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                  <text>Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Page 06 • The Sunday Times- Sentinel

Sunday. October 12, 2008

.

· Breastfeeding
Awareness Month
activities, As

Hemsley sign
dedicated, As

•
~

Printed Oft • • 'ii;
ll.eydnl Newsptiul ~·

··• Burton wins at
Lowe's to move up in
standings. See Page Bl

BY KEviN KELLY
KKEUYOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis Wai-Mart shoppers were at first surprised
and then excited on
Sunday to find a national
political figure in their
midst who was , just as they
· were, picking up a few
things she needed.
.Accompanied by her
youngest son Trig, security,
staffers and a small pool of
news media, Republican
vice presidential candidate
Sarah Palin stepped off the
"Straight Talk Express" bus
to enter the store around
I :30 p.m., where she purchased a bag of Parents·
Choice brand disposable
~In K8ttylph0t0
·
Holding her youngest son Trig and flanked by jlecurily .personnel, Republican vice presi- diapers and a toy.
dential candidate Sarah Palin greeted shoppers at the Gallipolis Wal-Mart on Sunday. Palin · But it was also an opporwas enroute to events in Marietta and St. Clairsville. when she made
her stop in Gallipolis. tunity for the first-term
.

Enili Oldobor 31, ~

..

. DonWoodHvundal~com

810 E. STATE Sf., ATitENS~ OHIO
·Sales Hotline 888·288·9451

.

OBITUARIES

.

GMt:: '

Page AS
• Shannon Phipps,
37
.

.

.

'

Alaska governor to meet the
public at large and win
some votes for the ticket on
which she's running with
the GOP White Hol:se nominee. U.S . Sen . John
McCain of Arizona.
Palin did not have time to
answer questions from the
media following her tri.p
through southeastern Ohio ,
but left some folks exhilirated at meeting her.
" It was so ·exCiting," said
Pat · Miller of Patriot.
accompanied by her daugh- ·
ter Amber, a student at
South Gallia High School.
" She seemed to be very
sweet, and if she could stop
and take the time to buy
some diapers for her son, it
tells you that for her, family is first."

Pleue see Plllln. AS .

Southern fitness center ~pen to community
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYti'IILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE - The Souihem
Local School District Fitness
Center, located at Southern
High School, is now open
for not olll).' students and fac·
to .uttlize but members
.

.

•'

p.m.,
only; 3:45-6 p.m.,
Friday, for. athletes '

...

2008 GMC

Y•kons,
Y•kon
·\lt,,.... Hy.ltrlcla

· .· . ·

Financing For
72 Months

Sale Ends Odaber 31, 2008

0% APR lor 721110$. with appo..d ~-

MSIP

·• Five generations.
SeePageA3
· • Garden club program
on Qre$ting cards.
: See Page A3
• !;!forts on global
warming ctiilled by
ecqnomic woes. •
See Page Al

WEATHER

.coach's
-9 p.m .•s~~~~:;~~~~u~f~~:
•
for community members.
In relation to special
times set aside for community · members, Thursday
evenings a hired attendant
will be available ill the fitness center, but from 9-11
a.m., Monday-Friday, community members are asked
to sign in at the hi$h school
office before utilizing the
center. The fitness center is
closed on Saturday . and
Sunday and children under
-the age of 12 are not.jll!rrnit. Submitted pl)oto
ted at the center due to liability reasons. Students in Around 125 people turned out for the recent open house at the Southern Local School District Fitness Center. The censeventh-twelfth grades will te.r Is open Monday-Friday w~h special hours for community, staff and students. Ajlmission into the center and use oflhe
·
·
·
also utilize the facility dur- equipment is free.
ing physical education and
This fitness center was $50,000 . for the district
lifetime fitness courses.
· advantage of free health is located in the renovated
next year.
The fitness center is avail- screenings offered by a vari" industrial arts room near the made possible by · a
Nelsonville
The
-able at no cost and anyone ety of health'care providers. back of the high school and $50,000 grant from the Osteopathic
Heritage
y;ishing to utilize the facili- Many participants signed up contains industrial quality Nelsonville Osteopathic Foundation grant will
ty is encouraged to visit · for a pilot study to evaluate equipment much like in pro- Heritage Foundation. Thi s address health , nutrition and
during evening hours to · the effectiveness and avail- fessional rehabilitation and year's money will come in physical activity efforts in
complete the medicallliabil, ability of the center with a work-out centers. In addi- two phases, as approval of the schools a~ part of the
ity waiver and tour.
follow up screening being tion to new equipment the first implementation Foundation 's Healthy and
is
analyzed .
During its recent open held 3:30-6:30 p.m., March (including Cardiovascular), phase
Fit in Southeastern Ohio
Successful
implementation
the room has new windows
house, the fitness center had 26,2009 .
mean
another Initiative ,
could
125 ~isitors, who also took
The SLSD Fitness Center and floor matting .

.

'

.

Delalll on Page A5

r-

Racine receives
.g rant for well repairs

repair but will now return
that money.
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
Racine has five wells in
It SEI;TIONS- lll PAGES
RACINE - When light- its well field located in Star
ening recently hit two wells Mill Park within a Source
Annie's Mailbox
in the Racine well fields, the Water Protection Area.
At it's mo~t recent meetvillage was looking at
Calendars
repairs that were going to ing, Racine Council · set
$30,000 but luckily a trick-or-treat for 6:30-7:30
cost
Classifieds.
grant offset the l;&gt;ulk of that p.m ., Thursday, Oct . 30.
.
The start and ·end time is
Bs expense.
Comics
Racine recently received slightly different because of
a
EcJitorials ·
A4 grant for around $24,000 parent-teacher conferences
from the Ohio Public Works being held in the Southern
Obituaries
Commission to pay for the Local School District that
repairs , according to Clerk same night . .
B Section Treasurer Dave Spencer. . Council also adopted the
$ports
Spencer added that the vii- 2008
·Solid
Waste
As !age's insurance paid for Management Plan for the
Weather
around $6,000 of the cost district including Vinton,
® aoo8 Ohio Valley Publlsbinl Co. leaving Racine to pay . Meigs , Gallia and Jackson
around $300 for the repair. · Comities.
Before it knew about the
Racine. is al so consid~ro
grant, the vmage took out a ing buying new playP111H - Grent. AS
• loan to pay for the $30,000

INDEX

lL

,

EHS Homecoming Court

BY BETH SERGENT

•

•

'
•

Brion J . Reedlphoto

Eastern High School's Homecoming Court is pictured. Front: Flower Attendant Jenna
Chadwell and Crown Bearer Blake Newland , Allie Rawson , sophomore attendant, Queen
candidate Tresa Swatzel, Queen Morgan Burt, Queen Candidate Tesla Maynard, Junior
Attendant Chelsi Kearns and · Freshman Attendant Brenna Holter. Back, Escorts
Sophomore Jay .Warner, Seniors Anthony Putman, Derek Griffin and Travis Koenig, Junior
.
Jack Lynch and Freshman Jacob Parker.

�•

-

-.

I

•

PageA2

•

NATION· WoRLD
Mo~oy,
Holocaust
survivors
teD
love
story
~orts on global w:anning
·
·
·
chilled by econonnc woes
:rJte Daily Sentinel

'

Oetober 13, aoo8 ·

Bv MATT SEDENSKY

He·must recognize impact oflies

.

Other Democrats, howev"
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
er, see a cap-and-trade bill
NORTH
MIAMI
- and the government rev:BEACH , Fla. - In the
WASHINGTON - The enues it · would generate
beginning, there was a boy,
economic free fall gripping from selling permits - aS
a girl and an apple.
. 1:)\.
the nation may bring down an engine for economic
: He was a teenager 1n ..JHI
one of the main environ- growth, · Democratic presiconcentration ca!llp in Nazi- ·
mental objectives: capping dential nominee Barack
'controlled · Gerinany. She
the greenhouse gases that Obama supports auctioning
was a bit younger, living free
are blamed for global off all pennits, using the
in the village, her family
wanning.
money to help fund altem~­
posing as Christians .. lbeir
Democratic leaders in the tive energy.
·
·eyes met through a barbedHouse and the Senate, and
"If you see this as a job
' wire fence and she wondered
both p{1!sidential candidates, creation opportunity for the
:what she could do for this
continue to rank tackhng U.S. to develop the produ~
·handsome young man.
global warming as a chief that are then sold around the
Sbe was carrying apples.
goal next year. Bui the focus world. then you should be
and decided to throw one
on stabilizing the economy optimistic about what the
over the fence .·He ·caught 11
probably will make it more impact of passage woulli
·and ran away toward t_he
difficult to pass a Ia w to mean for the American
"barracks. And so it began.
reduce carbon dioxide and . economy,"
said
Rep.
As they tell it. they returned
other greenhouse gases. At. Edward Markey, D-Mass. :
·the following day and she
the very least,. it will push
Conservative Republicans
tossed an apple again. And
back when the reductions who were never fans of a
each day after that. for
would have to start.
law to curb greenhouse
months. the routine contin- Herman and Roma Rosenblat pose for a photo in their North Miami Beach, Fla:APphoto
As one Republican sena- gases have used the ewnomhome,
ued. She threw. he caught,
Sept. 25. as they talk about "Angel Girl."· the book written by Laurie Friedman, about the tor put it, the green bubble ic downturn as a rallyinjl cry.
and both scurried away.
has burst.
Oklahoma Se,n. James·
: They never knew one beginning of their relationship during the Holocaust.
''Clearly it is somewhere lnhofe, the senior R~blican
'another's name , never working papers. including
"I forgot," she says.
ment, the couple kept the down the totem pole given on the Senate EPvtronment
uttered a single word, so Rosenblat and his brothers.
''I forgot about her, too," story mostly to themseiVC$, the economic realities· we amL
Public
Works
fearful they'd be spotted by In the other, everyone else, he recalls.
telling only those. closest to are facing," said Tom Committee, in a blog entry
a guard. Until one day he including the boys' mother.
Rosenblat
.eventually tbem . Herman s11ys . it's Williams, a spokesman for . this month crfticized 152
came to the fence and told
Rosen blat went over to his moved to New York. He was because they met at a PQint in Duke Energy Corp., ~ elec- House members for releasing
her he wouldn't be ba&lt;;k.
mother. "I want to be with running a television repair' hislifehe'dratherforgc;t.But otricity . producer that has a set of principles to taclde
"I won't see you any- ,
k
h
h
fri d h ed eventually, he said, hefelt the supported federal llllll\dates global warming in the midst
more .'' she said. ·""Right, you," he ·cried. She spo e s op w en a en p on
d harshly to him and one of him one Sunday afternoon need to share it with others. on greenhouse gases. Quke of the economic tunnoil.
his brothers pulled him and said he ·wanted to fix
right. Don ·r. come aroun
b R
bl • is a ·member of the U.S.
N
"The curren.t economic.
anymore.'' he answered.
·
'th · 1 R
bl
· ow,has· t mspu-ed'
·e · osen
~~~s Climate Ac.tion Partnership, crisis only reinforces . the
. And so their brief and . away. His heart was broken . him up WI a grr. osen at story
a chil"I
was
destroyed," was unenthusiastic: He did- dren's book,. "Angel Girl." an assocjation of businesses public's wariness'about any
innocent tryst came to an
Rosenblat remembers. It n't like blind djltes, he told And eventuaiJy, -there are and nonprofit groups that climate bill that attempts to
.end. Or so they thought.
was the last time he would his friend. He didn't know plans to tlftn 1t into a film, has lobbied Congress to act. increase the co~ts of ene~
Just months ago, chances and jeopardizes jobs, ·
ever
see her.
what she would look like. "The Flower of the Fence."
Before he was shipped off
to
publish
for
legislation passing in the · Inhofe said.
Hennan
expects
...
·But finally, he n;lented.
to a ·death camp. before the
Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas,
next Congress and becomIt was in Schlieben,
It went well enough. ~he his memoirs next year.
girl with the apples
took
the argument. a step
Michael
Berenbaum,
a
·
ing
law
looked
promising.
Germany,
that
.
Rosenblat
was
Polish
and
easygomg.
appeared. .
Herman
further
when he said the
Holocaust
The
presidential
candidates
Rosenblat's life had already and the girl he later called Conversation flowed, and distinguished
his angel would meet. Roma eventually talk turned to scholar who has authored a support mandatory cuts and Boucher'Diilgell bill could
changed forever.
Radziki
worked on a nearby their wartime experiences. dozen books. has read a Democratic majority is lead the country "off the
His family had been
forced from their home Into . fann and the boy caught her Rosenblat recited the litany · Rosenblatt's memoiF and ready to act on the problem economic·cliff."
But even supporters of feda ghetto. His father fell ill eye. And bringing him food of camps he had been in, and sees no reason to question it. after years of the Bush
"I wasn't born then so I admimstration's resisting · eral regulation of greenhouse
with typhus. They smuggled - apples., mostly, but Radziki's ·ears perked up.
·
gases acknowledge . that
in a doctor, but there was lit- bread , too - became part of She had been in Schliehen, can't say I was an eyewit- federal controls.
Butthe·most popular rem- something has to give given
too, hiding from the Nazis. · ness. But it's credible,"
tle he could do to help. The her routine.
"Every day," sh!j says, .. She spoke of a boy she Berenbaum said. "Crazier edy for slowing global the state of the economy.
man ·knew what was comwarming, · a mechanism
Sen. John Warner, R-Va.,
"every
day I went."
·
would visit, of the apples things have h!!ppc;ned."
ing. He summoned his
know as cap-and-trade, a .lead sponsor of a Senate .
Rosenblat says he would she would bring, how he
·youngest son. "If you ever
Herman is now 79 • and could put further stress on a bill to curb greenhouse
secretly
eat the apples and was sent away.
get out of this w.ar,"
Roma is three years his teetering economy.
And then, the words that junior; they celebrated their · Under such a system, the gases that failed this year,
Rosenblat remembers him never mentioned a word of
saying, "don't carry a it to anyone else for fear would change their lives for- 50th anniversary this sumld
bl' h acknowledged that the
economy could delay when
grudge in your heart and word would spread and he'd ever: "Tbat was me," he said. mer..He often tells their story government wou esta IS
a
market
for
carbon
dioxide
be punished. or even killed. · Rosenblat knew he .could to Jewish and other groups. IJy giving or selling credits reductions in carbon dioxtolerate everybody."
ide would start. .
Two days later, the When Rosenblat learned he never le'ave th1s woman
H,· helieves· the lesson is to companies with operaWarner told the AP that
again. He proposed mar- the very one his father tions that emit greenhouse
father was dead. Herman would . be moved again any
bill ·should allow the
this time to Theresienstadt, riage that very night. She · imparted.
;was just 12.
gases. The companies can · president to decide.
: The family was moved in what is now the Czech thought he was crazy. Two
"Not to hate and to love then choose whether to
"We must continue to
·again. this time to a ghetto Republic - he told the girl months later she said yes.
- that's what I am lectur- invest in technologies to think and devise a riece of
· where he shared. a single he would not return.
· In 1958, they were married ing about," he said: "Not to reduce emissions to meet
room with his mother, three
Not long after, the at a synagogue in the Bronx hold a grudge and to toler- targets or instead buy cred- legislation that wil enable
brothers, uncle, aunt and four Russians rolled in on a tank - a world away from their ate everybody, to love .peo- its from other companies the president, of the United
;cous ins. He and his brothers and liberated Rosenblat's sorrows, more than a decade pie, to be tolerant of people, who have already met them. States to conttol timing ...
dependent on the president's
:got working papers anti he camp. The war was over. after they had thought they no matter who they are or
In an interview with The analysis for the ability of the
:got a factory job painting She went to nursing school . were separated forever.
(Associated Press, Rep. Rick
what they are."
:stretchers for.the Germans.
in Israel. He went to
·· •••
· The anger of the concen. '"Boucher, D-Va., said that in economy to assume the
: Eventually, the ghetto was London and learned to be an
It all seems too remarkable !ration camps, Horman says,. light of the economic down, fmancial burdens," he said.
dissolved. As the Poles were electrician.
to be believed. Rosenblat . has gone away. He forgave. tum, a bill that would give . The U.S. is not alone~ As
the economic crisis has
. ushered out; two lines
Their · dailr ritual faded insists it is all true.
And his life has been filled polluters permits free of spread to markets across the ·
:formed. In one, those with from their mmds.
Even after their engage- with love.
charge would be preferable. globe, work to curb green~
_ _ _ _.:___ _ _ _- - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - . - . : _ _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - "The first way we can house gases elsewhere has
control program costs is by stalled.
not charging industrial
Earlier this past week,
emitters," said Boucher, Rajendra Pachauri, head of
who released a first draft of the UN. climate panel, said
BAGHDAD (AP)
release the information.
Mosul, Duraid Mohiunmed ly our sons the Christians.;' a bill this past week with the discussions about · global
·Suicide car· bombers struck
The
southwestern Kashmoula, said Saturday
"We 'the sons of 'Iraq, chairman of the House warming solutions were "oil
:twice Sunday in the north- Baghdad neighborhood ·was that about 3,000 Christians should be of one heart·, one Energy and Commerce the back burner." Pachauri
:ern city of Mosul, killing at · the scene of bitter Sunni- have fled the city over the population and one home- Committee, Rep. John shared the2007 Nobel Peace
:least six people and wound- Shiite fighting until last year past week alone to escape land for the sake of the pros- Dingell, D-Mich, Giving Prize with former Vice
: ing dozens of others, U.S. when the U.S . . troop threats and attacks by Sunni perity of our country," he away right-to-pollute per- President AI Gore for their
and Iraqi officials said. A ''surge." the Sunni revolt extremists.
said from Rome.
mits was one of the options. worlc on climate chan~e.
. car bomb killed severy other against ai-Qaida and a
Interior
Ministry
cease-frre by anti-American spokesman Maj. Gen.
; people in Baghdad.
· Two Iraqi soldiers were cleric Muqtada al-Sadr Abdul Karim Khalaf said
:killed by snipers in separate .brought down violence to its Sunday that the government
was taking new measures to
:attacks Sunday in the capi- lowest level in four years.
"Several car bombings protect Mosul 's Christians,
:tal's Yarmouk district.
have occurred on this street mcluding more police in
·police said .
Also Sunday. the govern- but no measures were taken to · their neighborhoods and
. ment announced new secu- prevent these events," one more checkpoints and
;rity measures to protect Bayaa resident, who gave patrols near churches.
"Anyhow, there is a kind
•Chri&gt;tians in Mosul after a only his nickname Abu
:spate of attacks against Ibrahim. told Associated of exaggeration in describ ..
:1hem by Sunni religious Press Television News. ing the events in Mosul," ·
OPENHOUSE .
"Where is the government? Khalaf said. "We don't deny
:.extremists.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16,2008
The series of attacks Where are the security offi- that· hostile acts oc~urred,
shows the ong()ing security cials to prevent such attacks?" but we have the ability to
1:00PM•• 4:00PM.
Attacks have. been continu- stop such acts and the situa:challenges facing Iraq as the
•
oonlltv healllt tare wilhout distrimi..i!on.
:U .S. shifts responsibility to ing in Mosul, ·Iraq's third tion is under control." ·
"'
•ess
to
-«ordabll,lti,.
q-ry
Prov,...ng at.
""' 306 North
. Seco d ,..•·venue · ·
;this country's own soldiers largest city,despite months of · In an interview Sunday
.
U.S.
and
l~;~qi
security
operawith
AI-Sharqiya
television;
:and police following the
()blo
45760
.
Middleport,
·s harp decline .in violence tions agains!- at-Q81da and Iraqi Cardinal .Emmanuel
other Sunni ex'tre!llist groups. Ill Deily condemned the
740-992-0540
since last year.
The
governor
of
the
killings
that
have
occmred
. The ftrSt attack in Mosul
.
d and roud to invite you to join us as we
·occurred when a suicide car province that includes recently in Mosul "especialFamily Healthcare,Inc. IS plea~est loc~tion in Middleport ..
:bomber attacked ' a U.S.
celebrate our ne
we will have a very mformal
:patrol, the U.S . military said.
2008
6
:There were no American
On Thursday, o~~ober 1House from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00p.m.
:casualties, but tive lraqis were
"'meet and greet 0~~
d .ntroduction of our staff
·killed, including three young
There will be a facility tour an .~II be provided
.
r boys, the u.s. said. The attack .
.
ht
refresllments
WI
L•g
d Ed ards at 740-992-0540 or
:also killed the bomber.
RSVPtoWan a w
Please : · · · .1 t cheertigerrose@yahoo.com
; Another suicide car
Via e-ma• a
• bomber targeted Iraqi police
:in Mosul. 225 miles north·
.
•
:west of Baghdad. Twenty' '
"e~~,-'tt
:tive people were wounded,
the U.S. said.
1e41/ef6k~-/
: In Baghdad, a parked car
Reed
&amp;
Baur
Insurance
Agency
: bomb exploded in a commerfHIIJ' ee/tJMfiH
220 East Main Street
;cial street in the Bayaa disPomeroy, OH 45769
: trict, killing seven people and
www.reedbaur.com
·woumling nine others, police
'
jdillon@feedbaur.com
:said. They spoke on 'condi. tion of anonymity because
.they· were lirit-supposed
. to

·-·

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

•

Submitted photo

The File family recently celebrated the birth of a fifth generation. Pictured are Roscoe File, Cheryl Roush, Julie
Mayer, Matthev.&lt; Wandling and Landyn Wandling.

.Garden club program
on ~reeting cards
SYRACUSE - Wildwood Garden Club members created greeting cards at its recent meeting at Syracuse
Community Center.
·
President Shirley Hamm pr~sente~ the program on ~on­
,structing the greetmg cards usmg dned flowers and fohage
.collected from her garden.
·.
' Members selected from the various dried materials
Hamm offered, arranged them on their card stock and
sealed them into place with transparent contact film. Hamm
.said she dried the flowers and fohage by placmg them mto
'old telephone books and then adding a weight on top to
press them. Leaving them in place for a couple of weeks
will sufficiently dry them to use.1n proJects, she sa1d.
. Hamm also read devotions titled "Soliloquy." Treasurer
-Barbara Koker collected dues for the year. Members voted
-''no" on the question of needing membership cards from the
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs. .
_ · New officers selected for . the next two years were
-President Shirley Hamm. Vice President Lola Hubbard,
·Secretary LiRda Russell and Treasurer Barbar~ K?ker. .
The holiday flower show, schedul~ was d1~tnbut~d ~o
members. This year's show, 'A Carohng We W1ll Go w1ll
be Nov. 22 and 23 at the Carleton School in Syracuse.
Hostess Linda Russell served refreshments to Barbara
.Koker, Shirfey Hamm, Evelyn Hollon, Sara Roush, Ada
'Titus, Lola Hubbard, Joy Bentley, Tume Redov1an, Peggy
Moore, Betty Milhoan and guest Patty Tarr.
The next meeting will be held at the home of. Betty
Milhoan with Rich and Ann Toms~ to speak •:m organic gar~
'dening. New officers will also be mstalled.

~Bombers strike in Mosul, Baghd~d, killing 13

i
I

S~bmltted

4t·

•

••

.

•

•
v

•

photo

:From left are Richard Lewis, executive director of the hio
:School Boards Association (OSBA), presenting the 0
Southeast Region Outstanding Administrator Award for
2008 to Michael Brace, district technology coordinator for
:the Gallipo1is City School District. Brace was recently rec:ognized at the OSBA Southeast Region's Annual _Fall
.- Conference held at Alexander High Sc~oolln Albany.

18111

· ralicPartv

n·

-

Monday, October 13,'2oo8

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Bv DINA CAPP!EUO

ASSOCIATED PREss WAITER

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Dear Annie: My son,
"Quentin," has always had a
problem telling the truth. It
started in kindergarten and
became worse over time.
He's a grown man now and
will lie about anrfhing from
what he was domg an hour
ago to whether he lost his job.
Quentin had an affair during his first marriage and
when his wife forgave him,
he did' it a!ain. He has two
children from that marriage
whom he refuses to see. He
says their mother insisted he
stay away and threatened to
have him arreste.d if he tried
to visit, but I know that's
not true. The only plausible
reason he could be arrested
is if he's behind on his child
support.
Quentin remarried and his
second wife lies just as much
as he does. Neither of them
can keep a job and now they
have a child .together and
another on the way.
How .can I help Quentin
see what he is doing to himself and his children? How
do I get him to stop lying? I
took him to counseling when
he was a child, but the therapist simply said Quentin had
an active imagination and
would grow out of it.

·Community Calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday, Oct. 14
SHADE
- Bedford
Township Trustees, regufar
rrieeting , 7 p.ym., town~all.
POMER 0
e•gs
County Board of Elections,
8:30 a.m., for monthly
board meeting.
Wednesday, Oct.1S
RUTLAND - Leading
Conservancy
Creek
District, ·
5 , . p.m.
Rescheduled from Oct. 22.

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will review "Hope's Boy" by
Andrew Bridge. Hostess will
beOlita Heighton.
HARRISONVILLE
#255 Order of Eastern Star,
. annual installation of officers, 7:30p.m., members furnish pot l\lck, refreshments.
Thursday, Oct. 16
POMEROY
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic
Lodge #164 regular meet·mg. 7:30 p.m., at t he lod
. ge

Monday, Oct. 13
POMEROY - Big Bend
Farm Antique Club, 7:30
p.m., Mulberry Community
Center. 1
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Middleport Lodge
#363. 7 p.m., at Middleport
Masonic Temple. Work in the
Master Mason degree. All
Master Masons invited.
POMEROY - Regular
meeting of Republican Party,
7:30 p.m., Republican headquarters at 118 W. Main St.
Tuesday, Oct. 14
HARRISONVILLE .
#255 Order of Eastern Star,
regulaf meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
practice for installation of
officers following.
POMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce business-minded
luncheon,
noon,
omeroy Library. Meigs
ounty
Economic
evelopment
Director
erry Varnadoe speaking.
·Wednesday Oct. IS
POMEROY -Middleport ·
.Literary Club will meet at the
Pomeroy Library. Leah Ord

_...,....._____

QUES110NS: ·can Meigs Cou~ Delnocractlc Headquartera .
218 East Main Stree~ Pomeroy, OH • 992-4191 or 992-4193

Valley Tabernacle Church.
Bailey Run Road. Services
continue through Oct. 19.

Church events

Friday, Oct. 17.
POMEROY
- Emma
Broderick will tum 97 on Oct. '
17. Cards may be sent to The
~aples, .100 Memorial Dr.,
#216. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,

Birthdays

Thursday, Oct. 16
POMEROY - Revival
with Evangelist Jerry
Cottrell, 7 p.m., . Faith

ATIONAL
WOMEN'S

Wqe ~allipoli~ lailp ~ribune

Joint ~Ieasant l\egtster
&amp;The

Daily Sentinel

presents

THE WOMEN OF
THE TRI· COUNTY ·

/·

This special section, publishing October 31st, is an excellent opportunity
for local businesswomen to tell their story, promote their business and
give their tips for ~uccess.
·.
Not jusdor women who own their own business, but for all the women
who are the back bone of local successful businesses.

111101

lit Richard Cordray..FOR OHIO ATTORNEY~~
lit Chjlrlle Wilaon ......FOR US CONGRESS 8TH DISTRICT
lit Rick Shriver..........FOR STATE SENATE :lOTH DISTRICT
lit Debbie Phllllpa .....FOR STATE HOUSE tmt DISTRICT
lit Tom lowery~ .........FOR MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
lit Brenda Phalln.......FOR MEIGS COUN'IY CLERK OF COURTS
lit ,k,seph:Russo......FOR OHIO SUPREME COURT
.lit Peter Slkora.:......:.FOR OHIO SUPREME COURT

in Racine. Taking donations
for Operation Christmas
Child. Bring dish towel for
pantry prOJect. Call Randy
Smith at 508-0816.

•

Clubs and
organizations

l!f Barack Obama.....FOR PRESIDENT
~ Joseph Blden.......FOR VICE PRESDENT .

l can't afford therapv and kids play together frequent- inappropriate behavior if the
am uncomfortable · dis- ly. M'y girls are the youngest parents won't bother to get
cussing this .with my pastor. ·of the bunch, just 3 and lO involved.
I .believe an intervention months, and my husband
Dear Annie: I read the
might help. but I doubt I and I find ourselves, super- letter from "Scared Mother.''
could get my husband or the . vising the children more who thinks her daughter is
rest of the family to partici- than the other parents.
shoplifting because she has
pate because they won't
·Js it appropriate for us to found expensive items in her
even speak to Quentin. tell someone else's child to room.
What is a worried mother to stop behaving a certain way
Maybe Mom should be
do? -Worried Mom
·if the child's parents won't worried about some adult
Dear Mom: Quentin must do it' We feel if tlieir buying this stuff for her
recognize the negative actions involve our chil- daughter. In high school , l
impact of his lies and want to dren, house, pets or proper- had friends who would meet
stop. Unfortunately, that ty, we have a right to step in. these much older guys who
doesn't seem to be the case, In return, they have a right would try to. "buy" them for
which means nothin~ you do to say something if our sex. nude photographs and
is likely to make a d1fference daughter misbehaves in a other things. ·- Just a
in his behavior, especially . way that affects t~em.
Thoqght in California
since his wife will unden:ut
.We know not everyone
Dear California: Thanks
your efforts. Right now, the thinks as we do and · find for pointing out that alannonly person who will benefit ourselves constantly tread- ing possibility. We hope
from counseling is you.
ing a fine line to keep things "Scared Mother" will talk to
Contact the United Way, safe without offending other her daughter and find out
YMCA, local hospitals, uni- parents. What do you think? • what's really going on.
versity psychology depart' - Supervising Parents
Annie's Mailbox is writments and graduate school
Dear Parents: It is ten by Kathy Mitchell and
couns~ling departments , the
always best for parents to Mqrcy Sugar, longtime ediAmerican Association of discipline their own chil- tors of the Ann Landers
Counselors dren , but if your neighbors column. Please e-mail your
Pastoral
(aapc.org), 95.04A Lee are unwilling to do so, you questions to anniesma!l·
Highway, Fairfax, VA may step.in.ln fact , so01e of box@cor~ca.~r.ne.t, or write
22031-2303;
and
the them may prefer that you to: A11me's Ma1lbox, P.O:
American
Counseling take responsibility for moni- Box 118190, Chicago, IL
Association (coun:ieling.org) loring the action. You should 60611 . To f!n,d out .more
. at l-800-347-~7.
not lay hands on another llbout Anme s Ma1lbox,
Dear Annie: · I live in a person's child unless it is an and read features by other
neighborhood full of kids of emergency situation (i.e., Creators Sy11dicate writers
all ages and various parent- the child is running into traf- a11d cartoo11ists, visit the
ing styles ranging from fie) . You may, however, tell Creators Syndicate Web
strict to laid-back. All the a child to cease and desist page at www.creators.com.

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(Each ad will have the same layout to give everyone equal opportunity to tell their story.)

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Contact your
Representa#ve Today!
·Gallipolis Daily Tribune 446-2342
Point Pleasant Register 675· f333
The Daily Sentinel 992·2155
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NATION· WoRLD
Mo~oy,
Holocaust
survivors
teD
love
story
~orts on global w:anning
·
·
·
chilled by econonnc woes
:rJte Daily Sentinel

'

Oetober 13, aoo8 ·

Bv MATT SEDENSKY

He·must recognize impact oflies

.

Other Democrats, howev"
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
er, see a cap-and-trade bill
NORTH
MIAMI
- and the government rev:BEACH , Fla. - In the
WASHINGTON - The enues it · would generate
beginning, there was a boy,
economic free fall gripping from selling permits - aS
a girl and an apple.
. 1:)\.
the nation may bring down an engine for economic
: He was a teenager 1n ..JHI
one of the main environ- growth, · Democratic presiconcentration ca!llp in Nazi- ·
mental objectives: capping dential nominee Barack
'controlled · Gerinany. She
the greenhouse gases that Obama supports auctioning
was a bit younger, living free
are blamed for global off all pennits, using the
in the village, her family
wanning.
money to help fund altem~­
posing as Christians .. lbeir
Democratic leaders in the tive energy.
·
·eyes met through a barbedHouse and the Senate, and
"If you see this as a job
' wire fence and she wondered
both p{1!sidential candidates, creation opportunity for the
:what she could do for this
continue to rank tackhng U.S. to develop the produ~
·handsome young man.
global warming as a chief that are then sold around the
Sbe was carrying apples.
goal next year. Bui the focus world. then you should be
and decided to throw one
on stabilizing the economy optimistic about what the
over the fence .·He ·caught 11
probably will make it more impact of passage woulli
·and ran away toward t_he
difficult to pass a Ia w to mean for the American
"barracks. And so it began.
reduce carbon dioxide and . economy,"
said
Rep.
As they tell it. they returned
other greenhouse gases. At. Edward Markey, D-Mass. :
·the following day and she
the very least,. it will push
Conservative Republicans
tossed an apple again. And
back when the reductions who were never fans of a
each day after that. for
would have to start.
law to curb greenhouse
months. the routine contin- Herman and Roma Rosenblat pose for a photo in their North Miami Beach, Fla:APphoto
As one Republican sena- gases have used the ewnomhome,
ued. She threw. he caught,
Sept. 25. as they talk about "Angel Girl."· the book written by Laurie Friedman, about the tor put it, the green bubble ic downturn as a rallyinjl cry.
and both scurried away.
has burst.
Oklahoma Se,n. James·
: They never knew one beginning of their relationship during the Holocaust.
''Clearly it is somewhere lnhofe, the senior R~blican
'another's name , never working papers. including
"I forgot," she says.
ment, the couple kept the down the totem pole given on the Senate EPvtronment
uttered a single word, so Rosenblat and his brothers.
''I forgot about her, too," story mostly to themseiVC$, the economic realities· we amL
Public
Works
fearful they'd be spotted by In the other, everyone else, he recalls.
telling only those. closest to are facing," said Tom Committee, in a blog entry
a guard. Until one day he including the boys' mother.
Rosenblat
.eventually tbem . Herman s11ys . it's Williams, a spokesman for . this month crfticized 152
came to the fence and told
Rosen blat went over to his moved to New York. He was because they met at a PQint in Duke Energy Corp., ~ elec- House members for releasing
her he wouldn't be ba&lt;;k.
mother. "I want to be with running a television repair' hislifehe'dratherforgc;t.But otricity . producer that has a set of principles to taclde
"I won't see you any- ,
k
h
h
fri d h ed eventually, he said, hefelt the supported federal llllll\dates global warming in the midst
more .'' she said. ·""Right, you," he ·cried. She spo e s op w en a en p on
d harshly to him and one of him one Sunday afternoon need to share it with others. on greenhouse gases. Quke of the economic tunnoil.
his brothers pulled him and said he ·wanted to fix
right. Don ·r. come aroun
b R
bl • is a ·member of the U.S.
N
"The curren.t economic.
anymore.'' he answered.
·
'th · 1 R
bl
· ow,has· t mspu-ed'
·e · osen
~~~s Climate Ac.tion Partnership, crisis only reinforces . the
. And so their brief and . away. His heart was broken . him up WI a grr. osen at story
a chil"I
was
destroyed," was unenthusiastic: He did- dren's book,. "Angel Girl." an assocjation of businesses public's wariness'about any
innocent tryst came to an
Rosenblat remembers. It n't like blind djltes, he told And eventuaiJy, -there are and nonprofit groups that climate bill that attempts to
.end. Or so they thought.
was the last time he would his friend. He didn't know plans to tlftn 1t into a film, has lobbied Congress to act. increase the co~ts of ene~
Just months ago, chances and jeopardizes jobs, ·
ever
see her.
what she would look like. "The Flower of the Fence."
Before he was shipped off
to
publish
for
legislation passing in the · Inhofe said.
Hennan
expects
...
·But finally, he n;lented.
to a ·death camp. before the
Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas,
next Congress and becomIt was in Schlieben,
It went well enough. ~he his memoirs next year.
girl with the apples
took
the argument. a step
Michael
Berenbaum,
a
·
ing
law
looked
promising.
Germany,
that
.
Rosenblat
was
Polish
and
easygomg.
appeared. .
Herman
further
when he said the
Holocaust
The
presidential
candidates
Rosenblat's life had already and the girl he later called Conversation flowed, and distinguished
his angel would meet. Roma eventually talk turned to scholar who has authored a support mandatory cuts and Boucher'Diilgell bill could
changed forever.
Radziki
worked on a nearby their wartime experiences. dozen books. has read a Democratic majority is lead the country "off the
His family had been
forced from their home Into . fann and the boy caught her Rosenblat recited the litany · Rosenblatt's memoiF and ready to act on the problem economic·cliff."
But even supporters of feda ghetto. His father fell ill eye. And bringing him food of camps he had been in, and sees no reason to question it. after years of the Bush
"I wasn't born then so I admimstration's resisting · eral regulation of greenhouse
with typhus. They smuggled - apples., mostly, but Radziki's ·ears perked up.
·
gases acknowledge . that
in a doctor, but there was lit- bread , too - became part of She had been in Schliehen, can't say I was an eyewit- federal controls.
Butthe·most popular rem- something has to give given
too, hiding from the Nazis. · ness. But it's credible,"
tle he could do to help. The her routine.
"Every day," sh!j says, .. She spoke of a boy she Berenbaum said. "Crazier edy for slowing global the state of the economy.
man ·knew what was comwarming, · a mechanism
Sen. John Warner, R-Va.,
"every
day I went."
·
would visit, of the apples things have h!!ppc;ned."
ing. He summoned his
know as cap-and-trade, a .lead sponsor of a Senate .
Rosenblat says he would she would bring, how he
·youngest son. "If you ever
Herman is now 79 • and could put further stress on a bill to curb greenhouse
secretly
eat the apples and was sent away.
get out of this w.ar,"
Roma is three years his teetering economy.
And then, the words that junior; they celebrated their · Under such a system, the gases that failed this year,
Rosenblat remembers him never mentioned a word of
saying, "don't carry a it to anyone else for fear would change their lives for- 50th anniversary this sumld
bl' h acknowledged that the
economy could delay when
grudge in your heart and word would spread and he'd ever: "Tbat was me," he said. mer..He often tells their story government wou esta IS
a
market
for
carbon
dioxide
be punished. or even killed. · Rosenblat knew he .could to Jewish and other groups. IJy giving or selling credits reductions in carbon dioxtolerate everybody."
ide would start. .
Two days later, the When Rosenblat learned he never le'ave th1s woman
H,· helieves· the lesson is to companies with operaWarner told the AP that
again. He proposed mar- the very one his father tions that emit greenhouse
father was dead. Herman would . be moved again any
bill ·should allow the
this time to Theresienstadt, riage that very night. She · imparted.
;was just 12.
gases. The companies can · president to decide.
: The family was moved in what is now the Czech thought he was crazy. Two
"Not to hate and to love then choose whether to
"We must continue to
·again. this time to a ghetto Republic - he told the girl months later she said yes.
- that's what I am lectur- invest in technologies to think and devise a riece of
· where he shared. a single he would not return.
· In 1958, they were married ing about," he said: "Not to reduce emissions to meet
room with his mother, three
Not long after, the at a synagogue in the Bronx hold a grudge and to toler- targets or instead buy cred- legislation that wil enable
brothers, uncle, aunt and four Russians rolled in on a tank - a world away from their ate everybody, to love .peo- its from other companies the president, of the United
;cous ins. He and his brothers and liberated Rosenblat's sorrows, more than a decade pie, to be tolerant of people, who have already met them. States to conttol timing ...
dependent on the president's
:got working papers anti he camp. The war was over. after they had thought they no matter who they are or
In an interview with The analysis for the ability of the
:got a factory job painting She went to nursing school . were separated forever.
(Associated Press, Rep. Rick
what they are."
:stretchers for.the Germans.
in Israel. He went to
·· •••
· The anger of the concen. '"Boucher, D-Va., said that in economy to assume the
: Eventually, the ghetto was London and learned to be an
It all seems too remarkable !ration camps, Horman says,. light of the economic down, fmancial burdens," he said.
dissolved. As the Poles were electrician.
to be believed. Rosenblat . has gone away. He forgave. tum, a bill that would give . The U.S. is not alone~ As
the economic crisis has
. ushered out; two lines
Their · dailr ritual faded insists it is all true.
And his life has been filled polluters permits free of spread to markets across the ·
:formed. In one, those with from their mmds.
Even after their engage- with love.
charge would be preferable. globe, work to curb green~
_ _ _ _.:___ _ _ _- - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - . - . : _ _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - "The first way we can house gases elsewhere has
control program costs is by stalled.
not charging industrial
Earlier this past week,
emitters," said Boucher, Rajendra Pachauri, head of
who released a first draft of the UN. climate panel, said
BAGHDAD (AP)
release the information.
Mosul, Duraid Mohiunmed ly our sons the Christians.;' a bill this past week with the discussions about · global
·Suicide car· bombers struck
The
southwestern Kashmoula, said Saturday
"We 'the sons of 'Iraq, chairman of the House warming solutions were "oil
:twice Sunday in the north- Baghdad neighborhood ·was that about 3,000 Christians should be of one heart·, one Energy and Commerce the back burner." Pachauri
:ern city of Mosul, killing at · the scene of bitter Sunni- have fled the city over the population and one home- Committee, Rep. John shared the2007 Nobel Peace
:least six people and wound- Shiite fighting until last year past week alone to escape land for the sake of the pros- Dingell, D-Mich, Giving Prize with former Vice
: ing dozens of others, U.S. when the U.S . . troop threats and attacks by Sunni perity of our country," he away right-to-pollute per- President AI Gore for their
and Iraqi officials said. A ''surge." the Sunni revolt extremists.
said from Rome.
mits was one of the options. worlc on climate chan~e.
. car bomb killed severy other against ai-Qaida and a
Interior
Ministry
cease-frre by anti-American spokesman Maj. Gen.
; people in Baghdad.
· Two Iraqi soldiers were cleric Muqtada al-Sadr Abdul Karim Khalaf said
:killed by snipers in separate .brought down violence to its Sunday that the government
was taking new measures to
:attacks Sunday in the capi- lowest level in four years.
"Several car bombings protect Mosul 's Christians,
:tal's Yarmouk district.
have occurred on this street mcluding more police in
·police said .
Also Sunday. the govern- but no measures were taken to · their neighborhoods and
. ment announced new secu- prevent these events," one more checkpoints and
;rity measures to protect Bayaa resident, who gave patrols near churches.
"Anyhow, there is a kind
•Chri&gt;tians in Mosul after a only his nickname Abu
:spate of attacks against Ibrahim. told Associated of exaggeration in describ ..
:1hem by Sunni religious Press Television News. ing the events in Mosul," ·
OPENHOUSE .
"Where is the government? Khalaf said. "We don't deny
:.extremists.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16,2008
The series of attacks Where are the security offi- that· hostile acts oc~urred,
shows the ong()ing security cials to prevent such attacks?" but we have the ability to
1:00PM•• 4:00PM.
Attacks have. been continu- stop such acts and the situa:challenges facing Iraq as the
•
oonlltv healllt tare wilhout distrimi..i!on.
:U .S. shifts responsibility to ing in Mosul, ·Iraq's third tion is under control." ·
"'
•ess
to
-«ordabll,lti,.
q-ry
Prov,...ng at.
""' 306 North
. Seco d ,..•·venue · ·
;this country's own soldiers largest city,despite months of · In an interview Sunday
.
U.S.
and
l~;~qi
security
operawith
AI-Sharqiya
television;
:and police following the
()blo
45760
.
Middleport,
·s harp decline .in violence tions agains!- at-Q81da and Iraqi Cardinal .Emmanuel
other Sunni ex'tre!llist groups. Ill Deily condemned the
740-992-0540
since last year.
The
governor
of
the
killings
that
have
occmred
. The ftrSt attack in Mosul
.
d and roud to invite you to join us as we
·occurred when a suicide car province that includes recently in Mosul "especialFamily Healthcare,Inc. IS plea~est loc~tion in Middleport ..
:bomber attacked ' a U.S.
celebrate our ne
we will have a very mformal
:patrol, the U.S . military said.
2008
6
:There were no American
On Thursday, o~~ober 1House from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00p.m.
:casualties, but tive lraqis were
"'meet and greet 0~~
d .ntroduction of our staff
·killed, including three young
There will be a facility tour an .~II be provided
.
r boys, the u.s. said. The attack .
.
ht
refresllments
WI
L•g
d Ed ards at 740-992-0540 or
:also killed the bomber.
RSVPtoWan a w
Please : · · · .1 t cheertigerrose@yahoo.com
; Another suicide car
Via e-ma• a
• bomber targeted Iraqi police
:in Mosul. 225 miles north·
.
•
:west of Baghdad. Twenty' '
"e~~,-'tt
:tive people were wounded,
the U.S. said.
1e41/ef6k~-/
: In Baghdad, a parked car
Reed
&amp;
Baur
Insurance
Agency
: bomb exploded in a commerfHIIJ' ee/tJMfiH
220 East Main Street
;cial street in the Bayaa disPomeroy, OH 45769
: trict, killing seven people and
www.reedbaur.com
·woumling nine others, police
'
jdillon@feedbaur.com
:said. They spoke on 'condi. tion of anonymity because
.they· were lirit-supposed
. to

