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                  <text>• Page 86 •

The Daily Sentinel

•

Monday, October 27, 2oo8

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ex-Pomeroy man wins .2 medals
at Huntsman World Senior Games
STAFF REPORT
SPOATSCMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

In sports . often times extra
effort pays off in dividends.
· That was true for John
Curd from Pomeroy, who
took home a Gold medal in
the Mixed Doubles and
·Silver medal .in the Men's
Doubles Table Tennis comPetitions at the Huntsman
·World Senior Games on
0 be 9 2008
·
cto r •
When asked about his
experi.ence at the games
Curd said "Competition was
outstanding and I met many
new friends in my first year
liere.''
' ·
The Huntsman World
Senior Games is a worldclass.
Olympic-format,
international sporting event
for athletes ages 50 years
and older.
Founded more than 20
years ago, the Games cur- ·
rently hosts over 9,500 ath-

letes annually.
tion of life after 50!
Each October. for two
The 2008 · Huntsman
weeks, the event is held in World Senior Games will
colorful St. George, Utah, host approximately 9,700
less than a two-hour drive partici(;lants from all 50 of
from Las Vegas, Nevada. At the Umted States and 20 for·
the 2008 Games , athletes eign countries. The majority
will compete in 25 different of the participants are male
.
- about 66% - and the
sports.
''One of the things that average age is around 64
makes this event so unique years "young.':
While
is that it is more than just a almost all of the athletes'
collection
of
sporting first trip to the Games was
events," .says · Kyle Case, prompted by the athletic
Huntsman World Senior competition. by their third
Games CEO. "The Games year, many of the particiare· a total experience, so pants list social aspects such
much more than just another as "meeting new friends"
sports competition.''
and "renewing acquainCase says the participants lances" as their primary rea·
enjoy the Parade of Athletes, son for attending the Games.
Opening
Ceremonies,
"We'd like to invite ath·
Concert and Celebration, · letes of all skill levels, from
Social Events, Banquets and the elite to the novice, to
Free Health Screenings , to experience this amazing
name only a few of the addi· ·event," sa~s Case. "Once
Submitted photo
tiona! activities that enhance . you expenence the Games,
the athletic experience. The we know you' ll have great Pictured above are John Curd and his wife Denise, who recently won medals in table tenHuntsman World · Senior time and we ' ll be seeing you nis at the 2008 Huntsman World
Senior Games. John is a Iormer
resident of Meigs County
.
Games are truly a celebra- for years to come.''
and is a graduate of Pomeroy High School.

•

~

SPORTS
:• Titans remain NFL:s
·lone undefeated team.
SeePageBl '

Nittany Lions score last 10 points, rally past Buckeyes to win .13-6
for the fourth straight game,
solidified its position as a
nillional championship .contender and also erased the
ugly memories of an 0-7
mark in Columbus since
joining the Big Ten in 1993.
Penn State's previous victo·
ry in Columbus came in
1978 - also when a fresh·
man
quarterback
(Art
Schlichter) made critical
mistakes and the Nittany
Lions pounced on them.
"One turnover was the
ballgame·," Paterno said.
"We played the game we had
to play."
·
Defenses controlled most
of the game before an. Ohio
Stadium-record crowd of
105,711 .
Ohio State had the . ball
and a three-point lead when
Terrelle Pryor fumbled,
defensive back Mark Rubin
using his left hand to knock
the ball away as the freshman quarterback carried on
a third-and-1 early in the
fourth quirrter.
"I just didn't want to let .
him get the first down,"
Rubin said. "I tired to square
up and push him back . I'm
not going to lie: I just hap·
pened to get my hand on the
ball and was able to bounce
it out."
Penn State linebacker
Navorro Bowman fell on the
loose ball at the Buckeyes.
38.

Immediately, the Nittany yard field goal with I :07 left
Lions were at a disadvantage to push the lead to 13-6.
as Clark remained on. the
Ohio State had one last
.sideline. He· was meeting .chance. Taking over at their
with team doctors. Paterno own 20, Pryor hit Ray Small
later said th_at. Clark had a for gains of 23 and 14 yards
mmor head mJury,. although to the Penn State 43 with
the coach said he had not ·just over 30 seconds left. But
spoken with his medical per- Pryor 's long pass to the goal
sonnel.
line was intercepted by corIn stepped Dev!in, who nerback Lydell Sargeant
had seen actiOn m seven with 27 seconds left.
games but had only been on
Paterno couldn't celebrate
the field for 45 plays .
with his players. At least not
He l~d a seven-play, 38- right away.
yard dnv~ thanook 4: 13 and
Penn State's coach for the
ended w1th h1s touchdown past 43 years, the 81-year,
fvJng Penn State a l0-6 old Paterno came up from
ea · .
.
the team locker room about
The big play m the march 15 minutes before the opend.
came on thtrd-and-2 at the · k" k0 ff ·
Onio State 6 when Royster m~ IC
• usmg a cane an
skirted right end, tiptoeing With_ ~ Penn State _athletic
along the sideline for a 4- ~dm1mstrator followmg h1m
yard gain and the first down. )n .~ase he needed assistance.
Three plays later, Devlin
Penn ,state played hard
scored on his second straight and dtdn .~ m~e a bunch of
keeper and Kevin Kelly con- ":Jistakes, Oh!o State coach
verted the !;'Oint-after for a Jtm Tressel satd.
10-6 lead w1th 6:25 left.
Clark comple:ted 12-of-Zq
Penn State's defense theil passes for 121 yards before
forced an Ohio State punt leaving. Royst&lt;~r had 71
and Royster promptly weni yards on 19 carries.
for 3, 10 and 9 yards on his
Pryor, the nation's most .
first three carries before heralded quarterback recruit
Devlin sneaked for a first · last spring, completed 16-of·
d0wn at the Ohio State 24.
25 for 226 yards with the
While th~ Buckeyes.were one interception. He ran for
using all their timeouts, the 6 yards on nine attempts.
Nittany . Lions continued to Chris "Beanie" Wells manstick to the ground. Finally, aged just 55 yards on 22 car,
they let the clock run down ries against Penn State's
unt.il Kelly converted a 35- stout defense .

0BmJARIF.S
.l'llli~~~- - . '
• Marsha Hall, 36
• Florence Love, 86
• Juanita Russell, 79

INSIDE
.• First batch of
·bailout money for
· banks moving soon ..·
See Page A2
• Chester Council
meets. See Page A3
• Sonshine Circle
makes donations,
:plans fund raisers.
.See Page A3
·• Rutland organization
·plans youth Halloween
·dance. See Page AS

: caU7~
'

INDEX
2 SI!C110NS ~ 12 PAGES

· Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

83-4

Annie's Mailbox

H.OLZER
CLINIC

.Comics .

Bs

Editorials

A4
As

'

Obituaries

BSection

Sports
Weather

A3

~ - ( ) I d a V.....,.l'aiJiiahln8 Co.

'

•

:11!.,.
•

for the riverbank project, not limited to) a portion of
some of the money used to Lincoln Hill and paved roads
pay for it can be taken fro!li in Beech Grove Cemetery:
the state highway fund.
Council approved the hirMusser said the Issue II ing of two part-time officen~ :
paving project ill' Pomeroy in the Pomeroy Police was set to begin yesterday Department. David Haqlwick .
but didn' t.
of Rutland and Mark Still, Jr.
"It's going to happen," ofGallipolisarejustoutofthe
Musser assured council of police academy and will be
the project which will be . making a starting patrolman's
done by Shelley Paving and
f $ 0 23
ho
includes re-paving several salary 0 1 · per ur.
streets
(including
but
Please see Pomeroy, A5 .

structure

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

.••

POMEROY - The first phase of
area improvements around the·
Mulberry Pond is slated to get under
way within the next few weeks, according to Pomeroy Mayor John Musser.
Musser said since the Nature Works
grant of $7,500 received by the village
_expires at the end of this year it was
decided to use that money now rather
than seek a time extension which might
or might not be granted. The village is
required to add a 25 percent match to
the grant which will bring the amount
for the proposed work to $10,000.
"The money will be used to construct a long four to five foot wide
deck on the left hand side of the lake,"
said Musser, "the side across from the
Beech Grove Cemetery hill.''
The mayor said this is just the begin·
. ning of improvements at the pond. He
estimated that another $40,000 in grants
and donations will be 'needed to complete the improvements planned. Those
Improvements include a walking path
around the pond, a walkway across the
pond at the back, and some dredging.
Musser earlier named Jim Smith
chairman of the Pond Restoration
Fund, who remains persistent in mak·
ing contacts with agencies asking for
.money so the work.can move forward.
He frequently fishes at the pond,
knows the interest of others in fishing
there and has been calling for·
improvements for severar years now.
Smith who grew .up in Pomeroy and
often fished there with his father as a
boy, retired from his Columbus job
several years ago and returned to
Pomeroy to live. Being able to fish at
that pond located near The Maples
where he lives played a part in his
return to Pomeroy.
''This pond was once beautiful and
healthy and people could walk all the
way around it," recalls Smith. "Now ·
tangled vegetation has choked off
access on three sides."
He described the pond ·as · also
"needing to be dredged to get rid of
some debris and waste material which
is making the water unhealthy for chil·
dren to be near."
Over the years Smith has written several letters to Governor Ted Strickland
and the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources appealing for grant ·money,

firesrepo~
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Several
structure fires over the
weekend and two yesterday
.afternoon kept several local .
fire departments occupied
dousing the flames.
·
Around 3:30 yesterday
afternoon the Racine and
Bashan Volunteer Fire
Departments were called out
on a working structure fire
initially reported at a vacant
trailer located at 2610
Richard Road in Lebanon
·Township. The fire was
determined suspicious and
the office of the Ohio Fire
Marshal was contacted._and
expected on the scene today.
Meigs EMS was also called
to the scene to treat a patient
for respiratory distress.
Another structure fire
yesterday morniqg was
reported on Bear Wallow
Road in Orange Township
with the Pomeroy, Chester
and
Tuppers
Plains .
Volunteer Fire Departments ·
responding. No further
details were available concerning this call.
A five-alarm fire at 4 a.m.
Saturday morning resulted in
a home at 410 Beech Street,
Pomeroy, being a total loss.

PluH ... Fira,AJ

Submitted photo

Jim Smith, who has been named chairman qf raising ful)ds for the Mulberry
Pond .restoration project by Pomeroy Mayor John Musser, displays a fish he
caught there recently.
and more recently has written · to the
National · Audobon Society and The
David and Lucile Packard Foundation
asking consideration for grants.
He also contacted Rep. Jimmy
Stewart about state funding and last
week received a response advising that
the next capital budget bill providing

for grant money for such projects will
not be considered by the Legislature
until 2009
Smith is now in the process of soliciting donations from businesses in
Meigs County. Earlier this month he
prepared and began distributed flyers

Council
establishes rate
structure for
village work
.

Bv BRIAN

J. REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
established a price structure
Please see Pond. A5
at Monday 's regular mej:t·
ing for services normally
performed by private con·
tractors.
Those services might be
rendered by village employ·
ees, using village-.owned
equipment, but only in cases .
where public health and
STAFF REPORT
.safety. are threatened. If
NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
such services are required;
they will be costly.
TUPPERS. 'PLAINS Village
Administrator
The Eastern Local Board of
Faymon Roberti' said the
Education approved substiordinance will allow the viltute teachers and supplelage to establish a· fee scale
mental
contracts
for
at 50 percent above usual
employees at its regu Jar
private rates.
October meeting.
'"l'here are a lot of pri·
The following were
vale contractors around,
approved · as substitute
and we 'have enough to do
teachers, pending ·certifiwithout soliciting work,"
cation:
Brenda Bills,
Roberts said .
Carole Collins, Dana
The list of fees for the
Dieterle , Darrell Dugan,
· year will be posted in the
Kimberly Ewing, Andrew
public wor.ks office, and
Frantz, Betty Fulks, Beth
·111cludes use of equipment
Gregory.
and labor fees for tree ·
Jordan Hill, Jacqueline
trimming. backhoe work,
Lavely-Smith,
Malinda
air compressor use and
Lawrence, Matthew Miller,
other work .
O'Callaghan,
Mavee
Mayor Michael Gerlach
Photo courtesy of the Melga County Sherlll'a DeparlrMnt
Shannon Plummer, Laura Deputies with the Meigs County Sheriff's Department and officers with the. Middleport said such work might be
Post, Darcy !Unger, Kelly and Pomeroy Police Departments completed thl!ir firearms re-qua1ification training over unlikely, but said the village
Robertson , . Anna Seno.
faces an increased need to
the
weekend.
Sgt.
Brian
Bissell
of
the
Jackson
Police
Department
was
the
certificated
Samantha
Shaffner,
trim or remove trees from
Ohio peace Officers Training Academy instructor. The training is an annual requirement
for peace officers.
Ple111e see.Coulldl. A5

Eastern board
approves subs,
contracts

DelaRa ori ,..... A3

.

lathe time to IChedule JOur l"'lual
m1mmogr•m, · Un-luured padentl will recelft a
dliCOunt, To acheclule JOUI' appointment, pleae

from another .company that
bid
was
around
$7,500. Council felt the
price was reasonable and the
project cost did 110t require a
bidding process. Proffitt
said his employees would
start the project "soon."
In regards to village
finan ces, Clerk-Treasurer
Kathy Hysell predicted the
village has approximately
$126,000 to "take in" before
the year is through and as

HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

.. .

Breut Cancer Awarenee1 Month

run them during the project
tO clear the debris which
• will follow the walking trail
POMEORY - Last night from the upper parking lot to
Pomeroy Village Council . Water WorJ:cs Park. Before
approved a bid from the bid was . approved,
Maintenance Plus to cut Mayor John Musser wanted
foliage and trees from the everyone to be aware that
riverbank and parking lot Maintenance Plus was
wall which run alongside owned by Pomeroy Chief of
the Pomeroy Walking Path . Police Mark E. Proffitt.
The bid was for $5,500, Musser said the last time the
two
chainsaws,
two village had attempted to get
weedeaters and the fuel to an estimate on doing the job
Bv BETH SERGENT .

BSERGENTCMYOtlllYSENTINELCOM

.

WEATIIER

'

Pomerov

Mulberry Pon_d improvements·set to begin ·several

..

•

•
Prinled on I 00'11&gt;
Rocyded Newsprlnl .~.,

a

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
late turnover and a second~arn quarterback made lbe
difference for Penn State.
For a change, everything
. went right for Joe Paterno
and the Nittany Lions at
Ohio Stadium.
Pat Devlin came off the
bench for injured starting
quarterback Daryll Clark in
the fourth quarter and led
two scoring drives, sneaking
in for the go-ahead touchdown to give No. 3. Penn
State a 13-6 victory over No.
lO Ohio State on Saturday
night.
"How many times have I
· told you Pat Devlin is a heck
of a quarterback?" coach Joe
Paterno said after his 381 st
career victory. "We're lucky
to have two quarterbacks.''
Devlin was stunned to be
called upon.
Asked what was wrong
with Clark, he shrugged his
shoulders and said, " I have
no idea. They just told me to
·goin.n
The win put the Nittany
Lions (9-0, 5;0) in command
in the Big Ten and severely
.crimped the chances of the
Buckeyes (7-2, 4-1) grabbing an unprecedented third
consecutive outright league
APphoto title and a piece of their
Ohio State wide receiver Brian Robiskie (80) gets pushed fourth conference champiback atte.r a rf!(:eption by Penn State defense during the onship in a row.
second quarter of an NCAA college fOotball game Saturday
Penn State, with Paterno
in Columbus.
coaching from the press bo11.

Phils, Rays suspended in
6th inning tied at 2, Bt

Syria raid suggests
new US stance, A2

Firearms

,,

�..

)he Daily Sentinel
•-

NATION •

Page.A2 .

WoRLD

. Tuesday, October aS, aoo8

.. 'The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND
ANNIE'S MAILBOX

.

.,

.

..

. BY PAMelA HESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

! WASHINGTON - Bold
lJ .S. raids into Pakistan and

U.S. attack In Syria
U.S. milllary helicopters
launcHed an attack on Syrian
t8rntory against -a.foretgn fighter
netw&lt;lfk. killing eight people .

'Syria show the stark choice
0
100 mi .
:the Bush administration is
TUI!KEY
_
o
100km
putting to both friends and
adversaries in its final
weeks: Clamp down on militants and terrorists or we'll
do it for you.
:. Raids like the one in Syria
on Sunday hold the potential to ki II or capture wanted
al-Qaida terrorists or other·
militants, bui they also risk
· ~lling ciyilians and anger- SOURCE: ESAl
AP
;~ng fore1gn governments
box in the new American
:ttnd thei,r citizens , ·
; _ Selective U .S~ilitary president by inflaming an
~ction across the borders of already outraged public.
"Public opinion is already
:nations
friendly
and
APphOIO
very
strongly against the
:unfriendly reflects increasAngry
family
members
and
villagers
shout
&lt;Inti-American
slogans
as
they
carry
the
coffin
of
a
relative
who
died
a
day
before
:mg willingness to embrace U.S. and 'anti' any U.S. role
interference," when U.S. military helicopters launched an attack on Syrian territory in the Sukkariyeh Farm near the town of Abu Kamal
:.Vhat U.S. commanders or
,.onsider a last resort: vio- Cordesman said. "It's not in an area of farms and brick factories about five ·miles (eight kilometers) inside the Syrian border, on Monday. Blood
;(ating the sovereignty of a clear that you are not build: stained the dusty earth Monday as anguished villagers on the outskirts of farming town ·near Iraq buried loved ones they .
'nation with whom the U.S. ing up a broad public resis- . say were killed by an American helicopter raid inside Syria.
.
.
. ·
tance that will bind the next
.. is not at war.
· It's a demonstration of administration."
Abu Ghadiyah, the nic'-- casuiilties. H~ said "several" the world . And periodically.
The raid capped nearly a
:overt military strength that · The target of Sunday's name .for Badran Turki men were killed and identi· U.S. commanders have year of debate among the
:the U.S. has been reluctant raid in Sukkariyeh, Syria, Hishan AI Mazidih , was fled them as Abu Ghadiyah 's noted that Damascus has · CIA, U.S. special forces
1o display in public for fear just over the Iraq border among those killed, a U.S. body guards.
worked harder to clamp and commanders ·in Iraq
it would backfire on U.S. from Husaybah was a man counterterrorism official
The cross-border action down on the use·of its coun- about how to handle the
-forces or supporters within known as Abu Ghadiy.ah , confirmed Monday. All the from U.S. positions inside try by terrorists.
Syrian tributary of the Iraq
~the governments of the the leader of the most pro- officials spoke anonymous- Iraq comes at a touchy time
Bush secretly approved a foreign fighter problem,
nations whose borders were lific network to move al- ly to discuss sensitive intel- in U.S.-Iraqi relations. The separate directive three according to a former intelQaida associated .foreign ligence about the raid.
breached.
two sides are negotiating an months ago allowing spe- ligence official and a curNow, senior U.S. officials fighters into Iraq. ·
The attack was carried out agreement to extend the cia! operations forces to rent U.S. military official
favor judicious use of the
The U.S. operation was at 4:45 p.m., timed to coin- legal basis for American cross the Afghan border to who deals with Iraq.
newly aggressive tactics . precipitated by intelligence cide w1th the Cllstomary forces in Iraq after a U.N. conduct
raids
inside
The United States has been
seeing more upsides than that he was .planning an afternoon rest period. A mandate expires on Dec. 31. Pakistan.
asking Syria to .hand over,
•down. They reason that imminent attack in Iraq, a ground ,attac~ was chosen
Opponents ·Jed by Iran
Just one such raid has captin:e or.lcill Abu Ghadiyah
whatever diplomatic dam- senior U.S. official told The over a missile strike to worry that a long-term U.S. been carried out, ~ccording for months ot years. The U.S.
age is done will be mitigat- Associated Press. U.S.· reduce the chances of hurt- military presence in Iraq is to a senior Pakistan govern- Treaiuty Depanmcmt. claiffis
·ed when President Bush intelligence picked up simi- ing civilians not associated an · invitation · to the ment official. Helicopter- he · ran a resupply operation
-leaves office and a new lar reports last spring. The with Abu Ghadiyah 's net- Americans to use Iraq as a borne U.S. special forces on the' Syrian border.
-president is inaugurated: ·
infonnation - not detailed work, the official said.
staging ground for attacks conducted a raid Sept. .3
Syria rebuffed the U.S.
• That may work in Syria, enough to take action on Syria said troops in four against its -neighbors. The inside Pakistan. Islamabad request , saying it was moniwhere the government bas· was followed by the killings helicopters attacked a build- Iraqis insisl they will not has complained bitterly t,oring Abu Ghadiyah 's
.already said it is looking of I I Iraqi policemen just · ing and killed eight people , allow that.
about the move, which it activities, said two U.S. milforward to a better relation- over the border from Abu including four children.
The attack comes at time says killed two dozen peo- itary officials with direct
. ship with the next U.S. pres- Ghadiyah 's Syrian comThe U.S. official confrrmed when Syria has been work- . pie, including civilians, and recent knowledge of U.S,
'ident, · said
Anthony pound. He personally led . that women and children ing to improve its image in violated its sovereignty.
intelligence in western Iraq.
-cordesman, a Middle East the attack, the official said. were at the house. but he said
expllrt with the Center for . ''The trip wire Was know- "they were protecled at the
Strategic and International ing an attack was imminent, objective and left . behind."
Studies.
and also being able to pin- He did not specifically
. · In Pakistan, however, spe- . point his location," the offi- address whether any women
cial operations raids could cial said.
and children were among the

OIJil

·:First batch of bailout money for banks nioving soon
BY MARTIN CRUTStNGER

28th time in the 31 trading York. "The credit markets
.sessions· since the financial are still pretty locked up."
meltdown began. that. t~e . Besides pumping money .
WASHINGTON - The Dow has moved tnple C\iglls ulto the bankmg system,
· Treasury Secretary Henry
government
prepared for the day. .
Monday to move the first
But the carnage . was · Paulson and other Treasuiy
batch of bailout money to worse elsewhere on another officials are considering a
banks as fretful world mar- day when investors worried round of requests for · help
kets plunged again. Wall about a looming worldwide frorn other industries,
Street ended with a big drop recession. Malar stock mar- including big insurance
_at the closing bell, sending kets .in Hong Kong, Tokyo, companies, autOmakers and
the Dow Jones industrials to · Britain,
France
and fore1gn-controlled banks .
'their Jowest close since the Germany dropped sharp)~
Presidential press secreJinancial meltdown began.
earlier in the day. Tokyo s tary Dana Perino told
The Treasury Department ]llikkei 22S index closed at reporters Monday that the
said it would start movil)g its lowest level in 26 years . financing arms of the
$125 billion to nine maJor
The Fed was expected to automakers might be eligibanks this week by tiuymg . make an even more dramatic ble for federal help. She said
ownership stakes, the first move later this week by .cut- the Bush administration was
,big transfer since. the $700 ting interest rates, perl!aps alsd working quickiy . to
· 'billion bailout package was lowering the key federal release $25 billion in loans
:passed early this month.
funds rate by as much as a · approved by Congress last
Assistant
Treasury half-point, driving the federal month to bolster the belea_Secretary David Nason said funds rate down to I percent. guered auto sector by pro·
the infusion would go to the
The question is whether viding support for car maklargest banks in the nation, aH the efforts, including bil- ers to develop new energy. including Bank of America. hans of dollars of loans to efticient vehicles.
Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase .. banks by the Fed and other
The broader bailout packand Wells Fargo.
central banks around the age has undergone major
A group of smaller but worl_d, will. be eno~gh to get changes since· it was passed
significant regional banks , lendmg gm_ng agam.
by Congress. Global markets
including Capital One
So far, 1t hasn't helped staggered, forcing •other
Fmancial and Sun Trust much. A closely watched countnes to rush to the a1d of
Banks, began announcing · measure tha~ tracks what their own banks, and Paulson
their own preliminary deals banks charge each other for dec1ded U.S. banks needed
with Treasury for another loans , edged down ~arginally even more urgent help. .
$125 billion . That money on Monday, suggestmg cred1t
The ongmal 1dea behmd
shbuld be released ·as soon is a bit looser than a few the bailout was to buy up
as paperwork is finished.
weeks ago but remains tight. bad mortgage-related debt
·:All these effort~ are off the book~ of banks, but
,The Fed also began a
major program to buy up domg: some good, but the only $100 b1lhon has been
the short-tenn debt known questiOn IS whether they set as1de to do that this year.
as commercial parer, that will do enough," said David The government announced
businesses use to pay for Wyss, ch1ef econom1st for plans Oct. 14 to buy drrect
everyday expenses and Standard &amp; Poor's in New stakes in the banks.
salaries. Lendin g, the
lifeblood of the economy,
froze up after the collapse
of
investment ·house
Lehman Brothers in midSeptember and has thawed
· Thursday, October 30th
agonizingly slowly since.
On Wall' Street, buying
Dinner begins at4:30
and selling that was half$8.00 Adults · $4.00 6 to 12 • S &amp; Under Eat Free
.hearted by the standards of
MENU
!fhe past month had major
:,averages drifting h.igher and
Creamed Baked Chicken or Ham
;jower throughout the day.
~en stocks plunged in the
:iina!IO minutes of trading.
; : The Dow Jones indliStri·als finished the day down
~03 points, or 2.4 percent,
~losing at the 8,1 76level ~
:,their lowest dose of the
:Year. Remarkably, it was the
,.
•
AP ECONOMICS WAITER

SACRED HEART
CATHOLIC CHURCH

...

O'n November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of.
crises and peace.
·
·
This Veteran's Day, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will publish a very spe·
cial tribute honoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by includ·
lng the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who has served or is CUT•
rently serving in any branch of the U.S; Armed Forces.
·

Your choice of Two Styles ...
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(shown actual s1ze)

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1 Please Fill Out And Return With 1
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YourPayment to:

~!]..Of.ru IC J VJJefiiAN sALure·
VEu~~~ H US~ AD ~Dally Sentinel
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111CourtSt
ar ones
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679
1969·1'971

I

I1
I1
I

In Honor of (name and rank)

Army
VietNam
Love, Your Famity
Ad With Photo - $15 .00

:Community Calendar
Public meetings

(Shown actual size)

Clubs and
organizations

Other events

•

.Voters' guides being distributed
. POMEROY - Doug and
•Brenda Stuart of Pomeroy.
:southeastern Ohio volunteer
:coordinators for the Ohio
'Christian Alliance based in
:Columbus , )lave announced
:the availability of free 2008
:Voter Guides for the Nov. 4
·election. They may be
:obtained at the Bethel
:Worship Center in Tuppers
:Plains and the Meigs County
·Republican Headquarters in
:downtown Pomeroy.

Stuart emphasized that
the Voter Guide brochures
are for voter educational
purposes only, are non-par- .
tisan, and do not endorse or
take a position on any candidates running for qffice.
The
Ohio
Christian
Alliance, a non-profit group
based in Columbus, surveyed
the candidates on a variety of
issues deemed important to
families
candidates'
responses to the issues are

.

printed in the Voter Guides.
The Voter Guides can be
picked up this week from 10
a.m.-noon. 2 p.m.-4 p.m ., and
6 p.m.-8 p.m., MondayFriday and noon-4 p.m. on
Saturday, at RepublicAn Party
Headquarters next to Crow &amp;
Crow . Law Offices on 2nd
Street. Pomeroy, or at Bethel
Worship Center, located 2
miles south of Tuppers Plains
on Oh.io State Route 7 (call
the church at 740-66./-6793
.

Tuesday...Mostly cloudy.
VVednesday night .•.Mostly
Scattered rain and snow clear. Lows in the lower 30s.
for best pickup times) .
showers
in
the West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Ohio Christian Alliance is morning ... Then
isolated
Thursday and Thursday
a non-partisan organization rain and snow showers in night ...Mostly clear. Highs
dedicated to promoting the afternoon. Highs in the in the upper 50s. Lows in
Judea-Christian values in lower 40s. Northwest winds the upper 30s.
'
American
government.. 10 to IS mph. Chance of
Fr~day... Sunny. Highs in
Ohio Christian ~lliance precipitation 50 percent.
the mid 60s.
•
does not endorse any particFriday
night ...Partly
Thesday night .•• Mostly
ular candidates or political cloudy. Isolated rain and cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s .
party. OCA provides educa- snow showers in the
Saturday...Partly sunny.
tional materials, including evening. · Cold with lows Highs in the upper 50s .
voter g~ides and scorecards. around 30. · West winds
Saturday mght through ·
For more informmion, around 10 mph. Chance of Suhday
night...Partly
visit www.ohioca.org.
.cloudy. Lows in the upper
precipitation 20 percent .
· VVednesday...Partly sunny. 30s. Highs in the mid 50s.
Highs in the upper 40s. West
· Monday ... Sunny. Highs
winds 10 to 15 mph.
in the k wer60s.

Kathryn Hart presided at the offered by Evelyn Foreman.
meeting with report from the Mabel Brace and Mildred
officers. Edie Hubbard Hart were hostesses · for the
reported that 12 cards had · meeting.
Members sang Happy
been sent out and 57 were
signed at the meeting attend- Birthday to Ruth Simpson.
The blessing was given by
ed by 23 members .
A thank you note was read Evelyn Foreman before
from Syracl!se for a donation refreshments were served.
of bears. Male Brace read a November hostesses will be
story from Guide Posts. · Betty ·Proffitt, Evelyn
Milder Hart had scripture, Foreman,Marth Lou Beegle
Psalms 108, ad prayer was and Holly Stump.

Your Name:·- - - - - - - - -

t Address: -- - - - - - - 1
I Phone: - - - - - - - - 1

L-----~-----------~

In Honor Of

The Daily Sentinel

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992 .

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your Family

''

•

Phone (740) 992·2155

Julie Curtis, state good qf
the
order , chairman,
Charlotte Grant, state publicity chairman, and Mazy
Jo Barringer, past state
councilor to the front of the
hall where they accepted
commissions and were presented gifts.
Members were reminded
to to wear white to the Nov.
18 meeting when initiation
of several members will be
held .
Present were Ruth Smitb,
Deloris Wolfe, Laura Nice,
Garv Holter, Sharon Riffle,
Charlotte Grant, Everett
Grant, Thelma White,
Sandy White, Helen Wolf,
Goldie Frederick , Mary Jo
Barringer. Julie Curtis, Opal
Hollon . and Esther Smith.

LQcai Weather

Members were reminded
: RACINE - Several dona:tions were made and fund to take egg cartons, alu:raising projects discussed minum pop tabs , card front~.
·when the Son shine Circle coupons and soup 'labels,
:met recently at the Bethany along with eye glasses to the
:Church. Donations were next meeting alon~ with
:made to Joy f..M. and to the desserts to go to God s NET.
·Meigs county Council on The annual Christmas din:Aging ~s Make a Difference ner was set for Dec. 8 at the
:Day program. Plans were . Wild Horse Cafe. Gifts are
·made for making noodles to to be taken for local people.
It was noted that a library
:sell and for the annual apple
is being started at the church.
:butter making sessi~n.

5:00 PM Tributes must be prepaid.
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th

Chester Council meets

Birthdays

Branch of Service

.
.
.
AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 5, 2008

Your ·
Veteran

Christmas flower show.
VVednesday, Oct. 29
POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club at
Pomeroy Library. Nadine
Goebel will rev1ew ·The
Other Boelyn Girl by
Phillipa Gregory. The hostess will be Pat Holter.
Friday, Oct. 31
POMEROY - Alzheimer
(and dementia) Support
Group ~ I: 15. Meigs Senior
Center, 992~ 2161.
·

:Sonshine ·Circle makes donations, plans ·fund raisers

Love, (Name relationship to veteran)

Photo of

Chili with cheese, peanut .
butier sandwiches, dessert .
RUTLAND Youth
Halloween dance , 7-10
p.m .. Rutland Civic Center.
Costumes optional, food
and adult supervision
available.

CHESTER - Chester
Council
323, Daughers of
VVednesday,Nov.S
America,
rnet recently at the
REEDSVILLE - Olive
hall with Laura Mae Nice.
·'township Trustees, ' 6:30
presiding.
.
p.m. , township garage.
The meeting opened with
pledges to the Christian and
American flags, singing of
the National Anthem, scripThesday, Oct. 28
Me reading and the Lord· s
RUTLAND :._ Revival at
Prayer in unison.
Rutland Freewill Baptist
It was noted that Jo Ann
Ritchie
and Doris Grueser
Church , Salem Street,
Tuesday, Oct. 28
had
gone
to Texas for ·the
;through Saturday. Services
POMEROY - OH-KAN
National Convention of the
•at 7 p.m. each evening. Rob
Coin Club, 7 p.m ., Pomeroy
Daughers
of America. It
:Fulton on Tuesday. Rob
Public . Library. Open to
was
noted
that Deloris
:Erwin on Wednesday, Tim
public.
Thesday, Nov. 4
Wolfe
is
having
health prob:Simpson on Thursday,
POMEROY
Open
SYRACUSE - Edward
Saturday.
;Friday ·and
house meeting of Meigs Wells, Syracuse, will cele- lems , that Erma Cleland
·Special
singers · each
County garden clubs. host- brate his 92nd birthday on remains ill and that Keith
:evening. Pastor Ed Barney,
ed by Winding Trail Garden Tuesday, Nov. 4. Cards may Ashley has a new grandFriday, Oct. 31
:742-3205.
MIDDLEPORT - Free Club, 7 p.m., Meigs County be sent to hirn at the child.
The colorbearers escorted
,
Friday, Oct. 31
community ~inner, 4:30 to 6 . Museum. Program by Janel- Ravenswood Village , 200
• LANGSVILLE
p.m ., Middleport Church of Bolin with ideas and South
Ritchie
Ave .,
:"October Festival" 6:30 Christ Family Life Center. demonstrations of the Ravenswood,' W.Va. 26164.

Church events

I'

p.m., House of Healing
Ministries.
Campfire,
weather permitting , Food .
and drinks provided. Pie
auction for building fund .
. Saturday, Nov. 1
POMEROY - Gospel
music at the Mulberry
Community Center, starting
at 6:30 p.m. by Hanging
Rock Junction and Never
too Late.
· Sunday, Nov. 2
RUTLAND - One ·Less
Stone performing a variety .
of gospel music, at 10:30
a:m. at Rutland Church of
th~ Nazarene .

