each of the last two weeks
including putting up over
400 yards and six touchdowns in the Dots win over
Tolsia two weeks ago.
Along with Arthur, the
Dots can also attribute their
recent success to new quarterback Jason Cuffie who
has been red-hot in the past
two weeks since returning
from knee surgery.
Poca's four losses came
against Nitro (38-35) ,
Ravenswood (35-6). Lo~an
· (20-17) and Chapmanville
(28-12). Combined the six
Dot opponents are 19-14 on
the year with three of those
teams ranked and another
pair' sitting among the Class
AAA ranks.
•
Point Pleasant has wins
against Wayne (22-21 ).
Midland Trail (64-28), Tug
Valley
(41-6) •
and
Sissonville (42-10) and losses to Gallia Academy (2821) and South Point (34-26).
Combined the six opponents
are 17-20 on the year with

only two · of those teams
Sporting winning records.
Friday night should be a
high scoring affair with the
Dots averaging 25.6 points
per game while giving up
30.5 points per outing while
the Big Blacks average 36
points per game and are giving up 21.2 po_ints a night.
It will also be a big night ,
not only the conference race .
but'the playoff hunt as well.
·PPHS is currently 13th in .
the latest SSAC standings
while Poca is 23rd.
.
Friday will also feature
two of the best backs in .the
state.
The only rusher in the
Cardinal Conference to
overshadow Arthur this season has been sophomore
Allan Wasonga . Through six.
games Wasonsa has 1.129
yards for an mcredible 13
yards per carry and has also
caught three passes for 81
yards . Combined he has
accounted for 18 total touchdowns this season helping
PPHS already double their
point output from a year
ago. Junior quarterback B.J .
Lloyd has also matured vastly since the start of the year
with his best outing the season coming in the upset win
against Wayne . Lloyd )lias 5of-6 for I00 yards through ·
the air and also rushed .for
two touchdowns in leading
the come-from-behind victory.

PluM see Enco... ~

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'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel
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Page A6 • The Daily Sentinel

ThUrsday. October 9, 2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

--

---Harvest Festival .
offers new activities

MASON, W.Va. - The · p.m. The hayba.le toss is
Town of Mason wi II be open to men ages 18 and up
'transfonned into a haven of and teenage boys between
· fun fall and Halloween the ages of 13 and 17. The
activities with this week- skillet fling is open to
end's fourth annual Mason women ages 18 and up as
Harvest Festival at .Stewart- well as teena~e ~iris ages
Johnson
Veterans
of 13-17. The ·obJeCtive of the
Foreign Wars/Lottie Jenks game is to see who can
Memorial Park.
throw or "fling" the iron
)'he event boasts a variety skillet the farthest. Winners
·of activities for all ages to of both games wtll rece1ve
enjoy. In fact, festival plan- cash prizes.
·
·
ners added several new age
Following this , the Ma~ic
groups for various activities of Carl Michael will begm.
in order to encourage more According to a news
teenage participation.
release. Micllael, a native of
The festival starts at II Mason County, will perform
a.m. Saturday and continues a stage show and do walkthroughout the day. New around magic throughout
events on tap this year the crowd. Michael has perinclude a magic show, chi!- formed in various places
dren 's biathlon, corn hol-e such as Pigeon Forge,
tournament, skillet fling and Tenn., Gatlinburg, Tenn .,
and Myrtle Beach, S.C.
·
cookie
stacking col)test.
.
.
Submitted photos
The
children's
biathlon
A
pumpkin
seed
spitting
The Bob Evans Farm festival celebrates its 38th year of re-creating Ute "down on the farm" with demonstrations, activiwill kick off the day with contest, cookie stacking
. ties and entertainm'ent !his Friday through Sunday, 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. each day.
.·
.
·
event registration slated for contest; sack races and nee10: 15 a .m. Children first die in a haystack also are
•
will bike along a designated . scheduled for the day. In
course, followed by running addition, there will be a perthe course. All participants formance from Hanging
must wear helmets for the Rock Junction, a bluegrass
bike ride. There will be !!roup. They will start playthree age divisions, with mg at 2:30p.m.
~ach -having a boy's and
The . "carry-your-partner"
.R
IO GRANDE - Three days of musical enterWinners
will
contest
will close the day.ln
girl's
division
.
;
tainment, traditional craft demonstratimis, chilreceive
awards
at the con- the contest, the man must
dren 's ac.tivities and unique attractions are
elusion of the event.
· carry his wife or girlfriend
planned for the Bob Evans Fann Festival this: Friday
cornhole
tourn~y
will
along the race .course, and
The
through Sunday.
begin
at
noon.
The
~inning
the first pair to finish will
The annual celebration of the harvest season includes
team will receive $100. receive the woman's weijlht'
square-dancing tractors, chainsaw carvers, a horseSecond and third places will in money. A junior divis1oti
mounted drill team, a timber show and farm demonstrareceive $50 and $25. Also for ages 13-17 also will take .
iions and contests. In addition, more than 100 artisans
set for noon is the costume place, and winners will
demonstrate anp sell their wares, many· made with tools
)udging, inflatables and Tejl· receive a set cash prize.
and techniques of yesteryear.
1stration for the pumpkm
Hungry
festival-goers
The festival will be held at the Bob Evans Farm in Rio
decorating
contest.
will
benefit
from a free
Grande, Ohio, from9 a.m.to 5 p.m. each day. Admission
Pumpkins should be deco- lunch of a hot dog, bag of
is $5 for adults, $3 for children ages six to 13, and free
rated prior to registration popcorn and • drink, which
for children age five and under. School groups are also
and
cannot be carved.
will be served at 12:30 p.m.
admitted free . A complete schedule of activities, enterThe hay bile toss and ski!For more information,
tainment and demo.nstrations is available i\t
let fling will follow at l call (304) 773-5200.
http://www.bobevans.co·m.
Headlining the musical entertainment on the Homestead ·
stage this year are Doyle Lawson &amp; Quicksilver, winners
of the "2007 Vocal Group of the Year Award" given by the
International Bluegrass Music Association.
Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver
"We're excited to bring this group to the Bob Evans
Fann Festival this year," said Bob Evans Farm·Manager
' .
Ray McKinniss. "Their smooth vocal harmonies, innovative song arrangements and instrumental prowess will
I·
·,,, .•
.0: -~
_
' ~-~
,~
t • ,
RIO GRANDE - In an a live band scheduled to
make them a festival favorite."
effort
to bring entertain- perform directly. after,
Also new to the featured musical entertainment this
Tnlc:ior~~...:
·t p:iii.~d lp.m.:,.
ment to as many people as dependent on the weather.
dail
·"-· ·· ... ·
. ·."':- ·
·-&lt;.·~
__
"'-"
· •
year is the addition of two acts featuring talented teenage
possible,
second annual The fireworks display, put
country and bluegrass players - South of the River
~uJnt~M:o.m;ted
·;Diill
Jl ' a.t\1: an~.'~ ·.· :~· Rockets the
dail
t._
'•
'
.
.
.'
·:L,
'
•
Over
Rio Fall on by Premier Pyrotechmcs,
Band and Little Mill Creek Boys, as well .as Hastily
•
Fireworks Extravaganza will go off rain or shine.
Assembled Bluegrass Band, and Melvin Goins &amp; Windy
$.
h
ow
onNa
,
has been scheduled to coin"We wanted the town to··
Mountain.
cide
with
the
Bob
Evans
have
a fireworks show, but
Returning favorites The Clark Family (gospel and
10;3o' •
country), Johnny Staats' Bluegrass Band (progressive
12:30 p.m\ anlj2:30 p.l)l. daily , . · · • ·. :. . .
. . · Farm Festival this Saturday, we didn't want to compete
Oct. I I.
with Fourth of July shows
·bluegrass), and Joe Freeman Band (bluegrass/comedy)
Bonier Collle Herding Demonstrations :- l0:30
The
village
of
Rio
or
other festivals," ·.said
will appear throughout .the weekend ;
.
a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.Jil. daily~:
'
.•
..
Grande,
in
conjunction
with
Mayor
Matt Easter. "This
More than 700 cloggers and line dancers also perform
Sheep ~heariug 'ud Qmsesliodq - 9:30 a.m.. •
continuously on the Clogging stage. The University of
12:~ a:~· daily .
.
•
. . . . the University of Rio way we can provide some
Grande entertainment for the people
Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College's 'Grande
C
w
. , corn shelllq _.. &amp;riJidlqa,•Pfle Grande/Rio
Community College, is host- camping at Bob's Fest, plus
Chorale will appear on stage and as roving minstrels
butter sad sorxbum making. ~t the (liy,
~
ing the event in the Bob students, members of the
throughout the event.
Evans Farm Hall parking lot. community, and anyone else
Craft demonstrations include blacksmithing. folk toy
~~Will ~Dte.' 1.UUIII14CU
...~..:...l.'-'tt' · !!!''~.
.
The 38th annual . Bob who would like to · see a
making, leatherworking, sorghum making, quilting, soap ·
•·.!j.,_ . . . •
.•
._.
Evans Farm Fetsival is Oct. good show."
making, weaving and many more, according to McKinniss.
'
.
. . Frida·y · ,-;,:..:·:~,0· ...... •~"' ,,; ,,~
,•
·
_ '~'•J!. r·
~t.,.
~
10-12.
According to Easter, this
"Favorites like the world-renowned Reno Family
Homestead Stage ,... "Young F.un:~y!?i, ., " ,·~ · . · · ·
The festivities will .start year's fireworks show will
· Horseshoe Pitchers, border collie herding de!Ilonstrations , sheep shearing, horseshoeing and other old-time . lO.a.m. ~ t p.m. ·• South)lf!\li:Riv.e t 'Ban4 05-' '' early with the Rio Grande be bigger thlm last year
year-old boys playingtodafs ~ttY· music~ . . . ·. Volunteer Fire Department thanks to numerous local
fann demonstrat,ions will be back this year," he said.
· 11 a.DI.ud 2 pm. -:- t.i.ttle fdijl creetC. Boys (tale,nted,
Children's activities include an interactive barnyard,
selling concessions during business donations nearly
teenageu
take
bluegrass
to
a·who)e.~
~ven
.
three Red Stonn soccer doubling the b,udget, a Jist he
;platter painting. lead horseback rides , a hay bale maze,
Noon sad 3 p.m. - Joe Freeman •88Jid (lJiueps and
wagon rides , a game tent arid face painting. Re!listration
games,
scheduled to begin at hopes will continue to grow.
Comedy) . . ' • .
. '
•. .
.
begins each day at 9 a.m. for contests which mclude a
3
pro.,
5 pro., aitd 7 p.m.
The live entertainment
. . ,·
Saturday Qd;
Firefighters will be serving will · be performed by
chi ldren's pedal tractor pull; and corn shelling. cow chip
Homestead S - - "Dow'n pn die Farm Day'~
,
t_o&gt;;ing, apple peeling, hog calling, feed sack races and
veg~ble soup cooked over a Smokestack Lightning, a
18 a.m. IUld 1 p.m. - Hastily As!lanbled Bluegrass · fire
egg tos; for those of all ages.
along with hotdogs, other bluesyl.,jam band out of
Band (talented pickers with a style all ibem own) ,. l
Traditional foods offered at the Bob Evans Fann
concessions, and non-alco- Colum~s. which includes
11 a.m. and l p.m. ,.... 1oe Free,D14!1 Band (bluegra4~ . holic beverages. They will member Dan Rees, who
Fe&gt;ti val inclade bean soup. com bread, kettle com , pies,
aqd
comedy)
.
·. ,
. · · ·
" _.
apple dumplings, ice cream and Ohio-made cheeses and .
also be raffling off gas cards~ hails from Galli a County.
• NOI)n and 3 p.m. - ·Melvm Goins &amp;W'mdy Mountain·
trail bologna. as well as the Bob Evans Restaurant and
: The Rio Grande Police
This. event will provide
&lt;.legen&lt;lary K&gt;e~t,ucky,_!lluepass .IIJ1ists for o~er .~·~~~.;'.
food tent on site .
Department will be i-affiing ' fun for families; studeJil!i,
,~.~.-12 .
! \
: Primitive tent and RV camping for the weekend is
off a village of Rio Grande and community members of
Homestead
Slaft.
_,
''QOspel
&amp;
Bluegr8as
Pay"
c~ . i'··,
ava•lable at the farm. For additional information about
comhole set and two $50 all ages. No alcohol will be
11 a.in. -·~ nlti Clarlc Family· (harmonizeS ·a mix 9f'· gift certificates from Temple served. I'eople are ·encourcamping or the festival, visitors may call (800) 994-3276.
country
and gospel)" ·
. ,
.
..
·
Tattoo. The fire department . aged to bring lawn chairs
The Bob Evans Farm in southeastern Ohio was home
12:30
p~. - Joe Freeman B8n(l (bluegrass and COQI•
to Bob Evans, founder of Bob Evans Farms Inc., and his
will hold gas card raffles.
and blankel!i, .find a good
edy)
., .
l
.
•
.
•
'1
wife Jewell for nearly 20 years. They raised their six
The 15- to 20-minute fire- place to watch the show,
l p.m. - ,Jobnny S.tllllts Bluegrass ·Band · , ,
. work display is set to music, and enjoy themselves.
children in the large. brick farmhouse known as the
3:30
p.m.
boyle
Lawson
(2007
International
which listeners can tune · "Where else can you see
tiornestead . The Homestead , once a stagecoach stop and
Bluegrass Music Association Vocal Cbuup of the Year)
an mn , IS now a corporate museum and historical center.
into on Sunny 93.1, and will · fireworks in October?"
ft is open daily during the festival and admission is free .
kick off around 9 p.m. with Easter said.

Bob Evans Farm Fesdval
notes 38th year this weekend

·Rockets·over Rio
slated for Farm Fest

Demcmstration·sdledule ; .
1

'

·

'O'a.'m .•

Team ....:

l•
l
l
'

l
,I
'

pJP. '
d'reat Lak"'Uni:b.et 8J!d
Water~~
-i!!~-n:.s~~- ~~ :, --· .m~:·

M ...:--• .

Thursday, October 9, 2008

l..ocA.L ScHEDULE

-

. ...... Thul'ld8y,Octoberl
OI'CS at Elk Vatlev. 5 p.m.
•
Votloybotl

)Migs at Belpi'e, 6 p.m.
.Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.

- n a t Fed Hock, 6 p.m.

~iver VaUlly at Fairland, 5.30 p.m.

•OI'CS al Ell&lt; Vatlev. 6 p.m

Frld.oy, October 10

•

Foott&gt;otl

.Wehama at Wirt County, 7:30p.m.
-&lt;Gllmet County at Harman, 7:30 p.m.
'Wellston at Gallia Academy, 7:30p.m.
)Aelgs at Alexander, 7:30p.m.
.River Valley at Ctlesapeake, 7:30p.m.
Miller at Eastern. 7:30p.m.
"South GaKia al Sclolovllle East, 7:30
~.m.
.
.
.
.SOutham at Water1ord, 7:30p.m.
Solurday, ~ 11
Volloyball
.Gallla Academy at Day or Champions,

•

TBA
•

At Holzer Clinic, You Can Always Count on ...

HOLZER
CLINIC
.

740-446-5381

Medical Excellence.
· Local Caring:
www.holzerclinic.-com
•

CroatCO&lt;Inlry

a.m.

Ohio high .
school
association
looks
at 7th
.
division
'

: COLUMBUS (AP) - A
has recommended to the Ohio High
School
Athletic
Association that a seventh
division be added in football, addressing the large
ilisparity in enrollments
· among the biggest schools ·
in the state.
The l?roposal would
divide Dtvision I in half,
with the •top four teams
from each region qualify. i~t6eaiKJi1..play­
otfs, the association said
Wednesday.
·
· But officials said it was
merely a proposal and no
timetable has been set for
action on it. They added
that even if it were accepted, it would not be implemented . for the next few
years, .
HiJ!h school enrollments
in Dtvision I vary' in size
between 528 boys and
• 1,246 boys. The . proposal
would place schools with ·
similar enrollments in the
same division.
Divisions II through VI
would remai'n relatively
unchanged .
~ubc&lt;immittee

·

.

.

.

Bryan Waltaro/llle photo

Meigs head coach Mike Chancey gives instruction to his team during a high school football game against Coal Grove in this Week 1 ·tile photo. Meigs
will try keep its postseason hopes alive whef1 it travels to Alexander while Eastern and Southern battle Miller and Wate~ord respectively. All three ·games
will get underway Friday at 7:30p.m.

Meigs, Southern hit the road; Eastern hos~ Miller
STAFF REPORT

SPORTSOMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM '
- Things
ALBANY
looked pretty grim for the
Meigs football teamjust two
weeks ago after the
Marauders dropped back-tobacls:
games
against
and
Nelsonville-York
Warren .
But after getting back on
track last week with a domi~
nating 41-7 victory over
Vinton
County,
the
Marauders are starting to see
a little light at the end of the
tunneL
Meigs (5-2, 2-1 TVCOhio) currently sits in ninth
place in Division IV, Region
15, one spot outside of the
playoff hunt behind Bishop
Hartley and GalliaAcademy.
And with a remaining schedule very favorable to the
Marauders, Meigs still holds
out hope that it can still
make a run a1 its first ever

postseason appearance.
·And that all starts this
weekend against ·TVC-Ohio
·foe Alexander.
Meigs destroyed struggling Vinton County last
week to the tune of 540
yll.l"ds of qffense, with Jeremy

SO&gt;itll;.-~~el~ c0m-

birilng 'fot most of that
yardage. Smith toted the ball
13 times for the Marauders
for 175 yards and three
touchdowns while Well
completed 6-of-14 passing
for a whopping 254 yards
and two t&lt;Juchdowns.
Well and Smith also combined for a score when
Smith took a Well pass 85
yard. io the house. The other
passes found
With last weeks big win
the Marauders·are now averaging 30.5 points per game
while the defense surrenders
18.7 points 'per outing.
Meigs' other wins came
against Athens (26-13),

River Valley
(53-20), it hopes to get past the high- Wildcats .
. Adversely
Fairland (26-23) and Coal scoring Marauder team.
Waterford, after a 2-0 start ,
Grove (18-7) while its two
Friday's
TVC-Ohio has since dropped four of its
losses
came . against matchu[} is scheduled to get last five contests Including a
Nelsonville-York (30-28) underway at 7:30p.m.
38-0 beatdown at the hands
and Warren .(31-22). The
of Trimble a week ago .
combined recorc! of Meigs'
Southern at Waterford
Waterford's other losses
oppo~nts. is 21-27, .
·
·
·
· came. against River Valley
. .i~er (3-4;8.3--1'1(€-,.;;,,-WATERFORD - It has · (27-7), Fort Frye (14-0) atld
Ohio),cln the other haitd; has been a long time since the Grove City Christian (33-3)
dropr.ed two straight and Southern football team has while its three wins came
hasn t been very consistent been off to a start like this.
against Miller· (35-7),
so fat this year. The Spartan
And they aren't done just Frontier (28-20) and South
losses have come against yet.
Gallia (41-20). The comNelsonville- York (40-19),
The Tornadoes (3-4, 1-1 bined record of Waterford's
Athens (34-6), Belpre (26- TVC-Hocking) have already opponents is 21-28.
14) and Trimble (21-7) surpassed their · win total
Waterford's offense is .
while their wins came from a year ago and are hop- paced by quarterback Cody
against Eastern (48-14), ing to adilto that total when Strahler who provides a duel
Unioto (40-12) and Federal they meet Waterford (3-4, 1- threat to run the ball as well
Hocking (27-0). The com- I TVC-Hocking)) in TVC- . as pass it. Jarrod Eichorn is
bined record of Alexander's Hocking action Friday night the team's other running
at Waterford High SchooL
back while receivers Cody
opponents is 22-27.
So far this ·season the
After an 0-3 start, Hall and Levi McCuthcheon
Spartans have surrendered Southern has since fired off pace the air attack.
21 points pe~ game while three wins in its past four
The Wildcats are averagsconng 23 poml!i per game games and are hopmg to ing 16 points per game and
and will need to find a wax carry that momentum into
Plene see Footb1ll, B:Z
to put up big points Friday 1f ·the Week 8 matchup with the

West Virginia Football Previews

Point ~le,asant looking for big encore
STAFF REPORT

SPOATSOMYDAILVTAieUNE.COM
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va . - Prior to last
Friday's · game against
Wayne, Point Pleasant head
football coach Dave Darst
said that before his team can
be counted among the best
of Class AA, they would
first need to get a si~nature
win against a team hke the
Pioneers.
·
Mission accomplished.
After falling behind 21-6
with seemingly little hope of
victory, ' Pomt Pleasant
began a wild comeback that
included 16 points in the
final six minutes to cap one
of the biggest upset victories
in the team's storied past
when kicker Justid Weaver
booted a 32-yard field goal
to give the Red and Black a
stunning 22-21 win over
Wayne last Friday.
One win and sudtlenly the
Big Blacks have gone from
the opening ac\-to the main
event - bu(it didn't always
look that way.
In· a season that began like
many others at Point
Pleasant - 1-2 with bad
luck and mistakes domina!ing game nights - things
have turned around in a
hurry with three straight
road wjns highlighted by the
shocking upset of the fourth
.
ranked Pioneers at horne
.
.
Larry Crumlllt. pholo · during homecoming . last
Point Pleasant running back Derek Mitchell rushes lor a first down in a high school football week . •
QBme·against Sissonville in this Friday, September Stile photo.
Now me Big Blacks (4-2)
1

•

.

.SEOAL Championships at Warren, 10

I

.. ·.,; . . '

·-

. Acachtmy al Point Pleasant,
:oama

QOOI1

1'

. ...

.

:Poca al Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.