·-·

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

•

Submitted photo

The File family recently celebrated the birth of a fifth generation. Pictured are Roscoe File, Cheryl Roush, Julie
Mayer, Matthev.&lt; Wandling and Landyn Wandling.

.Garden club program
on ~reeting cards
SYRACUSE - Wildwood Garden Club members created greeting cards at its recent meeting at Syracuse
Community Center.
·
President Shirley Hamm pr~sente~ the program on ~on­
,structing the greetmg cards usmg dned flowers and fohage
.collected from her garden.
·.
' Members selected from the various dried materials
Hamm offered, arranged them on their card stock and
sealed them into place with transparent contact film. Hamm
.said she dried the flowers and fohage by placmg them mto
'old telephone books and then adding a weight on top to
press them. Leaving them in place for a couple of weeks
will sufficiently dry them to use.1n proJects, she sa1d.
. Hamm also read devotions titled "Soliloquy." Treasurer
-Barbara Koker collected dues for the year. Members voted
-''no" on the question of needing membership cards from the
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs. .
_ · New officers selected for . the next two years were
-President Shirley Hamm. Vice President Lola Hubbard,
·Secretary LiRda Russell and Treasurer Barbar~ K?ker. .
The holiday flower show, schedul~ was d1~tnbut~d ~o
members. This year's show, 'A Carohng We W1ll Go w1ll
be Nov. 22 and 23 at the Carleton School in Syracuse.
Hostess Linda Russell served refreshments to Barbara
.Koker, Shirfey Hamm, Evelyn Hollon, Sara Roush, Ada
'Titus, Lola Hubbard, Joy Bentley, Tume Redov1an, Peggy
Moore, Betty Milhoan and guest Patty Tarr.
The next meeting will be held at the home of. Betty
Milhoan with Rich and Ann Toms~ to speak •:m organic gar~
'dening. New officers will also be mstalled.

~Bombers strike in Mosul, Baghd~d, killing 13

i
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S~bmltted

4t·

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v

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photo

:From left are Richard Lewis, executive director of the hio
:School Boards Association (OSBA), presenting the 0
Southeast Region Outstanding Administrator Award for
2008 to Michael Brace, district technology coordinator for
:the Gallipo1is City School District. Brace was recently rec:ognized at the OSBA Southeast Region's Annual _Fall
.- Conference held at Alexander High Sc~oolln Albany.

18111

· ralicPartv

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Monday, October 13,'2oo8

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Bv DINA CAPP!EUO

ASSOCIATED PREss WAITER

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Dear Annie: My son,
"Quentin," has always had a
problem telling the truth. It
started in kindergarten and
became worse over time.
He's a grown man now and
will lie about anrfhing from
what he was domg an hour
ago to whether he lost his job.
Quentin had an affair during his first marriage and
when his wife forgave him,
he did' it a!ain. He has two
children from that marriage
whom he refuses to see. He
says their mother insisted he
stay away and threatened to
have him arreste.d if he tried
to visit, but I know that's
not true. The only plausible
reason he could be arrested
is if he's behind on his child
support.
Quentin remarried and his
second wife lies just as much
as he does. Neither of them
can keep a job and now they
have a child .together and
another on the way.
How .can I help Quentin
see what he is doing to himself and his children? How
do I get him to stop lying? I
took him to counseling when
he was a child, but the therapist simply said Quentin had
an active imagination and
would grow out of it.

·Community Calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday, Oct. 14
SHADE
- Bedford
Township Trustees, regufar
rrieeting , 7 p.ym., town~all.
POMER 0
e•gs
County Board of Elections,
8:30 a.m., for monthly
board meeting.
Wednesday, Oct.1S
RUTLAND - Leading
Conservancy
Creek
District, ·
5 , . p.m.
Rescheduled from Oct. 22.

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8

will review "Hope's Boy" by
Andrew Bridge. Hostess will
beOlita Heighton.
HARRISONVILLE
#255 Order of Eastern Star,
. annual installation of officers, 7:30p.m., members furnish pot l\lck, refreshments.
Thursday, Oct. 16
POMEROY
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic
Lodge #164 regular meet·mg. 7:30 p.m., at t he lod
. ge

Monday, Oct. 13
POMEROY - Big Bend
Farm Antique Club, 7:30
p.m., Mulberry Community
Center. 1
MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Middleport Lodge
#363. 7 p.m., at Middleport
Masonic Temple. Work in the
Master Mason degree. All
Master Masons invited.
POMEROY - Regular
meeting of Republican Party,
7:30 p.m., Republican headquarters at 118 W. Main St.
Tuesday, Oct. 14
HARRISONVILLE .
#255 Order of Eastern Star,
regulaf meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
practice for installation of
officers following.
POMEROY Meigs
County
Chamber
of
Commerce business-minded
luncheon,
noon,
omeroy Library. Meigs
ounty
Economic
evelopment
Director
erry Varnadoe speaking.
·Wednesday Oct. IS
POMEROY -Middleport ·
.Literary Club will meet at the
Pomeroy Library. Leah Ord

_...,....._____

QUES110NS: ·can Meigs Cou~ Delnocractlc Headquartera .
218 East Main Stree~ Pomeroy, OH • 992-4191 or 992-4193

Valley Tabernacle Church.
Bailey Run Road. Services
continue through Oct. 19.

Church events

Friday, Oct. 17.
POMEROY
- Emma
Broderick will tum 97 on Oct. '
17. Cards may be sent to The
~aples, .100 Memorial Dr.,
#216. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,

Birthdays

Thursday, Oct. 16
POMEROY - Revival
with Evangelist Jerry
Cottrell, 7 p.m., . Faith

ATIONAL
WOMEN'S

Wqe ~allipoli~ lailp ~ribune

Joint ~Ieasant l\egtster
&amp;The

Daily Sentinel

presents

THE WOMEN OF
THE TRI· COUNTY ·

/·

This special section, publishing October 31st, is an excellent opportunity
for local businesswomen to tell their story, promote their business and
give their tips for ~uccess.
·.
Not jusdor women who own their own business, but for all the women
who are the back bone of local successful businesses.

111101

lit Richard Cordray..FOR OHIO ATTORNEY~~
lit Chjlrlle Wilaon ......FOR US CONGRESS 8TH DISTRICT
lit Rick Shriver..........FOR STATE SENATE :lOTH DISTRICT
lit Debbie Phllllpa .....FOR STATE HOUSE tmt DISTRICT
lit Tom lowery~ .........FOR MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER
lit Brenda Phalln.......FOR MEIGS COUN'IY CLERK OF COURTS
lit ,k,seph:Russo......FOR OHIO SUPREME COURT
.lit Peter Slkora.:......:.FOR OHIO SUPREME COURT

in Racine. Taking donations
for Operation Christmas
Child. Bring dish towel for
pantry prOJect. Call Randy
Smith at 508-0816.

•

Clubs and
organizations

l!f Barack Obama.....FOR PRESIDENT
~ Joseph Blden.......FOR VICE PRESDENT .

l can't afford therapv and kids play together frequent- inappropriate behavior if the
am uncomfortable · dis- ly. M'y girls are the youngest parents won't bother to get
cussing this .with my pastor. ·of the bunch, just 3 and lO involved.
I .believe an intervention months, and my husband
Dear Annie: I read the
might help. but I doubt I and I find ourselves, super- letter from "Scared Mother.''
could get my husband or the . vising the children more who thinks her daughter is
rest of the family to partici- than the other parents.
shoplifting because she has
pate because they won't
·Js it appropriate for us to found expensive items in her
even speak to Quentin. tell someone else's child to room.
What is a worried mother to stop behaving a certain way
Maybe Mom should be
do? -Worried Mom
·if the child's parents won't worried about some adult
Dear Mom: Quentin must do it' We feel if tlieir buying this stuff for her
recognize the negative actions involve our chil- daughter. In high school , l
impact of his lies and want to dren, house, pets or proper- had friends who would meet
stop. Unfortunately, that ty, we have a right to step in. these much older guys who
doesn't seem to be the case, In return, they have a right would try to. "buy" them for
which means nothin~ you do to say something if our sex. nude photographs and
is likely to make a d1fference daughter misbehaves in a other things. ·- Just a
in his behavior, especially . way that affects t~em.
Thoqght in California
since his wife will unden:ut
.We know not everyone
Dear California: Thanks
your efforts. Right now, the thinks as we do and · find for pointing out that alannonly person who will benefit ourselves constantly tread- ing possibility. We hope
from counseling is you.
ing a fine line to keep things "Scared Mother" will talk to
Contact the United Way, safe without offending other her daughter and find out
YMCA, local hospitals, uni- parents. What do you think? • what's really going on.
versity psychology depart' - Supervising Parents
Annie's Mailbox is writments and graduate school
Dear Parents: It is ten by Kathy Mitchell and
couns~ling departments , the
always best for parents to Mqrcy Sugar, longtime ediAmerican Association of discipline their own chil- tors of the Ann Landers
Counselors dren , but if your neighbors column. Please e-mail your
Pastoral
(aapc.org), 95.04A Lee are unwilling to do so, you questions to anniesma!l·
Highway, Fairfax, VA may step.in.ln fact , so01e of box@cor~ca.~r.ne.t, or write
22031-2303;
and
the them may prefer that you to: A11me's Ma1lbox, P.O:
American
Counseling take responsibility for moni- Box 118190, Chicago, IL
Association (coun:ieling.org) loring the action. You should 60611 . To f!n,d out .more
. at l-800-347-~7.
not lay hands on another llbout Anme s Ma1lbox,
Dear Annie: · I live in a person's child unless it is an and read features by other
neighborhood full of kids of emergency situation (i.e., Creators Sy11dicate writers
all ages and various parent- the child is running into traf- a11d cartoo11ists, visit the
ing styles ranging from fie) . You may, however, tell Creators Syndicate Web
strict to laid-back. All the a child to cease and desist page at www.creators.com.

2

0

(Each ad will have the same layout to give everyone equal opportunity to tell their story.)

0

8

V

¥

•

Contact your
Representa#ve Today!
·Gallipolis Daily Tribune 446-2342
Point Pleasant Register 675· f333
The Daily Sentinel 992·2155
•

•

�Monaay, October 13, 2008

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
.

J

·The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

..
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.
..
...• ...
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•

www.mydallysentlnel.com

.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
•

'

General Manager~News Editor

I . ·, :

·I

I

Congress shall make ''o laiV respecting an
- establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
: free exercise thereoj; or abridging the freedom
: of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
. · people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
·· : · the Government for a redress of grievances.

·---- ----

..

'

~

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•

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

•

-?TODAY IN HISTORY

..

Today is Monday. Oc·t. 13, the 287th day of 2008. There
. - _are 79 days left in the year. This is the 'Columbus Day hoi~ -iday in the United States, as well as Thanksgiving D"y in
• ·- t:anada.
·
.
·
·
: Today's Highlight in History: On Ocf. 13. 1792, the comer·stone of the executive mansion. Iuter known as the White
· ·~House, was laid during" ceremony in the District of Columbia.
• On this date: .In A.D. 54, Roman emperor Claudius I died,
· poisoned 'apparently at the behest of his .wife , Agrippina.
In 1775, the United States Navy had its origins as the
Continental Congress ordered the construction of a naval fleet. ~ In 1843,the Jewish organization B'nai B'rith was founded iiJ New York City.
In 1858, the sixth debate between senatorial candidates
Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas took p.lace in
Quincy, Ill.
·
.~ . · In 1908, the Chicago Cubs won Game 4 of the World Series.
defeating the Detroit Tigers 3-0 to take a 3-1 Series lead .
·•
In 1943, Italy declared war on Germany. its one-time
Axis partner.
In 1944, American troops entered Aachen. Germany. dtn·ing World War !1.
·
In 1960, Richard M. Nixon and John F. Kennedy participated in the third televised debate of their presidential can1paign.
(Nixon was in Los Angeles: Kennedy was in New York.)
In 1962, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'~ by Edward
Albee opened on Broadway.
In 1974, longtime television host' Ed Sullivan died in
New York City at age 72.
Today's Birthdays: Forme_r British Prime
'stcr
Margaret Thatcher is 83. Playwright Frank D. Gilr · 83.
Gospel singer Shirley Caesar is 70 .. Singer-musician Paul
Simon is 67. Singer-musician Sammy Hal'ar is 61. Actor
John Lone is 56 . Model Beverly Johnson 1s 56. Producerwriter Chris Caner is 52. Actor Reggie Theus is 51 . Singer
Marie Osmond is 49. Rock singer Joey Belladonna is 48.
Actress T'Keyah Crystal Keymah is 46. Actress Kate
Walsh is 41. Actress Tisha Campbell-Martin ts 40 .
Classical singer Carlos Marin (II Divol is 40. Olympic silver-medal figure skater Nancy Kerrigan is 39. Country
-singer Rhett Akins is 39. Actor Sacha Baron Cohen is 37 .
Singer Ashanti is 28 . Christian rr .. k. singer Jon Micah
Sumrall (Kutless) is 28.
Thought for Today: "There are some things one can only
achieve by a deliberate leap in the opposite direction. One
has to go abroad in order to find the home one has lost." -'
Franz Kafk,~. Austrian author ( 1883-1924).
•

i/:J

Page _A4
Monday, October 13,2008

Obama s (radicalism' agrowing chasm on road to victory
Palin's remark s were racist . The line between the estabI realized something after
because
"terrorists are en vi- · lishment and the anti-estabTuesday night 's debate: If
sioned as dark-skinned radi- lishment has vanished - at
(big it) Burack Obama is
cal Muslims.'' Therefore.. .. least as far as our political and
not elected president next
Are they kidding? In a media and social institutions
month. it will not be John
.'
word. no. But such efforts are concerned. But there
McCain who defeats him. ·
Diana
·
may
signal a desperate . remain citizens for wbom
ML~ain mny ·be Obama's
West
response
to
g.rowing, such di ~tinctions matter.
official opponent, but he isn't
inchoate unease in the land,
Writing · at
National
making the core case against
a silent, or sighing, or very Review Online , Andrew C.
him: namely. the case against
privately discussed queasi- McCarthy pegged the signifObama 's deep roots in radiness
over the prospect of icance of the Obama-Ayers
calism. which the Democratic , Ayers - a violent. 1960s
nominee ha.~ never pulled up militant ·who later dec1ded making an American presi- connection: "Yes, Ayers is
and grown away from. This is that radicalizing education in dent out of a man who not blunterthan Obama. As he so
wily if Obama loses on the guise of"refonn" was the only didn't cross the street delicat ~ ly told the Times,
Election Day, it won't ·be front-line of revolution - IS to shun a punk like Ayers, America makes him· want to
McCain who defeats him. infamous for a New York but was so comfortable with puke.' The smoother Obama
Like a flashy third-party ·can- Times interview pub Iished on . Ayers - who. not inciden- is content to say ol)r society
didate who ends up drawing Sept. II, 200 I in Which he tally. in 1995-described him~ . needs fundamental '. change.'
just enough support from one not only declared America self &lt;IS "u radical. leftist, But what they're talking
about," he wrote , referring to
candidate to put the other over "makes me ..want to puke:· small 'c' communist'.' ' the top, it is Obama's connec- but also discussed his group's . that Obama launched h!s their complementary visions, .
tions to anti-American violent attacks on American . political career from Ayers' "is not materially different:
Such sentiments should
extremism - his incubation military and civilian targets: living room, also in 1995.
This relationship continued, make Obama unelectable."
in a radical comfon zone asserting, ''we didn't do
Actually, such sentiments
home
to
ex-Weather enough." His working rela- as even ti)C New York Times
Underground leader William tionship with Obama, as doc- perhaps inadveitently report- should make Qbama radioacAyers . ex-PLO mouthpiece umented by Stanley Kurtz, cd : Obama "said they have rive. But ours is a culture of
Rashid .Khalidi , anti-white- goes back to the 1990s when not spoken by phone or relativism in which one
and -anti -•' lliJ iddlec Iassness" Obama served as chaiiTilan of exchanged e-mai I messages · "belief system" is considered
minister Jeremiah Wright and a $150 million charity,which since Mr. Obama began serv- as valid as any other.
Marxism?
others - that will doom his Kurtz describes as Ayers' ing in the United States Democracy?
Senate
in
Janmuy
2005
."
Ask
Whatever!
Lawful
elections?
presidential ambitions.
"brainchild," that doled out
yourself:
What
American
.Bombing
·
t
he
·Pentagon?
McCain. Obuma and, money to far-left groups such
coming up on the outside, as ACORN. Funny, as Kurtz president - any party. any What's the difference? So
Obama.'s radicalism: This .has noliid, Obama never era - would have maintained greatly transformed by relathree-way race has created a mentioned the~ five years of correspondence with Mr. tivism is our society that not
weird dynmac as .the candi- what is his only executive America "makes me want to even elder statesman and vetdates turn into the final experience in e1ther of his puke" for that long'/ And eran John McCain is alarmed
stretch. Blinkers on, McCain two memoirs. Not so funny is about the year 2005: Isn't that by Obama's radicalism. If he
hobbles after Obama, who is Obama 's dishonest descrip- roughly when Obama decid- were. this patriot who puts
"country first ," would be
now desperdiely trying to tion of Ayers as "just a guy ed to run for president"
Americans may be fuzzy doing everything in his
shake off the radicalism that who lives in my neighbOron the details - and how power to warn the American
could trip him iip before the hood." .
tinish line. Again, no thanks . · ~SM coverage of the could they be clear, given the people against it .
Not that it matters. not
to McCain, whose winks at relationship has been hardly. media's pro-Obanm activities
Obama 's nidicalism, Sarah more fonhcoming. It ruris - but some are realizing, now. not since Obama's radPalin's stumpside references from demonstrable white- slowly and with no conubo- icalism entered the race. If
notwithstanding, are not wash - as put over in the · ration in the public square, this stalking horse finishes
what has brought it to the New York T1mes, which, in that such radical ties don't · · strong. Obuma loses and
America wins - despite the
fore. The fact is, Obama 's nixing notable ties, omitted pass presidential muster.
ties to radicalism are taking all mention of copious, pre- . Or do they'l In the end, the other candidate.
(Diana Wesr is a cvltuu on a life of their own.
viously published evidence answer will decide the election.
Meanwhile,
we
,
the
peonisi
for The Washing ron
Such a "life" is in no way to' the contrary - to overt
documented in the main- damage control. as conduct- pie, are on our own. Once. Times . S'•e is the awhor of
stream media (MSM). Just ed by the Associated Pr~ss. America's political and media _"The Death of the Grownconsider our leading jour- The AP actually argued that and social institutions would itp: How America :, Arre,ved
nalists' idea of professional Palin's reference · to the have reflexively rejected a Del'dopmenr Is Bringing
Western
responsibility when it Obama-Ayers relationship presidential candidate with an Doll'n
comes . to , for example, · as Obama "(palling) around· alliance with, or even an Cil'ili~ arion, " ond has a
Obama 's connection to with terrorists" conveyed a affinity for, an unrepentant hlog '" diwunvesr .net. She
unrepentant
Pentagon "racially tin~ed subtext." terrorist and · anti-establish- can be cmuaaed via
Huh? Acc·l?rdmg to the Ap, ment.revolutionary. No more. dianawesr@verizon.net.)
bomber William Ayers.

.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

.

.....

.

ALL BUSINESS: Crisis doesn't curb corporate excess

ignoring - the potential
downside to such decisions.
When the going was good ;
NEW
YORK
Even
as
they profited handsomely.
Letters to the editor are wdwme. Tlwv should !Je less
Wall
Street
trembled,
some
of
r: l}m 's CEO Richard
ihan 300 words. All tellers are subject ro ·ediring. 11111.1·t bt•
the
people
responsible
for
the
ved compensation
signed, and include addrt•ss and teleplrone 1111111/&gt;er. No
financial
stonn
got
f~tials
valued at $22.05
unsigned [el/ers will be published. Lerrers s/rou/d he in
and
others
tried
to
secure
milmillion
when
it was grantgood raste, addressing issues, nor persmwlities. Lerrers ~ of
lion-dollar
payouts.
ed,
while
AlG's
then-CEO
thanks to nrganizarions and indil•idua/.~ will not be acceptJust
days
after
the
U.S.
Martin
Sullivan's
pay was
ed for puhlicarion .
government saved American $13.9 _,rtll..lon last year,
International Group with an according tq a calculation
$85 billion taxpayer-funded by The Associated Press . ·
loan; the company picked up . From the moment things
'
the $440,000 tab, for a week- turned ugly more than a year
(USPS 213-960)
long retreat at a posh ago, they've failed to be
Reader Services .
Ohio Valley Publishing
Cal ifomia resort for t\&gt;p-per- upfront about the ·conseCo.
forming insurance agents, quences for their businesseS.
Correetton Polley
Published every anernoon. Monday
according to congressional Yet behind the scenes,
Our main concern in all stori es is to
thro ugh Friday. 111. Court Street. ·
investigators.
they've pushed han! to secure
be accurate. II you know of an error PorTt.roy, Ohio. Second-class postage
At
lehman
Brothers,
the
their
own finances and bene·in a story, call the newsroom at (7 40) paid at Pomemy_
investment
bank
pleaded
for
fits - even while investors
99~·2156 .
Member: The ASSOCiated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association
a federal lifeline to prevent have lost out. Financial comPos1m11ter: Send address correcits implosion while its board p.any shares in the Standard
Our main number Is
tions io The Daily Sentinel. 111 CoUI't '1. was arranging fat bonuses
&amp; Poor's 500 index 'have
(740) 992-2156.
Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 .
f Jr tired executives.
plunged 45 percent since the
Oepartment extensions are:
start
of the year.
Corporate
leaders
and
Subscription Rates
directors
can't
understand
Such
·a sense of entitleBy
carrier
or
motor
route
' '
News
One month ·
'1 0.27
what their .priorities should · ment infuriates sharehold. Edbor: Charlene HoeHich, E•t 12
One year '115.84
be, and the result is causing ers who watch their. invest- ·
Deity
50'
Reportet : Brian At;ted, Ext. 14
ment portfolios tumble ,
investors to flee. ·
Senior Citizen rates
~ ; Be1h Seryent E•t 13'
workers who lose their jobs
Financial
markets
run
on
One month ·
'I 0.27
One year
'103.90
11ust. The public's confi- and taxpayers who ~ on a ·
Sd.aa b:Ms lhliJd , remit in adVance
Advertising
dence h&lt;LS ero&lt;led because $700 bill ion hook to bai I out
Outalde Slltt: Dave Harris. Ext 15 din3ct to 1he Daily Sentinel. N o sub·
no one knows who or what · the financial system.
sc ript ion t&gt;,. mail permined in areas
Outsides.... : B,renda Dav1s. Exr 16 where home carrier service is avaU·
That's why the AlG boonto
believe
anymore.
ClaaJCirc.: Judy Clarl&lt;. E•t 10
Financial company execu- doggle requires attention. It
ti ves can blame themselves highlights the disconnect
Mall Subscrtptton
between Wall Street and
for creating this mess General Manager
Inside Meigs County
and what's astonishin$ is Main Street regarding
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
t 3 Weeks
' 32.26
that they keep doing thmgs what's app~priate behavior.
26 Weeks
'64.20
The govern,ment on Sllpt .
to make matters worse.
52 Weeks
' 127. 11
E-mail :
16
offered t~1 e insurance
First,
they
allowed
their
newsOmydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
companies to take on exces- company an $85 billion loan
13 Weeks
' 53.55
sive risk in their overexpo- to prevent its collapse.
Wob :
26 Weeks
' 107 10
h
www.my.J.~ysen1tnel.oom
52 Weeks
' 214.21 ' sure to t e housing market, Federal officials worried
'-----------'~----------....J I without recognizing - or that a panic might occur·

The Daily Sentinel

Shannon Phipps

The Daily Senti nel • Page As

Hemsley sign dedicated

POMEROY - Shannon Phipps 37 of Pomeroy
passed away at the Pleasant Valley Hospital on Friday'
Oct. lO, 2008 .
•
She _was born on Aug. 13, 1971, to the late .Robert and
V1ctona (Evans) McCarty in Washington Coljnhouse. She
was a homemaker.
, ·
She is survived by her husband, Bennie Phipps; sons,
~obe~ and Dra~o; daughters, )\'lakala and Nikkfa· sister
....onrue; aunt, Hdda; uncle, Mike; and severallli~es and
nexhews; several friends.
.
graveside service will be conducted at I. J).tn. on
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2008 , at. the U_mon_Cemetery in New
Haven: W.Va.-There w1ll be no vtsitahon. Arrangements
are be!ng handled by the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home m Pomeroy.
·
·
Online condolences may be sent to www.anersonmcdaniel.com.