Oates Of Active Duty

Conflict/War

Butler birth announced

Russells announce birth

·Honor Our
·Heroes··

IN

Tuesday, October 28,2008

OAK HILL - Candice
and Bradlee B4tler of Oak
Hill announced the birth of
BY KATHY MITCHELL .
guarantee it. Talk to a require an invitation, but years. I thought I was losing their daughter. Jeorgia
AND MARCY SUGAR
lawyer and find out what considering the relationship my mind.
Kayann Butler, June 20,
steps you need to take to and closeness it only seemed
I strongly sug~est she find 2008.
'
Dear Annie: Thirty years extricate yourself from your appropriate. In hindsight l a hematologist m her area .
She
weighed
six pound.s,
;ago, I married an abusive previous marriage and make think I was · wrong. The Though tJ;lere is no cure, I
15
ounces.
and
was
20 inch;man and h~d two children. your current situation legal- guest list is totally her deCi- wa~ helped with vitamin
.
-Four years later, pregnant ly binding. And please try to sion and she should not feel B 12 injections. She can es long. ·
are
Maternal
grandparents
:and miserable, I ran away find _your older children. obligated to invite me. So expect to take a few steps
;and left the .children with You may have done what what do I do now? Should l forward and then a few Beverly and Andy Fetty of
;their paternal aunt to raise. you thought was best for attend? Should I stay away back, but will gradually Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are Sharon and
-Then l met ••Joe." I lied on them at the time, but we can and send a gift? start feeling better within a Mike Lewis and George and
:the marriage license (with assure you, they never Etiquette Lacking
year. Stress is a huge factor Ruth Butler, all of Jackson.
:Joe's approval), saying I stopped wondering if you
Dear Etiquette: You are with this disease, so allevi- Great grandparents are Point Pleasant. · W.Va.
·was divorced so that we simply didn't love them right that you should not ating that would be vety
:could marry. When my son enough to want them to be have asked about your invi- ·beneficiaL Just let her know P.atty and Walter Ridenour. Wanda and Joel Scott of
Jr.. Leon . W.Va.. and
:was born, I gave him Joe's part of your new life.
tation , although it is rude to there is hope. - Mending Shirley and Charles Fetty, Rock Branch are great-great
grandparents.
;last name.
.
Dear Annie: When my impose on friends for wed- in Memphis
·
: h's been 26 years since office assistant announced ding .advice and assistance
Dear Memphis: Thank
-then .. My questio11 is: To her •engagement, l offered and not invite them to' the you and all the others who
:whom am I legally married? my husband 's print shop event (assuming, of course, recommended B 12 injec:My first husband has more services for her invita- it is more than a family-only tions . We can't guarantee
·children with someone else tions . She graciously affair). But that is irrelevant their effectiveness, but it's
CHAUNCEY - Tim and
:and I have only seen my accepted. She· often asked now. You've been invited to worth looking into.
Beverly Napper Russell of
:older kids a couple of times . my advice regarding her a wedding. If you wish to · Annie's Mailbox is writ· Chauncey announce the
:We live in another state and dress, catering, the loca- attend, do so. Please send a ten by Kathy Mitchell and bir!h of their first child, a
.I no longer know where tion of the ceremony and gift either way.
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- son, Timothy Dale Russell ,
they are. I need. help trying other things. I 11lso orgaDear Annie: This is in tors of the Ann Landers bornonJuly 16atO'Bleness
·to get this straightened out, nized an office shower.
response to "Tired of Being column. Please e-mail your Memorial
Hospital in
.so can you please give me
She spoke to me several Tired." l could have written questions to anniesmail- Athens. He w~ighed 9
.some guidance? - Mrs. times as if I were invited to that letter two years ago. box@comcast.net, or write pounds, 11.8 ounces.
Smith or Mrs. Jones?
the wedding, but no invita- Chronic Epstein-Barr di.s- to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Maternal grandparents are
Dear Mrs.: Unless your tion appeared. I assumed it ease is not just being tired. Box 118190, Chicago, IL Lena Napper of Rutland and
first husband initiated was an oversight and men- It's an effort tO get out of bed 60611 , To find out more the . late David "Gabby"
·divorce proceedings, you tioned it to her. She seemed some mornings. Sleep does about ·Annie's · Mailbox, Napper, Jr. Paternal grand. may still be legally married awkward and I regret not cure it, nor does inactivi, and read features by other _parents are Jim and Marilyn
to him . After all this time, inquiring. The next day, an ty. This disease affects your Creators Syndicate writeril Russell of Chauncey.
·he may be quite willing to invite was on 'my desk .
memory, emotions, energy and cartoonists, visit the
Maternal great-grandparlet you gQ without much
I realize our offer to help level, everything. After suf- Creators Syndicate Web ents are the late Walter and
·fuss , but there's no way to does not automatically fering for more than three page at www.creators .com. Margaret Hysell and the late are the late Rev. N. L. and
David and Mary Napper. Alice Russell and the late
Paternal great-grandparents Charles and Leona North.

•,.

..

Is she Mrs. Smith or Mrs. Jones?

PageA:J.

Prosecutor: Trucker scared boss before slayings
BOWLING GREEN (AP)
: - The head of a trucking
:company office feared for a
:week that he was going to
·"get beat . up or worse" the
:day he fired one of his dri: vers, a witness testified
:Monday.
Another witness told
·jurors that : Douglas Smith
. was so nervous that he called
:his fiance repeatedly during
·the hours before he was to
:meet with the driver. And he
:even sent her a message, Jet:ting her know that the driver
'had arrived, fiance Lucinda
:collins testified.
: Smith and another truck:ing.company employee who
:had been sent to bel p fire
·Calvin Neyland Jr. were shot
'and killed in August 2007 at
the Libelty Transportation

office in suburban Toledo.
· Neyland, 44, has pleaded
not guilty to two counts of
aggrl}vated IJlUrder and
could face the death penalty
if convicted.
He had been warned that he
was one violation from being
let go. He then had a traffic
accident a week before the
shootings that sealed his ftring, assistant Wood County
prosecutor Heather Baker
told jurors during opening
·statements of the trial.
Nerland went to the
truckmg office and first shot
Thomas Lazar, a former
Pennsylvania state trooper
who worked with the company and had been sent to
the office to assist with the
firing, Baker said . Neyland
then shot Smith, who was

sitting by himself in a second-floor office, she said .
1\vo men working at a
windbw company next door
testified Monday that they
lleard the first gunshots,
watched Neyland go into
the office and then heard a
·few more shots.
Both identified Neyland as
the man they saw with a gun. ·
Neyland was arrested
about three hours after the
slayings in a motel parking
lot in Temperance, Mich.,
about I 5 miles north of
where the shooting took
place.
His · motel room was
stocked with weapons. In
'his truck, police found a
handgun and a will in an
envelope addressed to
' Neyland's cousin, Baker

said. Tests showed that bulleis from the gun matched
those found at the trucking
company, she said.
'Authorities later found a
storage unit that belonged to
Neyland. It was filled with
more guns and ammunition,
Baker said.
Defense attorney J. Scott
Hicks made just a brief opening statement, telling jurors
to listen to the evidence
closely. He didn't indicate
what defense they would use.
Neyland worked for
Liberty for about a year and
was a good employee at first .
Collins said. But then Smith
began hearing complaints.
from customers and noticed
that he Wasn 't keeping up
with truck maintenance and
paperwork, she said.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 29.64
52.33
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 31.55
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS,
DAQ)- t8.45
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 20.67
Big Lots (NYSE)- 19.75
BBT (NYSE) - 32.20
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 19.10 Peoples (NASDAQ) - 16.87
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 19.45
Pepsico (NYSE) - 51.49
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.72
-9.28
. Rockwell (NYSE) - 22.63
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.14
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) Charming Shops (NASDAQ) - 3.10
1.13
Royal Dutch Shell - 44.70
City Holding (NASDAQ) Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 48.61
34.85
Colltna (NYSE) - 31 .59
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 49.67
Wendy's (NYSE) - 2.84
DuPont (NYSE) - 27.80
US Bank (NYSE) - 28.82
WesBanco (NYSE) - 23.44
Gannett (NYSE)- 9.13
Worthington (NYSE) - 10.05
Dally llock reports are the 4
General Electric (NYSE) p.m. t;T closing quotes of . ·
17.73
transactions lor Oct. 27, 2008,
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) provided by Edward .Jones
18.87
financial advisors Isaac Mills
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 34
Kroger (NYSE) - 25.89
In Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441
Limited Brands (NYSE) and Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-Q174.
10.18
Member SIPC.
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

�..

)he Daily Sentinel
•-

NATION •

Page.A2 .

WoRLD

. Tuesday, October aS, aoo8

.. 'The Daily Sentinel

BY THE BEND
ANNIE'S MAILBOX

.

.,

.

..

. BY PAMelA HESS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

! WASHINGTON - Bold
lJ .S. raids into Pakistan and

U.S. attack In Syria
U.S. milllary helicopters
launcHed an attack on Syrian
t8rntory against -a.foretgn fighter
netw&lt;lfk. killing eight people .

'Syria show the stark choice
0
100 mi .
:the Bush administration is
TUI!KEY
_
o
100km
putting to both friends and
adversaries in its final
weeks: Clamp down on militants and terrorists or we'll
do it for you.
:. Raids like the one in Syria
on Sunday hold the potential to ki II or capture wanted
al-Qaida terrorists or other·
militants, bui they also risk
· ~lling ciyilians and anger- SOURCE: ESAl
AP
;~ng fore1gn governments
box in the new American
:ttnd thei,r citizens , ·
; _ Selective U .S~ilitary president by inflaming an
~ction across the borders of already outraged public.
"Public opinion is already
:nations
friendly
and
APphOIO
very
strongly against the
:unfriendly reflects increasAngry
family
members
and
villagers
shout
&lt;Inti-American
slogans
as
they
carry
the
coffin
of
a
relative
who
died
a
day
before
:mg willingness to embrace U.S. and 'anti' any U.S. role
interference," when U.S. military helicopters launched an attack on Syrian territory in the Sukkariyeh Farm near the town of Abu Kamal
:.Vhat U.S. commanders or
,.onsider a last resort: vio- Cordesman said. "It's not in an area of farms and brick factories about five ·miles (eight kilometers) inside the Syrian border, on Monday. Blood
;(ating the sovereignty of a clear that you are not build: stained the dusty earth Monday as anguished villagers on the outskirts of farming town ·near Iraq buried loved ones they .
'nation with whom the U.S. ing up a broad public resis- . say were killed by an American helicopter raid inside Syria.
.
.
. ·
tance that will bind the next
.. is not at war.
· It's a demonstration of administration."
Abu Ghadiyah, the nic'-- casuiilties. H~ said "several" the world . And periodically.
The raid capped nearly a
:overt military strength that · The target of Sunday's name .for Badran Turki men were killed and identi· U.S. commanders have year of debate among the
:the U.S. has been reluctant raid in Sukkariyeh, Syria, Hishan AI Mazidih , was fled them as Abu Ghadiyah 's noted that Damascus has · CIA, U.S. special forces
1o display in public for fear just over the Iraq border among those killed, a U.S. body guards.
worked harder to clamp and commanders ·in Iraq
it would backfire on U.S. from Husaybah was a man counterterrorism official
The cross-border action down on the use·of its coun- about how to handle the
-forces or supporters within known as Abu Ghadiy.ah , confirmed Monday. All the from U.S. positions inside try by terrorists.
Syrian tributary of the Iraq
~the governments of the the leader of the most pro- officials spoke anonymous- Iraq comes at a touchy time
Bush secretly approved a foreign fighter problem,
nations whose borders were lific network to move al- ly to discuss sensitive intel- in U.S.-Iraqi relations. The separate directive three according to a former intelQaida associated .foreign ligence about the raid.
breached.
two sides are negotiating an months ago allowing spe- ligence official and a curNow, senior U.S. officials fighters into Iraq. ·
The attack was carried out agreement to extend the cia! operations forces to rent U.S. military official
favor judicious use of the
The U.S. operation was at 4:45 p.m., timed to coin- legal basis for American cross the Afghan border to who deals with Iraq.
newly aggressive tactics . precipitated by intelligence cide w1th the Cllstomary forces in Iraq after a U.N. conduct
raids
inside
The United States has been
seeing more upsides than that he was .planning an afternoon rest period. A mandate expires on Dec. 31. Pakistan.
asking Syria to .hand over,
•down. They reason that imminent attack in Iraq, a ground ,attac~ was chosen
Opponents ·Jed by Iran
Just one such raid has captin:e or.lcill Abu Ghadiyah
whatever diplomatic dam- senior U.S. official told The over a missile strike to worry that a long-term U.S. been carried out, ~ccording for months ot years. The U.S.
age is done will be mitigat- Associated Press. U.S.· reduce the chances of hurt- military presence in Iraq is to a senior Pakistan govern- Treaiuty Depanmcmt. claiffis
·ed when President Bush intelligence picked up simi- ing civilians not associated an · invitation · to the ment official. Helicopter- he · ran a resupply operation
-leaves office and a new lar reports last spring. The with Abu Ghadiyah 's net- Americans to use Iraq as a borne U.S. special forces on the' Syrian border.
-president is inaugurated: ·
infonnation - not detailed work, the official said.
staging ground for attacks conducted a raid Sept. .3
Syria rebuffed the U.S.
• That may work in Syria, enough to take action on Syria said troops in four against its -neighbors. The inside Pakistan. Islamabad request , saying it was moniwhere the government bas· was followed by the killings helicopters attacked a build- Iraqis insisl they will not has complained bitterly t,oring Abu Ghadiyah 's
.already said it is looking of I I Iraqi policemen just · ing and killed eight people , allow that.
about the move, which it activities, said two U.S. milforward to a better relation- over the border from Abu including four children.
The attack comes at time says killed two dozen peo- itary officials with direct
. ship with the next U.S. pres- Ghadiyah 's Syrian comThe U.S. official confrrmed when Syria has been work- . pie, including civilians, and recent knowledge of U.S,
'ident, · said
Anthony pound. He personally led . that women and children ing to improve its image in violated its sovereignty.
intelligence in western Iraq.
-cordesman, a Middle East the attack, the official said. were at the house. but he said
expllrt with the Center for . ''The trip wire Was know- "they were protecled at the
Strategic and International ing an attack was imminent, objective and left . behind."
Studies.
and also being able to pin- He did not specifically
. · In Pakistan, however, spe- . point his location," the offi- address whether any women
cial operations raids could cial said.
and children were among the

OIJil

·:First batch of bailout money for banks nioving soon
BY MARTIN CRUTStNGER

28th time in the 31 trading York. "The credit markets
.sessions· since the financial are still pretty locked up."
meltdown began. that. t~e . Besides pumping money .
WASHINGTON - The Dow has moved tnple C\iglls ulto the bankmg system,
· Treasury Secretary Henry
government
prepared for the day. .
Monday to move the first
But the carnage . was · Paulson and other Treasuiy
batch of bailout money to worse elsewhere on another officials are considering a
banks as fretful world mar- day when investors worried round of requests for · help
kets plunged again. Wall about a looming worldwide frorn other industries,
Street ended with a big drop recession. Malar stock mar- including big insurance
_at the closing bell, sending kets .in Hong Kong, Tokyo, companies, autOmakers and
the Dow Jones industrials to · Britain,
France
and fore1gn-controlled banks .
'their Jowest close since the Germany dropped sharp)~
Presidential press secreJinancial meltdown began.
earlier in the day. Tokyo s tary Dana Perino told
The Treasury Department ]llikkei 22S index closed at reporters Monday that the
said it would start movil)g its lowest level in 26 years . financing arms of the
$125 billion to nine maJor
The Fed was expected to automakers might be eligibanks this week by tiuymg . make an even more dramatic ble for federal help. She said
ownership stakes, the first move later this week by .cut- the Bush administration was
,big transfer since. the $700 ting interest rates, perl!aps alsd working quickiy . to
· 'billion bailout package was lowering the key federal release $25 billion in loans
:passed early this month.
funds rate by as much as a · approved by Congress last
Assistant
Treasury half-point, driving the federal month to bolster the belea_Secretary David Nason said funds rate down to I percent. guered auto sector by pro·
the infusion would go to the
The question is whether viding support for car maklargest banks in the nation, aH the efforts, including bil- ers to develop new energy. including Bank of America. hans of dollars of loans to efticient vehicles.
Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase .. banks by the Fed and other
The broader bailout packand Wells Fargo.
central banks around the age has undergone major
A group of smaller but worl_d, will. be eno~gh to get changes since· it was passed
significant regional banks , lendmg gm_ng agam.
by Congress. Global markets
including Capital One
So far, 1t hasn't helped staggered, forcing •other
Fmancial and Sun Trust much. A closely watched countnes to rush to the a1d of
Banks, began announcing · measure tha~ tracks what their own banks, and Paulson
their own preliminary deals banks charge each other for dec1ded U.S. banks needed
with Treasury for another loans , edged down ~arginally even more urgent help. .
$125 billion . That money on Monday, suggestmg cred1t
The ongmal 1dea behmd
shbuld be released ·as soon is a bit looser than a few the bailout was to buy up
as paperwork is finished.
weeks ago but remains tight. bad mortgage-related debt
·:All these effort~ are off the book~ of banks, but
,The Fed also began a
major program to buy up domg: some good, but the only $100 b1lhon has been
the short-tenn debt known questiOn IS whether they set as1de to do that this year.
as commercial parer, that will do enough," said David The government announced
businesses use to pay for Wyss, ch1ef econom1st for plans Oct. 14 to buy drrect
everyday expenses and Standard &amp; Poor's in New stakes in the banks.
salaries. Lendin g, the
lifeblood of the economy,
froze up after the collapse
of
investment ·house
Lehman Brothers in midSeptember and has thawed
· Thursday, October 30th
agonizingly slowly since.
On Wall' Street, buying
Dinner begins at4:30
and selling that was half$8.00 Adults · $4.00 6 to 12 • S &amp; Under Eat Free
.hearted by the standards of
MENU
!fhe past month had major
:,averages drifting h.igher and
Creamed Baked Chicken or Ham
;jower throughout the day.
~en stocks plunged in the
:iina!IO minutes of trading.
; : The Dow Jones indliStri·als finished the day down
~03 points, or 2.4 percent,
~losing at the 8,1 76level ~
:,their lowest dose of the
:Year. Remarkably, it was the
,.
•
AP ECONOMICS WAITER

SACRED HEART
CATHOLIC CHURCH

...

O'n November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of.
crises and peace.
·
·
This Veteran's Day, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will publish a very spe·
cial tribute honoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by includ·
lng the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who has served or is CUT•
rently serving in any branch of the U.S; Armed Forces.
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ar ones
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1969·1'971

I

I1
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In Honor of (name and rank)

Army
VietNam
Love, Your Famity
Ad With Photo - $15 .00

:Community Calendar
Public meetings

(Shown actual size)

Clubs and
organizations

Other events

•

.Voters' guides being distributed
. POMEROY - Doug and
•Brenda Stuart of Pomeroy.
:southeastern Ohio volunteer
:coordinators for the Ohio
'Christian Alliance based in
:Columbus , )lave announced
:the availability of free 2008
:Voter Guides for the Nov. 4
·election. They may be
:obtained at the Bethel
:Worship Center in Tuppers
:Plains and the Meigs County
·Republican Headquarters in
:downtown Pomeroy.

Stuart emphasized that
the Voter Guide brochures
are for voter educational
purposes only, are non-par- .
tisan, and do not endorse or
take a position on any candidates running for qffice.
The
Ohio
Christian
Alliance, a non-profit group
based in Columbus, surveyed
the candidates on a variety of
issues deemed important to
families
candidates'
responses to the issues are

.

printed in the Voter Guides.
The Voter Guides can be
picked up this week from 10
a.m.-noon. 2 p.m.-4 p.m ., and
6 p.m.-8 p.m., MondayFriday and noon-4 p.m. on
Saturday, at RepublicAn Party
Headquarters next to Crow &amp;
Crow . Law Offices on 2nd
Street. Pomeroy, or at Bethel
Worship Center, located 2
miles south of Tuppers Plains
on Oh.io State Route 7 (call
the church at 740-66./-6793
.

Tuesday...Mostly cloudy.
VVednesday night .•.Mostly
Scattered rain and snow clear. Lows in the lower 30s.
for best pickup times) .
showers
in
the West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Ohio Christian Alliance is morning ... Then
isolated
Thursday and Thursday
a non-partisan organization rain and snow showers in night ...Mostly clear. Highs
dedicated to promoting the afternoon. Highs in the in the upper 50s. Lows in
Judea-Christian values in lower 40s. Northwest winds the upper 30s.
'
American
government.. 10 to IS mph. Chance of
Fr~day... Sunny. Highs in
Ohio Christian ~lliance precipitation 50 percent.
the mid 60s.
•
does not endorse any particFriday
night ...Partly
Thesday night .•• Mostly
ular candidates or political cloudy. Isolated rain and cloudy. Lows in the mid 40s .
party. OCA provides educa- snow showers in the
Saturday...Partly sunny.
tional materials, including evening. · Cold with lows Highs in the upper 50s .
voter g~ides and scorecards. around 30. · West winds
Saturday mght through ·
For more informmion, around 10 mph. Chance of Suhday
night...Partly
visit www.ohioca.org.
.cloudy. Lows in the upper
precipitation 20 percent .
· VVednesday...Partly sunny. 30s. Highs in the mid 50s.
Highs in the upper 40s. West
· Monday ... Sunny. Highs
winds 10 to 15 mph.
in the k wer60s.

Kathryn Hart presided at the offered by Evelyn Foreman.
meeting with report from the Mabel Brace and Mildred
officers. Edie Hubbard Hart were hostesses · for the
reported that 12 cards had · meeting.
Members sang Happy
been sent out and 57 were
signed at the meeting attend- Birthday to Ruth Simpson.
The blessing was given by
ed by 23 members .
A thank you note was read Evelyn Foreman before
from Syracl!se for a donation refreshments were served.
of bears. Male Brace read a November hostesses will be
story from Guide Posts. · Betty ·Proffitt, Evelyn
Milder Hart had scripture, Foreman,Marth Lou Beegle
Psalms 108, ad prayer was and Holly Stump.

Your Name:·- - - - - - - - -

t Address: -- - - - - - - 1
I Phone: - - - - - - - - 1

L-----~-----------~

In Honor Of

The Daily Sentinel

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992 .

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your Family

''

•

Phone (740) 992·2155

Julie Curtis, state good qf
the
order , chairman,
Charlotte Grant, state publicity chairman, and Mazy
Jo Barringer, past state
councilor to the front of the
hall where they accepted
commissions and were presented gifts.
Members were reminded
to to wear white to the Nov.
18 meeting when initiation
of several members will be
held .
Present were Ruth Smitb,
Deloris Wolfe, Laura Nice,
Garv Holter, Sharon Riffle,
Charlotte Grant, Everett
Grant, Thelma White,
Sandy White, Helen Wolf,
Goldie Frederick , Mary Jo
Barringer. Julie Curtis, Opal
Hollon . and Esther Smith.

LQcai Weather

Members were reminded
: RACINE - Several dona:tions were made and fund to take egg cartons, alu:raising projects discussed minum pop tabs , card front~.
·when the Son shine Circle coupons and soup 'labels,
:met recently at the Bethany along with eye glasses to the
:Church. Donations were next meeting alon~ with
:made to Joy f..M. and to the desserts to go to God s NET.
·Meigs county Council on The annual Christmas din:Aging ~s Make a Difference ner was set for Dec. 8 at the
:Day program. Plans were . Wild Horse Cafe. Gifts are
·made for making noodles to to be taken for local people.
It was noted that a library
:sell and for the annual apple
is being started at the church.
:butter making sessi~n.

5:00 PM Tributes must be prepaid.
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th

Chester Council meets

Birthdays

Branch of Service

.
.
.
AD DEADLINE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 5, 2008

Your ·
Veteran

Christmas flower show.
VVednesday, Oct. 29
POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club at
Pomeroy Library. Nadine
Goebel will rev1ew ·The
Other Boelyn Girl by
Phillipa Gregory. The hostess will be Pat Holter.
Friday, Oct. 31
POMEROY - Alzheimer
(and dementia) Support
Group ~ I: 15. Meigs Senior
Center, 992~ 2161.
·

:Sonshine ·Circle makes donations, plans ·fund raisers

Love, (Name relationship to veteran)

Photo of

Chili with cheese, peanut .
butier sandwiches, dessert .
RUTLAND Youth
Halloween dance , 7-10
p.m .. Rutland Civic Center.
Costumes optional, food
and adult supervision
available.

CHESTER - Chester
Council
323, Daughers of
VVednesday,Nov.S
America,
rnet recently at the
REEDSVILLE - Olive
hall with Laura Mae Nice.
·'township Trustees, ' 6:30
presiding.
.
p.m. , township garage.
The meeting opened with
pledges to the Christian and
American flags, singing of
the National Anthem, scripThesday, Oct. 28
Me reading and the Lord· s
RUTLAND :._ Revival at
Prayer in unison.
Rutland Freewill Baptist
It was noted that Jo Ann
Ritchie
and Doris Grueser
Church , Salem Street,
Tuesday, Oct. 28
had
gone
to Texas for ·the
;through Saturday. Services
POMEROY - OH-KAN
National Convention of the
•at 7 p.m. each evening. Rob
Coin Club, 7 p.m ., Pomeroy
Daughers
of America. It
:Fulton on Tuesday. Rob
Public . Library. Open to
was
noted
that Deloris
:Erwin on Wednesday, Tim
public.
Thesday, Nov. 4
Wolfe
is
having
health prob:Simpson on Thursday,
POMEROY
Open
SYRACUSE - Edward
Saturday.
;Friday ·and
house meeting of Meigs Wells, Syracuse, will cele- lems , that Erma Cleland
·Special
singers · each
County garden clubs. host- brate his 92nd birthday on remains ill and that Keith
:evening. Pastor Ed Barney,
ed by Winding Trail Garden Tuesday, Nov. 4. Cards may Ashley has a new grandFriday, Oct. 31
:742-3205.
MIDDLEPORT - Free Club, 7 p.m., Meigs County be sent to hirn at the child.
The colorbearers escorted
,
Friday, Oct. 31
community ~inner, 4:30 to 6 . Museum. Program by Janel- Ravenswood Village , 200
• LANGSVILLE
p.m ., Middleport Church of Bolin with ideas and South
Ritchie
Ave .,
:"October Festival" 6:30 Christ Family Life Center. demonstrations of the Ravenswood,' W.Va. 26164.

Church events

I'

p.m., House of Healing
Ministries.
Campfire,
weather permitting , Food .
and drinks provided. Pie
auction for building fund .
. Saturday, Nov. 1
POMEROY - Gospel
music at the Mulberry
Community Center, starting
at 6:30 p.m. by Hanging
Rock Junction and Never
too Late.
· Sunday, Nov. 2
RUTLAND - One ·Less
Stone performing a variety .
of gospel music, at 10:30
a:m. at Rutland Church of
th~ Nazarene .

Oates Of Active Duty

Conflict/War

Butler birth announced

Russells announce birth

·Honor Our
·Heroes··

IN

Tuesday, October 28,2008

OAK HILL - Candice
and Bradlee B4tler of Oak
Hill announced the birth of
BY KATHY MITCHELL .
guarantee it. Talk to a require an invitation, but years. I thought I was losing their daughter. Jeorgia
AND MARCY SUGAR
lawyer and find out what considering the relationship my mind.
Kayann Butler, June 20,
steps you need to take to and closeness it only seemed
I strongly sug~est she find 2008.
'
Dear Annie: Thirty years extricate yourself from your appropriate. In hindsight l a hematologist m her area .
She
weighed
six pound.s,
;ago, I married an abusive previous marriage and make think I was · wrong. The Though tJ;lere is no cure, I
15
ounces.
and
was
20 inch;man and h~d two children. your current situation legal- guest list is totally her deCi- wa~ helped with vitamin
.
-Four years later, pregnant ly binding. And please try to sion and she should not feel B 12 injections. She can es long. ·
are
Maternal
grandparents
:and miserable, I ran away find _your older children. obligated to invite me. So expect to take a few steps
;and left the .children with You may have done what what do I do now? Should l forward and then a few Beverly and Andy Fetty of
;their paternal aunt to raise. you thought was best for attend? Should I stay away back, but will gradually Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are Sharon and
-Then l met ••Joe." I lied on them at the time, but we can and send a gift? start feeling better within a Mike Lewis and George and
:the marriage license (with assure you, they never Etiquette Lacking
year. Stress is a huge factor Ruth Butler, all of Jackson.
:Joe's approval), saying I stopped wondering if you
Dear Etiquette: You are with this disease, so allevi- Great grandparents are Point Pleasant. · W.Va.
·was divorced so that we simply didn't love them right that you should not ating that would be vety
:could marry. When my son enough to want them to be have asked about your invi- ·beneficiaL Just let her know P.atty and Walter Ridenour. Wanda and Joel Scott of
Jr.. Leon . W.Va.. and
:was born, I gave him Joe's part of your new life.
tation , although it is rude to there is hope. - Mending Shirley and Charles Fetty, Rock Branch are great-great
grandparents.
;last name.
.
Dear Annie: When my impose on friends for wed- in Memphis
·
: h's been 26 years since office assistant announced ding .advice and assistance
Dear Memphis: Thank
-then .. My questio11 is: To her •engagement, l offered and not invite them to' the you and all the others who
:whom am I legally married? my husband 's print shop event (assuming, of course, recommended B 12 injec:My first husband has more services for her invita- it is more than a family-only tions . We can't guarantee
·children with someone else tions . She graciously affair). But that is irrelevant their effectiveness, but it's
CHAUNCEY - Tim and
:and I have only seen my accepted. She· often asked now. You've been invited to worth looking into.
Beverly Napper Russell of
:older kids a couple of times . my advice regarding her a wedding. If you wish to · Annie's Mailbox is writ· Chauncey announce the
:We live in another state and dress, catering, the loca- attend, do so. Please send a ten by Kathy Mitchell and bir!h of their first child, a
.I no longer know where tion of the ceremony and gift either way.
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- son, Timothy Dale Russell ,
they are. I need. help trying other things. I 11lso orgaDear Annie: This is in tors of the Ann Landers bornonJuly 16atO'Bleness
·to get this straightened out, nized an office shower.
response to "Tired of Being column. Please e-mail your Memorial
Hospital in
.so can you please give me
She spoke to me several Tired." l could have written questions to anniesmail- Athens. He w~ighed 9
.some guidance? - Mrs. times as if I were invited to that letter two years ago. box@comcast.net, or write pounds, 11.8 ounces.
Smith or Mrs. Jones?
the wedding, but no invita- Chronic Epstein-Barr di.s- to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Maternal grandparents are
Dear Mrs.: Unless your tion appeared. I assumed it ease is not just being tired. Box 118190, Chicago, IL Lena Napper of Rutland and
first husband initiated was an oversight and men- It's an effort tO get out of bed 60611 , To find out more the . late David "Gabby"
·divorce proceedings, you tioned it to her. She seemed some mornings. Sleep does about ·Annie's · Mailbox, Napper, Jr. Paternal grand. may still be legally married awkward and I regret not cure it, nor does inactivi, and read features by other _parents are Jim and Marilyn
to him . After all this time, inquiring. The next day, an ty. This disease affects your Creators Syndicate writeril Russell of Chauncey.
·he may be quite willing to invite was on 'my desk .
memory, emotions, energy and cartoonists, visit the
Maternal great-grandparlet you gQ without much
I realize our offer to help level, everything. After suf- Creators Syndicate Web ents are the late Walter and
·fuss , but there's no way to does not automatically fering for more than three page at www.creators .com. Margaret Hysell and the late are the late Rev. N. L. and
David and Mary Napper. Alice Russell and the late
Paternal great-grandparents Charles and Leona North.

•,.

..

Is she Mrs. Smith or Mrs. Jones?

PageA:J.

Prosecutor: Trucker scared boss before slayings
BOWLING GREEN (AP)
: - The head of a trucking
:company office feared for a
:week that he was going to
·"get beat . up or worse" the
:day he fired one of his dri: vers, a witness testified
:Monday.
Another witness told
·jurors that : Douglas Smith
. was so nervous that he called
:his fiance repeatedly during
·the hours before he was to
:meet with the driver. And he
:even sent her a message, Jet:ting her know that the driver
'had arrived, fiance Lucinda
:collins testified.
: Smith and another truck:ing.company employee who
:had been sent to bel p fire
·Calvin Neyland Jr. were shot
'and killed in August 2007 at
the Libelty Transportation

office in suburban Toledo.
· Neyland, 44, has pleaded
not guilty to two counts of
aggrl}vated IJlUrder and
could face the death penalty
if convicted.
He had been warned that he
was one violation from being
let go. He then had a traffic
accident a week before the
shootings that sealed his ftring, assistant Wood County
prosecutor Heather Baker
told jurors during opening
·statements of the trial.
Nerland went to the
truckmg office and first shot
Thomas Lazar, a former
Pennsylvania state trooper
who worked with the company and had been sent to
the office to assist with the
firing, Baker said . Neyland
then shot Smith, who was

sitting by himself in a second-floor office, she said .
1\vo men working at a
windbw company next door
testified Monday that they
lleard the first gunshots,
watched Neyland go into
the office and then heard a
·few more shots.
Both identified Neyland as
the man they saw with a gun. ·
Neyland was arrested
about three hours after the
slayings in a motel parking
lot in Temperance, Mich.,
about I 5 miles north of
where the shooting took
place.
His · motel room was
stocked with weapons. In
'his truck, police found a
handgun and a will in an
envelope addressed to
' Neyland's cousin, Baker

said. Tests showed that bulleis from the gun matched
those found at the trucking
company, she said.
'Authorities later found a
storage unit that belonged to
Neyland. It was filled with
more guns and ammunition,
Baker said.
Defense attorney J. Scott
Hicks made just a brief opening statement, telling jurors
to listen to the evidence
closely. He didn't indicate
what defense they would use.
Neyland worked for
Liberty for about a year and
was a good employee at first .
Collins said. But then Smith
began hearing complaints.
from customers and noticed
that he Wasn 't keeping up
with truck maintenance and
paperwork, she said.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 29.64
52.33
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 31.55
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS,
DAQ)- t8.45
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 20.67
Big Lots (NYSE)- 19.75
BBT (NYSE) - 32.20
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 19.10 Peoples (NASDAQ) - 16.87
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 19.45
Pepsico (NYSE) - 51.49
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.72
-9.28
. Rockwell (NYSE) - 22.63
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.14
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) Charming Shops (NASDAQ) - 3.10
1.13
Royal Dutch Shell - 44.70
City Holding (NASDAQ) Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 48.61
34.85
Colltna (NYSE) - 31 .59
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 49.67
Wendy's (NYSE) - 2.84
DuPont (NYSE) - 27.80
US Bank (NYSE) - 28.82
WesBanco (NYSE) - 23.44
Gannett (NYSE)- 9.13
Worthington (NYSE) - 10.05
Dally llock reports are the 4
General Electric (NYSE) p.m. t;T closing quotes of . ·
17.73
transactions lor Oct. 27, 2008,
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) provided by Edward .Jones
18.87
financial advisors Isaac Mills
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 34
Kroger (NYSE) - 25.89
In Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441
Limited Brands (NYSE) and Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-Q174.
10.18
Member SIPC.
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

�•

Tuesday, October 28, 2oo8

•

The Daily Sentinel

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

_ Congress shall make no law respteting an .
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
_ free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
·of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

PageA4.