,, .

u

Ohio Football Previews

POMEROY - A .ctwdule or upcoming high
fi:Chool v1rslty tportlng eventa involving
llan\f from Meigs end Gallla co untltoa .

will get to showcase their
newfound p'ride in the··
friendly confines of Sanders
Stadium with their first
home game since · midSeptember a~ainst another
surging team m Poca.
The Dots (2-4) began the
season 0-4 but have since
fired off .two straight wins
over Tolsia (54-42) and
Herbert Hoover (30-20) riding the back of running back
Caleb Arthur. Arthur has
rushed for.J50ormore yards
in each of the last two weeks
including putting up over
400 yards and six touchdowns in the Dots win over
Tolsia two weeks ago.
Along with Arthur, the
Dots can also attribute their
recent success to new quarterback Jason Cuffie who
has been red-hot in the past
two weeks since returning
from knee surgery.
Poca's four losses came
against Nitro (38-35) ,
Ravenswood (35-6). Lo~an
· (20-17) and Chapmanville
(28-12). Combined the six
Dot opponents are 19-14 on
the year with three of those
teams ranked and another
pair' sitting among the Class
AAA ranks.
•
Point Pleasant has wins
against Wayne (22-21 ).
Midland Trail (64-28), Tug
Valley
(41-6) •
and
Sissonville (42-10) and losses to Gallia Academy (2821) and South Point (34-26).
Combined the six opponents
are 17-20 on the year with

only two · of those teams
Sporting winning records.
Friday night should be a
high scoring affair with the
Dots averaging 25.6 points
per game while giving up
30.5 points per outing while
the Big Blacks average 36
points per game and are giving up 21.2 po_ints a night.
It will also be a big night ,
not only the conference race .
but'the playoff hunt as well.
·PPHS is currently 13th in .
the latest SSAC standings
while Poca is 23rd.
.
Friday will also feature
two of the best backs in .the
state.
The only rusher in the
Cardinal Conference to
overshadow Arthur this season has been sophomore
Allan Wasonga . Through six.
games Wasonsa has 1.129
yards for an mcredible 13
yards per carry and has also
caught three passes for 81
yards . Combined he has
accounted for 18 total touchdowns this season helping
PPHS already double their
point output from a year
ago. Junior quarterback B.J .
Lloyd has also matured vastly since the start of the year
with his best outing the season coming in the upset win
against Wayne . Lloyd )lias 5of-6 for I00 yards through ·
the air and also rushed .for
two touchdowns in leading
the come-from-behind victory.

PluM see Enco... ~

�·.

•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Octo'ber 9, 2008

Www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 9, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~rthune

- Sentinel - l\egt~ter
C LAS S·l F I E D

•

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS .WEEK'S. Hl(jH SCHOOL FOOTBALL GAMES
Gallia
County,
OH
•

E-mail
classified@ mydailytribune.com
Bryan Walters
Sport-"• Wmt·r
Rt."cord :i 7- ll
la~t Wet k· H-2
(\'inner~

m bold)

Larry Crum
Sporh Wn ter
Rc(oni 46-2~
LJ~ r We~k . H- 2
(\\ llllll' T~ Ill

h2ht)

Charlie Shepherd

Scott Wolfe

Pa~m:nor

\p,lrt\ c·,)rn. ~ r&lt; • I J.it · nt

R crord · 4H-::!2
Last Wet'k. h- 4
(wmner~ m h2ld'

R t't'OTtl: -t5-2:i
La'r Wl·t·k 8-2

~

al
~
i'oc.l

i\k ;.,..uhkr
Rl\ l'r \ 'dll'\
,Jt

Scimovdlr Ea51

( \\'111 llt' f"i Ill

~

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\\ 'd ],(l 'll II

1 1no 1t

Plc;~~m

30-20
\Vn· k 7-J

~

Rr vc r Valle\
af ChesapeaM

M!ller ~ ~
Eastern

Mtllt.'r .u

Wahama n
Wtrt Coumy

Wahama Jl
Wm Coum)

S(1ut h GJ!h.! a.r

South (;.r!lr a Jt
Sdotoyille East

Wahama at

Wlft Cuunn•
Snuth C.1lhil Jt
Sciotoyillt East

• .It C hl~IPI'Jkl'

~

Wellston at '
Poca at
~

Mfisl Jt

MU&amp;t;J.t

:\lexomd.t'r

Hope Roush
Reporrer

R ecord· -18-1::!
Last Week 5-5
m h2hl)

(winne~s

Well!&gt;tuu Jt
~
Poca

Alex:m drr

Ak.urul&lt;r

Alexander

River ValJev
Jl ~

Rm:rV.tllq

Ri\ o:r V.:~Jlc,

RwerVallt')

''~

"~

"~

Mtller Jl
Eas u:rn

Mdll'r Jt
Eanern

M1lkr at
E11rrra

Miller at

Eastern

Miller n
Eastern

Eastern

Wahama Jt
rrt C011nt~

Wabam1 Jt

Wabama at

\\ 'u t Cou nty

Wtrt County

Wehama at
Wtrt Coun ty

Wahama 11
Wrrt Count)

Wtrt Cou ury

Snt•th G,,Jh a ~~
Sdotovil!e £as.t

Sou rll r:.lllia aT
Sdotoyille E RSI

South l.a.llra ar
Scjotmj!le Eau

South Galh.a at
SdotgyjiJe &amp;st

Su uth G;l. lha at

South

c~llra

Scigtovmr East

Sciotoville Eatt

:;,mn h ~ m Jt

Wal e rford

·Waterfiud

Southern 01t
Watt:rford

· South ern at
Waterford

'Sou thern at
Waterford

G ilmer Co unty
.11 H,.um.J n

Gilmer County

Gjlmu Cpuuty

Cdw ~ r ( nun t\
Jt Hannan

Gilmt r CouQiy
.rt H.wn:~u

Gilmer Co un ty
at Hannan

Gilmer CAunry
at Hannan

Gilmer County

.It HJ1111.111

G lh l l t'T Coun ty
..II Hannap

Fcda .1l H ockin!':

Frcltr.d Hot ki n~

Federal Hock jne
.1t'Trunhlt'

fclkr.ll llockmg
.u Trimble

fl·1IL rJl Hu, km~

Federal Hockin1
at Trnnble

Ft:der.il Hockmg

FedcrJI H ockm~

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Ir.imbl£

H .11111.11 1

Federal Hmklll..:-

.

" lli.m!!k .

.11

I!iJ.n.!!l.t

at

li.im.bl.r:

Fcdcral

thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IO WI!,TE 6lf AQ
1'Uccas4TAds

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •••

• All ads must be prepaid'

• StJJrt Your Ada With A keyword • lndude Complete
Detcrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tiOnl
• Include Phort11 Number And Addr~~u When Needed
• AU Should Run 7 Oay1

POLICIES · Ohio valley Publlltllng ,.,.rve• the rlght lo .cill, reject, or cancel any ad at any llrrMI. Errors must bll rePorted on the flnJt day of publication end the
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any tosa or expenM u.t raaulta from the pubMcatlon or oml11lon ot an edvertl~~~m~~nt Correction will be made In ll;t• tlralevlllable edition. ·Box number_.
are tlweya confldenllll. •Currant rare ctrd eppiiH. · All real Hlell Bdvartlatmenllare aubject to the Federal Fair Housing Act 0119611. · This newspaper
acc.pll only halp wlntad •d• metUng EOE etlr.dtrda. Wa Will not knoWingly accept any adverttalng In violation ot the law wm nOI bll ratponllble for any
enoraln an ad tak•n ovar thl phont.
·

KiT &amp; CARLYLE

Ho~kmg

Ohio Valley
Publllhlng • tho righllo edt~
reject or cancel any
odotany-.
Errors Mutt

•. ·" lliml&gt;k

Previous Champions - 200 I: Butch Cooper, 2002: Butch Cooper, 2003: Brad Sherman. 2004: Brad Sherman. 2005: Bryan Walters, 2006: Brad Sherman, 2007: Dave Harris.

Pet
Cremations.
74D-44ll·3745

·

Call

Football

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

from Page 81

SEOAL
W·L
PF
ChiUicothe .

have been held to a touchdown or less m four games
t'his season while the WHS
defense is surrendenng 22.7
pOints per outmg.
Southern. on the other
hand . has turned ill; slow
start rnto an offensive
explos ion over the past four
weeks
The Tornadoes
scored th ree pomb in their
first three games but have
·smce scored I29 points over
the past lour weeh.
Their three wms came
agamst Miller (33-20).
Green ( 3 I· I4) and Hannan
(57-0) while the losses
came against Federal
H oc~i n g
(50-8). South
Gallia r i4-0). Wahama (59I)) and S)mmes Valley (35 3).
\\ i!h that bi~ wm around
SHS Is now 'up to I 8.8
pomts per game offensively
mcludrng scon ng 31 or•
more pmnb 111 three of the
)' .~ t
four
11eeks.
[k lensJ\el) the Tornadoes
are , tJJI susceptible to the
. big pi a! as the! have grven
up 27 .J points per out mg.
The cumbihed record of
Southern \ opponents is 2024.
Southern' s br~
win
aga1n'st ~1iller last '~eek was
made possible by the com;billed ;rllack of runniM
;backs
Greg
Jenki ns.
M1&lt;:h acl Manuel, Sean
Copp rck .111d Eric Buuard
'who • Comhmed for 262
yards on the ground "'hile
quarterback Dustin Sa lse r
added 6 I yards through the
air and Manuel added
·Mother I9 to give til&lt;'
rornadoe' 342 yards on the
night.
Friday night 's game
between the tw.o TVCHock ing oppone nts is
;scheduled to begin at 7.30

p.m.

Miller at Eastern
TUPPERS PLAINS
One thmg ts certain Friday
night at East Shade River
.Stadtum. Either Miller or
Eastern will pick up its first
Tri· Valley
Conference
liocking DivisiOn gridiron
victory of 2008 .
· With lhat said, the Ea~Jes
_(2-5. 0-2 TVC Hock~ng)
will have the home i1eld
· advahtage this weekend
·when the visiting Falcon;
(1-6, 0-2) corhe to Meigs

,

•

''

Logan

.1

•

Jackson .... .

Ironton ..... .
Gallia Academy

Warren . . . .
Marietta ..
Zahesv1lle
Portsmouth

ALL
PA

'

PJ:

W-1.

PA

• .
4-0
.1 16 44 ......5·2 .... 160 .11 2
.. . . . . . . ,3-{) . . 100 .,38 ..
7-0 . . .241
69
. . . . . . . . . . . 2·2 ... 90 ... 138 .....5·2 .... 185 . 172
.. .. . .. .. .. .2·2 .. .115 .. 64 ......4·3 .... 209
99
... 2•2
49 . 1t1 .. 4·3
.115 194
141
.. 1·2 . 33 ...82 .....4·3 ....95
. .. .1·2 ... 68 ... 105 ....2·5 . . . 171
259
.... 1·2 ... 84 .. .43 .....2·5 .. .. 137
146
. . 0·4
. 41 .. 7 1
.'.1-6 ... 75
148

Ohio Valley Conference
OYC

W·L

PF

PA

W-1.

ALL
PF

I

PA

.. ...............2·0 ... 49 .. 34
. .. 4·3 . . .129 . 100
.. " ............. 2·0 .... 118 .. 59
. 2-4 .. ' .183
156
.. H
63.28
3-4 .. 167
145
. . . t · l ... 49 . .55
. 3·4 . .168 . 187
.. . . . . . . . . . . . .0·2 .... 40 ... 11 1
.. 2·5 .... 107 .246
. ..... ..........0·2 .... 53 ...85 .. .. 0-7 .... 104 , .288

Coal Grove .
Fal~and . .
South Potnt •
Chesapeake
River Valley .
Rock Hill

'

Tri-Valley Conference
Ohlp Dlvialon
TVC
W·L
PF

Nelsonville·York ..
Wellston
Me1gs
Athens
Belpre
Alexandet
Vinton County

PA

.. ..........4·0 ... 147 .. 82 .
.3· 1 .... 116 76 .
.. •..
2·1 ... 95 .. 50
2·2.93 .. 73
.1·2 .... 46 ... 85 .
0·3
39
100
•.
0·3 ... 22
90

Hocking Division
TVC
W·L
PF
PA
. .. .2·0 .... 91
.34 .

Federal Hocking

Tnmble . . ...... . . • . . . .
Waterfofd ......~ .
Southern .... .
Eastern

Miller

. •. 2·0 .... 85 ... 0 .
.. .1-1 .... 35 . .45
.. .H .. .41 ... 70
.. Q.2
·26
88
Q.2
27
68

ALL
W·L

PF

. 6·1 . .
. 3·4.
5·2 ..
2·5 . .
.2·5 ...

,J

PA

222
137
164 .173
214
131
128
147
96 . . 153
3-4 .. 164 147
1·6 ' 76
2t0

W·L

ALL
PF

PA

' 5·2 ..
. .5·2 . .

175 .. 121
t92 107
.. 3-4 ... 11 4. 159
.. 3·4 ... 132
192
. 2-5
143
216
J.6 . 81
235

Independents
W·L
Wahama ..

ALL
PF

PA

5·0 ... 229 ., .72
..2·5 .... 78 .. 200
. .1-4 .... 74 ...216

.

South Gallll! . .. .
Hannan .. . . .

County for a Week 8
match up on Homecoming.
Both EHS and Miller
enter thi; h1day With losmg
record1 and lo&gt;1 ng streaks .
The Green and Vv hlle have
lo;t two ; tra1g~t and four of
the rr last five. while MHS
has dropped five in a row.
Both teams started the year
I- I.

The Green and White
come into Friday night
averag in~ 20.4 points per
game olfensrvely and are
also allowing 30.9 points as
a defense. The Eagles have
also pl~yed opponenb that
are a combined 23-22 this
fall
/1
•
The F'urpliand White on the other hand - are
scoring just I I .6 points per
game offensively and are
also allowing 33.6 points as
a defensive unit.
the Falcons have scored
just 35 points 111 the last four
weeks, with 20 of those
coming last weekend in a
loss at Southern (33-20).
Miller's schedule is also a
combined 22-22.
Miller was Jed last week
by sen1or quarterback Tyler
Householder (6-foot·O. 160
pounds), who amassed I34
total · yards of offense including 82 rushmg yards

..

and two rushing scores.
Runnmg hack Tony
Adkms . (5-X. I35) also
added 89 rushmg yards and
Tucker McLean (6·1, 155)
was _ the team·, leading
receiver with 43 yards ,on
one catch.
The last tm1e Miller came
to East Shade River
Stadium. the Falcon., left
wrth a I9- I2 vrctory.
Eastern won Ia'! year's con·
test at MHS by a 16-12
decisiOn. K1ckoff 1s set for
7:30 p.m.
Wellston at
Gallia Academy

:lerVICPC,

UOG

'

Gallia Academy holds a
45- 15-2
head-to-head
advantage in this series,
which originally dates back
to the I925 season.
.
As for thi s latest installment , the Devils enter
Friday ready to start a threegame home stand to finish
out the regular season .
GAHS "-- following a 4 I-0
setback last week in its road
finale at Chillicothe - also
enters thi s weekend currentJy sitting seventh 10 the
Di vision IV, Region 15
playoff ratings , so a win
increase the possibilities of
a postseason berth:
The Blue Devils are averaging I6.4 points and 227
yards of total offense per
game, while allowing 27.7
points and 288.8 yards per
game defensively. The Blue
and White are also a perfect
3-0 at Memorial Field this
year.
The Rockets, on the other
hand , enter Fnday With a
three-game winning streak
after snapping a 15-game
losing skid back in Week 5
against Belpre (28 · I 3).
WHS also has recent wins
over Vinton County (24·8)
and last week at Athens (34·
2 I). .
Wellston opened the sea·
son with losses agl)inst
Jackson (41-14), Minford
(21-)3) .. waverly (35-21)
and a dou ble-overtime loss
to Nelsonville-York 34-28.
WHS opponents are a combined 25-24 this year and
the Rockets currently sit
I9th in Division IV, Region
I5 ratings.
The Rockets are · led by
semor
tai lback
Matt
Lockar (5-foot-10 , 195
pounds), who amassed 831
rushing yards on 133 carries
this season - an average of
6.2 yards per carry. Lockard
als.o has 10 rushing touch·
downs and II total this season, as well as 15 extra
points.
Wellston last won this
head-to-head matchup back
in I978 . Kickoff 'is sched·
uled for 7:30p .m.

J

GALLIPOLIS - For the
first time m I9 years, two
familiar grid1ron fbes will
renew acquaintances thlS
Fnday night when Gallia
Academy hosts Wellston in
River Valley
a Week 8 i10n-conference
at ChesaJ)eake ·
· football contest at Memorial
F1eld.
CHESAPEAKE - After
The Blue Devil s (4·3) and
Golden Rocket; (3-4) have two straight wins gave
hot played one another River Valley and its fans
since the 1989 Ieason. a plenty to celebrate with its
contest that GAHS won by best start since 2003, the
a 20-6 margin . The Blue Raiders were quickly
and White have won I9 of brought back down to earth
the last 2 I in this series with the start of Ohio Valley
in cluding the last seven Conference play.
overall.
Since the 2-3 stat1 , the

2001
Coleman
Chey·
enne
pop-up
CE&gt;.mper,
electnc brakes, A/C, 3
way refng , sleeps 6-8, 2
stoves plu s screened
porch,
call
(740)367·7569

t..a W::t. !\ "'.o !

JOQ

0

Ar, r·• tis

RV

offense
surrendering
26.7 points per outing.
.
The two OVC teams will
square off Friday night
starting at 7:30p.m.

PORTSMOUTH
Coming off of a thrilling
12-8 win over Green while
wrapping up the home portion of the schedule, the
South Gallia Rebels will
now hit the road for . the
final three games of the sea·
son starting with a very
tough test Friday night in
Portsmouth.
·
·
The Rebels (2-5) will
match up with a very powerful Sctotoville East (6-1)
squad that has pretty much .
rolled over every obstacle
10 its path.
The Tartans' victories
include wins over Symmes
Valley (32-8), Oak Hill (21·
13), Manchester (76·38),
Buffalo
(13-12);
Southeastern (26· 7) and
'Northwest (47-0) wliile
their only setback co.ming
in Week 3 against undefeat·
ed West Virginia progr:am
Matewan (19' 6). The com·
bin~d
record · ' of
Sciotoville 's opponents 1s
19-27.
Since the : loss to
Matewan, the Tartans have
fired off four straight wins.
Overall Sciotoville is
averaging a whoppin~ 31 ,5
points per llame highh~
by three wms of 32 or more
points. On defense the
Tartans are . surrendering
only 13.8 points per outing
with a game · high of 38
given up to winless
Manchester in Week 5.
South Galli a, on the other
hand, has seen better days,
but has still done a tremendous job with the long Jist
of underclassmen on the
roster.
The Rebels hold two wjns
over Green and Southern
(14-0) with their five losses
coming against Buffalo
(40·12), Notre Dame (356), Wahama (41·6), Eastern ·
(35-8) and Waterford (41·
20). The combined record
for South Gallia's oppo·
nents is 22-23.
The Red and Gold are
averaging I l points per
game with a game high of
20
coming
agajnst
Waterford in Week 1 while
giving up 285 points to
their opponents.
Friday 's game will kickoff at 7:30p.m.

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Ohio River
'
Pnvate drrve off L1ncoln
Htll.
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C)

Raiders (2·5, 0·2 OVC)
have since dropped back-to·
back contests to Fairland
and South Point and have
been outscored \11-40 in
the process.
Not the start to conference play RVHS had hoped
for.
Now the Raiders will gear
up for. another tough test
this weekend ',Vith a trip to
Chesapeake (3-4 , I- I OVC)
Friday night. And if the
Raiders hope to snap us current 19-game losing streak
in the. OVC, they will first
need to find a way to slow
teams down.
River Valley had all the
offense it needed and more
last Friday, putting 36
points on the board while
tacking up 462 yards of
total offense, but its defense
surrendered 69 points and
661 yards to a Fairland team
that has struggled at times
this year.
But while . last weekend
dido 't go as planned, if the
Raide~ can find a way to
slow te,uns down - look
out.
Despite scoring more than
30 points for only the fourth
titne in· five ~ears, River
· Valley is startmg to show
signs that last week,was not
a fluke. The Raiders are
only averaging i5 points
per game, but have found
ways to move the football
and that all starts with
senior quarterback Clayton
Curnutte.
· Curnutte threw for 362
yards and four touchdowns
last weekend on 15-of-34
passing and has been rock
solid all season long.
RVHS. has two wins over
Eastern
(14-0)
and
Waterford (27-7), while the
res\ of the year has been
marred with losses to
Minford (42-6), Oak Hill
(33-0), Meigs (53-20),
South Point (42·6) and
Fairland (69-34). The c-om·
bined record of River
Valley's opponents is 25-23.
Chesapeake, on the other
hand, snapped a three-game ·
losing skid last week with a
36-28 win over winless
Rock Hill. The Panthers
also have wins over Oak
Hill (30-29) and Symmes
Valley (48-6) with losses to
Wayne (39-21), Valley (90), Portsmouth West (49·
. 20) and Coal Grove. (27 r
13). The combined record
of Chesapeake's opponents
is 28-20.
.
.The Panthers are averag~
ing 24 points per game on

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"Saturday Morning Sports Clinics"

PREP FooTBALL STANDINGS

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at

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YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Southern at
Watrrford

G!lmrr County

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bki&amp;a .11

dt

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Pomt 1'\C"u.mt

Southt"l n at

' Waterford

~

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\~

Pl

Ga;(r;"X;!d:..y
Egg,

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.l'2in1...l'lru
Mt"tg;

Stacey Walters
Paginator
R ecord . 44-26
lasr Week · 7-3
(wi'nnl·rs m Wdd)

' R 1\'t'T VJIJt')

Ea!ttrn

Scigtovillr Eau

Wellston Jt
~

Diane Pottorif
R.("poner

~

Al c'\an.kr

V;all('\'

Record· 45-15
Last Week- 5-5
(wmners m lwld)

Beth Ser.gent
Reporter
Record: 44 -26
L~st Weok· 7-3
(winne~ in JHWI)

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Alcxandt-r

Eastern

Jl

LJ~ t

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Eastt' rn

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Well~t o n ~~

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\l:.'c:JJ,tnll II

'Gary · Clark •

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER ·285,000 PROSPECTS

•

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legala ........................................................... 1 00
Announcamont. .......................................... 200
Blrthday/Annlveraary.................................. 205
Happy Ada •........••....••.......... ......•....•......•.....•210
Loot I Found ............................................... 215
Memory/thank You .........................•......•.... 220
Notlcea ..................... .................................... 225
Peraonala .........'............................................ 230
Wanted ....................................................... 235

Sarvlcea ....................................................... 300
Sorvlce ....................................... 302

Hoalth ........................................................... 321l
Heating I Coottng ....................................... 321l
Home Improvements 330

lnaurince ....................... - ............................ 332
Lawn Sorvtce ............................................... 334
Mualc/Dance.'Drama .................................... 336
Other Sorvlcaa ................ ............................. 336
Plumblng/Eiectrtcal ..................................... 340
ProiH81onal Sorvlceo ...........•....•.......•..••... 34~
Repairs .............................................:........... 344
Rooltng ....................................:.................... 348
SecurHy ........................................................ 348
TaxiAccounUng ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ....................... :..........352
Financial,..... ,,;,., ............:..............................400
Financial Servlcaa ......••..•.,...... :................... 405
J

Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to lend............................................. 415
Educatlon ......................~ .,............................ SOO
Bualnell Trade School •...........; .............. 505
tnatructlon I Training ................................. 510
Leaaona ........................................................ 515
Poroonat ...................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ aoo
Antmol

a.