Local Briefs .
Date changed
!UP~ERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
D1stnct s boared meeting has been changed from October
l3 to Oct. 20.

Local Weather
Columbus Day•..;Sunny .
Highs ·in the lower 80s.
South winds around 5 mph .
Monday nlght •••Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower
50s.
Southeast
winds
around 5 mph. .
Tuesday ...Sunny. Highs
· in the lower 80s. Southwest.
winds around 5 mph.
Tuesday night ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s. Southwest wmds
around 5 mph.
·
"'ednesday ... Part I y
sonny. Highs in the mid 70s.

Wednesday nlg_ht and
cloudy
With , a 40 percent chance
of showers. Lows in the
mid 50s . . Highs · in the
·
upper 60s.
.
.
Submitted photo
Thursday night and .
Friday•• .Mostly
cloudy. Recently, famtly members of the late Ralston "Rollie" Burdett Hemsley gathered to dedicate a sign in his honor which
Lows around 50. Highs in hangs at the Syracuse Mumc1pal Park. Hemsle_y was a professional baseball player and a native of Syracuse. Pictured in
the back row (from left) grandchlldren, John! Bnan and Jean Ano Ritch hart; nephews, Jimmy Joe Hemsley with his daughthe lower 60s.
Friday night through ter Danae_ and Wife Manlyn; second row, mece M~ry Donna Davis; third row (from left) great grandch ildren , Valerie and
Saturday · night...Partly Autumn Rrtchhart. Not pr.ctured, daughter Roanna Handy, Potomac, Md. and Bobby Hemsley, Silver Springs, Md.
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s. Highs in the lower 60s.
Sunday...Sunny. Highs in
the mid 60s.
T~ursday ...Mostly

~re~lStltee1di11t2 Awareness Month activities .
STAFF REPORT

Eating champ delivers top
piz~a performance in NY .

. NEWSCMYD~ILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - In support'
of the World Allian.ce for
Breastfeeding
Action
(WABA)
2008
world ·
NEW YORK (AP) squeezed the slices to make theme, "Mother Support:
Chowdown champ Joey them easier to swallow.
Going for the Gold," the
Chestnut .has done it again
The 24-year-old rocketed · Meigs County W!C office
- this time proving he's a to
. competitiv~ating coordinated with t.he recogpizza powerhouse.
celebnty · when he- won nized "Circles of Support"
He downed 45 slices in I0 · Coney lslapd~s July Fourth to increase breastfeeding
minutes Sunday to win the hot-dog eating contest in awareness and . support.
first Famous Famiglia 2007. He took the title again These circles
include
. World
Pizza
Eating .this summer by gulping Women, Family and Social ·
Championship in New down 59 dogs in lO min- Networks, Workplace and
York's Times Square. .
. utes.
.
Employment, Emergency _
The 24-year-old from San
He won a contest in Response, Government/
Jose, Calif.; says he fasted Tennessee last · month by legislation, and Healthcare.
for more than a day to pre- wolfing down 93 Krystal
Women and Family and
pare. He folded and hamburgers in 8 minutes.
Socia.! Networks were provided with information on
their importance in providing support of mother's
from Page AI
who choose to breastfeed ...
· Pa.lin was to speak at a city to be hit hard with the · Some suggestions inCluded ·
.encouraging,
rally in St Clairsville later · loss of jobs from the DHL listening,
assistin~,
and
referring.
in _the day. A~er arriving at delivery service hub based
Tn-State A1rport near there, spoke later in a com- Many ttmes just knowing
Huntington, W.Va., Palin munity where 'union senti- that someone else cares can
help ease the struggles
boarded the bus for the what ment runs hi~h .
with brining · a
associated
would be her single stop for
St. Clainvdle is the seat
.
of Belmont County, won by new baby home. It is also
Gallipolis.
"I told the governor when John Kerry in the 2004 important to remember that
she arrived at the airport she presidential race, and also accurate information leads
would see the most beauti- the home of U.S. Rep. to mljking the best decision
.
·
Submitted photo
ful part of Ohio when she Charlie Wilson, a first-term for one's circumstance, so The Me1gs County WIC program recently raised money and presented a donation to the
'traveled up this way Democrat whose Sixth it is never a bad idea to Ohio Mother's Mil~ Bank which provides breastmilk to critically ill infants. Meigs County
through Lawrenct! and Congressional
District - refer to a professional. The WIC rarsed these funds by holding a Mother's Milk walk and Craft Fair in Pome roy.
Gallia counties,"_ said for- includes Ga.llia and Meigs Meigs County Resource
Guide
found
at · the benefits of breastfeedmer Sen. Mike DeWine of counties.
mation about breastfeeding
www
.meigscountycham
- ' ing and how making specific concerns is avail- feeding when it is Ollr own
Ohio, who with his wife
"I think we will do well in
babies experiencing less illFran traveled with the Palin southern and southeastern ber.com is a stan to finding changes to infant diets now able in all of our area hospi- ness. higher intelli~cn ce
entourage.
Ohio," DeWine reflected. a professional iri the area . can , have many positive tals . Acute care facilities scores , and increased s'C ilool
The 'other announced stop "Even in more Democratic Other infoiTilation included changes to future health of that serve our area also have success.
was for Marietta, ·and counties we're seeing more overcoming time · barriers our community.
IBCLC '~ on staff to support
. WOUB 's ConversatiO(l S
reports Palin would make a people coming in for to providing support like
Infmmation was also pro- breastfeeding families that from Studio B program was
prioritizing our own lives, . vided to the Public Health may have extraordinary cirstop at the last day of the McCain signs."
making
the "have to's" fun , Infrastructure Coordinator cumstances. WJC also ut!lized a ~ a forum for
Bob EVJI!IS Fann Festival
"I try to look at both
0 Bleness
Memori al
proved mcorrect as the sides," Pat Miller s'aid. "I . and planning ahead.
at the Meigs County Health employs
a
Certifie1:1 Hospital'&gt; IB CLC. Michelle
The Business Case for · Department to facilitate the Lactation Counselor who
entourage was seen travel- want to v'ote for the best
Breastfeeding
presentation development of Emergency can answer ~reastfeeding Biddlestone, A ihcn' Coumy
ing nonh on Ohio 7 after - person for my country
WIC's
Brcu;,ti'eeding
because I have to think developed • by the US Preparedness policies that questions and make refer- Coordinator. Julie G l adn c~:
' leaving Ga.llipolis.
"I think it's a great thing abOut my children's future." Department of Health and support breastfeeding moth- rals _to other healthcare and Meigs County WIC:'s
for us,'' said Andy Fisher of
With three weeks left in the Human Services was pre- ers in crisis situations.
providers.
Breastfeeding ;mJ O u t r~ac h
Ga.llipolis, present with his campaign, Ohio :.__ consid- sented to the Workplace and
Meigs County WIC colThe highlight of 2008 Coordinator.' Nora Ell is to
wife Jo Ellen and daughter ered a_ major swing state for Employment circle of sup- laborated with area WJC BAM was the First share general breastfeediug
Ashley when. Palm stopped. l'ylcCam and Democratic port at t,he Meigs County agencies to focus on the Mother's Milk Walk and information
wi th
th e
"She has a good Christian opponent · Sen. Burack Chamber of Commerce hospital
within
the Craft Fair in Pomeory Southeastern Ohio listeniiig
Minded Healtbcare
heart and will make a fme Obama of Dlinois - has Business
Circle. which raised over $200 for area . The arch ived prograin
Many
business
Luncheon.
becone a regular stop for the
vice president.
Breastfeeding support mate- the Ohio Mother 's Milk will also be ava ilable for
"She rea.lly cares about candidates. Obama spoke in ownen were surprised to rials' provided included ref- Bank. The milk bank pro- download on demand fro m
people with_ special needs Dayton,
· Cincinnati, learn that accommodating erence materials ·to easily vides breastmilk to critical- the WO UB web,ite .
and she's not afraid to stand Portsmouth, Chillicothe and breastfeeding in the work- assist in addressing com- ly ill infants . Current _ Wrappin g· up brc;htfeedup to big business," he Columbus late last week, and place could be as simple as mon breastfeeding con- research has s_how~a esti- mg awareness mollth activjadded.
plans a visit to Toledo today. rnsta.lling a privacy curtain cerns. An Internationally maied cost benefi
$11 ' ti es. the Mother·, Mil-k
"She was rea.ll~ down to
Sen. Joe Biden of . and allowing an employee Board Certified Lactation for every $1 s nt on Walk funds were de livere.:J
earth," Ashley Ftsher said. Delaware, Obama's running to flex their break and/or Consultant (IBCLC) who ' human milk in the avoid- to the Ohio Mother\ Mi lle
"There was no j:go and she mate, will also speak in St. lunch lime 'in order to has completed a rigorous, ance of infections . Of Bank and a variety or loc:i l
treated us with respect, Clairsville on Tuesday at 4 express milk for their training program to provide -course, there are many Meigs County sponsors
whic~ some~s you do~'t p.m. at the Ohio University infant. Businesses can also accurate up-to-date infor- priceless benefits to breast· were thanked .
get from pohttcal peOple.
Eastern Campus, and in contact the WIC office for a
Palin;.
who · spoke Marietta at Armory Square complimentary collection
•
of materials that further
Thursday .in 'Wilinington, a Wednesday at 7: 15 p.m.
•
•'
Taking Applications
addresses
incorporating
'
economically . beneficia.!
family friendly policies in
•
their organizations .
HUD Subsidized
The Meigs
County
Efflciency/1 Bedroom
ground equipment for Star to build the Racine Skate Commissioners
" and
50yrs or qualifying disability
Mill Park with a $6,000 Park which must be used · Governor Ted Strickland
Low Income priority
donation from Gatling, for recreational purposes demonstrated
. our
p,..
...
,.,..
•
.,e,.,,.tl'la•lll8
740·992-7022 •
Ohio, help from the Racine only. The village is looking Government's Support of
Middleport l'l&gt;meroy
Community at a playground set which August as Breastfeeding
Area
Silverheels
992-5141 992-544-1
Organization and left over would · cost
around Awareness Month by signA Realty Company·EHO
•••..udtrsonmrdaftld.tom
•
funds from the grant used . $24,000.
ing proclamations outlining
•
•

Palin

: Elections letters-advisory
Letters dealing with the Nm.- . .J el.ecri&lt;m are 1re/come and
· will be accepted up umi/5 p.m. 011 Friday. Ocr. 2-J. Lmer.1·
1•eceived after that deadline wi/11101 be published. Lerrers
should be 300 words i11 length or /e.u a11d IIIIlS/ addn•ss
issues, not personalities. Leiters endorsing local or uational candidates. or containing pasmwl a/lacks. will not be
accepted.

Obituaries

www .mydailysentinel.com

BY RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

across financial markets if
'"We need to be circumAJG failed to cover its in sur, .spec! about activities that
ance obligations on defaults are legitimate but might be'
of mortgage-backed securi- perceived as negative in the
ties and other risky debt.
cun·ent
environment ,"·
Then on Sept. 22, AIG's Ashooh said.
event began at the St. Regis
But no excess should be
resort in Monarch Beach, considered
"legitimate"
Calif., which is built- into a when the financial world is
the under siege. That point
bluff overlooking
Pacific · Oceag half way seems to be lost by many
between Los Angeles and aroun&lt;;l the finaricial industry.
San Diego, according to the · Waxman's panel also
· found documents that
hotel's Web site.
A!G paid a pretty price showed on. Sept. II Lehman
for the views and ameni'ties planned to approve "special
- ringing up a tab of more payments" worth $18.2 milthan $440,000. That bill lion for two executives who
included a we~:k's worth of w.ere terminated involuntaraccominodations, meals, ily, and another $5 million
nearly $24,000 in spa ser- . for one who was leaving on
vices and $7 ,000 worth of his own.
.
golf, according to· a hotel
It shouldn 't\matter what
invoice obtained by con- their employme'ht contracts
gressional investigators .
said - the discu sSio~ were
All this came to light dur- going on just four (la¥-S_
ing an investigation by the before the government l~t
House Overnight Committee lehman go under and file
and Government Reform for ban)(ruptcy. That set off
Committee . Its chairman, a series of tinancial shocks
Henry Waxman _. D-Calif., and failure s that eventually
called out the company dur- led Washington to a $700
ing a hearing on Tuesday for billion
taxpayer-funded
"wining and dining at one of bailout plan for Wall Street.
th ~ most exclusive re:.orts in
" If the board had any
the nation" less than a week sense that the company was
after the government'~ falling apan , I can 't see
bailout.
anything more inappropriAIG spokesman Nick ate than discussing compenAshooh acknowledged the sation at that moment ," sdid
"bad timing" oft he event. He Charles Elson ~ director of
also pointed out it was the Weinberg Center for
planned a year ago and noted , Corporate Gove rnance at
it wasn't an executive retrea( University of Delaware .
rather an event to recognize
Wall Street's greed will
top performing independent ·only prolong tb': world 's
insurapce sales agents.
financtal pam .

r

-

The Maples

Grantrnim.,.At .

,

•

'

�Monaay, October 13, 2008

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
.

J

·The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

..
..

.
..
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www.mydallysentlnel.com

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
•

'

General Manager~News Editor

I . ·, :

·I

I

Congress shall make ''o laiV respecting an
- establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
: free exercise thereoj; or abridging the freedom
: of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
. · people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
·· : · the Government for a redress of grievances.

·---- ----

..

'

~

.'

•

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

•

-?TODAY IN HISTORY

..

Today is Monday. Oc·t. 13, the 287th day of 2008. There
. - _are 79 days left in the year. This is the 'Columbus Day hoi~ -iday in the United States, as well as Thanksgiving D"y in
• ·- t:anada.
·
.
·
·
: Today's Highlight in History: On Ocf. 13. 1792, the comer·stone of the executive mansion. Iuter known as the White
· ·~House, was laid during" ceremony in the District of Columbia.
• On this date: .In A.D. 54, Roman emperor Claudius I died,
· poisoned 'apparently at the behest of his .wife , Agrippina.
In 1775, the United States Navy had its origins as the
Continental Congress ordered the construction of a naval fleet. ~ In 1843,the Jewish organization B'nai B'rith was founded iiJ New York City.
In 1858, the sixth debate between senatorial candidates
Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas took p.lace in
Quincy, Ill.
·
.~ . · In 1908, the Chicago Cubs won Game 4 of the World Series.
defeating the Detroit Tigers 3-0 to take a 3-1 Series lead .
·•
In 1943, Italy declared war on Germany. its one-time
Axis partner.
In 1944, American troops entered Aachen. Germany. dtn·ing World War !1.
·
In 1960, Richard M. Nixon and John F. Kennedy participated in the third televised debate of their presidential can1paign.
(Nixon was in Los Angeles: Kennedy was in New York.)
In 1962, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?'~ by Edward
Albee opened on Broadway.
In 1974, longtime television host' Ed Sullivan died in
New York City at age 72.
Today's Birthdays: Forme_r British Prime
'stcr
Margaret Thatcher is 83. Playwright Frank D. Gilr · 83.
Gospel singer Shirley Caesar is 70 .. Singer-musician Paul
Simon is 67. Singer-musician Sammy Hal'ar is 61. Actor
John Lone is 56 . Model Beverly Johnson 1s 56. Producerwriter Chris Caner is 52. Actor Reggie Theus is 51 . Singer
Marie Osmond is 49. Rock singer Joey Belladonna is 48.
Actress T'Keyah Crystal Keymah is 46. Actress Kate
Walsh is 41. Actress Tisha Campbell-Martin ts 40 .
Classical singer Carlos Marin (II Divol is 40. Olympic silver-medal figure skater Nancy Kerrigan is 39. Country
-singer Rhett Akins is 39. Actor Sacha Baron Cohen is 37 .
Singer Ashanti is 28 . Christian rr .. k. singer Jon Micah
Sumrall (Kutless) is 28.
Thought for Today: "There are some things one can only
achieve by a deliberate leap in the opposite direction. One
has to go abroad in order to find the home one has lost." -'
Franz Kafk,~. Austrian author ( 1883-1924).
•

i/:J

Page _A4
Monday, October 13,2008

Obama s (radicalism' agrowing chasm on road to victory
Palin's remark s were racist . The line between the estabI realized something after
because
"terrorists are en vi- · lishment and the anti-estabTuesday night 's debate: If
sioned as dark-skinned radi- lishment has vanished - at
(big it) Burack Obama is
cal Muslims.'' Therefore.. .. least as far as our political and
not elected president next
Are they kidding? In a media and social institutions
month. it will not be John
.'
word. no. But such efforts are concerned. But there
McCain who defeats him. ·
Diana
·
may
signal a desperate . remain citizens for wbom
ML~ain mny ·be Obama's
West
response
to
g.rowing, such di ~tinctions matter.
official opponent, but he isn't
inchoate unease in the land,
Writing · at
National
making the core case against
a silent, or sighing, or very Review Online , Andrew C.
him: namely. the case against
privately discussed queasi- McCarthy pegged the signifObama 's deep roots in radiness
over the prospect of icance of the Obama-Ayers
calism. which the Democratic , Ayers - a violent. 1960s
nominee ha.~ never pulled up militant ·who later dec1ded making an American presi- connection: "Yes, Ayers is
and grown away from. This is that radicalizing education in dent out of a man who not blunterthan Obama. As he so
wily if Obama loses on the guise of"refonn" was the only didn't cross the street delicat ~ ly told the Times,
Election Day, it won't ·be front-line of revolution - IS to shun a punk like Ayers, America makes him· want to
McCain who defeats him. infamous for a New York but was so comfortable with puke.' The smoother Obama
Like a flashy third-party ·can- Times interview pub Iished on . Ayers - who. not inciden- is content to say ol)r society
didate who ends up drawing Sept. II, 200 I in Which he tally. in 1995-described him~ . needs fundamental '. change.'
just enough support from one not only declared America self &lt;IS "u radical. leftist, But what they're talking
about," he wrote , referring to
candidate to put the other over "makes me ..want to puke:· small 'c' communist'.' ' the top, it is Obama's connec- but also discussed his group's . that Obama launched h!s their complementary visions, .
tions to anti-American violent attacks on American . political career from Ayers' "is not materially different:
Such sentiments should
extremism - his incubation military and civilian targets: living room, also in 1995.
This relationship continued, make Obama unelectable."
in a radical comfon zone asserting, ''we didn't do
Actually, such sentiments
home
to
ex-Weather enough." His working rela- as even ti)C New York Times
Underground leader William tionship with Obama, as doc- perhaps inadveitently report- should make Qbama radioacAyers . ex-PLO mouthpiece umented by Stanley Kurtz, cd : Obama "said they have rive. But ours is a culture of
Rashid .Khalidi , anti-white- goes back to the 1990s when not spoken by phone or relativism in which one
and -anti -•' lliJ iddlec Iassness" Obama served as chaiiTilan of exchanged e-mai I messages · "belief system" is considered
minister Jeremiah Wright and a $150 million charity,which since Mr. Obama began serv- as valid as any other.
Marxism?
others - that will doom his Kurtz describes as Ayers' ing in the United States Democracy?
Senate
in
Janmuy
2005
."
Ask
Whatever!
Lawful
elections?
presidential ambitions.
"brainchild," that doled out
yourself:
What
American
.Bombing
·
t
he
·Pentagon?
McCain. Obuma and, money to far-left groups such
coming up on the outside, as ACORN. Funny, as Kurtz president - any party. any What's the difference? So
Obama.'s radicalism: This .has noliid, Obama never era - would have maintained greatly transformed by relathree-way race has created a mentioned the~ five years of correspondence with Mr. tivism is our society that not
weird dynmac as .the candi- what is his only executive America "makes me want to even elder statesman and vetdates turn into the final experience in e1ther of his puke" for that long'/ And eran John McCain is alarmed
stretch. Blinkers on, McCain two memoirs. Not so funny is about the year 2005: Isn't that by Obama's radicalism. If he
hobbles after Obama, who is Obama 's dishonest descrip- roughly when Obama decid- were. this patriot who puts
"country first ," would be
now desperdiely trying to tion of Ayers as "just a guy ed to run for president"
Americans may be fuzzy doing everything in his
shake off the radicalism that who lives in my neighbOron the details - and how power to warn the American
could trip him iip before the hood." .
tinish line. Again, no thanks . · ~SM coverage of the could they be clear, given the people against it .
Not that it matters. not
to McCain, whose winks at relationship has been hardly. media's pro-Obanm activities
Obama 's nidicalism, Sarah more fonhcoming. It ruris - but some are realizing, now. not since Obama's radPalin's stumpside references from demonstrable white- slowly and with no conubo- icalism entered the race. If
notwithstanding, are not wash - as put over in the · ration in the public square, this stalking horse finishes
what has brought it to the New York T1mes, which, in that such radical ties don't · · strong. Obuma loses and
America wins - despite the
fore. The fact is, Obama 's nixing notable ties, omitted pass presidential muster.
ties to radicalism are taking all mention of copious, pre- . Or do they'l In the end, the other candidate.
(Diana Wesr is a cvltuu on a life of their own.
viously published evidence answer will decide the election.
Meanwhile,
we
,
the
peonisi
for The Washing ron
Such a "life" is in no way to' the contrary - to overt
documented in the main- damage control. as conduct- pie, are on our own. Once. Times . S'•e is the awhor of
stream media (MSM). Just ed by the Associated Pr~ss. America's political and media _"The Death of the Grownconsider our leading jour- The AP actually argued that and social institutions would itp: How America :, Arre,ved
nalists' idea of professional Palin's reference · to the have reflexively rejected a Del'dopmenr Is Bringing
Western
responsibility when it Obama-Ayers relationship presidential candidate with an Doll'n
comes . to , for example, · as Obama "(palling) around· alliance with, or even an Cil'ili~ arion, " ond has a
Obama 's connection to with terrorists" conveyed a affinity for, an unrepentant hlog '" diwunvesr .net. She
unrepentant
Pentagon "racially tin~ed subtext." terrorist and · anti-establish- can be cmuaaed via
Huh? Acc·l?rdmg to the Ap, ment.revolutionary. No more. dianawesr@verizon.net.)
bomber William Ayers.

.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

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.....

.

ALL BUSINESS: Crisis doesn't curb corporate excess

ignoring - the potential
downside to such decisions.
When the going was good ;
NEW
YORK
Even
as
they profited handsomely.
Letters to the editor are wdwme. Tlwv should !Je less
Wall
Street
trembled,
some
of
r: l}m 's CEO Richard
ihan 300 words. All tellers are subject ro ·ediring. 11111.1·t bt•
the
people
responsible
for
the
ved compensation
signed, and include addrt•ss and teleplrone 1111111/&gt;er. No
financial
stonn
got
f~tials
valued at $22.05
unsigned [el/ers will be published. Lerrers s/rou/d he in
and
others
tried
to
secure
milmillion
when
it was grantgood raste, addressing issues, nor persmwlities. Lerrers ~ of
lion-dollar
payouts.
ed,
while
AlG's
then-CEO
thanks to nrganizarions and indil•idua/.~ will not be acceptJust
days
after
the
U.S.
Martin
Sullivan's
pay was
ed for puhlicarion .
government saved American $13.9 _,rtll..lon last year,
International Group with an according tq a calculation
$85 billion taxpayer-funded by The Associated Press . ·
loan; the company picked up . From the moment things
'
the $440,000 tab, for a week- turned ugly more than a year
(USPS 213-960)
long retreat at a posh ago, they've failed to be
Reader Services .
Ohio Valley Publishing
Cal ifomia resort for t\&gt;p-per- upfront about the ·conseCo.
forming insurance agents, quences for their businesseS.
Correetton Polley
Published every anernoon. Monday
according to congressional Yet behind the scenes,
Our main concern in all stori es is to
thro ugh Friday. 111. Court Street. ·
investigators.
they've pushed han! to secure
be accurate. II you know of an error PorTt.roy, Ohio. Second-class postage
At
lehman
Brothers,
the
their
own finances and bene·in a story, call the newsroom at (7 40) paid at Pomemy_
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bank
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Member: The ASSOCiated Press and
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and
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motor
route
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One month ·
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One year '115.84
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Deity
50'
Reportet : Brian At;ted, Ext. 14
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Advertising
dence h&lt;LS ero&lt;led because $700 bill ion hook to bai I out
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no one knows who or what · the financial system.
sc ript ion t&gt;,. mail permined in areas
Outsides.... : B,renda Dav1s. Exr 16 where home carrier service is avaU·
That's why the AlG boonto
believe
anymore.
ClaaJCirc.: Judy Clarl&lt;. E•t 10
Financial company execu- doggle requires attention. It
ti ves can blame themselves highlights the disconnect
Mall Subscrtptton
between Wall Street and
for creating this mess General Manager
Inside Meigs County
and what's astonishin$ is Main Street regarding
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
t 3 Weeks
' 32.26
that they keep doing thmgs what's app~priate behavior.
26 Weeks
'64.20
The govern,ment on Sllpt .
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52 Weeks
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h
www.my.J.~ysen1tnel.oom
52 Weeks
' 214.21 ' sure to t e housing market, Federal officials worried
'-----------'~----------....J I without recognizing - or that a panic might occur·

The Daily Sentinel

Shannon Phipps

The Daily Senti nel • Page As

Hemsley sign dedicated

POMEROY - Shannon Phipps 37 of Pomeroy
passed away at the Pleasant Valley Hospital on Friday'
Oct. lO, 2008 .
•
She _was born on Aug. 13, 1971, to the late .Robert and
V1ctona (Evans) McCarty in Washington Coljnhouse. She
was a homemaker.
, ·
She is survived by her husband, Bennie Phipps; sons,
~obe~ and Dra~o; daughters, )\'lakala and Nikkfa· sister
....onrue; aunt, Hdda; uncle, Mike; and severallli~es and
nexhews; several friends.
.
graveside service will be conducted at I. J).tn. on
Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2008 , at. the U_mon_Cemetery in New
Haven: W.Va.-There w1ll be no vtsitahon. Arrangements
are be!ng handled by the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home m Pomeroy.
·
·
Online condolences may be sent to www.anersonmcdaniel.com.

Local Briefs .
Date changed
!UP~ERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
D1stnct s boared meeting has been changed from October
l3 to Oct. 20.

Local Weather
Columbus Day•..;Sunny .
Highs ·in the lower 80s.
South winds around 5 mph .
Monday nlght •••Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower
50s.
Southeast
winds
around 5 mph. .
Tuesday ...Sunny. Highs
· in the lower 80s. Southwest.
winds around 5 mph.
Tuesday night ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s. Southwest wmds
around 5 mph.
·
"'ednesday ... Part I y
sonny. Highs in the mid 70s.

Wednesday nlg_ht and
cloudy
With , a 40 percent chance
of showers. Lows in the
mid 50s . . Highs · in the
·
upper 60s.
.
.
Submitted photo
Thursday night and .
Friday•• .Mostly
cloudy. Recently, famtly members of the late Ralston "Rollie" Burdett Hemsley gathered to dedicate a sign in his honor which
Lows around 50. Highs in hangs at the Syracuse Mumc1pal Park. Hemsle_y was a professional baseball player and a native of Syracuse. Pictured in
the back row (from left) grandchlldren, John! Bnan and Jean Ano Ritch hart; nephews, Jimmy Joe Hemsley with his daughthe lower 60s.
Friday night through ter Danae_ and Wife Manlyn; second row, mece M~ry Donna Davis; third row (from left) great grandch ildren , Valerie and
Saturday · night...Partly Autumn Rrtchhart. Not pr.ctured, daughter Roanna Handy, Potomac, Md. and Bobby Hemsley, Silver Springs, Md.
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s. Highs in the lower 60s.
Sunday...Sunny. Highs in
the mid 60s.
T~ursday ...Mostly

~re~lStltee1di11t2 Awareness Month activities .
STAFF REPORT

Eating champ delivers top
piz~a performance in NY .

. NEWSCMYD~ILYSENTINEL .COM

POMEROY - In support'
of the World Allian.ce for
Breastfeeding
Action
(WABA)
2008
world ·
NEW YORK (AP) squeezed the slices to make theme, "Mother Support:
Chowdown champ Joey them easier to swallow.
Going for the Gold," the
Chestnut .has done it again
The 24-year-old rocketed · Meigs County W!C office
- this time proving he's a to
. competitiv~ating coordinated with t.he recogpizza powerhouse.
celebnty · when he- won nized "Circles of Support"
He downed 45 slices in I0 · Coney lslapd~s July Fourth to increase breastfeeding
minutes Sunday to win the hot-dog eating contest in awareness and . support.
first Famous Famiglia 2007. He took the title again These circles
include
. World
Pizza
Eating .this summer by gulping Women, Family and Social ·
Championship in New down 59 dogs in lO min- Networks, Workplace and
York's Times Square. .
. utes.
.
Employment, Emergency _
The 24-year-old from San
He won a contest in Response, Government/
Jose, Calif.; says he fasted Tennessee last · month by legislation, and Healthcare.
for more than a day to pre- wolfing down 93 Krystal
Women and Family and
pare. He folded and hamburgers in 8 minutes.
Socia.! Networks were provided with information on
their importance in providing support of mother's
from Page AI
who choose to breastfeed ...
· Pa.lin was to speak at a city to be hit hard with the · Some suggestions inCluded ·
.encouraging,
rally in St Clairsville later · loss of jobs from the DHL listening,
assistin~,
and
referring.
in _the day. A~er arriving at delivery service hub based
Tn-State A1rport near there, spoke later in a com- Many ttmes just knowing
Huntington, W.Va., Palin munity where 'union senti- that someone else cares can
help ease the struggles
boarded the bus for the what ment runs hi~h .
with brining · a
associated
would be her single stop for
St. Clainvdle is the seat
.
of Belmont County, won by new baby home. It is also
Gallipolis.
"I told the governor when John Kerry in the 2004 important to remember that
she arrived at the airport she presidential race, and also accurate information leads
would see the most beauti- the home of U.S. Rep. to mljking the best decision
.
·
Submitted photo
ful part of Ohio when she Charlie Wilson, a first-term for one's circumstance, so The Me1gs County WIC program recently raised money and presented a donation to the
'traveled up this way Democrat whose Sixth it is never a bad idea to Ohio Mother's Mil~ Bank which provides breastmilk to critically ill infants. Meigs County
through Lawrenct! and Congressional
District - refer to a professional. The WIC rarsed these funds by holding a Mother's Milk walk and Craft Fair in Pome roy.
Gallia counties,"_ said for- includes Ga.llia and Meigs Meigs County Resource
Guide
found
at · the benefits of breastfeedmer Sen. Mike DeWine of counties.
mation about breastfeeding
www
.meigscountycham
- ' ing and how making specific concerns is avail- feeding when it is Ollr own
Ohio, who with his wife
"I think we will do well in
babies experiencing less illFran traveled with the Palin southern and southeastern ber.com is a stan to finding changes to infant diets now able in all of our area hospi- ness. higher intelli~cn ce
entourage.
Ohio," DeWine reflected. a professional iri the area . can , have many positive tals . Acute care facilities scores , and increased s'C ilool
The 'other announced stop "Even in more Democratic Other infoiTilation included changes to future health of that serve our area also have success.
was for Marietta, ·and counties we're seeing more overcoming time · barriers our community.
IBCLC '~ on staff to support
. WOUB 's ConversatiO(l S
reports Palin would make a people coming in for to providing support like
Infmmation was also pro- breastfeeding families that from Studio B program was
prioritizing our own lives, . vided to the Public Health may have extraordinary cirstop at the last day of the McCain signs."
making
the "have to's" fun , Infrastructure Coordinator cumstances. WJC also ut!lized a ~ a forum for
Bob EVJI!IS Fann Festival
"I try to look at both
0 Bleness
Memori al
proved mcorrect as the sides," Pat Miller s'aid. "I . and planning ahead.
at the Meigs County Health employs
a
Certifie1:1 Hospital'&gt; IB CLC. Michelle
The Business Case for · Department to facilitate the Lactation Counselor who
entourage was seen travel- want to v'ote for the best
Breastfeeding
presentation development of Emergency can answer ~reastfeeding Biddlestone, A ihcn' Coumy
ing nonh on Ohio 7 after - person for my country
WIC's
Brcu;,ti'eeding
because I have to think developed • by the US Preparedness policies that questions and make refer- Coordinator. Julie G l adn c~:
' leaving Ga.llipolis.
"I think it's a great thing abOut my children's future." Department of Health and support breastfeeding moth- rals _to other healthcare and Meigs County WIC:'s
for us,'' said Andy Fisher of
With three weeks left in the Human Services was pre- ers in crisis situations.
providers.
Breastfeeding ;mJ O u t r~ac h
Ga.llipolis, present with his campaign, Ohio :.__ consid- sented to the Workplace and
Meigs County WIC colThe highlight of 2008 Coordinator.' Nora Ell is to
wife Jo Ellen and daughter ered a_ major swing state for Employment circle of sup- laborated with area WJC BAM was the First share general breastfeediug
Ashley when. Palm stopped. l'ylcCam and Democratic port at t,he Meigs County agencies to focus on the Mother's Milk Walk and information
wi th
th e
"She has a good Christian opponent · Sen. Burack Chamber of Commerce hospital
within
the Craft Fair in Pomeory Southeastern Ohio listeniiig
Minded Healtbcare
heart and will make a fme Obama of Dlinois - has Business
Circle. which raised over $200 for area . The arch ived prograin
Many
business
Luncheon.
becone a regular stop for the
vice president.
Breastfeeding support mate- the Ohio Mother 's Milk will also be ava ilable for
"She rea.lly cares about candidates. Obama spoke in ownen were surprised to rials' provided included ref- Bank. The milk bank pro- download on demand fro m
people with_ special needs Dayton,
· Cincinnati, learn that accommodating erence materials ·to easily vides breastmilk to critical- the WO UB web,ite .
and she's not afraid to stand Portsmouth, Chillicothe and breastfeeding in the work- assist in addressing com- ly ill infants . Current _ Wrappin g· up brc;htfeedup to big business," he Columbus late last week, and place could be as simple as mon breastfeeding con- research has s_how~a esti- mg awareness mollth activjadded.
plans a visit to Toledo today. rnsta.lling a privacy curtain cerns. An Internationally maied cost benefi
$11 ' ti es. the Mother·, Mil-k
"She was rea.ll~ down to
Sen. Joe Biden of . and allowing an employee Board Certified Lactation for every $1 s nt on Walk funds were de livere.:J
earth," Ashley Ftsher said. Delaware, Obama's running to flex their break and/or Consultant (IBCLC) who ' human milk in the avoid- to the Ohio Mother\ Mi lle
"There was no j:go and she mate, will also speak in St. lunch lime 'in order to has completed a rigorous, ance of infections . Of Bank and a variety or loc:i l
treated us with respect, Clairsville on Tuesday at 4 express milk for their training program to provide -course, there are many Meigs County sponsors
whic~ some~s you do~'t p.m. at the Ohio University infant. Businesses can also accurate up-to-date infor- priceless benefits to breast· were thanked .
get from pohttcal peOple.
Eastern Campus, and in contact the WIC office for a
Palin;.
who · spoke Marietta at Armory Square complimentary collection
•
of materials that further
Thursday .in 'Wilinington, a Wednesday at 7: 15 p.m.
•
•'
Taking Applications
addresses
incorporating
'
economically . beneficia.!
family friendly policies in
•
their organizations .
HUD Subsidized
The Meigs
County
Efflciency/1 Bedroom
ground equipment for Star to build the Racine Skate Commissioners
" and
50yrs or qualifying disability
Mill Park with a $6,000 Park which must be used · Governor Ted Strickland
Low Income priority
donation from Gatling, for recreational purposes demonstrated
. our
p,..
...
,.,..
•
.,e,.,,.tl'la•lll8
740·992-7022 •
Ohio, help from the Racine only. The village is looking Government's Support of
Middleport l'l&gt;meroy
Community at a playground set which August as Breastfeeding
Area
Silverheels
992-5141 992-544-1
Organization and left over would · cost
around Awareness Month by signA Realty Company·EHO
•••..udtrsonmrdaftld.tom
•
funds from the grant used . $24,000.
ing proclamations outlining
•
•

Palin

: Elections letters-advisory
Letters dealing with the Nm.- . .J el.ecri&lt;m are 1re/come and
· will be accepted up umi/5 p.m. 011 Friday. Ocr. 2-J. Lmer.1·
1•eceived after that deadline wi/11101 be published. Lerrers
should be 300 words i11 length or /e.u a11d IIIIlS/ addn•ss
issues, not personalities. Leiters endorsing local or uational candidates. or containing pasmwl a/lacks. will not be
accepted.