·OPINION

'McCains slim hopes ride
on Obama s 'poor closer' record
tionist, raising taxes for , Democratic maJonty in
Is it "over"? Well, all the
those making more than Congress will .lead to exces- ,
indicators - from polls to
$250,000 and culling them sively liberal policies.
money tp troops on · the
Congress is even more
for everyone else.
ground - suggest an
unpopular
than President
It 's McCain who made
Obama victory. 'But ·it's not
"Joe the Plumber" famous Bush, and McCain would
quite "over" yet.
Morton
· in the final presidential do well to run hard in the
John McCain's slim
Kondracke debate ,'so it's eniirely legit- final days against the trihopes· for an upset resi priimate to question whether umvirate of Obama,
marily on the· fact that in
Wurzelbacher truly ·is the Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Dseveral crucial battleground
and
Senate
"ever) man" that McCain Calif. ,
states, Burack Obama still
Majority Leader Harry
makes him out to be,
has not broken through the
are
capable
of
turning
red
In
fact.
Wurzelbacher
is
a
Reid , D·Nev.
50 percent barrier, or has
But he has to be vivid
conservative ideologue who
once more ·
barely done so.
As McCain supporters said in a press conference about it - pointing o~~t
In
Florida,
the.
point
out, history does con- that he regards the gradual- explicitly
that
all- ..
Rea!ClearPolitics poll avertain
a
number
of
cases
in
ed
income
tax
as
"socialDemocratic
rule
will
deliver,
·
age · (as of this writing) which ' the underdog came
gives Obama a 2-poini lead, from behind in the final ism." And. it turns out, as the country into the hands
someone who makes less of · trade unions, trial
48.6 percent to 46.6 per,
days
and
won,
or
almost
.
than $100,000 a year, he lawyers,
taxers
and
cent. In Ohio, Obama leads
did:
Harry
Truman
in
1948.
would
benefit
more
from
spenders. It's a fact, for · .
48.3 to 45.5.
Hubert
Humphrey
in
1968
,
Obama's
tax·
program
than
instance, that Democrats
The same situation pre·Gerald
Ford
m
1976
and
AI
McCain's
_
even
if
he
suewanted
to put union reprevails in Nevada, where Gore in 2000.
Obama has 48 percent;
To pull out a victory this ceeded in buying the small sentatives onto the boards
North Carolina, 48.3;
ear, the McCain campaign plumbing company he of banks in their version o~
Y
the $700 billion rescue
Missouri. 48; West Virginia. is throwing not only the works for. ·
43:7; and Indiana, 45,
klt~.:hen sink at Obama, but
McCain has a fair argu- package, but Republicans
Obama has
broken the toilet, too - iltcluding ment to make that small stopped it.
It's entirely likely that'
through the 50 percent ridiculous
charges of businesses with profits of
threshold in Colorado "socialism" (from McCain $250 ,000 or more would Democrats wiJI try to bail
(50.4 percent), Minnesota himself) ,
"Castro-style have their taxes raised out other industries !Jesides ·
autos. for ·
(51.4), Washington (52) commun ism" (from Florida under Obama 's plan - and banking
and Michigan (51.3) but is Republican
Sen. Mel it is ' those businesses, instance ·- and to politistill within the margin of Martinez) and "palling · employing 10 or more .cize the investment deci·
error. ·
around with terrorists" workers, that haye created sions companies malce.
McCain is making a spe- (from vice presidential all of the new jobs in That is edging toward
cial effort to capture nominee Sarah Palin).
"socialism."
America this year.
Will any of this work? It's
Pennsylvania. where RCP
Palin, for all her value in
And it's also a good argushows him · II points . energizing the GOP base, ment · that Obama has . not a heavy lift. Right now,
behind, and eight of the past has not won women over repeated statements he Obama has a solid lead with
10 polls have given Obama to· McCain's side. Last made in June On ABC's 259 electoral votes, just II
a double-digit lead. But week's Pew poll showed "This Week" and on CNBC short of victory, according
still, the polls give Obama that Obama leads among that he might defer tax hikes to ReaiClearPolitics, to
an average of only 51.7 per- white women 47 percent to in the midst of a recession. McCain's 137.
"
cent of the vote .
To close the gap, McCain
43
percent,
whereas McCain is right to charge
Obama 's failu~ (o top 50 · President , Bush carried that tax hikes will deepen has to capture all eight cur"
especially
given them in 2004 by 55 :per- the downturn.
rent tossup states, totaling• ·
President Bush's rock-bot- cent to 44 percent.
92
electoral votes, the three- :
Whatever McCain. says
tom approval ratings, 90
And a Fox News poll about the economy, it does leaning toward McCain
percent public .dissatisfac- earlier this month showed not seem to be convincing (Montana, Georgia and
tion with (he status quo and that by 40 percent to 32 voters . The Washington · West Virginia), with 23
a terrible economy - sug- percent, voters said they Post/ ABC poll showed on votes , and carry· Virginia,
gests that he still has not were less lik!!IY to vote for Tuesday that , by 55 per- with
13, and. · eithet
completely "made the McCain because of Palin , cent to 36 percent, they Colorado, with nine, ot ·
sale."
while by 34 percent to 23 think that Obama under- New Mexico, with five, curMoreover, his record in percent, Obama 's choice stand.s their economic rently "leaning" toward
the primary campaign of gaffe-prone Sen. Joseph problems better than Ol&gt;ama.
Sen,
Hillary Biden, D-DeL, made them McCain does.
against
Or, he needs to steal a big
Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., more inclined to vote for · And, 51 percent to 43 per- state such as Michigan or
suggests that · he is ·a poor him.
currently
cent, they say that Obama is Pennsylvania,
"closer." It's no wonder he
·
as
solidly
for
regarded
The "socialism" charge the stronger leade{ •
·
and Clinton were encourag- is based ·on Obama's state- agreeing with Gen. Colin Obama.
ing early voting in Florida ment to Ohio man Joe Powell that , contrary 'to
To do it, McCain needs
on Monday.
Wurzelbacher that he McCain's claims, Obama is more than good arguments.
Obama current! y leAds He needs a miracle.
wanted to "spread the qualified to be president.
but is either just under or wealth around' - as if
Perhaps McCain's best
(Morton Kondracke is
just over 50 percent - in there · has ever been any remaining argument is that executive editor of Roll
eight states carried once or doubt that Obama's tax electing Obama president Call , the l!ewspaper oj
twice by Bush and hence policies were redistribu- with
an
expanding Capitol Hill.)

: Today is Tuesday, Oct. 28. the 302nd day of 2008, There
are 64 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: Fifty years ago, on Oct. 28,
1958 , the Roman Catholic patriarch of Venice , Angelo
Giuseppe Roncalli , was elected Pope; he took the narne
John XXIII.
.
. On this date: In 1636, the General Court of
Massachusetts passed a legislative act establishing Harvard
College.
·
·
' In 1776. the Battle of White Plains was fought during the
Revolutionary War, resulting in a limited British victory.
In 1858, Rowland Hussey Macy opened his first New
York store at Sixth Avenue and 14th Street in Manhattan.
In 1886, the Statue of Liberty, a gift from the people of
France, was dedicated in New York Harbor by President
· Cleveland.
. In 1893, Peter llyich Tchaikovsky conducted the first
public performan€e of his Symphony No. 6 in B 'minor
(''Pathetique") in St . Petersburg, Russia: just nine days
before his death.
· In 1918, the Republic of Czechoslovakia proclaimed its
independence . .
. In 1919, Congress enacted the Volstead Act , which provided for enforcement of Prohibition, over President
Wilson 's veto.
In 1958, the Samuel Beckett play "Krapp's Last Tape"
premiered in London .
In 1962, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev informed the
United States that he had ordered the dismantling of missile
bases in Cuba.
In 1980, President Carter and Republican presidential
nominee Ronald Reagan faced · off in a nationally broadcast, 90-minute debate in Cleveland.
One year ago·: Fire ravaged a North Carolina beach
house, killing seven college students. Argentina's first lady,
Cristina Fernandez. claimed victory in the country's presidential election; she became the first woman elected to the
post. The Boston Red Sox swept to their second World
Series title in four years with a 4-3 win over the Colorado
Rockies in Game 4. Country star Porter Wagoner died in
Nashville , Tenn. , at age 80.
Today's Birthdays: Jazz singer Cleo Laine is 81, Actress
Joan Plowright is 79. Musician-songwriter Charlie Daniels
is 72. Singer Curtis Lee is 67. Actor Dennis Franz is 64 .
Actress Telma Hopkins is 60. Olympic track and field gold
medalist Bruce Jenner is 59, Actress Annie Potts is 56.
Microsoft chairman Bill Gutes is 53. Country singer-musician Ron He1uby (Jil~ Buffalo Club) is 50. Actor Mark
"The assessment of the
Derwin is 48. Actr• Lauren Holly is 45. Actress Jami
Gertz is 43 .Actor-comedian Andy Richter is 42. Actress death penalty, however
Julia Roberts is 41 . Country singer-musician Caitlin Cary is well designed the system
for doing so, remains a ·
~. Singer Ben Harper is 39. Country singer Brad Paisley
IS 36. Actor Joaquin Phoenix is 34. Singer Justin Guarini human endeavor wit~ a
Nat
{''American Idol'') is 30. Pop singer Brett Dennen is 29. consequent risk of error
that
may
not
be
remedia~ock musician Dave Tirio (Plain White T's) is 29.
Hentoff
Thought for Today: "Next to excellence is the apprecia- ble." - Judge Carolyn
tion of it." - William Makepeace Thackeray, British King of the 5th Circuit
Court of Appeals, 2006.
~uthor ( 1811 -1863).
.
Having reported on the
Supreme Court in books murder of an . off-duty
•
•
and column~ for decades , I police . officer who was
LETT~RS TO THE
am well aware of King',s putting his life on the line
EDITOR
assessment , but never to
protect
innocent
before
have
I
seen
such
an
bystanders."
Leuers 10 the editor are welcome. Tliey should be less
However, in the case of
than 300 words. Allleuers are subject to editinfl, must be outright denial of funda0-year·old
mental
justice
as,
on
Oct.
Davis,
4
~igned, and include address and tele(lllone number. No
14,
when
the
Supreme
!)essions
continued:
"The
unsigned leiters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste , addressing issues, not persoiUilities. Leiters of Court sent Troy Anthony murder weapon was never
found, and other important
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- Davis to be executed.
This
case,
Davis
'
physical evidence was
ed for publication.
.
lawyers told the Supreme missing . Key witnesses
Court in July, "allows this made inconsistent statecourt an opportunity to ments , and seven out of the
determine what it has only nine non' police witnesses
before . assumed: that the . have now recanted or ·
(USPS
213-960)
execution of an innocent · changed their original tesReader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
man is constitutionally timony, some stating that
Co.
.
they had been pressured by
abhorrent."
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon, Monday
In this country and around the police to implicate
Our ffialn concem in all stories is to through · Friday, 1 11 Court Street,
the world, the basic fairness Davis."
'be aCOJrate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ofllo. Second-class postage
of Davis' conviction has
Moreover - and 1 write
In a story, caN the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
been
questioned
by,
among
this
as I found out that an
Member: The Associated Press and
992·2156.
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
others , conservative fotmer execution date for Davis has
Po•tmaller! Send address correcCongressman
Bob Barr, a been set for Oct. 27 in
•
Our main number Is
tions to The Daily Sen tinel , 111 Court
strong
supporter
of the Georgia - the .Supreme
"
(740) 992·2156.
· Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
death
penalty;
Pope Court, our ultimate decider
Department extensions ere:
Benedict
XVI;
and of due/rocess - had also
Subscription Rates
Archbishop Desmond Tutu ignore
that, Sessions
By carrier or motor route
News
One month
'10.27
of South Africa.
emphasizes, "One of the
~dltor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12 One year .
'115.84
Davis
was
convicted
in
two witnesses who has not
Dally
50'
:Reporter: Brian Reed, E&lt;l. 14
1991
of
murdel'ing
an
offrecanted his testimony has
Senior Citizen rates
. Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13
duty
Savanmut,
Ga.,
police
now been implicated as the
One month
'1 0.27
real murderer by two witofficer in!989.
One year
'103.90
Slbicilbs shcr.Jd remit in lldwn::e
I have been most nesses at trial and four new
Advertising
impressed ily a statement witnesses."
"()ut8kle SIIIH: Davo Harris, Ext 15 dlnlct kl lho Dolly - · No sub·
scription by mall permitted in areas
Jrom William Sessions, the
Is that enough reasonable
~=~ SIIIH: Brenda DaviS, Ex116 where home canier service .is avail·
director of the FBI under doubt? Not for the Supreme
1:1
-rrc.: Judy Clark, Exi.IO
able.
President Reagan, the elder Court. There's more. Did
Mall Subacrlptlon
George
Bush and Bill Davis, during his trial,
General Manager
Inside Melga County
Clinton:
receive sufficiently compeCharlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32 .26
"Troy
Anthony
Davis
has
tent
legal counsel under our
26 Weel&lt;s
'64.20
been
on
.
death
row
in
rule
of Jaw? Appellate
! l Weeks
'127.11
E-mail:
Georgia for rnore than 15 courts have overturned
news@ mydailysentinel.com
Outalde Malga County
years for the murder of a cases when a defendant's
13 Weeks
'53.55
police offi~er .... I believ.e lawyer has failed that cruWeb:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
that there IS no more sen- cia! obligation.
www. myd~lysentlnol.com
52 Weeks
'214.21
ous
violent crime than the
Writes Sessions: " It '
•

Roberts Supreme Court:
Nine
executioners
.

, The Daily Sentinel

Obituaries

Tuesday, October 28, 2008'

Juanita 'Kathryn' RusseU

Deaths
Florence LoVe
· POINT 'PLEASANT, W.Va, -: Florence Evelyn Machir
Love. 86, Letart, W.Va., died Sunday morning, Oct. 26,
2008. at her home.
Service will be at I p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2008, at
Cri:iw-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial
will be in Suncrest Cemetery in Point Pleasant. Friends may
call from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at Crow Hussell Funeral Home.
. Memorial contributions may be made to the Heights
United Methodist Church Educational or Building Funds,
• 2016 N. Main St., Point Pleasant.
Online condolences at www.crowhussellfh.com.

. ·. Marsha (Clevinger) Hall
. . GALLIPOUS FERRY, W.Va. ...., Marsha (Clevinger)
Hall, 36, of Gallipolis ~erry. W.Va., died Monday,.Oct. 27,
2008, She was the wife of John Hall.
· ·
. Funeral arrangements are incomplete and. will be
announced by Crow-Hussell Funeral Home. An online
guest ~~istry is available at www.crowhussellfh.co~.

Local Briefs

Kathleen Miller-Temple,
and Tonya Woodbridge.
· The following supplemental contracts were approved:
follows: Chris Carroll, seventh grade boys basketball
coach; Robert Cross , eighth
grade . boys basketball
coach; David Weber, assistant varsity boys basketball
.coach; Susan Parsons, elementary choir advisor.
Stephanie Allen, Carmel
Evans, Angela Spencer, and
Angela · Yongue
were
approved as substitute
teacher aides for the remainder of the scbool year.
Approved as volunteers.
were:
Christi · Adams,
Rachael Arix, Tricia Baer,
Crystal Bailey, Sarah Barber,
Mischelle Beeler, Stephanie
Brewer, Shelly Caldwell,
Lisa Catlett, Debra Cochran,
Shelly ·Combs,. Tracie
ConnQlly, Gary Curtis, Kyle
Davis, Astrid Santos Dia7.
Amanda Dill, Mindey
Durst, Kacy Ervin, Sonja
Fick, Randi Gheen, Wenola

Lunch Along the River

cussed repairs· needed for Sue Grueser, Joe and Janet
the civic center and activi- Bolin.
and
Heath
ties to be held there. Dave Richmond .
Boyd discussed plans for a
Anyone interested in
December basketball tour- working at the center or
nament.
who would like to be a
Members present were member should contact the
Mayor Lowell Vance, village office or any of the
Margaret Vance, Joan May, members.

Fires rron1 Page Al
were heavy flames showing
from the roof and second
floor. Tankers were used to
douse the fire because there is
no hydrant pn Beech· Street.
Assisting Pomeroy were the
Middleport,
Syracuse,
Rutland and Mason, W.Va.
Volunteer Fire Departments.
Blaettnar said it's possible
the fire was electrical in
nature and appears to have
started between the second
floor and attic area though

that has not been confirmed . been damaged in a windstoll1)
Arriving around 4 a.m., and the cause of the fire
emergency personnel were remains undetermined. No
finished at the scene 7 a.m. injuries were reported.
There were not .injuries
· A strucrure fire at a home
reported .
converted into apartments on
At around 7 p.m. Frid&lt;!y. North Third in Middleport
the Pomeroy. Middleport and was also reported on ·
Syracuse. Volunteer Fire Saturday. The upper floo~
Deparnnents were called to a were reported damaged and
structure fire · involving a both the Middleport and
va~;ant trailer on Peach Fork
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire ·
Road. Blaettnar said the unoc· Departments responded . No
cupied trailer had previously further details were available.

Eastern rrom PageAl
Griffin; Pamela Hartenbach ,
Amy Hill, Lynn Hoffman,
Tammy Hoffman, Michelle
Holsinger, Amanda Honaker,
Tabitha Homer, Andy
Jenkins, Janel Kennedy,
Deborah King, Jody King,
Kenda Lawrence, Rachel
Lee, Heather Long.
Melissa Milliron, Kerry
Moodispiugh, Samantha
Mugrage, Christine Mulford,
Sarah Oldaker, Wendy
Pierce, Angela Powell,
Freddie Queen, Amanda
Reed, Natasha · Ridenour,
John Rus.~ell. Kesha Sarver,
Christina Schrei::kengost, Juli
Simpson, Amanda Smith,
Tanya Smith, Robin Swain,
Melissa· Van Meter, Kelly
Watson, Brandi Wells, Faith
Wells , Ed Werry, Sandy
Williams.
Delta Dawn Weddle was
approved as a substilute
cook for the remainder of
the year.
The board also:
• Approved an agreement
with the . Athens-Meigs

Educational Service Center Week for the 'week of
for the period school year October 23,
·
2008-09 to provide supervi• Approved having an
sory and educational sup- auction for the disposal of
_port services.
District assets no longer
• Approved the following needed or suitable for conrecipients for the Class of tinued district use.
··
2008 Educational Foundation
• Approved a · contraet
Scholarships: Valedictorian with Ohio University fof
Andrew T. Bissell. Kyle A. research services in conRawson, Morgan R. Werry; junction ·with the dis tric~
Salutatorian Ryan D. Davis; mental health initiative. ~
Green (Four Year ·Program),
• Approved an extension
Nathan Carroll; White (Two of the vending contract witti
Year Program), Nikita Pepsi of Athens.
Young.
• Approved bid· ,advertis•
• Approved the following ing for the walkway enclostudents
for
Open sure project between the
Enrollment for the remain- high school and elementary
der of the 2008-09 school schooL
"year: Brett Rose , Amber
• Approved the financial
Pryor, Tylor Pryor.
reports for the month of
• Approved a request for September as submitted. ·
disposal of books and other
• Approved the five year
library or media assets that forecast for the OctobeF
have been deemed unsuitable submission to the Ohio
for continued district use as Department of Education. .
submitted by Library Media
• Set the next meeting for
Specialist, Chad Griffith.
6:30p.m. on Nov. 19. in the
• Approved a resolution Elementary
Librar}'
approvmg Red Ribbon Conference Room.

warnings that are not documented. Examples· include
placement of political signs,
high grass issues and other
minor property issues that
do not require citations."
Earlier this month, counCil approved the Mayor's
Report which took in
$i 6,997 in fines and forfeitures as submitted on Oct.
13. There were 175 traffic
tickets issued~ sz;526.83

Code ·
'Enforcement
Officer Joey Riffle also prepared an activity log for
council to review in regards
. to his recent activities. The
Jog reports there had bee 68
totaJ rentaJ permit inspections processed; 10 open
RUTLAND - A youth Halloween dance will be held cases; II closed cases; and
from 7-10 p.m. on Friday at the Rutland Civic Center. what he described as "sevCostumes are optional, and food and adult supervision will eraJ minor cases and pro~­
be available.
lems that have been handled
ve'rbally ·or with written

· Halloween dance

Election dinners

center. Costumes
are
optional, and food will be
available, There will also be
games, and adults will
supervise.
The organization also
planned an Election Day
dinner for Nov . 4.
The organization . dis-

Pond

Pomeroy rrom PageAl

'
. ·r~~IDDLEPORT
The Middleport Community
Association will hold its last Lunch Along the River fundrais·
• er from 11 a.m. to I p.m. on Friday in Dave Diles Pl!fk .
. , The menu will include.chili and potato soup, sandwiches, cake and a soft drink for $5.
Proceeds benefit the Middleport July 4 fireworks display.
',

.

appears that the ,quality of feel a tug of guilt? They
legal representatiOn Dav1s are, after all, human
received during trial was, beings. like us. , And,
by his own lawyer's though this case has been
account, seriously defi- highly publicized, I detect· ,
cient." Defending Davis . ed no shudder ·among the .'.
was· the Georgia Resource citizenry at large. They
Center 311d.. Sessions were otherwise occupied
expll!ins, "A lawyer from with the disintegrating
the Resource Center stated economy and the raucous
in an affidavit that 'We were •presidential finale .
simply trying to avert total
Persistently active in try·
disaster rather than provide ing to save Davis from our
any kind of active or effec- . justice system has been
tive representation."'
Amnesty InternationaL Its
But nonetheless , the Southc;:rn regional director,
Supreme Court told the Jared Feuer, told The New
state of Georgia to extermi- York Times: "This decision ·
nate this man . Sessions' shows how flawed and
clear, damning analysis of i(l1moral the death penalty
how,
despite
the is. The court had been asked
Constitution, the High to rule on the basic question
Court
r4bber-stamped of guilt and innocence and
Davis ' conviction was pub- the constitutional right of an
lished by the Washington- individual to not be executbased
American · ed when there is doubt of
Constitution
Project. his guilt."
Sessions is a member of its
The doubt is towering.
bipartisan Death Penalty Added Feuer, "The court
Committee. . He
now ducked its obligation."
reminds us of what the late That's too kind. The Court
Chief Justice William failed the Constitution!
Rehnquist - hardly a foe
There are countries civiof the death penalty lized enough to have struck
wrote in 1993: "It is an down the death penalty.
unalterable fact that our Maybe, just maybe, Dav 1s
judicial system, like the will bave markedly enerhuman beings who admin- gized the rising movement
ister it , is.fallible."
in this nation to shut down
Does this exculpate the our death rows.
nine executioners on the
As for the Roberts ·
Roberts Court in its lethal Supreme Court, I would
judgment of Troy Davis? serenade it with Hank
When the Supreme C\lUrl, Will'iam's recording of
without comment, refused "Cold, Cold Heart" as it
to hear any more from . continues, despite the
Davis , there was no written warning of the late Justice
record of any member dis- Harry Blackmun, to "tinsenting . This often hap- ker w!!h the machinery of
pens, but there have been death.
times when one or more
(Nat Hentoff is a nation·
dissenters were so ago- ally renowned authority on
nized that they said so on tile First ~mendmenr and
the record . Th1s lime, there the Btl/ of Rrghts and author
was silence from even the of many , books, including .
four "liberal" members of "The War on the Bi!l ol
the Court.
Rrg~ts an~. tile Gathering
In the wee hours , does · Reststance (Seven Stories
any member of this Court Press, 2004).
''

Rutland organization plans youth Halloween dance

RUTLAND - Rutland
Civic
Community
Organization made plans
MASON, W.Va. - Juanita "Kathryn" Russell 79 fo~ a youth Halloween
at its recent meetin~ .
Mason, W.Va., who dedicated lter life .to her famili and dance
held
at
GHod •. passed away Oct.,24, 2008, at St. Mary's HospltaJ in Center. the Rutland Civ1c
untmgton, W.Va.
The dance will be beld
She was a homemaker, and a long-time member of the Ash
from
7-10 p.m. at the civic
Street ~burch in Middleport. She was born April 5, 1929, in
Cheshire, daughter of the late Roscoe and Bessie (Hood) Fife.
Sh~ was . also preceded in death by her brothers:
" Ray~ond F1~e. Claren~e Fife , John Fife,.and Lewis Fife;
a,nd SISterll: Margaret Fife, Marie Ralph, Ermajean Russell
a,nd Doroth,Y Veith.
·
' The two-story structure, for. Survivors are her loving husband, Delbert c. ·Russell of merly . known as the
Mason; ~ns : Danny Russell of Fort Meade, Fl~ .• and Haptonstall house, was home
Randy (Cmdy) Russell of Gallipolis; a daughter, Sherri to Carole Schwendeman
(Thomas) Sm1th of Parkville, Mo.; nine grandchildren: ..tho was home the night of
Danny Russell, Todd Russell, Shea Russell, Stephanie the fire along with a child,
Ru~ll. Ashley Russell, Bridgette Russell , Kyle Smith, according to the Pomeroy
~ah Sm1th, an~ Vtctona Smith; a brother: Roscoe (Betty) . Fire Department. Pomeroy
F1fe, Jr. of Middleport; sisters: Doris (Frank) Cook of Fire Ch1ef Rick Blaettnar · said Schwendeman and the
Charlotte, N.C. and Evelyn Thomas of Middleport.
. Friends may call .from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesday at the c,hild went to a neighbor's
. Fogelong-Thcker Funeral Home 111 Mason, W.Va.
house to call for help.
•
Funeral will be at I p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 29,2008 at
Blaettnar said once his
· Ash Street Church, Middleport, with Pastor Mark Morr~w department arrived there .
· and Pastor .Rod Walker officiating. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery.
' E-mail condolences to foglesongtucker@verizon .net.

·,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

'

.

.

received from parking
meters , $700 from tickets.
$290 from parking permils
for a total of $3,516.83.
Musser also
extended
sympathies on behalf of himself, Hysell . and council to
Proffitt and Councilman Jim
Sisson for the recent deaths ,
in their separate families, '
Council was joined at the
meeting by Proffitt and Sgt.
Brandy King .

from Page AI
around asking for donations
to be sent to the Village of
Pomeroy for the Pond
Restoration
Fund:
Arrangements to restock the
pond with fish once the
pond has been dredged arid
the other work completed
have been discus~ed witli
Keith Wood~ wildlife officer
with the Department of
Natural Resources.

RUTLAND - An Election Day dinner will be served all
day Nov. 4 at the Rutland Civic Center.

~ited

Metholiist Church will
: CHESTER - The Chester
have an election day dinner from 4:30-6:30 p.m. on Nov. 4.
The dinner will feature ham loaf and desserts' available for
in and take out. Call 985-4342 for carry-out orders.

eat
.

•
.

Scholarship deadline

'

POMEROY - Nov;

2.0 is the deadline for applications

for the Meigs County Retired Teachers' Scholarshi.P. ·

, Applicants must be.a ~ident of Meigs ~~un~. a JUniru: or .
senior currently enrolled m a college,. maJonng m educatiOn
and teDCher trauting, with a grade point average of at le115t 2.5.
Applications must include a current college transcript
showing the two previous yeats of credits and grades, a
r'esume of activities, work and volundler, and career objecdves listing at least three references including an instructpr, ~ current photograph for publicity purposes and the
r)arne and ·address ?f the college auended.
..
, All applicants w11I be evaJua!ed on GPA .ll:"d compliance
~ith requirements. Extra-curncular actlVIlles and career
objectives will be considered. ,
.
· Ap.plicatio.ns are to be ma1led t~ MCRT Scholmb1p
', Committee, c/o Joan Corder, 297 Wnght St., Pomefoy.

20% off all non-surgical cosmetic procedures
including:

Dinner theater

f

·Cosmetic Tattooing

1

Microdermabraslon

. RUTLAND - River City Players will perform the dinner theater, "The Best of River Ctty Players: A Look Back,"
Nov. 21 and 22, at Meigs Elementary School.
,
The show will feature songs from all ~t musicals the
group has performed since 200 I: '"The Mus1c Man," "WIZ8I'd
·of Oz ""Arinie, Get Your Gun," "Bye, Bye, Birdie," "Fiddler
on the Roof" "Seussical," "Seven Brides for Seven
Brothers " "oklahoma!" and songs from musicaJ revues .
· Perforr'ners will be accompanied by. a •four-piece band.
· tickets by reservation. are $25 an~ $20 for sem?rs, .55 ru:'d .
·older. They will·be available on Nov. lO.lnf?rmall?n ~s available by calling 992-6759 or 416-7860. Sealing IS lumted.

1

Vascular Laser

t

Thermage

~

Laser Hair Removal

Council rrom PageAl
properties now in bank
ownership after foreclosure.
In other business, council
passed a resolution authorizing approval of a 15year solid waste plan as
· proposed by the GalliaJackson-Meigs- Vinton
Solid Waste District .
Mayor Michael Gerlach is

,•

· a memJx:r of the board.
Counc1I also approved
payment ··o r biUs in the
amount of $26,588.92. .
Present were . counctl
members Joan Cra1g; Sandy
Brown, Rae Moore, Shawn
Rice, Craig Wehrung; and
Julia Houston., and Fiscal
Officer Susan Baker.

To Schedule.an Appointment,
Please Call: 740-446-5225

�•

Tuesday, October 28, 2oo8

•

The Daily Sentinel

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

_ Congress shall make no law respteting an .
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
_ free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
·of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY

PageA4.

·OPINION

'McCains slim hopes ride
on Obama s 'poor closer' record
tionist, raising taxes for , Democratic maJonty in
Is it "over"? Well, all the
those making more than Congress will .lead to exces- ,
indicators - from polls to
$250,000 and culling them sively liberal policies.
money tp troops on · the
Congress is even more
for everyone else.
ground - suggest an
unpopular
than President
It 's McCain who made
Obama victory. 'But ·it's not
"Joe the Plumber" famous Bush, and McCain would
quite "over" yet.
Morton
· in the final presidential do well to run hard in the
John McCain's slim
Kondracke debate ,'so it's eniirely legit- final days against the trihopes· for an upset resi priimate to question whether umvirate of Obama,
marily on the· fact that in
Wurzelbacher truly ·is the Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Dseveral crucial battleground
and
Senate
"ever) man" that McCain Calif. ,
states, Burack Obama still
Majority Leader Harry
makes him out to be,
has not broken through the
are
capable
of
turning
red
In
fact.
Wurzelbacher
is
a
Reid , D·Nev.
50 percent barrier, or has
But he has to be vivid
conservative ideologue who
once more ·
barely done so.
As McCain supporters said in a press conference about it - pointing o~~t
In
Florida,
the.
point
out, history does con- that he regards the gradual- explicitly
that
all- ..
Rea!ClearPolitics poll avertain
a
number
of
cases
in
ed
income
tax
as
"socialDemocratic
rule
will
deliver,
·
age · (as of this writing) which ' the underdog came
gives Obama a 2-poini lead, from behind in the final ism." And. it turns out, as the country into the hands
someone who makes less of · trade unions, trial
48.6 percent to 46.6 per,
days
and
won,
or
almost
.
than $100,000 a year, he lawyers,
taxers
and
cent. In Ohio, Obama leads
did:
Harry
Truman
in
1948.
would
benefit
more
from
spenders. It's a fact, for · .
48.3 to 45.5.
Hubert
Humphrey
in
1968
,
Obama's
tax·
program
than
instance, that Democrats
The same situation pre·Gerald
Ford
m
1976
and
AI
McCain's
_
even
if
he
suewanted
to put union reprevails in Nevada, where Gore in 2000.
Obama has 48 percent;
To pull out a victory this ceeded in buying the small sentatives onto the boards
North Carolina, 48.3;
ear, the McCain campaign plumbing company he of banks in their version o~
Y
the $700 billion rescue
Missouri. 48; West Virginia. is throwing not only the works for. ·
43:7; and Indiana, 45,
klt~.:hen sink at Obama, but
McCain has a fair argu- package, but Republicans
Obama has
broken the toilet, too - iltcluding ment to make that small stopped it.
It's entirely likely that'
through the 50 percent ridiculous
charges of businesses with profits of
threshold in Colorado "socialism" (from McCain $250 ,000 or more would Democrats wiJI try to bail
(50.4 percent), Minnesota himself) ,
"Castro-style have their taxes raised out other industries !Jesides ·
autos. for ·
(51.4), Washington (52) commun ism" (from Florida under Obama 's plan - and banking
and Michigan (51.3) but is Republican
Sen. Mel it is ' those businesses, instance ·- and to politistill within the margin of Martinez) and "palling · employing 10 or more .cize the investment deci·
error. ·
around with terrorists" workers, that haye created sions companies malce.
McCain is making a spe- (from vice presidential all of the new jobs in That is edging toward
cial effort to capture nominee Sarah Palin).
"socialism."
America this year.
Will any of this work? It's
Pennsylvania. where RCP
Palin, for all her value in
And it's also a good argushows him · II points . energizing the GOP base, ment · that Obama has . not a heavy lift. Right now,
behind, and eight of the past has not won women over repeated statements he Obama has a solid lead with
10 polls have given Obama to· McCain's side. Last made in June On ABC's 259 electoral votes, just II
a double-digit lead. But week's Pew poll showed "This Week" and on CNBC short of victory, according
still, the polls give Obama that Obama leads among that he might defer tax hikes to ReaiClearPolitics, to
an average of only 51.7 per- white women 47 percent to in the midst of a recession. McCain's 137.
"
cent of the vote .
To close the gap, McCain
43
percent,
whereas McCain is right to charge
Obama 's failu~ (o top 50 · President , Bush carried that tax hikes will deepen has to capture all eight cur"
especially
given them in 2004 by 55 :per- the downturn.
rent tossup states, totaling• ·
President Bush's rock-bot- cent to 44 percent.
92
electoral votes, the three- :
Whatever McCain. says
tom approval ratings, 90
And a Fox News poll about the economy, it does leaning toward McCain
percent public .dissatisfac- earlier this month showed not seem to be convincing (Montana, Georgia and
tion with (he status quo and that by 40 percent to 32 voters . The Washington · West Virginia), with 23
a terrible economy - sug- percent, voters said they Post/ ABC poll showed on votes , and carry· Virginia,
gests that he still has not were less lik!!IY to vote for Tuesday that , by 55 per- with
13, and. · eithet
completely "made the McCain because of Palin , cent to 36 percent, they Colorado, with nine, ot ·
sale."
while by 34 percent to 23 think that Obama under- New Mexico, with five, curMoreover, his record in percent, Obama 's choice stand.s their economic rently "leaning" toward
the primary campaign of gaffe-prone Sen. Joseph problems better than Ol&gt;ama.
Sen,
Hillary Biden, D-DeL, made them McCain does.
against
Or, he needs to steal a big
Rodham Clinton, D-N.Y., more inclined to vote for · And, 51 percent to 43 per- state such as Michigan or
suggests that · he is ·a poor him.
currently
cent, they say that Obama is Pennsylvania,
"closer." It's no wonder he
·
as
solidly
for
regarded
The "socialism" charge the stronger leade{ •
·
and Clinton were encourag- is based ·on Obama's state- agreeing with Gen. Colin Obama.
ing early voting in Florida ment to Ohio man Joe Powell that , contrary 'to
To do it, McCain needs
on Monday.
Wurzelbacher that he McCain's claims, Obama is more than good arguments.
Obama current! y leAds He needs a miracle.
wanted to "spread the qualified to be president.
but is either just under or wealth around' - as if
Perhaps McCain's best
(Morton Kondracke is
just over 50 percent - in there · has ever been any remaining argument is that executive editor of Roll
eight states carried once or doubt that Obama's tax electing Obama president Call , the l!ewspaper oj
twice by Bush and hence policies were redistribu- with
an
expanding Capitol Hill.)