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ..................................................., .•....... 1005
Blcyctea ......................................................101 0
Boata/AcuuortH .................................... 1015
Camper/RVo I Trellera ............................. 1020
Motorcycloo ............................................... 1025
Other .......................................................... 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Renflll1Lea• ...........................~......... 2005
Autoa .......................................................... 2010
Claulc!Antlquaa ....................................... 2015
commerclalllnduatrlat ....... :. ..................... 2020
Porta I Accoaaorlea ..................................2025
Sporto Utlltty .............................................. 2030
Trucka .........................................................2035
Utility Tr~llero ............................................ 2040
Vana............................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Ettata So leo ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Ptota ..........................................3005
Commerclal ................................................3010
Condomlnluma .......................................... 3015
For Sale by 0Wner.....................................3020
H011101 lor Soto ... A ................. ................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Loll ............................... .............................3035
Want to buy ............................................... 3040
Real t:.lall Ronteta ...................................3500
Apartments/Town.houaas ......................... 3505

Commerclal ................................................ 3510
Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3515
HOUIH lor Rent .. ;..................................... 3520
'Land (Acreaga) .......................................... 3525
Storago .....................................................3535
Want to Rent.. ................... ........................ 3540 .
Manufactured Houalng ............................. 4000
Loto ................... :......................................... 4005
Mo-o....!................................................... 4010
Rentelo ............................. .......................... 4015
Sotao .,......................................................... 4020
Suppltea ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Raoo'rt Property .........................................
Rnort Property lor sale ........................... 5025
Rnort ProiJllriY lor rent.. ...:..................... 5050
Employment,..............................................6000
Acoounttng/Financlal ................................ 6002
Admlnltt.-tlve/Prolontonat .....................6!lQ4
hlor/Cierk .............................................6006
Chlld/Etdarly Care ........ :..................,......... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
conatructton •.•.........•.......:......................... 6012
Orlvoro &amp; Delivery ....................................,.6014
~ducatton ...................................................6016
Elec:trtcot Ptumblng ...................................6018
Employment Agencleo ..............................6020
Entenatnment........................................... 6022
Food Sotvtcoa ............................................ 6024
Government I F-rol Jobo .................... 6026
H•lp onlld- Genorot .................................. 6028
Lew Enforcement ...................................... 6030
MalntenancallloniHtlc ....... ...................... 6032
Managemeni/Supervtaory ......•••.............•. 6034
Mochantca ...............•...............••...•............. 6036
Medtcal ....................................................... 6038
Muotcal ....................................................... 6040
Part·nme-Temporarle1 .............................. 6042

sooo

c..

Rea"uranta .......... 1.... : ............................... 6044

want to
Yard Sale .................................... ................. 975

Sllloo..........................................................6048
Tochniclll Tladu .............. ,....................... 6050
TeJtltloo!FICtory..........................................6052

l.an&lt;! (ACIIOgo)

3500

Rea I :~d·
c

•

'

Renldl~

Apartmonb/
Townhou...
ove-n pee 1
Clrp thiS AD and tak&amp;.ll
w1th you when you v1stt
our communrty to get
thiS Special diSCOunt
Move-in in Oct and get
$1(10.00 off your 28R
Apt. 10 Nail Currenlty
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR units
Spac1ous floor plans,
ranch &amp; townhOme style
Irving 'playg'round &amp;
basketball court, on-site
laundry fac11ity, 24 hr'
emergency mamte·
nance, qu1et counii)IIO·
cat1on close tO.maJOr .
medrcal
faoUittes,
pharmacies, grocery
store JUSt m1nutes
away from othe r maJOr
shopp1ng 1n lhe area
Honeysuckle HUll

Seasoned F1rew0Qd de- Gallipolis, Thursday 9th
Want To Buy
livered. Ca!l446·9204.
&amp; Fnday 10th, 47 West- ~--~\'"';;;;;:-:'~=
wood
Ortve.
Joanne Want to buy Junk Cars.

farm Equipment
=;~~~~~;;;;; -;;;;;;;i;Miil~-iiiillaOini.i-;i;i;"'i;;;;;=

EBY,
INTEGRITY, ~
2 Fire Place Inserts, 1
KIEFER BUILT,
Buck, 1 Ktndel Wood
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
4-6 •
30 75 3616
STOCK
TRAILERS, - - - . . - - - - LbAO
MAX
EQUIP· Jet AeratiOn Motors re·
MENT
TRAILERS, paued , new &amp; rebuilt In
CARGO
EXP~ESS &amp; stock. Call Ron Evans,
HOMESTEADER
1·800·537·9526
CARGO/CONCESSION
t
O
TRAILERS.
6+W FREE Wudlller
rgan
NECK
FLATBED
IS
bas
. e
pedal
needs
GOOSE
$3999 . VIEW OUR EN· same
repa Irs
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· 304·862·2385
TORY AT
Hot Tub, 6 person, Like
WWW CARMICHAEL·
New With cover, Must
TAAILEAS.COM
Sell·
MOiling
$1600
740-146·3825
740·645·3:333
House Shutters, vanous
720 J.O diesel w/pony sizes
$80,
Whirlpool
motor, (740)949-2072
washer
$75
Have you prteed a JOhn 304·675-5015
Deere Iatel Y? You '11 ....-.
~ NEW AND USED STEEL
surpnsedl Check out our
t
t
• ·
used
1nvefl ory
a
www.CAREQ.com.
Carmichael
Equipment
7'n 446 24'2
1

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
for
concrete
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating tor Drains, Drive·
ways &amp; Walkways l&amp;l

Two row new Idea com
picker/sheller;
lntema·
tional 1~6 TracJor/Cab:
8'x20' Gooseneck cattletrailer
.
Call
740-446·4432

Scrap Metals Open Mon.
Tue,
Wed
&amp;
Fn,
6am,4'30pm
Closed
Th~~ .
Sat
&amp;
Sun.
74().446-7300
Pole Bam 30x40x10 only
$6.995, other s1zes, Free

'tV'

•

Garden &amp; Procfuce

Delivery 877·773·8356

"Sheets"
Fillinger.
9·4 caii74Q.386·0684
both days.
Rcnl Eslilte
~-;:,;;~--:-~- 3000
Garage full of clean
Salrs
doihes... dirt cheap
All
doth1ng 1tems 25 cents.
Sz tod·3XL. Also m.eat
Commercial
slicer, plano mise Sat
10111 Sam·?? 1316 Ad· For • sale
or
lease
amsville Rd 1 mile E of office/warehouse/storage
:.:R';;,o,;G~ran;,;;;de;oo;;fl.;5;;;66-...~- great locat10n 1n Galhpo·
,.,
Huge yard sale. Fn Oct lis.
1600
sq.
fl
'le Fl
$400/month. Call Wayne
IOih , 9a·5p • 2 m&lt; s at· 404-456·3802
woods Ad . lois of good ;,;,;,;,;;'""i~""'""""""
quality clothes. kids &amp;
Houlll For Sale
adults ,
&amp;
mise
4 ~~~~~o;;;;;:-"""::
famllyl1st tlmesale
North P;;~rk Dr call
OCt. 10 &amp; 11 at 218 Lov- 304·675·5640
or
ers tn Clay Townhouse 304·593·1204 w111 sell on
Barnes , McCarty
Don· Land Contract or Out
net Lots of everything!
Rtght
Al so a Wellmgton
.Sat Oct i1th, 37019 P1ano call for appo1nt·
ment to see them bolh
Aockspnngs
Ad ·
Pomeroy,
8:3()-?,
Ta· ~~"':':"~~~~~
4 bed 2 bath &amp; othce 1n
coma bug·guard, oak en· town , hw &amp; !lie floors,
tartalnment
center,
namebrand
clothing, updated kitchen &amp; baths,
TV prtvacv fence &amp; above
household
1tems.
,
'
groun11
pool ,
secunty
'"m:
lsc
=
·=
=
=
=
=
=
:
system. much more 130
Bas11an 1 Or.
$129.000
446·2923

las

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~
&amp;oats I

AccehOrils

1989 Stratos Bass boat
Scag
Tiger
Cub wf1 00hp
Evinrude oulKiwi just E. of Syracuse Zero·tum
mower,
e• board,
good
shape
011
St
Rt.
124, con ., low hours, $3,000, $3750
OBO
(740)992-7449
740-742-2373
(740)992·2692

Apartments

~

266 Colonral DriVe #113
B1dwell. Ohio 4561' 4
740·44§·3344
OffiCe Hours M. W. F
9AM • 5PM

'-------...11
-

1 Yr old SA 588 lor more IBR Apl , WID hoOkups
satellite TV 1ncl. wfrent.
1nto and ptclums go to
ctose
to hospital. Call
WVM orvb com
I.D
741).339·0362 •
Brown1ng 740·446·72~
New QBR 2 bath on 3 ac 1BR close Ia hospiJII:
new refng , range &amp; diSh· WJD hookup. appliances
740· 441 -3702
washer Included $75.000 furn ished.
or 286-5789
740·4~6· 7029

•
•

�·.

•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Octo'ber 9, 2008

Www .mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, October 9, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

~rthune

- Sentinel - l\egt~ter
C LAS S·l F I E D

•

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS .WEEK'S. Hl(jH SCHOOL FOOTBALL GAMES
Gallia
County,
OH
•

E-mail
classified@ mydailytribune.com
Bryan Walters
Sport-"• Wmt·r
Rt."cord :i 7- ll
la~t Wet k· H-2
(\'inner~

m bold)

Larry Crum
Sporh Wn ter
Rc(oni 46-2~
LJ~ r We~k . H- 2
(\\ llllll' T~ Ill

h2ht)

Charlie Shepherd

Scott Wolfe

Pa~m:nor

\p,lrt\ c·,)rn. ~ r&lt; • I J.it · nt

R crord · 4H-::!2
Last Wet'k. h- 4
(wmner~ m h2ld'

R t't'OTtl: -t5-2:i
La'r Wl·t·k 8-2

~

al
~
i'oc.l

i\k ;.,..uhkr
Rl\ l'r \ 'dll'\
,Jt

Scimovdlr Ea51

( \\'111 llt' f"i Ill

~

I'I l l ,I

~

hW.il)

\\ 'd ],(l 'll II

1 1no 1t

Plc;~~m

30-20
\Vn· k 7-J

~

Rr vc r Valle\
af ChesapeaM

M!ller ~ ~
Eastern

Mtllt.'r .u

Wahama n
Wtrt Coumy

Wahama Jl
Wm Coum)

S(1ut h GJ!h.! a.r

South (;.r!lr a Jt
Sdotoyille East

Wahama at

Wlft Cuunn•
Snuth C.1lhil Jt
Sciotoyillt East

• .It C hl~IPI'Jkl'

~

Wellston at '
Poca at
~

Mfisl Jt

MU&amp;t;J.t

:\lexomd.t'r

Hope Roush
Reporrer

R ecord· -18-1::!
Last Week 5-5
m h2hl)

(winne~s

Well!&gt;tuu Jt
~
Poca

Alex:m drr

Ak.urul&lt;r

Alexander

River ValJev
Jl ~

Rm:rV.tllq

Ri\ o:r V.:~Jlc,

RwerVallt')

''~

"~

"~

Mtller Jl
Eas u:rn

Mdll'r Jt
Eanern

M1lkr at
E11rrra

Miller at

Eastern

Miller n
Eastern

Eastern

Wahama Jt
rrt C011nt~

Wabam1 Jt

Wabama at

\\ 'u t Cou nty

Wtrt County

Wehama at
Wtrt Coun ty

Wahama 11
Wrrt Count)

Wtrt Cou ury

Snt•th G,,Jh a ~~
Sdotovil!e £as.t

Sou rll r:.lllia aT
Sdotoyille E RSI

South l.a.llra ar
Scjotmj!le Eau

South Galh.a at
SdotgyjiJe &amp;st

Su uth G;l. lha at

South

c~llra

Scigtovmr East

Sciotoville Eatt

:;,mn h ~ m Jt

Wal e rford

·Waterfiud

Southern 01t
Watt:rford

· South ern at
Waterford

'Sou thern at
Waterford

G ilmer Co unty
.11 H,.um.J n

Gilmer County

Gjlmu Cpuuty

Cdw ~ r ( nun t\
Jt Hannan

Gilmt r CouQiy
.rt H.wn:~u

Gilmer Co un ty
at Hannan

Gilmer CAunry
at Hannan

Gilmer County

.It HJ1111.111

G lh l l t'T Coun ty
..II Hannap

Fcda .1l H ockin!':

Frcltr.d Hot ki n~

Federal Hock jne
.1t'Trunhlt'

fclkr.ll llockmg
.u Trimble

fl·1IL rJl Hu, km~

Federal Hockin1
at Trnnble

Ft:der.il Hockmg

FedcrJI H ockm~

J[

Iri.n.thlt.

.H

Ir.imbl£

H .11111.11 1

Federal Hmklll..:-

.

" lli.m!!k .

.11

I!iJ.n.!!l.t

at

li.im.bl.r:

Fcdcral

thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IO WI!,TE 6lf AQ
1'Uccas4TAds

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •••

• All ads must be prepaid'

• StJJrt Your Ada With A keyword • lndude Complete
Detcrlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tiOnl
• Include Phort11 Number And Addr~~u When Needed
• AU Should Run 7 Oay1

POLICIES · Ohio valley Publlltllng ,.,.rve• the rlght lo .cill, reject, or cancel any ad at any llrrMI. Errors must bll rePorted on the flnJt day of publication end the
TrtbUnt-S.ntlnei-Aeglster Will be reaponelblalor no mctr11 than lhe cost ot tha space occupied by the srror and only the llrst lnHftkJn. We aha II not btlllabtt tor
any tosa or expenM u.t raaulta from the pubMcatlon or oml11lon ot an edvertl~~~m~~nt Correction will be made In ll;t• tlralevlllable edition. ·Box number_.
are tlweya confldenllll. •Currant rare ctrd eppiiH. · All real Hlell Bdvartlatmenllare aubject to the Federal Fair Housing Act 0119611. · This newspaper
acc.pll only halp wlntad •d• metUng EOE etlr.dtrda. Wa Will not knoWingly accept any adverttalng In violation ot the law wm nOI bll ratponllble for any
enoraln an ad tak•n ovar thl phont.
·

KiT &amp; CARLYLE

Ho~kmg

Ohio Valley
Publllhlng • tho righllo edt~
reject or cancel any
odotany-.
Errors Mutt

•. ·" lliml&gt;k

Previous Champions - 200 I: Butch Cooper, 2002: Butch Cooper, 2003: Brad Sherman. 2004: Brad Sherman. 2005: Bryan Walters, 2006: Brad Sherman, 2007: Dave Harris.

Pet
Cremations.
74D-44ll·3745

·

Call

Football

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

from Page 81

SEOAL
W·L
PF
ChiUicothe .

have been held to a touchdown or less m four games
t'his season while the WHS
defense is surrendenng 22.7
pOints per outmg.
Southern. on the other
hand . has turned ill; slow
start rnto an offensive
explos ion over the past four
weeks
The Tornadoes
scored th ree pomb in their
first three games but have
·smce scored I29 points over
the past lour weeh.
Their three wms came
agamst Miller (33-20).
Green ( 3 I· I4) and Hannan
(57-0) while the losses
came against Federal
H oc~i n g
(50-8). South
Gallia r i4-0). Wahama (59I)) and S)mmes Valley (35 3).
\\ i!h that bi~ wm around
SHS Is now 'up to I 8.8
pomts per game offensively
mcludrng scon ng 31 or•
more pmnb 111 three of the
)' .~ t
four
11eeks.
[k lensJ\el) the Tornadoes
are , tJJI susceptible to the
. big pi a! as the! have grven
up 27 .J points per out mg.
The cumbihed record of
Southern \ opponents is 2024.
Southern' s br~
win
aga1n'st ~1iller last '~eek was
made possible by the com;billed ;rllack of runniM
;backs
Greg
Jenki ns.
M1&lt;:h acl Manuel, Sean
Copp rck .111d Eric Buuard
'who • Comhmed for 262
yards on the ground "'hile
quarterback Dustin Sa lse r
added 6 I yards through the
air and Manuel added
·Mother I9 to give til&lt;'
rornadoe' 342 yards on the
night.
Friday night 's game
between the tw.o TVCHock ing oppone nts is
;scheduled to begin at 7.30

p.m.

Miller at Eastern
TUPPERS PLAINS
One thmg ts certain Friday
night at East Shade River
.Stadtum. Either Miller or
Eastern will pick up its first
Tri· Valley
Conference
liocking DivisiOn gridiron
victory of 2008 .
· With lhat said, the Ea~Jes
_(2-5. 0-2 TVC Hock~ng)
will have the home i1eld
· advahtage this weekend
·when the visiting Falcon;
(1-6, 0-2) corhe to Meigs

,

•

''

Logan

.1

•

Jackson .... .

Ironton ..... .
Gallia Academy

Warren . . . .
Marietta ..
Zahesv1lle
Portsmouth

ALL
PA

'

PJ:

W-1.

PA

• .
4-0
.1 16 44 ......5·2 .... 160 .11 2
.. . . . . . . ,3-{) . . 100 .,38 ..
7-0 . . .241
69
. . . . . . . . . . . 2·2 ... 90 ... 138 .....5·2 .... 185 . 172
.. .. . .. .. .. .2·2 .. .115 .. 64 ......4·3 .... 209
99
... 2•2
49 . 1t1 .. 4·3
.115 194
141
.. 1·2 . 33 ...82 .....4·3 ....95
. .. .1·2 ... 68 ... 105 ....2·5 . . . 171
259
.... 1·2 ... 84 .. .43 .....2·5 .. .. 137
146
. . 0·4
. 41 .. 7 1
.'.1-6 ... 75
148

Ohio Valley Conference
OYC

W·L

PF

PA

W-1.

ALL
PF

I

PA

.. ...............2·0 ... 49 .. 34
. .. 4·3 . . .129 . 100
.. " ............. 2·0 .... 118 .. 59
. 2-4 .. ' .183
156
.. H
63.28
3-4 .. 167
145
. . . t · l ... 49 . .55
. 3·4 . .168 . 187
.. . . . . . . . . . . . .0·2 .... 40 ... 11 1
.. 2·5 .... 107 .246
. ..... ..........0·2 .... 53 ...85 .. .. 0-7 .... 104 , .288

Coal Grove .
Fal~and . .
South Potnt •
Chesapeake
River Valley .
Rock Hill

'

Tri-Valley Conference
Ohlp Dlvialon
TVC
W·L
PF

Nelsonville·York ..
Wellston
Me1gs
Athens
Belpre
Alexandet
Vinton County

PA

.. ..........4·0 ... 147 .. 82 .
.3· 1 .... 116 76 .
.. •..
2·1 ... 95 .. 50
2·2.93 .. 73
.1·2 .... 46 ... 85 .
0·3
39
100
•.
0·3 ... 22
90

Hocking Division
TVC
W·L
PF
PA
. .. .2·0 .... 91
.34 .

Federal Hocking

Tnmble . . ...... . . • . . . .
Waterfofd ......~ .
Southern .... .
Eastern

Miller

. •. 2·0 .... 85 ... 0 .
.. .1-1 .... 35 . .45
.. .H .. .41 ... 70
.. Q.2
·26
88
Q.2
27
68

ALL
W·L

PF

. 6·1 . .
. 3·4.
5·2 ..
2·5 . .
.2·5 ...

,J

PA

222
137
164 .173
214
131
128
147
96 . . 153
3-4 .. 164 147
1·6 ' 76
2t0

W·L

ALL
PF

PA

' 5·2 ..
. .5·2 . .

175 .. 121
t92 107
.. 3-4 ... 11 4. 159
.. 3·4 ... 132
192
. 2-5
143
216
J.6 . 81
235

Independents
W·L
Wahama ..

ALL
PF

PA

5·0 ... 229 ., .72
..2·5 .... 78 .. 200
. .1-4 .... 74 ...216

.

South Gallll! . .. .
Hannan .. . . .