Obituaries

www .mydailysentinel.com

BY RACHEL BECK
AP BUSINESS WRITER

across financial markets if
'"We need to be circumAJG failed to cover its in sur, .spec! about activities that
ance obligations on defaults are legitimate but might be'
of mortgage-backed securi- perceived as negative in the
ties and other risky debt.
cun·ent
environment ,"·
Then on Sept. 22, AIG's Ashooh said.
event began at the St. Regis
But no excess should be
resort in Monarch Beach, considered
"legitimate"
Calif., which is built- into a when the financial world is
the under siege. That point
bluff overlooking
Pacific · Oceag half way seems to be lost by many
between Los Angeles and aroun&lt;;l the finaricial industry.
San Diego, according to the · Waxman's panel also
· found documents that
hotel's Web site.
A!G paid a pretty price showed on. Sept. II Lehman
for the views and ameni'ties planned to approve "special
- ringing up a tab of more payments" worth $18.2 milthan $440,000. That bill lion for two executives who
included a we~:k's worth of w.ere terminated involuntaraccominodations, meals, ily, and another $5 million
nearly $24,000 in spa ser- . for one who was leaving on
vices and $7 ,000 worth of his own.
.
golf, according to· a hotel
It shouldn 't\matter what
invoice obtained by con- their employme'ht contracts
gressional investigators .
said - the discu sSio~ were
All this came to light dur- going on just four (la¥-S_
ing an investigation by the before the government l~t
House Overnight Committee lehman go under and file
and Government Reform for ban)(ruptcy. That set off
Committee . Its chairman, a series of tinancial shocks
Henry Waxman _. D-Calif., and failure s that eventually
called out the company dur- led Washington to a $700
ing a hearing on Tuesday for billion
taxpayer-funded
"wining and dining at one of bailout plan for Wall Street.
th ~ most exclusive re:.orts in
" If the board had any
the nation" less than a week sense that the company was
after the government'~ falling apan , I can 't see
bailout.
anything more inappropriAIG spokesman Nick ate than discussing compenAshooh acknowledged the sation at that moment ," sdid
"bad timing" oft he event. He Charles Elson ~ director of
also pointed out it was the Weinberg Center for
planned a year ago and noted , Corporate Gove rnance at
it wasn't an executive retrea( University of Delaware .
rather an event to recognize
Wall Street's greed will
top performing independent ·only prolong tb': world 's
insurapce sales agents.
financtal pam .

r

-

The Maples

Grantrnim.,.At .

,

•

'

�·'

•

The Daily Sentinel
'

AcRoss THE NATION

PageA6
Monday, October 13,2008

Bl

'

The Daily Sentinel ·
OSU seeking more oft'ense, Page B2

Jones leads Jets past Bengals, Page 86
Brow&amp; stagger into Monday Digbt, Page Bo

Monday, October 13, 2008

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY - A ICheck.lle of upcoming high
School varaHy aportl_n g e'olents involving
teama from Me lgt lnd Galli• counlle•.

Mgndlv Ocetpbtr 13
D2 VOI!eylloll
(9). Waverly at (8) Galtia Academy, 6
,
p.m.

Skyline holds dual Jack-o-Lantern 35's.
'

Bv seem- WOLFE
SPORTS CORAeSPONDENT

nrud•r

Pr:tgt= 14
D2Buya(7) Gatlia Academy at (2) Marietta . 6

freedom and garnered some
momentum. Meanwhile ,
Danny Smith · began to run
down the front runners as a
smooth-driving Mintz drove
through traffic. on cruise
control. In-and-out, high and
low Mintz's every move was
smooth and sneaky-fast.
· A lot of close action followed the leaders, but all
eyes were on Mintz and his
breath-taking moves through
traffic. Blaney was no less
impressive and by lap 23
was back to within a couple
car lengths. Mintz felt
Blaney's presence and
responded with a sense of
urgency. A~ if shifting into
overdnve, Mintz once again
opened 'up the lead to five or
more rods, just as the caution. waved for a spinning
Caleb Griffith on lap 25.
Drivers tightened up their
belts, and fans moved closer
to the ed~e of their se.ats in
anticipatiOn for a classic
Skyline finish. Cole Duncan,
Kevin Lee, and Aaron
Higgins all had great runs in
afightforthetopfive. Mintz
went low and Blaney high
with two different strategies
as Cole Duncan and Aaron
Higgins both bagged Smith
for third and fourth. Smith
responded with a vengeance
and battled to regain posi-

.

tion.
,
The first time Mintz visited Sk~line Speedway, he
liked 1t. In his last visit
Saturday, he absolutely
loved it. Mintz rode his
rocketship ,
a · Griff's
Mopar/Maxim Chassis, into
the Skyline record books as
Blaney struggled to find any
part of, turf where his car
could make traction. Duncan
moved in on Blaney to add
to the excitement as Mintz
blasted under the checkered
for his first Skyline win,
while Danny Smith bagged
Higgins for fourth at the
start-fmish line. ·
"I've been here three
times and I absolutely love
this place. You gl!ys
(Skyline) put on a great
show and this is. a great·
track," exclaimed Mintz. :·11
was an honor to be able to
start beside Dale Blaney.
He's one of the best. We've
;aced Dale close on occasion, but to get the jump and
eventually beat him was a
bonus."·
Kevin Lee made his first
visit to Skyline a good one,
showcasing his talents in the
Southern half of the state in
placing just ahead of Josh
Da11is, Jimmy Nier, Keith
Baxter, and Cale Conley
who rounded out t~e top ten.

.

Mintz lapped all but the first
nine Cars:
It wasn't offi~ially ali All·
Star race, but it could well
have been. Several heavy
hitters speckled tlie field for
the 2nd Annual Jack-0Lantern race . Rod Conley
and Steve Shaver paced a
star-studded .Late Model
field to the wave of the
green, and quickly Shaver
Rocketed into the lead.
Shaver fought off Conley,
then Josh McGuire moved
into second for a ten lap
rumble that saw numerous
lead changes. Finally, on lap
eleven McGuire took command and Shaver was now
in chase with Mike Balzano
in hot pursuit.
By midway, fan~ in attendance knew they were in for
a great race. At the finish it
w:ts a well known fact. In
fact, many fans concurred it
may liave been one of the
best ever , at the Southern
Ohio speed plant.
For five circuits Shaver
dogged McGuire then the
Vienna
driver's
Rocket/Malcuit hot rod was
trapped behind a lapped car.
Shaver baited \)le hook and
reeled McGuire back to .the
end of the rod, finally
regaining lost ground and
the lead with a daredevil

pass on the backchute. Wellscripted, the race's climax
would be · at the checkered .
flag. Now the Grayson, KY
driver was in the catbird seat
and watched as Shaver mastered the high-banked 3/8
mile oval.
·
McGuire rode low ani!
then high, but Shaver 's highline was the fastest. Still
McGuire wasn't satisfied for
second · as lapped traffic
yielded to open turf for the
two-lap shootout to the finish. The battle of nip-andtuck rattled the stands as
Shaver prevailed with a
solid, hard-earned win.
Shaver, McGuire, Mike
Balzano, Rod Conley,
Delmas Conley. Jason
Montgomery, Larry Bond,
Chris Garnes, Audie ~artz,
and Andy Bond rounded out
the top ten.
"I want to dedicate this ·
race to my friend Jack Shutts .
and his family. I want to
wish him the best, this one is
for him," said Shaver in victory lane. "It's getting
toward the end of the season,
so it's good 'to finish the season strong. And we finally
beat
Josh
McGuire
here .. .fair and square. He
has owned this place .so it's

STEWART - With 141
cars in the pits and a good
p.m.
October crowd,
Billy
.
lluyaSocce&lt;
Jarrell's Skyline Speedway
Ohio Valley Christian at Cross Lanes
·was
doing its own version of
Christian, 5 p.m.
"Monster Rock" in the first
Wednuclllt OM""M 15
running of the dual 'ack-oD2 Yolleyt&gt;oll
Lantern 35's. Northern Ohio
Winner of Marietta-VInton County a.t (2)
Meigs, 6 p.m.
invader Craig Mintz .of
Winner ot Waverty-Gall.la Academy at
Gibsonburg
claimed the
(1) Unioto, 6 p.m.
crown in the 410 Sprint
Jbf.l!'ldl¥ tlt:Ww 1(
main, while the companion
D4 Votleyblll - Sectional ftnala
Late
Model .main was won
17) Miller at (2) Eastern , 6 p.m.
by Vienna, WV driver Steve
(~) Pile Eastern at ~4) South Gallia, 8
p.m.
.
Sha,ver. · Mike
Martin
~6) SouiMrn at 13) Waterto rd, 6 p.m.
claimed the Street Stock
main , Jeremy Blake won the
Satunllv Octqbtfll
D3 VOlleyball - SectiONtl flnol
Pure Stocks, Ryan McClain
(6) Nelsonville·Vo\'k at River Valley, 4
·claimed the Four Cylinders,
p.m.
Tracy Fritier the Mod Lites,
ACSI Tourn.
Ohio Yalley Christian at Granville, TBA
and Ronnie Pickens took the
Mini..W~ge main.
.
The 410 sprinters took to
.11
.the 'speedway first led b'y
dash winner Craig Mintz
and All-Star Champ Dale
Blaney. Mintz led the first
five markers as Blaney
~apped out his strategy, divmg low past Mmtz as the
NEW YORK (AP)
two exchanged positionsTexas rode its resounding and-back on the cross-over.
i{ed River Rivalry upset Mintz continued to lead as a
right to 'No. 1.
· lapped car sawed off Blaney
The
Longhor·m-.J.Al:nd gave the Northern Ohio
leapfrogged No. 2 Alabama driver some breathing room .
P,lease see Skyline, 11
on Sunday and sit atop The
Mintz took the low road to
Associated Press Top 25 in --~----------------..,-------------------,----------..,-­
the regular season for the
first time in 24 years after
)Jeating Oklahoma 45-35.
Texas' jump to No. I is
the largest si nee Miami
went from No . 6 to No. I on
Aug. 29, 1988 , after beating
COLUMBUS (AP) preseason
top-ranked
Asked to describe his
Aorida State 31 "0 to start
team's offense in one word,
the season.
Ohio . State coach Jim
Texas received 39 firstTressel thought a minute
place votes and I ,599 points
and said, "hit and miss."
from the. media panel.
On a sloppy day for the
Alabama received the pther
No.
12. Buckeyes, even the
36 first-place . votes and
coach
had trouble narrowI ,582 points.
.
ing
down
what was wrong .
. "Bemg ranked No. I
Special teams and defense
shows respect for what
held
up their ends of the
we've
accomplished
bargain,
though, with
through the early. part of the
Malcolm
Jenkins
blocking a
season, but nobody really
punt and Etienne Sabino
knows who is No. I at this
returning
it 20 yards for a
pPint," Texas coach Mack
touchdown to lead the way ·
Brown said Sunday.
to · a 16-3 vic'tory over
· · It certainly has been a
Purdue on Saiurday.
fluid situation.
"The offense came up and
The Longhorns are the
said, 'We owe you,"' Ohio
fourth No. I team this seaState linebacker James
son, following Georgia,
Laurinaitis said.
Southern California and
•
Submmed photo
The Boilermakers (2-4, 0- ·
Oklahoma. So it's just more Pictured above are members of the 2008 SEOAL girls' championship cross country team from Gallia Academy High 2) didn't get inside the Ohio
of the ·same following an School. Standing from left are Allison Nolan, Katie Dunlap, Miriah Green, McKenna Warner, Lauren Adkinsm Peyton . State 30 until the final 30
unpredictable 2007 season
seconds.
that had four No. I teams Adkins, Lee Ann Townsend ahd Genna Baker. Absent from the photo was Kayla Harrison.
Freshman quarterback
and eight different teams
ranked second.
For the second time this
·•
"Beanie" Wells totaled 94
season, three of the top four
The Blue Angels had the winning the 57-competitor . with respective finishes sev- yards on 22 carries for the
BY BRYAN WALTERS
teams in the country lost on BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRtBUNE.COM overall race winner and five girls' race with a time of enth and . tenth. All five of Buckeyes (6-1, 3-0 Big
the same weekend. While
of the 4op-IO finishers en 20:04.5. The elder Adkins those . Blue Angels also Ten). Whether it was due to
the losses by the previously . VINCENT - The perfor- route to capturing the 2008 - who entered Saturday's earned AII-SEOAL acco-· . Purdue's defense or the
top-ranked
Sooners, mance given by the Gallia SEOAL team championship race as the three-time reign- lades - which went to the Buckeyes' own missteps.
Missouri and LSU weren't Academy· girls' cross coun- in grand fashion at Warren ing SEOAL champion - top-16finishersineachrace. nothing seemed~o click on
stunning, they did a number try team Saturday at the High School in wa;hington placed second with a time of The Blue and White post- offense. Despite good field
on the rankings.
2008 · Southeastern Ohio County.
20:51.4.
.
ed a team score of 25 points, position, it only produced
Unbeaten Penn State Athletic· League
CC
Senior Lee Ann Townsend finishing well ahead of three field goals.
Freshman Peyton Adldns
moved up three spots to No. Championship could best be became the only person ever was also fifth with a time of defending team champion
"We just looked bad,:'
) . The Sooners dropped described in one single in SEOAL competition to · 21:25.9,
followed
by Marietta - which had 53 Pryor said. 'That's the only
three spots to No. 4 after word .
defeat her older sister - McKenna Warner (22:02.8)
way to put it."
1
1
1
their first loss. Florida
senior
L11uren
Adkins
by
and
Genna
Baker
(22:35.5)
P
use
see
Anp
Bl
And it wasn't just one
•
Dominant.
jumped six spots to No. 5
thing.
,
after pounding' LSU 5,1-21
·"There was a moment
on Saturday mght.
where you looked good and
No. 6 Southern California
there was a moment where
is followed by.Big 12 .rivals
you went backwards,"
'rexas . Tech and Oklahoma
Tressel said. "We're not
State, which upset Missouri
consistent at all."
iS-23 and has its highest
Ohio State has won four
knocked
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) championship
ranking since November
straight ~ince a 35-3 loss at
Kyle Busch, Carl Busch, the regular-season
·I985 when the Cowboys then-No.
I , Southern
Jimmie points winner, out of conEdwards · · and
California prom~ted Tressel
were seventh. . '
to put semor Todd
No. 9 BYU and Georgia Johnson. Those were · the tention.
Edwards
is
teetering
Now
guys
everyone
picked
three
Boeckman on the bench
round out the top Ip.
·: Missouri dropped eight ' to win the Sprint Cup title. on the edge after a 33rdbehind Pryor.
Nobody g11,ve Jeff Burton place fmish Saturday night
Spots to No. 11. The Tigers
Pryor completed 10 of 14
!hopped him to fourth in the
passes for 97 yards and ran
eould vault right \lack up a chance. ·
And that's exactly how stmidings.
the polls When they play
for 27 yards on 14 carries.
Burton's win, his second
Burton
likes it.
He was sacked three times
Texas in , Austin on
Burton thrust himself into of the. season, pushed him
(twice by Ryan Kerrigan),
Saturday.
title contention Saturday two spots ih the standings to
sometimes holding onto the
:: ' ,........ Pall,
82
night, using savvy pit strate- second. He trails Johnson by
.
ball when he was in trouble
gy to win at Lowe's Motor 69 points with five races to
instead of getting rid of it
Speedway and slice into go.
earlier or throwing it away.
Johnson's points lead on a · "We're just havin~ fun .
"The defense was on their
toNTACfUS
conpaying
attenuon
to
night
when
several
We're
backs the whole game and
.•
us,"
Burton
said.
"We're
not
tenders
lost
sight
of
the
title
.
they
stepped up and
• 1·740-446-2342 ext. 33
. "Nobody' s giving us, a going to get caught up in
played." ,Pryor said. "We
...... - 1·7oiD-446·3008
chance ~xcept for us, and all this. We!re paying attention
need to help them out and
(-m.ll - sportsOmydaUy&amp;&amp;rltlnel.com
those
guys
have
a
tremento
it,
but
we're
not
going
to
score · touchdowns. We're
..
· Sport• Staff
dous amount to lose," get caught up in it. If we
not happy with that perforBurton
said.
"We've
.
got
don't
win
the
chamP.ionship,'
mance.'
BryaJTWattera, Sports Wrlt.er
nothing to lose and we're our year is not a frulure. We
Tressel said he never con- .
(740) 4-46·2342, oxt. 33
•
..
t
APpholo sidered switching back to
just
hanging it out there lind weren't one of the teams
b~lteraO ~tlallytrl~com
~
Jeff Burton celebrates in victory lane alter winning the Boeckman, who led the
Seeing what happens ."
that set that bar up there ..
l)lrry Crum, Sport~Wrttt(r
NASCAA Sprint Cup Bank of America 500 auto race at
Three poor finishes at·the .
' (740) 446,2342, ext. 33
'PIHH
...
NASCAJt.B:t
Lowe's
Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C. , on Saturday. . PluH- Buckeyu. 82
start
to
the
Chase
for
the
lcrum0mydelly1'11Qtll8r.co'!' •
. '
c

Boyo--

'11eXaS ·takeS
the top Spot
• AP p0}},.

1.n

Special teams
supplies TD in
OSU's 16-3 win .

cc
p In .

· • · hi •

Blue Angels win SEOA
. . L champlODS

!:~~llea~~~n~~:~ eg~~:~

Burton wins at Lowe's
'to move up in standings

.
.

Smile! Now you can own the picture of that unforgett~e
moment captured In the newspaper. Photos become timeless
'when framed or printed on a mug or mouse pad.

Visit www.mydailysentinel.com and click the blue button

•

f

1

••

'

�·'

•

The Daily Sentinel
'

AcRoss THE NATION

PageA6
Monday, October 13,2008

Bl

'

The Daily Sentinel ·
OSU seeking more oft'ense, Page B2

Jones leads Jets past Bengals, Page 86
Brow&amp; stagger into Monday Digbt, Page Bo

Monday, October 13, 2008

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY - A ICheck.lle of upcoming high
School varaHy aportl_n g e'olents involving
teama from Me lgt lnd Galli• counlle•.

Mgndlv Ocetpbtr 13
D2 VOI!eylloll
(9). Waverly at (8) Galtia Academy, 6
,
p.m.

Skyline holds dual Jack-o-Lantern 35's.
'

Bv seem- WOLFE
SPORTS CORAeSPONDENT

nrud•r

Pr:tgt= 14
D2Buya(7) Gatlia Academy at (2) Marietta . 6

freedom and garnered some
momentum. Meanwhile ,
Danny Smith · began to run
down the front runners as a
smooth-driving Mintz drove
through traffic. on cruise
control. In-and-out, high and
low Mintz's every move was
smooth and sneaky-fast.
· A lot of close action followed the leaders, but all
eyes were on Mintz and his
breath-taking moves through
traffic. Blaney was no less
impressive and by lap 23
was back to within a couple
car lengths. Mintz felt
Blaney's presence and
responded with a sense of
urgency. A~ if shifting into
overdnve, Mintz once again
opened 'up the lead to five or
more rods, just as the caution. waved for a spinning
Caleb Griffith on lap 25.
Drivers tightened up their
belts, and fans moved closer
to the ed~e of their se.ats in
anticipatiOn for a classic
Skyline finish. Cole Duncan,
Kevin Lee, and Aaron
Higgins all had great runs in
afightforthetopfive. Mintz
went low and Blaney high
with two different strategies
as Cole Duncan and Aaron
Higgins both bagged Smith
for third and fourth. Smith
responded with a vengeance
and battled to regain posi-

.

tion.
,
The first time Mintz visited Sk~line Speedway, he
liked 1t. In his last visit
Saturday, he absolutely
loved it. Mintz rode his
rocketship ,
a · Griff's
Mopar/Maxim Chassis, into
the Skyline record books as
Blaney struggled to find any
part of, turf where his car
could make traction. Duncan
moved in on Blaney to add
to the excitement as Mintz
blasted under the checkered
for his first Skyline win,
while Danny Smith bagged
Higgins for fourth at the
start-fmish line. ·
"I've been here three
times and I absolutely love
this place. You gl!ys
(Skyline) put on a great
show and this is. a great·
track," exclaimed Mintz. :·11
was an honor to be able to
start beside Dale Blaney.
He's one of the best. We've
;aced Dale close on occasion, but to get the jump and
eventually beat him was a
bonus."·
Kevin Lee made his first
visit to Skyline a good one,
showcasing his talents in the
Southern half of the state in
placing just ahead of Josh
Da11is, Jimmy Nier, Keith
Baxter, and Cale Conley
who rounded out t~e top ten.

.

Mintz lapped all but the first
nine Cars:
It wasn't offi~ially ali All·
Star race, but it could well
have been. Several heavy
hitters speckled tlie field for
the 2nd Annual Jack-0Lantern race . Rod Conley
and Steve Shaver paced a
star-studded .Late Model
field to the wave of the
green, and quickly Shaver
Rocketed into the lead.
Shaver fought off Conley,
then Josh McGuire moved
into second for a ten lap
rumble that saw numerous
lead changes. Finally, on lap
eleven McGuire took command and Shaver was now
in chase with Mike Balzano
in hot pursuit.
By midway, fan~ in attendance knew they were in for
a great race. At the finish it
w:ts a well known fact. In
fact, many fans concurred it
may liave been one of the
best ever , at the Southern
Ohio speed plant.
For five circuits Shaver
dogged McGuire then the
Vienna
driver's
Rocket/Malcuit hot rod was
trapped behind a lapped car.
Shaver baited \)le hook and
reeled McGuire back to .the
end of the rod, finally
regaining lost ground and
the lead with a daredevil

pass on the backchute. Wellscripted, the race's climax
would be · at the checkered .
flag. Now the Grayson, KY
driver was in the catbird seat
and watched as Shaver mastered the high-banked 3/8
mile oval.
·
McGuire rode low ani!
then high, but Shaver 's highline was the fastest. Still
McGuire wasn't satisfied for
second · as lapped traffic
yielded to open turf for the
two-lap shootout to the finish. The battle of nip-andtuck rattled the stands as
Shaver prevailed with a
solid, hard-earned win.
Shaver, McGuire, Mike
Balzano, Rod Conley,
Delmas Conley. Jason
Montgomery, Larry Bond,
Chris Garnes, Audie ~artz,
and Andy Bond rounded out
the top ten.
"I want to dedicate this ·
race to my friend Jack Shutts .
and his family. I want to
wish him the best, this one is
for him," said Shaver in victory lane. "It's getting
toward the end of the season,
so it's good 'to finish the season strong. And we finally
beat
Josh
McGuire
here .. .fair and square. He
has owned this place .so it's

STEWART - With 141
cars in the pits and a good
p.m.
October crowd,
Billy
.
lluyaSocce&lt;
Jarrell's Skyline Speedway
Ohio Valley Christian at Cross Lanes
·was
doing its own version of
Christian, 5 p.m.
"Monster Rock" in the first
Wednuclllt OM""M 15
running of the dual 'ack-oD2 Yolleyt&gt;oll
Lantern 35's. Northern Ohio
Winner of Marietta-VInton County a.t (2)
Meigs, 6 p.m.
invader Craig Mintz .of
Winner ot Waverty-Gall.la Academy at
Gibsonburg
claimed the
(1) Unioto, 6 p.m.
crown in the 410 Sprint
Jbf.l!'ldl¥ tlt:Ww 1(
main, while the companion
D4 Votleyblll - Sectional ftnala
Late
Model .main was won
17) Miller at (2) Eastern , 6 p.m.
by Vienna, WV driver Steve
(~) Pile Eastern at ~4) South Gallia, 8
p.m.
.
Sha,ver. · Mike
Martin
~6) SouiMrn at 13) Waterto rd, 6 p.m.
claimed the Street Stock
main , Jeremy Blake won the
Satunllv Octqbtfll
D3 VOlleyball - SectiONtl flnol
Pure Stocks, Ryan McClain
(6) Nelsonville·Vo\'k at River Valley, 4
·claimed the Four Cylinders,
p.m.
Tracy Fritier the Mod Lites,
ACSI Tourn.
Ohio Yalley Christian at Granville, TBA
and Ronnie Pickens took the
Mini..W~ge main.
.
The 410 sprinters took to
.11
.the 'speedway first led b'y
dash winner Craig Mintz
and All-Star Champ Dale
Blaney. Mintz led the first
five markers as Blaney
~apped out his strategy, divmg low past Mmtz as the
NEW YORK (AP)
two exchanged positionsTexas rode its resounding and-back on the cross-over.
i{ed River Rivalry upset Mintz continued to lead as a
right to 'No. 1.
· lapped car sawed off Blaney
The
Longhor·m-.J.Al:nd gave the Northern Ohio
leapfrogged No. 2 Alabama driver some breathing room .
P,lease see Skyline, 11
on Sunday and sit atop The
Mintz took the low road to
Associated Press Top 25 in --~----------------..,-------------------,----------..,-­
the regular season for the
first time in 24 years after
)Jeating Oklahoma 45-35.
Texas' jump to No. I is
the largest si nee Miami
went from No . 6 to No. I on
Aug. 29, 1988 , after beating
COLUMBUS (AP) preseason
top-ranked
Asked to describe his
Aorida State 31 "0 to start
team's offense in one word,
the season.
Ohio . State coach Jim
Texas received 39 firstTressel thought a minute
place votes and I ,599 points
and said, "hit and miss."
from the. media panel.
On a sloppy day for the
Alabama received the pther
No.
12. Buckeyes, even the
36 first-place . votes and
coach
had trouble narrowI ,582 points.
.
ing
down
what was wrong .
. "Bemg ranked No. I
Special teams and defense
shows respect for what
held
up their ends of the
we've
accomplished
bargain,
though, with
through the early. part of the
Malcolm
Jenkins
blocking a
season, but nobody really
punt and Etienne Sabino
knows who is No. I at this
returning
it 20 yards for a
pPint," Texas coach Mack
touchdown to lead the way ·
Brown said Sunday.
to · a 16-3 vic'tory over
· · It certainly has been a
Purdue on Saiurday.
fluid situation.
"The offense came up and
The Longhorns are the
said, 'We owe you,"' Ohio
fourth No. I team this seaState linebacker James
son, following Georgia,
Laurinaitis said.
Southern California and
•
Submmed photo
The Boilermakers (2-4, 0- ·
Oklahoma. So it's just more Pictured above are members of the 2008 SEOAL girls' championship cross country team from Gallia Academy High 2) didn't get inside the Ohio
of the ·same following an School. Standing from left are Allison Nolan, Katie Dunlap, Miriah Green, McKenna Warner, Lauren Adkinsm Peyton . State 30 until the final 30
unpredictable 2007 season
seconds.
that had four No. I teams Adkins, Lee Ann Townsend ahd Genna Baker. Absent from the photo was Kayla Harrison.
Freshman quarterback
and eight different teams
ranked second.
For the second time this
·•
"Beanie" Wells totaled 94
season, three of the top four
The Blue Angels had the winning the 57-competitor . with respective finishes sev- yards on 22 carries for the
BY BRYAN WALTERS
teams in the country lost on BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRtBUNE.COM overall race winner and five girls' race with a time of enth and . tenth. All five of Buckeyes (6-1, 3-0 Big
the same weekend. While
of the 4op-IO finishers en 20:04.5. The elder Adkins those . Blue Angels also Ten). Whether it was due to
the losses by the previously . VINCENT - The perfor- route to capturing the 2008 - who entered Saturday's earned AII-SEOAL acco-· . Purdue's defense or the
top-ranked
Sooners, mance given by the Gallia SEOAL team championship race as the three-time reign- lades - which went to the Buckeyes' own missteps.
Missouri and LSU weren't Academy· girls' cross coun- in grand fashion at Warren ing SEOAL champion - top-16finishersineachrace. nothing seemed~o click on
stunning, they did a number try team Saturday at the High School in wa;hington placed second with a time of The Blue and White post- offense. Despite good field
on the rankings.
2008 · Southeastern Ohio County.
20:51.4.
.
ed a team score of 25 points, position, it only produced
Unbeaten Penn State Athletic· League
CC
Senior Lee Ann Townsend finishing well ahead of three field goals.
Freshman Peyton Adldns
moved up three spots to No. Championship could best be became the only person ever was also fifth with a time of defending team champion
"We just looked bad,:'
) . The Sooners dropped described in one single in SEOAL competition to · 21:25.9,
followed
by Marietta - which had 53 Pryor said. 'That's the only
three spots to No. 4 after word .
defeat her older sister - McKenna Warner (22:02.8)
way to put it."
1
1
1
their first loss. Florida
senior
L11uren
Adkins
by
and
Genna
Baker
(22:35.5)
P
use
see
Anp
Bl
And it wasn't just one
•
Dominant.
jumped six spots to No. 5
thing.
,
after pounding' LSU 5,1-21
·"There was a moment
on Saturday mght.
where you looked good and
No. 6 Southern California
there was a moment where
is followed by.Big 12 .rivals
you went backwards,"
'rexas . Tech and Oklahoma
Tressel said. "We're not
State, which upset Missouri
consistent at all."
iS-23 and has its highest
Ohio State has won four
knocked
CONCORD, N.C. (AP) championship
ranking since November
straight ~ince a 35-3 loss at
Kyle Busch, Carl Busch, the regular-season
·I985 when the Cowboys then-No.
I , Southern
Jimmie points winner, out of conEdwards · · and
California prom~ted Tressel
were seventh. . '
to put semor Todd
No. 9 BYU and Georgia Johnson. Those were · the tention.
Edwards
is
teetering
Now
guys
everyone
picked
three
Boeckman on the bench
round out the top Ip.
·: Missouri dropped eight ' to win the Sprint Cup title. on the edge after a 33rdbehind Pryor.
Nobody g11,ve Jeff Burton place fmish Saturday night
Spots to No. 11. The Tigers
Pryor completed 10 of 14
!hopped him to fourth in the
passes for 97 yards and ran
eould vault right \lack up a chance. ·
And that's exactly how stmidings.
the polls When they play
for 27 yards on 14 carries.
Burton's win, his second
Burton
likes it.
He was sacked three times
Texas in , Austin on
Burton thrust himself into of the. season, pushed him
(twice by Ryan Kerrigan),
Saturday.
title contention Saturday two spots ih the standings to
sometimes holding onto the
:: ' ,........ Pall,
82
night, using savvy pit strate- second. He trails Johnson by
.
ball when he was in trouble
gy to win at Lowe's Motor 69 points with five races to
instead of getting rid of it
Speedway and slice into go.
earlier or throwing it away.
Johnson's points lead on a · "We're just havin~ fun .
"The defense was on their
toNTACfUS
conpaying
attenuon
to
night
when
several
We're
backs the whole game and
.•
us,"
Burton
said.
"We're
not
tenders
lost
sight
of
the
title
.
they
stepped up and
• 1·740-446-2342 ext. 33
. "Nobody' s giving us, a going to get caught up in
played." ,Pryor said. "We
...... - 1·7oiD-446·3008
chance ~xcept for us, and all this. We!re paying attention
need to help them out and
(-m.ll - sportsOmydaUy&amp;&amp;rltlnel.com
those
guys
have
a
tremento
it,
but
we're
not
going
to
score · touchdowns. We're
..
· Sport• Staff
dous amount to lose," get caught up in it. If we
not happy with that perforBurton
said.
"We've
.
got
don't
win
the
chamP.ionship,'
mance.'
BryaJTWattera, Sports Wrlt.er
nothing to lose and we're our year is not a frulure. We
Tressel said he never con- .
(740) 4-46·2342, oxt. 33
•
..
t
APpholo sidered switching back to
just
hanging it out there lind weren't one of the teams
b~lteraO ~tlallytrl~com
~
Jeff Burton celebrates in victory lane alter winning the Boeckman, who led the
Seeing what happens ."
that set that bar up there ..
l)lrry Crum, Sport~Wrttt(r
NASCAA Sprint Cup Bank of America 500 auto race at
Three poor finishes at·the .
' (740) 446,2342, ext. 33
'PIHH
...
NASCAJt.B:t
Lowe's
Motor Speedway in Concord, N.C. , on Saturday. . PluH- Buckeyu. 82
start
to
the
Chase
for
the
lcrum0mydelly1'11Qtll8r.co'!' •
. '
c

Boyo--

'11eXaS ·takeS
the top Spot
• AP p0}},.