: Today is Tuesday, Oct. 28. the 302nd day of 2008, There
are 64 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: Fifty years ago, on Oct. 28,
1958 , the Roman Catholic patriarch of Venice , Angelo
Giuseppe Roncalli , was elected Pope; he took the narne
John XXIII.
.
. On this date: In 1636, the General Court of
Massachusetts passed a legislative act establishing Harvard
College.
·
·
' In 1776. the Battle of White Plains was fought during the
Revolutionary War, resulting in a limited British victory.
In 1858, Rowland Hussey Macy opened his first New
York store at Sixth Avenue and 14th Street in Manhattan.
In 1886, the Statue of Liberty, a gift from the people of
France, was dedicated in New York Harbor by President
· Cleveland.
. In 1893, Peter llyich Tchaikovsky conducted the first
public performan€e of his Symphony No. 6 in B 'minor
(''Pathetique") in St . Petersburg, Russia: just nine days
before his death.
· In 1918, the Republic of Czechoslovakia proclaimed its
independence . .
. In 1919, Congress enacted the Volstead Act , which provided for enforcement of Prohibition, over President
Wilson 's veto.
In 1958, the Samuel Beckett play "Krapp's Last Tape"
premiered in London .
In 1962, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev informed the
United States that he had ordered the dismantling of missile
bases in Cuba.
In 1980, President Carter and Republican presidential
nominee Ronald Reagan faced · off in a nationally broadcast, 90-minute debate in Cleveland.
One year ago·: Fire ravaged a North Carolina beach
house, killing seven college students. Argentina's first lady,
Cristina Fernandez. claimed victory in the country's presidential election; she became the first woman elected to the
post. The Boston Red Sox swept to their second World
Series title in four years with a 4-3 win over the Colorado
Rockies in Game 4. Country star Porter Wagoner died in
Nashville , Tenn. , at age 80.
Today's Birthdays: Jazz singer Cleo Laine is 81, Actress
Joan Plowright is 79. Musician-songwriter Charlie Daniels
is 72. Singer Curtis Lee is 67. Actor Dennis Franz is 64 .
Actress Telma Hopkins is 60. Olympic track and field gold
medalist Bruce Jenner is 59, Actress Annie Potts is 56.
Microsoft chairman Bill Gutes is 53. Country singer-musician Ron He1uby (Jil~ Buffalo Club) is 50. Actor Mark
"The assessment of the
Derwin is 48. Actr• Lauren Holly is 45. Actress Jami
Gertz is 43 .Actor-comedian Andy Richter is 42. Actress death penalty, however
Julia Roberts is 41 . Country singer-musician Caitlin Cary is well designed the system
for doing so, remains a ·
~. Singer Ben Harper is 39. Country singer Brad Paisley
IS 36. Actor Joaquin Phoenix is 34. Singer Justin Guarini human endeavor wit~ a
Nat
{''American Idol'') is 30. Pop singer Brett Dennen is 29. consequent risk of error
that
may
not
be
remedia~ock musician Dave Tirio (Plain White T's) is 29.
Hentoff
Thought for Today: "Next to excellence is the apprecia- ble." - Judge Carolyn
tion of it." - William Makepeace Thackeray, British King of the 5th Circuit
Court of Appeals, 2006.
~uthor ( 1811 -1863).
.
Having reported on the
Supreme Court in books murder of an . off-duty
•
•
and column~ for decades , I police . officer who was
LETT~RS TO THE
am well aware of King',s putting his life on the line
EDITOR
assessment , but never to
protect
innocent
before
have
I
seen
such
an
bystanders."
Leuers 10 the editor are welcome. Tliey should be less
However, in the case of
than 300 words. Allleuers are subject to editinfl, must be outright denial of funda0-year·old
mental
justice
as,
on
Oct.
Davis,
4
~igned, and include address and tele(lllone number. No
14,
when
the
Supreme
!)essions
continued:
"The
unsigned leiters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste , addressing issues, not persoiUilities. Leiters of Court sent Troy Anthony murder weapon was never
found, and other important
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- Davis to be executed.
This
case,
Davis
'
physical evidence was
ed for publication.
.
lawyers told the Supreme missing . Key witnesses
Court in July, "allows this made inconsistent statecourt an opportunity to ments , and seven out of the
determine what it has only nine non' police witnesses
before . assumed: that the . have now recanted or ·
(USPS
213-960)
execution of an innocent · changed their original tesReader Services
Ohio Valley Publishing
man is constitutionally timony, some stating that
Co.
.
they had been pressured by
abhorrent."
Correction Polley
Published every afternoon, Monday
In this country and around the police to implicate
Our ffialn concem in all stories is to through · Friday, 1 11 Court Street,
the world, the basic fairness Davis."
'be aCOJrate. If you know of an error Pomeroy, Ofllo. Second-class postage
of Davis' conviction has
Moreover - and 1 write
In a story, caN the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
been
questioned
by,
among
this
as I found out that an
Member: The Associated Press and
992·2156.
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
others , conservative fotmer execution date for Davis has
Po•tmaller! Send address correcCongressman
Bob Barr, a been set for Oct. 27 in
•
Our main number Is
tions to The Daily Sen tinel , 111 Court
strong
supporter
of the Georgia - the .Supreme
"
(740) 992·2156.
· Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
death
penalty;
Pope Court, our ultimate decider
Department extensions ere:
Benedict
XVI;
and of due/rocess - had also
Subscription Rates
Archbishop Desmond Tutu ignore
that, Sessions
By carrier or motor route
News
One month
'10.27
of South Africa.
emphasizes, "One of the
~dltor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. 12 One year .
'115.84
Davis
was
convicted
in
two witnesses who has not
Dally
50'
:Reporter: Brian Reed, E&lt;l. 14
1991
of
murdel'ing
an
offrecanted his testimony has
Senior Citizen rates
. Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13
duty
Savanmut,
Ga.,
police
now been implicated as the
One month
'1 0.27
real murderer by two witofficer in!989.
One year
'103.90
Slbicilbs shcr.Jd remit in lldwn::e
I have been most nesses at trial and four new
Advertising
impressed ily a statement witnesses."
"()ut8kle SIIIH: Davo Harris, Ext 15 dlnlct kl lho Dolly - · No sub·
scription by mall permitted in areas
Jrom William Sessions, the
Is that enough reasonable
~=~ SIIIH: Brenda DaviS, Ex116 where home canier service .is avail·
director of the FBI under doubt? Not for the Supreme
1:1
-rrc.: Judy Clark, Exi.IO
able.
President Reagan, the elder Court. There's more. Did
Mall Subacrlptlon
George
Bush and Bill Davis, during his trial,
General Manager
Inside Melga County
Clinton:
receive sufficiently compeCharlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
13 Weeks
'32 .26
"Troy
Anthony
Davis
has
tent
legal counsel under our
26 Weel&lt;s
'64.20
been
on
.
death
row
in
rule
of Jaw? Appellate
! l Weeks
'127.11
E-mail:
Georgia for rnore than 15 courts have overturned
news@ mydailysentinel.com
Outalde Malga County
years for the murder of a cases when a defendant's
13 Weeks
'53.55
police offi~er .... I believ.e lawyer has failed that cruWeb:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
that there IS no more sen- cia! obligation.
www. myd~lysentlnol.com
52 Weeks
'214.21
ous
violent crime than the
Writes Sessions: " It '
•

Roberts Supreme Court:
Nine
executioners
.

, The Daily Sentinel

Obituaries

Tuesday, October 28, 2008'

Juanita 'Kathryn' RusseU

Deaths
Florence LoVe
· POINT 'PLEASANT, W.Va, -: Florence Evelyn Machir
Love. 86, Letart, W.Va., died Sunday morning, Oct. 26,
2008. at her home.
Service will be at I p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 29, 2008, at
Cri:iw-Hussell Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial
will be in Suncrest Cemetery in Point Pleasant. Friends may
call from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday at Crow Hussell Funeral Home.
. Memorial contributions may be made to the Heights
United Methodist Church Educational or Building Funds,
• 2016 N. Main St., Point Pleasant.
Online condolences at www.crowhussellfh.com.

. ·. Marsha (Clevinger) Hall
. . GALLIPOUS FERRY, W.Va. ...., Marsha (Clevinger)
Hall, 36, of Gallipolis ~erry. W.Va., died Monday,.Oct. 27,
2008, She was the wife of John Hall.
· ·
. Funeral arrangements are incomplete and. will be
announced by Crow-Hussell Funeral Home. An online
guest ~~istry is available at www.crowhussellfh.co~.

Local Briefs

Kathleen Miller-Temple,
and Tonya Woodbridge.
· The following supplemental contracts were approved:
follows: Chris Carroll, seventh grade boys basketball
coach; Robert Cross , eighth
grade . boys basketball
coach; David Weber, assistant varsity boys basketball
.coach; Susan Parsons, elementary choir advisor.
Stephanie Allen, Carmel
Evans, Angela Spencer, and
Angela · Yongue
were
approved as substitute
teacher aides for the remainder of the scbool year.
Approved as volunteers.
were:
Christi · Adams,
Rachael Arix, Tricia Baer,
Crystal Bailey, Sarah Barber,
Mischelle Beeler, Stephanie
Brewer, Shelly Caldwell,
Lisa Catlett, Debra Cochran,
Shelly ·Combs,. Tracie
ConnQlly, Gary Curtis, Kyle
Davis, Astrid Santos Dia7.
Amanda Dill, Mindey
Durst, Kacy Ervin, Sonja
Fick, Randi Gheen, Wenola

Lunch Along the River

cussed repairs· needed for Sue Grueser, Joe and Janet
the civic center and activi- Bolin.
and
Heath
ties to be held there. Dave Richmond .
Boyd discussed plans for a
Anyone interested in
December basketball tour- working at the center or
nament.
who would like to be a
Members present were member should contact the
Mayor Lowell Vance, village office or any of the
Margaret Vance, Joan May, members.

Fires rron1 Page Al
were heavy flames showing
from the roof and second
floor. Tankers were used to
douse the fire because there is
no hydrant pn Beech· Street.
Assisting Pomeroy were the
Middleport,
Syracuse,
Rutland and Mason, W.Va.
Volunteer Fire Departments.
Blaettnar said it's possible
the fire was electrical in
nature and appears to have
started between the second
floor and attic area though

that has not been confirmed . been damaged in a windstoll1)
Arriving around 4 a.m., and the cause of the fire
emergency personnel were remains undetermined. No
finished at the scene 7 a.m. injuries were reported.
There were not .injuries
· A strucrure fire at a home
reported .
converted into apartments on
At around 7 p.m. Frid&lt;!y. North Third in Middleport
the Pomeroy. Middleport and was also reported on ·
Syracuse. Volunteer Fire Saturday. The upper floo~
Deparnnents were called to a were reported damaged and
structure fire · involving a both the Middleport and
va~;ant trailer on Peach Fork
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire ·
Road. Blaettnar said the unoc· Departments responded . No
cupied trailer had previously further details were available.

Eastern rrom PageAl
Griffin; Pamela Hartenbach ,
Amy Hill, Lynn Hoffman,
Tammy Hoffman, Michelle
Holsinger, Amanda Honaker,
Tabitha Homer, Andy
Jenkins, Janel Kennedy,
Deborah King, Jody King,
Kenda Lawrence, Rachel
Lee, Heather Long.
Melissa Milliron, Kerry
Moodispiugh, Samantha
Mugrage, Christine Mulford,
Sarah Oldaker, Wendy
Pierce, Angela Powell,
Freddie Queen, Amanda
Reed, Natasha · Ridenour,
John Rus.~ell. Kesha Sarver,
Christina Schrei::kengost, Juli
Simpson, Amanda Smith,
Tanya Smith, Robin Swain,
Melissa· Van Meter, Kelly
Watson, Brandi Wells, Faith
Wells , Ed Werry, Sandy
Williams.
Delta Dawn Weddle was
approved as a substilute
cook for the remainder of
the year.
The board also:
• Approved an agreement
with the . Athens-Meigs

Educational Service Center Week for the 'week of
for the period school year October 23,
·
2008-09 to provide supervi• Approved having an
sory and educational sup- auction for the disposal of
_port services.
District assets no longer
• Approved the following needed or suitable for conrecipients for the Class of tinued district use.
··
2008 Educational Foundation
• Approved a · contraet
Scholarships: Valedictorian with Ohio University fof
Andrew T. Bissell. Kyle A. research services in conRawson, Morgan R. Werry; junction ·with the dis tric~
Salutatorian Ryan D. Davis; mental health initiative. ~
Green (Four Year ·Program),
• Approved an extension
Nathan Carroll; White (Two of the vending contract witti
Year Program), Nikita Pepsi of Athens.
Young.
• Approved bid· ,advertis•
• Approved the following ing for the walkway enclostudents
for
Open sure project between the
Enrollment for the remain- high school and elementary
der of the 2008-09 school schooL
"year: Brett Rose , Amber
• Approved the financial
Pryor, Tylor Pryor.
reports for the month of
• Approved a request for September as submitted. ·
disposal of books and other
• Approved the five year
library or media assets that forecast for the OctobeF
have been deemed unsuitable submission to the Ohio
for continued district use as Department of Education. .
submitted by Library Media
• Set the next meeting for
Specialist, Chad Griffith.
6:30p.m. on Nov. 19. in the
• Approved a resolution Elementary
Librar}'
approvmg Red Ribbon Conference Room.

warnings that are not documented. Examples· include
placement of political signs,
high grass issues and other
minor property issues that
do not require citations."
Earlier this month, counCil approved the Mayor's
Report which took in
$i 6,997 in fines and forfeitures as submitted on Oct.
13. There were 175 traffic
tickets issued~ sz;526.83

Code ·
'Enforcement
Officer Joey Riffle also prepared an activity log for
council to review in regards
. to his recent activities. The
Jog reports there had bee 68
totaJ rentaJ permit inspections processed; 10 open
RUTLAND - A youth Halloween dance will be held cases; II closed cases; and
from 7-10 p.m. on Friday at the Rutland Civic Center. what he described as "sevCostumes are optional, and food and adult supervision will eraJ minor cases and pro~­
be available.
lems that have been handled
ve'rbally ·or with written

· Halloween dance

Election dinners

center. Costumes
are
optional, and food will be
available, There will also be
games, and adults will
supervise.
The organization also
planned an Election Day
dinner for Nov . 4.
The organization . dis-

Pond

Pomeroy rrom PageAl

'
. ·r~~IDDLEPORT
The Middleport Community
Association will hold its last Lunch Along the River fundrais·
• er from 11 a.m. to I p.m. on Friday in Dave Diles Pl!fk .
. , The menu will include.chili and potato soup, sandwiches, cake and a soft drink for $5.
Proceeds benefit the Middleport July 4 fireworks display.
',

.

appears that the ,quality of feel a tug of guilt? They
legal representatiOn Dav1s are, after all, human
received during trial was, beings. like us. , And,
by his own lawyer's though this case has been
account, seriously defi- highly publicized, I detect· ,
cient." Defending Davis . ed no shudder ·among the .'.
was· the Georgia Resource citizenry at large. They
Center 311d.. Sessions were otherwise occupied
expll!ins, "A lawyer from with the disintegrating
the Resource Center stated economy and the raucous
in an affidavit that 'We were •presidential finale .
simply trying to avert total
Persistently active in try·
disaster rather than provide ing to save Davis from our
any kind of active or effec- . justice system has been
tive representation."'
Amnesty InternationaL Its
But nonetheless , the Southc;:rn regional director,
Supreme Court told the Jared Feuer, told The New
state of Georgia to extermi- York Times: "This decision ·
nate this man . Sessions' shows how flawed and
clear, damning analysis of i(l1moral the death penalty
how,
despite
the is. The court had been asked
Constitution, the High to rule on the basic question
Court
r4bber-stamped of guilt and innocence and
Davis ' conviction was pub- the constitutional right of an
lished by the Washington- individual to not be executbased
American · ed when there is doubt of
Constitution
Project. his guilt."
Sessions is a member of its
The doubt is towering.
bipartisan Death Penalty Added Feuer, "The court
Committee. . He
now ducked its obligation."
reminds us of what the late That's too kind. The Court
Chief Justice William failed the Constitution!
Rehnquist - hardly a foe
There are countries civiof the death penalty lized enough to have struck
wrote in 1993: "It is an down the death penalty.
unalterable fact that our Maybe, just maybe, Dav 1s
judicial system, like the will bave markedly enerhuman beings who admin- gized the rising movement
ister it , is.fallible."
in this nation to shut down
Does this exculpate the our death rows.
nine executioners on the
As for the Roberts ·
Roberts Court in its lethal Supreme Court, I would
judgment of Troy Davis? serenade it with Hank
When the Supreme C\lUrl, Will'iam's recording of
without comment, refused "Cold, Cold Heart" as it
to hear any more from . continues, despite the
Davis , there was no written warning of the late Justice
record of any member dis- Harry Blackmun, to "tinsenting . This often hap- ker w!!h the machinery of
pens, but there have been death.
times when one or more
(Nat Hentoff is a nation·
dissenters were so ago- ally renowned authority on
nized that they said so on tile First ~mendmenr and
the record . Th1s lime, there the Btl/ of Rrghts and author
was silence from even the of many , books, including .
four "liberal" members of "The War on the Bi!l ol
the Court.
Rrg~ts an~. tile Gathering
In the wee hours , does · Reststance (Seven Stories
any member of this Court Press, 2004).
''

Rutland organization plans youth Halloween dance

RUTLAND - Rutland
Civic
Community
Organization made plans
MASON, W.Va. - Juanita "Kathryn" Russell 79 fo~ a youth Halloween
at its recent meetin~ .
Mason, W.Va., who dedicated lter life .to her famili and dance
held
at
GHod •. passed away Oct.,24, 2008, at St. Mary's HospltaJ in Center. the Rutland Civ1c
untmgton, W.Va.
The dance will be beld
She was a homemaker, and a long-time member of the Ash
from
7-10 p.m. at the civic
Street ~burch in Middleport. She was born April 5, 1929, in
Cheshire, daughter of the late Roscoe and Bessie (Hood) Fife.
Sh~ was . also preceded in death by her brothers:
" Ray~ond F1~e. Claren~e Fife , John Fife,.and Lewis Fife;
a,nd SISterll: Margaret Fife, Marie Ralph, Ermajean Russell
a,nd Doroth,Y Veith.
·
' The two-story structure, for. Survivors are her loving husband, Delbert c. ·Russell of merly . known as the
Mason; ~ns : Danny Russell of Fort Meade, Fl~ .• and Haptonstall house, was home
Randy (Cmdy) Russell of Gallipolis; a daughter, Sherri to Carole Schwendeman
(Thomas) Sm1th of Parkville, Mo.; nine grandchildren: ..tho was home the night of
Danny Russell, Todd Russell, Shea Russell, Stephanie the fire along with a child,
Ru~ll. Ashley Russell, Bridgette Russell , Kyle Smith, according to the Pomeroy
~ah Sm1th, an~ Vtctona Smith; a brother: Roscoe (Betty) . Fire Department. Pomeroy
F1fe, Jr. of Middleport; sisters: Doris (Frank) Cook of Fire Ch1ef Rick Blaettnar · said Schwendeman and the
Charlotte, N.C. and Evelyn Thomas of Middleport.
. Friends may call .from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesday at the c,hild went to a neighbor's
. Fogelong-Thcker Funeral Home 111 Mason, W.Va.
house to call for help.
•
Funeral will be at I p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 29,2008 at
Blaettnar said once his
· Ash Street Church, Middleport, with Pastor Mark Morr~w department arrived there .
· and Pastor .Rod Walker officiating. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery.
' E-mail condolences to foglesongtucker@verizon .net.

·,

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

'

.

.

received from parking
meters , $700 from tickets.
$290 from parking permils
for a total of $3,516.83.
Musser also
extended
sympathies on behalf of himself, Hysell . and council to
Proffitt and Councilman Jim
Sisson for the recent deaths ,
in their separate families, '
Council was joined at the
meeting by Proffitt and Sgt.
Brandy King .

from Page AI
around asking for donations
to be sent to the Village of
Pomeroy for the Pond
Restoration
Fund:
Arrangements to restock the
pond with fish once the
pond has been dredged arid
the other work completed
have been discus~ed witli
Keith Wood~ wildlife officer
with the Department of
Natural Resources.

RUTLAND - An Election Day dinner will be served all
day Nov. 4 at the Rutland Civic Center.

~ited

Metholiist Church will
: CHESTER - The Chester
have an election day dinner from 4:30-6:30 p.m. on Nov. 4.
The dinner will feature ham loaf and desserts' available for
in and take out. Call 985-4342 for carry-out orders.

eat
.

•
.

Scholarship deadline

'

POMEROY - Nov;

2.0 is the deadline for applications

for the Meigs County Retired Teachers' Scholarshi.P. ·

, Applicants must be.a ~ident of Meigs ~~un~. a JUniru: or .
senior currently enrolled m a college,. maJonng m educatiOn
and teDCher trauting, with a grade point average of at le115t 2.5.
Applications must include a current college transcript
showing the two previous yeats of credits and grades, a
r'esume of activities, work and volundler, and career objecdves listing at least three references including an instructpr, ~ current photograph for publicity purposes and the
r)arne and ·address ?f the college auended.
..
, All applicants w11I be evaJua!ed on GPA .ll:"d compliance
~ith requirements. Extra-curncular actlVIlles and career
objectives will be considered. ,
.
· Ap.plicatio.ns are to be ma1led t~ MCRT Scholmb1p
', Committee, c/o Joan Corder, 297 Wnght St., Pomefoy.

20% off all non-surgical cosmetic procedures
including:

Dinner theater

f

·Cosmetic Tattooing

1

Microdermabraslon

. RUTLAND - River City Players will perform the dinner theater, "The Best of River Ctty Players: A Look Back,"
Nov. 21 and 22, at Meigs Elementary School.
,
The show will feature songs from all ~t musicals the
group has performed since 200 I: '"The Mus1c Man," "WIZ8I'd
·of Oz ""Arinie, Get Your Gun," "Bye, Bye, Birdie," "Fiddler
on the Roof" "Seussical," "Seven Brides for Seven
Brothers " "oklahoma!" and songs from musicaJ revues .
· Perforr'ners will be accompanied by. a •four-piece band.
· tickets by reservation. are $25 an~ $20 for sem?rs, .55 ru:'d .
·older. They will·be available on Nov. lO.lnf?rmall?n ~s available by calling 992-6759 or 416-7860. Sealing IS lumted.

1

Vascular Laser

t

Thermage

~

Laser Hair Removal

Council rrom PageAl
properties now in bank
ownership after foreclosure.
In other business, council
passed a resolution authorizing approval of a 15year solid waste plan as
· proposed by the GalliaJackson-Meigs- Vinton
Solid Waste District .
Mayor Michael Gerlach is

,•

· a memJx:r of the board.
Counc1I also approved
payment ··o r biUs in the
amount of $26,588.92. .
Present were . counctl
members Joan Cra1g; Sandy
Brown, Rae Moore, Shawn
Rice, Craig Wehrung; and
Julia Houston., and Fiscal
Officer Susan Baker.

To Schedule.an Appointment,
Please Call: 740-446-5225

�Page A6- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. October 28. 2008

www.mydailysentinel .com

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Thesday, October 28,2008 .

UALL''"'-"" - A tcheWia of llpOOtl't1og t.:d-

~ va..- sponng everu
IMml from Ga.. m:l Melga OOtrillet.

•

fr1cMy, Qctober 31
FOOiboll - Ohio ployolf•

Divisions II, IV and VI, 7:30p.m.

-·1
FOOiboll
- Ngytmlw
Ohio pioyofl•
Clvls.lons I, Ill and V, 7 p.m.
CJooo Country
State championships at Scioto Downs,
{1 a.m.

Phils, Rays
suspended
due to rain

. SPORTS BRIEFS

Football stats
·needed for AP
district, OVP
nQminations

Shoe Place

992-5627 •N2nd Middleport, OH-

Meigs playoff
. tickets on sale

Picture Gallery &amp;Jf'welry
Gatat
992·2635 • Middleport. OH

MICHAEL

Summerfields Restaurant RIOYOIIAG
a•t
Carry-Out Available
SllJ)dwiches • Legal Beverages
St. Rt. 248 • Chester, OH • 7411-985-3857

Please see Rain, 81

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149 S. 3rd St. • Middleport, OH • 740-IJ92.6685

an &amp; Abbott
Heating and Cooling
.740-112-1321

1-800-31St-4303

311 Nora. SICctnd Av1111ue 4e760

OH 21281

Middleport, OH

WV 00824.3

FREE ESTIMATES

lng.els Carpet
175 North 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH

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a

SYRACUSE

We've Got Itt

949-2210 • Racine, OH · ~
992-6333 • Syracuse, OH E

740-992-7028

11

·rime to

.mammognm.

CROW&amp;CROW

your annual

Un-msured patients~ recem a

idiscount. To schedule your appointment, please

AnORNEYS AT LAW

A "Encouraging the Artist
~•
in you!"

992-6059 ·• Pomeroy, 0,.

\... . Z90 North lnd AvenG)
Middleport. OH

:ca~~740
~I

•

PHILADELPHIA
Game 5 of the.World Series
was suspended because of
rain in the sixth inning
Monday night with the
Philadelphia · Phillies and
Tampa Bay Ray~ tied at 2
and the field already a sloppy, soggy mess .
·
"I can't tell you tonight
when we'll resume," commissioner Bud Selig said.
"We'll stay here if we have
to celebrate Thanksgiving
here."
Rain was expected to continue into Tuesday, delaying
the Phillies' chance to wrap
up their first championship
smce 1980 . Philadelphia
leads three games to one.
There has never been a
rain-shortened game in
Series history. Whenever
this· one resumes, it will
pick up where it left off,
with the Phils about to bat
in the bottom of the sixth.
"The weathertomorrow is
supposed to be worse," said
Bob DuPuy, MLB's chief
.. ·
operating officer.
Carlos Pena hit a tying,
two-out single in the sixth
for the Rays. and the
umpires called it moments
later. By then, every ball
and every pitch had become
an adventure because of the
miserable conditions.
"The infield was tough.
The ball ·would do funny
things," Phillies second
baseman Chase Utley said.
"It was in bad shape. It was
not playable."
If Pena had not tied it,
Selig said he would not
have let the Phillies win
with a game that was called
after six innings.
"It's pot a way to end a
World Series," he said. "I
would not have allowed a

•

214 E Main St. • Pomeroy, OH
740-992·2143 • 740·992-6687

•

PRESS

SIAII PUM

"Stop by or Clll for aR your IIISUI1nCf n88dal"

HOLZER
CLINIC

R.

GALLIPOLIS - With
the end of the football regular season coming this
weekend, it is time to start
compiling slats for . the
upcoming AP district selection meeting and also the
Qhio Valley Publishing
Super 25 team . .
All head varsity football
coaches are requested to
send individual nominations ·
from their respective teams
~ along with regular season st~ts - to Bryan
Walters of the sports department in Gallipolis. . .
Stats may be faxed to
446-3008 or emailed to
bwalters @mydail ytri bune .c
om
Don't forget to include
offensive and defensive
AP photo
stats, as well as special Tennessee Titans quarterback Kerry. Collins (5) passes against the Indianapolis Colts behind the blocking of center
Kevin
teams for any individual Mawae (68) and guard Jake Scott (73) in the first quarter of an NFL football game in Nashville, Tenn ., Monday.
nominated .
All nominations must be
received · by Monday,
November I, to be eligible
for representation at the AP
Bv TERESA WALKER
South away from the team focu sing on the Colts, not its their ·worst start since
district meeting .
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Manning's rookie season.
that has dominated this divi- surprising start.
Any questions , call the ·
sion in winning the past five
"The season's still early, The Colts trail Tennessee by
NASHVILLE~ Tenn.
sporis line at 446-2342 ext.
titles.
and
there 's a Jot of games four ganies in the Joss col. 33. .
.
The
Tennessee
Titans
keep
Collin~.
Ol!tphiyed
left,
...
.fisl}eui\i~ ..::041'fQ.cus . umn with nine games left
Kerry
'
.,
winning , and not even Mannin~ , throwing for 193 wa~ on the Colts at)d trying and New England visiting
Peyton Manning could stop yards wtth no interceptions. to prepare .. , to try to find a on Sunday night.
the NFL's only undefeated
"We're tryinft to get where way to beat them. That was
"It's going to make il
team .
they've been,' Collins said. the commitment that we doubtful for us to win the
LenDale White ran . for "It was a big step for us made this week . We' re not division, but ... we 'll see
two touchdowns , Chris tonight I thinK. We obvious- looking ahead. We 'II now what the last nine games
POMEROY - Tickets Hope intercepted Manning ly got off to a good start, and look ahead to next weekend. bring ," Dungy said . "If we
for Friday's Meigs vs. New twice and the Titans routed to get one more against a As far as the division and all play well and get ours~lves
Lexington football playoff the Indianapolis Colts 31-21 division opponent is again . that stuff's"concerned, we're on a streak and get going, we
game will be . available for Monday night. .
real big at this time of year." just trying to win ballgames · can be a playoff team . I
purchase at Meigs High
The Titans (7-0) have won
Jeff Fi sher joined Tom right now."
think once you get in the
School beginning Tuesday an NFL-best 10 straight reg- Landry and Don Shula as the
Coach Tony Dungy had playoffs, anything can hapat 1 p.m.
ular-season games, match- only NFL coaches to start 7- called this a must-win for ·pen as we' ve seen two of the
Tickets are $7 and will be ing the second-best streak in 0 in their 15th season or Indianapolis . to · have any last three years." ·
· ·
available through Thursday. franchise history. More later. He credited his.defense chance at winning the diviManning had the Colts up
Tickets purchased Friday at importantly, . Tennessee for staying patient against sion, but now his Colts (3-4)
grabbed control of the AFC Manning and ~is team for have lost two straight in
tlie gate will be $9.
Please see ntans, 81
--~'1i"'

Ingels Electronics

man1n·s

ASSOCIAT~D

Titans remain NFL's lone undefeated team

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

The·

Bv BEN WAL.KER

•

•

·HOLZER .
CLINIC

�Page A6- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday. October 28. 2008

www.mydailysentinel .com

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Thesday, October 28,2008 .

UALL''"'-"" - A tcheWia of llpOOtl't1og t.:d-

~ va..- sponng everu
IMml from Ga.. m:l Melga OOtrillet.

•

fr1cMy, Qctober 31
FOOiboll - Ohio ployolf•

Divisions II, IV and VI, 7:30p.m.

-·1
FOOiboll
- Ngytmlw
Ohio pioyofl•
Clvls.lons I, Ill and V, 7 p.m.
CJooo Country
State championships at Scioto Downs,
{1 a.m.

Phils, Rays
suspended
due to rain

. SPORTS BRIEFS

Football stats
·needed for AP
district, OVP
nQminations

Shoe Place

992-5627 •N2nd Middleport, OH-

Meigs playoff
. tickets on sale

Picture Gallery &amp;Jf'welry
Gatat
992·2635 • Middleport. OH

MICHAEL

Summerfields Restaurant RIOYOIIAG
a•t
Carry-Out Available
SllJ)dwiches • Legal Beverages
St. Rt. 248 • Chester, OH • 7411-985-3857

Please see Rain, 81

SWIGER

103111118t. •lllllddlepOit, OH 4miO • 7..0 182
Open Mon•.f!rl. ..m.apm • s.t. lim-Noon

PAYING TOP PRICI!S POR ·
Aluminum c- • Aluminum Wh ....
c.tltytlc
• Copp«. Rlllllat!Orl&amp; ~
Cun'lid PrieM) ·

"Pro,UU,r lu~~~VUW &amp; Financial Serric.s" ·

149 S. 3rd St. • Middleport, OH • 740-IJ92.6685

an &amp; Abbott
Heating and Cooling
.740-112-1321

1-800-31St-4303

311 Nora. SICctnd Av1111ue 4e760

OH 21281

Middleport, OH

WV 00824.3

FREE ESTIMATES

lng.els Carpet
175 North 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH

IIACIN£

a

SYRACUSE

We've Got Itt

949-2210 • Racine, OH · ~
992-6333 • Syracuse, OH E

740-992-7028

11

·rime to

.mammognm.

CROW&amp;CROW

your annual

Un-msured patients~ recem a

idiscount. To schedule your appointment, please

AnORNEYS AT LAW

A "Encouraging the Artist
~•
in you!"

992-6059 ·• Pomeroy, 0,.

\... . Z90 North lnd AvenG)
Middleport. OH

:ca~~740
~I

•

PHILADELPHIA
Game 5 of the.World Series
was suspended because of
rain in the sixth inning
Monday night with the
Philadelphia · Phillies and
Tampa Bay Ray~ tied at 2
and the field already a sloppy, soggy mess .
·
"I can't tell you tonight
when we'll resume," commissioner Bud Selig said.
"We'll stay here if we have
to celebrate Thanksgiving
here."
Rain was expected to continue into Tuesday, delaying
the Phillies' chance to wrap
up their first championship
smce 1980 . Philadelphia
leads three games to one.
There has never been a
rain-shortened game in
Series history. Whenever
this· one resumes, it will
pick up where it left off,
with the Phils about to bat
in the bottom of the sixth.
"The weathertomorrow is
supposed to be worse," said
Bob DuPuy, MLB's chief
.. ·
operating officer.
Carlos Pena hit a tying,
two-out single in the sixth
for the Rays. and the
umpires called it moments
later. By then, every ball
and every pitch had become
an adventure because of the
miserable conditions.
"The infield was tough.
The ball ·would do funny
things," Phillies second
baseman Chase Utley said.
"It was in bad shape. It was
not playable."
If Pena had not tied it,
Selig said he would not
have let the Phillies win
with a game that was called
after six innings.
"It's pot a way to end a
World Series," he said. "I
would not have allowed a

•

214 E Main St. • Pomeroy, OH
740-992·2143 • 740·992-6687

•

PRESS

SIAII PUM

"Stop by or Clll for aR your IIISUI1nCf n88dal"

HOLZER
CLINIC

R.