County for a Week 8
match up on Homecoming.
Both EHS and Miller
enter thi; h1day With losmg
record1 and lo&gt;1 ng streaks .
The Green and Vv hlle have
lo;t two ; tra1g~t and four of
the rr last five. while MHS
has dropped five in a row.
Both teams started the year
I- I.

The Green and White
come into Friday night
averag in~ 20.4 points per
game olfensrvely and are
also allowing 30.9 points as
a defense. The Eagles have
also pl~yed opponenb that
are a combined 23-22 this
fall
/1
•
The F'urpliand White on the other hand - are
scoring just I I .6 points per
game offensively and are
also allowing 33.6 points as
a defensive unit.
the Falcons have scored
just 35 points 111 the last four
weeks, with 20 of those
coming last weekend in a
loss at Southern (33-20).
Miller's schedule is also a
combined 22-22.
Miller was Jed last week
by sen1or quarterback Tyler
Householder (6-foot·O. 160
pounds), who amassed I34
total · yards of offense including 82 rushmg yards

..

and two rushing scores.
Runnmg hack Tony
Adkms . (5-X. I35) also
added 89 rushmg yards and
Tucker McLean (6·1, 155)
was _ the team·, leading
receiver with 43 yards ,on
one catch.
The last tm1e Miller came
to East Shade River
Stadium. the Falcon., left
wrth a I9- I2 vrctory.
Eastern won Ia'! year's con·
test at MHS by a 16-12
decisiOn. K1ckoff 1s set for
7:30 p.m.
Wellston at
Gallia Academy

:lerVICPC,

UOG

'

Gallia Academy holds a
45- 15-2
head-to-head
advantage in this series,
which originally dates back
to the I925 season.
.
As for thi s latest installment , the Devils enter
Friday ready to start a threegame home stand to finish
out the regular season .
GAHS "-- following a 4 I-0
setback last week in its road
finale at Chillicothe - also
enters thi s weekend currentJy sitting seventh 10 the
Di vision IV, Region 15
playoff ratings , so a win
increase the possibilities of
a postseason berth:
The Blue Devils are averaging I6.4 points and 227
yards of total offense per
game, while allowing 27.7
points and 288.8 yards per
game defensively. The Blue
and White are also a perfect
3-0 at Memorial Field this
year.
The Rockets, on the other
hand , enter Fnday With a
three-game winning streak
after snapping a 15-game
losing skid back in Week 5
against Belpre (28 · I 3).
WHS also has recent wins
over Vinton County (24·8)
and last week at Athens (34·
2 I). .
Wellston opened the sea·
son with losses agl)inst
Jackson (41-14), Minford
(21-)3) .. waverly (35-21)
and a dou ble-overtime loss
to Nelsonville-York 34-28.
WHS opponents are a combined 25-24 this year and
the Rockets currently sit
I9th in Division IV, Region
I5 ratings.
The Rockets are · led by
semor
tai lback
Matt
Lockar (5-foot-10 , 195
pounds), who amassed 831
rushing yards on 133 carries
this season - an average of
6.2 yards per carry. Lockard
als.o has 10 rushing touch·
downs and II total this season, as well as 15 extra
points.
Wellston last won this
head-to-head matchup back
in I978 . Kickoff 'is sched·
uled for 7:30p .m.

J

GALLIPOLIS - For the
first time m I9 years, two
familiar grid1ron fbes will
renew acquaintances thlS
Fnday night when Gallia
Academy hosts Wellston in
River Valley
a Week 8 i10n-conference
at ChesaJ)eake ·
· football contest at Memorial
F1eld.
CHESAPEAKE - After
The Blue Devil s (4·3) and
Golden Rocket; (3-4) have two straight wins gave
hot played one another River Valley and its fans
since the 1989 Ieason. a plenty to celebrate with its
contest that GAHS won by best start since 2003, the
a 20-6 margin . The Blue Raiders were quickly
and White have won I9 of brought back down to earth
the last 2 I in this series with the start of Ohio Valley
in cluding the last seven Conference play.
overall.
Since the 2-3 stat1 , the

2001
Coleman
Chey·
enne
pop-up
CE&gt;.mper,
electnc brakes, A/C, 3
way refng , sleeps 6-8, 2
stoves plu s screened
porch,
call
(740)367·7569

t..a W::t. !\ "'.o !

JOQ

0

Ar, r·• tis

RV

offense
surrendering
26.7 points per outing.
.
The two OVC teams will
square off Friday night
starting at 7:30p.m.

PORTSMOUTH
Coming off of a thrilling
12-8 win over Green while
wrapping up the home portion of the schedule, the
South Gallia Rebels will
now hit the road for . the
final three games of the sea·
son starting with a very
tough test Friday night in
Portsmouth.
·
·
The Rebels (2-5) will
match up with a very powerful Sctotoville East (6-1)
squad that has pretty much .
rolled over every obstacle
10 its path.
The Tartans' victories
include wins over Symmes
Valley (32-8), Oak Hill (21·
13), Manchester (76·38),
Buffalo
(13-12);
Southeastern (26· 7) and
'Northwest (47-0) wliile
their only setback co.ming
in Week 3 against undefeat·
ed West Virginia progr:am
Matewan (19' 6). The com·
bin~d
record · ' of
Sciotoville 's opponents 1s
19-27.
Since the : loss to
Matewan, the Tartans have
fired off four straight wins.
Overall Sciotoville is
averaging a whoppin~ 31 ,5
points per llame highh~
by three wms of 32 or more
points. On defense the
Tartans are . surrendering
only 13.8 points per outing
with a game · high of 38
given up to winless
Manchester in Week 5.
South Galli a, on the other
hand, has seen better days,
but has still done a tremendous job with the long Jist
of underclassmen on the
roster.
The Rebels hold two wjns
over Green and Southern
(14-0) with their five losses
coming against Buffalo
(40·12), Notre Dame (356), Wahama (41·6), Eastern ·
(35-8) and Waterford (41·
20). The combined record
for South Gallia's oppo·
nents is 22-23.
The Red and Gold are
averaging I l points per
game with a game high of
20
coming
agajnst
Waterford in Week 1 while
giving up 285 points to
their opponents.
Friday 's game will kickoff at 7:30p.m.

EKtraordlnary Property;
Spectacular view ol the
Ohio River
'
Pnvate drrve off L1ncoln
Htll.
Pomeroy,
Oh1o;
woods on three Sides
{4+)acres , to a hlstoncal
·home. C1rca 1900, 5
bedrooms, 2 fireplaces , 2
full baths, 2 staircases,

at

Trailers
740·446·3825

Hoating &amp; Cooling

HomelmptovemMts ,

South Gallia
at Sciotoville East

I

patio, DR/FA Relocating .
$115,000 . 740-446-0817
leave msg

Carmichael beautiful anginal wood·
work, many p1cture w1n;
dows mostly new Win·
dows, large kttchen and
RV Servtce at Carm1: breakfast room, beaut1·
chael
Tra1lers fully landscaped w1th m
740·446·3825
ground pool. S1t on ' the
wrap around porch and
Motorcydoo
enjoy
the
spectacular
v1ew of the Ohio R1ver 2
2007
Kawasaki
Ninja car detached garage and
250 under 1500 miles 2 out burldrngs . Would
red helmet and tank bag
make a wonderlul famdy
$2 .6od 740·645·1912
home or be d &amp; breakfast.~
Pnvate and Picturesque
SPECTACULAR VIEW
Serious
tnqu1res
only,
please calj 740-992·3678

Service

C)

Raiders (2·5, 0·2 OVC)
have since dropped back-to·
back contests to Fairland
and South Point and have
been outscored \11-40 in
the process.
Not the start to conference play RVHS had hoped
for.
Now the Raiders will gear
up for. another tough test
this weekend ',Vith a trip to
Chesapeake (3-4 , I- I OVC)
Friday night. And if the
Raiders hope to snap us current 19-game losing streak
in the. OVC, they will first
need to find a way to slow
teams down.
River Valley had all the
offense it needed and more
last Friday, putting 36
points on the board while
tacking up 462 yards of
total offense, but its defense
surrendered 69 points and
661 yards to a Fairland team
that has struggled at times
this year.
But while . last weekend
dido 't go as planned, if the
Raide~ can find a way to
slow te,uns down - look
out.
Despite scoring more than
30 points for only the fourth
titne in· five ~ears, River
· Valley is startmg to show
signs that last week,was not
a fluke. The Raiders are
only averaging i5 points
per game, but have found
ways to move the football
and that all starts with
senior quarterback Clayton
Curnutte.
· Curnutte threw for 362
yards and four touchdowns
last weekend on 15-of-34
passing and has been rock
solid all season long.
RVHS. has two wins over
Eastern
(14-0)
and
Waterford (27-7), while the
res\ of the year has been
marred with losses to
Minford (42-6), Oak Hill
(33-0), Meigs (53-20),
South Point (42·6) and
Fairland (69-34). The c-om·
bined record of River
Valley's opponents is 25-23.
Chesapeake, on the other
hand, snapped a three-game ·
losing skid last week with a
36-28 win over winless
Rock Hill. The Panthers
also have wins over Oak
Hill (30-29) and Symmes
Valley (48-6) with losses to
Wayne (39-21), Valley (90), Portsmouth West (49·
. 20) and Coal Grove. (27 r
13). The combined record
of Chesapeake's opponents
is 28-20.
.
.The Panthers are averag~
ing 24 points per game on