1.n

Special teams
supplies TD in
OSU's 16-3 win .

cc
p In .

· • · hi •

Blue Angels win SEOA
. . L champlODS

!:~~llea~~~n~~:~ eg~~:~

Burton wins at Lowe's
'to move up in standings

.
.

Smile! Now you can own the picture of that unforgett~e
moment captured In the newspaper. Photos become timeless
'when framed or printed on a mug or mouse pad.

Visit www.mydailysentinel.com and click the blue button

•

f

1

••

'

�•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 13, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

'Monday, October 13,2008
said. "It's a decent margin,
sixth.
Greg Biffle, Jeff Gordon, . but we're only halfway
Mark Martin and David through it . If we go clean,
Ragan rounded out the top that's going to be really
tromPage81
tough for (Edwards) to
10 .
overcome. But if we have
The
night
was
a
disaster
''We're just laying it out
there and having a good for several Chase con- trouble, he's going to be
tenders,
including (ight back in it."
time."
Dale Earnhardt Jr. fared
Johnson, seeking a third Edwards, who entered the
consecutive title, finished race second in the stand- worse than Edward's, fin·
sixth and insisted he never ings. He lost power in his ishing 36th after his tire
Ford early and finished exploded a lap before he
counted out Burton.
33rd
to likely lose his shot planned to head to pit road
"He's always been on my
radar screen," Johnson r,t his first Sprint Cup title. to have them changed.
It ended a drama-filled He 's lOth in the standings.
said. "He's been doing this
Matt Kenseth was caught
week
for Edwards, who
a long 'time. He knows the
in
a mid-race accident and·
tracks. He knows how to caused a 12-car accident
race cars. He's be~n out last Sunday in Talladega finished 41st to drop to
there a long time and he then scuffled with Kevin lith in the standings.
Gordon seemed poised to
knows how to race and get Harvick irt the garage area
end
his yearlong losing
at
Lowe's.
·
points."
Edwards left fourth in streak, leading several
He proved that Saturday
the
standings, 168 behind times for 47 laps despite
night with three gas-only
two hard bounces off the
.
pit stops, including fuel Johnson .
only to make sure he was · "It's. not good," Edwards wall very early in. the race.
still out front o.n the final said. " I think we're still . He had to pit just 10 laps
fourth, though, so there are into the race to change
restart with 34 laps to go .
only
three guys in front of tires afterhitting the wall,
Kasey Kahne, who swept
the May races at the track, us. There's no other way to but sti ll managed to make
finished second and was put it. It's just a bad week. his way back to the front.
He gave up the lead for
That's all there is to it."
·followed by Kurt Busch.
Johnson, who was 146 an off-sequence pit stop
Kyle Busch, the regular-'
season points winner; was points·out after this race in and never made it back to
fourth for hi s best finish 2006, said he 's not ready to the front. He took four tires
since .he Chase began five call Edwards out of it just on the final pit stop, which
mired him too far back into
weeks .
ago.
Jamie yet,.
McMurray was fifth, and
"If us top three guys the field to make a run at
Johnson faded over the have problems•, they're the leaders over the final
final few laps to finish right back in it," Johnson sprint to the finish. ·

www.mydallysentlnel.com

jBuckeyes seeking more offense NASCAR

'

COLUMBUS (AP)
him. Another time he over"Terrelle needs to have
:This was supposed to be threw open wide receiver more confidence throwing
:Ohio State's foray into a Brian Robiskie in the end the ball," Ballard said. "He's
·):tigh-tech spread offense and zone.
.
doing well on his feet, but he
";away from it's staked-to·
He was sacked three times has to believe in his arm.''
,the-_ground past.
for 19 yards in losses and
Wells frequently jokes that
ended up adding only 27 he'd like to carry the ball40
: So far, it's been a dud.
;· "Otlensively we didn't ~et yards on 14 carries with his times a game. Excep.t he
. near as much done as we re legs.
wasn't joking when he said
;going t&lt;? need to getdone,"
"We've really got to exe- the passing game needed to
:coach Jn1,1Tressel saad after. cute," Pryor said later. "It's · get a lot better before next
:S~turday s punchless 16-3 frustrating for us that we week's game at Micl:igan
:vactory over Purdue .. . · .
didn 't click today. We just State.
: Th~ com~matwn of spnnt- looked bad. That's the only
"We have 10 pass the ball
_er-quarterback
Terrelle way to put it ."
·
. better," Wells said. "That
-Pryor and burly, shafty latl·
w ll . d
.
. h might be surprising coming
e s masse practace wat from a 'running back. but we
:back Chris "Beanie" Wells ·
:has had trouble getting off t~e flu but sllll mustered 94 have to get the ball down:the ground in the three Y.ard_s on 22 attempts. .
field. We have to use our
games they've been togethStall, Wath both m. the l ~ne- receivers better."
er.
·
·
up the Buckeyes twace faa led
Tressel was asked if had
: The still-No. 12 Buckeyes to score a touchdown after contemplated putting sixth·
. ·have won all thr~e. but not gettang a· first down msade year senior Todd Boeckman
:so tnuch, because of any· th~ p,urdue 10 ·. . ·
- a much better passer :thing the offense is doing.
It~ frustratang ~? !he red into the game to replace
:. In. the Purdue game, spe- fone, Well~! saad. 1! s beben Pryor.
bal teams blocked a punt rustratmg a y.ear.It sa out
"Tbere weren't any huge
Tesulting in the only touch- not executing."
discussions about lhat." he
down. The ledger proved . The Bucke~es punted six said.
·how
ineffective
the tames an I hear II possesThe main goal for the
sions. They also missed one Buckeyes - particularly
:Buckeyes· attack was.
: Pryor looked tentative at field goal but kicked three after the 35-3 black eye they
:times and made bad deci- more.
· took at Southern California
:Sions at others. He complet·
Tight end Jake Ballard and in their third game - is to
:ed 10 of 14 passes for just 97 Wells both think . the capture a fourth consecutive
·yards. He missed one wide- Buckeyes need to throw the Big Ten title including aft
open receiver at the goal line ball more and more effec- unprecedented tljird outright
when he threw a pass behind tively.
championship in a row.

Poll
from Page 81
"Our team has just played
·well for six weeks and we
· know more about where we
are today than we did last
Sunday. but we have a long
·way to go and a lot of room
lo improve." Brown said.
"Every week. we're seeing
teams learn the hard way
· that the only poll that mat·
ters. or lasts, is the· final one.
No one remembers who was
~o. I after six weeks last
:year. If we ' re No . I in late
January, it becomes a statement."

Buckeyes
from Page81
Buckeyes to an 11 -2 record
· and the national championship game last season.
Curtis Painter threw for
228 yard~ for Purdue ,
becoming just the fourth
Big Ten quarterback to ·sur·
pass 10,000 passing yards.
He was 23-of-51 with one
interception.
· "They've got fast guys .
and athletic guys," Painter
·said . "They're just really
·good players. Just getting
. open is tough."
It didn't take long for the
· Buckeyes to gain the upper
hand. Ohio State's defense
'forced a three-and-out on
Purdue's first possession
and Jenkins smothered a
punt by Cl 1ris Summers
before Sabi no raced in for
the score.
"Lots f times we don 't

S~yline
from Page 81
really good to get the win."
Shaver 's dedication was
in response ro longltme
nagman/scorer
and
Shaver's neighbor Jao;k
Shutts. who is critically· ill
and undergoing treatment.(See related story)
Mike Martin and Steve
Bigley put on one whale of
a show in the Street' Stock
main . Using all 15 laps and
every inch Of speedway.
Martin pulled off the win by
a nos~ . Bigley charged upon
Martin's quaa1er 's early, but
. ~ould never b&lt;~llle past the
. consastently quick Martin.
:Martin led every lap, but the
race was by no means a dull
one with plenty of action in
:all parts of the field . In third
was Jeremy Blake ahead of
Rob Smith, Frank Roush,
:Dan Reno, Brad Roc. Jason
Holstein, Danny Ferguson.
and Brandon Thompson.
Jeremy Blake and Jeff
.Fomash ~ere never bo~ers,
l)ut the boundaries of
·Skyline Speedway served
as the ring for a great fight
for number one. Blake
withstood all \he challenges
Fornash had to offer as he·
rode under the checkered
first ahead of .Fprnash,
Jeremy · Misel , George
'Klintworth , Gary Gould,

J

Texas was also No. I in which jumped four spots
the USA Today coaches' afte~ beating Notre Dame
poll and the Harris poll, 29-.24.
with Alabama second and
South · Florida
and
Penn State third. The coach· Michigan State compl&lt;ited
es' poll and the Harris poll the .first 20.
are used by the Bowl
The final five were Wake
Championship Series to Forest, Vanderbilt, which
detennine. which teams play lost its first game of the seafor the national title. The son .At Mississippi State on
first BCS standings will be Saturday and dropped eight .
released Oct. 26.
spots, PittsblJrgh, Ball State
Ohio State is l2th and and California.
LSU is 13th, a nine spot
The Golden Bears were
drop after getting drubbed the only team to move into .
in the Swamp.
the rankings this week. It's
No. 14 Utah, No. 15 their second time in the Top
Boise Siate and No. 16 25 this season. ·
Kansas all · held their spots.
Auburn dropped out after
No. 17 Virginia Tech was ·losing its third game of the
followed by North Carolina, season.
rush the punter," Jenkins
said. "But we had the mentality we were going to get
one today,"
Carson Wiggs ~booted a
school-record 53~yard field
goal early in the third quar.
ter for Purdue's plii,nts.
The teams had almost as
much . punting .yardage as
theY. did on offense. The
Boilermakers' spread attack
had just 298 . yards (190
yards on six pilots) and the
Buckeyes totaled 222 (with
211 yards on six punts).
One play summed up the
day for . Ohio State's
offense . On fourth-and-8 at'
the Purdue 36 in the ftfst
quarter. die Buckeyes were
going to try a . fake field
goal. But just as the snap
went 10 the holder and he
bolted upright to run to the
right, they were flagged for
delay of game. They had to
punt on the next snap.
Ohio State failed .to .score
a touchdown after getting
first downs inside the

Purdue 10 in both the first
and third quarters.
. .
· In his third game back
from a foot injury that sidelined him for a month,
Wells was solid. But he said
he had difficulty breathing
after missing practie,e . this
· week wuh the flu.
.
''We have to pass the ball
better. That might sound
surprising coming from a
running back, but .we hav4;
to get the ball down field to
use our receivers better,"
Wells said. ''We'd love to
be more versatile."
Purd)le, which has lost
its ·last· 17 games ag&lt;~inst
ranked teams, .has not w·on
in Ohio Stadium since
1988. The Boilermakers
have lost three in a row.
"The inability for us to
score · is baffling," said
tailback Kory Sheets, who
rushed for 67 yards on :20
carries.
· The Buckeyes faits
might be saying the same
thing .

Jamie Gillian, Robbie was Mr. Consistency Zach
McCulough.
Shawn Fox in third ahead of Kyle
Donahue , Jake Swain, and Bond, · Sydney Staats,
Jason Mayse.
Coleman Evans, and Tyler
Ryan McClain and Tony Evans.
Plaugher went tooth-and·
Skyline will be idle
claw for the Four Cylinder October 18 and October 25
top spot. McClain took the as race fans trek to the Dirt
early lead , but Plaugher Track World Championship
passed for the top spot with . at K·C Raceway and the
just two laps to go. following week to the
McClain, .
undaunted , · racer's flea market at
regrouped to ·post the big Fremont. Stay tuned to the
win. Behind second . place Skyline Websate for another
Plaugher was Keith Youn!l, big show in the first of
Zach
Kisner,
Do.nme November.
Bartlett, George Klintworth,
Jeff Blanton , David 'Banks, , SKYUNE SPEEDWAY IDLE
Ken Young, and Jeff
FOR TWO WEEKS
Rankin.
Tracy Fritter was once the
STEWART - Skyline
king of Modified Lite rac- Speedway fans are awaitinu
ing in the atea. He returned what owner Billy Jarrell
with all his glory Saturday calls "another Big One" to
· in claiming a convincing complete the 2008 racing ·
win over Tony Sites. Denny season, however, Skyline
Lamphier was an early will take off October 18 and
casualty and charged from October 25 . October I 8 is
the tail to first in claiming the night of the Dirt Track
fourth place as the hard World Championship at Jim
charger. Behind Sites were Nler's K-c Raceway.Harold Kuhn, · Dennis
Orlilnally, Skyline was to
Lamphier,
Tony operate October 25, but the
Tatgenhorst, Chris Stone, sates Y{lll remain cloted
James Watson. Joe McFee, until tentatively November
Rodney Settle, and Rodney 1 for the · 2nd Annual
Cossin. .
Foothills Fury.
Ronnie Pickens showed
Fans are uked to stay
why he was the 2008 champ tuned' to the skylinespeedas he flexed his muscle way.net website and to all
early and · held · off Will local newspapers, racing
Holland for the Mini- ~bs, and racing trade
Wedge main. Pickens papers for further details
claimed both the heat and and purse structure for the
the feature . Behind Holland events.

,.
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.In One Week With Us
classitied@~~~~:~ribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
R AD

, GIRLS DIVISIOH · '
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l'i

,~TEAM scriB§S , ~· f.,,
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Sentinel

Ca~r;.::;... (7!?2 ro446;!~0842 (7!?a~ To99~:~~~6

HOW 10 W!!r!ds6fi 6Q.

~Ueoeo
Should Include These Items .
To Help Get !lesponse...

·

Dally In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Friday ror Jnaertlon
In Next Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 9:00a.m • .
Foil Sundays Paper

. ""· '""·'··

:i f t\~t

Errors

Mu•t
eportod on the fl
of publlcall
lhe Trlbu
llnel-Reglller wll
responsible tor'
~ thin the cost .
y

nd

buylnc or selllac
Items. you an use
this widely read
sectla• tO wlsli

~

Happy BirthdaY.
provide a ·Theak
You, ancl place an
ad uln Memory"'
of • loved one.
Far mare Informa-

tion, contact ya!lr
laal Ohio V•lley
hbllshlnc office.

Angels
from,Page Bl .
points. Warren was third ·
with 90 points, followed by ·
Logan with 94 and Jackson
with 110. Chillicothe was
sixth out of six teams with
139 points. ·
Other Blue Angel finishes
included Katie Dunlap
(27:52) in 40th, Mariah
Green (32:07 .7) in 51st and
Allison Nolan ,(38: 13 .I) in
56th. GAHS was also the
2006 SEOAL team champi- ·
on for girls' cross country.
Marietta had the most AIISEGAL honorees in the
girls' race, placing six in the
top-16. Warren , Logan,
Jackson, Chillicothe and
Ironton also had one representati~e each. IHS and
Zanesvalle also competed',

~allipolis

lpiCI occupt

y the error and on
he flrsl lnoertlon. W
hall not be liable lo

someone a

but did not have enough Jackson did not have enough
participants for team scores. participants for team scores.
On the boys' side of
Both Marietta and Warren
things, there were 64 indi- had five top-10 finisher,.
vidual runners and six MHS had the most Allteams involved · in · the . 5- SEOAL selections with
kilometer race. Marietta and seven, followed by Warren
Warren combined to win the with five and Ironton with
top-12 individual spotS, but two. Zanesville and Logan
the Warriors· managed to also had one SEOAL hon·
defend their home turf and oree apiece.
won the 2008 SEOALboys'
The top Blue Devil effort
title by a meager three came
from
Morgan
points.
McKinniss, who finished
WHS scored 26 points as 29th with a time of 20:45.6.
a squad, while the Tigers Dallas Craft (20:48.1) was
posted a team tally of 29. next in 30th. followed by
MHS
senior
Mark Cody Pullins (24:53.6) and
Wieferich won the individ· OJ. Faro (24:53.8) with
ual event with a ·time of respective placements of
17:06.4,
.60th and 6lst.
Other team finishes
Complete .results of ·the
included Logan (98) in third, · 2008 Southeastern Ohio
Ironton ( 112) in fourth, Athletic League Cross
Zanesville (l28) in fifth and Country Championships are
Chillicothe (161) in sixth. available on the web at
Both Gallia Academy and www.baumspage.com

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Oaya Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thuraday for Sundaya

MAKf
SOMfONf'S

·ny loas or axpen
t results from
ubllullon
mlot
' ertl-l

will ftro
In lho
1 ~~";:'
Vallable edltton.

{1,.

Now you can have borders and graphics
"'-"
added to your classified ods
"""
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50C for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

POLICIES: Ohio V•O.V Publllhlng rewrvq the right to edit, rt)Kt. or cancellny ad II any time. Errora mull bt rJported on the tlrSI Clew of
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not be
any aon 01' tllpenM thtt ruu1ta from tht publlc.tlon or omlalktn of an ..tvertiiiiMfiL Correcllon wHI be made In the II rat eva liable edition. · Bol numbtf
sre tiWIVI coi'tfldlntlal. ·Current r... eard appllll . ·· All f¥1 Htltt tdvertlurntntl are subt-ct to me ~erst Fair .Houtlng Act of 1968. ·This.nn1p11per
aeoeptl; onty help.wam.d ldt mMUnu EOE ttand..-dt. We wlll not knowingly accapt any lldQf'tlalng In vlotltiOn or UM law. Will not be 're•pontlbft lOr any
error• In an •taken owr tht phone.
· '

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

«POLICIES·
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserve~
lho dg~llo edit,
reject or cancel any
ad II any time.

67S·5234

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• All ads must be prepaid'

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviltlonl
• Include Phone Number And Adc:lreu Wh•n NHdH
• Ada Should Run 7 D•v•

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(304) 675-1333

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

kltncarlyle@lcomcast.net

Found: Rio Grande area:
Small pekingese
type
dOg, , Tan, very friend ly;
(740)245-577(]

Spom U~lity
1993 S10 · Blazer.4 door.
131 ,00(] miles, Good gas
mileage. 4x4. 6Cyl., 4.3
engine. Air, All Power,
Red &amp; Cream color,
Great condition, S3000
Neg. ; Call 74Q-256·1332
or 304·638·0485

, Noba

Want To Buy

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. rei:·
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lng lhe 9fferir:g.

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Boy'

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wf
65-72 PO Box

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Want to buy Junk Cars,
call 74Q-388·0084 ·

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great localion in Gallipo·
lis.
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$400fmonth . Call Wayne
404·456·3802

Houou For Sale

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(140) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Basement

t)oint t)leasant l\egister

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guarantee. Local refer·
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740-446-01170. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Llgata ...................................... :.................... 100

.. Annaunc:ementa .......................................... 200
,
.•
'
·. ,

Blrthday/Annl....,ry..................................205
HappyAdL ................................................... 210
Loat l Found ..........................................,.... 215
Memory/Thenk You ..................................... 220
Noltcn ......................................................... 225
Petionato .............................................,........ 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Servlcea ....................... :.... :........................... 300
Appll1nce Servlca .............- ........................ 302
Autamollve ..........................:..............,........ 304
Building Mlltorleto ....................................... 306

Buslneu ................................._................... 308
Catarlng ............,........................................... 310
Child/Elderly care ....................................... 312
Computara ................................................... 314
ConbiCIOI'I.,.. ...........,..................... ,.. .......... 316
Darnnttco/JanHollot.................. - .............. 318
Eleclrlca1 ..........~ .......................................... 320
Flnonclat..........,.. ..........................................322

.zoos

-Hh ..................................................:........ 326
H11tkag l Caollng ....................................... 328

Home lmpn&gt;- 330

lnourence ........ ~ ...-~................................... 332

~ Sarvlce ..... - ....................................... 33'
~ .................................... 336

Other Serv-................................ _. ____ .. 338
• Ptumblng/Eiee:trlcll .................................... 340
• Plol · - ......................................... 342

RICfUllanal Vehlctea ..:............................ 1000

ATV ............................................................. 10115
Blcy-......................................................1010
lloldaiAcceuorieo .................................... 1015
camper/RVa l Trettera ............................. 1020
Motorcycln ............................................... 1025
Other ...........: .............................................. 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Autamollve ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentallleoae.:.. ,............................... ,2005

Auto•·....................." ................................... 2010
Claollc/Anttqueo ..............................:........ 2015

Commen:lolllndUatrlol .....,.. ..:................... 2020
Parta• Acc1110....................................... .202S
Spa&lt;11 U11111y.............................................. 2030
Truclla......................................................... 2035
Utlllty'lnll- ....: ....................................... 2040
Vana,.. ..,..,.... :.,.. ....,.. ........... ,....................... 2045
W1JI11 to buy ...............................................2050

Real~ Satea ..................,..............: .... 3000
Cetr-y Platll ............ ,.. ........................... 3005
Commen:lat ................................................ 3010
Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3015
Far Sale by Qwner .....................; ...... _ ..... .3020
Hc&gt;u.- tor Salo ......................................... 3025
Lind (AcNige) ................................, ......... 3030

TURNED DOWN ON
SDCIAL SECURITY SS1
No' Fee Unless We Win!

1-888-582-3345

Lata ...........:............................ .,..................3035

want to buy................................................304G
_.- -

....................................35011

Aplrlmenti/T~ ......................... 350S

; Repllra ......................................................... 344 ' Commwctal............._................:........., ......3510

• Roollng.........................................................346 Condomlnlums .......................................... 3515
Sacurtty ........................................................348 -lorRenl ........................................ 3520
Tu/Accoun11ng ....:.............. ,. ..................... 3!50 Lllnd (Ac,..) ..........................................3525
Trovet/Entertalnmont ............................ .J ....352 ·Storogo .................. :.................................... 3535
Flnlnclat. ......................................................400 Want 1o Renl .............................................. 354ll
Flnonclll Servt..........................................405 MllnufaciUoed Houotng ........................ - .. 4000
tnouronce ........................, ........................... 410 Lota.............................................................4005
Maney to Lond .............................................415 ,.,..,...............,. ........................................a-to

Educatlan.....................................................soo

-

~ ... :...................................................515

- t o lluy ..... _ ...............- ................... 41130

Buolnne l Tredo Schaal ...........................505
IJ181NC110n llnlnlng .....'.. ,:: ....................... 510
• - 1 . -........................ ,............... ,.. ........ 520

Antnwls ..............,.. ....................................... eoo

Anlnllll Suppllll-.......................................805

-

.~

To be inserted in the

•

The Daily Sentinel
on Friday- October 31 at
Deadline 5 pm • October 24
Contact Brenda Davis or Dave Harris
for advertising information &amp; assistance

740·992·2156
or 992·2155

•
•
•
•

Re~l Est~te

J'&gt;OO

Rer.till~

- * ~aportr----·-----·.....,............511110

Rllart Property lor .........................5025
R11art ~lor rent ...............: ........... ll0!50

..............................:...........................e1o Employment.............................._ ..............eooo

Ll&lt;oetock-............................ _, ....................615
...............................................................620
Want1o buy .........................................._ .... ll25
Agrtcutture ............._ ................................... 7110
Flml Equt-1 ...- ....................................705
~a Produce.......................................710
Hay, FMd, Saed, Gnlln ............................... 715
Hunting. LIJnd._ .................. _ ................... 720
w.at to )luY.........." ....- ......- ....- ......- ...--725
Mon;hendlll ............... - .............................. 11110
Ant~qUea:.............._ ...................................... aos
~............................. _ .................... 810

; AuCttona............ -.......,................................. 915
• llafgalnBaalmont....................................... 820

· : Cotlec1lbln ......................... _....................... ll25
• Complllln ................................................... 830
• ~ppllel....................................835
: Flaa ................................................ 1140
• Fuel Oil Coii/WoadiGU .......................... ,.. IMS
• Fumlture ...................................................... 950
: ~oot a Spor1 ....................................t55

Kld'a c:onw .......... ,.....................................880

I' .

.........................................................a~s

8111011............................... _ .......................4020
SUppllea ...........................:.............. :.........402S

Accounltng/Flnanctat .... _ ..,,........... ,.. ..... II002
o\ilmlnl-~ ..................... 6004
Cnhler1Cierk ............................................. II006
Clllld/Eidefly ca.. ..................................... II006
Clerlcat ................................. :....................:8010
Can.tructlon ...............:.............................. 8012
Drtvera l Dolhlery.........\........................... 80,.
Edur:allon ................................._,................ 8018
Eloc1rlcel Plumblng .......................,. .........8018

2BR

EmptovmentAfanCIOII ........... - ................6020
en...-....~~~~e~~t.

........ - ...- .......................... 8022

FoCMISao·--·-····-·----····.................1024

Go••••••••
a: Fedeial ~ .................... 6021
Help-Generat ......- ........................ 6021

Lllw Enloocement......................................8030
Mlltnl8nanceiQotlc .............................8032
~ ...................-'-··..................................................80311

Medical._ .......... _ .........................- ...........6038
......................................... _ ...........8040

Part-Tl..,..Tompc••ln ....................... - ..eoa
Reataur--............................................
8044
Salel ............- ...- ......._ ............................8048

• - -. ..............................................865
- t o jruy.............................,....................870 ...1 -..........................- - - · - Y'Ird Sail .~...- ............................................875 TbllloeiFIC!o?".......... - ...., ..........---8052

APT.

441..0194

Gllllpolte c...
Collogo

tea.- CJooe To +&lt;orne) ·
Cal Toda~ 7-..:J67
c-8JJ0.21.-0452
gt'"j ,.
. . """'··
Ng It~~~·
ing~b"·"'

..,,_

Cclllr9-~ScMoai12748

Ci A.
'

(740)

�•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 13, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

'Monday, October 13,2008
said. "It's a decent margin,
sixth.
Greg Biffle, Jeff Gordon, . but we're only halfway
Mark Martin and David through it . If we go clean,
Ragan rounded out the top that's going to be really
tromPage81
tough for (Edwards) to
10 .
overcome. But if we have
The
night
was
a
disaster
''We're just laying it out
there and having a good for several Chase con- trouble, he's going to be
tenders,
including (ight back in it."
time."
Dale Earnhardt Jr. fared
Johnson, seeking a third Edwards, who entered the
consecutive title, finished race second in the stand- worse than Edward's, fin·
sixth and insisted he never ings. He lost power in his ishing 36th after his tire
Ford early and finished exploded a lap before he
counted out Burton.
33rd
to likely lose his shot planned to head to pit road
"He's always been on my
radar screen," Johnson r,t his first Sprint Cup title. to have them changed.
It ended a drama-filled He 's lOth in the standings.
said. "He's been doing this
Matt Kenseth was caught
week
for Edwards, who
a long 'time. He knows the
in
a mid-race accident and·
tracks. He knows how to caused a 12-car accident
race cars. He's be~n out last Sunday in Talladega finished 41st to drop to
there a long time and he then scuffled with Kevin lith in the standings.
Gordon seemed poised to
knows how to race and get Harvick irt the garage area
end
his yearlong losing
at
Lowe's.
·
points."
Edwards left fourth in streak, leading several
He proved that Saturday
the
standings, 168 behind times for 47 laps despite
night with three gas-only
two hard bounces off the
.
pit stops, including fuel Johnson .
only to make sure he was · "It's. not good," Edwards wall very early in. the race.
still out front o.n the final said. " I think we're still . He had to pit just 10 laps
fourth, though, so there are into the race to change
restart with 34 laps to go .
only
three guys in front of tires afterhitting the wall,
Kasey Kahne, who swept
the May races at the track, us. There's no other way to but sti ll managed to make
finished second and was put it. It's just a bad week. his way back to the front.
He gave up the lead for
That's all there is to it."
·followed by Kurt Busch.
Johnson, who was 146 an off-sequence pit stop
Kyle Busch, the regular-'
season points winner; was points·out after this race in and never made it back to
fourth for hi s best finish 2006, said he 's not ready to the front. He took four tires
since .he Chase began five call Edwards out of it just on the final pit stop, which
mired him too far back into
weeks .
ago.
Jamie yet,.
McMurray was fifth, and
"If us top three guys the field to make a run at
Johnson faded over the have problems•, they're the leaders over the final
final few laps to finish right back in it," Johnson sprint to the finish. ·

www.mydallysentlnel.com

jBuckeyes seeking more offense NASCAR

'

COLUMBUS (AP)
him. Another time he over"Terrelle needs to have
:This was supposed to be threw open wide receiver more confidence throwing
:Ohio State's foray into a Brian Robiskie in the end the ball," Ballard said. "He's
·):tigh-tech spread offense and zone.
.
doing well on his feet, but he
";away from it's staked-to·
He was sacked three times has to believe in his arm.''
,the-_ground past.
for 19 yards in losses and
Wells frequently jokes that
ended up adding only 27 he'd like to carry the ball40
: So far, it's been a dud.
;· "Otlensively we didn't ~et yards on 14 carries with his times a game. Excep.t he
. near as much done as we re legs.
wasn't joking when he said
;going t&lt;? need to getdone,"
"We've really got to exe- the passing game needed to
:coach Jn1,1Tressel saad after. cute," Pryor said later. "It's · get a lot better before next
:S~turday s punchless 16-3 frustrating for us that we week's game at Micl:igan
:vactory over Purdue .. . · .
didn 't click today. We just State.
: Th~ com~matwn of spnnt- looked bad. That's the only
"We have 10 pass the ball
_er-quarterback
Terrelle way to put it ."
·
. better," Wells said. "That
-Pryor and burly, shafty latl·
w ll . d
.
. h might be surprising coming
e s masse practace wat from a 'running back. but we
:back Chris "Beanie" Wells ·
:has had trouble getting off t~e flu but sllll mustered 94 have to get the ball down:the ground in the three Y.ard_s on 22 attempts. .
field. We have to use our
games they've been togethStall, Wath both m. the l ~ne- receivers better."
er.
·
·
up the Buckeyes twace faa led
Tressel was asked if had
: The still-No. 12 Buckeyes to score a touchdown after contemplated putting sixth·
. ·have won all thr~e. but not gettang a· first down msade year senior Todd Boeckman
:so tnuch, because of any· th~ p,urdue 10 ·. . ·
- a much better passer :thing the offense is doing.
It~ frustratang ~? !he red into the game to replace
:. In. the Purdue game, spe- fone, Well~! saad. 1! s beben Pryor.
bal teams blocked a punt rustratmg a y.ear.It sa out
"Tbere weren't any huge
Tesulting in the only touch- not executing."
discussions about lhat." he
down. The ledger proved . The Bucke~es punted six said.
·how
ineffective
the tames an I hear II possesThe main goal for the
sions. They also missed one Buckeyes - particularly
:Buckeyes· attack was.
: Pryor looked tentative at field goal but kicked three after the 35-3 black eye they
:times and made bad deci- more.
· took at Southern California
:Sions at others. He complet·
Tight end Jake Ballard and in their third game - is to
:ed 10 of 14 passes for just 97 Wells both think . the capture a fourth consecutive
·yards. He missed one wide- Buckeyes need to throw the Big Ten title including aft
open receiver at the goal line ball more and more effec- unprecedented tljird outright
when he threw a pass behind tively.
championship in a row.

Poll
from Page 81
"Our team has just played
·well for six weeks and we
· know more about where we
are today than we did last
Sunday. but we have a long
·way to go and a lot of room
lo improve." Brown said.
"Every week. we're seeing
teams learn the hard way
· that the only poll that mat·
ters. or lasts, is the· final one.
No one remembers who was
~o. I after six weeks last
:year. If we ' re No . I in late
January, it becomes a statement."