GALLIPOLIS - With
the end of the football regular season coming this
weekend, it is time to start
compiling slats for . the
upcoming AP district selection meeting and also the
Qhio Valley Publishing
Super 25 team . .
All head varsity football
coaches are requested to
send individual nominations ·
from their respective teams
~ along with regular season st~ts - to Bryan
Walters of the sports department in Gallipolis. . .
Stats may be faxed to
446-3008 or emailed to
bwalters @mydail ytri bune .c
om
Don't forget to include
offensive and defensive
AP photo
stats, as well as special Tennessee Titans quarterback Kerry. Collins (5) passes against the Indianapolis Colts behind the blocking of center
Kevin
teams for any individual Mawae (68) and guard Jake Scott (73) in the first quarter of an NFL football game in Nashville, Tenn ., Monday.
nominated .
All nominations must be
received · by Monday,
November I, to be eligible
for representation at the AP
Bv TERESA WALKER
South away from the team focu sing on the Colts, not its their ·worst start since
district meeting .
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Manning's rookie season.
that has dominated this divi- surprising start.
Any questions , call the ·
sion in winning the past five
"The season's still early, The Colts trail Tennessee by
NASHVILLE~ Tenn.
sporis line at 446-2342 ext.
titles.
and
there 's a Jot of games four ganies in the Joss col. 33. .
.
The
Tennessee
Titans
keep
Collin~.
Ol!tphiyed
left,
...
.fisl}eui\i~ ..::041'fQ.cus . umn with nine games left
Kerry
'
.,
winning , and not even Mannin~ , throwing for 193 wa~ on the Colts at)d trying and New England visiting
Peyton Manning could stop yards wtth no interceptions. to prepare .. , to try to find a on Sunday night.
the NFL's only undefeated
"We're tryinft to get where way to beat them. That was
"It's going to make il
team .
they've been,' Collins said. the commitment that we doubtful for us to win the
LenDale White ran . for "It was a big step for us made this week . We' re not division, but ... we 'll see
two touchdowns , Chris tonight I thinK. We obvious- looking ahead. We 'II now what the last nine games
POMEROY - Tickets Hope intercepted Manning ly got off to a good start, and look ahead to next weekend. bring ," Dungy said . "If we
for Friday's Meigs vs. New twice and the Titans routed to get one more against a As far as the division and all play well and get ours~lves
Lexington football playoff the Indianapolis Colts 31-21 division opponent is again . that stuff's"concerned, we're on a streak and get going, we
game will be . available for Monday night. .
real big at this time of year." just trying to win ballgames · can be a playoff team . I
purchase at Meigs High
The Titans (7-0) have won
Jeff Fi sher joined Tom right now."
think once you get in the
School beginning Tuesday an NFL-best 10 straight reg- Landry and Don Shula as the
Coach Tony Dungy had playoffs, anything can hapat 1 p.m.
ular-season games, match- only NFL coaches to start 7- called this a must-win for ·pen as we' ve seen two of the
Tickets are $7 and will be ing the second-best streak in 0 in their 15th season or Indianapolis . to · have any last three years." ·
· ·
available through Thursday. franchise history. More later. He credited his.defense chance at winning the diviManning had the Colts up
Tickets purchased Friday at importantly, . Tennessee for staying patient against sion, but now his Colts (3-4)
grabbed control of the AFC Manning and ~is team for have lost two straight in
tlie gate will be $9.
Please see ntans, 81
--~'1i"'

Ingels Electronics

man1n·s

ASSOCIAT~D

Titans remain NFL's lone undefeated team

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital

The·

Bv BEN WAL.KER

•

•

·HOLZER .
CLINIC

�'

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.rriydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 28,2008

TUesdatOctober28,2008

Bengals reaching new lows
BY JoE KAY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo
·Jimmie Johnson is followed by Carl Edwards, Greg Biffle, Clint Bowyer and Jeff Gordon
:(luring the Pep Boys Auto 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup Senes auto race at Atlanta Motor
:Speedway 1n Hampton, Ga , Sunday

~ohnson dominance giving

NASCAR reason to rethink Chase
r

r

•

done without that one. That's
unbelievable. He does a
great job."
Johnson sure stretched the
bounds of believability after
crew chief Chad Knaus gambled on a late pit stop to
change all four tires. His dnver returned to the track in
lith place with e1ght laps
remammg.
"That was JUSt a great call,
a risky call, but it JUSt goes to
show that Chad is out there
racing," Johnson said "He's
not trying to nde around and
get pomts. He's out there to
earn them. He called me in
for t1res and told me to put
my cape on ·and off we
went."
One by one, Johnson took
down those ahead of h1m Greg Btffle, Jeff Gordon,
Kyle Busch and Matt
Kenseth among them.
Fmally, he set hts stghts on
Denny Hamlin , who led 56
laps late in the race before
bemg passed by Edwards on
a restart.
Johnson saved hts best
move for the fmal Iap.
Commg through the last btg
sweepmg tum on the !.54mile tnoval. he closed in on
Hamlm's bumper, then went
htgh The rear wheels on the
No . II car drifted up the
banktng, before Hamltn got
the tempestuous car under
control and av01ded a spmout.
Johnson kept from w1pmg
out htmself and sped on by
as though he had places to
be, awards to collect. H1s
commandmg lead m the
pomts - 149 over B1ffle
commg mto the race - actually got btggcr. He's now

183 ahead of Edwards as
B1ftle slipped to thtrd, 185
off the leader's blistenng
pace.
Johnson has been qu1te the
closer, the stock-car equivalent of Mariano R1vera. He's
won four of the last nine
races, fimshed second in two
others and been ins1de the
top 10 every lime dunng that
stretch. In the seven Chase
races, he's taken the checkered flag second, fifth, ftrSt,
n~nth, SIXth, first and second,
leavmg everyone else in the
dust.
Also give credit to Knaus
for making the call to change
all four trres on the final
stop.
NASCAR dev1sed the
Chase playoff system in
hopes of addmg a little
drama to its fall races, when
many casual fans tum the1r
attentiOn to football.
It's not workmg out so
well Even on a warm, sunny
day, the turnout in Atlanta
was estimated at 80,000 some 45.000 short of capactty. There were gaping holes
of empty seats on the front
straightaway, perhaps an
indtcatton of how Johnson
has sucked all the drama out
of this season.
Wh1ch 1s JUSt the way ~e
hkes 1t. Let others duke out
m the garage, as Edwards
and Kevm Harvtck did a few
weeks ago, or moan about
NASCAR 's ever-changing
rules, as Tony Stewart seems
to do every ttme he opens his
mouth
"I can't be like Stewart and
cause a hurricane.( It JUSt
doesn't work for me,"
Johnson said "I race people
with respect. I try to settle it
on the track. I'm no
pushover by any means.
That's just my style."
There's even a mathemallcal chance Johnson could
clinch the title next week in
Texas. If he leaves there up
323 points over the compellHon, he would need only to
start the final two races to
become the first dnver since
Cale Yarborough (1976-78)
to wm three consecuttve
champ1onsh1ps .

Park telhng fans wrapped in
plasttc sheets they were
done for the mght.
By then , many had left
their seats and streamed into
the concourses. They
crowded SIX o~ seven deep,
trymg to see any of the
game before the umps stgnaled for the tarp.
Because It was only lightly rammg when the game
started. MLB hoped it could
play a full mne mnmgs
Quickly, however. the
showers turned to a steady
downpour and the field
became a quagmtre .
By the m1ddle tnnings. the
, grounds crew was runm ng
shuttles onto the field, carrymg bags of a drymg agent
- baseball 's vcrston of cat
htter - to absorb the water.
No luck
l!t. puddle formed on.home
plate and umpire Jeff
Kellogg resorted to usmg a
towel rather than the usual
whisk broom to wipe it
clean.
Batters kept blinkin11 back
the rain drops and pitchers
~tru&amp;lllc.d with their footlna .
Strona IIUNts dropped tlic
wlnd-chni factor fnto the
30s, nnd fielders covered
their bare hands between
pitches.

All-Star shortstop Jimmy
Rolhns of the Phillies
chased a popup all qver and
dropped it for a tough error
in the fifth. There were
pools of water at every base
and the Phillie Phanatic
wore a rain slicker for h1s
'
routme.
B.J. Upton beat out an
mfield hlt With two outs m
the s1xth on a ball that
Rollins bobbled. Upton
stole second and huslled
home on Pen a's h1t , with
left fielder Pat Burrell 's
throw home plopping into a
puddle m the grass.
Fans showed up hoping
they'd be witnesses to a
World Senes champ10nsh1p.
Shane Vtctonno got them
cheenng wtth bases-loaded
smgle m the first for a 2-0
lead off Scott Kazmir.
Rays
manager
Joe
Maddon tinkered with his
lineup, dropping the slumping Pena and Lonjoria one
spot each - they were a
combined O·for-29 with I~
strlkeouu after four aamc1.
The Tampa Bay atars
ended their hltleu ruts In
the fourth when Pcna dou·
bled off the rljht·fleld wall
and Lon11orl11 followed with
an RBI sln~le up the middle
that made tt 2· I.

BY PAUL NEWBERRY

.1/l~~i~':l

ASSOCIATED PRESS

:•

ATLANTA
Hey,
Got any other
:tweaks that ought actually
bring a little suspense to
;what is supposed to the most
:"exciting part of the season?
~ Jimmie JQhnson has turned
!me current Cup Chase into a
:Iaugher. Judging by all those
empty seats at Atlanta Motor
Speedway on Sunday, most
.fans have already turned
their attention to 2009.
Maybe the folks that
brought you yellow fla~s for
"debris on the track' can
·sneak a couple of cement
blocks mto Johnson's car
Maybe they can get some
troopers to set up a speed
'trap that only targets the No.
48. Maybe they can send
'him out in a REAL
Chevrolet Impala.
The way things stand now,
they m1ght as well set up the
,ballroom, warm up that banquet-ctrcuit chicken and
5hme up the big trophy for
Johnson.
Even on a day when Carl
Edwards crmsed to vtctory
.in the Pef Boys Auto soo,
the star o the show was the
laid-back Cahforman who
has essenllally locked up hts
'thud stratght Cup championshtp wtth three races sllll
to go.
Even with a rare mistake
- he was caught gomg a btl
too fast on pit road (maybe
NASCAR did take the
advice about the speed traps)
- Johnson roared back from
30th place to take the runnerup spot behmd Edwards.
"We JUSt fought and fought
and fought ," Johnson said
"We leave here very happy.
It's almost hke a wm ."
It sure seemed that way to
Edwards, even though he
pulled away to wm by more
than 2 1/2 seconds. Wh1le
celebratmg m vtctory lane, a
TV reporter asked tf he knew
.who fimshed second.
"Who?" Edwards satd.
' Johnson , came tbe reply
"Are you ktddmg me?"
Edwards shot back, mcrcdulous. "Well, you've ramed
.on my parade . I could have

2008 Sprint Cup Standings
After Atlanta

~ASCAR.

I

I
·I

Rain
fromPageBl
World Senes to end thts
way."
MLB changed tts rules on
·suspended
games
m
November 2006, addmg a
provi sion to resume them
rather than replay them In
enher case, this would have
been a suspenston because
the vtsttmg team ued 11 m
the top of an mnmg and the
. home team never got to bat
·in the boUom half.
"It was temble . The field
.wasn't bad, but it was the
'worst conditions I've ever
:played in ," Tampa Bay th1rd
baseman Evan Longona
:said
Tuesday was supposed to
be a travel day, if necessary.
.Instead, the teams w1ll stay
in Philadelphia and then
head back to Tropicana
Field if the Rays win.
The delay, however,
forced the Rays to find a
·hotel In Wllmlnaton , Dol.,
about 25 mllc• awny.
About I0 minute• after
the 1111me waa aiTiclally m·
ponded, an announcement
:waa made at Cltizens Bank

Name
1 J1mm1e Johnson
2 Carl Edwards

3 Grog Biffle

4 Jeff Burton
5 Kevin Harvlck

Jeff Gonlon
Clint Bowyer
8 Tony Stewart
9 Man Kenoeth
6
7

10 Call Earndhart Jr
11 Denny Hamlin

12 Kyle Buoeh

.

Wins Pts

6

7
2
2
0
0
t
t

0

t
1
6

6246
·t63
·t65
·2t6
·307
·312
·3t4
-401
-413
o4t9
-42S
-465

CINCINNATI - Halfway
home,
the
Cmcmnatt
Bengals snll don "t have a
wm. The1r petfectly dreadful
start 1s n:achmg unprecedented lows for a franchtse
accust6med to them
And there ·s no stgn of letting up
A 35-6 loss m Houston on
Sunday left the Bengals with
their fourth 0-8 start since
1991, when Mt ke Brown
took control of the team
after his father died. There
have been only nine other 08 starts by the rest of the
league combined during that
span.
Thts latest one ts breakmg
new ground.
The Bengals lost to
Pittsburgh 38-10, then went
to Houston and allowed the
Texans to pull away to the
most lopsided victory in the
expanston team's history.
Coach Marvin Lewis now
has pres1ded over. the most
lopstded back-to-back losses
m Bengals htstory, which
goes back to 1968 when
Paul Brown coached the
team.
The Bengals have taken to
falling apart when they fall
behind, JUSt like in the bad
old days .
,
"When you get down by a
lot of points and you've lost
a lot of games, sometimes
things waver here and there,
your effort here and there,"
receiver
T.J.
Houshmandzadeh
said
Monday. "Maybe it's just
human nature. I don't know
what it is. You've )ust got to
fight against that.'
There aren't a lot of
chances that stand out on the

schedule for that ltrst wm
Next is at home Jgamst
the 3-4 Jaguars. who are
coming off a 23- 17 loss 10
Cleveland If they lose that
one. the Bengals will head
mto their bye week at 0-9,
one loss shy of the worst
start m franchise h1story.
The 1993 Bengals opened 010 under Dave Shula.
,
Up next. Philadelphia,
Pittsburgh,
Baltimore.
Indianapolis
and
Washington. The Bengals
finish the season m
Cleveland (currently 3-4)
and at home agamst Kansas
Ctty (1-6).
·
No team has gone 0-16, so
the Bengals will likely win
one along the way. But the
fin a'l record won't matter
much. Thts season already
has been a reminder that the
Bengals can't shake thetr
past. Since 1991 , they've
managed only one winnmg_
record - under Lewis m
2005 - and spent much of
the time bringmg up the rear
m the NFL.
The loss in Houston was
so bad that Lewis changed
his routme on Monday and
addressed the entire team
Brown, the team's maJority
owner and de facto general
manager, has declined mterviews during the losing
streak, leaving Lewis to
answer for it.
"That's fine," Lewis said
Monday. "That's what the
position entails. That was
the arrangement of this position six years ago (when
Lewis was htred). As I told
our football team today, the
way they play is a reflect1on
of me.) met with them. It's a
reflection of me; it's not the
coaches, it's me. And tha~'s
why it was my meeting

Before coach Romeo
Crennel's news conference
Monday, an agttated Sl\va~e
came mto the team's media
room to dt5cuss his postgame
comments.
"Once and for all, Kellen's
tllness was determined to be
a staph infection," Savage
said tersely "He had been in
the hospital for two or three
days; 11 takes a couple days to
figure out what something is.
Secondly, there was no sec·ondary illness. Thirdly, he is
m ·the bmlding, · he has
worked out and the team
meets at 1 o'clock.
"That's the end of the story.
It ts over with, OK? There is
no secondary illness. Staph
mfectmn. Everybody's got tt,
nght?"
The Browns are 2-0 without Winslow, who was
released from the hospital the
day before their Oct. 13 upset
of the New York (iliants. Oh
Sunday, backup tight end
Steve Heiden led the club
wuh 73 yaf.d~ receivmg,
pickmg up 5 on a fourthand-1 catch to set up
Cleveland's second touchdown.
. Crennel chuckled when
asked if Heiden would hike
Wmslow 's starting spot.
"We're gomg to work
Kellen m and I'll say this:
Don't be surpmed 1f Kellen
is the starter," Crennel sa1d.
"I'm not saying he's the
starter, but don't be surprised
if he's the starter."

Titans

former Colts cornerback
N1ck Harper helped break
up a pass to Marvin
Harrison on fourth-and-2.
Tennessee responded by
driving 66 yards over 6:51,
and White scored hts second TD - giving hi~. 10
for the season. Hope p1cked
off Manning again With
3· 38 left Rookie Chris
Johnson scored hts own TD
on a I6-yard run and the
sold-out crowd clad m
Tennessee light blue began
celebrating another wm.
Manning scored on a 1yard run with I : 17 left, but
Titans safety Michael
Griffin recovered the Colts'
onside kick atteml't that
diCin't travellO yards.
"I hope we can play a lit·
tic ticked off," Mannina
said. "There's a healthy way
to be anary and try to
bounce back and do tome·
thlna about it, We had aome
chances tonlaht. We htld the
load, and then just they
made the play1 In tho ICC·
ond half, and we didn't."
Mannina put the Colta up
14-6 with his second TD

pass to Clark, a 19-yarder
on their opening dnve of the
second half. That seemed
hke it might be enough on a
night when all the Titans
could manage were field
goals
They eventually got a little help from the Colts, who
again were w tthout Bob
Sanders, the retgmng
Defensive Player of the
Year, running back Joseph
Addai and cornerback
Kelvin Hayden.
"
The Titans drove 80 yards
in 14 plays capped by
Wh1te's !-yard run on thirdand-goal, assisted by an illegal contact pena,lty on
Marlin Jackson with a flag
coming a little late after
Justin Gage had dropped a
pass on third-and-5. Then
Melvin Bullitt was called
for pass interference on
tlaht end Bo Scaife, puttin11
tlie ball at the lndlanapollil
18.
Tcnneneo then tied It at
14 when ColUn• rolled to
his rlaht and found fullback
Ahmard Hall for the 2-polnt
conversion.

fromPageBl
14-6 in the th1rd quarter on
two touchdown passes to
Dallas Clark agamst a
Tennessee defense that
came m havmg allowed
only one . TD pass through
the first six games
But the Titans came up
big after tying 1t at 14 with
3:21 left m the third.
The NFL's stingiest scormg defense stopped the
.,Colts on· fourth-and-short
on consecutive drives at the
end of the third and start of
the fourth. Linebacker
Stephen Tulloch stopped
Dominic Rhodes behind the
line on fourth-and·! with
less than a minute left In the
third. Rob Bironas' second
flel&lt;tlloal, a48·yarder,llave
the Tftana a 17·14lead early
In the fourth quwr,
On the Colu' nut po1101·
Blon, Mannina couldn't con·
ncct flut with Rellllie
Wayne, who failed to pl!l£ In
a pass one-handed. -Then

•

Daily Sentinel ·Page B3

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Winslow ready to move on and play
team's handling of his three·
day hospitalizauon at the
Cleveland Clime with a staph
infection . After imt1ally
agree in~ with the team to
keep hts illness concealed,
Winslow revealed he had
staph following a loss at
Washington last week.
Two days later, the Browns
suspended the outspoken
Winslow one game without
pay for disparagmg comments and behavior toward
the organizatiOn. Wmslow
insists he was commg forward to protect the health of
his teammates. He has had
staph tw1ce and is one of at
least SIX known Cleveland
players to contract staph
smce 2005.
Winslow appealed the suspens10n, wh1ch was dropped
late Saturday mght after the
Browns reportedly learned
Winslow had rece1ved text
messages from a member of
Cleveland's media relations
staff who told him not to
reveal he had staph.
After Sunday's 23-17 win
in Jacksonville, Savage
downplayed the rrnportance
of the text messages and said
he and , Winslow's agent,
Drew Rosenhaus, had been
working toward a settlement
since Thursday.
Savage also suggested
Winslow had ·been hosp1talized for something other than
staph and the club was trying
to protect the player's priv~cy.

The

'

today. because there are
things we need to do better.
If we tl1nch. It 's my fault,
and I understand that."
They flinched a lot in
Houston . where cornerback
Johnathan Joseph provtded
the stgnature play for the latest season gone bad.
Kevm Walter. a receiver
who left the Bengals as a
restncted free agent two
years ago, beat Joseph on a
crossmg
pattern
from
Cmcmnati's 39-yard hne .
He made a diving catch at
about the 30. Joseph slowed,
allowmg Walter to get back
to hts feet. Joseph touched
hun wtth two hands after he
was off the ground, thmkmg
the receiver would be ruled
down
WtoQg . Walter ran the rest
of the way for one of h1s two
touchdowns
Lewts agreed the cornerback fmled to hustle on the
play.
"That's a poor play."
Lew1s ,,ud. "It's as poor a
play as you can have on an
NFL field"
The Bengals aren't in a
posttion to make meaningful
changes.
Quarterback
Carson Palmer is out indefinitely with an injured elbow,
limning the offense. The
defense has slipped the last
two games, gtving up a lot
of long passes. Lewis'
advice is to keep trying .
"When you've been
·embarrassed like we were,
the only way to get away
from that is to redeem yourself," he said. "And the only
way to redeem yourself is to
go do better, and do better
nght away, and not let it sit
and spoil you."
The last two losses suggest they're past that point.

BEREA (AP) - Kellen
Winslow didn't utter a word
about staph infections or suspensions , After a conrentJous, confusing week
laced With suspicion, innuendo and · dueling statements,
the ' Pro Bow I ught end
returned to the Cleveland
Browns on Monday eager to
restart his disrupted season.
"I'm ready to move on and
just play fqotball ," he said.
Wmslow and the Browns
appear to have made a truce,
albeit a tenuous one.
Suspended one game last
week by the club, wh1ch later
Its
penalty,
rescmded
Wmslow reJoined h1s teammates one day after the
Browns won for the second
time llus season w1thout him.
Wmslow spoke briefly m
front of his locker before
heading to a team meeting.
The 25-year-old said he has
worked out his differences
w1th Browns general manager Ph1l Savage and owner
Randy Lerner.
"They knew where I was
coming from and I understood where they were coming from, so it is all worked
out," he sai4. "I am JUSt
excited to get back to playing
football, doing what I love to
do. I just really see this as a
challen~.e, so I am gomg to
meet 11.
Winslow was banned from
the team's facihty last week
by the Browns, who suspended him for cnhcizmg the

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Buolneat &amp; Trode Scl1ool......................... 505
lnotructl"on &amp; Trolnlng ................................. 510
Lenona ...,................-................................. 515
Paroonal. ..................................................... 520
Anll'nllla ....................................................... 600
Animal Suppllao ........................................ 605
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Announcementa ........•.......•.....•..............•.. 200 ATV ........................................................... 1005
Blrthdlly/Annlveraary .... ........ ..... ........ ...... 205 Bicycles................................................ 1010
Happy Ada.................................................... 210 Boata/Acceasorlee .................................. 1015
Loat &amp; Found ••....••..•.••••.••••••••••••.••••••••••••••• 215 Compor/RVo 6 Trallora ..... ,. ...................... 1020
Memory/Thank You ................. .,.................. 220 MOtorcycles.......... ..• •...••.. •••••....• .....• 1025
Notlces ......................................................... 225 Other .......................................................... 1030
Pereonala ............................ .................... 230 Want lo buy ............................................... 1035
Wanted ...........:............................................ 235 Automotive .............................................. 2000
Services ....................................................... 300 Auto RentaiA.ea•e .................................. 2005
Appliance Servlca ..,.......... ........................ 302 Autoo .......................................................... 2010
Automotive ...... ,..........,....,, .......................... 304 Clooolc/Antlquea ...................................... 2015
Building Materlala .. .. ...............•............... 306 Commerclalllnduatrlal .............................. 2020
Butlnell ................. ········'···· ..................... 308 Parte &amp; Accesaorlee..................................2025
Catarlng ........................................................310 Sports Utility ............................................2030
Child/Elderly Caro ................................... 312 Trucko .. ......................................................2035
Computero ............................................... 31~ Utility Trollera ............................................ 2040
Contractora .... ,,, .. ,........................................ 318 Van• .... • ...... ....
.... .... •.•. .•••• • .•• 2o.t5
Oomeatlca/Janltorlal ................................. 318 WontiO buy .............................................. 2050
Eleclflcot ................................... .............. 320 Rut Estate Salee ...................................... 3000
Financial, ...... ,, ....... ,....... ,,, ............................322 Cematery Plots... . ........,.. ....... ,...... . .... 3005
Hoalth .................................................. 328 Commercial ..........................................3010
Hoatlng • Coollng ....................................... 328 c;ondomlnluma ..........................................3015
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner....................................3020
lnaurence ................................................ 332 Houoeo lor Sale ..................... ...............3025
uwn Service ............................................... 334 L.ond (Acroage) ........................ :.................3030
MualcJDance/Drama .................................... 338 Loto ..... ............ . .............. .... ....... .........3035
Othor Senrlceo ..........................................338 Wont to buy..............................................3040
Plumbing/Electrical ....................................340 Real Eotate Rentalo ...................................3500
Prole11lonol Sarvlcea .................................342 Apartment..,.ownhouH:a ......................... 3505
R-lrt ......... ........................ ................... 344 Commercial ....... ............................ .......... 3510
Rooting ................................................. 346 Condomlnluma......................................... 3515
Security ........................................................ 348 HouMa for Rant ....... ......... ... ... . ..... 3520
Tax/Accounting ........ ....... ...•••. •............... 350 L.ond (Acreage).. ................................ 3525

TraveL/Entertainment .... . .. • ....... ............ 352
Financial .....................................................400
Flftllnclel Servlcea .......................................405
lnaurance .................... ....., ......................... 410
, Money IO Lend ............................................. 415

on

$450

announcemant ~~--~~-­
the Oh10 Valley M1n1ature
Schnouzers

PubliShing Company)

'

$350

Storage ....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent ..... . . .. ............................. 3540

Mlnulactunod Housing .......................... 4000

Lota .............. ....................................... ,......4005
Movere ..................................................4010

Rantalo ..........................................,........... 4015
Salao..........................................................4020
Suppll"··•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••oo4025
Wont to Buy ............................................... 4030
Rot011 Property ......................................... 5000
Re11011 Property lor ulll .•...•..................... 5025
Reo011 Property lor rent ........................... 5050
Employmant...............................................eooo
Accountlng1Financlal ... ,............................8002
Admlnlotratlve/Pro!Holonol...................:6004
Cooht.r/Ciark .............................................6006
Agriculture.............. ............. ...... ........... 700 Child/Elderly Cera ................................... 8008
Farm Equipment .......................... ,...............70S Clerical ................................................ 6010
Gorden &amp; Produce ......... .,.......................... 710 Conatructlon..... . .................................. 6012
Hay, Feed, Sled, Grain .............................. 715 Drlvara &amp; Delivery . ... ......................... 8014
Hunting • L.ond .......................................... 720 Education ........... .................................... 6016
wont to bUy ..................................................725 Eloctrlcal Plumblng ...................................5018
MerchondiH .............................................. 900 Employmenl Agencln..............................5020
Antlqu................................. .. ,..................... 805 Entertainment ..................................... 6022
Appliance ...................................................810 Food Sarvlcet... ......................................6024
Aucttona •.•.•• , ...... .............. . ..••• .............815 Go-nment a F-rol Job............ . ..... 5028
Bargain Baaement ......................................820 !Wp onled- General. ......•........................ 5028