Hou ... For Salo
Campers/ RVo &amp;
Troilon
~~~~--~iiOiiiii 3BA.2BA, 2 car gar~
1995 24' Terry Camper.
sleeps 6 , $6,000. good
shape &amp; clean, call
(740)949·2616,
740·591·6522

,.~ e.u~pi~;S, 1 w~vwv~
~iA~Iel) WATlHiiJI::! 4ot-F

"Saturday Morning Sports Clinics"

PREP FooTBALL STANDINGS

kltncarlyle~comcast.net

If I KN~&lt;W AB-ouT

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

9:00am

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifiedads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
f!.iitll
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Mor~day

Waterford

.u H amun

" ·Iriml&gt;l&lt;

675·5234

at

~oUihLr n .11

at

(304) 675-1333

Wahaq1a at

W.u crt~ml

HJm1.111

l\egt~ter

To Place .

Mdler J.t

Soythrrn ar

Jt

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

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Southern at
Watrrford

G!lmrr County

.

bki&amp;a .11

dt

Snmht·m .lt
Wau•rford

\quthan ,11

www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinei.com
www.mydailyregister.com

Pomt 1'\C"u.mt

Southt"l n at

' Waterford

~

~I (

,It~

\~

Pl

Ga;(r;"X;!d:..y
Egg,

Jl

.l'2in1...l'lru
Mt"tg;

Stacey Walters
Paginator
R ecord . 44-26
lasr Week · 7-3
(wi'nnl·rs m Wdd)

' R 1\'t'T VJIJt')

Ea!ttrn

Scigtovillr Eau

Wellston Jt
~

Diane Pottorif
R.("poner

~

Al c'\an.kr

V;all('\'

Record· 45-15
Last Week- 5-5
(wmners m lwld)

Beth Ser.gent
Reporter
Record: 44 -26
L~st Weok· 7-3
(winne~ in JHWI)

,Jt

Alcxandt-r

Eastern

Jl

LJ~ t

~"
All'x.m dl' r

Eastt' rn

South (' dhJ

· Pomt

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It

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~

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M.rip ,It

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Wahama

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lt e(ohl -L\-.::!7
I N Wt·l:~ 7-J
(\\ mm·r, 111 hold)

Dave H a rris
Ad R eprnl."ll.tU.Vt'

M.ti.&amp;J 3[
RI Vt' f

Chrsapuke

\p&lt;lf[\ ( 'llrTt'&lt;.l'tliiJc.'IK

Wlll'-tllll .11
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1\\' liUlef\ Ill

Well~t o n ~~

\l.l c JI ~W II

\l:.'c:JJ,tnll II

'Gary · Clark •

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER ·285,000 PROSPECTS

•

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legala ........................................................... 1 00
Announcamont. .......................................... 200
Blrthday/Annlveraary.................................. 205
Happy Ada •........••....••.......... ......•....•......•.....•210
Loot I Found ............................................... 215
Memory/thank You .........................•......•.... 220
Notlcea ..................... .................................... 225
Peraonala .........'............................................ 230
Wanted ....................................................... 235

Sarvlcea ....................................................... 300
Sorvlce ....................................... 302

Hoalth ........................................................... 321l
Heating I Coottng ....................................... 321l
Home Improvements 330

lnaurince ....................... - ............................ 332
Lawn Sorvtce ............................................... 334
Mualc/Dance.'Drama .................................... 336
Other Sorvlcaa ................ ............................. 336
Plumblng/Eiectrtcal ..................................... 340
ProiH81onal Sorvlceo ...........•....•.......•..••... 34~
Repairs .............................................:........... 344
Rooltng ....................................:.................... 348
SecurHy ........................................................ 348
TaxiAccounUng ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ....................... :..........352
Financial,..... ,,;,., ............:..............................400
Financial Servlcaa ......••..•.,...... :................... 405
J

Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to lend............................................. 415
Educatlon ......................~ .,............................ SOO
Bualnell Trade School •...........; .............. 505
tnatructlon I Training ................................. 510
Leaaona ........................................................ 515
Poroonat ...................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ aoo
Antmol

a.

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ..................................................., .•....... 1005
Blcyctea ......................................................101 0
Boata/AcuuortH .................................... 1015
Camper/RVo I Trellera ............................. 1020
Motorcycloo ............................................... 1025
Other .......................................................... 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Renflll1Lea• ...........................~......... 2005
Autoa .......................................................... 2010
Claulc!Antlquaa ....................................... 2015
commerclalllnduatrlat ....... :. ..................... 2020
Porta I Accoaaorlea ..................................2025
Sporto Utlltty .............................................. 2030
Trucka .........................................................2035
Utility Tr~llero ............................................ 2040
Vana............................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Ettata So leo ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Ptota ..........................................3005
Commerclal ................................................3010
Condomlnluma .......................................... 3015
For Sale by 0Wner.....................................3020
H011101 lor Soto ... A ................. ................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Loll ............................... .............................3035
Want to buy ............................................... 3040
Real t:.lall Ronteta ...................................3500
Apartments/Town.houaas ......................... 3505

Commerclal ................................................ 3510
Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3515
HOUIH lor Rent .. ;..................................... 3520
'Land (Acreaga) .......................................... 3525
Storago .....................................................3535
Want to Rent.. ................... ........................ 3540 .
Manufactured Houalng ............................. 4000
Loto ................... :......................................... 4005
Mo-o....!................................................... 4010
Rentelo ............................. .......................... 4015
Sotao .,......................................................... 4020
Suppltea ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Raoo'rt Property .........................................
Rnort Property lor sale ........................... 5025
Rnort ProiJllriY lor rent.. ...:..................... 5050
Employment,..............................................6000
Acoounttng/Financlal ................................ 6002
Admlnltt.-tlve/Prolontonat .....................6!lQ4
hlor/Cierk .............................................6006
Chlld/Etdarly Care ........ :..................,......... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
conatructton •.•.........•.......:......................... 6012
Orlvoro &amp; Delivery ....................................,.6014
~ducatton ...................................................6016
Elec:trtcot Ptumblng ...................................6018
Employment Agencleo ..............................6020
Entenatnment........................................... 6022
Food Sotvtcoa ............................................ 6024
Government I F-rol Jobo .................... 6026
H•lp onlld- Genorot .................................. 6028
Lew Enforcement ...................................... 6030
MalntenancallloniHtlc ....... ...................... 6032
Managemeni/Supervtaory ......•••.............•. 6034
Mochantca ...............•...............••...•............. 6036
Medtcal ....................................................... 6038
Muotcal ....................................................... 6040
Part·nme-Temporarle1 .............................. 6042

sooo

c..

Rea"uranta .......... 1.... : ............................... 6044

want to
Yard Sale .................................... ................. 975

Sllloo..........................................................6048
Tochniclll Tladu .............. ,....................... 6050
TeJtltloo!FICtory..........................................6052

l.an&lt;! (ACIIOgo)

3500

Rea I :~d·
c

•

'

Renldl~

Apartmonb/
Townhou...
ove-n pee 1
Clrp thiS AD and tak&amp;.ll
w1th you when you v1stt
our communrty to get
thiS Special diSCOunt
Move-in in Oct and get
$1(10.00 off your 28R
Apt. 10 Nail Currenlty
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR units
Spac1ous floor plans,
ranch &amp; townhOme style
Irving 'playg'round &amp;
basketball court, on-site
laundry fac11ity, 24 hr'
emergency mamte·
nance, qu1et counii)IIO·
cat1on close tO.maJOr .
medrcal
faoUittes,
pharmacies, grocery
store JUSt m1nutes
away from othe r maJOr
shopp1ng 1n lhe area
Honeysuckle HUll

Seasoned F1rew0Qd de- Gallipolis, Thursday 9th
Want To Buy
livered. Ca!l446·9204.
&amp; Fnday 10th, 47 West- ~--~\'"';;;;;:-:'~=
wood
Ortve.
Joanne Want to buy Junk Cars.

farm Equipment
=;~~~~~;;;;; -;;;;;;;i;Miil~-iiiillaOini.i-;i;i;"'i;;;;;=

EBY,
INTEGRITY, ~
2 Fire Place Inserts, 1
KIEFER BUILT,
Buck, 1 Ktndel Wood
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
4-6 •
30 75 3616
STOCK
TRAILERS, - - - . . - - - - LbAO
MAX
EQUIP· Jet AeratiOn Motors re·
MENT
TRAILERS, paued , new &amp; rebuilt In
CARGO
EXP~ESS &amp; stock. Call Ron Evans,
HOMESTEADER
1·800·537·9526
CARGO/CONCESSION
t
O
TRAILERS.
6+W FREE Wudlller
rgan
NECK
FLATBED
IS
bas
. e
pedal
needs
GOOSE
$3999 . VIEW OUR EN· same
repa Irs
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· 304·862·2385
TORY AT
Hot Tub, 6 person, Like
WWW CARMICHAEL·
New With cover, Must
TAAILEAS.COM
Sell·
MOiling
$1600
740-146·3825
740·645·3:333
House Shutters, vanous
720 J.O diesel w/pony sizes
$80,
Whirlpool
motor, (740)949-2072
washer
$75
Have you prteed a JOhn 304·675-5015
Deere Iatel Y? You '11 ....-.
~ NEW AND USED STEEL
surpnsedl Check out our
t
t
• ·
used
1nvefl ory
a
www.CAREQ.com.
Carmichael
Equipment
7'n 446 24'2
1

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
for
concrete
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating tor Drains, Drive·
ways &amp; Walkways l&amp;l

Two row new Idea com
picker/sheller;
lntema·
tional 1~6 TracJor/Cab:
8'x20' Gooseneck cattletrailer
.
Call
740-446·4432

Scrap Metals Open Mon.
Tue,
Wed
&amp;
Fn,
6am,4'30pm
Closed
Th~~ .
Sat
&amp;
Sun.
74().446-7300
Pole Bam 30x40x10 only
$6.995, other s1zes, Free

'tV'

•

Garden &amp; Procfuce

Delivery 877·773·8356

"Sheets"
Fillinger.
9·4 caii74Q.386·0684
both days.
Rcnl Eslilte
~-;:,;;~--:-~- 3000
Garage full of clean
Salrs
doihes... dirt cheap
All
doth1ng 1tems 25 cents.
Sz tod·3XL. Also m.eat
Commercial
slicer, plano mise Sat
10111 Sam·?? 1316 Ad· For • sale
or
lease
amsville Rd 1 mile E of office/warehouse/storage
:.:R';;,o,;G~ran;,;;;de;oo;;fl.;5;;;66-...~- great locat10n 1n Galhpo·
,.,
Huge yard sale. Fn Oct lis.
1600
sq.
fl
'le Fl
$400/month. Call Wayne
IOih , 9a·5p • 2 m&lt; s at· 404-456·3802
woods Ad . lois of good ;,;,;,;,;;'""i~""'""""""
quality clothes. kids &amp;
Houlll For Sale
adults ,
&amp;
mise
4 ~~~~~o;;;;;:-"""::
famllyl1st tlmesale
North P;;~rk Dr call
OCt. 10 &amp; 11 at 218 Lov- 304·675·5640
or
ers tn Clay Townhouse 304·593·1204 w111 sell on
Barnes , McCarty
Don· Land Contract or Out
net Lots of everything!
Rtght
Al so a Wellmgton
.Sat Oct i1th, 37019 P1ano call for appo1nt·
ment to see them bolh
Aockspnngs
Ad ·
Pomeroy,
8:3()-?,
Ta· ~~"':':"~~~~~
4 bed 2 bath &amp; othce 1n
coma bug·guard, oak en· town , hw &amp; !lie floors,
tartalnment
center,
namebrand
clothing, updated kitchen &amp; baths,
TV prtvacv fence &amp; above
household
1tems.
,
'
groun11
pool ,
secunty
'"m:
lsc
=
·=
=
=
=
=
=
:
system. much more 130
Bas11an 1 Or.
$129.000
446·2923

las

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~
&amp;oats I

AccehOrils

1989 Stratos Bass boat
Scag
Tiger
Cub wf1 00hp
Evinrude oulKiwi just E. of Syracuse Zero·tum
mower,
e• board,
good
shape
011
St
Rt.
124, con ., low hours, $3,000, $3750
OBO
(740)992-7449
740-742-2373
(740)992·2692

Apartments

~

266 Colonral DriVe #113
B1dwell. Ohio 4561' 4
740·44§·3344
OffiCe Hours M. W. F
9AM • 5PM

'-------...11
-

1 Yr old SA 588 lor more IBR Apl , WID hoOkups
satellite TV 1ncl. wfrent.
1nto and ptclums go to
ctose
to hospital. Call
WVM orvb com
I.D
741).339·0362 •
Brown1ng 740·446·72~
New QBR 2 bath on 3 ac 1BR close Ia hospiJII:
new refng , range &amp; diSh· WJD hookup. appliances
740· 441 -3702
washer Included $75.000 furn ished.
or 286-5789
740·4~6· 7029

•
•

�A~•••ntl/

r••••, ..ta

1br,

l300tmonth

Apar1ment,
$300/de-

posll, References. No
Pets 304-675-2749 ·

Hou..a For Rent

3BR brick ranch quiet New · 3 BedroOm. homes
Modem 1BA apt. Call neighborhood near new tram $214.36 per month,
740-446·0390
high school, no pets includes many upgrades,
&amp;
set-up.
~-':":"'-"'!"'-"':'~ $650 month &amp; $650 de· delivery
New Haven,· one bed· posit. 614·575·161:3 or 740·365·2434
room opartmenl. depo&lt;il 914·915·7624
----===~
&amp;
referenCes, " - - - - - - - 740·992·0t65 '
In Pomeroy. 2br, 1 ba,t) 1 6000
Emp oyment
NICe
Clean
Groun~ Move &amp; trlg ., no pets, .nb
Floor, 2br, WID hookup, smokrng, quret. $4!5 a

pl~s dep.. prck·~P. ;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;Ciori~~·ca;i;l;;;;;;;=;;;;;
adpl~llcrtatiOns at DO Mrd·
"'\po
CtenC.!t &amp; office posrt1ons
Tara
Townhouse ;,;;~;;.,=====~ aiJallable. paid trcilnihb
Apartments · 2BR, 1.5 1
starts rmmedrately. 110
bath/ back patio. pool,
e'perience needed, no

3 rooms and bath upa&amp;a.irs. . Completely furnished with WID. No
p8ts. Ref. Req. 441.0245 playground,

age,

Apartment available noW 542 5/rent,
Alverbend
Apts. New

(trash.

water

.mo.

sew·

call

sales,

pd.)

$ 42 5/sec.
Hoven WV. Now ae&lt;:eptl dep. Call740·367- 054 7
·
tng
appftcations
tor Two 1BR new apis. m
HUD-subsldized,
one . town w/ off street par~Bedroom Apts. Utilities ing. Fully toadect w/
.
·
.,
Included. Based on 30o/o starnless
ste011
app 1J·,
ol adjuSted income. Call ances including trash
304·682-3121 .
available compactor, OW. custom
for Senior and Orsabled built cabrnets, WID also
peopl&amp;.
Included.
Lrmited to 1 person per
apt. $700/rent (utilities in·
eluded). Call after 5prn.
6,4;,;;
127
4 0;,
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD· ~7 ,;;
·4
;,;4,;;·

f. ree

Rent

Speciallll

2&amp;3BR and up, Central
Air, WID hookup, ten8nt
pays electric. EHO Etrn

\/Jew

Apts.
(~)8B2 ·3017
Twin Rivers Tower is ac-

..ca!ions
· · 1or
app I1
· waiting I'JSl ·-rur HUD su b ·
aklized, 1·BR apartment
cepting

for the elderly/disabled,
Call675·6679
•-uttful Apts. at Jack·
rion e.tatn. 52 WestIRood Dr., from $365 to
Ssso. .
740.446·2568.
Eq~l Housing Opportu·
nity. This institution is an
Equal Opponunity Pro·vider and Employer.
Gracloua Living 1 and 2

d ...o.

Government &amp; Fo ..-.,..

2 br. mobile home in
Job1
Racine, $325 per mo.•
$325 dep.,
yrs. lease,
FEDERAL
$60 non·reluf!dable wa ·
POSTAL JOBS
ter dep., no. pets, no calls
$17.89-$2,8.27/HA.,
now
after
9pm.

No experience
required'
No Credit Card
Sales!
No Gollectir:lns'
Here's what vou

®:

hiring.
For
application
and tree government JOb
•2-BR--1-ba-lh-on
--la-rm• info, call Amencan As·
ot
Labor
$500 per month includes SQC.

· Raise funds and
renew
memberships for
· the National Rifle
Association

(740)992·5097

utilities. 540·752·0826 ·or 1·9i3·599·8226,
emp. serv
540·729· 1331

24/hrs

Federal Funds just re· ·=~....,..,=~~~
• d owners. POST OFFICE NOW
leased lor •l,.Qn
No closing cost and HIRING avg. , Pay '$20/hr
ZERO DOWNI Will do or
$57Ktyr.·
includes
land
improvements. Fed.Ben, QT. Place by
o-nkruplcy , ""d Cred·,,
ff '
0t1
o 0(1
adSource. not a rliated
OK . 2. 3. 4 and 5 bed· with USPS who hires .
rooms
available . 1·866·403·2582

1need to lind (2} people
nt!edmg a lull Hfl'le job.
You "eed to be honest. a
person ot mtegnty, ...,Jth
good people sk1lls. You
also need to be able to
follow rnstructKJns and
have an abi1ity to listen
and lead people in the
right dtrect!Qn I need
people who want to work
"' and will show up for
work. If you are a recent
college grad and cartnoj
frnc:l employment and feel
that you are quatlried,
give us a chance until a
JOb in yOUI e&lt;uee1path
becDfnes available. Call
Pat tiJII. f\leW Car Man·
·agar tor an interv1ew at

$327
lo
740·992-5064.

$592. room
Mobile
Equal Camp
Housing Opportunity.
304-895-3129

Home "(7;;,40:;!J9;9;,;2;;;
·5;;;:6;,:;39;,,,;,
Conley =
Sal..
2 20ot;i l6x80 Clayton 3

Happy Ad

bed 2 bath, 200 16x70

_ _ _.:..:._:..__ _ _ · Fleetwood 2 bed 1 bath,

1999 Fortune 3 bed 2
bath. We deliver block
level and anchor. We
can do the footers also.
Daytime
740·388·0000
or 740-388-85 t 3 Eve-

nlrgs , 740-388-8017

or

740·245·9213.

2004 Ooubtewide in new
condition . 4 bedroom, 2
bath. all appliances in·
eluded, $37,000 Jocilted
at 176 Zuspari Lane Ma·
son City 304·675·211 7'
Brand new 3bed 2bath
on + -half acre in Pt.
Pleasant. OWNER FI-

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room Addition• &amp;
RemOdellog

· New Gai'egu_
• Ekt~trlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; GuttarW

·Vinyl Siding &amp; Pi~lnllng
·Patio and Porch Deckt
W¥036725

446·'96&amp;0.

V.C. YOUNG Ill

91 14x70 mobile home, 3
Or., 2 bath, ready to be
moved,
$10,500,
(740)591-8936

Ohm

Pom~:roy

25 Years Local E-.xpC'fl{)rKI'

.. ... .

Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives•
Full and
Part-lime
PositiOns!
Professional
work ·

Environment.'
Medical. Dental.
EAP. 401KI
On-site Doctor/

ROBER HYSEllS

Owner

Operator Oppor-

tumtres

R&amp;J · Trucking

·

Marietta. Ot'tiQ has op·
pon unities avarlable for
Owner Operators within
the re gion. We teature
weekly settlements, in ·
eluding fuel surcharge &amp;
trailer rental Operators
houtd have newer equipment. For more inlorma·
lion · contact Dennis at

lis. OH

el&lt;perience. Submrt re·
AVON! All Areas\
To sume &amp; salary requ1re·
Buy
or Sell Shirley ments to: GallipoliS C.M..
Gorsuch Mgt . PO. Box
Spears 304·6751429
t90. Lancaster OH
COmmercial Cleaners · 43130·0190 01 email to:

BADGE

'

----~---

· Public Notice ,
Public Notl~e
The Meigs County SubCommittee. for Round
23 SCIPILTP Prolects
will meet Thursday October 23, 2008 at 9:00
A.M. at the Meigs
County Commissioners Office In the Counhouae on Second
Street In Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Commlftee Is
composed of one repreaentetlve appointed
by the villages of the
cOunty, one representative appointed by the
township trustees, one ·
aprepreaentatlve
pointed by the county
commlsalonera, one
representative

ap-.

pointed by the counly .
engineer end a fifth
member oolected by
the lour appointed repreeentatlvea. Th• purpoee olthle meeting 11
lo select the flfth member and to assfgn local
priority
to
Meigs
County IPPifcallons
submitted lor Round 23
SCIPILTP.
(10) 9

/

Manlyn Fn . Roadside
Portland, Ohjo

4577t
740-949-2217

sbl.5'JI:1 o·
,tb 1-0Jx30'

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

e•p.

neces·

sa:,y at Rt. 2 Bypnss Pt
PI at Floodwall between
:SOpm-4pm
1

Fri·Sat- Sun
Oct 10, 11 , 12

French ·soo
Flea Market
Gallia County Fairgrounds

Dealers Welcome

Kipling Shoe Co.

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

..Eosl
"'AQJ 32
• J as 3
•

Johnson's Tree
Service
Complete Tree Care
lll'!IIU&lt;ed · Fr"

Eltl",.1••

1110-441·93.11

?!l

~·"'· ·~,...,.,.0.
s.,,.,,.
em,..,

Soulh
• 98 5
•AK109f
• J 4
o!o A J 3

Slop &amp; Compare

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: East-West

E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com.
www.auctionzip.com
#5548

Special tables of
$5 &amp; 10
Name brand shoesJor the
entire family.New selections added
weekly

~

YDIJ LOST

Tt4E eLeGTION

-~/

FOil

(;0LONY Pfles II&gt; E.NT 7

~

()Points)

FOil Tt'IE
.1DJ.

BARNEY

"al'dwood Clblnury And Furnilure

YORE .,lUGHAID
VOLUNTEERED
TO GO GIT MY .

W'W"W..thnbercree1u:ablnlftrJ'.com

OOPS!!

HE'S STARliN' COLLECTIN'
STAMPS !!

I MEANT

Tb WARN
MAIL !! _ _.-'( YA, ELVINEY !!

RV\

(740) 992-5344
Mtm-Fri .
· 8:1JU am - 4JO pm
Sai . 8:00 um - I 2
Wt appreciate your
busi11l!.~.\'

II \\1 '
((1\i(Hill
( 0:\" Jl(l'( I Hl'i
Concrete Removal

~...,,..,=~r-=-r:-~

THE
Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe .

LOSER

~-

'fOU; ~W, BRUTUS, WE.'\Jf.
AAb .OUR 600t&gt; Tl to\E~
IKtt:0\.{;*1 Til£ '((A~ ...

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

~

....

'

.

.

.
1&gt;.1'11&gt; wt'IIE. ~&lt;M&gt; CAJR.
"'!( ""BUTI'OR
Tllt\t5 ...
NOW, 1 C."'''i'T IIU.I&gt;-LL WI-\IC.I-\
W~~ WI-\IC.I-\!
.

m

~1-\tli.FEOI=~~~f