Buckeyes
from Page81
Buckeyes to an 11 -2 record
· and the national championship game last season.
Curtis Painter threw for
228 yard~ for Purdue ,
becoming just the fourth
Big Ten quarterback to ·sur·
pass 10,000 passing yards.
He was 23-of-51 with one
interception.
· "They've got fast guys .
and athletic guys," Painter
·said . "They're just really
·good players. Just getting
. open is tough."
It didn't take long for the
· Buckeyes to gain the upper
hand. Ohio State's defense
'forced a three-and-out on
Purdue's first possession
and Jenkins smothered a
punt by Cl 1ris Summers
before Sabi no raced in for
the score.
"Lots f times we don 't

S~yline
from Page 81
really good to get the win."
Shaver 's dedication was
in response ro longltme
nagman/scorer
and
Shaver's neighbor Jao;k
Shutts. who is critically· ill
and undergoing treatment.(See related story)
Mike Martin and Steve
Bigley put on one whale of
a show in the Street' Stock
main . Using all 15 laps and
every inch Of speedway.
Martin pulled off the win by
a nos~ . Bigley charged upon
Martin's quaa1er 's early, but
. ~ould never b&lt;~llle past the
. consastently quick Martin.
:Martin led every lap, but the
race was by no means a dull
one with plenty of action in
:all parts of the field . In third
was Jeremy Blake ahead of
Rob Smith, Frank Roush,
:Dan Reno, Brad Roc. Jason
Holstein, Danny Ferguson.
and Brandon Thompson.
Jeremy Blake and Jeff
.Fomash ~ere never bo~ers,
l)ut the boundaries of
·Skyline Speedway served
as the ring for a great fight
for number one. Blake
withstood all \he challenges
Fornash had to offer as he·
rode under the checkered
first ahead of .Fprnash,
Jeremy · Misel , George
'Klintworth , Gary Gould,

J

Texas was also No. I in which jumped four spots
the USA Today coaches' afte~ beating Notre Dame
poll and the Harris poll, 29-.24.
with Alabama second and
South · Florida
and
Penn State third. The coach· Michigan State compl&lt;ited
es' poll and the Harris poll the .first 20.
are used by the Bowl
The final five were Wake
Championship Series to Forest, Vanderbilt, which
detennine. which teams play lost its first game of the seafor the national title. The son .At Mississippi State on
first BCS standings will be Saturday and dropped eight .
released Oct. 26.
spots, PittsblJrgh, Ball State
Ohio State is l2th and and California.
LSU is 13th, a nine spot
The Golden Bears were
drop after getting drubbed the only team to move into .
in the Swamp.
the rankings this week. It's
No. 14 Utah, No. 15 their second time in the Top
Boise Siate and No. 16 25 this season. ·
Kansas all · held their spots.
Auburn dropped out after
No. 17 Virginia Tech was ·losing its third game of the
followed by North Carolina, season.
rush the punter," Jenkins
said. "But we had the mentality we were going to get
one today,"
Carson Wiggs ~booted a
school-record 53~yard field
goal early in the third quar.
ter for Purdue's plii,nts.
The teams had almost as
much . punting .yardage as
theY. did on offense. The
Boilermakers' spread attack
had just 298 . yards (190
yards on six pilots) and the
Buckeyes totaled 222 (with
211 yards on six punts).
One play summed up the
day for . Ohio State's
offense . On fourth-and-8 at'
the Purdue 36 in the ftfst
quarter. die Buckeyes were
going to try a . fake field
goal. But just as the snap
went 10 the holder and he
bolted upright to run to the
right, they were flagged for
delay of game. They had to
punt on the next snap.
Ohio State failed .to .score
a touchdown after getting
first downs inside the

Purdue 10 in both the first
and third quarters.
. .
· In his third game back
from a foot injury that sidelined him for a month,
Wells was solid. But he said
he had difficulty breathing
after missing practie,e . this
· week wuh the flu.
.
''We have to pass the ball
better. That might sound
surprising coming from a
running back, but .we hav4;
to get the ball down field to
use our receivers better,"
Wells said. ''We'd love to
be more versatile."
Purd)le, which has lost
its ·last· 17 games ag&lt;~inst
ranked teams, .has not w·on
in Ohio Stadium since
1988. The Boilermakers
have lost three in a row.
"The inability for us to
score · is baffling," said
tailback Kory Sheets, who
rushed for 67 yards on :20
carries.
· The Buckeyes faits
might be saying the same
thing .

Jamie Gillian, Robbie was Mr. Consistency Zach
McCulough.
Shawn Fox in third ahead of Kyle
Donahue , Jake Swain, and Bond, · Sydney Staats,
Jason Mayse.
Coleman Evans, and Tyler
Ryan McClain and Tony Evans.
Plaugher went tooth-and·
Skyline will be idle
claw for the Four Cylinder October 18 and October 25
top spot. McClain took the as race fans trek to the Dirt
early lead , but Plaugher Track World Championship
passed for the top spot with . at K·C Raceway and the
just two laps to go. following week to the
McClain, .
undaunted , · racer's flea market at
regrouped to ·post the big Fremont. Stay tuned to the
win. Behind second . place Skyline Websate for another
Plaugher was Keith Youn!l, big show in the first of
Zach
Kisner,
Do.nme November.
Bartlett, George Klintworth,
Jeff Blanton , David 'Banks, , SKYUNE SPEEDWAY IDLE
Ken Young, and Jeff
FOR TWO WEEKS
Rankin.
Tracy Fritter was once the
STEWART - Skyline
king of Modified Lite rac- Speedway fans are awaitinu
ing in the atea. He returned what owner Billy Jarrell
with all his glory Saturday calls "another Big One" to
· in claiming a convincing complete the 2008 racing ·
win over Tony Sites. Denny season, however, Skyline
Lamphier was an early will take off October 18 and
casualty and charged from October 25 . October I 8 is
the tail to first in claiming the night of the Dirt Track
fourth place as the hard World Championship at Jim
charger. Behind Sites were Nler's K-c Raceway.Harold Kuhn, · Dennis
Orlilnally, Skyline was to
Lamphier,
Tony operate October 25, but the
Tatgenhorst, Chris Stone, sates Y{lll remain cloted
James Watson. Joe McFee, until tentatively November
Rodney Settle, and Rodney 1 for the · 2nd Annual
Cossin. .
Foothills Fury.
Ronnie Pickens showed
Fans are uked to stay
why he was the 2008 champ tuned' to the skylinespeedas he flexed his muscle way.net website and to all
early and · held · off Will local newspapers, racing
Holland for the Mini- ~bs, and racing trade
Wedge main. Pickens papers for further details
claimed both the heat and and purse structure for the
the feature . Behind Holland events.

,.
I

·~ribune - Sentinel CLASSI.FIED

.

'

.In One Week With Us
classitied@~~~~:~ribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
R AD

, GIRLS DIVISIOH · '
•

~ ~ ~

•'' ' '

. .• .

l'i

,~TEAM scriB§S , ~· f.,,
~

•'

'l :

. .v

l
'

~

~

•
·.

~

'
,

'.' '
t .·

BOYS DIVISION
'

TEAM S¢6BES

Sentinel

Ca~r;.::;... (7!?2 ro446;!~0842 (7!?a~ To99~:~~~6

HOW 10 W!!r!ds6fi 6Q.

~Ueoeo
Should Include These Items .
To Help Get !lesponse...

·

Dally In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Friday ror Jnaertlon
In Next Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 9:00a.m • .
Foil Sundays Paper

. ""· '""·'··

:i f t\~t

Errors

Mu•t
eportod on the fl
of publlcall
lhe Trlbu
llnel-Reglller wll
responsible tor'
~ thin the cost .
y

nd

buylnc or selllac
Items. you an use
this widely read
sectla• tO wlsli

~

Happy BirthdaY.
provide a ·Theak
You, ancl place an
ad uln Memory"'
of • loved one.
Far mare Informa-

tion, contact ya!lr
laal Ohio V•lley
hbllshlnc office.

Angels
from,Page Bl .
points. Warren was third ·
with 90 points, followed by ·
Logan with 94 and Jackson
with 110. Chillicothe was
sixth out of six teams with
139 points. ·
Other Blue Angel finishes
included Katie Dunlap
(27:52) in 40th, Mariah
Green (32:07 .7) in 51st and
Allison Nolan ,(38: 13 .I) in
56th. GAHS was also the
2006 SEOAL team champi- ·
on for girls' cross country.
Marietta had the most AIISEGAL honorees in the
girls' race, placing six in the
top-16. Warren , Logan,
Jackson, Chillicothe and
Ironton also had one representati~e each. IHS and
Zanesvalle also competed',

~allipolis

lpiCI occupt

y the error and on
he flrsl lnoertlon. W
hall not be liable lo

someone a

but did not have enough Jackson did not have enough
participants for team scores. participants for team scores.
On the boys' side of
Both Marietta and Warren
things, there were 64 indi- had five top-10 finisher,.
vidual runners and six MHS had the most Allteams involved · in · the . 5- SEOAL selections with
kilometer race. Marietta and seven, followed by Warren
Warren combined to win the with five and Ironton with
top-12 individual spotS, but two. Zanesville and Logan
the Warriors· managed to also had one SEOAL hon·
defend their home turf and oree apiece.
won the 2008 SEOALboys'
The top Blue Devil effort
title by a meager three came
from
Morgan
points.
McKinniss, who finished
WHS scored 26 points as 29th with a time of 20:45.6.
a squad, while the Tigers Dallas Craft (20:48.1) was
posted a team tally of 29. next in 30th. followed by
MHS
senior
Mark Cody Pullins (24:53.6) and
Wieferich won the individ· OJ. Faro (24:53.8) with
ual event with a ·time of respective placements of
17:06.4,
.60th and 6lst.
Other team finishes
Complete .results of ·the
included Logan (98) in third, · 2008 Southeastern Ohio
Ironton ( 112) in fourth, Athletic League Cross
Zanesville (l28) in fifth and Country Championships are
Chillicothe (161) in sixth. available on the web at
Both Gallia Academy and www.baumspage.com

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Oaya Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00
Thuraday for Sundaya

MAKf
SOMfONf'S

·ny loas or axpen
t results from
ubllullon
mlot
' ertl-l

will ftro
In lho
1 ~~";:'
Vallable edltton.

{1,.

Now you can have borders and graphics
"'-"
added to your classified ods
"""
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50C for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

POLICIES: Ohio V•O.V Publllhlng rewrvq the right to edit, rt)Kt. or cancellny ad II any time. Errora mull bt rJported on the tlrSI Clew of
Ttlbunt-Sentlnei-Aeglater wilt be responsible IOJ no more thin the cosi ol the lpllct occupied by tht lffOr tnd ontv the first lnNrtton. WI
not be
any aon 01' tllpenM thtt ruu1ta from tht publlc.tlon or omlalktn of an ..tvertiiiiMfiL Correcllon wHI be made In the II rat eva liable edition. · Bol numbtf
sre tiWIVI coi'tfldlntlal. ·Current r... eard appllll . ·· All f¥1 Htltt tdvertlurntntl are subt-ct to me ~erst Fair .Houtlng Act of 1968. ·This.nn1p11per
aeoeptl; onty help.wam.d ldt mMUnu EOE ttand..-dt. We wlll not knowingly accapt any lldQf'tlalng In vlotltiOn or UM law. Will not be 're•pontlbft lOr any
error• In an •taken owr tht phone.
· '

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

«POLICIES·
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserve~
lho dg~llo edit,
reject or cancel any
ad II any time.

67S·5234

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

• All ads must be prepaid'

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviltlonl
• Include Phone Number And Adc:lreu Wh•n NHdH
• Ada Should Run 7 D•v•

· aren't only for

(304) 675-1333

pisglav Ads

• SU.rt Your Adl With A Keyword • :a:nclude Complete

. ;, !i

l\egi~ter

Oead'ffir~

Wprd Ads

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

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

. NLINE

mribune

.To Place

2008 S.~9~.Qt~·-~~y C~ION~~j'
•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

kltncarlyle@lcomcast.net

Found: Rio Grande area:
Small pekingese
type
dOg, , Tan, very friend ly;
(740)245-577(]

Spom U~lity
1993 S10 · Blazer.4 door.
131 ,00(] miles, Good gas
mileage. 4x4. 6Cyl., 4.3
engine. Air, All Power,
Red &amp; Cream color,
Great condition, S3000
Neg. ; Call 74Q-256·1332
or 304·638·0485

, Noba

Want To Buy

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. rei:·
· omffiends lhal you do
business with people you
know, and NOT lo send
money through' the mal!
until you have investigat·
lng lhe 9fferir:g.

70 yr okl

s&amp;ekS

'Country

Boy'

Romance
wf
65-72 PO Box

DAY!

Want to buy Junk Cars,
call 74Q-388·0084 ·

Re-al Estate
Sales

3000

Commercial
For
sale
or
lease
of1ice/warehouse/sto rage
great localion in Gallipo·
lis.
aeoo sq. ft .
$400fmonth . Call Wayne
404·456·3802

Houou For Sale

•

:mailp Wribune

(140) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Basement

t)oint t)leasant l\egister

'

,I

W~flng

.
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local refer·
ences tumishad. Estabiisht!d 1975. Call24 Hrs.

(304) 675-'1333

740-446-01170. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Llgata ...................................... :.................... 100

.. Annaunc:ementa .......................................... 200
,
.•
'
·. ,

Blrthday/Annl....,ry..................................205
HappyAdL ................................................... 210
Loat l Found ..........................................,.... 215
Memory/Thenk You ..................................... 220
Noltcn ......................................................... 225
Petionato .............................................,........ 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Servlcea ....................... :.... :........................... 300
Appll1nce Servlca .............- ........................ 302
Autamollve ..........................:..............,........ 304
Building Mlltorleto ....................................... 306

Buslneu ................................._................... 308
Catarlng ............,........................................... 310
Child/Elderly care ....................................... 312
Computara ................................................... 314
ConbiCIOI'I.,.. ...........,..................... ,.. .......... 316
Darnnttco/JanHollot.................. - .............. 318
Eleclrlca1 ..........~ .......................................... 320
Flnonclat..........,.. ..........................................322

.zoos

-Hh ..................................................:........ 326
H11tkag l Caollng ....................................... 328

Home lmpn&gt;- 330

lnourence ........ ~ ...-~................................... 332

~ Sarvlce ..... - ....................................... 33'
~ .................................... 336

Other Serv-................................ _. ____ .. 338
• Ptumblng/Eiee:trlcll .................................... 340
• Plol · - ......................................... 342

RICfUllanal Vehlctea ..:............................ 1000

ATV ............................................................. 10115
Blcy-......................................................1010
lloldaiAcceuorieo .................................... 1015
camper/RVa l Trettera ............................. 1020
Motorcycln ............................................... 1025
Other ...........: .............................................. 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Autamollve ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentallleoae.:.. ,............................... ,2005

Auto•·....................." ................................... 2010
Claollc/Anttqueo ..............................:........ 2015

Commen:lolllndUatrlol .....,.. ..:................... 2020
Parta• Acc1110....................................... .202S
Spa&lt;11 U11111y.............................................. 2030
Truclla......................................................... 2035
Utlllty'lnll- ....: ....................................... 2040
Vana,.. ..,..,.... :.,.. ....,.. ........... ,....................... 2045
W1JI11 to buy ...............................................2050

Real~ Satea ..................,..............: .... 3000
Cetr-y Platll ............ ,.. ........................... 3005
Commen:lat ................................................ 3010
Condomlnlumo .......................................... 3015
Far Sale by Qwner .....................; ...... _ ..... .3020
Hc&gt;u.- tor Salo ......................................... 3025
Lind (AcNige) ................................, ......... 3030

TURNED DOWN ON
SDCIAL SECURITY SS1
No' Fee Unless We Win!

1-888-582-3345

Lata ...........:............................ .,..................3035

want to buy................................................304G
_.- -

....................................35011

Aplrlmenti/T~ ......................... 350S

; Repllra ......................................................... 344 ' Commwctal............._................:........., ......3510

• Roollng.........................................................346 Condomlnlums .......................................... 3515
Sacurtty ........................................................348 -lorRenl ........................................ 3520
Tu/Accoun11ng ....:.............. ,. ..................... 3!50 Lllnd (Ac,..) ..........................................3525
Trovet/Entertalnmont ............................ .J ....352 ·Storogo .................. :.................................... 3535
Flnlnclat. ......................................................400 Want 1o Renl .............................................. 354ll
Flnonclll Servt..........................................405 MllnufaciUoed Houotng ........................ - .. 4000
tnouronce ........................, ........................... 410 Lota.............................................................4005
Maney to Lond .............................................415 ,.,..,...............,. ........................................a-to

Educatlan.....................................................soo

-

~ ... :...................................................515

- t o lluy ..... _ ...............- ................... 41130

Buolnne l Tredo Schaal ...........................505
IJ181NC110n llnlnlng .....'.. ,:: ....................... 510
• - 1 . -........................ ,............... ,.. ........ 520

Antnwls ..............,.. ....................................... eoo

Anlnllll Suppllll-.......................................805

-

.~

To be inserted in the

•

The Daily Sentinel
on Friday- October 31 at
Deadline 5 pm • October 24
Contact Brenda Davis or Dave Harris
for advertising information &amp; assistance

740·992·2156
or 992·2155

•
•
•
•

Re~l Est~te

J'&gt;OO

Rer.till~

- * ~aportr----·-----·.....,............511110

Rllart Property lor .........................5025
R11art ~lor rent ...............: ........... ll0!50

..............................:...........................e1o Employment.............................._ ..............eooo

Ll&lt;oetock-............................ _, ....................615
...............................................................620
Want1o buy .........................................._ .... ll25
Agrtcutture ............._ ................................... 7110
Flml Equt-1 ...- ....................................705
~a Produce.......................................710
Hay, FMd, Saed, Gnlln ............................... 715
Hunting. LIJnd._ .................. _ ................... 720
w.at to )luY.........." ....- ......- ....- ......- ...--725
Mon;hendlll ............... - .............................. 11110
Ant~qUea:.............._ ...................................... aos
~............................. _ .................... 810

; AuCttona............ -.......,................................. 915
• llafgalnBaalmont....................................... 820

· : Cotlec1lbln ......................... _....................... ll25
• Complllln ................................................... 830
• ~ppllel....................................835
: Flaa ................................................ 1140
• Fuel Oil Coii/WoadiGU .......................... ,.. IMS
• Fumlture ...................................................... 950
: ~oot a Spor1 ....................................t55

Kld'a c:onw .......... ,.....................................880

I' .

.........................................................a~s

8111011............................... _ .......................4020
SUppllea ...........................:.............. :.........402S

Accounltng/Flnanctat .... _ ..,,........... ,.. ..... II002
o\ilmlnl-~ ..................... 6004
Cnhler1Cierk ............................................. II006
Clllld/Eidefly ca.. ..................................... II006
Clerlcat ................................. :....................:8010
Can.tructlon ...............:.............................. 8012
Drtvera l Dolhlery.........\........................... 80,.
Edur:allon ................................._,................ 8018
Eloc1rlcel Plumblng .......................,. .........8018

2BR

EmptovmentAfanCIOII ........... - ................6020
en...-....~~~~e~~t.

........ - ...- .......................... 8022

FoCMISao·--·-····-·----····.................1024

Go••••••••
a: Fedeial ~ .................... 6021
Help-Generat ......- ........................ 6021

Lllw Enloocement......................................8030
Mlltnl8nanceiQotlc .............................8032
~ ...................-'-··..................................................80311

Medical._ .......... _ .........................- ...........6038
......................................... _ ...........8040

Part-Tl..,..Tompc••ln ....................... - ..eoa
Reataur--............................................
8044
Salel ............- ...- ......._ ............................8048

• - -. ..............................................865
- t o jruy.............................,....................870 ...1 -..........................- - - · - Y'Ird Sail .~...- ............................................875 TbllloeiFIC!o?".......... - ...., ..........---8052

APT.

441..0194

Gllllpolte c...
Collogo

tea.- CJooe To +&lt;orne) ·
Cal Toda~ 7-..:J67
c-8JJ0.21.-0452
gt'"j ,.
. . """'··
Ng It~~~·
ing~b"·"'

..,,_

Cclllr9-~ScMoai12748

Ci A.
'

(740)

�,,
I

Monday, October 13, 2008

.

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

FREE

l

Spacious floor plans.
ranch &amp; townhome style
living, playground &amp;
basketball court, on•srte
laundry tacilifY, 24 hr
emergency mainten.-.ce, quiet country location close to major
medk;al
facilities.
phfrmacleS, !iJrOCel)'
ltOfe ...just minutes
liWay from other major
shopping in the area.
tbloyoucllle Hlllo
Aport. . .tl
266 Colonial Drive 1111 3
Bi-1. OhK&gt; 45614

740-446-3344
Olfloe Hours M.' W, F
9AM · SPM

"-------...!

w

RENT

2 3R house in Gal6polis, 1!f.K) Clayton 14x70, 3br,
SPECIAL WID
conn .
$415/mo 1b. new carpet, new AIC

Jordan Landing 2bf. 3br S1 501dep. You pay an wr1umrture &amp; metal car&amp; 4br Available No Pels, • utilrt.es. No sectiOn a or port, porches, elC . con..
Tenant Responsible fqr HUO.
Call
Wayne must be moved, $12 ,900
Rent

&amp;

Eiecfric '404-45&amp;3602

(740)992-6849

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

304-674-{)()23
304·610-ons

2BA

town,

roose

located

Ganipolis,

•n 2004 Doubtewlde ., il9W
OH. conditioo. 4 bediJOOhi, 2

Taking
applications
S5001mo plus utilities. No bath, au appliances in·
Gallipolis area near Wal- Pets. 74o-441-Q110 or eluded, $3?,000 located
mart. 1 BR

Apt Utilities

~740-~5;..;9.;.1·-i-5•17~4::"".._"""!'~

at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma -

Pd. 245-;.893

2br on the River in Ma- s011 City304-675-2117

Twin Rivers Tower Is accept'ng
ap llcatton 5 1
1
or
, P
waiting Us! lor HUO subsidized, 1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled,
116756679
ca
•
Beautiful Aptt. at Jack&amp;on Estates. 52 West·

son. HUO Approved Ret·
erences 304-682-3512 or
o:an..t 486 7946
-~
-:·:-:-----:,- - - : - - ::::
.
ho
3 Bd . spaciOUs
me
M
tlf'
1
5750
.. pUS
lJIIIE!S ,
available
mid
N011
Pomeror. 740-992·7511 .

wood · D1., lrom $365 b
$560.
740..446·2568.
Equal Housing Opportu·
nity. This institution is an
Equa
0 pponunrty Provtd and Emp loyer
Gracious Llvtng 1' and 2
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
Manor
and
Riverside
Apts . in Middleport, from
$ 327 .
10
5592 .

~

2 BR $400 month $400
~sil
plus utilities . 89
UCJJV
Gartiekt Av.
Gallipolis
740-645- 1646
:--=::~~-~.,...~
2 BR house Gallipolis.
Oh, $375 per mth. plus
ulil!tles, $375. deposit, no
256
1
:.pe;.;15
:;;·.;;
,;;.;
· 666
;.;.;;.;....___

~~--~~~~

::;Or~2~66-~57~8~9~~~':"'"~

HouHt For Rent
pets, Ret. Reg. 441-D245 .
Free
Rent
Spedal!lt $400/
mo + deposit. 1BA ,
2&amp;3
. BA and up. Central
A &amp;A6 r
r
W&amp;D
·
Air, W/0 hookup.' tenant
g
urn,
hookup. No steps, Very
_pays ~ ~lecbic. EHO Elm . cJe.:in , 114 State St.
View '
Apts. 7 t\
4~441 ·0596
(304)aB2-3017
In Memory

In Memory of

Terry Wyatt
·; on his birthday, /0/13/1954

Three Bedroom nouse
At# 2 Nonn. Two Bedroom
Mobile
Home
Camp
Conley

:::304~-6~9~5-~31~2~9~~~~
=

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
!!!!!

Rentals

~~==;;;;;===•
2 b r. moolie • horne .. In
·
Racine, $325 per mo.,
$325 •dep.,
yrs . lease,
$60 non-refundable water dep., no pels, no calls
after
9pm,
)
_
740 992 5097

(

~~-----2BR.

1 batf1 on fann
5500 per monlh includes
utilities. 540-752·0626 or
540 _729 _1331

:;.,;;;..;.;~~~-~-

Federal Funds just reteased lor Land Owners.
No
closio'g cost and

$250 Sign on Bonul

Owner Operator OpporR&amp;J Trucf&lt;ing •
by next weffii:l
Marietta. · ONo 1'\a.S opNo experience required! ponunlti&amp;S available tor
No Sales!
Owner Operators witi'Wl
No Coliecfions'
the region l'.t feature
weekly settlements. ;,.
Recruit YOiootee~ !Of
eluding ft8 &amp;lKd\arge &amp;
non-profit organizations · tra1er rental. Opetators
suc11 as St. Jude
hol*l have newer equipTen positions need filled

tion • oontacl

Hospital.
difference!

Ful1 and Pan-time

P18asant.
OWNER Fl·
NANCE
AVAILABLE.
·(740)446-3570

Day and Evening

.,.--------9 1 14x70 mobile home, 3
br .. 2 bath, ready to be
SID .500.
moved,
(7401591 936
.,...------New 3 BediOo.m homes
trom 5214 .36 per mont11.
1nctudes many upgrades.
delivery
&amp;
set-up.

..a

~'

Professional W~
Environment!
..... 1 Dental EAn

,._,.
~·

roo·•rt
A

,nu,.,....

1--888-IMC.PAYU

a_,·~-•

Ert1921
http:/llObl.lnfocllbl.com

'""
Delivery/Warehouse person needed, lull time, immediate opening, must
· ·
nave good driv1ng record. 6 .....,1y· Litestyle Fursales.
call
....,....
1·686·610.'953
niture 856 Third Ave .
0
Gallipolis, 9:30-5:00 No
,......,..,......,..-,--- Phone Calls
Local business is accepting
applications/resumeff
lor part-tirile
posi· ATIENnON:
11011
· . Mon-Frt·, 30 hwith lull
'" per tiLocal company
d
,. time
week .
Previous
evNirime
an
pa.
~
po·
:"""
tions in our customer
ence is a plus. Please service department. No
mail.lemait
resume
to :
Precision
Fabricators, experience required ·perposition
com716 1 Oht·o Rt'ver. Road. ma""nt
Point
Pleasant
WV pany . training
provided
or
sales@pre- must be a High School
25550
fabltc.com
No phone graduate. Full time pocalls please.
tions $580 per week,
"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'" rapid advancements and
·
benefits. FOf an interview
Govomment &amp; Fedora!
call740-446-n96.
Clerical &amp; office positions
available, paid training
starts
immediatetu,
no
'
experiertee needed, no

cler~al

Jobs

==;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;=;;;;;; ~O~hio--v·a~lle.·y-~H·om-e
FEDERAL
Health, Inc. hiring Home
POStAL JOBS Health Aides. STNA,
CNA, CHHA, PCA may
apply at 1480n Jackson
P:ike, Gallipolis, Ohio or
phone 740-441-1393 for
ll)Ore info. Competitive
wages,
mil88ge
reiri1bursement .and benefits

sume
LLCOCAREO.COM
f
ax 10 740-446-9104

to
or

'Those we lon don't go away, · ·
They walk beside us every day.
'Unseen, 'unheard , but alw3ys 11ear,
Still loved, still missed, and v~ry dear.
~dly missed , always loved

Hrrl s Self
Storage

CARPENTER
SERVICE

--_,ng

• Eletblcill &amp; Plumbtng

.-._&amp;G-.

• VInyl Skiing &amp; P1intlng ·
• P.Uo and Porch Oldll
WV036725

,.

.''

'

'l('r-:; 1 Ut1

writlflg and English skills,.
photography skills and

knowledge of desktop ·
publislling are sought.
The position is full time.
40 hours a week . with
be •t I t
ted
neu s. n ares
parties can send resumes 10
Kevin KeVy, Man$:ging
Editor, Ohio Valley Publishing Co., 825 Third
Ave. , Gall'1poI'IS, Ohio
45631 or kketlyvmy·
A
daltytribuAe.com. No
, phone catts Please.

Sub.
Bus
Drivers
Needed 1 M ·
L
1
or
etgs oca
School Dlstrict.$55 for all
day.Must attend
driver
training class .Ciass to be
held Oct.20,06 ' through
Oct.24,08.1nterested
please call Paul McElroy
at 740-7,.2·2990
Tilytor
made
coun1er
tops.

looking

tor

solid

surface fabricators . Ex·
perience in cabinet shop
will be helpful but will
train light People. Must
pass ·
pre-employment
~
testing,
drug
screen,"
criminal
background
ch eck.' 6 month training

'E•.• (-

L

7:00AM · 8:00 PM

f

ltlt12UtlttnlN

._H._,

Aucuoneer:
BIIIV I. a·oble Jr.

Johnson's Tree

740-416·1164

JQ-112-5812

Service
Complete rre. Care
.,.,., . .,,.. t:llfmlllll

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

FIND .BARGAINS
EVERY
DA•VI
'

~~W~i~fe~,~fa~m~i~ly~a~n~d~f~ri~e~nd:s:·:::::;~I;N;;;T;;H;;E;;;;~C;;;:l~·:A;;;:S::S=I=F=I=E=D==S~

An Excellent
earn apartment"
ager needed
for local lomoney.
The way
Newto AVon.
community
.
cated
in
Gallipolis,
II
Man 1rn Ideal candidate willOhio.
Ca
have
304-88f:·2645
previous eJ&lt;perience in
- - - - - - - - - property management at
Diesel Mechanic , tow ~ Rural Development
boat experiece des_
ired, property, excellent comgood wages, exc. benefit ·municalion and organizapackage 304-675-4545.
tiona! ski Us and be de-