Farm Equipment

Fall

9AM SPM

Ttueb

~~~~--~~

==--;;;;;;;;;;i;;=~= Clal Carpal S6 95/yard 1998
GMC 98439 0
EBY,
INTEGRITY, Several
Colors miles 7 o engtne gas 5
KIEFER BUILT,
740-44&amp;-7444 Quality at speed trans 24 f1 bed,

VALLEY
STOCK
LOAD
MENT

HOASEA.IVE Low Pncosl
TRAILERS ~~~~~=~

MAX

EQUIP·
TRAILERS
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS
B-4-W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWW CARMICHAEL

nal No 057618 prev1
oush• dehvered to it b11
''
r
~-aid

I.IVI'

Maslro ol Wad

sworth Ohto for repa1rs
The sale Will be •as
Is where ts•
with all
faults and w1thout war
ranty of any k1nd ot char
acter except those re-

1

;:;304;·7;;,;, ,;73;,;5343;;;,;;;,,,,

satellite TV 1ncl w/rent
close to hoSpital Call

for

740·339·0362

COI1Cre1e

Angle

1000

sq

~

Hard·

$650rent
740 591 5174
or441 0110

740·446·2568

Equal Housll'lg Opporto·
nity Th1s mslitullon IS an
Equal Opportumty Pro
v1der and Employer
Graciou• Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts at V1llage
Manor
and
R1verslde
Apts 1n M1ddteport !rom

$327

10

$592

740-992 5064
Equal
Hous1ng Opportumty
NICe
Clean
Ground
Floor 2br WID hookup
Aelerences/Deposlt/No
Pets 304 675 5162
Now accepting
appliCations at
Valley Vtew Apartments
BOO State Route 325
Thurman Oh1o 45685

740-245-9170

t 2 Bedroom Apartments
with appliances furn1shed
On Slle laundry facility
Call for detailS or piCK up
appiiCSIIOn at rental
OffiCe
PossJblh!y or rental
assistance
Equal Hous1ng
Opportun1ty
TDOil 419·526-0400
"lh1s mst1tut10n 1s an
Equal Opportunl~
Prov1der and Employer"

Vans
~---~-;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-- ~~--~----· Tara
Townhouse
2 bedroom l!vtng room
kitchen bath Apartment
Ha11e Central A1r fur

Apanments
2BR, 1 5
bath back pat1o pool
pl-.yground, (trash sew
nlshed
With
couch, age
water
pd )
chairs
washer
dryer S4251rent
$425/sec
Want To Buy
stove microwave beds dep Call740·367·0547
dm1ng table and cha1rs
Cars Trucks and GMC $400 depos11 $450 a
Comma-'•!
•Saturn Bu1ck SUI/'s wlttJ month
Call "'"~iiOii"':';;;;;;~~
~
warranty
V1Sll us at 304·682 2523
Leave 2 bay servtee , staiiOn
(gocdookmotorn com)
Message and Number 11 Jackson
P1ke
Lease
Cook Mo1ors 328 Jack not at Horne
reqwred Call 446 3644
son Ptke 740-446 0103
lor more 1nto
,----..,...~~ 2 BA Apartment &amp; 2 BR ;;;;,;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,,.,,"""'
Want to buy Junk Cars House on 51h St Pt
Housel For R.nt
call740·388-o884
Pleasant
304·812·4350 ~::-;:;;;;;;~~~~
ask for Don
$2 ~i'llmo "' t-oed ~ nmh
01 Oldsmobile Silhouette
98000 m11e 1 owner,
OIID player great cond
$5495 740 441 9322

=======

--:::::--:-::::-"::":":--::=:::

;;::

28 A

;;,;;;;,;;;;,..,,;,;;;;;,;;;~"""
Worllo luy

APT

CIA

!740)

: : : : : : ; ,44,. ,.1-01.,.94=---:~
HouMI For Safe
3 br $400 a mo 1 br
-.;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-'$295 a mo plus utiliiiEis
.Buy1ng tools sell or trade ~
Mechantc-cafJ}Bnter lawn 1B6 North Park Or call &amp;
deposit
3rd
St
J04-tl 75•5640
or Racu,e (740)247-4292
&amp; garden powt~r tools
Call 740·388-15,5 or cell 304·593·12()4 Will sell on 3 rooms and bath up·
74D-208-o320
Land Contract or Our stairs
Completely fur·
Right Also a Weltmglon nlshed With WID No
Absolute Top Dollar s1l PlllflO call for appOint pets Rei Aeq 441 0245
ver/gold
co1ns
any --~ll~o~sea"""':lh~em~bo-lh
....~
10KI14Kf18K gold ,ew ':"'
2BA dose 10 hosp•tal
2 br 1 b. full basement, wid hookup app1 tur·
elry' denial gold ' pre above ground pool de ntshed 740-441 3702 or
1935
US
currency
IBchod double garage. .....,.~
740 ·266
5769
proof/m1nt
sets,
d1a· tenced-1n back yarCI, mce ':'
~=~:-~~
monds, MTS Co1n Shop nelghbort'lOOd ll'l Racine, CONVENIENTLY
LO
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· (740 )992 1424
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD
~:;po;;;l";;;,;;44;,;6;,;2;;64~2'=""'""" ~~~~~~~ ABLE I Townhouse apart
;::
3 BD HOUSE IN CHES ments
and/or
small

Yard Sala

3BR

wood floors W/0 No pet

25950 lbs Don"!
COL
$6,500 1BA Apl W
ID hoo•ups

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams Pipe Rebar ;::

Channel, Flat Bar Steel
Grating lor Drains Drive
ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mon
Tue
Wed
&amp;
Fn
Bam 4 30pm
Closed
Thurs
Sat
&amp;
Sun
740-446 7300
TRAILERS COM
:-;~-:------::-:~~
New Lennox Pulse Fur740-446-3825
~---:-:-~ nace down draft With ex·
7-:
oh tra parts, 90,000 BTU
Have you priced a J n $699 00 74()-446·4306
Deere lately? You'll be ~~-:~--:-::-.
surpriSed! Check out our Travel trunk
14"
x
used
mventory
at 14"115"h~gh
tooled
VN.wCAREOcom
Car leather
Stenciled s A
miChael
Eqwpment
740 446 2412
Couch.
P1 Ploasanl va
dtd May 1858-phone 304
::O_n_o_r_a'::ffe_r_Oct~o-.ba~r~f4 592·1 ~7 m evening

2008 Carmlctlael EqUip·
ment, Inc Jf 668 P1ne0
crest Dn...e Bidwell, 1'110
I
I
I
I
1
WI
se a Is orgolng
bus1ness prem1ses pursuant to Sect1on 1333 41
of the OhtO Revised
COde a certain John
Deere model 820 tractor
with attacMd loader Se·

G'IW
need

2

Mtddleport

TEA Oh CONTACT

hOuses lor renl Call

Homes 1 Only S19 900 lor
hst1ngs 800-620--4946 ex
A0 19
4 bed 2 bath &amp; OffiCe m
town . hw &amp; tile tloofs,
updated kttchen &amp; baths.
pnvacy leACe &amp; above
ground
pool
secunty

:
28:::A::-ga-ra-ga--:-Ap-a~rtm~e~n':"1
downtown $425 mtll rent
,.. ut1htie&amp;, NO PETS
446~ 15
~-~-.~:'00'=
Free
Rent
Specaal'!'
2&amp;3BR and up Central
A1r WID hookup tenant
pays eleclnc EHO Elm

B.u1~ Rcpn 1 \~ 1:;. drmu
)C :t"

K(WJ

8'l &gt;\I'R 1 r,1r

fi~O -1.!}4bc~ Rn~7

I~

11~llnl!~

:-S400/=~mo -+-:
de_po
_s.,.I1~1B:::'R
Rg&amp;Ael
turn
w&amp;o
hookup, No steps, Very
clean
114 State St
740·441 0596

~--~~~~~

2br on the River In Ma·
son
$500 00 a mon
References

304 862 3512
or
304·488·7946
3 bedroom total electnc
hOuse also 14x70 trader
Rac1ne (740)949·2237
3BR house on SR 160
near North Gall18. H1gh
S&lt;:hoot SSOO rent + $500

Moving
Sale
Co~Jntry ~74.;1).~9;;.65;.·•-1~31~~~~· 740·441 · 11 1, for appb·
Home deCor and fuml 3 Bed 2 Bath HUD cation &amp; InformatiOn
ture At 218 to Ne1ghbor

~;ff.::o;-:~~~~
3 AM s &amp; bath rg &amp; rei
fum very clean no pets
S400 mo + dep off sl
parttms 44&amp;0596
3BA 1 112 bath on Jack
son Pike No pets S675
per month ... DepoSit

r
- / RVs"&amp;
_.,,.... •
_..__
1,_,...
Mlllntenanc.'Domntlc ..................
••... 8032
Equlpmani/Suppllat...................................835 '481111gement1Suparvlaory ................ ••. 6034
HEAP
accep1od ~~~~....~~~ system, much more"' 130
Apls ::74?0~-4~46;;.4~0~51~~"":~
RV Service 81 carrm· Bast1an1 Dr $129000For v,ew
Church parson.age 3BA.
Fin Morkats ................................................ 1140 Mechanlco....................... .........................8038 1 645·5948or441-094,
1304)882·3017
to
1
Fuel 011 Cooi/Wood/Oao.................. ... . .•. 945 Medical ............................................ :........ 8038
chael
Tra11ers pk:s and n rma IOn go -:-:~-:-.-.~ 2 bath full basement 2
FurnHure ................................. ,... ,......... 950 Mualcel ...................................... ..... 6040
740-446·3825
to
www ONb com Tw1n A111ers Tower IS ac- ca1 garage
Includes
Hobby/Hunl• Sport.................................... 955 PartwTime-Temporaries ........................... 61M2
446
2923
1
f
W
ID
I ""- and
Jet Aeration Motors re~ -:::-------..;.;~~--.~~ cept1ng app 1Cat1ons or
new
r.UV"'
Kld"l Comer ..................... -······· ....... ...... 960 Reataurante ............................................. - ~
paired, new &amp; rebuilt 1n Rv
fur Salt:: 1 • tOt) at .:4l l Mt waiting hst lor HUO sub- range Sits on near1y 2
Mlocello.-uo...........................................985 Salea.................. , .................................... 6048
stock caM Ron Evans, SeNICe at Ca.rmlchael vlm&lt;&gt;n AH· Pf Plea..am sidtZed I BA apanment acres $700 plus sec
WOfltto buy .................................................. 870 Technical Tradeo .................................... 6050
Trallf!IS
4br tbit 112 base a&gt;li.mg for ltle elderly/~5Bbled dep For 11110 or mspec' "" Sot. ........ ....... .......... ............ .. .... ····· 975 ToxtlloiiFactol'l' ......................................... 6052
1-800- 537•9528
740-446-3825
S80 coo ){14 &lt;&gt; 7~ :wn
call 675 6679
bon call 245..()031
Collectlblea ............................, .................. 825
Computare ..................................... ........... 830

Law Enforcernent ...................................... 6030

Seasoned Ftrewood CAA

1

II

Off1ce Hours M, W F

256·1616

Spec1al 20 oz Commer

Beech St

br h.nn1shed apartment
ut 11111es pa1d no pets,
dep
&amp;
ref
1740)992-0165

$560

TownhouMs

lo-~'6

Pels
Miacelloneoua
~:'"";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;; =--~--~--~~

Re~t~ls

TownhouMs

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Baauttful Apts at JackApartments/
son Estates 52 West
wood Or from $365 to

D

@ 2008

Re.1 1Es i&lt;J ic

350 0

M~~-

=======

=""'""'""'""'""'""'"

Trade 1995 Chevy Con
vers1on
Van
9)(Cellent
conditiOn easy on gas
also wltra11er
'76"x16
2 350011' BKies 2 wheel
brakes w/ramp tor 5
acres tn Me1gs Coun~

Aporlmtnh/

•

�'

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.rriydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, October 28,2008

TUesdatOctober28,2008

Bengals reaching new lows
BY JoE KAY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photo
·Jimmie Johnson is followed by Carl Edwards, Greg Biffle, Clint Bowyer and Jeff Gordon
:(luring the Pep Boys Auto 500 NASCAR Sprint Cup Senes auto race at Atlanta Motor
:Speedway 1n Hampton, Ga , Sunday

~ohnson dominance giving

NASCAR reason to rethink Chase
r

r

•

done without that one. That's
unbelievable. He does a
great job."
Johnson sure stretched the
bounds of believability after
crew chief Chad Knaus gambled on a late pit stop to
change all four tires. His dnver returned to the track in
lith place with e1ght laps
remammg.
"That was JUSt a great call,
a risky call, but it JUSt goes to
show that Chad is out there
racing," Johnson said "He's
not trying to nde around and
get pomts. He's out there to
earn them. He called me in
for t1res and told me to put
my cape on ·and off we
went."
One by one, Johnson took
down those ahead of h1m Greg Btffle, Jeff Gordon,
Kyle Busch and Matt
Kenseth among them.
Fmally, he set hts stghts on
Denny Hamlin , who led 56
laps late in the race before
bemg passed by Edwards on
a restart.
Johnson saved hts best
move for the fmal Iap.
Commg through the last btg
sweepmg tum on the !.54mile tnoval. he closed in on
Hamlm's bumper, then went
htgh The rear wheels on the
No . II car drifted up the
banktng, before Hamltn got
the tempestuous car under
control and av01ded a spmout.
Johnson kept from w1pmg
out htmself and sped on by
as though he had places to
be, awards to collect. H1s
commandmg lead m the
pomts - 149 over B1ffle
commg mto the race - actually got btggcr. He's now

183 ahead of Edwards as
B1ftle slipped to thtrd, 185
off the leader's blistenng
pace.
Johnson has been qu1te the
closer, the stock-car equivalent of Mariano R1vera. He's
won four of the last nine
races, fimshed second in two
others and been ins1de the
top 10 every lime dunng that
stretch. In the seven Chase
races, he's taken the checkered flag second, fifth, ftrSt,
n~nth, SIXth, first and second,
leavmg everyone else in the
dust.
Also give credit to Knaus
for making the call to change
all four trres on the final
stop.
NASCAR dev1sed the
Chase playoff system in
hopes of addmg a little
drama to its fall races, when
many casual fans tum the1r
attentiOn to football.
It's not workmg out so
well Even on a warm, sunny
day, the turnout in Atlanta
was estimated at 80,000 some 45.000 short of capactty. There were gaping holes
of empty seats on the front
straightaway, perhaps an
indtcatton of how Johnson
has sucked all the drama out
of this season.
Wh1ch 1s JUSt the way ~e
hkes 1t. Let others duke out
m the garage, as Edwards
and Kevm Harvtck did a few
weeks ago, or moan about
NASCAR 's ever-changing
rules, as Tony Stewart seems
to do every ttme he opens his
mouth
"I can't be like Stewart and
cause a hurricane.( It JUSt
doesn't work for me,"
Johnson said "I race people
with respect. I try to settle it
on the track. I'm no
pushover by any means.
That's just my style."
There's even a mathemallcal chance Johnson could
clinch the title next week in
Texas. If he leaves there up
323 points over the compellHon, he would need only to
start the final two races to
become the first dnver since
Cale Yarborough (1976-78)
to wm three consecuttve
champ1onsh1ps .

Park telhng fans wrapped in
plasttc sheets they were
done for the mght.
By then , many had left
their seats and streamed into
the concourses. They
crowded SIX o~ seven deep,
trymg to see any of the
game before the umps stgnaled for the tarp.
Because It was only lightly rammg when the game
started. MLB hoped it could
play a full mne mnmgs
Quickly, however. the
showers turned to a steady
downpour and the field
became a quagmtre .
By the m1ddle tnnings. the
, grounds crew was runm ng
shuttles onto the field, carrymg bags of a drymg agent
- baseball 's vcrston of cat
htter - to absorb the water.
No luck
l!t. puddle formed on.home
plate and umpire Jeff
Kellogg resorted to usmg a
towel rather than the usual
whisk broom to wipe it
clean.
Batters kept blinkin11 back
the rain drops and pitchers
~tru&amp;lllc.d with their footlna .
Strona IIUNts dropped tlic
wlnd-chni factor fnto the
30s, nnd fielders covered
their bare hands between
pitches.

All-Star shortstop Jimmy
Rolhns of the Phillies
chased a popup all qver and
dropped it for a tough error
in the fifth. There were
pools of water at every base
and the Phillie Phanatic
wore a rain slicker for h1s
'
routme.
B.J. Upton beat out an
mfield hlt With two outs m
the s1xth on a ball that
Rollins bobbled. Upton
stole second and huslled
home on Pen a's h1t , with
left fielder Pat Burrell 's
throw home plopping into a
puddle m the grass.
Fans showed up hoping
they'd be witnesses to a
World Senes champ10nsh1p.
Shane Vtctonno got them
cheenng wtth bases-loaded
smgle m the first for a 2-0
lead off Scott Kazmir.
Rays
manager
Joe
Maddon tinkered with his
lineup, dropping the slumping Pena and Lonjoria one
spot each - they were a
combined O·for-29 with I~
strlkeouu after four aamc1.
The Tampa Bay atars
ended their hltleu ruts In
the fourth when Pcna dou·
bled off the rljht·fleld wall
and Lon11orl11 followed with
an RBI sln~le up the middle
that made tt 2· I.

BY PAUL NEWBERRY

.1/l~~i~':l

ASSOCIATED PRESS

:•

ATLANTA
Hey,
Got any other
:tweaks that ought actually
bring a little suspense to
;what is supposed to the most
:"exciting part of the season?
~ Jimmie JQhnson has turned
!me current Cup Chase into a
:Iaugher. Judging by all those
empty seats at Atlanta Motor
Speedway on Sunday, most
.fans have already turned
their attention to 2009.
Maybe the folks that
brought you yellow fla~s for
"debris on the track' can
·sneak a couple of cement
blocks mto Johnson's car
Maybe they can get some
troopers to set up a speed
'trap that only targets the No.
48. Maybe they can send
'him out in a REAL
Chevrolet Impala.
The way things stand now,
they m1ght as well set up the
,ballroom, warm up that banquet-ctrcuit chicken and
5hme up the big trophy for
Johnson.
Even on a day when Carl
Edwards crmsed to vtctory
.in the Pef Boys Auto soo,
the star o the show was the
laid-back Cahforman who
has essenllally locked up hts
'thud stratght Cup championshtp wtth three races sllll
to go.
Even with a rare mistake
- he was caught gomg a btl
too fast on pit road (maybe
NASCAR did take the
advice about the speed traps)
- Johnson roared back from
30th place to take the runnerup spot behmd Edwards.
"We JUSt fought and fought
and fought ," Johnson said
"We leave here very happy.
It's almost hke a wm ."
It sure seemed that way to
Edwards, even though he
pulled away to wm by more
than 2 1/2 seconds. Wh1le
celebratmg m vtctory lane, a
TV reporter asked tf he knew
.who fimshed second.
"Who?" Edwards satd.
' Johnson , came tbe reply
"Are you ktddmg me?"
Edwards shot back, mcrcdulous. "Well, you've ramed
.on my parade . I could have

2008 Sprint Cup Standings
After Atlanta

~ASCAR.

I

I
·I

Rain
fromPageBl
World Senes to end thts
way."
MLB changed tts rules on
·suspended
games
m
November 2006, addmg a
provi sion to resume them
rather than replay them In
enher case, this would have
been a suspenston because
the vtsttmg team ued 11 m
the top of an mnmg and the
. home team never got to bat
·in the boUom half.
"It was temble . The field
.wasn't bad, but it was the
'worst conditions I've ever
:played in ," Tampa Bay th1rd
baseman Evan Longona
:said
Tuesday was supposed to
be a travel day, if necessary.
.Instead, the teams w1ll stay
in Philadelphia and then
head back to Tropicana
Field if the Rays win.
The delay, however,
forced the Rays to find a
·hotel In Wllmlnaton , Dol.,
about 25 mllc• awny.
About I0 minute• after
the 1111me waa aiTiclally m·
ponded, an announcement
:waa made at Cltizens Bank

Name
1 J1mm1e Johnson
2 Carl Edwards

3 Grog Biffle

4 Jeff Burton
5 Kevin Harvlck

Jeff Gonlon
Clint Bowyer
8 Tony Stewart
9 Man Kenoeth
6
7

10 Call Earndhart Jr
11 Denny Hamlin

12 Kyle Buoeh

.

Wins Pts

6

7
2
2
0
0
t
t

0

t
1
6

6246
·t63
·t65
·2t6
·307
·312
·3t4
-401
-413
o4t9
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CINCINNATI - Halfway
home,
the
Cmcmnatt
Bengals snll don "t have a
wm. The1r petfectly dreadful
start 1s n:achmg unprecedented lows for a franchtse
accust6med to them
And there ·s no stgn of letting up
A 35-6 loss m Houston on
Sunday left the Bengals with
their fourth 0-8 start since
1991, when Mt ke Brown
took control of the team
after his father died. There
have been only nine other 08 starts by the rest of the
league combined during that
span.
Thts latest one ts breakmg
new ground.
The Bengals lost to
Pittsburgh 38-10, then went
to Houston and allowed the
Texans to pull away to the
most lopsided victory in the
expanston team's history.
Coach Marvin Lewis now
has pres1ded over. the most
lopstded back-to-back losses
m Bengals htstory, which
goes back to 1968 when
Paul Brown coached the
team.
The Bengals have taken to
falling apart when they fall
behind, JUSt like in the bad
old days .
,
"When you get down by a
lot of points and you've lost
a lot of games, sometimes
things waver here and there,
your effort here and there,"
receiver
T.J.
Houshmandzadeh
said
Monday. "Maybe it's just
human nature. I don't know
what it is. You've )ust got to
fight against that.'
There aren't a lot of
chances that stand out on the

schedule for that ltrst wm
Next is at home Jgamst
the 3-4 Jaguars. who are
coming off a 23- 17 loss 10
Cleveland If they lose that
one. the Bengals will head
mto their bye week at 0-9,
one loss shy of the worst
start m franchise h1story.
The 1993 Bengals opened 010 under Dave Shula.
,
Up next. Philadelphia,
Pittsburgh,
Baltimore.
Indianapolis
and
Washington. The Bengals
finish the season m
Cleveland (currently 3-4)
and at home agamst Kansas
Ctty (1-6).
·
No team has gone 0-16, so
the Bengals will likely win
one along the way. But the
fin a'l record won't matter
much. Thts season already
has been a reminder that the
Bengals can't shake thetr
past. Since 1991 , they've
managed only one winnmg_
record - under Lewis m
2005 - and spent much of
the time bringmg up the rear
m the NFL.
The loss in Houston was
so bad that Lewis changed
his routme on Monday and
addressed the entire team
Brown, the team's maJority
owner and de facto general
manager, has declined mterviews during the losing
streak, leaving Lewis to
answer for it.
"That's fine," Lewis said
Monday. "That's what the
position entails. That was
the arrangement of this position six years ago (when
Lewis was htred). As I told
our football team today, the
way they play is a reflect1on
of me.) met with them. It's a
reflection of me; it's not the
coaches, it's me. And tha~'s
why it was my meeting

Before coach Romeo
Crennel's news conference
Monday, an agttated Sl\va~e
came mto the team's media
room to dt5cuss his postgame
comments.
"Once and for all, Kellen's
tllness was determined to be
a staph infection," Savage
said tersely "He had been in
the hospital for two or three
days; 11 takes a couple days to
figure out what something is.
Secondly, there was no sec·ondary illness. Thirdly, he is
m ·the bmlding, · he has
worked out and the team
meets at 1 o'clock.
"That's the end of the story.
It ts over with, OK? There is
no secondary illness. Staph
mfectmn. Everybody's got tt,
nght?"
The Browns are 2-0 without Winslow, who was
released from the hospital the
day before their Oct. 13 upset
of the New York (iliants. Oh
Sunday, backup tight end
Steve Heiden led the club
wuh 73 yaf.d~ receivmg,
pickmg up 5 on a fourthand-1 catch to set up
Cleveland's second touchdown.
. Crennel chuckled when
asked if Heiden would hike
Wmslow 's starting spot.
"We're gomg to work
Kellen m and I'll say this:
Don't be surpmed 1f Kellen
is the starter," Crennel sa1d.
"I'm not saying he's the
starter, but don't be surprised
if he's the starter."

Titans

former Colts cornerback
N1ck Harper helped break
up a pass to Marvin
Harrison on fourth-and-2.
Tennessee responded by
driving 66 yards over 6:51,
and White scored hts second TD - giving hi~. 10
for the season. Hope p1cked
off Manning again With
3· 38 left Rookie Chris
Johnson scored hts own TD
on a I6-yard run and the
sold-out crowd clad m
Tennessee light blue began
celebrating another wm.
Manning scored on a 1yard run with I : 17 left, but
Titans safety Michael
Griffin recovered the Colts'
onside kick atteml't that
diCin't travellO yards.
"I hope we can play a lit·
tic ticked off," Mannina
said. "There's a healthy way
to be anary and try to
bounce back and do tome·
thlna about it, We had aome
chances tonlaht. We htld the
load, and then just they
made the play1 In tho ICC·
ond half, and we didn't."
Mannina put the Colta up
14-6 with his second TD

pass to Clark, a 19-yarder
on their opening dnve of the
second half. That seemed
hke it might be enough on a
night when all the Titans
could manage were field
goals
They eventually got a little help from the Colts, who
again were w tthout Bob
Sanders, the retgmng
Defensive Player of the
Year, running back Joseph
Addai and cornerback
Kelvin Hayden.
"
The Titans drove 80 yards
in 14 plays capped by
Wh1te's !-yard run on thirdand-goal, assisted by an illegal contact pena,lty on
Marlin Jackson with a flag
coming a little late after
Justin Gage had dropped a
pass on third-and-5. Then
Melvin Bullitt was called
for pass interference on
tlaht end Bo Scaife, puttin11
tlie ball at the lndlanapollil
18.
Tcnneneo then tied It at
14 when ColUn• rolled to
his rlaht and found fullback
Ahmard Hall for the 2-polnt
conversion.

fromPageBl
14-6 in the th1rd quarter on
two touchdown passes to
Dallas Clark agamst a
Tennessee defense that
came m havmg allowed
only one . TD pass through
the first six games
But the Titans came up
big after tying 1t at 14 with
3:21 left m the third.
The NFL's stingiest scormg defense stopped the
.,Colts on· fourth-and-short
on consecutive drives at the
end of the third and start of
the fourth. Linebacker
Stephen Tulloch stopped
Dominic Rhodes behind the
line on fourth-and·! with
less than a minute left In the
third. Rob Bironas' second
flel&lt;tlloal, a48·yarder,llave
the Tftana a 17·14lead early
In the fourth quwr,
On the Colu' nut po1101·
Blon, Mannina couldn't con·
ncct flut with Rellllie
Wayne, who failed to pl!l£ In
a pass one-handed. -Then

•

Daily Sentinel ·Page B3

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Winslow ready to move on and play
team's handling of his three·
day hospitalizauon at the
Cleveland Clime with a staph
infection . After imt1ally
agree in~ with the team to
keep hts illness concealed,
Winslow revealed he had
staph following a loss at
Washington last week.
Two days later, the Browns
suspended the outspoken
Winslow one game without
pay for disparagmg comments and behavior toward
the organizatiOn. Wmslow
insists he was commg forward to protect the health of
his teammates. He has had
staph tw1ce and is one of at
least SIX known Cleveland
players to contract staph
smce 2005.
Winslow appealed the suspens10n, wh1ch was dropped
late Saturday mght after the
Browns reportedly learned
Winslow had rece1ved text
messages from a member of
Cleveland's media relations
staff who told him not to
reveal he had staph.
After Sunday's 23-17 win
in Jacksonville, Savage
downplayed the rrnportance
of the text messages and said
he and , Winslow's agent,
Drew Rosenhaus, had been
working toward a settlement
since Thursday.
Savage also suggested
Winslow had ·been hosp1talized for something other than
staph and the club was trying
to protect the player's priv~cy.

The

'

today. because there are
things we need to do better.
If we tl1nch. It 's my fault,
and I understand that."
They flinched a lot in
Houston . where cornerback
Johnathan Joseph provtded
the stgnature play for the latest season gone bad.
Kevm Walter. a receiver
who left the Bengals as a
restncted free agent two
years ago, beat Joseph on a
crossmg
pattern
from
Cmcmnati's 39-yard hne .
He made a diving catch at
about the 30. Joseph slowed,
allowmg Walter to get back
to hts feet. Joseph touched
hun wtth two hands after he
was off the ground, thmkmg
the receiver would be ruled
down
WtoQg . Walter ran the rest
of the way for one of h1s two
touchdowns
Lewts agreed the cornerback fmled to hustle on the
play.
"That's a poor play."
Lew1s ,,ud. "It's as poor a
play as you can have on an
NFL field"
The Bengals aren't in a
posttion to make meaningful
changes.
Quarterback
Carson Palmer is out indefinitely with an injured elbow,
limning the offense. The
defense has slipped the last
two games, gtving up a lot
of long passes. Lewis'
advice is to keep trying .
"When you've been
·embarrassed like we were,
the only way to get away
from that is to redeem yourself," he said. "And the only
way to redeem yourself is to
go do better, and do better
nght away, and not let it sit
and spoil you."
The last two losses suggest they're past that point.

BEREA (AP) - Kellen
Winslow didn't utter a word
about staph infections or suspensions , After a conrentJous, confusing week
laced With suspicion, innuendo and · dueling statements,
the ' Pro Bow I ught end
returned to the Cleveland
Browns on Monday eager to
restart his disrupted season.
"I'm ready to move on and
just play fqotball ," he said.
Wmslow and the Browns
appear to have made a truce,
albeit a tenuous one.
Suspended one game last
week by the club, wh1ch later
Its
penalty,
rescmded
Wmslow reJoined h1s teammates one day after the
Browns won for the second
time llus season w1thout him.
Wmslow spoke briefly m
front of his locker before
heading to a team meeting.
The 25-year-old said he has
worked out his differences
w1th Browns general manager Ph1l Savage and owner
Randy Lerner.
"They knew where I was
coming from and I understood where they were coming from, so it is all worked
out," he sai4. "I am JUSt
excited to get back to playing
football, doing what I love to
do. I just really see this as a
challen~.e, so I am gomg to
meet 11.
Winslow was banned from
the team's facihty last week
by the Browns, who suspended him for cnhcizmg the

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FOUND. Siamese

Educatlon.....................................................500
Buolneat &amp; Trode Scl1ool......................... 505
lnotructl"on &amp; Trolnlng ................................. 510
Lenona ...,................-................................. 515
Paroonal. ..................................................... 520
Anll'nllla ....................................................... 600
Animal Suppllao ........................................ 605
Horoot............ ........................................ 810
Llvaatock ............. ,, .................... ...............616
Peto ...............................................................620
Want to buy .............................................825

recom·

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Mollohan Carpet

avallab~.(740)992·1328

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legola ........................................................... 100 Recreational Vehicles ............................ 1000
Announcementa ........•.......•.....•..............•.. 200 ATV ........................................................... 1005
Blrthdlly/Annlveraary .... ........ ..... ........ ...... 205 Bicycles................................................ 1010
Happy Ada.................................................... 210 Boata/Acceasorlee .................................. 1015
Loat &amp; Found ••....••..•.••••.••••••••••••.••••••••••••••• 215 Compor/RVo 6 Trallora ..... ,. ...................... 1020
Memory/Thank You ................. .,.................. 220 MOtorcycles.......... ..• •...••.. •••••....• .....• 1025
Notlces ......................................................... 225 Other .......................................................... 1030
Pereonala ............................ .................... 230 Want lo buy ............................................... 1035
Wanted ...........:............................................ 235 Automotive .............................................. 2000
Services ....................................................... 300 Auto RentaiA.ea•e .................................. 2005
Appliance Servlca ..,.......... ........................ 302 Autoo .......................................................... 2010
Automotive ...... ,..........,....,, .......................... 304 Clooolc/Antlquea ...................................... 2015
Building Materlala .. .. ...............•............... 306 Commerclalllnduatrlal .............................. 2020
Butlnell ................. ········'···· ..................... 308 Parte &amp; Accesaorlee..................................2025
Catarlng ........................................................310 Sports Utility ............................................2030
Child/Elderly Caro ................................... 312 Trucko .. ......................................................2035
Computero ............................................... 31~ Utility Trollera ............................................ 2040
Contractora .... ,,, .. ,........................................ 318 Van• .... • ...... ....
.... .... •.•. .•••• • .•• 2o.t5
Oomeatlca/Janltorlal ................................. 318 WontiO buy .............................................. 2050
Eleclflcot ................................... .............. 320 Rut Estate Salee ...................................... 3000
Financial, ...... ,, ....... ,....... ,,, ............................322 Cematery Plots... . ........,.. ....... ,...... . .... 3005
Hoalth .................................................. 328 Commercial ..........................................3010
Hoatlng • Coollng ....................................... 328 c;ondomlnluma ..........................................3015
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner....................................3020
lnaurence ................................................ 332 Houoeo lor Sale ..................... ...............3025
uwn Service ............................................... 334 L.ond (Acroage) ........................ :.................3030
MualcJDance/Drama .................................... 338 Loto ..... ............ . .............. .... ....... .........3035
Othor Senrlceo ..........................................338 Wont to buy..............................................3040
Plumbing/Electrical ....................................340 Real Eotate Rentalo ...................................3500
Prole11lonol Sarvlcea .................................342 Apartment..,.ownhouH:a ......................... 3505
R-lrt ......... ........................ ................... 344 Commercial ....... ............................ .......... 3510
Rooting ................................................. 346 Condomlnluma......................................... 3515
Security ........................................................ 348 HouMa for Rant ....... ......... ... ... . ..... 3520
Tax/Accounting ........ ....... ...•••. •............... 350 L.ond (Acreage).. ................................ 3525

TraveL/Entertainment .... . .. • ....... ............ 352
Financial .....................................................400
Flftllnclel Servlcea .......................................405
lnaurance .................... ....., ......................... 410
, Money IO Lend ............................................. 415

on

$450

announcemant ~~--~~-­
the Oh10 Valley M1n1ature
Schnouzers

PubliShing Company)

'

$350

Storage ....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent ..... . . .. ............................. 3540

Mlnulactunod Housing .......................... 4000

Lota .............. ....................................... ,......4005
Movere ..................................................4010

Rantalo ..........................................,........... 4015
Salao..........................................................4020
Suppll"··•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••oo4025
Wont to Buy ............................................... 4030
Rot011 Property ......................................... 5000
Re11011 Property lor ulll .•...•..................... 5025
Reo011 Property lor rent ........................... 5050
Employmant...............................................eooo
Accountlng1Financlal ... ,............................8002
Admlnlotratlve/Pro!Holonol...................:6004
Cooht.r/Ciark .............................................6006
Agriculture.............. ............. ...... ........... 700 Child/Elderly Cera ................................... 8008
Farm Equipment .......................... ,...............70S Clerical ................................................ 6010
Gorden &amp; Produce ......... .,.......................... 710 Conatructlon..... . .................................. 6012
Hay, Feed, Sled, Grain .............................. 715 Drlvara &amp; Delivery . ... ......................... 8014
Hunting • L.ond .......................................... 720 Education ........... .................................... 6016
wont to bUy ..................................................725 Eloctrlcal Plumblng ...................................5018
MerchondiH .............................................. 900 Employmenl Agencln..............................5020
Antlqu................................. .. ,..................... 805 Entertainment ..................................... 6022
Appliance ...................................................810 Food Sarvlcet... ......................................6024
Aucttona •.•.•• , ...... .............. . ..••• .............815 Go-nment a F-rol Job............ . ..... 5028
Bargain Baaement ......................................820 !Wp onled- General. ......•........................ 5028

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740-992 5064
Equal
Hous1ng Opportumty
NICe
Clean
Ground
Floor 2br WID hookup
Aelerences/Deposlt/No
Pets 304 675 5162
Now accepting
appliCations at
Valley Vtew Apartments
BOO State Route 325
Thurman Oh1o 45685

740-245-9170

t 2 Bedroom Apartments
with appliances furn1shed
On Slle laundry facility
Call for detailS or piCK up
appiiCSIIOn at rental
OffiCe
PossJblh!y or rental
assistance
Equal Hous1ng
Opportun1ty
TDOil 419·526-0400
"lh1s mst1tut10n 1s an
Equal Opportunl~
Prov1der and Employer"

Vans
~---~-;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-- ~~--~----· Tara
Townhouse
2 bedroom l!vtng room
kitchen bath Apartment
Ha11e Central A1r fur

Apanments
2BR, 1 5
bath back pat1o pool
pl-.yground, (trash sew
nlshed
With
couch, age
water
pd )
chairs
washer
dryer S4251rent
$425/sec
Want To Buy
stove microwave beds dep Call740·367·0547
dm1ng table and cha1rs
Cars Trucks and GMC $400 depos11 $450 a
Comma-'•!
•Saturn Bu1ck SUI/'s wlttJ month
Call "'"~iiOii"':';;;;;;~~
~
warranty
V1Sll us at 304·682 2523
Leave 2 bay servtee , staiiOn
(gocdookmotorn com)
Message and Number 11 Jackson
P1ke
Lease
Cook Mo1ors 328 Jack not at Horne
reqwred Call 446 3644
son Ptke 740-446 0103
lor more 1nto
,----..,...~~ 2 BA Apartment &amp; 2 BR ;;;;,;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,,.,,"""'
Want to buy Junk Cars House on 51h St Pt
Housel For R.nt
call740·388-o884
Pleasant
304·812·4350 ~::-;:;;;;;;~~~~
ask for Don
$2 ~i'llmo "' t-oed ~ nmh
01 Oldsmobile Silhouette
98000 m11e 1 owner,
OIID player great cond
$5495 740 441 9322

=======

--:::::--:-::::-"::":":--::=:::

;;::

28 A

;;,;;;;,;;;;,..,,;,;;;;;,;;;~"""
Worllo luy

APT

CIA

!740)

: : : : : : ; ,44,. ,.1-01.,.94=---:~
HouMI For Safe
3 br $400 a mo 1 br
-.;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-'$295 a mo plus utiliiiEis
.Buy1ng tools sell or trade ~
Mechantc-cafJ}Bnter lawn 1B6 North Park Or call &amp;
deposit
3rd
St
J04-tl 75•5640
or Racu,e (740)247-4292
&amp; garden powt~r tools
Call 740·388-15,5 or cell 304·593·12()4 Will sell on 3 rooms and bath up·
74D-208-o320
Land Contract or Our stairs
Completely fur·
Right Also a Weltmglon nlshed With WID No
Absolute Top Dollar s1l PlllflO call for appOint pets Rei Aeq 441 0245
ver/gold
co1ns
any --~ll~o~sea"""':lh~em~bo-lh
....~
10KI14Kf18K gold ,ew ':"'
2BA dose 10 hosp•tal
2 br 1 b. full basement, wid hookup app1 tur·
elry' denial gold ' pre above ground pool de ntshed 740-441 3702 or
1935
US
currency
IBchod double garage. .....,.~
740 ·266
5769
proof/m1nt
sets,
d1a· tenced-1n back yarCI, mce ':'
~=~:-~~
monds, MTS Co1n Shop nelghbort'lOOd ll'l Racine, CONVENIENTLY
LO
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· (740 )992 1424
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD
~:;po;;;l";;;,;;44;,;6;,;2;;64~2'=""'""" ~~~~~~~ ABLE I Townhouse apart
;::
3 BD HOUSE IN CHES ments
and/or
small

Yard Sala

3BR

wood floors W/0 No pet

25950 lbs Don"!
COL
$6,500 1BA Apl W
ID hoo•ups

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams Pipe Rebar ;::

Channel, Flat Bar Steel
Grating lor Drains Drive
ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mon
Tue
Wed
&amp;
Fn
Bam 4 30pm
Closed
Thurs
Sat
&amp;
Sun
740-446 7300
TRAILERS COM
:-;~-:------::-:~~
New Lennox Pulse Fur740-446-3825
~---:-:-~ nace down draft With ex·
7-:
oh tra parts, 90,000 BTU
Have you priced a J n $699 00 74()-446·4306
Deere lately? You'll be ~~-:~--:-::-.
surpriSed! Check out our Travel trunk
14"
x
used
mventory
at 14"115"h~gh
tooled
VN.wCAREOcom
Car leather
Stenciled s A
miChael
Eqwpment
740 446 2412
Couch.
P1 Ploasanl va
dtd May 1858-phone 304
::O_n_o_r_a'::ffe_r_Oct~o-.ba~r~f4 592·1 ~7 m evening

2008 Carmlctlael EqUip·
ment, Inc Jf 668 P1ne0
crest Dn...e Bidwell, 1'110
I
I
I
I
1
WI
se a Is orgolng
bus1ness prem1ses pursuant to Sect1on 1333 41
of the OhtO Revised
COde a certain John
Deere model 820 tractor
with attacMd loader Se·

G'IW
need

2

Mtddleport

TEA Oh CONTACT

hOuses lor renl Call

Homes 1 Only S19 900 lor
hst1ngs 800-620--4946 ex
A0 19
4 bed 2 bath &amp; OffiCe m
town . hw &amp; tile tloofs,
updated kttchen &amp; baths.
pnvacy leACe &amp; above
ground
pool
secunty

:
28:::A::-ga-ra-ga--:-Ap-a~rtm~e~n':"1
downtown $425 mtll rent
,.. ut1htie&amp;, NO PETS
446~ 15
~-~-.~:'00'=
Free
Rent
Specaal'!'
2&amp;3BR and up Central
A1r WID hookup tenant
pays eleclnc EHO Elm

B.u1~ Rcpn 1 \~ 1:;. drmu
)C :t"

K(WJ

8'l &gt;\I'R 1 r,1r

fi~O -1.!}4bc~ Rn~7

I~

11~llnl!~

:-S400/=~mo -+-:
de_po
_s.,.I1~1B:::'R
Rg&amp;Ael
turn
w&amp;o
hookup, No steps, Very
clean
114 State St
740·441 0596

~--~~~~~

2br on the River In Ma·
son
$500 00 a mon
References

304 862 3512
or
304·488·7946
3 bedroom total electnc
hOuse also 14x70 trader
Rac1ne (740)949·2237
3BR house on SR 160
near North Gall18. H1gh
S&lt;:hoot SSOO rent + $500

Moving
Sale
Co~Jntry ~74.;1).~9;;.65;.·•-1~31~~~~· 740·441 · 11 1, for appb·
Home deCor and fuml 3 Bed 2 Bath HUD cation &amp; InformatiOn
ture At 218 to Ne1ghbor

~;ff.::o;-:~~~~
3 AM s &amp; bath rg &amp; rei
fum very clean no pets
S400 mo + dep off sl
parttms 44&amp;0596
3BA 1 112 bath on Jack
son Pike No pets S675
per month ... DepoSit

r
- / RVs"&amp;
_.,,.... •
_..__
1,_,...
Mlllntenanc.'Domntlc ..................
••... 8032
Equlpmani/Suppllat...................................835 '481111gement1Suparvlaory ................ ••. 6034
HEAP
accep1od ~~~~....~~~ system, much more"' 130
Apls ::74?0~-4~46;;.4~0~51~~"":~
RV Service 81 carrm· Bast1an1 Dr $129000For v,ew
Church parson.age 3BA.
Fin Morkats ................................................ 1140 Mechanlco....................... .........................8038 1 645·5948or441-094,
1304)882·3017
to
1
Fuel 011 Cooi/Wood/Oao.................. ... . .•. 945 Medical ............................................ :........ 8038
chael
Tra11ers pk:s and n rma IOn go -:-:~-:-.-.~ 2 bath full basement 2
FurnHure ................................. ,... ,......... 950 Mualcel ...................................... ..... 6040
740-446·3825
to
www ONb com Tw1n A111ers Tower IS ac- ca1 garage
Includes
Hobby/Hunl• Sport.................................... 955 PartwTime-Temporaries ........................... 61M2
446
2923
1
f
W
ID
I ""- and
Jet Aeration Motors re~ -:::-------..;.;~~--.~~ cept1ng app 1Cat1ons or
new
r.UV"'
Kld"l Comer ..................... -······· ....... ...... 960 Reataurante ............................................. - ~
paired, new &amp; rebuilt 1n Rv
fur Salt:: 1 • tOt) at .:4l l Mt waiting hst lor HUO sub- range Sits on near1y 2
Mlocello.-uo...........................................985 Salea.................. , .................................... 6048
stock caM Ron Evans, SeNICe at Ca.rmlchael vlm&lt;&gt;n AH· Pf Plea..am sidtZed I BA apanment acres $700 plus sec
WOfltto buy .................................................. 870 Technical Tradeo .................................... 6050
Trallf!IS
4br tbit 112 base a&gt;li.mg for ltle elderly/~5Bbled dep For 11110 or mspec' "" Sot. ........ ....... .......... ............ .. .... ····· 975 ToxtlloiiFactol'l' ......................................... 6052
1-800- 537•9528
740-446-3825
S80 coo ){14 &lt;&gt; 7~ :wn
call 675 6679
bon call 245..()031
Collectlblea ............................, .................. 825
Computare ..................................... ........... 830

Law Enforcernent ...................................... 6030

Seasoned Ftrewood CAA

1

II

Off1ce Hours M, W F

256·1616

Spec1al 20 oz Commer

Beech St

br h.nn1shed apartment
ut 11111es pa1d no pets,
dep
&amp;
ref
1740)992-0165

$560

TownhouMs

lo-~'6

Pels
Miacelloneoua
~:'"";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;; =--~--~--~~

Re~t~ls

TownhouMs

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Baauttful Apts at JackApartments/
son Estates 52 West
wood Or from $365 to

D

@ 2008

Re.1 1Es i&lt;J ic

350 0

M~~-

=======

=""'""'""'""'""'""'"

Trade 1995 Chevy Con
vers1on
Van
9)(Cellent
conditiOn easy on gas
also wltra11er
'76"x16
2 350011' BKies 2 wheel
brakes w/ramp tor 5
acres tn Me1gs Coun~

Aporlmtnh/

•

�~For.....
Houle For Aenl ' Point
~aant : 2--story house,
Main St. Point Pleasant,
2
br.,2
Da.
2
fr.,dr.• kitchen wfstove, relrigerator, 112 basement,
~rge yard, no pets,
1555(l.OO,dep. &amp; ret. req .

food S.Mc:oo

Go...,IMIII &amp; F.doral

010101
;;
McDo
""'nald's ""';;o;;t..,,.R,.Io

~~--!!!J=:obo".:::""'~~

Sal..
01

~38!1!A/2!1!!1!BA~.""'CI~A, ~t~6x~32~

01

Help Wanlocl. General

$250 Sign on Bonuo
Ten positions need filled
by next week1
No Sates!
No CoHectlons!

Service Manager &amp; Serv·
ice Technician pos1110ns
available. Health care &amp;
Retirement plans allallable. Please send re·
sume
to
LLCIICAAEO.COM
or
tax to 740-44B-9t04

.;

Pomeroy, 2 br., 1 bath,
flO pels, · no smoking,

Help Want.d • Genwal

740..385-2434

$475
plus
1740)992-5 t 8t

deposit, Prices Reduced 2 2006
1SxBO 2 bed 2 bath. t
2000 16x70 2 bed 1
Well maintained 4 br. bath, 1 1999 16x80 2
~use &amp; 2 t)r. cabin on Dad 2 bath gas, 1 1997
200 acres close to 14x70 2 bed 2 bath gas,
Pomeroy. available im- t 2002 16x80 3 bed 2
mediately,
bath. Priced delivered
(740)992-4590
or blocked, leveled and an740-416-7538
chored.
Day
Ph.
740-388-0000
&amp;
~OQO
f,\~11Ull\C'Jr('d
740-388-8513
&amp;
Housmg
740-245-92 15
Evenings
&amp;
weekends .
Ph.
740-388·8017
&amp;
Rontalo
740-245-92 15
&amp;
2BR trailer for rent. 740·794-0460
'
387-7762
Pleasant
area,
Pl.
Federal Funds just re- bank . owned double
leased for Land Owners. wide on lg liat lot
'No closing cost and close to town $24 .900
.ZERO DOWN! Will do Brokers Realty Mike
Broker
land
improvements. Slack
Bankruptcy ·&amp; Bad Credit 304-542-5888.
OK. 2. 3, 4 and 5 bed·
rooms
available.
5000
R('so 'P opcrty
740-446-3384
2 br.. 2 bath in Syracuse,

AVONI All Areas!
To
Buy or Sell Shirley
Spaars 304-6751429

-1' Full and Part-time

Help us make calls on
behalf of ConseiVative
Political Ol'ganizations,
Candidates and causes.

2004 Doublewide in new
Driven &amp; Delivery
condition. 4 bedroom , 2 ;;;;;....;.;;;;..;.;;;;;;
bath, all appliances in·
eluded, $37,000 located
Seeking ·
driver
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma· w/CDLIHazrflat qualificason City 304-675-2117
tions lor lull time employment @ propane busiBrand new 3Ded 2bath ness. send resumes to:
on · + ·halr acre i~ · Pt Daily Sentinel, PO Box
Pleasant OWNER Fl· 729-23,
Pomeroy, Oh
NANCE
AVAILABLE. 45769
(740) 446-3570

CiiiTODAYI '
Interview
TOMoRROW!!
Work NEXT WEEKI! I

• Eam up to S8.50Alour
t Medical, Dental, EAP,
and 401K ·
• On site doctor!
t Full and part-time
schedules
Start doing work you can
be proud of. Start doing
'WOrk tl1at makes a
difference. Start your
new career today!
Calltodayl
1-tln-463-11247 Ext.
2331
hnp:l~obt. lntoclslon.com

Card of Thanks

Positions
•' Day and Evening
Shilts
.,; Professional Work
Environment!
.,; Medical. Dental. EAP,
401K!
"' On·site Doctor
.,; Weekly r·ay and
Bonus Incentives!

. We are getting reedy
lor the 2008
elections and we
need YOU I

Fmplo~mr: 1t

For Rent
Accountihg I financial
Mot&gt;ile homes &amp; . lots .
(no pets) in Ashton WV
304-576-2942.
-Local
home
tl)edical
equipment company now
Scenic location, conven· · seeking
·e)(perienced
lent to town and al1ord- mediCal billing specialist
able. 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms with cuslomer service
available
call skills. Fax resume and
(740)992-5639
salary requirements to
Salao
740-44t -t 54B

~

Management
·Qpporturlities
We seek career oriented
Individuals who will striv&amp;
tQ achieve the "Besr in
Customer Satisfaction
and team work. II you
have a desire to succeed
with a goal driven, team
onented and growing
company, we offer:
Healtht dental, and lite
insurance, prescription
card, bonus program,
paid vacation.
management apparel,
advancement from
within.
Apply in person a1111e
Burger King Restaurant
65 Upper River Rd or
mail resume to:
Burger King
PO .Box 2407
Huntington, WV 25725 or
lax resume to: '
740.446-3400 Of
304·529-0055
EOE