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Estimates

TREE WORK
Topll&lt;'d, Takr Uown
&amp; Removal
AITordahtc,
Rra,onablc Pri"'
740-444-5152
or lean ntl'ssa e

""

Pass.'

Pas s

Pass

DOWN
1 Smoke
outlet
2 Juattouch
3 Cooking
·apice
4 Oattlch kin
5 Boxer's
move
6 Parlo
..aoon
7 Graoo
8 ¥ocal group
9 Flocal ·
period
10 A Caner
11 Leso
obvlouo .
12 Skin llflglh
17 - a deell
20 At the table
21 Market
aegmonro
22 Minh
23 Kenya's

loc.

24 Auahoo off 44 Gusto
25 Mo. Paquin 47 Statuesque.
of fUm
48 Holiday
28 "Fioh
tlmeo
Magic"
49 Sz. option
artlsl
51 Buolness
29 Bribes
abbr.
31 Waterloo
52 Whiz Ieeder,
locale
54 Machi"e
tooth
32 Sandra
Day33 Recipe
meas.

31 Woody ex
40 Declare
41 Owner's
proof
42 Dog's
ancestor
43 Orchestra
member

the ·values to bid, ·but no clear-cuf bid
avlilable. 'vou hope partner can do
somettllng Intelligent.
·
You can also make a responsive double
after your partner overcalls and respon·
dar raises oPener's suit - as in tapay's

slrenglh, should not b!~ three. spades. .
where he would go doWn two, losing two
heaits, a heart ruff, .on&amp; diamond and
!Wo dubs.)
Against three clubs, West leads lhe
spade ·lour. The defenders take two
trid&lt;s in the suit, then shlfl to a trump.
But there Is llttle 1o the play. Declarer
gives up a diamond trick, wins the nex1
· trump lead, takes a diamond ruff In his
hand, cashes the heart ace, rufts a heart
on lhe board. draws lha lost lrump. an&lt;l

Seamless Gutters

1Rc&gt;ofiin'9· Siding, G rtters
740-653·9657

i

Crmrmi'IHIII &amp; Rt•.&gt;idnuiCJf

Vinyl

Siding/Replm.:ement
Windows/Remodeli ng

Bonded &amp; Insured
740-99l- t493 Ollke
740-416-8339 Cell

Free Estimated
Pomeroy. Ohio

Toaa:y's clue: Wequals F

"T

FKB .RKP

TCRZK

ATE

BRNP MTHKENK

RK" T WRWNKKE-SK"TH-DCG

UDS , TEG

BRCC

HKATRE

WRWNKKE·SKTH;OCG

T

UOS HNRC

NPKS GRKI"

G

T~:i~:~' . S@"\\(\\1\- ""Btrs~~
.....,.,;,:--__;,....,: Edllo&lt;l by CLAY R.

AstroGraph
'l&gt;ur&lt;llrthofooi:

SCORPIO (Oct. 2(-Nov. 22) - 'lbur sixth

St;;mley TreeTrimming .
&amp; Removal

SIR, I KNOW El{ACTLV
WIIAT OUR, HOMEWORK
IS FOR TOMORROW ..

MARCIE, DO 't'OII IIAI/E AROUGH
OR e\JEN VAGUE IDEA
IIOW AN'!0'(1N6 VOU ARE ?

*Pron1pt and Quality

sense will beo fully operational, so If you
get any hunches·or instinCts about so'tne·
tl'llng, fOllow through. More than one
mighl prove to be rewarding.
· SAGITIAAIUS· (Nov. 23·0ec. 21} There could be a quiet Ioree stirring wjttl·
in you, whictl more tn.an one p&amp;fSOn will

· recognize. The great drive vou now pos·
sess will al!tr1 otllers not to take you light·
ly.

Work

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Should seed morley be required In order
to primt the pump, review all pertinent

*RL'asonable Rmes
*In sure-d
*Expericntl!d

Information first and then take ltle n9CiiS·
sary steps to oet things moving again.

Rtference&lt; Available'
Caii .IJary Stanley @

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-FSil. 19) - Having
harmonious associates will enhance
your posst,ilities for success. If yOu have

740-&gt;91-81l44
Please leave messa e

a cl'lofce. ·b&amp; sure 1o select

PISCES (Feb. 2()oMa&gt;Oh 20) - No ooe
your inlentions 10
yourself. 'rou're smart enough to know
has to tell you to keep

• I THOUGHT HE W~S

RICK PRICE

DEATHLY IUdCI iD

New Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,

OF CI10WS.

• MPRCRM

HONP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' You can'l have ahealthy ecooomy, you can't have
a healthy anything 1n a degraded environment" • Peter Coyote

~OII.A/i

WOlD
GAMI :

A ReartOnge lontts· of lho
V lour ocramblad _ , below to form lour almple wordl.

ADSROL

lhel ~IUrtly llildn011bou1 SOillOihil9
can throw all'Klr'My wrench into the mix.

Construction

MOSTLY I~
THAT SNAI&lt;E-.
VENOM COM~.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,

GARAELD

Local Contractor

740·367-0544

•

•

•

•

Tou9hy-Order - Viola , Ponder - DON'T HAVE
Llb_iuk. most people go Jhrougb life not know,ing what they
. \Iaiii, but feeling sure 1bey DOifT HAVE it
.

ARLO&amp;JANIS

.

-

tteult (ltOple or s1tu1tionl, You will un
this knowt&amp;dge well 1nd end up 'lilth 1

Additions • Garage~ • Vinyl
und Wood.Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's. Porches and Decks

smile on your fie..
VIRGO (""g. 23·Sepl. 22) - ~ltho&lt;ign
you mlgtll not get 0&lt;11 of 'lhe j1arting
blocks too qui&lt;*:ly, Dr'la. you do. you'll
make up tor lost tlrM and pick up
momei-mJm u you 8dvanot toward the

GRIZZWELLS
~T 6ET ENc:Utill
~ 1\1~ l'o:x:IKS

I

Cf FAMoUS
~

finish lint.

~ &amp;ol.l-'1 I., SOUP TO NUTZ
1
"'

1\-11~1&lt;.. '10\J

HA.\L~D

-rHAi
~~

:

Complole. the dwttle o~.-r
"' h11ing in the
)'OU dMiop from atep No. 3 below.•

8

. • · SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 10/K/08

23·Aug. 22) - \bu know 1&gt;61·
ter than most that ~macy and tad are
lhetoob of choice when dealinG""" dn-

• Room

.

:

I' 12
··~E~TTERS I ,. I I I I. I

ooutd come out of them.

{Ju~

-g
_.
:
I' r .t r r

,1/bak&gt;f-•

8 PR~b'::esLETTERS IN

GEMINI (May 21-.June 20) -'!bur iudg·

.., a&lt;l'iontago ~ -

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

Advertise ·
in this space for
$64 per month

s

•

you. Be sure to handle this know!·
edge wi1tl great care , so you don't lose

For Remodeling and New House Huildlng

25+ years exprrience Pret Estimate~·

I I I I 1• I
M0 N l 0 D

your ultimate advantage. If these
changes are affecting ~ur work or
career, some tnteresting occumtnces

LEO

Cell : 740-41~-18:14

A pun 10 make you groan: "A
l......oll..-"--"--.t.-J .,
prol'l$Sor di3cowred IIIII her ..
...-------~...., . theory ofeardlquakes was ou : ·

~wtth

Free Estimates

74G-367-0536

740-985-4141

...

mem lS especlalty good a1 this time, so
don't entertain' any seH-doubts. F1rs1.
study what is at hand and then mO\ie for·
ward with a plan o4 actiOn.
CANCER (•.kme 2t.July 22) - A CO·
worker who hs you might be privy to
some wluable InformatiOn and share it

Remodeling, Room
Additions

/

9

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - The stir·
Mngs taking place around you wiU work to

'HE'S STILL

47cW Riebel Roatl .l.on~ Bonom. OH

1! I I

tion of how much your views of the wortd
haw changed mtgnt hit you at thiS time.
What you 00 with your new insights Is u'p
to you, bu1 continue to keep yoor actions
positive.

liKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

HYUT 0

ARIES (Ma&gt;Oh 21·April 19)- A roaliza·

(·

Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs. Siding, Decks,
lluthnK&gt;m
Lkcn&gt;&lt;d &amp; Insured

Electric, Plumbing,
Drywafl, ,

cottorta who

share yOur hopes and objective!:

PSI CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing·
·Decks
• Garages
·Pale Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

Eacn letter rn t~c1pher star\dstor aflOther

process.

·I

Gu1tcrs
Maintenance l'lus

by Luis Campos
Celetxt,- Cipher cryc!Dgrams aretreeted lfom quotauon~ by famous :li!OOi@ pas! and :r',w~1

a

Insured &amp; Bonded

Quality Seamless

CELEBRITY CIPHER

spades and two diamonds.,
Wrthout this versioo ol the responsi11e
double, how would you . get to tllree
clubs?

Friday, Oct. to, 2008
By Bernie. Beet. Osol
The year ahead couk:l be bne of breaking
down what is no longer working and .
reptacing things wi1h
new structure.
Although you m·lght seek change, lessons teamed the hard way&amp;houfd guide
your choices ai'ICI d&amp;clsions.
'IBR~ (Sept 23-0cl. 23) - ll&lt;&gt;n1 be
reluctant to pitel'l in and tlefp out with a
situation another is struggling to handle.
Nol only will you do a good job; you'll end
up protecting your interests in the

. Saloa

FIND .
BARGAINS
IN THE
CLASSIFIED$

Dbl.
Pass

concedes a diamond. He loses two

28 Years Experience

WVD42182 Free

2•

lplll1

55 Temporary
whHia
56 Flipped
over
57 Runll tight
56 Hlir gooo

Ceal. This responsive double is more
clear-cut. You (Nor1h) promise length in
the tWo untid suits.
South rebids three dubs for want of anything better to do.·(Note that East, with.
no extra spade length or high-card

and

winlcrizc bl)Uts and

·

2•
:J 4

46 Thlng
50 Da a favor
53 Planlot'o

"f'HAVEf 10-'1 · makes a lokeoul double. and .the
;;;::;:a.____...;;~;.:;...;.;...;..J responder raises, a double by you shows

repair.
Sl'r~·icc

Easi

I Not run
from
5 Landing
pier
'
1D Picture
holders
12 Grow up
13 Waldkl wear
t4 Speln and
Portugal
15 Hairy humanoid
.t&amp; Proposal
18 Gil lag wml
1"9 Me1hDke
Iabrie
~3 Sol
26 car,p and
Joeon
27, Genres·
30 Having
bounds
32 ·spotted cat
34 Monet contemporary
35 Twiners
36 Cut, as logs
37 Stooge wRh
bangs
38 Telepalhy
39 In opposltion to
42 Grievous ·
lrouble ·
45 Mover's
vehicle

I

Charles Darwin wrote, "It is not the
strongest of the species that surviv35,
nor the most Intelligent. but the one most
responsive to change."
However, you could argue that being
responsive to change makes you not
only a surviVor, but also a strong and
intelligent person.
Yesterday we started to look· at the
responsive double. If the player on your
leh opens with one of a sun, your partn.er

wASN'T
IJNfUITtl&gt;

.'.

New &amp; Us~·d Tii·c!-1.

We

North

after an overcall

YEAt'l,

·.;-

440R7 Wlt&gt;l&gt;lc Rd .
l'omcroy, Oil

ali,gnme'nts, light '
mcchan il· work .
t:omplctc scrvkc oil
dan gl'~. small cng.ine

Weal

A'responsive double .

L &amp; L Tire Harn

computer wheel

South

Opening lead: ·• 4.

I Church D/UOI/111

V.il'' huy u!-oed tires.

K 8

"'Q 2

Auctiooeer:
BiiiV R. Goble Jr.
140-416-1164

Call:

Gallipolis Location

Across from the City Park
Hours M-F 10-6, Sati0-5
Closed Sunday

tA6 532
o!oK1 0974

AUCTIONS/ ANTIQUES

0PIR9·6M·F
9-12SII.

10 7

• 2

1114/1 rna . pd

740-992·5612.

Holspol. Harrispn.
Monday !
h F.
5p
Concrete
lhroug
nday 9a·. .
81
26
6
740·4 4 ·4 4 ext.
or
M
· b. k
e·mai t 1esuma to · rharri· Ail types asonry, nc ·
son@rescare.com
block, stone , ~ree Esti·
mate.
· 740·&lt;16-7305 .
Rostouronb
304·593·642 1
,..---;::;;;-;;;;,..---,
.
Gnllade lph l~ now tak1ng
applications lor Drovers.
Gnll, Prep. counter, &amp;
Wartresses,

Kipling Shoe Co.
3.00 2nd Ave.

l0·09.fll

•

740-992-1m

Hours

StIll. 124 Plm•rav, 81

know ledge ol desktop
pubhsh1ng are sought
·The positron Is full time.
40 hours a week. with
benefits. tnwested parties c8n Selld resume!!- IO
Kevin Kelly, Ma!)aging ·
Editor, Ohio Valley Publishing Co., 825 Third
Aile ., Gallipolis, Oh10
4563~ or kkelly@mydailytribune.com . No

nlty provisions, and the Call
requirement lor a pay- 304·002·2645
"IBnt b on d an d' performance bond for
100% ~ of the contract
prlca. No bidder may
withdraw his bid within •
thlny (30) days after
the actual date of the
opening thereof. The
Meigs County Commlssloners reserve tho
right to rejeclany or all
bids.
Jim Sheets, President
Meigs County Commisoloners
(9) 30, (10) 6, 9

Racine, Ohio

ROBERT
BISSELl
OOISTIUCDON

'"

Immediate Openings
kdasbury@e,;lbaJqmml.com
Appalachian Tire Prod·
Buffalo. Full-time, Must ....,,,,.E;O;;E; , , , . ucts, Inc
is currently
have driver'!&gt; tie. &amp; pass =
Meclcal
se8king a salesperson
bac~ground
ch~ck. ;;;;;=""''"'-"""~== for our Point Pleasant.
304-768·6309
EOE
Home Health Care of WV locallon. Experience
Southeast Ohio Inc , is is preferred. Job bene·
Direct care Staff In resl·
currently
hiring tmrne fils include 40t K, Health
dential yoL lh prOgram .
health a1des. Certified or Insurance . and Paid Va·
Must be 21 years of age.
Bonuses cation are also available.
Pay based on experi· experrence .
Available .
can Please apply in person .
Located @ . 426 Viand
eoca.
Call t866·3~· 1100 .
(740)379·9083
Mon·Fri
Street in downtQwn Point
ph1 ne calls please.
9am·3pm.
ReSCare Home Care • Pleasant
- -....- ......,.-- ·Provider
of
Support ..;;;;;;;;.;..~===~
SPrv1ce , Bus
.,....,...,.~---- Help Wanted- Now ac· Services 'to Individuals · 9000
PUBUC NOTICE
office opened and read ance
requlremanls, An E11cellent way to earn cepllng applications flam with MR/DO. Direct Care
0Jfeclor~
NOTICE: Ia hereby aloud for the following: various eqUal opportu· money. The New AVon . 9anl-noon. Mon. thru Staff
Contact Rhonda :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

given that on Saturday, Tuppers Plelna Pump
October 11 , 2008 at House Construction
tO:OO a.m., a pu bll c . Proloci.
.ale will'-- held at211 Specifications, and bid
uu
W
' Second
St., forms may be secured
Pomeroy, Ohio. The at th~ office of Meigs
Farmera Bank and Sev- County Comnilsslorl'
Courthouse,
lngo Company Is sell- era,
lng lor caah In hand or Pomoroy, Ohio 45769
certified chock the lol- Phone 740.992-2895. A
lowing collateral:
deposit of 0 dollars will
2007 Chevrolet Cobalt be required lor each
20
Vln set of plans and speci11G1AK15F477154433 llcatlono, check made
The Farmera Bank and payable to . The lull
Savings
C~mpany, amount will ba rePomaroy, Ohio, rit- turned within thirty (30)
aerveothe right to l&gt;ld days attar receipt of
at thluale, and to wnh- bid a.
draw the above colla!- Each bid must be acoral prior to sale .. companied by either a
Further, · The ·Farmers bid bond In an amount
Bank and Savings of 100"4 ·of the bid
company reaerve·a the amount with a surety
right to reject any or all. satlslaclary to the
bldnubmltted.
·
aforesaid
Meigs
Tho above described County Commluloncollateral will be oold era or by cenllled
... , Is-where Ia", with check , cashiers check ,
no expressed or lm· or letter of credit upon
plied warranty given.
a solvent bank In the
For tunher Information, amount of notleaothan
or lor an appointment 10% of the bid amount
to lnepect collateral, In favor Ql the afOreprior to aale date con· said Metga County
tiiCI Cyndle or Ken at Comml1alonera. Bid
· 740-992-2136. ·
Bonds shall be accom(10) a, B, 10
ponied by· Proof of Authority altho official or
agent signing
the
Public Notice
band.
Bids ehall be eealed
NoTICE TO CONTRAC- and marked 11 Bid lor
TORS
· Tuppers Plalno Pump
Se1led 'propoeala for Houee and mailed or
tho Tuppero Plaine delivered to:
Pump House Construe- Melgo County Commlstlon Project, Meigs alonars
Counfy Ohio A• per Counhouae
lpeclllcatlona In bid Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
pocket Will be received Attention of bidders Ia
by the Milgl County caiiOd to all of the reE:ommlaai01111rs at their qulrements conlalned
Qlllco at the Coun- I~ this bid packet, per~ouse, Pomeroy, Ohio tlcularly to the Federal
45761 until 1!00 p.m ., Labar St~ndardo ProviOctober 23, 2008 and slana and Ojlvla-Bacon
then at 1:15 p.m. at Nkl Wagoa, various lnsur-

29670 Bashan Road

H,

CNA. CHHA, PCA may &lt;;:ommun1ty
Services.'
apply at 14BOn Jackson P.O, Bm: 004, Jackson.
Pike, GB.flipolis , Ohro or OH 45640 or e·mai! to
Call TOOAYI
phone 740·44 t -1 393 for beyeeserv@yahoo.com.
Interview.
" more info. Competi tive Deadline for applicants:
TOMORROW/!
wages,
mileage reim· 10!15/0a. Equal OpportuWork NEXT WEEKI/I
·bursement and benelils nity Employer.
including l1ealth insw·
Xl&gt;w:1llllltuar.tOLin_ ance &amp; much more:
Management /
waiting for you !II
Suporviaory ...;;;;;;
Super· 8 now hiring lor ==.;;;~~~
part time employment
f.[Q,Qerty Managemenl
1-800~MC-PAYU
Qualified persOns must P.T. Community Man·
Ext. 1901
http:l~s.lnfoclslon . com
be 2~ years ot age. pos· ager need~d !or lOcal
sess ·strong customer apartment community lo--"'!"'~-~-- seNice skills and be able cated rn Gallipolis. Ollio.
to work lloating shifts Ideal candidate will have
Sportswriter
The O,hio Valley Publish-· ~ply . jn person, NO pr~vlous ex:p~r~nce' in.
PHONE CALL.
. properly management a!
ing Co. is seeking mali·
a Aural Development
vated, people-oriented
indivictual ti till a vacancy A LOC AL MANUFAC· property, e~&lt;ce llent com·
TUREA is taking applica · municar1on and organizain the news dept. as a
tions lor EXPERIENCED tional skills and be de·
Sportswriter. The sucMig Welders. Please ap· pendable. Health insur· .•.
cessful candidate will
cover high school athlet- ply in person at 2150 ance &amp; 401k twailable.
Eastem Avenue, Gat11po· Salary dependent upon
ics in the area lot the

NANCE
'AVAILABLE
(740) 446-3570

Hill's Self
Storage

992-6215

IJ1t.M.;

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

·weekly Pay ar;1d
Bonus Incentives!

daily edition of the news·
paper. as well as ctssist
with the production of
sports pages. Excellent
writing and English skills,
photography skill$ and

The Daily Sentinel • .Page 85 _

Phillip
Alder

s

Bedroom house able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms .
Apts. In Middleport, froffi At* 2 North. Two Bed- &lt;wa•lable
call

www.mydailysentinel.com

BRIDGE

•74_0...:4_4_6-_3_4
38 _ _ _ _ ~,;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;,.;,,.,,.,~
600·462·9365
Help Wanted. General
2 bedroom mobile home
Servrce Manager &amp; Serv·
S. Gallia Scllool D1shict.
Call TODAY!
ice. Technician positions
250 Sign-on Bonus!
Must ha11e references.
ava1lable. Health care &amp;
Interview
S375
plus
deposit.
RetJrerllen\
plans avail·
Voted TOP FIVE Bes'l
TOMORROW//
2 BR house rn Gallipolis,7.4,.;;0;,;·2:.;5,;;6·.,:1,:6ll:.;6~--~ Pieces to Work In Ohio!
able. Please send reWID conn.
S4t 5/mo •
Work NEXT
sume
to
ComeSHWhy/
Mobile home for rent 2
WEEKI//
$150/dep You pay all
b
LLC@C AREQ.COM
or
utilities. No sectiOn 6 or BA
1
ath;
new
ia~ to 740-446-9104
No Sales! No
lurnace/ca: new appli·
HUO.
Call
Wayne ances; neY&lt;: bath like new
Collections! Recruit
WANTED : Par1·1ime po·
1-888-IMC-PAYU,
404-456-3602
volunteers tor non· profit
sition available to assist
home, no pets. 3675 Bu·
. Ext. 23.11
organtzaUons that help
lndiiJiduals with mental
2br .on lhe R••er
·n
Ma· ·Iaviiie Pike 740-446-4234
1
,.
Apply online:
save lives and prevent
retardalion at a group
son. HUD Approved Rei· or 740-208-78tl1
http://jobs.lnfodslon.com
home in Bidwell:
diseases such as Cancer,
erences 304-682-3512 or 3BR located- on BulaiJille
lung and heart disease I lb======dl 1) .35 hrs: 10:30a·7 30p
304-488-7946
~I ke .
$475/rent
Gel paid to make a
. Sun: 2·10p MITuiW:
3408 Mossman Ave. 3br, 740o367·7762
. Dellvery}VVarehouse per- 2) 27.5 hrs : 3:30· 11p Fri;
difference!
$400 month, $200 Dam· ----.,......,..-son r1eeded . lull time. irn- 9a-7p Sat: t-9p Sun;
0 eposrt· 3br, 2ba, Pt Pleasant
age
mediate
opening, ITltiSI Must have high school
FUll
and
Part·ttme
or area 304-273·6622 or
304.634 _5625
Positions
have good rf riving re· diploma/GED. vafid dri"·
304 674 6204
- .
304 ·567·2247
cord. Appi; ,Lirestyle Fur· ar's license and three
Day and Evening
;:,;;,;..;;.;;:=-~=-.;.;..;......;_~~~
New 2BR 2 bath your Mobile Home for Rent Pt.
ShiltS
niture 856 Third Ave. years good driving e&gt;:pe·
choice of renting com- Pleasant area HUD ac·
Gallipolis, 9:30-5:00 No rience.
Si8.40fhr
after
Professional Work
pletely fumished &amp; all cepted, Deposit reqL•ired
Environment!
Phone Calls
J
training~ E&gt;:cellent benefit
utilities paid or you pro- ;;C•:;;";,;3:;;04;;,-,;;67;,;5;,;-34
;;;;;23;___
Medical, Dental.
OhiQ
valley
Home package.
Pre-employEAP, 401K1
Health , Inc. hirin g Home ment ·Drug Tej&gt;ling' Send
viding furniture &amp; utilities. Scenic location, conven·
On·site Doctor
Heal'h
Aides
STNA •. resume·
lo:
Buckeye
NO LEASE 446-7029
ient 10 town and aflord-

Bedroom Apts.• at Village
Manor
and
Riverside Three

Happy Ad

Sign On
-Bonus!!

1·008·610·6953

Rentals .

;;,;,,,= ,;,;.;,;,;;,;_.,;,;,.____

ABLE! Townhouse apart· ""
Commercial
ments,
and/or
small
·
•··-·s
.
lor
rent.
Call
+1\N:M:r
2 bay service sa
1 !Jon
lor
appli·
·1111
7'"441
&lt;tV"
Jackson . Pike. Lease
cation &amp; information.
,
reqUJred. Call 446·3644
FREE RENT SPECIAL ~fo-rm_o_r_e:"in":'lo~:-'~~
Jpnjan Landing 2br. 3br Commerical
Space for
&amp; 4br Availabl~ No Pets , Rent, Main St. Pt. Pleas.
r~ant Responsible for $400/mo. 2000
sQifi
Rent
&amp;
Electric 703 .501. 4808
304·674·0023
or ;,;:;;:;,;;;;:.,;;;;;;:,.,,.,,.,,.,
304-6 10-0776
Housel For Rent

Thurectay, October 9, 2008
ALLEYOOP

Sal••

. Townhou..a

2 bedroom Apartment &amp;
i bedroom House on 5th
St 304-812-4350 ask lor
~;,
.
lBR APT. CIA. (740) RelerencestpepositiNo
441·0194
Pets 304·675·5162

;:.:;.::.:;:;:.__~--

Thursday, October 9, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

~ Re '1\:&gt;U laU&lt;iHCi
alt&gt;OT'!" LJ\\81' laND cF
·nms~- ~

I

�A~•••ntl/

r••••, ..ta

1br,

l300tmonth

Apar1ment,
$300/de-

posll, References. No
Pets 304-675-2749 ·

Hou..a For Rent

3BR brick ranch quiet New · 3 BedroOm. homes
Modem 1BA apt. Call neighborhood near new tram $214.36 per month,
740-446·0390
high school, no pets includes many upgrades,
&amp;
set-up.
~-':":"'-"'!"'-"':'~ $650 month &amp; $650 de· delivery
New Haven,· one bed· posit. 614·575·161:3 or 740·365·2434
room opartmenl. depo&lt;il 914·915·7624
----===~
&amp;
referenCes, " - - - - - - - 740·992·0t65 '
In Pomeroy. 2br, 1 ba,t) 1 6000
Emp oyment
NICe
Clean
Groun~ Move &amp; trlg ., no pets, .nb
Floor, 2br, WID hookup, smokrng, quret. $4!5 a

pl~s dep.. prck·~P. ;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;Ciori~~·ca;i;l;;;;;;;=;;;;;
adpl~llcrtatiOns at DO Mrd·
"'\po
CtenC.!t &amp; office posrt1ons
Tara
Townhouse ;,;;~;;.,=====~ aiJallable. paid trcilnihb
Apartments · 2BR, 1.5 1
starts rmmedrately. 110
bath/ back patio. pool,
e'perience needed, no

3 rooms and bath upa&amp;a.irs. . Completely furnished with WID. No
p8ts. Ref. Req. 441.0245 playground,

age,