~-..,..-~---....,. p8ndable. Health insur·
Direct Care Stan In resldential youth program.
Must be 2 1 ye~rs of age.
Pay based on experlCaM
a nee.
(740)379·9083
Mon-Fn
.Qam-3pm.

~~~~~i -~-.~-.~-~I need to find (2) people

iii~:~~~;~~~JH
:'!;

~

/

needing a fulltir]1e joP.
You need to be honest a
peffion of integrity, with
. good peopo, skins. You
also need to be able to
·follow InstructiOns and
ha\le an ab.Hity io Iiden
and lead people in the
right direction. I need
people Who want to work
and will show up for
work. If you are a recent
colege grad and cannot
find employment and fool
that you are qualified,
give ,us a chance until a
job in your
path
becomes available. can
Pal Hilt, NeW Car Manager for an interview at .
446·9600.

career

.. . .... .
~

ance&amp;401kavailable.
Salary dependent upon
eKperlence. Submit resume &amp; salary requirements to: Gallipolis C.M.,
Gorsuch Mgt., P.O. Box
190, LancasterOH
43130-Q190oremailto:
kdasburyOembarqmail.com

#5548

44087 Wlpple Rd.
Pomeroy, OH ..
(5 Points)
- New &amp; Used Tin.~s.

BARNEY

We buy used tire~.
computer wheel

Hal'llwlod CHlnecrj And Furnialrt

alignments. light
mechanic work .

WWW4flz1 IIUM'koabtAet:rJ'..eom

MY MAMA'S
COMIN' T'VISIT,
'WEEZY !!

MERCY-WE'D
'BETTER
STOCK UP

DON'T
WORRY,
SHE .
EATS
LIKE A

ON GROCERIES !!

complete serv ice oil
changes, small engine

MDS
COORDINATOR
Edgewood Manar

oiWI!IIIon
50 Skilocl bed Facility

"AN
'2 Y"' MDS
Expel'ienc:tl
'Exceptional
communication &amp;
people Skills ·
'Interpersonal &amp;
Ofganizattonal skills
To apply, visit:
w~.consulatemgtca­

. reers .com
405 North Part&lt; Ave
Wellston, &lt;JH 45692
740-364·5el1
EOEISFIDF

THAT'S
TRUE
H

a

TWICE H&amp;R WEIGHT
.AT EV'RY MEAL !!

BIRD!!

Mon-Fri.

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

TO!l:it.S 1~.._"-......,.---.r
1&gt;. COl~ ...

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

'0 '

H&amp;H

Guttering

ResCare Home Care
Pro\llder
of
Support
Services to tndividiJBis
with MRIDD. Direct Care

Seamless Gutters
Roofing , Sieling, Gytters

is preferred.
fils Include

TO " CONI'LICT

Job bene-

740-653-9657

"iiiiiii;;;;:;;;,~,.::;;;:;

1

Insurance, and Paid Va-·
cation -are also available.
Pl~e apply In person.
Located @ 426 VIand
Street in downtown Polnt
Pleasant.

CJOOO

1

Srtv'f:t' Elus
) rrf'l li)

Maintenance Plus
Comm1·rciaJ &amp; Resiifemiaf

Vinyl
Siding/RepliJcement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740- 9'12-1493 Oftl ce
740-416·8339 Cell

Free Estimated

OKA'f.I LL ADMIT If..
IF WE !-lAD 1-!0RSES,
WE COUL.D GALLOP..

Pomeroy. Ohio

AU types Maso nry, brick,
block, stonB", Free Estt-

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; F.lemoval
*Prompt and Qua lity

Wurk
*Rcrtsonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
Rt!fcrence!'i Available I
Ca ll Gmy Stanley @.
740-59 1-8044
Pl ease leave messu e

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE ·

=

cow and BOY

",...-------.., ...-------..,, ,.·--....--.....;--...,

·. LIFE IS ASE"IES
OF
~
PEAJ(S AND VAu.EVS
AND WE CAN'T EVEI2
EJ&lt;PEI1IENCE THE HIGHS
n"'
SHA""
WIT"nUT
nv
V~.J~~;
KC.
THE LOWS.

"

1DISAGREE. FOI!SO""
.
n~
UFE SEEMS TO BE AN
OOl.ESS BASELINE OF
. DO!.DI!U/A-IC MEDIOCRITY
WHEIIE NOTHI~ GI!EAl OQ

w~

~HUIJUJ

HORRIBLE EVER REALLY
H~
.AN()
THEN

Windows
• Rooflng
·Decks
• Polo

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
E:lectric, Plumbing,

Buildings

Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

Local Contractor

74()..367·0544
FrH Eollmateo

740·367-()536

Coli: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Rooting • Pole
Dams • Patio 's, Porches and Decks

37

Co. honcho . 9 Bays

38 Mod. plans

10 Tallow

35 Genghissource
13- Nutmeg and 36 High
waistline
as bene11ts
cloves

39 Ricke~
ingredient
40 Gym
amenity
41 Mellower
42 Go inside ..
43 Delhi coin •
44 Grey
•

o1 western ~
no\lels
45 Honda rival
47 Candly
sttiper
48 Endorsers'
needs
;
51 BaH club ~
VIP
.
53 Keg couSin:

39 Looks happy
41 Enjoy,

clou~es !hat

n~ar-worthless.

balanced. the outcom~ win be gory.
will be
and if it is also
In today's doal, South has 17 high-card
points, three diamond stoppers and a
good club suit. But h8 is unlucky, flhding
West with both an easy double and a
goQd lead, and North with a balanced
Yartlorough.
After West leads the spade queen. how
many doWn can South be taken?
You might think that d8etarer is due to
win three or'fou r Irick$, but he can be
held to his two top spades.
South takes the lirs1 trick and tries a
club. East wins and returns a spade.
Then, when in with his second top club,
East must shill to the heart.}ack. (This
will be a hard play to find, but a Sophisti ·
cated West w9uld drop the spade jack ·
on the second round of tha1 su it The
unn6cessarily high. cafd asks par1ner to
lead hearts, the highest-ranking s~.;~it
below spades.) Then, whe.n West runs
his m~jors, everyone is brought down to
two cards. West has the club eight and
diamond two. East retains the ace·
queen of diamonds. But what does
South keep ? He cannot hold both his
hi gh club and the king-jack ot diamonds .
bown five doubled and nonvulnerable
costs 1,100, which is a tad better than
450 tro~ tour spades plus one.

·•

I!Oil 'u wA un

~""':'2,!.1

SCORPIO ~ Oct 24-Nov. 22) '- Just
because you might recognize certain
Inadequacies in yourself, don't point out
the flaws In others, even If you're right. ·
They wOfl'l take kindly to YQUr trying to
correct them.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) · Should you run into someone whose
strong opinions diametrically &lt;Jppose
'yours. don't take It personally. Although
you will handle tt1e ctestl well, fruitless
combat Is a. waste of time.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - When
you run Into s congeste? ro~dbiOck,
unless you're willing to scout out roules
tess Cluttered-, you will make life rtu.ICh
harder on yourself than II need be.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()-Feb. 19) - It is OK
to be a bit assertive, but don't let any ·
aggressiveness spill over Into social sltuation,s. Friendship cah only survive with
give-and-take.
PISCES
(Fob.purchases
20-Morchthat
20) will
:.. spruce
If you
plan to make
up your homo. be careful that you don·•
go overboard just because the bargains
are tow and far between . Walt until
another day.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) - In reality,

47239 Riebel Rood. Long Bottom, Oii

740-985-4141
.
Cell : 740-416- 1 ~34

2J+ )'ears txperitnce Free Estima1e1
•

...

a1rlltgr
(2 wds.

19 Doughier
of Hyperion
21 Stare
24 Cry
of dis9ust
25 Pollut1on
org.
26 Church seat
27 Ewes and
mares
28 Moppet
30 Casper's st.
31 Kind
of system
32 Hedge
shrub
33 Distress.
call

not lor penalty. But the penalty dou·

IIIE W. _IIRCUJ:Il, OwtiEI

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

• Q

---~-~

· Garages
• Room AddRiona

8 Fallback

ofaigh1
(hyph.)

Don't discount sentiment
TAURU S (Apot 20·May 20) - Ba careful
when It comes to household repairs .
Getting a friend to do theee jobs might
prove to be an expansive mistake, especia lly if you can't polnl out what you don't
like.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - Althoug h
you mlgtlt be adept 1111 managi nG your
personal artal rs. don't attempt to tell oth·
~ ers how ttley should run their lives. It
....- - . . . - - - - - - . . . - - . . , . . . - . , won 't go over too well, even If you mean
well.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- A· number
ot thinds might turn out to be a bll more
dlffic4k than usual kl acllkMI. owing to a
lot of small problems going against you.
However, don't use this as a cop·out to·
throw in the towel.
LEO (J uly_ 23 ~ Aug . 22.)- Even llaome· ,
one Close to you ctoea something you
don't approve, don't make a big thing of
lt. All ttlat will do II create a chasm
between tl'le rwo of you that won't be
AIP)'~Ifled .
. .
VIRQO (Aug, 23·SI~t. 22) - Aunntng
around with tllgh 1'01111'1 might Qlve ycu
delt,jiiOI"'I or grtndeur, but thl prloe you
pay mey ~.more than yov'n prepartctto
~ll'ldle . Trying to malah their . .ding
would bo lolly.

ONE DAY
YOU.DIE.

Construction
• Replacement

34 Keen

some o1 your "'"' !II oughts wilt be your
best ones, yet you might not trust your
judgment simply oeoauso they could be

._ )

• Vlnvl Siding

7 Viewa

couldtobe
quitejob
impressive
al'td actually
lead
a now
or career opportunity.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Even if you
feel that your ttlinklng Is far bener than
that of your contemporaries, don't push
your beliefs on them. Be prepared to
accept their ideas, or you could come off
· as being a know-it·alt.

currenUy

4D~K. Healltl

All pass

wlcl1

29 Gorilla
30 Some lholl

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity" Crpher cty~()9ra-ns are created lrorn QUOiat.ons

I

:~ 'amous p!OO ~

Eacn leller rn 1ne croher stands to• a&lt;blher
rooay's clue: YeQuals P

pasl aM pre~'lt

'

" W D E I U R 0 KSG PF D R · 0 RF GV U U0
COl

SOK ' R

KGHGV

WD ,

YOC

OKW

COl

ORRGKRMDK

c·

PMXX

RD

X M J M R 0 R M·o K U 0' A, 0 M K . "

RFGMV

E0 J GU

SDDL
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' God bless America. God save the Queen. G&lt;J4
defend New Zealand and thank Christ for Australia · ·R ussell Crowe
·

O Rearrang8

lstten of th
f011r l&lt;rGmbled wordo be-

low to form faur simple words.

Ir--:--:--::--:-:--:-:--"1
S E V U RS

you

~ JnstJr9d &amp; Bond9d

Quality Seamless
Gutters

East

Oct. 14, 2008
·av B...-nlc• Bed• O•ol
In the yeat ahead, it behoovu5
lo
become more Involved , ln creative
endeavors that provkle outlets to
express you r talents. The end result

Sol 11

seekii'lg
a salesperson
lor
our Point
PIBBsant,
WV location. . Experience

Obi.

4 Annual
5 - nova
6 Dineraand·

sent

'

STUOEN~ &lt;:OIITRt&amp;UTING.

~~.;,;;;o=;;.,;;;;;;;;""'

In Asia
3 Breezy

27 Misrepre-

·Astro·Graph
•
-'llrtbdltl&gt;:
Tu-.

w£'Re GUESTS HeRE 1\T
J£fFEP.50N! I DON'T
WI\Nr 1\N'! OF OUR ·

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

Medical

~e.'S !lO ltlC.i-1, WI'.E.I'I 1-\t'.Jft.LI(!,...,
P~T 1&gt;. WI~I-\INC. WW.., 1-\E

Racine, Ohio 74D-247·2019

Is

to

opponent is when partner opens the bid·
ding with one of a sun and the next play·
er overCalls one no-trump. If you have a
. decent hand, ctouble . Ypu know dummy

(740) 992-5344

P"'I-lOW ltlti-1 I~ VEE.e.LE.F~iEi ~~ .

58 Tastf"'!ll

adjunct

59 Remainder
17 Hail,
Caesar
18 Early harps
DOWN
20 Kind of fong
1 Favre et at .
22 H. .ail 'a
2 River
Mauna-

One of the easiest limes to catch an

winterize boa ts and
RV 's

THE BORN LOSER

Felber
57 Bungle

go~red species.

~ ~.

repui r.

Sat. 8:00am · 12
We appreciate yo•r
busiMss·

1 NT

haVe been looking at

56 Millay or

calces

ble does still exist. even ~ ~ is an endan·

We service and

8:00am. 4 :30pm

W•si Nor111

We
are

!!i~

~~;~~~~~~~~;;IIi~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~

L &amp; L Tire Barn

For Remodeting and New HouS&lt; Building
""""

"

8~

§;

...,,.,..;E;;;O;
E, . , . , , mate,
740-416·7305,
304-593·6421
Medical
Home Health Care of
Southeast Ohio Inc., i~
currently
hlrln_
g
home
health aides·. Certified or
experieooe.
Bonuses
Available.
Call
t866·366·1100.

6fT OUT
OF Ttlf
MAilt:H.

~Lee

23 Semi partl
24 Prolific

A double can be
for penalty

~ viAilNfl&gt; tliM TO '

55 Shlrpen

diarist

Sooth

Opening lead:

.

~

Inc .

4 A K ,3

I t

.z

ucts,

•

Vulnerable: Neither

:~;;~;;;;;;:;-• ·---"-'~-;;;;;;;
Appalachian Tire PrOd·

Eastern Avenue, Gatlipo·
tis, OH .
PropenvManagement
.,....,......,._ _ _ _ _ P.T. Community Man-

t A Q '7 4 3

Dealer: East

www.auctlonzlp.com

7all-64 , -93117

Staff.
Contact
Rhonda
Harrison,
Monday
through
Friday . 9a·5p.
74().446·4814 ext. 26 or
e-mail ·resume to: rharnsonOrescare.com

• J 2

• 2
8 52

notice word

Rawlo

16 Porch

¥ K9 5
t K J 10 9
4 Q J tO 9

E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com

WANTED: Part-time posilloh available to assist
lndivldiJBIS with mental
retardation · at a group
home ln.Bidwell:
1) 35 hrs: 10:30a·7:30p
Sun; 2-10p MfruiW;
·
2) 27,5 hrs: 3:30·11p Fri;
~a- 7p Sat; 1•9p Sun;
Must .have high school

3br, 2ba, Pt. Pleasant Wireless: The areas fast· 60..hr. EMT Miner Class
or est growing Verizon re- &amp; Refreshers 40-hr. Sur·
area
304-273·6622
tail er. Now hiring the fol- face
Apprentice
80-hr.
304·674-6204
Apprentice
lowing: Assistant Man- · Underground
3br. $425 a mo., 1br. agar
star1ing
at 16-ru.
Tree
Clearing
$295 · a mo. plus dep., $10.50-$11 .50/hr
plus Mine Underground Forutilities &amp; references, 3fd commission.
~art·Ume man Cfass. Minor Safety
St. ,
Racine , sale associate starting at · Equipment ·Store.
For
(740)247-4292
$8.50/hr plus
commis- more
information
call
Training OH 45640 or e-mail 10
Scenic location, conven- sion. Please send re- Whit-cO
beyeeservCyahoo.corri.
to 304·372·8346.
ient to town and afford- sumes
Deadline for applicants:
able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrOoms joshmcgraw@ gmall.com.
Pre· A
LOCAL
MANUfAC· 10115106. Equal Opportu·
Wireless
a\lailabte
call Verizon
nity Employer.
mium Retailer.
·
(740)992·5639
TURER is taking· appNca·
tions for EXPERIENCED
Mig Welders. Please liJl·
¥anoglfllllenl/
ply in pe"""' ot 2150
Supernoory

• 6 4 3

•AK

'

bright

50 Hounehet
52 Chid&lt;en
atyle
54Bridll

p.,.,..,.,.

15

South

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

~;~;~!~=

--

12

1/1411 mo. pd

HIRING avg. Pa~ $20!hr ~.,...~~--:~- letview. An Equal opporor
$571&lt;/yr,
includes Gallipolis Career College ~tu;;,n;;;
ily~E;:m;;:p;;;lo~y;er;.._ __

Fed.Ben, OT. Place by is seeking part-time in·
adSource, not affiliated structors who possess a
with USPS . who hires. master's degree in gen~1,;
·8;;;66-;;,;,;,40!!3!!
-. 2!!5!!82;;,,,,. eral education subJect ar;;:
ea_s such as: English,
Help Wanlad • Gonorol Math, and Social Sci·
ences. E-mail resumes
AVON! AU Areas!
ro
Sell . ,Shirley to
tc~anicki@gallipollsca·
Buy ·. or
3BR located on Bulavtlle
reercollege'.com or call
Pike.
$475/(ent Spears 304·6751 429
800-214-0452
740-367-7762

•=.-::.....

14 Gehrig or

•Q J1098
¥ A Q tO 8

Swp &amp; Compare

no-

46 Opon
49 Unuou..y

ripenocl

Eut

Remodeling

Hours

CJ92 fi2'5
&gt;

• Garages

Bay port
.U SUmmer

11-

Wotl

.• Complete

S!Mit'K'IO'
.101Ch30','

V C YOUNG Ill

Sportswriter
The Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Co. is seeking moti·
vated , people-oriented
ind ivldua 1tt· fill a vacancy
•n I he news """'
"""'"' · 85 a ·
Sport ., The
swner.
sue·
cessful &lt;;:andidate will
cover high school athlet·
k:s in !he area lor rhe
daily edition ot the newspaper, as wei! as assist.
with the production of
sports pages. Excellent

• New Homes

45n1
740-949-2217 .

43GlUII10bera

1 Jeltieo
5 Ammo

• 8' 5
• 7' 4

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ot1io

• Room Adclltlont •

insur- program.
Call 740·379-2267 for in -

Mobile home for rent 2
BR
1
bath;
new
ap'pli·
fumace/ca;
new
ances; new bath like new
home, no pets . . 3675 Bu·.
Iaviiie P~e 740.446-4234
or 740·208-7861

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

IO.lS-(16

YOUNG 'S

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

l

·

' .__,,~

S. Gallia School District. ~~-~":'!"-~~ including. health
Must have
references. PosT
OFFIC.
NOW ance &amp; much more.
deposit

r,

401K!
On-site Doctor
Weef!fy ~ay and
Bonus Incentives!

TOMORROWII
WCJdc: NEXT WEEKfll

ZERO ·DOWN! Will do $17.S9·$28.27/HR.,
now
land
improvements.
application
hiring.
For
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit and free government tob
OK. ,?. 3, 4 and 5 bed·
r
info. ca ll American Asroonis
available.
soc.
of
Labor
74 ()..446· 3384
1·913·599·8226,
24/hrs~
2 . bedroom mobile home emp. serv.

$375
plus
740-256·1686

available. Heatttl care &amp;
Retirement plans avail·
able. Please send re-

o•ifts .

•

at

Ice Technician positiOns

Positions

rrnruiC8 •

Den:nls

~-9365
service Manager &amp; Sel\'·

Getpaidtomakea

diploma/QED,
valid· three
clriv·
er
's license and
years gOOd driVIng expertence.
$6.40/hr
·aHer
treinlng. Excellent benefft
package..
Pre-employment Drug Testing . Send
Buckeye
resume · to:
Community
Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson.

:

ALLEY'OOP

tun-

ment. For more informa-

Chikfren's Research

BraAd new 3bed 2bath
•
In Pt
on · + -hau acre
.

New 2BR 2 bath yoJJr
choice ol renting com·
pletety furnished &amp; all
utilities paid or' ·you pro·
7 40.992·5064
Equal
Housing Oppor1unlty.
viding lumiture &amp; ulitities.
::--~;..;__...;,.~~ NO LE ASE 446· 7029

New Haven, one bed·
room apartment. deposil
-:&amp;
references ,
taR Apt , WID hookups, 740..992...0165
~..;..;.;;....:,~-~:""'"":
..tellite TV incl. w/rent, ::N.
C
G
'dose to hospital. Can tee
lean
round
·
Floor 2br WID hookup
740-339-()362
'
'
'
~?-~l;ill:-~----:"~~ ReterencesJDeposit/No
. fBA close lo hospital. · Pets 304 _675 _5162
WID hookup, appliances ,_;;;.;.;......;...;..;.,;;;....._ _
furnished.
740..441 -3702 Tara
Townhouse
Apartmfi!nts · 2BR, 1.5
;;
2 bedroom Apar1mant &amp; batll. back patld. pool,
. 11trash. sew·
~ bedroom House on 5th Pla"ground
'
water
pd.)
. ask for age,
St. 304•612 -4 350
$4 25/rent.
Don .
$425/sec.
dep. Call 740·367·0547
·a room tumished
apt. for
.
rent. 7 miles below GalliCommercial
polls. Parking for one car ~=--=""'=~p~. $275 month + etec- 2 bay service station
tric.
Deposit · required. Jackson
Pike.
Lease
.Stop in office at 1403 requited. cau 446-3644
Eastern Avo . for rnntal lor more info.
~·
application
or
call ~-~,-~--~
446-5 14
Commerical
Space
for
Rent, Main St. Pt. Pleas.
3 rooms and bath up- S400/mo.
2000
sq/H
Completely lur· 703·501·4806
stairs.
nlshed With WID. ,No

In Memory

Monday, October 13,2008

:::~~~·~-~_,~:·~;;~~-~-F~~~..,~~;;;;~s~d~,~~~~~~w~~~~·io..d~~i~~w~~~·;.-~o-.a~~~~~~~~!!~~~!l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To•dr

Clip this AD and take it
With you when you Visit
our community 1o get
this special discount.
Move-In In Oct and get
f100.00 oft your ZIIR
Apt. in Nov. Cu•entty
"'""ng 1 &amp; 2 BR units

www.mydailysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailystntlnel.com

·I I I' I' I

f--r__;r-r~,.;....,...-1

·

I

I

==·==·==·~-~-'

~==·

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1 1 1 1

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· ..L-l..-1.~

I IT H14CIAHI ...,
0
co

~~0,'

"--'---'-.1---L....J ~

I
•

5

e

dtso edient boy.
"The straight and narrow path .
wouid not be so narrow if more
Teacher ((J

I
·I . I· I I I' 0
S I N D Al

•

•

•

•

people .... ··."

•

Com~le10

•h• chu~klo

quoted
.·
by filling In t ho misllnQ worclj
yCtu develop fram step No. 3 bfllow.

PRINT NUMBf!ED LETTERS !N
THESE SQUARES

I

.,

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS I Oil 0108
· .Weapon - Began - Aglow - Graven .. DE WRONG
HYour tonsciencc.'' lectured .the mom ·· wams .you tluH .voui·
instincts may BE WRON(f .'
·

.

ARLO &amp; JANIS ·

.

�,,
I

Monday, October 13, 2008

.

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

FREE

l

Spacious floor plans.
ranch &amp; townhome style
living, playground &amp;
basketball court, on•srte
laundry tacilifY, 24 hr
emergency mainten.-.ce, quiet country location close to major
medk;al
facilities.
phfrmacleS, !iJrOCel)'
ltOfe ...just minutes
liWay from other major
shopping in the area.
tbloyoucllle Hlllo
Aport. . .tl
266 Colonial Drive 1111 3
Bi-1. OhK&gt; 45614

740-446-3344
Olfloe Hours M.' W, F
9AM · SPM

"-------...!

w

RENT

2 3R house in Gal6polis, 1!f.K) Clayton 14x70, 3br,
SPECIAL WID
conn .
$415/mo 1b. new carpet, new AIC

Jordan Landing 2bf. 3br S1 501dep. You pay an wr1umrture &amp; metal car&amp; 4br Available No Pels, • utilrt.es. No sectiOn a or port, porches, elC . con..
Tenant Responsible fqr HUO.
Call
Wayne must be moved, $12 ,900
Rent

&amp;

Eiecfric '404-45&amp;3602

(740)992-6849

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

304-674-{)()23
304·610-ons

2BA

town,

roose

located

Ganipolis,

•n 2004 Doubtewlde ., il9W
OH. conditioo. 4 bediJOOhi, 2

Taking
applications
S5001mo plus utilities. No bath, au appliances in·
Gallipolis area near Wal- Pets. 74o-441-Q110 or eluded, $3?,000 located
mart. 1 BR

Apt Utilities

~740-~5;..;9.;.1·-i-5•17~4::"".._"""!'~

at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma -

Pd. 245-;.893

2br on the River in Ma- s011 City304-675-2117

Twin Rivers Tower Is accept'ng
ap llcatton 5 1
1
or
, P
waiting Us! lor HUO subsidized, 1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled,
116756679
ca
•
Beautiful Aptt. at Jack&amp;on Estates. 52 West·

son. HUO Approved Ret·
erences 304-682-3512 or
o:an..t 486 7946
-~
-:·:-:-----:,- - - : - - ::::
.
ho
3 Bd . spaciOUs
me
M
tlf'
1
5750
.. pUS
lJIIIE!S ,
available
mid
N011
Pomeror. 740-992·7511 .

wood · D1., lrom $365 b
$560.
740..446·2568.
Equal Housing Opportu·
nity. This institution is an
Equa
0 pponunrty Provtd and Emp loyer
Gracious Llvtng 1' and 2
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
Manor
and
Riverside
Apts . in Middleport, from
$ 327 .
10
5592 .

~

2 BR $400 month $400
~sil
plus utilities . 89
UCJJV
Gartiekt Av.
Gallipolis
740-645- 1646
:--=::~~-~.,...~
2 BR house Gallipolis.
Oh, $375 per mth. plus
ulil!tles, $375. deposit, no
256
1
:.pe;.;15
:;;·.;;
,;;.;
· 666
;.;.;;.;....___

~~--~~~~

::;Or~2~66-~57~8~9~~~':"'"~

HouHt For Rent
pets, Ret. Reg. 441-D245 .
Free
Rent
Spedal!lt $400/
mo + deposit. 1BA ,
2&amp;3
. BA and up. Central
A &amp;A6 r
r
W&amp;D
·
Air, W/0 hookup.' tenant
g
urn,
hookup. No steps, Very
_pays ~ ~lecbic. EHO Elm . cJe.:in , 114 State St.
View '
Apts. 7 t\
4~441 ·0596
(304)aB2-3017
In Memory

In Memory of

Terry Wyatt
·; on his birthday, /0/13/1954

Three Bedroom nouse
At# 2 Nonn. Two Bedroom
Mobile
Home
Camp
Conley

:::304~-6~9~5-~31~2~9~~~~
=

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
!!!!!

Rentals

~~==;;;;;===•
2 b r. moolie • horne .. In
·
Racine, $325 per mo.,
$325 •dep.,
yrs . lease,
$60 non-refundable water dep., no pels, no calls
after
9pm,
)
_
740 992 5097

(

~~-----2BR.

1 batf1 on fann
5500 per monlh includes
utilities. 540-752·0626 or
540 _729 _1331

:;.,;;;..;.;~~~-~-

Federal Funds just reteased lor Land Owners.
No
closio'g cost and

$250 Sign on Bonul

Owner Operator OpporR&amp;J Trucf&lt;ing •
by next weffii:l
Marietta. · ONo 1'\a.S opNo experience required! ponunlti&amp;S available tor
No Sales!
Owner Operators witi'Wl
No Coliecfions'
the region l'.t feature
weekly settlements. ;,.
Recruit YOiootee~ !Of
eluding ft8 &amp;lKd\arge &amp;
non-profit organizations · tra1er rental. Opetators
suc11 as St. Jude
hol*l have newer equipTen positions need filled

tion • oontacl

Hospital.
difference!

Ful1 and Pan-time

P18asant.
OWNER Fl·
NANCE
AVAILABLE.
·(740)446-3570

Day and Evening

.,.--------9 1 14x70 mobile home, 3
br .. 2 bath, ready to be
SID .500.
moved,
(7401591 936
.,...------New 3 BediOo.m homes
trom 5214 .36 per mont11.
1nctudes many upgrades.
delivery
&amp;
set-up.

..a

~'

Professional W~
Environment!
..... 1 Dental EAn

,._,.
~·

roo·•rt
A

,nu,.,....

1--888-IMC.PAYU

a_,·~-•

Ert1921
http:/llObl.lnfocllbl.com

'""
Delivery/Warehouse person needed, lull time, immediate opening, must
· ·
nave good driv1ng record. 6 .....,1y· Litestyle Fursales.
call
....,....
1·686·610.'953
niture 856 Third Ave .
0
Gallipolis, 9:30-5:00 No
,......,..,......,..-,--- Phone Calls
Local business is accepting
applications/resumeff
lor part-tirile
posi· ATIENnON:
11011
· . Mon-Frt·, 30 hwith lull
'" per tiLocal company
d
,. time
week .
Previous
evNirime
an
pa.
~
po·
:"""
tions in our customer
ence is a plus. Please service department. No
mail.lemait
resume
to :
Precision
Fabricators, experience required ·perposition
com716 1 Oht·o Rt'ver. Road. ma""nt
Point
Pleasant
WV pany . training
provided
or
sales@pre- must be a High School
25550
fabltc.com
No phone graduate. Full time pocalls please.
tions $580 per week,
"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'" rapid advancements and
·
benefits. FOf an interview
Govomment &amp; Fedora!
call740-446-n96.
Clerical &amp; office positions
available, paid training
starts
immediatetu,
no
'
experiertee needed, no

cler~al

Jobs

==;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;=;;;;;; ~O~hio--v·a~lle.·y-~H·om-e
FEDERAL
Health, Inc. hiring Home
POStAL JOBS Health Aides. STNA,
CNA, CHHA, PCA may
apply at 1480n Jackson
P:ike, Gallipolis, Ohio or
phone 740-441-1393 for
ll)Ore info. Competitive
wages,
mil88ge
reiri1bursement .and benefits

sume
LLCOCAREO.COM
f
ax 10 740-446-9104

to
or

'Those we lon don't go away, · ·
They walk beside us every day.
'Unseen, 'unheard , but alw3ys 11ear,
Still loved, still missed, and v~ry dear.
~dly missed , always loved

Hrrl s Self
Storage

CARPENTER
SERVICE

--_,ng

• Eletblcill &amp; Plumbtng

.-._&amp;G-.

• VInyl Skiing &amp; P1intlng ·
• P.Uo and Porch Oldll
WV036725

,.

.''

'

'l('r-:; 1 Ut1

writlflg and English skills,.
photography skills and

knowledge of desktop ·
publislling are sought.
The position is full time.
40 hours a week . with
be •t I t
ted
neu s. n ares
parties can send resumes 10
Kevin KeVy, Man$:ging
Editor, Ohio Valley Publishing Co., 825 Third
Ave. , Gall'1poI'IS, Ohio
45631 or kketlyvmy·
A
daltytribuAe.com. No
, phone catts Please.

Sub.
Bus
Drivers
Needed 1 M ·
L
1
or
etgs oca
School Dlstrict.$55 for all
day.Must attend
driver
training class .Ciass to be
held Oct.20,06 ' through
Oct.24,08.1nterested
please call Paul McElroy
at 740-7,.2·2990
Tilytor
made
coun1er
tops.

looking

tor

solid

surface fabricators . Ex·
perience in cabinet shop
will be helpful but will
train light People. Must
pass ·
pre-employment
~
testing,
drug
screen,"
criminal
background
ch eck.' 6 month training

'E•.• (-

L

7:00AM · 8:00 PM

f

ltlt12UtlttnlN

._H._,

Aucuoneer:
BIIIV I. a·oble Jr.

Johnson's Tree

740-416·1164

JQ-112-5812

Service
Complete rre. Care
.,.,., . .,,.. t:llfmlllll

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

FIND .BARGAINS
EVERY
DA•VI
'

~~W~i~fe~,~fa~m~i~ly~a~n~d~f~ri~e~nd:s:·:::::;~I;N;;;T;;H;;E;;;;~C;;;:l~·:A;;;:S::S=I=F=I=E=D==S~

An Excellent
earn apartment"
ager needed
for local lomoney.
The way
Newto AVon.
community
.
cated
in
Gallipolis,
II
Man 1rn Ideal candidate willOhio.
Ca
have
304-88f:·2645
previous eJ&lt;perience in
- - - - - - - - - property management at
Diesel Mechanic , tow ~ Rural Development
boat experiece des_
ired, property, excellent comgood wages, exc. benefit ·municalion and organizapackage 304-675-4545.
tiona! ski Us and be de-

~-..,..-~---....,. p8ndable. Health insur·
Direct Care Stan In resldential youth program.
Must be 2 1 ye~rs of age.
Pay based on experlCaM
a nee.
(740)379·9083
Mon-Fn
.Qam-3pm.

~~~~~i -~-.~-.~-~I need to find (2) people

iii~:~~~;~~~JH
:'!;

~

/

needing a fulltir]1e joP.
You need to be honest a
peffion of integrity, with
. good peopo, skins. You
also need to be able to
·follow InstructiOns and
ha\le an ab.Hity io Iiden
and lead people in the
right direction. I need
people Who want to work
and will show up for
work. If you are a recent
colege grad and cannot
find employment and fool
that you are qualified,
give ,us a chance until a
job in your
path
becomes available. can
Pal Hilt, NeW Car Manager for an interview at .
446·9600.

career

.. . .... .
~

ance&amp;401kavailable.
Salary dependent upon
eKperlence. Submit resume &amp; salary requirements to: Gallipolis C.M.,
Gorsuch Mgt., P.O. Box
190, LancasterOH
43130-Q190oremailto:
kdasburyOembarqmail.com

#5548

44087 Wlpple Rd.
Pomeroy, OH ..
(5 Points)
- New &amp; Used Tin.~s.

BARNEY

We buy used tire~.
computer wheel

Hal'llwlod CHlnecrj And Furnialrt

alignments. light
mechanic work .

WWW4flz1 IIUM'koabtAet:rJ'..eom

MY MAMA'S
COMIN' T'VISIT,
'WEEZY !!

MERCY-WE'D
'BETTER
STOCK UP

DON'T
WORRY,
SHE .
EATS
LIKE A

ON GROCERIES !!

complete serv ice oil
changes, small engine

MDS
COORDINATOR
Edgewood Manar

oiWI!IIIon
50 Skilocl bed Facility

"AN
'2 Y"' MDS
Expel'ienc:tl
'Exceptional
communication &amp;
people Skills ·
'Interpersonal &amp;
Ofganizattonal skills
To apply, visit:
w~.consulatemgtca­

. reers .com
405 North Part&lt; Ave
Wellston, &lt;JH 45692
740-364·5el1
EOEISFIDF

THAT'S
TRUE
H

a

TWICE H&amp;R WEIGHT
.AT EV'RY MEAL !!

BIRD!!

Mon-Fri.

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

TO!l:it.S 1~.._"-......,.---.r
1&gt;. COl~ ...

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

'0 '

H&amp;H

Guttering

ResCare Home Care
Pro\llder
of
Support
Services to tndividiJBis
with MRIDD. Direct Care

Seamless Gutters
Roofing , Sieling, Gytters

is preferred.
fils Include

TO " CONI'LICT

Job bene-

740-653-9657

"iiiiiii;;;;:;;;,~,.::;;;:;

1

Insurance, and Paid Va-·
cation -are also available.
Pl~e apply In person.
Located @ 426 VIand
Street in downtown Polnt
Pleasant.

CJOOO

1

Srtv'f:t' Elus
) rrf'l li)

Maintenance Plus
Comm1·rciaJ &amp; Resiifemiaf

Vinyl
Siding/RepliJcement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740- 9'12-1493 Oftl ce
740-416·8339 Cell

Free Estimated

OKA'f.I LL ADMIT If..
IF WE !-lAD 1-!0RSES,
WE COUL.D GALLOP..

Pomeroy. Ohio

AU types Maso nry, brick,
block, stonB", Free Estt-

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; F.lemoval
*Prompt and Qua lity

Wurk
*Rcrtsonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
Rt!fcrence!'i Available I
Ca ll Gmy Stanley @.
740-59 1-8044
Pl ease leave messu e

PSI CONSTRUCTION
RICK PRICE ·

=

cow and BOY

",...-------.., ...-------..,, ,.·--....--.....;--...,

·. LIFE IS ASE"IES
OF
~
PEAJ(S AND VAu.EVS
AND WE CAN'T EVEI2
EJ&lt;PEI1IENCE THE HIGHS
n"'
SHA""
WIT"nUT
nv
V~.J~~;
KC.
THE LOWS.

"

1DISAGREE. FOI!SO""
.
n~
UFE SEEMS TO BE AN
OOl.ESS BASELINE OF
. DO!.DI!U/A-IC MEDIOCRITY
WHEIIE NOTHI~ GI!EAl OQ

w~

~HUIJUJ

HORRIBLE EVER REALLY
H~
.AN()
THEN

Windows
• Rooflng
·Decks
• Polo

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
E:lectric, Plumbing,

Buildings

Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

Local Contractor

74()..367·0544
FrH Eollmateo

740·367-()536

Coli: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Rooting • Pole
Dams • Patio 's, Porches and Decks

37

Co. honcho . 9 Bays

38 Mod. plans

10 Tallow

35 Genghissource
13- Nutmeg and 36 High
waistline
as bene11ts
cloves

39 Ricke~
ingredient
40 Gym
amenity
41 Mellower
42 Go inside ..
43 Delhi coin •
44 Grey
•

o1 western ~
no\lels
45 Honda rival
47 Candly
sttiper
48 Endorsers'
needs
;
51 BaH club ~
VIP
.
53 Keg couSin:

39 Looks happy
41 Enjoy,

clou~es !hat

n~ar-worthless.

balanced. the outcom~ win be gory.
will be
and if it is also
In today's doal, South has 17 high-card
points, three diamond stoppers and a
good club suit. But h8 is unlucky, flhding
West with both an easy double and a
goQd lead, and North with a balanced
Yartlorough.
After West leads the spade queen. how
many doWn can South be taken?
You might think that d8etarer is due to
win three or'fou r Irick$, but he can be
held to his two top spades.
South takes the lirs1 trick and tries a
club. East wins and returns a spade.
Then, when in with his second top club,
East must shill to the heart.}ack. (This
will be a hard play to find, but a Sophisti ·
cated West w9uld drop the spade jack ·
on the second round of tha1 su it The
unn6cessarily high. cafd asks par1ner to
lead hearts, the highest-ranking s~.;~it
below spades.) Then, whe.n West runs
his m~jors, everyone is brought down to
two cards. West has the club eight and
diamond two. East retains the ace·
queen of diamonds. But what does
South keep ? He cannot hold both his
hi gh club and the king-jack ot diamonds .
bown five doubled and nonvulnerable
costs 1,100, which is a tad better than
450 tro~ tour spades plus one.

·•

I!Oil 'u wA un

~""':'2,!.1

SCORPIO ~ Oct 24-Nov. 22) '- Just
because you might recognize certain
Inadequacies in yourself, don't point out
the flaws In others, even If you're right. ·
They wOfl'l take kindly to YQUr trying to
correct them.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) · Should you run into someone whose
strong opinions diametrically &lt;Jppose
'yours. don't take It personally. Although
you will handle tt1e ctestl well, fruitless
combat Is a. waste of time.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) - When
you run Into s congeste? ro~dbiOck,
unless you're willing to scout out roules
tess Cluttered-, you will make life rtu.ICh
harder on yourself than II need be.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()-Feb. 19) - It is OK
to be a bit assertive, but don't let any ·
aggressiveness spill over Into social sltuation,s. Friendship cah only survive with
give-and-take.
PISCES
(Fob.purchases
20-Morchthat
20) will
:.. spruce
If you
plan to make
up your homo. be careful that you don·•
go overboard just because the bargains
are tow and far between . Walt until
another day.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) - In reality,

47239 Riebel Rood. Long Bottom, Oii

740-985-4141
.
Cell : 740-416- 1 ~34

2J+ )'ears txperitnce Free Estima1e1
•

...

a1rlltgr
(2 wds.

19 Doughier
of Hyperion
21 Stare
24 Cry
of dis9ust
25 Pollut1on
org.
26 Church seat
27 Ewes and
mares
28 Moppet
30 Casper's st.
31 Kind
of system
32 Hedge
shrub
33 Distress.
call

not lor penalty. But the penalty dou·

IIIE W. _IIRCUJ:Il, OwtiEI

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month

• Q

---~-~

· Garages
• Room AddRiona

8 Fallback

ofaigh1
(hyph.)