~~~~~~~~

all electric, $400 a mo.
plus dep . &amp; utilities: 2 br, 6000
1
bath,
14x70.
(740)992-7680

Recruil volunteers tor
non-profit organizations
such as St. Jude
Children'SResearch
Hospital.
Gel pa1d to make a
ditterencel

1-88tHMC.PAYU
Ext. 1941
http://}obl .lnfoclslon.com

Ohio
valley
Home
Health, Inc. hiring Home
Health Aides.
STNA.
CNA, CHHA, PCA may
apply at 1480n Jackson
Pike , GaNipolls, Ohio or
phone 740-441 -1393 lor
more info. Competitive
wages. mileage reimbursement and benefits
including health insur-

;:;;:======-=======;;;;; .
Card of Thanks

ance &amp; much more.

The family of

Michael Bailey
wishes to thank the
fire departments, businesses,
churches and the many
individuals, who gave gifts of
money, offered their prayers and
acts of kindness during the
surgery &amp; recovery of Cassidy.
Your kindness 'will always be in
our hearts.
Michael, Kim, Ben &amp; Cassidy

L.o'--------------''-1

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~F=~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~

Nortb

. A J I 0\143

'

Wanted:
Part
Time
Room Al1endant at 1he
Gallipolis Holiday Inn
Must be wiling . to work
weekends and holidays,
Experience preferred but
we will train. Apply in
person. Absolutely no
phone calls.

New 01rages ,
Ettctrlell &amp; Plumbing
floollng &amp; Gutters
Vtny·l Siding &amp; Pelntlng

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
'
45771
740-949-2217

iff '

Patio 1nd Porgh Decks

wv 036725
V.C. YOUNG Ill
99262t5
Pomeroy Ul&gt;ou
2'i YL' 1• ~ Loc.11 ~ ~ pc' L' ncr

if. ' 11' 1f113G' &lt;

P.T. Community Manager needed lor local
apartment community lo·

L &amp; L Tire Barn

cated in Gallipolis, Ohio:

44087 Wipple Rd.

Ideal candidate will have
previous experience in

Pomeroy, OH

proper1y m~riageinent at
a Aural Development

New &amp; Use,d Tires.
We buy used ti res.

propeny, eKcellent com-

munlcatlon and organizational skills and be dependable. Health insurarice &amp; 401k available.

Salary dependent upon

changes. small engine

experience. ~ mitre-

repair.

sume &amp; salary require-

We service and

ments to: Ga!lipcliS C.M.,

RV 's

190. Lancaster OH
43130-0t90 or· email to:

(740) 992-5344
8:00 am - 4:30, pm

is seeking part-l irne inMedical
structors who... possess a ;;;..,;;;;..,;;;;~;;;;;;:;=

We appreciate yot1r

Accepting
applicatiOns
tor full &amp; part time EMT,
and
Par'amedics
We

Currently ForBeingFuii-.Time.
Conducted
Experienced CNA Posltions &amp; 1 Experienced
Dieta"' Helpar. Applicants That Enjoy The

at
followmasoncountyoes.com,
the EMS link.

have a beneltts package
available. $15.00/hr Air
plicatlons ean be ob·
reercollege.edu or call tained from the Mason
800-214·0452
County EMS 911 EmerC N A's I DIETARY gency Drive, Point Pleas- \,-""'::HELPER. Interviews Are ant, WV 25550 or online

Middlet0n Estates· .is accepting applications lor a
tulltime . LPN Supervisor

• Complete
Remodeling

•

140-992·1171

'•

/

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

H&amp;H
Guttering

and more...

-

,
•

-.

"*'ton

To Subscribe Call

The Daily Sentinel

.,

flATIN~S •

992-2155

NGt1b

1•
3 NT

Pass
Pa86

Pass

1'
2•

~- r&amp;J·~ LT,'IID~"IN"$
rt 10 7 , " i1
,

TOPPEf&gt; ,Y

~

"f&gt;ANC.ING A/lOtJ/'J/)
~~~~~~@~~~~i
·
".rt.,.,
~ · T tl I'11: l.f5U~
i1 · •1

~~

to ~ 28
'f~V.t-")-

_____

OCVE.LQ!&gt;~~. l

f&gt;.Ji\ NOT

FEE:.U~I'\'1 ~L,

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2011

~

f'\1&gt;...'( &amp;.
P"'t-10 _:_'I'Our~E. JU5T
~FFERIKG&gt; ~ ~•.
IQCE.~510K !

oo'&lt;du TI·\11--IK I

P"'

t:&gt;OC.TOR

I~ A.

_r;=.:;:----_...1

7;_.

Cell: 740-416-5047

email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

YoU'LL
NEED To
TURN
ARoUND, SON.

AstroGraph
-'llldhlflly:

Wedneoday, Oct. 29, 2008

Maintenance Plus
Commucia/ &amp;: Rtsidtnlial

Vinyl
Siding/Replacement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740;992-1493 Office
740-4!6-8339 Cell
Free Estimated

Pomemy, Ohio

CLOAK TO SI-IIELD ME FROM

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt and Qualify
Work

"'Reasonable Rates
*Insured

*Expmenced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

:;,.: _:.;_;: _:.:.,;:. ; _;___-, r-------_,.--,

r1'

740-591 ·8044

Joh'£Wif,tr"
11.11. 1HP

i&amp;H

lU-112-51112

, ... HIH

·---

Compfolo Tloo CoN
lnelnd • F!1oe .........

Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, RoOm
Additions

J&amp;L

•Roon1 Add~lono
Ow~r:

Jamet Kte- II
742-2332

LOCIII Conb7 411-387..()544

I•

·'

F-Eotf....tM

740-367-()538

f

~=--~~-~~~~

For Remodeling and New House Bulldlq

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Addilions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Bam~ • Patio's, Porches and Decks

.Coli:

.

MIIEW...CI.
47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 7&lt;1()-416-1834

25+ yean experitne~ Frtt Eni-1

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month ,

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

J.-.oo&lt;---...1)

_,_
......
,.,.__

GRIZZWELLS

tJI. )bU Ct-1-I'T ~EAT
~ tMTCilU~

"1\lE
'~
~1\IS
L\O~~

lalget
4 Buckeye
campus
7 Find fault

1 t Mo.
multipleo
12 Fiohhook

gradea

SO Bread

part

grain a

14 --opeod
15 Poychic
power
16 Foutlh•
tar gut
asteroid
17 Quick look
18 loalet

52 Flyin;
mammal
53 Piccadilly
statue
54 Bench or
hassoCk
55 Forum hello tO Dawdling
56 Refute
13 Quits
57 Calendat
(2 wds.)
· diva. ·
19 Get smart
56 lnexpari•
with
enced
21 Rembrandt
painlings
DOWN
24 Street

35 Do garden ·
. work
,
36 Submissive
38 Slylish ·
39 Crows over
41 Fine-tune
42 Frosted
43 Just
In Paris
44 Unskilled
Ivan's
25 Science
laborer
refusal
magazine 46 Diplomat
2 Latin bear 26 Unwrap
Abba3 Sugar amte. 27 Dissolve
47 Cathedral
part
28 Type
4 Goal
5. River rapids
o squad
48 One-pol
6 Coflea
29 Youn9iady
dinner
serve~r
of Sp.
5t Ever green
7 Dome
31 Caus~c
trH
8 Mimicked
remarks
9 AAA
33 Sighs
suggestiOr'!S
of content

20 Groveliko
22 Circus
routine
23 Part of
RSVP
24 Perch
27 Wiodom
. tHth
30 Out callero
31 Alhena'o
· falhlr
32 Kao~h

relat1ve

34
35
36
37

Pilot's dir.
Wither
c.ncle lover
Hlllhe
Tab key

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ctlttlrlly Cl~trcryptogr1m1 arecrea1.:l lrom ~ u01 111oos OytamousPtr:ple
Each lelt&amp;r In !h9 Clp1&amp;! 11111n~s br11n~' ''

pe~

llld Pllitlll

·

Today's·due: B equafs Y

" ZCW

JICOWL

TAZB

UYNWXFRWFZ
HWJKW

JFT

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• IJRWD

00

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'My Whrte House job pays more than
systems. biA the tenure is less certain.· · Lyndon 8. Johnson

publ ~ sdlo~

~::~:~~~ S©J\Q{r~A-lretts·

woao:
GAll:

lcflttd ~~ CLAY I. POLlAN·

.

ltHers of the
0 lovr scrambled
word• b..
~earron91

low to form four 1imple worda.

By Bernice Bede 0101

In the year ahead, you will be able to uti~
Jize acquired experience and knowledge
in 'Nays that will acce,lerate your rise to
the top. Once on a roll, your progress will
be rapid.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) - Small
fruslral io~ with which you might have to
con tend from time to time shouldn't put a
damper on an the good t~ i ngs that will .
happen to you at this lime.
SAOtnARtUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)-Your
material pt06pects are much brighter
than usual, although lhey might derive
trom some unexpected sources. EMplo're
hidden, seldom~tapped moneymS:klng
channels.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -The
TI-!EN I SHALL SEEK
· HERE .. WE'RE SUPPOSED
best course of action wilt be the one that
ELSEWHERE FOR SPIRITUAL
TO DO ALL OF TI4E5E
you establish lor yourself, lor which you
can assume a leadership role and not be
PROBLEMS ON PAGE NINE ..
dependent on anyone else.
Ml( TEM:IlER'S IC'( W,RATH ..
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. 19) - If you
allOw Lady luck to run your day and
don't try to alter conditions to suil what
you think Is best, you will have ;i greater
chance of events working out to your liking .
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch . 20) - Lady
Luck will be attentive to your involveinents. especially .those that are grouporiented. If you IIX&gt;k like a wimer and act
like one, you wi11 find that y0u are one.
r~-------:--:-1
AR tES (March 2t -April t9) - There
~ sl1ould be no excuses as to why you
I'M TII2ED OF ~OU
D0£5 THIS BOYCOTT H~VE can't do anything you want. The aspects
Pl101t\ISIN' ONE THING ON
ANYTHING TO DO WITH THE . allow lor just abolrt any activity you wish
F~CT TH~T YOU'~E EIGHT?
to pursue: it'll satlsty your needs.
T~E TV AND THEN OOIN'
. TAURUS {April 20-May 20) - Almost
WHATEVER YOU WI\NT
any relationship you want to improve can
ONCE YEI1 ELECTED .
become more harmonious and meaninglfS ~~~HOOEY!'
lui with a little effort on your part. Don't sit
back and wait for.life to happen.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Your talents and abilities shotJid be used lo the
fullest on things that eould have a good
effect upon your material circumstances. •
YOu have what it takes to derive returns
from more than one source.
f;;2:~...!~
CANCER {Ju'ne 21-July ~l- You cou ld
1:
'"' I....-----..:;;;---'. be elCtremely fortunate not only for your·
self but tor those with whom you share
your day. Lady Luck haS singled you out
for special attention, so put her generos-ity to good us~;~.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - A person~t
matter looks as if it's going to work out for
you in ways that will meet your highest
elCpectations. Keep the faith, and keep
plugging al1ead.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Although
you are likely to be well received by most
eve~one , It could be members of the
opposite sex who'll find you the most
appealing. II you're looking, De sure to
get out and mingle.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. .23) - II you've
recently acquired a bit of a llr.~ancial surplus, don't let it burl') a hole in yoUr pock~
el. It's OK to spend a little for tun , bUt put
most of It Jn places where ~ won't be
wasted.

A

Quality Seamless
Gutters

Ea•t
Pas!
Pa!&amp;
Pass

the
three and hope for Islhe
best. Partner
will noticethatthetwo
missing,
but he
· migh1 think declarer is hiding that card.
When you do not have the necessary
card, life can be tough ..
In today's deal, West had the ideal c:ard
and could make his partner's tile easy.
If you open a 6-4 hand with sb: jn a major
and four In a minor, It Is normal to rebid
In tho major with a minimum opening
bid, but to bid major-minor-major wlih
eXIra values.
Here, South aho1.1iU in:1vt1 rebid thrtt dla·
monds, which wi&gt;uld have led to a llnal
contract ol rive diamonds, which Is
unbeatable. (Six clamonds can be made
unless the defense casl'l8s a spade and
shifts to a trump.)
Against throe no-trump, West led !he
club eight, top of nothing. Declarer overtook dummy's lack with his ijng and
' played a heart. to dummy's nino. East
won with his queen.and returned a elub
10 remove dummy's entry. Now came the
heart aee, tl1en the heart jack to East's
king, South pitching a diamond and a
spade. What did West discard?
West threw the diamond four, 11is lowest
card to discourage in thai su~. Now East
knew that declarer'had a dummy entry in
diamonds. So East shifted to the spade
queen {in case West had A·10·x). Tl1e
defenders took 1hree spades f,or down
one.

G
PSI CONSTRUCTION

40 Not decal.
· 41 Finger
oppolile
42 Obotruct
45 AOUOII up
49 Average

"" ~ The contract is, say, lour spades. Partner
leads the heart ace and you wish to
g~ j encouragehimtoconlinuehearts.Then,
~ ~ 21 assuming you use normal signals, you
h~i hope tohaveahighheart. llyouhaveQ~ ~ ~ 9-2, you are laughing, playing the nine.
~Q But it you have 0 -3-2, you have to play

HardWood Ca~nevy All~
F'lt Iila 1
_..,._

THE BORN
'Wm~ Til~ ~E.~T UO~IC

verlion1
1 Wrench

~;)~

~tated

INl~RTAINM~NT

''

l'tUGE

,.f&gt;ArJC,ING WITtl

David Lewis
740-992-6971

Ravenswood, WV. Rei- waitstaH, cooks, dish- space. ~s first coffie first
11 13 . Wasl1ington St., Now Hiring Experienced,
dated. Building
erences
.Required. washef"fi &amp; delivery driv· ~ervc.
ELECTION OF TAX benefit of ·Sutton
Public Notice
Eo E
ers apply In person
Inside Stora~c 14.00I!f
RJM
. . .
Harru's
Famous
Hot
Open Span: $l.OO/Jf
LEVY IN EXCESS OF ~•owns hiP· f or the
An Excellent way to eam
·•
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf
THE
TEN
MILl purpooa
of
Fire PROBATE COURT OF Company,
money. The New AVon. 0D=o=g,=s=N=ew=Ha=v=e=n=== ~::::::~:;::~~
LIMITATION
protection
MEIGS
COUNTY, TPCWD Office In C I
M 1 :
.R.C.
3501 .11(Gj, Said tax being a OHIO
Reedsville, Ohio.
~-aa .
artyn ·
5705.19, 5705.25
replacement of tax of IN RE: CHANGE OF The·
Englneer'a
lstlmate
of Overbrook Rehabilitation
NOTICE Is hereby 1 mill ot a rate not NAME OF ZACHARY
given
that
In exceeding 1 .mill lor THOMAS SCWAB TO
Construction Cost tor Center is currently ac- ~
pursuance
of · a - h one dollar of ZACHARY SELDEN
this project Is $ cepting applications '"'
Concnte
seamless Guners
ReeoiUIIon of the valuation,
which
STORY
t90,000.
lult time cook position,
Rooting, Siding. Gutters
Board of Education amounts to fen cents
CB!Ie NO. 2008 6 034
Copies
of
the Bam-1 :30pm. Anyone in- All typas Mason"/. brick,
Insured &amp; 8onded
of the Southern Local ($0. 101 lor each one NOtiCE OF HEARING contract documenta terested please pick up block, stone, · concre te,
740-653-9657
School
District, hundred dollars of ON
CHANGE
OF and
'bid. an appl&lt;atlon at . 333 Free
Estimate,
Racine, Ohio passed valuation, for five (51 NAME
specifications
may Page Street, Mlddlepon, 304-593-6421
on the 14th day of years. The polls for
Applicant
hereby be purchased ftom OH. E.O. E. &amp; a ParticiAugust, 08, there will the election w(ll open given notice to all
RJM
Engl-tlng pant of the Drug-Free .
be submitted to a at 6:30 a.m. and · Interested
persons Company,
. Inc, Wor1&lt;place·Program.
vote of the people of remain open until that the applicant has · located at 66 . S. Wanted
Welder,
Iron
said subdivision as s 7:30 p.m. on election flied an Application Plains Road, The workers, Pipe . Fitters, &amp;
General Election to day.
for Change of Name Plalns 1 Ohio 45780,
crane
operalof's. Top
be held in the County By order of the Board In the Probate Court upon payment of
Pay.304-763-2694
of Meigs, Ohio, at the of Elections, of Meigs of Meigs County,
Fifty Dollars ($ SOl.
regular places of County, Ohio
Ohio, tequestlng the Each
bid
shell
voting therein, on the John N. lhle
change of name of contain the full name
4th dey of November, Chair
Zachary
Thomas and addiHS of each
08, the question of Rite 0. Smith
Scweb to Zachary
person or company
levying . a tax, In Dll8Ctar
Salden Story. The Interested
In
the
excess of the tan mlll Dated Sapt. 5, 2008
hearing
on
the same and must be
limitation, for the (1 0121, 28
application will be accompenled
by
benefit of Southern
held on the 9th day of either a bid bond In
Public Notice
December, 2008 at the amount of 100
Local School District
far the purpose of
1:30 o'clock p.m. In percent (100%) of the
Current Expenses
NOTICE
OF the Probate Court of bid amount wllh a
Meigs
County, surety satisfactory to
Said tax being a ELECTION OF TAX
renewal
of
an LEVY IN EXCESS OF located
at
Melga TPCWD;
Qr
by
existing tax of 4 mills THE
TEN
MILL County Courlhouse, .certHied
~heck,
at
a
rate
not LIMITATION
100 East Second cashiers check, or a
exceeding 4 mills for R.C.
3501 .11(G), Street, 2nd Floor, letter of credit upon a
each ane dollar of 5705.19, 5705.25
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. solvent bank In the
· vofuatlon,
which NOTICE Is hereby Zachary
Thomas amount of not tess
omounta to forty given
that
In Scwab, 552 Fourth than ten
percent
.($0.40) cento
for · purauance
of
a Avenue
(10%) of the bid
...:11 one hundred Resolution of the Middleport, OH 45760 omount In fllvor of
'dollare of. valuation, Board of Township (10) 28
the aforesaid TPCWD
·far five (51 years. The Ttusteeo
of
the
conditioned that II
polio for the election Township
of
Public Notice
the bid Is accepted, a
will open at 6:30 a.m. Columbia, . Albany,
contract
will
be
and remain apan Ohio passed on the ADVERTISEMENT
entered Into within
until 7:30 p.m. on 7th day of Augus~ oa, FOR BIDS
ten (10) days after
election day.
there
will
b8 Sealed proposals for nollce of f!Cceptance.
By order of the Board submitted to a vote the construction of Bid Bonds shall be
.of Elections, of Meigs . of .the people of said the RAINBOW RIDGE accompanied
by
-County, Ohio
subdivision
ao a WATERLINE
Proof of Authority of ·
John N. fhle
General ·Election to
PROJECT will ' be tf)e official or agenl
Chair
be
held
In
the racelvld
by
the signing the bond. A
Rita D. Smith
Township
of Tuppers
Plains- perfor-mance bond of
Director
Columbia, Ohio, ot Chester
Water ana hundred percent
D - Sept. 5, 2008
the regular pieces of District (TPCWO) at (100%1 of the amount ·
;(10) 21, 28
voting therein, on the their Dfotrfct Office of tha cantroct with a
4th dey of November, conference
roam setlofectory
surety
Public Notice
08, the queotlon of located at 39561 Bar company,
levying a tax, In 30 Rood, Reedsville, conditioned
-NOTICE
OF excen of the tan mill
Ohio, 45n2, until according to law, will
'ELECTION OF TAX limitation, . for the 11om on Thureday, be required far the
LEVY IN EXCESS OF benefit of Columbia
November 6th, 2008, faithful performance
THE
TEN
MILL . TWp. (or the purpooa and at that lime and a! the contract.
,LIMITATION
of Road Malnte111nce
place will be publicly The bidder will be
.R.C.
350t.11(G), Said ta• being an . opened end 'reocl . required to describe •
addltlon~~l tax of 1.5
aloud. All blcll will
In lull datall as til
' 5705.19, 5705.25
; NOTICE Is hereby mllls 'at a rate not be con..,ldered velld their experience In
·given
that
In exceeding 1.5 mlflo untll60 deya after the ·this class of work,
:pursuance
of
a for each one dollar of opening date. Pleue and
bldo
from
· "-'&gt;&gt;utton of the valuation,
which
be oware the Olatrlcto contl8Ctoro
·Bootrd of Tawnohlp amounts to main omce Ia located Inexperienced In lhla
TNof
the (15) cent• ($0. 161 lor th- nilteo lOUth of particular type of
Towrllhfp of SuUon, one hundred Tuppera Plalno )uat work will not be
Recfno, OhiO puaed doll111 of v81uatlon, off Rl 7.
conoldored.
The
on tho 15th d8y of for flvo (5) yeore. The The work far which wolll
-•
AUf11181, 01, thero will polio for lhe etec11on
propo~~lo are Invited
C011111*1C8
upon
be IUbmiMd to a will open at 6:30 a.m. conotota
of
the wr1ttan notice of
vote of the peopt. of end 11meln open construction of 7347 oword by TPCWO.
oubdlvtlkln u a until 7:30 p.m. on
Hneal feel of 4"
By Order of the
_ , , Electlon to
doy.
watwllne and other Tuppers
Plainsbe held In the By order of tho Board reloted work for the Cheater
Water
Township of Sutton, of Efectlona, of Meigs conotructlan of the
District, 39561 Bar 30
OhiO, at the regular County, Ohio
RAINBOW
RIDGE
Road,
Reedsvllla,
pieces
of
voting John N. !hie
WATERLINE
Ohio, 45n2 , Coun.t y
therein, bn the 4th
Chair
PROJ~CT.
. of Meigs, this 19th
dly of Nov8mber, oa, Rita 0 . Smith
The
contract dey of October, 2008.
tho
queillon
of Director
documents
ni•ybe Oct. 28, 2008.
levying a ~. In Deled Sapt. 5,2008
examined
ot
the
axceu of tho ten mill (10) ~~~. 28
following locations:

West

Do you have
ll . the right card?
8"
'

.Ttt~ POLITICAL t&gt;E,ATf5 ttAI&gt;

E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com
www.auctionzlp.c.om
#5548

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

A K 9

&amp;Jutb

39 T01t

~oodod

-. Opening lead: • 8

28 Years

and PANILPN's. You will ~;;;;~~~
be part of a team that
provides services ti indivi duals with mental retar- ·
dation and developmen~ WINTER STORAGE
tal disabilittes. Interested
Mci!ls Co. Fairgrounds
applicants may apply at
Oct . 25.2008
8204 Carla Drive, Galli9:00 u.m.- I I :00 a.m.
polis, Ohio 45631 or
Re!ca&gt;;e; April25. 2(KW
e-mail a rBSUme to dab· A fee of $20.00 will he
shire3@suddenlink.net
~hargcJ fCir early arrival.
lute ;trri\'Hl, early re m ov&lt;~l .
Today. You'll Be Glad
lute remnv al, or anytime
You
Didlt!304-273-5893
Rastaurantl
~cce.~s
is wan1cd 10
Or Stqp In &amp; See Us @ ~=~""'':";;;;""';;;;;:; fairgrounds other than

10- " 2

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: North-South

Stop &amp; Compare

~~~~!!~~l

Healthcare lridustry &amp;
Working With The Ekl·
erly May Apply. Competttive Wages, Paid Vacation. Paid Meats DiHerential Pay Discounts, No
Dues, ·come &amp; .Experi·
ence Working
1~
A
Pleasant, Homelike AImosphere. Call For Your
Confidential
Interview

•

• 5
t A K 10 9

Sal , S:OO am - 12

L--.:;b':;;":;'it;::lt:,:S;;.'_ __.

• K'Q76
• 75

Soutb
. 108643

Mnn-Fri.

kdasbury@embarqmaY .com.

master's degree in gen·
eral education subject .ar·
eas such as: l;ngllsh,
Math, and Social Sciences. E-mail resumes
to
jdanicki@gallipolisca-

• New Homes
• Garages

wi nterize boms and

Gorsuch Mgt., P.O. Box

• QJ n

• 8 2
• 3 6 4
4 !!7653

AUCdOIIIF:
BIIIV R. Goble Jr.
'140-416·1164

a li gn m~ lits , hght
mechanic work.
complete servit:e oi I

West

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

wheel

• Q J' 2
.. Q J
Eaal

.. A K ii

1/1411 me . pd

(5 Points)

..:ompUler

J

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

Pmoorty Manag90Jent

TECHNOLOGY
COMICS RTS

'

10·28 -0B

.. 7

CURRENT EVENTS

'

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

·SHOP THE
CLASSIFIEDS!

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Phillip
Aider

Gallipolis Career College ,.,..,...,E
;;;O;;E;..,,..,...,

2 2845

'•

www.mydailysentinel.com
BRIDGE

Help Wantod • Gonoral

Deck, 112 acre. Jeny's Grande now hiring mom· POST OFFICE
N\)W
Run
Rd.
$46,500 iJ1Q shift. flexible hours. HIRING a11g. Pay $2oltlr
304-578-3111
paid Holid;ws and Vaca- or
$57Ktyr,
incluoes
tion. Apply within.
Fed.Ben, OT. Place .by
New 3 Bedroom homes
adSource, not affiliated
~
fill!:
with USPS who hires.
from $214.36 per mooth ,
. 1 de
de
t-866-403-2582
1nc u s many upgra s.
l"'
___ll_304_·_67-5--2-3-t9_. ___ deliver'!
&amp;
set-up.

Tuesday, October 28, 2008 ,

'·

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 28, 2008
ALLEYOOP

SOUP TO NUTZ.

RAYORS

GN E 0 U

I

1~

T -T

~ ~1 /.-&gt;-'

.-------.
O G N y U ~,

"The real way to success,"

l--r_,..,.....,...._,..,.-1~

lectured the motivational

l-.LI_..L
I'_L-I.L
I'...J o

·I

speaker, "is to

I =~~~

G R A YS O
1--~,.:;..,;,l;...;.;.l,.:s,....::l,....::.,,--i

-'-...1..-l-.J.....J

L..L
.

like you,

you do, and how ---

0

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in tho mtu.ng wordo
you develop from
No. 3 below.

"'P

. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 10127108
Escape - Apllid L Index -- Stooge~ PATIENCE
to her sister, "You can learn many things from
children, for instance PATIENCE."
Molher of five

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�~For.....
Houle For Aenl ' Point
~aant : 2--story house,
Main St. Point Pleasant,
2
br.,2
Da.
2
fr.,dr.• kitchen wfstove, relrigerator, 112 basement,
~rge yard, no pets,
1555(l.OO,dep. &amp; ret. req .

food S.Mc:oo

Go...,IMIII &amp; F.doral

010101
;;
McDo
""'nald's ""';;o;;t..,,.R,.Io

~~--!!!J=:obo".:::""'~~

Sal..
01

~38!1!A/2!1!!1!BA~.""'CI~A, ~t~6x~32~

01

Help Wanlocl. General

$250 Sign on Bonuo
Ten positions need filled
by next week1
No Sates!
No CoHectlons!

Service Manager &amp; Serv·
ice Technician pos1110ns
available. Health care &amp;
Retirement plans allallable. Please send re·
sume
to
LLCIICAAEO.COM
or
tax to 740-44B-9t04

.;

Pomeroy, 2 br., 1 bath,
flO pels, · no smoking,

Help Want.d • Genwal

740..385-2434

$475
plus
1740)992-5 t 8t

deposit, Prices Reduced 2 2006
1SxBO 2 bed 2 bath. t
2000 16x70 2 bed 1
Well maintained 4 br. bath, 1 1999 16x80 2
~use &amp; 2 t)r. cabin on Dad 2 bath gas, 1 1997
200 acres close to 14x70 2 bed 2 bath gas,
Pomeroy. available im- t 2002 16x80 3 bed 2
mediately,
bath. Priced delivered
(740)992-4590
or blocked, leveled and an740-416-7538
chored.
Day
Ph.
740-388-0000
&amp;
~OQO
f,\~11Ull\C'Jr('d
740-388-8513
&amp;
Housmg
740-245-92 15
Evenings
&amp;
weekends .
Ph.
740-388·8017
&amp;
Rontalo
740-245-92 15
&amp;
2BR trailer for rent. 740·794-0460
'
387-7762
Pleasant
area,
Pl.
Federal Funds just re- bank . owned double
leased for Land Owners. wide on lg liat lot
'No closing cost and close to town $24 .900
.ZERO DOWN! Will do Brokers Realty Mike
Broker
land
improvements. Slack
Bankruptcy ·&amp; Bad Credit 304-542-5888.
OK. 2. 3, 4 and 5 bed·
rooms
available.
5000
R('so 'P opcrty
740-446-3384
2 br.. 2 bath in Syracuse,

AVONI All Areas!
To
Buy or Sell Shirley
Spaars 304-6751429

-1' Full and Part-time

Help us make calls on
behalf of ConseiVative
Political Ol'ganizations,
Candidates and causes.

2004 Doublewide in new
Driven &amp; Delivery
condition. 4 bedroom , 2 ;;;;;....;.;;;;..;.;;;;;;
bath, all appliances in·
eluded, $37,000 located
Seeking ·
driver
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma· w/CDLIHazrflat qualificason City 304-675-2117
tions lor lull time employment @ propane busiBrand new 3Ded 2bath ness. send resumes to:
on · + ·halr acre i~ · Pt Daily Sentinel, PO Box
Pleasant OWNER Fl· 729-23,
Pomeroy, Oh
NANCE
AVAILABLE. 45769
(740) 446-3570

CiiiTODAYI '
Interview
TOMoRROW!!
Work NEXT WEEKI! I

• Eam up to S8.50Alour
t Medical, Dental, EAP,
and 401K ·
• On site doctor!
t Full and part-time
schedules
Start doing work you can
be proud of. Start doing
'WOrk tl1at makes a
difference. Start your
new career today!
Calltodayl
1-tln-463-11247 Ext.
2331
hnp:l~obt. lntoclslon.com

Card of Thanks

Positions
•' Day and Evening
Shilts
.,; Professional Work
Environment!
.,; Medical. Dental. EAP,
401K!
"' On·site Doctor
.,; Weekly r·ay and
Bonus Incentives!