Apartment available noW 542 5/rent,
Alverbend
Apts. New

(trash.

water

.mo.

sew·

call

sales,

pd.)

$ 42 5/sec.
Hoven WV. Now ae&lt;:eptl dep. Call740·367- 054 7
·
tng
appftcations
tor Two 1BR new apis. m
HUD-subsldized,
one . town w/ off street par~Bedroom Apts. Utilities ing. Fully toadect w/
.
·
.,
Included. Based on 30o/o starnless
ste011
app 1J·,
ol adjuSted income. Call ances including trash
304·682-3121 .
available compactor, OW. custom
for Senior and Orsabled built cabrnets, WID also
peopl&amp;.
Included.
Lrmited to 1 person per
apt. $700/rent (utilities in·
eluded). Call after 5prn.
6,4;,;;
127
4 0;,
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD· ~7 ,;;
·4
;,;4,;;·

f. ree

Rent

Speciallll

2&amp;3BR and up, Central
Air, WID hookup, ten8nt
pays electric. EHO Etrn

\/Jew

Apts.
(~)8B2 ·3017
Twin Rivers Tower is ac-

..ca!ions
· · 1or
app I1
· waiting I'JSl ·-rur HUD su b ·
aklized, 1·BR apartment
cepting

for the elderly/disabled,
Call675·6679
•-uttful Apts. at Jack·
rion e.tatn. 52 WestIRood Dr., from $365 to
Ssso. .
740.446·2568.
Eq~l Housing Opportu·
nity. This institution is an
Equal Opponunity Pro·vider and Employer.
Gracloua Living 1 and 2

d ...o.

Government &amp; Fo ..-.,..

2 br. mobile home in
Job1
Racine, $325 per mo.•
$325 dep.,
yrs. lease,
FEDERAL
$60 non·reluf!dable wa ·
POSTAL JOBS
ter dep., no. pets, no calls
$17.89-$2,8.27/HA.,
now
after
9pm.

No experience
required'
No Credit Card
Sales!
No Gollectir:lns'
Here's what vou

®:

hiring.
For
application
and tree government JOb
•2-BR--1-ba-lh-on
--la-rm• info, call Amencan As·
ot
Labor
$500 per month includes SQC.

· Raise funds and
renew
memberships for
· the National Rifle
Association

(740)992·5097

utilities. 540·752·0826 ·or 1·9i3·599·8226,
emp. serv
540·729· 1331

24/hrs

Federal Funds just re· ·=~....,..,=~~~
• d owners. POST OFFICE NOW
leased lor •l,.Qn
No closing cost and HIRING avg. , Pay '$20/hr
ZERO DOWNI Will do or
$57Ktyr.·
includes
land
improvements. Fed.Ben, QT. Place by
o-nkruplcy , ""d Cred·,,
ff '
0t1
o 0(1
adSource. not a rliated
OK . 2. 3. 4 and 5 bed· with USPS who hires .
rooms
available . 1·866·403·2582

1need to lind (2} people
nt!edmg a lull Hfl'le job.
You "eed to be honest. a
person ot mtegnty, ...,Jth
good people sk1lls. You
also need to be able to
follow rnstructKJns and
have an abi1ity to listen
and lead people in the
right dtrect!Qn I need
people who want to work
"' and will show up for
work. If you are a recent
college grad and cartnoj
frnc:l employment and feel
that you are quatlried,
give us a chance until a
JOb in yOUI e&lt;uee1path
becDfnes available. Call
Pat tiJII. f\leW Car Man·
·agar tor an interv1ew at

$327
lo
740·992-5064.

$592. room
Mobile
Equal Camp
Housing Opportunity.
304-895-3129

Home "(7;;,40:;!J9;9;,;2;;;
·5;;;:6;,:;39;,,,;,
Conley =
Sal..
2 20ot;i l6x80 Clayton 3

Happy Ad

bed 2 bath, 200 16x70

_ _ _.:..:._:..__ _ _ · Fleetwood 2 bed 1 bath,

1999 Fortune 3 bed 2
bath. We deliver block
level and anchor. We
can do the footers also.
Daytime
740·388·0000
or 740-388-85 t 3 Eve-

nlrgs , 740-388-8017

or

740·245·9213.

2004 Ooubtewide in new
condition . 4 bedroom, 2
bath. all appliances in·
eluded, $37,000 Jocilted
at 176 Zuspari Lane Ma·
son City 304·675·211 7'
Brand new 3bed 2bath
on + -half acre in Pt.
Pleasant. OWNER FI-

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room Addition• &amp;
RemOdellog

· New Gai'egu_
• Ekt~trlcal &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; GuttarW

·Vinyl Siding &amp; Pi~lnllng
·Patio and Porch Deckt
W¥036725

446·'96&amp;0.

V.C. YOUNG Ill

91 14x70 mobile home, 3
Or., 2 bath, ready to be
moved,
$10,500,
(740)591-8936

Ohm

Pom~:roy

25 Years Local E-.xpC'fl{)rKI'

.. ... .

Weekly Pay and
Bonus Incentives•
Full and
Part-lime
PositiOns!
Professional
work ·

Environment.'
Medical. Dental.
EAP. 401KI
On-site Doctor/

ROBER HYSEllS

Owner

Operator Oppor-

tumtres

R&amp;J · Trucking

·

Marietta. Ot'tiQ has op·
pon unities avarlable for
Owner Operators within
the re gion. We teature
weekly settlements, in ·
eluding fuel surcharge &amp;
trailer rental Operators
houtd have newer equipment. For more inlorma·
lion · contact Dennis at

lis. OH

el&lt;perience. Submrt re·
AVON! All Areas\
To sume &amp; salary requ1re·
Buy
or Sell Shirley ments to: GallipoliS C.M..
Gorsuch Mgt . PO. Box
Spears 304·6751429
t90. Lancaster OH
COmmercial Cleaners · 43130·0190 01 email to:

BADGE

'

----~---

· Public Notice ,
Public Notl~e
The Meigs County SubCommittee. for Round
23 SCIPILTP Prolects
will meet Thursday October 23, 2008 at 9:00
A.M. at the Meigs
County Commissioners Office In the Counhouae on Second
Street In Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Commlftee Is
composed of one repreaentetlve appointed
by the villages of the
cOunty, one representative appointed by the
township trustees, one ·
aprepreaentatlve
pointed by the county
commlsalonera, one
representative

ap-.

pointed by the counly .
engineer end a fifth
member oolected by
the lour appointed repreeentatlvea. Th• purpoee olthle meeting 11
lo select the flfth member and to assfgn local
priority
to
Meigs
County IPPifcallons
submitted lor Round 23
SCIPILTP.
(10) 9

/

Manlyn Fn . Roadside
Portland, Ohjo

4577t
740-949-2217

sbl.5'JI:1 o·
,tb 1-0Jx30'

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

e•p.

neces·

sa:,y at Rt. 2 Bypnss Pt
PI at Floodwall between
:SOpm-4pm
1

Fri·Sat- Sun
Oct 10, 11 , 12

French ·soo
Flea Market
Gallia County Fairgrounds

Dealers Welcome

Kipling Shoe Co.

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

..Eosl
"'AQJ 32
• J as 3
•

Johnson's Tree
Service
Complete Tree Care
lll'!IIU&lt;ed · Fr"

Eltl",.1••

1110-441·93.11

?!l

~·"'· ·~,...,.,.0.
s.,,.,,.
em,..,

Soulh
• 98 5
•AK109f
• J 4
o!o A J 3

Slop &amp; Compare

Dealer: East
Vulnerable: East-West

E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com.
www.auctionzip.com
#5548

Special tables of
$5 &amp; 10
Name brand shoesJor the
entire family.New selections added
weekly

~

YDIJ LOST

Tt4E eLeGTION

-~/

FOil

(;0LONY Pfles II&gt; E.NT 7

~

()Points)

FOil Tt'IE
.1DJ.

BARNEY

"al'dwood Clblnury And Furnilure

YORE .,lUGHAID
VOLUNTEERED
TO GO GIT MY .

W'W"W..thnbercree1u:ablnlftrJ'.com

OOPS!!

HE'S STARliN' COLLECTIN'
STAMPS !!

I MEANT

Tb WARN
MAIL !! _ _.-'( YA, ELVINEY !!

RV\

(740) 992-5344
Mtm-Fri .
· 8:1JU am - 4JO pm
Sai . 8:00 um - I 2
Wt appreciate your
busi11l!.~.\'

II \\1 '
((1\i(Hill
( 0:\" Jl(l'( I Hl'i
Concrete Removal

~...,,..,=~r-=-r:-~

THE
Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe .

LOSER

~-

'fOU; ~W, BRUTUS, WE.'\Jf.
AAb .OUR 600t&gt; Tl to\E~
IKtt:0\.{;*1 Til£ '((A~ ...

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

~

....

'

.

.

.
1&gt;.1'11&gt; wt'IIE. ~&lt;M&gt; CAJR.
"'!( ""BUTI'OR
Tllt\t5 ...
NOW, 1 C."'''i'T IIU.I&gt;-LL WI-\IC.I-\
W~~ WI-\IC.I-\!
.

m

~1-\tli.FEOI=~~~f

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Estimates

TREE WORK
Topll&lt;'d, Takr Uown
&amp; Removal
AITordahtc,
Rra,onablc Pri"'
740-444-5152
or lean ntl'ssa e

""

Pass.'

Pas s

Pass

DOWN
1 Smoke
outlet
2 Juattouch
3 Cooking
·apice
4 Oattlch kin
5 Boxer's
move
6 Parlo
..aoon
7 Graoo
8 ¥ocal group
9 Flocal ·
period
10 A Caner
11 Leso
obvlouo .
12 Skin llflglh
17 - a deell
20 At the table
21 Market
aegmonro
22 Minh
23 Kenya's

loc.

24 Auahoo off 44 Gusto
25 Mo. Paquin 47 Statuesque.
of fUm
48 Holiday
28 "Fioh
tlmeo
Magic"
49 Sz. option
artlsl
51 Buolness
29 Bribes
abbr.
31 Waterloo
52 Whiz Ieeder,
locale
54 Machi"e
tooth
32 Sandra
Day33 Recipe
meas.

31 Woody ex
40 Declare
41 Owner's
proof
42 Dog's
ancestor
43 Orchestra
member

the ·values to bid, ·but no clear-cuf bid
avlilable. 'vou hope partner can do
somettllng Intelligent.
·
You can also make a responsive double
after your partner overcalls and respon·
dar raises oPener's suit - as in tapay's

slrenglh, should not b!~ three. spades. .
where he would go doWn two, losing two
heaits, a heart ruff, .on&amp; diamond and
!Wo dubs.)
Against three clubs, West leads lhe
spade ·lour. The defenders take two
trid&lt;s in the suit, then shlfl to a trump.
But there Is llttle 1o the play. Declarer
gives up a diamond trick, wins the nex1
· trump lead, takes a diamond ruff In his
hand, cashes the heart ace, rufts a heart
on lhe board. draws lha lost lrump. an&lt;l

Seamless Gutters

1Rc&gt;ofiin'9· Siding, G rtters
740-653·9657

i

Crmrmi'IHIII &amp; Rt•.&gt;idnuiCJf

Vinyl

Siding/Replm.:ement
Windows/Remodeli ng

Bonded &amp; Insured
740-99l- t493 Ollke
740-416-8339 Cell

Free Estimated
Pomeroy. Ohio

Toaa:y's clue: Wequals F

"T

FKB .RKP

TCRZK

ATE

BRNP MTHKENK

RK" T WRWNKKE-SK"TH-DCG

UDS , TEG

BRCC

HKATRE

WRWNKKE·SKTH;OCG

T

UOS HNRC

NPKS GRKI"

G

T~:i~:~' . S@"\\(\\1\- ""Btrs~~
.....,.,;,:--__;,....,: Edllo&lt;l by CLAY R.

AstroGraph
'l&gt;ur&lt;llrthofooi:

SCORPIO (Oct. 2(-Nov. 22) - 'lbur sixth

St;;mley TreeTrimming .
&amp; Removal

SIR, I KNOW El{ACTLV
WIIAT OUR, HOMEWORK
IS FOR TOMORROW ..

MARCIE, DO 't'OII IIAI/E AROUGH
OR e\JEN VAGUE IDEA
IIOW AN'!0'(1N6 VOU ARE ?

*Pron1pt and Quality

sense will beo fully operational, so If you
get any hunches·or instinCts about so'tne·
tl'llng, fOllow through. More than one
mighl prove to be rewarding.
· SAGITIAAIUS· (Nov. 23·0ec. 21} There could be a quiet Ioree stirring wjttl·
in you, whictl more tn.an one p&amp;fSOn will

· recognize. The great drive vou now pos·
sess will al!tr1 otllers not to take you light·
ly.

Work

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Should seed morley be required In order
to primt the pump, review all pertinent

*RL'asonable Rmes
*In sure-d
*Expericntl!d

Information first and then take ltle n9CiiS·
sary steps to oet things moving again.

Rtference&lt; Available'
Caii .IJary Stanley @

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-FSil. 19) - Having
harmonious associates will enhance
your posst,ilities for success. If yOu have

740-&gt;91-81l44
Please leave messa e

a cl'lofce. ·b&amp; sure 1o select

PISCES (Feb. 2()oMa&gt;Oh 20) - No ooe
your inlentions 10
yourself. 'rou're smart enough to know
has to tell you to keep

• I THOUGHT HE W~S

RICK PRICE

DEATHLY IUdCI iD

New Homes, Room Additions, Remodeling,

OF CI10WS.

• MPRCRM

HONP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' You can'l have ahealthy ecooomy, you can't have
a healthy anything 1n a degraded environment" • Peter Coyote

~OII.A/i

WOlD
GAMI :

A ReartOnge lontts· of lho
V lour ocramblad _ , below to form lour almple wordl.

ADSROL

lhel ~IUrtly llildn011bou1 SOillOihil9
can throw all'Klr'My wrench into the mix.

Construction

MOSTLY I~
THAT SNAI&lt;E-.
VENOM COM~.

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,

GARAELD

Local Contractor

740·367-0544

•

•

•

•

Tou9hy-Order - Viola , Ponder - DON'T HAVE
Llb_iuk. most people go Jhrougb life not know,ing what they
. \Iaiii, but feeling sure 1bey DOifT HAVE it
.

ARLO&amp;JANIS

.

-

tteult (ltOple or s1tu1tionl, You will un
this knowt&amp;dge well 1nd end up 'lilth 1

Additions • Garage~ • Vinyl
und Wood.Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's. Porches and Decks

smile on your fie..
VIRGO (""g. 23·Sepl. 22) - ~ltho&lt;ign
you mlgtll not get 0&lt;11 of 'lhe j1arting
blocks too qui&lt;*:ly, Dr'la. you do. you'll
make up tor lost tlrM and pick up
momei-mJm u you 8dvanot toward the

GRIZZWELLS
~T 6ET ENc:Utill
~ 1\1~ l'o:x:IKS

I

Cf FAMoUS
~

finish lint.

~ &amp;ol.l-'1 I., SOUP TO NUTZ
1
"'

1\-11~1&lt;.. '10\J

HA.\L~D

-rHAi
~~

:

Complole. the dwttle o~.-r
"' h11ing in the
)'OU dMiop from atep No. 3 below.•

8

. • · SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 10/K/08

23·Aug. 22) - \bu know 1&gt;61·
ter than most that ~macy and tad are
lhetoob of choice when dealinG""" dn-

• Room

.

:

I' 12
··~E~TTERS I ,. I I I I. I

ooutd come out of them.

{Ju~

-g
_.
:
I' r .t r r

,1/bak&gt;f-•

8 PR~b'::esLETTERS IN

GEMINI (May 21-.June 20) -'!bur iudg·

.., a&lt;l'iontago ~ -

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

Advertise ·
in this space for
$64 per month

s

•

you. Be sure to handle this know!·
edge wi1tl great care , so you don't lose

For Remodeling and New House Huildlng

25+ years exprrience Pret Estimate~·

I I I I 1• I
M0 N l 0 D

your ultimate advantage. If these
changes are affecting ~ur work or
career, some tnteresting occumtnces

LEO

Cell : 740-41~-18:14

A pun 10 make you groan: "A
l......oll..-"--"--.t.-J .,
prol'l$Sor di3cowred IIIII her ..
...-------~...., . theory ofeardlquakes was ou : ·

~wtth

Free Estimates

74G-367-0536

740-985-4141

...

mem lS especlalty good a1 this time, so
don't entertain' any seH-doubts. F1rs1.
study what is at hand and then mO\ie for·
ward with a plan o4 actiOn.
CANCER (•.kme 2t.July 22) - A CO·
worker who hs you might be privy to
some wluable InformatiOn and share it

Remodeling, Room
Additions

/

9

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - The stir·
Mngs taking place around you wiU work to

'HE'S STILL

47cW Riebel Roatl .l.on~ Bonom. OH

1! I I

tion of how much your views of the wortd
haw changed mtgnt hit you at thiS time.
What you 00 with your new insights Is u'p
to you, bu1 continue to keep yoor actions
positive.

liKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

HYUT 0

ARIES (Ma&gt;Oh 21·April 19)- A roaliza·

(·

Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs. Siding, Decks,
lluthnK&gt;m
Lkcn&gt;&lt;d &amp; Insured

Electric, Plumbing,
Drywafl, ,

cottorta who

share yOur hopes and objective!:

PSI CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing·
·Decks
• Garages
·Pale Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

Eacn letter rn t~c1pher star\dstor aflOther

process.

·I

Gu1tcrs
Maintenance l'lus

by Luis Campos
Celetxt,- Cipher cryc!Dgrams aretreeted lfom quotauon~ by famous :li!OOi@ pas! and :r',w~1

a

Insured &amp; Bonded

Quality Seamless

CELEBRITY CIPHER

spades and two diamonds.,
Wrthout this versioo ol the responsi11e
double, how would you . get to tllree
clubs?

Friday, Oct. to, 2008
By Bernie. Beet. Osol
The year ahead couk:l be bne of breaking
down what is no longer working and .
reptacing things wi1h
new structure.
Although you m·lght seek change, lessons teamed the hard way&amp;houfd guide
your choices ai'ICI d&amp;clsions.
'IBR~ (Sept 23-0cl. 23) - ll&lt;&gt;n1 be
reluctant to pitel'l in and tlefp out with a
situation another is struggling to handle.
Nol only will you do a good job; you'll end
up protecting your interests in the

. Saloa

FIND .
BARGAINS
IN THE
CLASSIFIED$

Dbl.
Pass

concedes a diamond. He loses two

28 Years Experience

WVD42182 Free

2•

lplll1

55 Temporary
whHia
56 Flipped
over
57 Runll tight
56 Hlir gooo

Ceal. This responsive double is more
clear-cut. You (Nor1h) promise length in
the tWo untid suits.
South rebids three dubs for want of anything better to do.·(Note that East, with.
no extra spade length or high-card

and

winlcrizc bl)Uts and

·

2•
:J 4

46 Thlng
50 Da a favor
53 Planlot'o

"f'HAVEf 10-'1 · makes a lokeoul double. and .the
;;;::;:a.____...;;~;.:;...;.;...;..J responder raises, a double by you shows

repair.
Sl'r~·icc

Easi

I Not run
from
5 Landing
pier
'
1D Picture
holders
12 Grow up
13 Waldkl wear
t4 Speln and
Portugal
15 Hairy humanoid
.t&amp; Proposal
18 Gil lag wml
1"9 Me1hDke
Iabrie
~3 Sol
26 car,p and
Joeon
27, Genres·
30 Having
bounds
32 ·spotted cat
34 Monet contemporary
35 Twiners
36 Cut, as logs
37 Stooge wRh
bangs
38 Telepalhy
39 In opposltion to
42 Grievous ·
lrouble ·
45 Mover's
vehicle

I

Charles Darwin wrote, "It is not the
strongest of the species that surviv35,
nor the most Intelligent. but the one most
responsive to change."
However, you could argue that being
responsive to change makes you not
only a surviVor, but also a strong and
intelligent person.
Yesterday we started to look· at the
responsive double. If the player on your
leh opens with one of a sun, your partn.er

wASN'T
IJNfUITtl&gt;

.'.

New &amp; Us~·d Tii·c!-1.

We

North

after an overcall

YEAt'l,

·.;-

440R7 Wlt&gt;l&gt;lc Rd .
l'omcroy, Oil

ali,gnme'nts, light '
mcchan il· work .
t:omplctc scrvkc oil
dan gl'~. small cng.ine

Weal

A'responsive double .

L &amp; L Tire Harn

computer wheel

South

Opening lead: ·• 4.

I Church D/UOI/111

V.il'' huy u!-oed tires.

K 8

"'Q 2

Auctiooeer:
BiiiV R. Goble Jr.
140-416-1164

Call:

Gallipolis Location

Across from the City Park
Hours M-F 10-6, Sati0-5
Closed Sunday

tA6 532
o!oK1 0974

AUCTIONS/ ANTIQUES

0PIR9·6M·F
9-12SII.

10 7

• 2

1114/1 rna . pd

740-992·5612.

Holspol. Harrispn.
Monday !
h F.
5p
Concrete
lhroug
nday 9a·. .
81
26
6
740·4 4 ·4 4 ext.
or
M
· b. k
e·mai t 1esuma to · rharri· Ail types asonry, nc ·
son@rescare.com
block, stone , ~ree Esti·
mate.
· 740·&lt;16-7305 .
Rostouronb
304·593·642 1
,..---;::;;;-;;;;,..---,
.
Gnllade lph l~ now tak1ng
applications lor Drovers.
Gnll, Prep. counter, &amp;
Wartresses,

Kipling Shoe Co.
3.00 2nd Ave.

l0·09.fll

•

740-992-1m

Hours

StIll. 124 Plm•rav, 81

know ledge ol desktop
pubhsh1ng are sought
·The positron Is full time.
40 hours a week. with
benefits. tnwested parties c8n Selld resume!!- IO
Kevin Kelly, Ma!)aging ·
Editor, Ohio Valley Publishing Co., 825 Third
Aile ., Gallipolis, Oh10
4563~ or kkelly@mydailytribune.com . No

nlty provisions, and the Call
requirement lor a pay- 304·002·2645
"IBnt b on d an d' performance bond for
100% ~ of the contract
prlca. No bidder may
withdraw his bid within •
thlny (30) days after
the actual date of the
opening thereof. The
Meigs County Commlssloners reserve tho
right to rejeclany or all
bids.
Jim Sheets, President
Meigs County Commisoloners
(9) 30, (10) 6, 9

Racine, Ohio

ROBERT
BISSELl
OOISTIUCDON

'"

Immediate Openings
kdasbury@e,;lbaJqmml.com
Appalachian Tire Prod·
Buffalo. Full-time, Must ....,,,,.E;O;;E; , , , . ucts, Inc
is currently
have driver'!&gt; tie. &amp; pass =
Meclcal
se8king a salesperson
bac~ground
ch~ck. ;;;;;=""''"'-"""~== for our Point Pleasant.
304-768·6309
EOE
Home Health Care of WV locallon. Experience
Southeast Ohio Inc , is is preferred. Job bene·
Direct care Staff In resl·
currently
hiring tmrne fils include 40t K, Health
dential yoL lh prOgram .
health a1des. Certified or Insurance . and Paid Va·
Must be 21 years of age.
Bonuses cation are also available.
Pay based on experi· experrence .
Available .
can Please apply in person .
Located @ . 426 Viand
eoca.
Call t866·3~· 1100 .
(740)379·9083
Mon·Fri
Street in downtQwn Point
ph1 ne calls please.
9am·3pm.
ReSCare Home Care • Pleasant
- -....- ......,.-- ·Provider
of
Support ..;;;;;;;;.;..~===~
SPrv1ce , Bus
.,....,...,.~---- Help Wanted- Now ac· Services 'to Individuals · 9000
PUBUC NOTICE
office opened and read ance
requlremanls, An E11cellent way to earn cepllng applications flam with MR/DO. Direct Care
0Jfeclor~
NOTICE: Ia hereby aloud for the following: various eqUal opportu· money. The New AVon . 9anl-noon. Mon. thru Staff
Contact Rhonda :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

given that on Saturday, Tuppers Plelna Pump
October 11 , 2008 at House Construction
tO:OO a.m., a pu bll c . Proloci.
.ale will'-- held at211 Specifications, and bid
uu
W
' Second
St., forms may be secured
Pomeroy, Ohio. The at th~ office of Meigs
Farmera Bank and Sev- County Comnilsslorl'
Courthouse,
lngo Company Is sell- era,
lng lor caah In hand or Pomoroy, Ohio 45769
certified chock the lol- Phone 740.992-2895. A
lowing collateral:
deposit of 0 dollars will
2007 Chevrolet Cobalt be required lor each
20
Vln set of plans and speci11G1AK15F477154433 llcatlono, check made
The Farmera Bank and payable to . The lull
Savings
C~mpany, amount will ba rePomaroy, Ohio, rit- turned within thirty (30)
aerveothe right to l&gt;ld days attar receipt of
at thluale, and to wnh- bid a.
draw the above colla!- Each bid must be acoral prior to sale .. companied by either a
Further, · The ·Farmers bid bond In an amount
Bank and Savings of 100"4 ·of the bid
company reaerve·a the amount with a surety
right to reject any or all. satlslaclary to the
bldnubmltted.
·
aforesaid
Meigs
Tho above described County Commluloncollateral will be oold era or by cenllled
... , Is-where Ia", with check , cashiers check ,
no expressed or lm· or letter of credit upon
plied warranty given.
a solvent bank In the
For tunher Information, amount of notleaothan
or lor an appointment 10% of the bid amount
to lnepect collateral, In favor Ql the afOreprior to aale date con· said Metga County
tiiCI Cyndle or Ken at Comml1alonera. Bid
· 740-992-2136. ·
Bonds shall be accom(10) a, B, 10
ponied by· Proof of Authority altho official or
agent signing
the
Public Notice
band.
Bids ehall be eealed
NoTICE TO CONTRAC- and marked 11 Bid lor
TORS
· Tuppers Plalno Pump
Se1led 'propoeala for Houee and mailed or
tho Tuppero Plaine delivered to:
Pump House Construe- Melgo County Commlstlon Project, Meigs alonars
Counfy Ohio A• per Counhouae
lpeclllcatlona In bid Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
pocket Will be received Attention of bidders Ia
by the Milgl County caiiOd to all of the reE:ommlaai01111rs at their qulrements conlalned
Qlllco at the Coun- I~ this bid packet, per~ouse, Pomeroy, Ohio tlcularly to the Federal
45761 until 1!00 p.m ., Labar St~ndardo ProviOctober 23, 2008 and slana and Ojlvla-Bacon