Don't discount sentiment
TAURU S (Apot 20·May 20) - Ba careful
when It comes to household repairs .
Getting a friend to do theee jobs might
prove to be an expansive mistake, especia lly if you can't polnl out what you don't
like.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - Althoug h
you mlgtlt be adept 1111 managi nG your
personal artal rs. don't attempt to tell oth·
~ ers how ttley should run their lives. It
....- - . . . - - - - - - . . . - - . . , . . . - . , won 't go over too well, even If you mean
well.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- A· number
ot thinds might turn out to be a bll more
dlffic4k than usual kl acllkMI. owing to a
lot of small problems going against you.
However, don't use this as a cop·out to·
throw in the towel.
LEO (J uly_ 23 ~ Aug . 22.)- Even llaome· ,
one Close to you ctoea something you
don't approve, don't make a big thing of
lt. All ttlat will do II create a chasm
between tl'le rwo of you that won't be
AIP)'~Ifled .
. .
VIRQO (Aug, 23·SI~t. 22) - Aunntng
around with tllgh 1'01111'1 might Qlve ycu
delt,jiiOI"'I or grtndeur, but thl prloe you
pay mey ~.more than yov'n prepartctto
~ll'ldle . Trying to malah their . .ding
would bo lolly.

ONE DAY
YOU.DIE.

Construction
• Replacement

34 Keen

some o1 your "'"' !II oughts wilt be your
best ones, yet you might not trust your
judgment simply oeoauso they could be

._ )

• Vlnvl Siding

7 Viewa

couldtobe
quitejob
impressive
al'td actually
lead
a now
or career opportunity.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Even if you
feel that your ttlinklng Is far bener than
that of your contemporaries, don't push
your beliefs on them. Be prepared to
accept their ideas, or you could come off
· as being a know-it·alt.

currenUy

4D~K. Healltl

All pass

wlcl1

29 Gorilla
30 Some lholl

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity" Crpher cty~()9ra-ns are created lrorn QUOiat.ons

I

:~ 'amous p!OO ~

Eacn leller rn 1ne croher stands to• a&lt;blher
rooay's clue: YeQuals P

pasl aM pre~'lt

'

" W D E I U R 0 KSG PF D R · 0 RF GV U U0
COl

SOK ' R

KGHGV

WD ,

YOC

OKW

COl

ORRGKRMDK

c·

PMXX

RD

X M J M R 0 R M·o K U 0' A, 0 M K . "

RFGMV

E0 J GU

SDDL
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' God bless America. God save the Queen. G&lt;J4
defend New Zealand and thank Christ for Australia · ·R ussell Crowe
·

O Rearrang8

lstten of th
f011r l&lt;rGmbled wordo be-

low to form faur simple words.

Ir--:--:--::--:-:--:-:--"1
S E V U RS

you

~ JnstJr9d &amp; Bond9d

Quality Seamless
Gutters

East

Oct. 14, 2008
·av B...-nlc• Bed• O•ol
In the yeat ahead, it behoovu5
lo
become more Involved , ln creative
endeavors that provkle outlets to
express you r talents. The end result

Sol 11

seekii'lg
a salesperson
lor
our Point
PIBBsant,
WV location. . Experience

Obi.

4 Annual
5 - nova
6 Dineraand·

sent

'

STUOEN~ &lt;:OIITRt&amp;UTING.

~~.;,;;;o=;;.,;;;;;;;;""'

In Asia
3 Breezy

27 Misrepre-

·Astro·Graph
•
-'llrtbdltl&gt;:
Tu-.

w£'Re GUESTS HeRE 1\T
J£fFEP.50N! I DON'T
WI\Nr 1\N'! OF OUR ·

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

Medical

~e.'S !lO ltlC.i-1, WI'.E.I'I 1-\t'.Jft.LI(!,...,
P~T 1&gt;. WI~I-\INC. WW.., 1-\E

Racine, Ohio 74D-247·2019

Is

to

opponent is when partner opens the bid·
ding with one of a sun and the next play·
er overCalls one no-trump. If you have a
. decent hand, ctouble . Ypu know dummy

(740) 992-5344

P"'I-lOW ltlti-1 I~ VEE.e.LE.F~iEi ~~ .

58 Tastf"'!ll

adjunct

59 Remainder
17 Hail,
Caesar
18 Early harps
DOWN
20 Kind of fong
1 Favre et at .
22 H. .ail 'a
2 River
Mauna-

One of the easiest limes to catch an

winterize boa ts and
RV 's

THE BORN LOSER

Felber
57 Bungle

go~red species.

~ ~.

repui r.

Sat. 8:00am · 12
We appreciate yo•r
busiMss·

1 NT

haVe been looking at

56 Millay or

calces

ble does still exist. even ~ ~ is an endan·

We service and

8:00am. 4 :30pm

W•si Nor111

We
are

!!i~

~~;~~~~~~~~;;IIi~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~

L &amp; L Tire Barn

For Remodeting and New HouS&lt; Building
""""

"

8~

§;

...,,.,..;E;;;O;
E, . , . , , mate,
740-416·7305,
304-593·6421
Medical
Home Health Care of
Southeast Ohio Inc., i~
currently
hlrln_
g
home
health aides·. Certified or
experieooe.
Bonuses
Available.
Call
t866·366·1100.

6fT OUT
OF Ttlf
MAilt:H.

~Lee

23 Semi partl
24 Prolific

A double can be
for penalty

~ viAilNfl&gt; tliM TO '

55 Shlrpen

diarist

Sooth

Opening lead:

.

~

Inc .

4 A K ,3

I t

.z

ucts,

•

Vulnerable: Neither

:~;;~;;;;;;:;-• ·---"-'~-;;;;;;;
Appalachian Tire PrOd·

Eastern Avenue, Gatlipo·
tis, OH .
PropenvManagement
.,....,......,._ _ _ _ _ P.T. Community Man-

t A Q '7 4 3

Dealer: East

www.auctlonzlp.com

7all-64 , -93117

Staff.
Contact
Rhonda
Harrison,
Monday
through
Friday . 9a·5p.
74().446·4814 ext. 26 or
e-mail ·resume to: rharnsonOrescare.com

• J 2

• 2
8 52

notice word

Rawlo

16 Porch

¥ K9 5
t K J 10 9
4 Q J tO 9

E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com

WANTED: Part-time posilloh available to assist
lndivldiJBIS with mental
retardation · at a group
home ln.Bidwell:
1) 35 hrs: 10:30a·7:30p
Sun; 2-10p MfruiW;
·
2) 27,5 hrs: 3:30·11p Fri;
~a- 7p Sat; 1•9p Sun;
Must .have high school

3br, 2ba, Pt. Pleasant Wireless: The areas fast· 60..hr. EMT Miner Class
or est growing Verizon re- &amp; Refreshers 40-hr. Sur·
area
304-273·6622
tail er. Now hiring the fol- face
Apprentice
80-hr.
304·674-6204
Apprentice
lowing: Assistant Man- · Underground
3br. $425 a mo., 1br. agar
star1ing
at 16-ru.
Tree
Clearing
$295 · a mo. plus dep., $10.50-$11 .50/hr
plus Mine Underground Forutilities &amp; references, 3fd commission.
~art·Ume man Cfass. Minor Safety
St. ,
Racine , sale associate starting at · Equipment ·Store.
For
(740)247-4292
$8.50/hr plus
commis- more
information
call
Training OH 45640 or e-mail 10
Scenic location, conven- sion. Please send re- Whit-cO
beyeeservCyahoo.corri.
to 304·372·8346.
ient to town and afford- sumes
Deadline for applicants:
able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrOoms joshmcgraw@ gmall.com.
Pre· A
LOCAL
MANUfAC· 10115106. Equal Opportu·
Wireless
a\lailabte
call Verizon
nity Employer.
mium Retailer.
·
(740)992·5639
TURER is taking· appNca·
tions for EXPERIENCED
Mig Welders. Please liJl·
¥anoglfllllenl/
ply in pe"""' ot 2150
Supernoory

• 6 4 3

•AK

'

bright

50 Hounehet
52 Chid&lt;en
atyle
54Bridll

p.,.,..,.,.

15

South

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

~;~;~!~=

--

12

1/1411 mo. pd

HIRING avg. Pa~ $20!hr ~.,...~~--:~- letview. An Equal opporor
$571&lt;/yr,
includes Gallipolis Career College ~tu;;,n;;;
ily~E;:m;;:p;;;lo~y;er;.._ __

Fed.Ben, OT. Place by is seeking part-time in·
adSource, not affiliated structors who possess a
with USPS . who hires. master's degree in gen~1,;
·8;;;66-;;,;,;,40!!3!!
-. 2!!5!!82;;,,,,. eral education subJect ar;;:
ea_s such as: English,
Help Wanlad • Gonorol Math, and Social Sci·
ences. E-mail resumes
AVON! AU Areas!
ro
Sell . ,Shirley to
tc~anicki@gallipollsca·
Buy ·. or
3BR located on Bulavtlle
reercollege'.com or call
Pike.
$475/(ent Spears 304·6751 429
800-214-0452
740-367-7762

•=.-::.....

14 Gehrig or

•Q J1098
¥ A Q tO 8

Swp &amp; Compare

no-

46 Opon
49 Unuou..y

ripenocl

Eut

Remodeling

Hours

CJ92 fi2'5
&gt;

• Garages

Bay port
.U SUmmer

11-

Wotl

.• Complete

S!Mit'K'IO'
.101Ch30','

V C YOUNG Ill

Sportswriter
The Ohio Valley Publish·
ing Co. is seeking moti·
vated , people-oriented
ind ivldua 1tt· fill a vacancy
•n I he news """'
"""'"' · 85 a ·
Sport ., The
swner.
sue·
cessful &lt;;:andidate will
cover high school athlet·
k:s in !he area lor rhe
daily edition ot the newspaper, as wei! as assist.
with the production of
sports pages. Excellent

• New Homes

45n1
740-949-2217 .

43GlUII10bera

1 Jeltieo
5 Ammo

• 8' 5
• 7' 4

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ot1io

• Room Adclltlont •

insur- program.
Call 740·379-2267 for in -

Mobile home for rent 2
BR
1
bath;
new
ap'pli·
fumace/ca;
new
ances; new bath like new
home, no pets . . 3675 Bu·.
Iaviiie P~e 740.446-4234
or 740·208-7861

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

IO.lS-(16

YOUNG 'S

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

l

·

' .__,,~

S. Gallia School District. ~~-~":'!"-~~ including. health
Must have
references. PosT
OFFIC.
NOW ance &amp; much more.
deposit

r,

401K!
On-site Doctor
Weef!fy ~ay and
Bonus Incentives!

TOMORROWII
WCJdc: NEXT WEEKfll

ZERO ·DOWN! Will do $17.S9·$28.27/HR.,
now
land
improvements.
application
hiring.
For
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit and free government tob
OK. ,?. 3, 4 and 5 bed·
r
info. ca ll American Asroonis
available.
soc.
of
Labor
74 ()..446· 3384
1·913·599·8226,
24/hrs~
2 . bedroom mobile home emp. serv.

$375
plus
740-256·1686

available. Heatttl care &amp;
Retirement plans avail·
able. Please send re-

o•ifts .

•

at

Ice Technician positiOns

Positions

rrnruiC8 •

Den:nls

~-9365
service Manager &amp; Sel\'·

Getpaidtomakea

diploma/QED,
valid· three
clriv·
er
's license and
years gOOd driVIng expertence.
$6.40/hr
·aHer
treinlng. Excellent benefft
package..
Pre-employment Drug Testing . Send
Buckeye
resume · to:
Community
Services,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson.

:

ALLEY'OOP

tun-

ment. For more informa-

Chikfren's Research

BraAd new 3bed 2bath
•
In Pt
on · + -hau acre
.

New 2BR 2 bath yoJJr
choice ol renting com·
pletety furnished &amp; all
utilities paid or' ·you pro·
7 40.992·5064
Equal
Housing Oppor1unlty.
viding lumiture &amp; ulitities.
::--~;..;__...;,.~~ NO LE ASE 446· 7029

New Haven, one bed·
room apartment. deposil
-:&amp;
references ,
taR Apt , WID hookups, 740..992...0165
~..;..;.;;....:,~-~:""'"":
..tellite TV incl. w/rent, ::N.
C
G
'dose to hospital. Can tee
lean
round
·
Floor 2br WID hookup
740-339-()362
'
'
'
~?-~l;ill:-~----:"~~ ReterencesJDeposit/No
. fBA close lo hospital. · Pets 304 _675 _5162
WID hookup, appliances ,_;;;.;.;......;...;..;.,;;;....._ _
furnished.
740..441 -3702 Tara
Townhouse
Apartmfi!nts · 2BR, 1.5
;;
2 bedroom Apar1mant &amp; batll. back patld. pool,
. 11trash. sew·
~ bedroom House on 5th Pla"ground
'
water
pd.)
. ask for age,
St. 304•612 -4 350
$4 25/rent.
Don .
$425/sec.
dep. Call 740·367·0547
·a room tumished
apt. for
.
rent. 7 miles below GalliCommercial
polls. Parking for one car ~=--=""'=~p~. $275 month + etec- 2 bay service station
tric.
Deposit · required. Jackson
Pike.
Lease
.Stop in office at 1403 requited. cau 446-3644
Eastern Avo . for rnntal lor more info.
~·
application
or
call ~-~,-~--~
446-5 14
Commerical
Space
for
Rent, Main St. Pt. Pleas.
3 rooms and bath up- S400/mo.
2000
sq/H
Completely lur· 703·501·4806
stairs.
nlshed With WID. ,No

In Memory

Monday, October 13,2008

:::~~~·~-~_,~:·~;;~~-~-F~~~..,~~;;;;~s~d~,~~~~~~w~~~~·io..d~~i~~w~~~·;.-~o-.a~~~~~~~~!!~~~!l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To•dr

Clip this AD and take it
With you when you Visit
our community 1o get
this special discount.
Move-In In Oct and get
f100.00 oft your ZIIR
Apt. in Nov. Cu•entty
"'""ng 1 &amp; 2 BR units

www.mydailysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailystntlnel.com

·I I I' I' I

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I
•

5

e

dtso edient boy.
"The straight and narrow path .
wouid not be so narrow if more
Teacher ((J

I
·I . I· I I I' 0
S I N D Al

•

•

•

•

people .... ··."

•

Com~le10

•h• chu~klo

quoted
.·
by filling In t ho misllnQ worclj
yCtu develop fram step No. 3 bfllow.

PRINT NUMBf!ED LETTERS !N
THESE SQUARES

I

.,

SCRAMLETS ANSWERS I Oil 0108
· .Weapon - Began - Aglow - Graven .. DE WRONG
HYour tonsciencc.'' lectured .the mom ·· wams .you tluH .voui·
instincts may BE WRON(f .'
·

.

ARLO &amp; JANIS ·

.

�'
: Pqe B6 • 11-e Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 13, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

••

Jones' 3 TDs.Iead Jets past Bengals, 26-14
:·EAST RUTHERFORD, the drawing board and fig-

.

.

.

N" J. (AP) - Brett Favre and ure it out."

'

back Into

Mondav

CLEVELAND (AP) were far
Despite their struggles ,
Braylon Edwards left his first
fiom flashy on offense, and the Bengals were still in It
Monday night game angry at
they didn't · need to be late. The Jets had a thirdthe world.
against
the
winless and-~ from the Bengals 7
He had gone to the Pontiac
~innati Bengals.
when Favre hit Chris Baker
Silverdome in 1995 as an
: Thomas Jones ran for two for 6 yards. Jones followed
excitable seventh grader with
U&gt;uchdowns, including a 1- with a !-yard rumble into
· dreams of playing in the
$afder late in the. game, and the end zone with 2:22 left
NFL. He sat in the stands
caught a pass from Favre for and the 2-point try fell
with his dad expecting to see
a ·score to. lead the Jets to a incomplete to make it a 12a rout.
A huge fan of the San
26-14 win Sunday.
point game.
Francisco 49ers, he was sure
. "It wasn't our best peiforFavre, coming off a sixSteve
Young and Jerry Rice
mance on offense. but it was . touchdown performance in
would
hook up for several
:twin," Favre said. "We did · a 56-35 victory over
touchdown
passes and the
spme good things.
Arizona, wasn't nearly as
defending Super Bow! chamThomas Jones, he had one explosive in this one. He
pions would demolish hts
of those days."
finished 25-for-33 for 189
hometown
Detroit Lions.
·The Jets (3-2) improved to yards - throwing mostly
"1 was thinking, no waY in
3~ in ,games immediately . short passes - ' a touchd01yn
heck they lose to the Lions."
f!)llowing a bye under coach . and two mtercepllons. .
Cleveland's wide receiver
Eric Mangini . but this one
''I'm not here for stars."
said.
was far from easy. With· Favre said. " I'm here for
Heck happened.
Jllew York holding a tenta- wins."
"What do you know ?"
live 20-14 lead, the Jets
Jones finished with 17
Edwards said. ·"(Detroit's)
needed ,a ·JO-play, 41 -yard carries for 65 yards and had
Helinan Moore · and Brei!
drive by Favre that ate up his first career three-TD
Perriman had outstanding
games and Barry Sanders
the clock to seal the victory game for the Jets, wearing
went crazy. rushed for about
over the Bengals (0-6).
their navy and gold throw180 yards. Tl)ey beat the
: "I don't believe in ugly back New York Titans uni49ers up and there I was,
wins," Favre said. "I believe forms for the second
AP photo mad." ·
a win's win. That one felt as straight game.
New York Jets linebacker Bryan Thomas, top, sacks
Edwards can only hope his
good as any win I've been a
"Last (game), we threw Cincinnati
Bengals
quarterback
Ryan
Fitzpatrick
(
11) in the Monday night debut as a
part of in recent memory." · the ball really well and . fourth quarter of tile Bengals' 26-14 loss to the Jets at
player $oes better. He and the
Ryan Fitzpatrick couldn't scored a iot of points and .Giants Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., on Sunday.
disappointing
Browns ·(1 -3)
get much going for the today · wasn't ' that exact
will
take
the
field
as enorto be able to win games like mous underdogs against
~en gals in place of an ailing sam_e situatio~,'' Jones said. tQ the team winning ."
the
· unbeaten New York Giants,
The score capped . a that."
earson Palmer. He was 20- "We had to kmd of gnnd 11
of-33 for . 152 yards as 'out a little more. The good sirange drive during which
After Jay Feely gave the who will carry an 11 -game
CinCinnati dropped to 0-6 thing is we' re able to dq Favre had thrown two oth~r Jets a 10-7 lead with a 38- road winning streak ( 12
for the third time since both."
touchdown passes that were yard field goal early in the counting the neutral site
2000.
Cincinnati took a 7-0 lead called back by penalties.
second quarter, New ·York Super Bowl) into the
- "0-and-anything stings," on the third play from
Favre tossed a pass to took advantage of a costly matchup and who embarfinebacker Dhani Jones said. scrimmage, when Antwan Dustin Keller in the end mistake by Fitzpatrick. The rassed Cleveland during tl1e
"We just want to get the b·ad Odom sacked Favre and zone on third-and-goal from Bengals quarterback fum- exhibition season.
taste out of our mouths. 0- forced a fumble. Chinedum the 4, but right guard bled when he was sacked by , "This is :a dream for me to
and-6 is not a position any- Ndukwe picked it up and Brandon Moore was called Hank Poteat, and Calvin play on ·Monday Ni~ht
body wants to be in."
ran 15 yards Into the end for being an ineligible man Pace recovered the ball. Football,' " Edwards satd.
The Bengals gained just zone to give the Bengals.the down field. On the next play Two plays late~. Jones ran it "Back to when you were a
43 yards rushing on 21 car- lead I :24 mto the game .
from the 9, Favre hit 'into the end zone from 7 kid, everybody wants to have
three or four touchdowns on
ries, with Fitzpatrick's 23
It didn't last long as New Jerricho Cotchery in the end yards . ·
it and be player of the game.
leading the way.
Y9rk tied it with a 2-yard zone, but the play was
Fitzpatrick 's !-yard · run We're
to be so pumped
. "Everyone will say that touchdown reception by called_ back · because of made. it 17- 14 with 8 sec- up, thegoing
first two series we ' ll
with a backup in there, we Jones. ·
, offensive . pass · mterference onds left before halftime. just work on getting rid of the
Feely added a 43-yarder in buuerfl ies and try to get
need to run the ball better.
"The whole point is to be . by Chanst Stuckey.
We will ," said Fitzpatrick, out there with the ball in . "We're not going to throw the third quarter to put the everyone going."
·making his second start in your hands," said Jones , SIX touchdown passes every Jets ahead 20-14.
Going forward would be
t,hree games with Palmer who had two TDs all last week," Favre said with a _ "We've got to do. better," preferred. To this point, the
resting a sore right elbow: season. "It always feel good smile. "We might throw Bengals coach Marvin Browns are crawling "It was a struggle out there to get touchdowns, get into three on one drive, which Lewis said, "It's not good backward.
today. We have to go back to the end zone and contribute was different, but we've got enough."
Bitten savagely by the

.J.e New York Jets

Bush to announce
eX}landed bank
bailout details, A2

injlll)' bug. they exrected to '

be their heahhtest thiS season

going into the matchup. They
were off last week and used
the bye to heal various bumps
and brui ses. Agamst th~
Giants. wide recetver Dome
Stallworth.
one
of
Cleveland's top free agent
signings. will likely make_hts
season debut. as wtll nght
tackle Ryan Tucker, w~o
underwent hip surgery, .m
May.
.
But their · return . to
Cleveland's
sputtermg
offense. ·which has .scored
just four touchdowns 1~ four
games, could be offset tf Pro
Bowl tight end Kellen
Winslow can't play. He was
released Sunday after spending three nights in the hoSP.Ital with an undisclosed Illness, and was downgraded
from questionable to doubtful.
"1 · hope that he plays,
because we need to wm and
we need our best players
there to win," backup Darnell
Dinkins said.
It 's been 15 years since the
Rrowns won on Monday
night and five years since
they appeared there. That's a
long drougl)t in this footballoLsessed city where MNF
made its debut on Sept. 21,
I 970, with a game between
Cleveland and the New York
·Jets.
"Five year.i?'' Browns safety Mike Adams said.

Printed on tOO%
Recycled Newsprint

Council to address new downtown school zone

• Browns hand Giants
first loss of season.
See Page Bl

Bv BRIAN

MIDDLEPORT .
Middleport Village Council
will consider traffic control
at the comer of Mill Street
and South Third Avenue, to
address safety of children
with autism.
The school, is a joint effon
between local school .systems, offering a new
method of educating children with · the learning disability. The parents' prgani"
zation at the school has

"

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
·• Rodney Gaul, 66
• James Taylor, 72
• Brownie Vujaklija, 85
'

.

•

Ex2900 COMPACT TRACTOR
• 28.7 HP' 3-cylinder dirO&lt;:I

fue1 injection diesel en;ne
• Hydrost,tic lransmiuioil with Hted1bkt 4WO
~ Fully hydraulic power ttHrins

· • Llrs• flywhett for omoothtr,
more sustllntd hnrsepower

$209/MONTH"
AS LOW AS

• Lepi joins staff
of Holzer Clinic.
See Page A3
• Wildfires force frantic
evacuations near LA.
See Page .AS

Attachments 1okl Mplfalaly.

• Curved boom loader with excellent

•isibitlly and modern design

·····~···························~·································
3 YEAR/2000 HOUR

"

·"

"' "

"

Sc2400 SUB-COMPACT TRACTOR
• 24 HP' diesel ••tine
• HydrQttalic 1/'lntmission WAh Nlet:tablt 4WD
• Shift-On-Tht·Go• ronp eonlrOI!olo ycu ohifl from
tow to hish without sloppiOJ
• Hilhtst tooder tift capacity in ils ctaos'"
• Dual hydraulic pumps to 1111ximiza anichmonl porformanco
• Comfortable and opon oporltOr station
• Er..,nomicatty dtsiiJIO&lt;Israb hand\11 aUow the operator
to p1 on and off lite .1/'aciOr Hsity

WEATHER
LOW MONTH LY PAYMENTS

$151 /MONTH* ·
ASLOWAS

AttacluMnts •old Mparately.
3 VEAR/2000 HOUR
, t.o!'l

NEW
EAGLE
Patrick Tyler Carey
of Shade became an
Eagle Scout Sunday,
at the Eagle Court of
Honor held at his
parish church,
Sacred Heart of
Pomeroy. Carey
completed an exterior repair and landscaping project al ·
the church as part of
his Eagle Seoul
requirements. Here,
Carey's grandmother, Diana, pins the
SCout medal,
"v~1 ~~;·~m~graodlalher,... ,.
·
and other
members of his famIly gather around.
Members of the
Meigs County Boy
Scout organization,
also pictured, participated in the ceremony, which was fOI'
lowed by a reception
in the church hall.

. Bv BETH SERGENT

3 YEAR 2000 HOUR
~

with the request. .
on Satf1rday at Downing
• Approved the mayor's
. During the council's dis- House .. The marker will report of fees and fines col~
cussion period, Councilman - commemorate
Mark lectcd in September, in the
Craig Wehrung suggested Twain's visit to the house. amount of $8,192.
that council consider an The owners of the bed and
• Approved report~ from
ordinance limiting the breakfast inn will conduct the thcome tax. public
placement of rumma~e and tours of the historic home works , refuse and finance
yard sale merchandise on and a reception will fol- departments .
low at 2:30 p.m. in the
• Approved
Peoples
residential properties.
In
other
business, freight depot.
Bank, N.A ., as the depositoGerlach announced an
Coun~il also:
ry of public funds.
open house at the new
• Approved Steve Koebel,
Also
present . were
Family Health Care from part-time patrolman, as a Council members Rae
1-4 p.m .-on Thursday.
full-time patrolman.
Moore, Sandy Brown,Cr~ig
Moore s~id an -Ohio · • Approved payment of Wehrung, Shawn Rice and
Historical Society marker bills 111 the · amount of . Julia Houston , and Fiscal
will be dedicated at 2 p.m. $47,761 .13.
Officer Susan Baker.

BSERGENTCMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

.

'

aske~ . that street markin(ls
or signs be provtded m
order to protect students
when school starts in the
· morning and at afternoon
dismissaL
Mayor Michael Gerlach
and council members
agreed that the school is an
asset to the community
· and that the students' safety must be protected .
Gerlach said he would discuss possible traffic signs
with the school's administrators and the rarents and
the village wil . cooperate

Pomeroy
changes
.speed limit

"Wow,'' said kick return
specialist Joshua Cribbs, also
unaware of -Cleveland's dry
spell. "Five years? Wow."
Unless · the Browns get
themselves together quickly.
it could be another five .years
before they get back on
national TV.Their reward for
a I0-6 season in 2007 was
tive prime-time appearances
- three on Monday night,
one on Sunday and one on
Thursday - this season. It's
their most since three· during
the 1989 season.
··~ we have a lot to prove to
the outside world," Edwards
said. "and to ourselves."

J t

J. REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

"Whew."

"

Therapy improves
chances of kidney
transplants, A6

POMEROY
Last
night Pomeroy Village
Council
unanimously
approved changing the
speed limit through sections of downtown and
established -a new business
district, effective Nov. I.
According to the new ordinance, from Fisher Funeral
Home on East Main Sireet to
the Middlepon corpof3tion
limit on West Main Street,
the speed limit will be 25 .
miles per hour. Currently, ·
there are places along this ·
stretch of road where the
speed limit is 35 mJ?h as well
as places whC!C it ts alrejldy
25 mph. Thts new speed
limit will place ~ uniform
speed limit along the stretch
of road from Fisher F1111eral
Horne to the corporation
limit on West Main Street.
The new speed limit will
be phased in by Nov. ·I,
complete with signs to
establish the new downtown
business district. This new
· speed limit I downtown
business district will not
extend along the entire
length of Main Street. For
example, from the intersection of Nye Avenue and
Ohio 833 to Fisher Funeral
Home, the speed limit will
remain 35 mph.
Council also approved the
third and final reading of an
ordinance which will raise
costs for mayor's court from
$65 to $75. Similar to the
· last meeting, Councilwoman
Mary McAn~u~· was the
lone vote agamst the raise.
The motion will allow $10
to go into a computer f11nd.
In other business:
.
Council set trick or treat
from. 6, 7 p.m., Thursd'ly,
Oct. 30.
PIMse see Spud l•lt. A5

.

'\,
0·
. '. .
-~
;;;;.-.,

...: -

•'

;

'

,.

Brion J. Reed/photos

~f.
,,

! 'MRI--1~ "-"~&gt;~!• '

Shriver
unveils 'job
creation' plan
in Pomeroy
BY BRIAN

J . REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Morgan
County Commissioner Rick
Shriver, the Democratic
candidate for the Ohio
Senate, visited Pomeroy
Monday to discuss a plan
for job creation.
"Places like Meigs County
are hit particularly hard by
changes in the global economy and we need to find ways
to bring new jobs and opportunity ~ere,' __,S.IJ!j,ver sajp.
"There IS no stfver bullet to
fixing the economy, but I
believe this plan will move
our region forward in a positive direction ."
Shriver's plan includes:
• Updating Ohio's tax
code to ensure they are
competitive with those of
other states.
• lmprovi ng access to
higher education through
support of learning centers.
such as the Rio Meigs
Center, which bring college
educations closer to rural ·
residents.
· • Investment in renewable
energy and clean coal technology ; allowing Ohio to
participate in an "emerging
industry."
• Streamlining state efforts
to attract new industry.
September data from the
Ohio Department of Job and
Family Services show a
I 0.8 perceni unemploymeni
rate in Meigs County Ohio's highest.
"Too many of our friends.
relatives and neighbors
canol find work worthy of
their talents ," Shriver said.
"Meigs County has felt this
burden perhaps more than
· any other place in the state."
• Shriver said the plan he
outlined in Pomeroy.Athens,
Please see Shriver, A5 ·

Ex3200 COMPACT TRACTOR
• 32 HP' 3-cyllnder diroel

fuot injocllon dilseltnlint
• Hydroolotic tronvnlnion w\111 ultclobte 4WO
• Fully hydraulic pa'Hir olflriOJ
• urae flywhttt for arnoothtr,
more SUitlintd hocupow.r ·

• Curvod boom taodtr with oxcottoni
vioibitKy and modom llnil"

S'2·19:!MONTH*

Delatts on "-ge AS

Atttchmantt. •old ltptrttaly.

'

FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1996
1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE • RT. 33 JUST SOUTH OF LANCASTER
8880 UNITED LANE • ONE MILE WEST OF ATHCNS ON RT. 50/32
LANCASTER
OH 43130 • (740&gt; 653-2827
.
ATHENS. OH 45701 • &lt;740&gt; 593-3279
.
STORE HOURS MONDAY-FRIDAY 9:00-6:00, SATL!RDAY 9:00-5:00

Horse show seiies wrapping up Fonner Mason councilman .
Bv BETH SERGENT

AS LOW AS

ALLPOWER
EQUIPMENT
.
.

.

•.

BSEAGENTOMYt».llYSENTINELCOM

•
PORTLAND - Though
it will return next year, the
2 SOCnONS -12 PAGES
Ohio - River Producer)
Horse Fun Show series will
Annie's Mailbox
A3 wrap up ·this year on
ft.
Saturday at the Portland
_Calepdars
A3 Community Center with a
B _ , special Halloween-inspired
3 4 category.
Warms ups begin at 10
Bs a.m.
CoPl~ ·
and the show starts at
II
a.m
. Saturday in the
Editorl!s
A4 horse show
ring behind the
Portland
Community
Obituaries
As Center. Like last
year, folB Section lowing the horse show will
Sports
be a Halloween costume
As
show
with prizes for horse
Weather
and rider as well as dog and
© 2;,.,8 Ohio Volley PubUohlns Co. owner.
Bruce McKelvey, ORP
member, said · the shows
average i:I'Ound ,40 horses
and continues to expand,
, · taking on more events as
I

INDEX

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•

well as entries. McKelvey donate $50 towards the puralso said the shows are chase of a riding helmet (as
attracting more people from well as educational materiout of the county, including als) now required by 4-H
Gallia and Wood and Mason for those participating in
Counties, W.Va .
horse shows at the Meigs
Any money raised from County F&lt;Ur.
the horse shows goes into
McKelvey guessed the
ORP programs which go secret to the series' sucback mto the community. cess is that "we keep our
For example, . the group shows entry level and laid
(which is comprjsed of back ." This means the
·RaCine-Southern FFA alum- shows allow particularly
ni) are donating $1 ,400 to younger riders an opportu· help fund a trip to the .nity to exp.erience cri· National FFA Convention tiques from judges and
for current Southern FFA how to get their horse to
members. Funds from the resJlPnd in the show ring:
shows also help provide Categories are also open to
scholatships for ~raduating, teen and adult riders.
Southern seniors m FFA and
Categories for the show
help purchase the blue FFA · include (but are not limited
jackets for those · students ro) exhibition, cones and
who can 't afford it
~arrels . pee-wee barrels ,
McKelvey said the orga- open bairels, etc.
nization recent~ ~gan
Call McKelvey ar 590working with the Meigs 9936 or 843-5216 for more
County Horse Committee to information.
.

.•

injured in motorcycle accident
BY DIANE POTlORFF
LK&gt;IIORFFOMVIliLYREGtSTER.COM

. POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - A former Mason
council member is in a
Huntington hospital 'for
injuries he received in a
motorcycle
accident
Saturday aftemoon.
Ralph Richard Ross of
Mason, W.Va., was riding his
Harley Davidson motorcy~ le
east on Success Road near
Tuppers Plains, when he
failed to negotiate a left
curve, according to the Ohio
State Highway Patrol. The
motorcycle then slid in the
loose gravel several feet , with
Ross striking a guardraiL
Emergency
personnel
with the Ohio State
Highway Patrol , Meigs
County Emergency Medical,
Services and Tuppers Plains

. Volunteer

Fire Department
responded to the scene.
Ross was wearing his helmet at the time of the accident , a law enforcement
official said. Ohio does not
require motorcycle riders to
wear helmets. whereas West
Virginia does require helmets on all motorcycle
operators and passengers.
He was taken to Cabell
Huntington Hospital by a
MedFiight heiicopter and
was listed in good condition , hospital spokesman
Charles Shumaker said.
Trooper Chenoah · Harris
investigated the 4:15 p.m.
accident.
Ross is a fom1er council
member in the Town of
Mason. where he served for
almost two years. He
PIMa see.Auldent, A5

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