then at 1:15 p.m. at Nkl Wagoa, various lnsur-

29670 Bashan Road

H,

CNA. CHHA, PCA may &lt;;:ommun1ty
Services.'
apply at 14BOn Jackson P.O, Bm: 004, Jackson.
Pike, GB.flipolis , Ohro or OH 45640 or e·mai! to
Call TOOAYI
phone 740·44 t -1 393 for beyeeserv@yahoo.com.
Interview.
" more info. Competi tive Deadline for applicants:
TOMORROW/!
wages,
mileage reim· 10!15/0a. Equal OpportuWork NEXT WEEKI/I
·bursement and benelils nity Employer.
including l1ealth insw·
Xl&gt;w:1llllltuar.tOLin_ ance &amp; much more:
Management /
waiting for you !II
Suporviaory ...;;;;;;
Super· 8 now hiring lor ==.;;;~~~
part time employment
f.[Q,Qerty Managemenl
1-800~MC-PAYU
Qualified persOns must P.T. Community Man·
Ext. 1901
http:l~s.lnfoclslon . com
be 2~ years ot age. pos· ager need~d !or lOcal
sess ·strong customer apartment community lo--"'!"'~-~-- seNice skills and be able cated rn Gallipolis. Ollio.
to work lloating shifts Ideal candidate will have
Sportswriter
The O,hio Valley Publish-· ~ply . jn person, NO pr~vlous ex:p~r~nce' in.
PHONE CALL.
. properly management a!
ing Co. is seeking mali·
a Aural Development
vated, people-oriented
indivictual ti till a vacancy A LOC AL MANUFAC· property, e~&lt;ce llent com·
TUREA is taking applica · municar1on and organizain the news dept. as a
tions lor EXPERIENCED tional skills and be de·
Sportswriter. The sucMig Welders. Please ap· pendable. Health insur· .•.
cessful candidate will
cover high school athlet- ply in person at 2150 ance &amp; 401k twailable.
Eastem Avenue, Gat11po· Salary dependent upon
ics in the area lot the

NANCE
'AVAILABLE
(740) 446-3570

Hill's Self
Storage

992-6215

IJ1t.M.;

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

·weekly Pay ar;1d
Bonus Incentives!

daily edition of the news·
paper. as well as ctssist
with the production of
sports pages. Excellent
writing and English skills,
photography skill$ and

The Daily Sentinel • .Page 85 _

Phillip
Alder

s

Bedroom house able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms .
Apts. In Middleport, froffi At* 2 North. Two Bed- &lt;wa•lable
call

www.mydailysentinel.com

BRIDGE

•74_0...:4_4_6-_3_4
38 _ _ _ _ ~,;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;,.;,,.,,.,~
600·462·9365
Help Wanted. General
2 bedroom mobile home
Servrce Manager &amp; Serv·
S. Gallia Scllool D1shict.
Call TODAY!
ice. Technician positions
250 Sign-on Bonus!
Must ha11e references.
ava1lable. Health care &amp;
Interview
S375
plus
deposit.
RetJrerllen\
plans avail·
Voted TOP FIVE Bes'l
TOMORROW//
2 BR house rn Gallipolis,7.4,.;;0;,;·2:.;5,;;6·.,:1,:6ll:.;6~--~ Pieces to Work In Ohio!
able. Please send reWID conn.
S4t 5/mo •
Work NEXT
sume
to
ComeSHWhy/
Mobile home for rent 2
WEEKI//
$150/dep You pay all
b
LLC@C AREQ.COM
or
utilities. No sectiOn 6 or BA
1
ath;
new
ia~ to 740-446-9104
No Sales! No
lurnace/ca: new appli·
HUO.
Call
Wayne ances; neY&lt;: bath like new
Collections! Recruit
WANTED : Par1·1ime po·
1-888-IMC-PAYU,
404-456-3602
volunteers tor non· profit
sition available to assist
home, no pets. 3675 Bu·
. Ext. 23.11
organtzaUons that help
lndiiJiduals with mental
2br .on lhe R••er
·n
Ma· ·Iaviiie Pike 740-446-4234
1
,.
Apply online:
save lives and prevent
retardalion at a group
son. HUD Approved Rei· or 740-208-78tl1
http://jobs.lnfodslon.com
home in Bidwell:
diseases such as Cancer,
erences 304-682-3512 or 3BR located- on BulaiJille
lung and heart disease I lb======dl 1) .35 hrs: 10:30a·7 30p
304-488-7946
~I ke .
$475/rent
Gel paid to make a
. Sun: 2·10p MITuiW:
3408 Mossman Ave. 3br, 740o367·7762
. Dellvery}VVarehouse per- 2) 27.5 hrs : 3:30· 11p Fri;
difference!
$400 month, $200 Dam· ----.,......,..-son r1eeded . lull time. irn- 9a-7p Sat: t-9p Sun;
0 eposrt· 3br, 2ba, Pt Pleasant
age
mediate
opening, ITltiSI Must have high school
FUll
and
Part·ttme
or area 304-273·6622 or
304.634 _5625
Positions
have good rf riving re· diploma/GED. vafid dri"·
304 674 6204
- .
304 ·567·2247
cord. Appi; ,Lirestyle Fur· ar's license and three
Day and Evening
;:,;;,;..;;.;;:=-~=-.;.;..;......;_~~~
New 2BR 2 bath your Mobile Home for Rent Pt.
ShiltS
niture 856 Third Ave. years good driving e&gt;:pe·
choice of renting com- Pleasant area HUD ac·
Gallipolis, 9:30-5:00 No rience.
Si8.40fhr
after
Professional Work
pletely fumished &amp; all cepted, Deposit reqL•ired
Environment!
Phone Calls
J
training~ E&gt;:cellent benefit
utilities paid or you pro- ;;C•:;;";,;3:;;04;;,-,;;67;,;5;,;-34
;;;;;23;___
Medical, Dental.
OhiQ
valley
Home package.
Pre-employEAP, 401K1
Health , Inc. hirin g Home ment ·Drug Tej&gt;ling' Send
viding furniture &amp; utilities. Scenic location, conven·
On·site Doctor
Heal'h
Aides
STNA •. resume·
lo:
Buckeye
NO LEASE 446-7029
ient 10 town and aflord-

Bedroom Apts.• at Village
Manor
and
Riverside Three

Happy Ad

Sign On
-Bonus!!

1·008·610·6953

Rentals .

;;,;,,,= ,;,;.;,;,;;,;_.,;,;,.____

ABLE! Townhouse apart· ""
Commercial
ments,
and/or
small
·
•··-·s
.
lor
rent.
Call
+1\N:M:r
2 bay service sa
1 !Jon
lor
appli·
·1111
7'"441
&lt;tV"
Jackson . Pike. Lease
cation &amp; information.
,
reqUJred. Call 446·3644
FREE RENT SPECIAL ~fo-rm_o_r_e:"in":'lo~:-'~~
Jpnjan Landing 2br. 3br Commerical
Space for
&amp; 4br Availabl~ No Pets , Rent, Main St. Pt. Pleas.
r~ant Responsible for $400/mo. 2000
sQifi
Rent
&amp;
Electric 703 .501. 4808
304·674·0023
or ;,;:;;:;,;;;;:.,;;;;;;:,.,,.,,.,,.,
304-6 10-0776
Housel For Rent

Thurectay, October 9, 2008
ALLEYOOP

Sal••

. Townhou..a

2 bedroom Apartment &amp;
i bedroom House on 5th
St 304-812-4350 ask lor
~;,
.
lBR APT. CIA. (740) RelerencestpepositiNo
441·0194
Pets 304·675·5162

;:.:;.::.:;:;:.__~--

Thursday, October 9, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

~ Re '1\:&gt;U laU&lt;iHCi
alt&gt;OT'!" LJ\\81' laND cF
·nms~- ~

I

�•'

.'
&lt;

•

_ Page ~6 • The Daily Sentinel

Encore
fromPageBl
..

The two teams will kickoff Friday at 7:30p.m.
Wahamaat
Wirt County

MASON -A surprisingly
~asy, 54-20 homecoming
victory over Class AA
Liberty Raleigh should go a
~ng way towards. preparing
lhe Wahama Wh1te Falcon
football eleven for a
demanding four game road
swinf; beginning with a date
at Wlrt County at 7:30 p.m.
Friday"
White . Falcons.
· The
advanced three positions '
from its IOth place ranking
to the number seven location
in the latest WVSSAC ratings ·after soundly defeating
the 18th ranked Raiders .
Next on the Bend Area
teams agenda will be the
first of four consecutive
away games at 3-3 Wirt

Thursday, October 9, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.eom

Cc&gt;•mty.
·Ihe Tigers are qurently
mired in a two game losing
skid with all three of Wirt
County's setbacks on the
year coming to a ranked
opponent. Foltowing a season opening 39-8 win over
Valley . Fayette the Tigers
dropped a 34-7 decision to
nuniber 8 St Marys.
Successive
wins
over
Gilmer County (28-14) and
Doddridge County (41-0)
preceded consecutive losses
m each of the past (wo
weeks
to
9th
rated
Parkersburg Catholic (39-0)
and a 56-20 thrashing at the
hands of 5th ranked
Poca,llontas County.
Jason Hickman is in his
second season at the helm of
the Tiger grid program with
senior quarterback Josh
Valentine the go-to guy for
Wirt County. Valentine is in
his founh year as the Tigers
starting. signal caller with
senior ",Tommy McCoy and
junior Levi Kerby pacing the
WCHS ground attack.
Senior Tyler Parker and
juniors Devin Dye and Zach

Chevuront are Valtntine 's over the Tigers last year. similar size and one that 15.1 points per g~e while
main targets in the Wirt Kickoff time at the Win Hannan has been very corn- giving ' up 29.I pomts per
County air attack .
County campus is scheduled petitive against over the outing.
·
.
,
years.
Gilmer County 1s commg
A huge offensive line Jor 7:30p.m.
The Titans won last year's off of its most disappointing
weighing 310,265,245,205
meeting 38-13, but Hannan loss of the season, falling to
Gilmer Coonty
and 200 will present some
won the matchup in 2006 Tygans Valley 12-6 in overdegree of difficulty for the
at Hannan
' time last Friday. While the
26-14. ,
White Falcons as a young
With the win two weeks Titans strUWed mij:ht,ly, on
Tiger line consisting of four
ASHTON - It will be a
juniors and a senior average clash of the TI,tans - and ago· the Wildcats are now the ground: amassmg only
Wildcat~ Friday night as averaging 14.8 points per 19 rushing yards in the loss,
245. pounds per man .
In last weeks win over Hannan tries to string ~arne, but the defensive unit GCHS quarterback Zach
Libeny Raleigh junior quar- together its first back-to- IS still surrendering 43.2 Burkhammer kept 'his team
terback William Zuspan hack victories in a lon.g time points per outing. Hannan's in the game with 205 ,yards
tossed three touchdown when Hannan banles Gilmer four losses have come through the air on 21-of-37
.
.
passes for the second time County Friday night on against Valley Wetzel (42-6), . passing.
this season while throwing homecoming
night in Van (62-24), Southern (57· . Burkhanuner, along w1th
0) and Eastern (49-8). quarterback Sam Dennison,
for 263 . yards in leading Ashton . ..
·
While Hannan isn't tech- Hannan's opiionents are a receivers Joel RobeltS and '
Wahama to its fifth straight
triumph . He now has . 764 nically comin~ off of a win, combined 8-24 so far t~is Daniel Dulude and running
. back Frank Hosey make up
yards with II touchdowns losing to l'omt Pleasant's season.
Gilmer
County
has
trav•
the main Titan offensive
junior
varsity
squad
last
and one interception on the
Saturday, the Wildcats will eled a similar road with a unit.
year.
Hannan will be riding the
Micaiah Branch improved be going for two straight in pair of wins over Doddridge
·his rushing total to 662 yards the official SSAC ratings as County (26-0) and Notre · back of rushers Robert
on the season after recording last weekend's game does Dame (32-28) and four loss- Wanh and Joe Kelly, both of
es . to Calhoun County (58· which eclipsed th~ 100-&gt;:ard
his third consecutive 100 not count in the final tally.
Hannan's (1-4) last official 6) South Harrison (49-7), mark m the WID agamst
yard outing with his 146
yard, three touchdown .per- game was a dominating 36-6 win County (28-14) and Burch. Patrick Flor11 . and
win over Burch, the team's . 'l)'garts Valley (12-6). Jacob Taylor also conformance.
Wahama leads the series biggest win in six years. Gilmer;s opponents are .a tributed in big ·ways in the
with Win County by an 11-5 Now the Wildcats will try to combined 16-19 so far th1s v1ctory that saw the Wildcats
amass 439 total yards of
margin with the White do it again against Gilmer year. · .
The Titans are averaging offense.
Falcons clainting a 36-7 win County (2-4), a school of

Senior Quarterly
inside today's Sentinel

•
..

"

I " ( I '\ I S • \ ul. ;;X . '\ o . h.)

•Goode wins

. Bv BRIAN J. REED

· TVC Championship.
SeePageBl

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY · - Meigs
County has received and
spent over $400,000 in
Homeland Security funds to
improve radio communications and upgrade equipfor
emergency
ment
responders.
.
Emergency Management
Agency Director Roben
Byer told county commissioners Wed'nesday that
most of the money made

To One 0/These Great Restauiauts

.•
P.-" ., •

1'-J ~.tjp.,
1

!/!~~~e llltli.

Name: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~---

10 ,....
11M. .... /14.• ~ ~

Mil tW tlfl!ti
!!!-....

0BITUARIFS

I

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• Daisy Taylor, 80 .

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INSIDE

Mail to: Free Lunch
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Jrd Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45631
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· . . .:'Qta'Ohs when'lJSing
title insurance agencies.
See Page A2
• Perrin accepted into
·program. See Page A2
• Local Briefs.
·
See Page A3
· • DAR members
discuss patriotism.
. See Page A3
~ Buzzard receives
· Marines promotion.
See Page A3
• Obama pledges
economic change
during Ohio rally.
See Page A3
· • A.Hunger For More.
See Page A7

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RomeeooMd Men,_ ra 11b DaiiJ
Pl'lencllr, rn•IIJ A.laloephon
Made frum ~·crulch Homemads Pits
Hml•emtule Sttup~·
DaUy Specials
Caterlllg AvaUab/e
Tlaanlu to
,.11 stonlers for
years o.f tJiuinm

11:00 AM · 3:30
I:01:111cd onl'hc Unlversit)· of

Ritl (;ronde's c:auupus in Ev11n
and Ellmbctlll&gt;avis Uniwrslt)
( '"nler 1m•ill'S ytl\1 to our
Sunduy bt'UII(h lmiM,
Mon·Thur~:

11:00 am·lO:OO.pm
l'ri.·Sa!.: II:00 xm· 10:,10 pon
: II :00 PIR·,:OO

'
Thank
You
to Our Many
Customers
10 Years in
Gallipolis ·

There "IS" Such A Thing As
A Free Lunch! ·
Enter Here For A
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$30 Gift ( ertificate
To One Of&lt;J'hese Great Restaurants
Name:: _________--,-_____________

$7.95 for 11dults and ¥~l' offer
distoUnted rates for children.

Phone#•________________________

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MaD to: Free Luncb
Gallipolis Dally Tribune •
Ga~IIJICIIb, ' OH

45631

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BSERGENTCMYDAILYSENTINEL..cOM

CHESTER - Ever wonder who your great-greatgreat grandfatber was . or
.when he was· born? If you
suspect he lived out his life
in this area bul can't prove it;·
the annual genealogy fair at
the Chester Courthouse may
help you solve that mystery.
The free genealogy fair,
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now in its sixth year, will
· ·oetena on Page A2
take place from 9 a.m. - 5
'!
.
p.m. tomorrow: The event is
co-spimsored by the ChesterShade Historical Association
and
Bedford/Lodi Historical
l_.... ~~Group.
li',SF.cnoNS- 16 PAGES
The event is an .opponuni1-Y
for researchers to ineet and
Annie's Mailbox
A2
gather information, some88 . times finding they're sl'l\ffing
Buckeye Edition
the same family tree
c8J.endars'
A2 around
which only facilitates the
Bs-6 sliaring (and spreading) of
Classifieds
genealogical information.
Comics
87
Once at the restored courthouse,
will find
Editorials
A4 a wide researchers
variety of matelials
faith • Val11es ' As-7 for review, including family
(listories·, photos, cemetery,
Movies.
census and death records
AS and other historical informaNASCAR
tion about not only Meigs
Obituaries
A3 County
but surrounding
'
B
Section
.
counties
Mason
and Jackson
. ~ports
County, W.Va . Due to
A2 'Mason
Weather
Courlty being wilh•
out
a
comJllunily
newspaper
e&gt; aoo8 Ohio VoDey PubU.hiDJI Co.
•
for a number of years , many
society iten\s 'such as mar·
riage liceno;es were reponed
in Meigs County newspapers &lt;md for that reason the

INDEX

II a.m. to I p.m.

. 8rin11 )'OUr fumil,l 11nd join us.

"'"" .mydail)st·ntind.t·um

available to the county has
'been used to improve communications among responder agencies like police and
fire depanments.
At · Thursday's regular
meeting of county commissioners, Byer said the,
Homel~nd Security funds
made available after Sept.
II , 200 I have paid for n
new interconnect system for
the EMA' s emergency operations cen1er in the county ·
annex, purchased new
radios and improved inter-

communication between radios is that ' they allow lhrough Homeland Security
depanments, and equipped responders from outside the · funding. Byer said.
every fire department in the county to communicate easTownships and villages
county \\lith at least one ily with our own," Byer told pay an annual $300 emer"
hand-held radio· allowing commissioners. "For exam- gency planning fee to EMA:
communications with other ple, if a hazardous materials and those funds , along with a
department. ,.
team from Columbus had to $18 ,000 appropriation froni
The Multi-Agency Radio respond to an emergenc.Y county commissioners each
Communications .Systein here , we could commum- year, help provide match
now in place provides a uni- cate with •them as soon as funds for the grants. No
form channel for communi- they got on their way."
administration fees are set
cations among agencies
In addition to improving aside, though, Commissioner
who once operated on their . radio
communications, Jim Sh&lt;!ets said.
own,,channels.
local fire departments have
"All money we receive
"The most important received · air. masks and goes · directly into the prO:.
thing about the MARCS · other upgraded equipment • grams," Sheets said.
·

No decision
in coal mine
appeal

.Genealogy fair
shin~s light on past

,1\·~

Mon.·· Sat

Sodexo Dining
. Services

Our brunch hours llrt

I· I&lt; I(),\\ . OCI OB ER 1o. :!OOH

COLUMBUS -. As of
yesterday afternoon no
decision on the issue of
standing in the appeal of a
coal mining permit issued to
Gatling, Ohio had been
reached, according to Linda
Osterman, spokesperson
with the Ohio Division of
Natural
Resource's
·Reclamation Commission
in Columbus which is considering the case.
· Tile commission met last
week and though Osteiman
said members · did some
work on the case, another
hearing was conducted in a
separate matter. Also, some
commission members were
out of town so no official
ruling was issued. Osterman
said it was possible the case
could come . up at the commission's meeting next
week, with a possible ruling
on Thursday or Friday.
The commission is considering the issue of standing in the appeal of the per- ·
mit which relates to whether
Brian J. RHdlphoto
a litigant is entitled to have
Dressed for ~Blackout Day," these Eastern High School seniors ani candidates for homecoming queen and king: a coun determine the merits
Tresa Swatzel and Morgan Burt: Travis Koenig, Anthony Putman, and Derek Griffin . Queen candidate Telsa Maynard
Pleas11 see Appeal, AJ
is not pictured.

BY BETH SERGENT

WEAmER

4.99
Luneh Buffet

We hll\'e ma11y Items to ch110-~c
fromlndudlug: made to order
tKnclcts, pastries. sRIIld bar,
hrtllkfiiSiollld lunch, desert.
Icc crer 111 bur, soup. piuu,
1111d much more.

Middleport' ~ Pomeroy, Ohio

BSERGENHI&gt;,IYOAILYSENTINELCOM

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BY BETH SERGENT

$30 Gift Certificate
. ·

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Printed on 100 %

Recycled Newsprint .

DoJDeeomi•tg candidates

A Free Lunch!
Enter Here For A

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historical society has these
aS Well as Mason County
cemetery records on file.
Also archived at the courthouse are .several weekly
editions from four newspapers in Meigs County wh1ch
each operated between
1880-1890. Available · to
researchers are four books of
obituaries, the oldest of
which dates back to 1850
with the bulk dating between
1880-1920. Books one-four
of these obituaries will also
be available for purchase.
In addition to access to
local researchers, computers and expanded genealogical resources, there will be
copying services and binding seniices available. Also
wanted at the fair ,are family
hi stories, old obituaries,
school and church ·pictures
and histories, old · Meigs
County maps, copies of war
,records of . M;eigs County
·military personl)el and old
Meigs County yearbooks.
Representatives from the
DAR and SAR will be present with information about
qualification for membership
and· to answer questions
about applying for membership. Genealogist and vendor
tables are $10 !hough again
the event is free.to the public .
·Contact Kaye Fick, 985-4115
or kayefick@windstream.net
for more infonnatit;~n. The
event is for both experienced
and beginning researchers .
Food and refreshments will
also be available.

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Brjan U. RMod!DIIIoto

Brenda Curfman, Abby Harris and Sean Riffle, representing Meigs County Mobilizing for
Change on Alcohol, join 'County Commissioners Jim Sheets and. Mick Davenport in declar;
ing "Red Ribbon Week' Oct. 23-31.
·
·

Commissioners declare 'Red Ribbon Week'.
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Meigs
County
Commissioners proclaimed Oct. 23-31 ''Red ·
Ribbon Week" at Thursday's regullll' meeting. The observance is organiied by Meigs
County Mobilizing for Change on Alcohol,
an initiative to decrease underage drinking.
Sean Riffle, Abby Harris and Brenda
Curfman met with comntissioners to discuss
activilies for October, with the theme, "Vote
Yes for a Drug-Free Future." Students in all
three school districts will have .the opportunity to particirate in various activities,
including schoo assemblies, theme days 1111d
art contests. Rei! ribbons will be distributed
to the staff, students and community'mem·
bers in Ociober to show suppo{t of effons.

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During their regular business meeting.
·
commissioners: ._
• Re-appointed Fred "Fritz" Goebel to the
Meigs . Metropolitan Housing Authority
.
through Oct. I, 2010.
• Approved the release and satisfaction of
mongage for Carl H. and Rebecca . E.
Wilscin through the Community Housmg
Improvement Program, in the amount of
$7,934.
• Approved payment of bills in the
amount of $298.007.87 . ·
·
Commissioner
Mick
• Appoinled
Davenport to the Issue Two committee, representing the Board of County Commissioners.
• Approved appropriations adjustments as
requested by the county engmeer.
Present were Commissioners Davenport
and Jim Sheets and 'Clerk Gloria Kloes .
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