. We are getting reedy
lor the 2008
elections and we
need YOU I

Fmplo~mr: 1t

For Rent
Accountihg I financial
Mot&gt;ile homes &amp; . lots .
(no pets) in Ashton WV
304-576-2942.
-Local
home
tl)edical
equipment company now
Scenic location, conven· · seeking
·e)(perienced
lent to town and al1ord- mediCal billing specialist
able. 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms with cuslomer service
available
call skills. Fax resume and
(740)992-5639
salary requirements to
Salao
740-44t -t 54B

~

Management
·Qpporturlities
We seek career oriented
Individuals who will striv&amp;
tQ achieve the "Besr in
Customer Satisfaction
and team work. II you
have a desire to succeed
with a goal driven, team
onented and growing
company, we offer:
Healtht dental, and lite
insurance, prescription
card, bonus program,
paid vacation.
management apparel,
advancement from
within.
Apply in person a1111e
Burger King Restaurant
65 Upper River Rd or
mail resume to:
Burger King
PO .Box 2407
Huntington, WV 25725 or
lax resume to: '
740.446-3400 Of
304·529-0055
EOE

~~~~~~~~

all electric, $400 a mo.
plus dep . &amp; utilities: 2 br, 6000
1
bath,
14x70.
(740)992-7680

Recruil volunteers tor
non-profit organizations
such as St. Jude
Children'SResearch
Hospital.
Gel pa1d to make a
ditterencel

1-88tHMC.PAYU
Ext. 1941
http://}obl .lnfoclslon.com

Ohio
valley
Home
Health, Inc. hiring Home
Health Aides.
STNA.
CNA, CHHA, PCA may
apply at 1480n Jackson
Pike , GaNipolls, Ohio or
phone 740-441 -1393 lor
more info. Competitive
wages. mileage reimbursement and benefits
including health insur-

;:;;:======-=======;;;;; .
Card of Thanks

ance &amp; much more.

The family of

Michael Bailey
wishes to thank the
fire departments, businesses,
churches and the many
individuals, who gave gifts of
money, offered their prayers and
acts of kindness during the
surgery &amp; recovery of Cassidy.
Your kindness 'will always be in
our hearts.
Michael, Kim, Ben &amp; Cassidy

L.o'--------------''-1

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~F=~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~

Nortb

. A J I 0\143

'

Wanted:
Part
Time
Room Al1endant at 1he
Gallipolis Holiday Inn
Must be wiling . to work
weekends and holidays,
Experience preferred but
we will train. Apply in
person. Absolutely no
phone calls.

New 01rages ,
Ettctrlell &amp; Plumbing
floollng &amp; Gutters
Vtny·l Siding &amp; Pelntlng

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
'
45771
740-949-2217

iff '

Patio 1nd Porgh Decks

wv 036725
V.C. YOUNG Ill
99262t5
Pomeroy Ul&gt;ou
2'i YL' 1• ~ Loc.11 ~ ~ pc' L' ncr

if. ' 11' 1f113G' &lt;

P.T. Community Manager needed lor local
apartment community lo·

L &amp; L Tire Barn

cated in Gallipolis, Ohio:

44087 Wipple Rd.

Ideal candidate will have
previous experience in

Pomeroy, OH

proper1y m~riageinent at
a Aural Development

New &amp; Use,d Tires.
We buy used ti res.

propeny, eKcellent com-

munlcatlon and organizational skills and be dependable. Health insurarice &amp; 401k available.

Salary dependent upon

changes. small engine

experience. ~ mitre-

repair.

sume &amp; salary require-

We service and

ments to: Ga!lipcliS C.M.,

RV 's

190. Lancaster OH
43130-0t90 or· email to:

(740) 992-5344
8:00 am - 4:30, pm

is seeking part-l irne inMedical
structors who... possess a ;;;..,;;;;..,;;;;~;;;;;;:;=

We appreciate yot1r

Accepting
applicatiOns
tor full &amp; part time EMT,
and
Par'amedics
We

Currently ForBeingFuii-.Time.
Conducted
Experienced CNA Posltions &amp; 1 Experienced
Dieta"' Helpar. Applicants That Enjoy The

at
followmasoncountyoes.com,
the EMS link.

have a beneltts package
available. $15.00/hr Air
plicatlons ean be ob·
reercollege.edu or call tained from the Mason
800-214·0452
County EMS 911 EmerC N A's I DIETARY gency Drive, Point Pleas- \,-""'::HELPER. Interviews Are ant, WV 25550 or online

Middlet0n Estates· .is accepting applications lor a
tulltime . LPN Supervisor

• Complete
Remodeling

•

140-992·1171

'•

/

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

H&amp;H
Guttering

and more...

-

,
•

-.

"*'ton

To Subscribe Call

The Daily Sentinel

.,

flATIN~S •

992-2155

NGt1b

1•
3 NT

Pass
Pa86

Pass

1'
2•

~- r&amp;J·~ LT,'IID~"IN"$
rt 10 7 , " i1
,

TOPPEf&gt; ,Y

~

"f&gt;ANC.ING A/lOtJ/'J/)
~~~~~~@~~~~i
·
".rt.,.,
~ · T tl I'11: l.f5U~
i1 · •1

~~

to ~ 28
'f~V.t-")-

_____

OCVE.LQ!&gt;~~. l

f&gt;.Ji\ NOT

FEE:.U~I'\'1 ~L,

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2011

~

f'\1&gt;...'( &amp;.
P"'t-10 _:_'I'Our~E. JU5T
~FFERIKG&gt; ~ ~•.
IQCE.~510K !

oo'&lt;du TI·\11--IK I

P"'

t:&gt;OC.TOR

I~ A.

_r;=.:;:----_...1

7;_.

Cell: 740-416-5047

email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

YoU'LL
NEED To
TURN
ARoUND, SON.

AstroGraph
-'llldhlflly:

Wedneoday, Oct. 29, 2008

Maintenance Plus
Commucia/ &amp;: Rtsidtnlial

Vinyl
Siding/Replacement
Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740;992-1493 Office
740-4!6-8339 Cell
Free Estimated

Pomemy, Ohio

CLOAK TO SI-IIELD ME FROM

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt and Qualify
Work

"'Reasonable Rates
*Insured

*Expmenced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

:;,.: _:.;_;: _:.:.,;:. ; _;___-, r-------_,.--,

r1'

740-591 ·8044

Joh'£Wif,tr"
11.11. 1HP

i&amp;H

lU-112-51112

, ... HIH

·---

Compfolo Tloo CoN
lnelnd • F!1oe .........

Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
•Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, RoOm
Additions

J&amp;L

•Roon1 Add~lono
Ow~r:

Jamet Kte- II
742-2332

LOCIII Conb7 411-387..()544

I•

·'

F-Eotf....tM

740-367-()538

f

~=--~~-~~~~

For Remodeling and New House Bulldlq

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Addilions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Bam~ • Patio's, Porches and Decks

.Coli:

.

MIIEW...CI.
47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 7&lt;1()-416-1834

25+ yean experitne~ Frtt Eni-1

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month ,

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

J.-.oo&lt;---...1)

_,_
......
,.,.__

GRIZZWELLS

tJI. )bU Ct-1-I'T ~EAT
~ tMTCilU~

"1\lE
'~
~1\IS
L\O~~

lalget
4 Buckeye
campus
7 Find fault

1 t Mo.
multipleo
12 Fiohhook

gradea

SO Bread

part

grain a

14 --opeod
15 Poychic
power
16 Foutlh•
tar gut
asteroid
17 Quick look
18 loalet

52 Flyin;
mammal
53 Piccadilly
statue
54 Bench or
hassoCk
55 Forum hello tO Dawdling
56 Refute
13 Quits
57 Calendat
(2 wds.)
· diva. ·
19 Get smart
56 lnexpari•
with
enced
21 Rembrandt
painlings
DOWN
24 Street

35 Do garden ·
. work
,
36 Submissive
38 Slylish ·
39 Crows over
41 Fine-tune
42 Frosted
43 Just
In Paris
44 Unskilled
Ivan's
25 Science
laborer
refusal
magazine 46 Diplomat
2 Latin bear 26 Unwrap
Abba3 Sugar amte. 27 Dissolve
47 Cathedral
part
28 Type
4 Goal
5. River rapids
o squad
48 One-pol
6 Coflea
29 Youn9iady
dinner
serve~r
of Sp.
5t Ever green
7 Dome
31 Caus~c
trH
8 Mimicked
remarks
9 AAA
33 Sighs
suggestiOr'!S
of content

20 Groveliko
22 Circus
routine
23 Part of
RSVP
24 Perch
27 Wiodom
. tHth
30 Out callero
31 Alhena'o
· falhlr
32 Kao~h

relat1ve

34
35
36
37

Pilot's dir.
Wither
c.ncle lover
Hlllhe
Tab key

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ctlttlrlly Cl~trcryptogr1m1 arecrea1.:l lrom ~ u01 111oos OytamousPtr:ple
Each lelt&amp;r In !h9 Clp1&amp;! 11111n~s br11n~' ''

pe~

llld Pllitlll

·

Today's·due: B equafs Y

" ZCW

JICOWL

TAZB

UYNWXFRWFZ
HWJKW

JFT

OAFDCOFW
• IJRWD

00

ZY

DZHT

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EWWit

YAZ

ZCW

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ZCW

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J . UJXLOWVT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'My Whrte House job pays more than
systems. biA the tenure is less certain.· · Lyndon 8. Johnson

publ ~ sdlo~

~::~:~~~ S©J\Q{r~A-lretts·

woao:
GAll:

lcflttd ~~ CLAY I. POLlAN·

.

ltHers of the
0 lovr scrambled
word• b..
~earron91

low to form four 1imple worda.

By Bernice Bede 0101

In the year ahead, you will be able to uti~
Jize acquired experience and knowledge
in 'Nays that will acce,lerate your rise to
the top. Once on a roll, your progress will
be rapid.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov 22) - Small
fruslral io~ with which you might have to
con tend from time to time shouldn't put a
damper on an the good t~ i ngs that will .
happen to you at this lime.
SAOtnARtUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21)-Your
material pt06pects are much brighter
than usual, although lhey might derive
trom some unexpected sources. EMplo're
hidden, seldom~tapped moneymS:klng
channels.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -The
TI-!EN I SHALL SEEK
· HERE .. WE'RE SUPPOSED
best course of action wilt be the one that
ELSEWHERE FOR SPIRITUAL
TO DO ALL OF TI4E5E
you establish lor yourself, lor which you
can assume a leadership role and not be
PROBLEMS ON PAGE NINE ..
dependent on anyone else.
Ml( TEM:IlER'S IC'( W,RATH ..
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. 19) - If you
allOw Lady luck to run your day and
don't try to alter conditions to suil what
you think Is best, you will have ;i greater
chance of events working out to your liking .
PISCES (Feb. 20-Merch . 20) - Lady
Luck will be attentive to your involveinents. especially .those that are grouporiented. If you IIX&gt;k like a wimer and act
like one, you wi11 find that y0u are one.
r~-------:--:-1
AR tES (March 2t -April t9) - There
~ sl1ould be no excuses as to why you
I'M TII2ED OF ~OU
D0£5 THIS BOYCOTT H~VE can't do anything you want. The aspects
Pl101t\ISIN' ONE THING ON
ANYTHING TO DO WITH THE . allow lor just abolrt any activity you wish
F~CT TH~T YOU'~E EIGHT?
to pursue: it'll satlsty your needs.
T~E TV AND THEN OOIN'
. TAURUS {April 20-May 20) - Almost
WHATEVER YOU WI\NT
any relationship you want to improve can
ONCE YEI1 ELECTED .
become more harmonious and meaninglfS ~~~HOOEY!'
lui with a little effort on your part. Don't sit
back and wait for.life to happen.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Your talents and abilities shotJid be used lo the
fullest on things that eould have a good
effect upon your material circumstances. •
YOu have what it takes to derive returns
from more than one source.
f;;2:~...!~
CANCER {Ju'ne 21-July ~l- You cou ld
1:
'"' I....-----..:;;;---'. be elCtremely fortunate not only for your·
self but tor those with whom you share
your day. Lady Luck haS singled you out
for special attention, so put her generos-ity to good us~;~.
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) - A person~t
matter looks as if it's going to work out for
you in ways that will meet your highest
elCpectations. Keep the faith, and keep
plugging al1ead.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Although
you are likely to be well received by most
eve~one , It could be members of the
opposite sex who'll find you the most
appealing. II you're looking, De sure to
get out and mingle.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. .23) - II you've
recently acquired a bit of a llr.~ancial surplus, don't let it burl') a hole in yoUr pock~
el. It's OK to spend a little for tun , bUt put
most of It Jn places where ~ won't be
wasted.

A

Quality Seamless
Gutters

Ea•t
Pas!
Pa!&amp;
Pass

the
three and hope for Islhe
best. Partner
will noticethatthetwo
missing,
but he
· migh1 think declarer is hiding that card.
When you do not have the necessary
card, life can be tough ..
In today's deal, West had the ideal c:ard
and could make his partner's tile easy.
If you open a 6-4 hand with sb: jn a major
and four In a minor, It Is normal to rebid
In tho major with a minimum opening
bid, but to bid major-minor-major wlih
eXIra values.
Here, South aho1.1iU in:1vt1 rebid thrtt dla·
monds, which wi&gt;uld have led to a llnal
contract ol rive diamonds, which Is
unbeatable. (Six clamonds can be made
unless the defense casl'l8s a spade and
shifts to a trump.)
Against throe no-trump, West led !he
club eight, top of nothing. Declarer overtook dummy's lack with his ijng and
' played a heart. to dummy's nino. East
won with his queen.and returned a elub
10 remove dummy's entry. Now came the
heart aee, tl1en the heart jack to East's
king, South pitching a diamond and a
spade. What did West discard?
West threw the diamond four, 11is lowest
card to discourage in thai su~. Now East
knew that declarer'had a dummy entry in
diamonds. So East shifted to the spade
queen {in case West had A·10·x). Tl1e
defenders took 1hree spades f,or down
one.

G
PSI CONSTRUCTION

40 Not decal.
· 41 Finger
oppolile
42 Obotruct
45 AOUOII up
49 Average

"" ~ The contract is, say, lour spades. Partner
leads the heart ace and you wish to
g~ j encouragehimtoconlinuehearts.Then,
~ ~ 21 assuming you use normal signals, you
h~i hope tohaveahighheart. llyouhaveQ~ ~ ~ 9-2, you are laughing, playing the nine.
~Q But it you have 0 -3-2, you have to play

HardWood Ca~nevy All~
F'lt Iila 1
_..,._

THE BORN
'Wm~ Til~ ~E.~T UO~IC

verlion1
1 Wrench

~;)~

~tated

INl~RTAINM~NT

''

l'tUGE

,.f&gt;ArJC,ING WITtl

David Lewis
740-992-6971

Ravenswood, WV. Rei- waitstaH, cooks, dish- space. ~s first coffie first
11 13 . Wasl1ington St., Now Hiring Experienced,
dated. Building
erences
.Required. washef"fi &amp; delivery driv· ~ervc.
ELECTION OF TAX benefit of ·Sutton
Public Notice
Eo E
ers apply In person
Inside Stora~c 14.00I!f
RJM
. . .
Harru's
Famous
Hot
Open Span: $l.OO/Jf
LEVY IN EXCESS OF ~•owns hiP· f or the
An Excellent way to eam
·•
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf
THE
TEN
MILl purpooa
of
Fire PROBATE COURT OF Company,
money. The New AVon. 0D=o=g,=s=N=ew=Ha=v=e=n=== ~::::::~:;::~~
LIMITATION
protection
MEIGS
COUNTY, TPCWD Office In C I
M 1 :
.R.C.
3501 .11(Gj, Said tax being a OHIO
Reedsville, Ohio.
~-aa .
artyn ·
5705.19, 5705.25
replacement of tax of IN RE: CHANGE OF The·
Englneer'a
lstlmate
of Overbrook Rehabilitation
NOTICE Is hereby 1 mill ot a rate not NAME OF ZACHARY
given
that
In exceeding 1 .mill lor THOMAS SCWAB TO
Construction Cost tor Center is currently ac- ~
pursuance
of · a - h one dollar of ZACHARY SELDEN
this project Is $ cepting applications '"'
Concnte
seamless Guners
ReeoiUIIon of the valuation,
which
STORY
t90,000.
lult time cook position,
Rooting, Siding. Gutters
Board of Education amounts to fen cents
CB!Ie NO. 2008 6 034
Copies
of
the Bam-1 :30pm. Anyone in- All typas Mason"/. brick,
Insured &amp; 8onded
of the Southern Local ($0. 101 lor each one NOtiCE OF HEARING contract documenta terested please pick up block, stone, · concre te,
740-653-9657
School
District, hundred dollars of ON
CHANGE
OF and
'bid. an appl&lt;atlon at . 333 Free
Estimate,
Racine, Ohio passed valuation, for five (51 NAME
specifications
may Page Street, Mlddlepon, 304-593-6421
on the 14th day of years. The polls for
Applicant
hereby be purchased ftom OH. E.O. E. &amp; a ParticiAugust, 08, there will the election w(ll open given notice to all
RJM
Engl-tlng pant of the Drug-Free .
be submitted to a at 6:30 a.m. and · Interested
persons Company,
. Inc, Wor1&lt;place·Program.
vote of the people of remain open until that the applicant has · located at 66 . S. Wanted
Welder,
Iron
said subdivision as s 7:30 p.m. on election flied an Application Plains Road, The workers, Pipe . Fitters, &amp;
General Election to day.
for Change of Name Plalns 1 Ohio 45780,
crane
operalof's. Top
be held in the County By order of the Board In the Probate Court upon payment of
Pay.304-763-2694
of Meigs, Ohio, at the of Elections, of Meigs of Meigs County,
Fifty Dollars ($ SOl.
regular places of County, Ohio
Ohio, tequestlng the Each
bid
shell
voting therein, on the John N. lhle
change of name of contain the full name
4th dey of November, Chair
Zachary
Thomas and addiHS of each
08, the question of Rite 0. Smith
Scweb to Zachary
person or company
levying . a tax, In Dll8Ctar
Salden Story. The Interested
In
the
excess of the tan mlll Dated Sapt. 5, 2008
hearing
on
the same and must be
limitation, for the (1 0121, 28
application will be accompenled
by
benefit of Southern
held on the 9th day of either a bid bond In
Public Notice
December, 2008 at the amount of 100
Local School District
far the purpose of
1:30 o'clock p.m. In percent (100%) of the
Current Expenses
NOTICE
OF the Probate Court of bid amount wllh a
Meigs
County, surety satisfactory to
Said tax being a ELECTION OF TAX
renewal
of
an LEVY IN EXCESS OF located
at
Melga TPCWD;
Qr
by
existing tax of 4 mills THE
TEN
MILL County Courlhouse, .certHied
~heck,
at
a
rate
not LIMITATION
100 East Second cashiers check, or a
exceeding 4 mills for R.C.
3501 .11(G), Street, 2nd Floor, letter of credit upon a
each ane dollar of 5705.19, 5705.25
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. solvent bank In the
· vofuatlon,
which NOTICE Is hereby Zachary
Thomas amount of not tess
omounta to forty given
that
In Scwab, 552 Fourth than ten
percent
.($0.40) cento
for · purauance
of
a Avenue
(10%) of the bid
...:11 one hundred Resolution of the Middleport, OH 45760 omount In fllvor of
'dollare of. valuation, Board of Township (10) 28
the aforesaid TPCWD
·far five (51 years. The Ttusteeo
of
the
conditioned that II
polio for the election Township
of
Public Notice
the bid Is accepted, a
will open at 6:30 a.m. Columbia, . Albany,
contract
will
be
and remain apan Ohio passed on the ADVERTISEMENT
entered Into within
until 7:30 p.m. on 7th day of Augus~ oa, FOR BIDS
ten (10) days after
election day.
there
will
b8 Sealed proposals for nollce of f!Cceptance.
By order of the Board submitted to a vote the construction of Bid Bonds shall be
.of Elections, of Meigs . of .the people of said the RAINBOW RIDGE accompanied
by
-County, Ohio
subdivision
ao a WATERLINE
Proof of Authority of ·
John N. fhle
General ·Election to
PROJECT will ' be tf)e official or agenl
Chair
be
held
In
the racelvld
by
the signing the bond. A
Rita D. Smith
Township
of Tuppers
Plains- perfor-mance bond of
Director
Columbia, Ohio, ot Chester
Water ana hundred percent
D - Sept. 5, 2008
the regular pieces of District (TPCWO) at (100%1 of the amount ·
;(10) 21, 28
voting therein, on the their Dfotrfct Office of tha cantroct with a
4th dey of November, conference
roam setlofectory
surety
Public Notice
08, the queotlon of located at 39561 Bar company,
levying a tax, In 30 Rood, Reedsville, conditioned
-NOTICE
OF excen of the tan mill
Ohio, 45n2, until according to law, will
'ELECTION OF TAX limitation, . for the 11om on Thureday, be required far the
LEVY IN EXCESS OF benefit of Columbia
November 6th, 2008, faithful performance
THE
TEN
MILL . TWp. (or the purpooa and at that lime and a! the contract.
,LIMITATION
of Road Malnte111nce
place will be publicly The bidder will be
.R.C.
350t.11(G), Said ta• being an . opened end 'reocl . required to describe •
addltlon~~l tax of 1.5
aloud. All blcll will
In lull datall as til
' 5705.19, 5705.25
; NOTICE Is hereby mllls 'at a rate not be con..,ldered velld their experience In
·given
that
In exceeding 1.5 mlflo untll60 deya after the ·this class of work,
:pursuance
of
a for each one dollar of opening date. Pleue and
bldo
from
· "-'&gt;&gt;utton of the valuation,
which
be oware the Olatrlcto contl8Ctoro
·Bootrd of Tawnohlp amounts to main omce Ia located Inexperienced In lhla
TNof
the (15) cent• ($0. 161 lor th- nilteo lOUth of particular type of
Towrllhfp of SuUon, one hundred Tuppera Plalno )uat work will not be
Recfno, OhiO puaed doll111 of v81uatlon, off Rl 7.
conoldored.
The
on tho 15th d8y of for flvo (5) yeore. The The work far which wolll
-•
AUf11181, 01, thero will polio for lhe etec11on
propo~~lo are Invited
C011111*1C8
upon
be IUbmiMd to a will open at 6:30 a.m. conotota
of
the wr1ttan notice of
vote of the peopt. of end 11meln open construction of 7347 oword by TPCWO.
oubdlvtlkln u a until 7:30 p.m. on
Hneal feel of 4"
By Order of the
_ , , Electlon to
doy.
watwllne and other Tuppers
Plainsbe held In the By order of tho Board reloted work for the Cheater
Water
Township of Sutton, of Efectlona, of Meigs conotructlan of the
District, 39561 Bar 30
OhiO, at the regular County, Ohio
RAINBOW
RIDGE
Road,
Reedsvllla,
pieces
of
voting John N. !hie
WATERLINE
Ohio, 45n2 , Coun.t y
therein, bn the 4th
Chair
PROJ~CT.
. of Meigs, this 19th
dly of Nov8mber, oa, Rita 0 . Smith
The
contract dey of October, 2008.
tho
queillon
of Director
documents
ni•ybe Oct. 28, 2008.
levying a ~. In Deled Sapt. 5,2008
examined
ot
the
axceu of tho ten mill (10) ~~~. 28
following locations:

West

Do you have
ll . the right card?
8"
'

.Ttt~ POLITICAL t&gt;E,ATf5 ttAI&gt;

E-mail: captbill65@yahoo.com
www.auctionzlp.c.om
#5548

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

A K 9

&amp;Jutb

39 T01t

~oodod

-. Opening lead: • 8

28 Years

and PANILPN's. You will ~;;;;~~~
be part of a team that
provides services ti indivi duals with mental retar- ·
dation and developmen~ WINTER STORAGE
tal disabilittes. Interested
Mci!ls Co. Fairgrounds
applicants may apply at
Oct . 25.2008
8204 Carla Drive, Galli9:00 u.m.- I I :00 a.m.
polis, Ohio 45631 or
Re!ca&gt;;e; April25. 2(KW
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CURRENT EVENTS

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Phillip
Aider

Gallipolis Career College ,.,..,...,E
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2 2845

'•

www.mydailysentinel.com
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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, October 28, 2008
ALLEYOOP

SOUP TO NUTZ.

RAYORS

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No. 3 below.

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. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 10127108
Escape - Apllid L Index -- Stooge~ PATIENCE
to her sister, "You can learn many things from
children, for instance PATIENCE."
Molher of five

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

. Tuesday, October 28,2008

Big 121ights it up, Golden Gophers feeling rosy
Bv RALPH Russo

Missouri with his eyes Big Ten with Ohio State, ment.
closed.
which handed Minnesota Its
-Notre Dame coach
But
,
no,
this
is
not
all
only
loss
.
Charlie
Weis is going to face
The Big 12 now better
about
offense.
Defense has been the cata- some criticism for runnmg a
a video game.
than
Even
the
best
teams
in
the
lyst
for the turnaround. After fake punt up 24-0 late in _the
Minnesota feeling rosy. A
Big
12
Texas,
Oklahoma,
allowing
518 yards per game third
quarter
agamst
quarterback finds redempTexas
Tech,
Oklahoma
in
'07,
Minnesota
1s
allowWashington
and
Tyrone
tion in Pittsburgh.
State,
Missouri
have
in~
363. Last year, Willingham. He shouldn't. II
The final October weekdefensive
issues.
And
the
Mmnesota
was minus-15 in might not have been the
end of the college football
teams
at
the
bottom
Texas
turnover
ratio.
This year, the nicest thing to do, but why
season put Penn State on
A~M.
Kansas
State,
Baylor.
Gophers
are
plus-IS
and No. not give your upcommg
course for Miami and set up
Iowa
State
have
proved
1
in
the
nation.
opponents somethmg to
two top-10 showdowns unable
to
play
defense
. A soft schedule is hurting think about in a low-pressure
one in west Texas and anothagainst
anyone.
.
the
Golden Gophers in the s·iruation? .
er in north Florida.
Ultimately,
we
probably
BCS
standings,
but
if
tliey
,
Here's
what
s!ands
1
,n
The Big Story
know
until
bowl
seawon't
keep
winning
that
should
the
way
o.f
Penn
State
s
The former standard for
son
how
much
of
this
offen·
change. And if Penn State _is unbeat~n regular season after
over-the-top offense in colsive
explosion
is
about
shodin the national championship the Nlltany L10ns .won at
lege football was the WAC.
. dy defense.
game,
and the Rose Bowl is Ohio State -:- at. Iowa ..then
With pass-happy BYU leadIn
the
meantime,
enjoy
the
looking
for a Big Ten team ,. home
agamst
lndmna,
ing the way. the old Western
show.
,
Minnesota
at,
·
say,
10-2
Michigan
State.
Athletic Conference was
BCS breakdown
would make sense. The
•
Lookahead
loads of fun : Remember that
The
race
inside
the
race
is
·
Texas
Tech
gets a chance
Golden
Gophers
haven't
52-52 tie between th e
heating
up.
Utah
is
lOth,
been
tq
the
Rose
Bowl
since
to
go
from
novelty
to nationCougars and
Marshall
Boise
State
is
11th,
TCU
is
1962.
at title contender Saturday m
F.au lk 's San Diego State
.13th, Ball State is 16th and
Heisman-worthy
Lubbock, when No . I Te~as
team in 1991? The wacky
Tulsa is 18th in the standings
Rutgers quarterback Mike comes ro town .
WAC at its best.
released
Sunday.
While
Tee! completed 14 of 21
The Red Raiders have
The wacky Big 12 doesn't
AP p~oto more than one of these passes for 361 yards and six become consistent winners
quite roll of the tongue , but
these Southwest slingers are Texas Tech quarterback Graham Harrell (6) directs his teams from the non-auto- touchdowns in a surprising under ninth-year coach Mike
victory
against Leach, but in a non-threatenmaking the glory days of the receivers during the second half of a college football game matic qualifying leagues can 54-3.4
BCS
eligible,
only
become
against
Kansas
in
Lawrence,
Kan.,
Saturday.
Pittsburgh.
Tee!
has
been
the ing way. More ·of a nuisance
WAC seem dull .
one
can
earn
an
automatic
target of booing at home as to Oklahoma and Texas than
On Saturday, the entire their substantial preseason
Call it a perfect storm. The bid. And the chances some the
Scarlet Knights j!Ot off to a true rival in the Big 12
Big 12 played m conference. hype.
Big 12 has embraced the· bowl will go out of its way a 1-5 start, · remintscent of South. If that's going to
The average score was 48Led by McCoy, secorid in spread-offense revolution. to pick a second team from the bad old da,Ys in change, this is the year to do
23.
the country in efficiency rat- Almost every team in the this group is slim.
Piscataway, N.J. Gomg off it. The Red Raiders have .
· The starting quarterbacks ing at 186.5 , Big 12 quarter- league is running some form
tt'll make for some inter- against Pitt should quiet the never been better under
including both of backs hold down five of the of the spread, and doing so
.
Colorado's rotating QBs - top six •spots in the major with a quarterback both tal- esting scoreboard watching critics - at least until he Leach. .
down
the
stretch.
throws
his
next
interception.
The
.
World's
Largest
combined to put up these college football. Five more ented and experienced.
Golden turnaround
Outdoor Cocktail Party,
Quick hi.ts
ridiculous numbers: ·3,545 Big 12 quarterbacks rank in Nothing·'s more dangerous
From
· 1·11 to the BCS?
-Steve
Spurrier
coaching
Georgia
and Florida's annual
yards. 27 touchdown passes. the top 28 in passer rating.
than a quarterback that That's probably a stretch,
Tennessee?
The
ol'
ball
get-together
in Jacksonville,
eight interceptions and a
So what's the deal? Are knows exactly what he's but surely fans . of 20thhas
spent
much
of
his
Fla.,
is
essentially
an elimicoach
completion percentage of Graham
Harrell.
Sam doing.
ranked
Minnesota
are
67.8.
Daniel isn't much of a pro dreaming about that thes~ career tormenting the Vols, nation game. The winner is
Bradford. Chase Daniel and
but if Phillip Fulmer does primed to get to the SEC title
·Hei sman Trophy front- the rest of these quarter- prospect, but he's been run- days!
get
pushed out in Knoxville, game with national champi~
runner Colt McCoy is lead- backs that good? Or have the ning the spread since high
Fiery
-coach
Tim
Brewster
you
can _bet Spurrier, w~o onship hopes .. The loser is
ing a group of passers that Big 12 defenses also become school and he could probahas
the
Golden
Gophers
7
-I
have outperformed even WAC-ky.
bly find an open receiver for and tied for second in the grew up m Tennessee, will probably lookmg at a chambe rumored as a replace- · pionship-less season.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

1.·--------------~----

'

Explanation

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

ISSllltltl

-

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL. AMF.NDMENT

.

TO PROVJI&gt;E FOR EARLIER FILINGOEAOUNES FOR STATEWIDE RAI..I.OT ISSliF.S

2520 Valley'Drin • Point Plcasunl , WV • 201·b~d radlity

(Propo$ed by Joint Resolution ofthe General Assembly of Ohio)

304-675-4340

3. ____________________

.

The Family of Projessio11als

The proposed amendment would:

5. _____________________

· 1.

•

6.

Require !hat a eitizen&lt;iniliated stateWide
ballot issue be considered at the next
general election if petitions are filed 125
day• before the election.

2. Establish deadlines for boards of
ele&lt;:iions to determine !he validity of
citizen-initiated petitions.

446-2404

1·888·446·2684

216 Upper River Rd. Gallipolis, Ohio
112 mile south of the Sliver Bridge
Litl)OSO CC 700077 .()()() and 001

License Ci750048-000 and 001 ·

.

.

.

NAME: _ ____,_.....___ _

HOLZER CUNIC
We're Everywhere.You An!

PHONE:.~---~~--'

J'

'
•

•

;

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I
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Sulpnlon&amp;
Bodyllfll

FqiSeMce
Shop

-.

'

'
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I·
~

1/i

~·

)

.,

A "YES" vote means approval of the

A majority YES vote is required for the
amendment 10 be adopted. ·

.

Elich Thesday through Dec. 9, a numbered game will
appear In each participating merchant's ad.
Indicate your pick of winners and write It beside the
corresponding number.
'Entries must be dropped off at the:
Gallipolis Dally Tribune or mailed to:
Football Smackdown
clo Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 Jrd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Entries must be postmarked by Thursday to qualify
for that week's contest. The prize will be awarded
weekly on the basis of most winners selected correctly
and In case of ties, winner will be determined by blind
draw. You must be 16 years of age or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per.week.

3. Siandaidize the ~ for legal
challenges to citizen-initiated petitions
by tiving the Ohio Supreme Court . ·
jurisdiction to c&lt;insider these oases and
es_tablishing expedited deadlines for the
Cnurtto make decisions. · ·

amendment.
·A ''NO" vote means disapproval of lhe
amendment.

ADDRESS:,--'---------

SHALL tHE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE APPROVED?

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a Pride Uft Chair - a fine furnishing
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enhancing your life.
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fYcuhif!;

i._l\)l .L N

• MI:DICAI. I:QUilltMI:NT

, 'f~ctt 'M l!HMMU, lt-'tiU "-" IIUUH'

To umend Settions Ia, tb, le;and lg of Artiele II ofthe Constitution of the State of Ohio
.
Purpose: The Ohio Constitution and cor=ponding state laws describe Ihe processes that electors
themselves can undertake to propose amendments to the conslituuon, to esiabl1sh stat~ laws, an~
to submit to the voters for their approval or rejection laws recently enacted by the Oh1o General
Assembly. People who seek to initiate these processes must abide by constitutio?al and statutory
deadlines. The pilfpose of Amended House Joint Resolution Number j. (UJR 3) 1s to chan~e the
filing deadlines for statewide ballot initiatives and referendums (sometu~es called "statewide
issueo").

.

To amend Sectloll!l la, lb, It; and lg of
Article II of tbe Constitution of tile State oJ
Ohio

4.·--------------~--~

'

tuR 3 W~ld ChJjnge Statewide lswe Petition Filin1 !kadljnes: Most stat~wide issues ate submitted
to the electorii 10 vote upon at a regular or general election. In oider for an Issue to be placed ~n
the ballot, it must be filed with the secretary of state's ofJ!ce ~ •.petition signed by a substantial
amount of supporters. Currently, petitions for proposed ronslitution_al aniendmen_rs and state laws
must be filed at Jeast90 days before the election at which the issue IS to be s~bm1tt~ to t~e electors. •
Referendum petitions must be filed at least 60 days before the election at wh1ch the 1ssue 1s to be
submitted.
HJR 3 would re.iuire that petition-s for all statewide issues brought by ef~'lors be filed 125 days
before the election at which the issue is to be submitted to the electors. -Th1s means that peopl~ who
·seelt to file a petition proposing a constitutional amendment or a state law or a referendum pet1t1on
must do ;Q earlier than they currently are required. Passing IIJR 3 also would mean that p&lt;-ople who
seek a referendum on 811Y law that passes b!!tween .2 15 and 125 days before an up&lt;;ommg regular or
general election will have 90 days or less to undertake the entire,referendum process 1f they w~nt to
ensure the placement of the issue on the ballot for the upeoming election. Any referendum pe11110n
filed after tile 125-day deadline must be placed on the ballot at the regular or general elechon that
. occurs over a year later.
HJR 3 Would Change Pred!ines for VerifY in&amp; and ChaltenMin&amp; the Petili9f!: Statewide issue
•
pe!itions must be signed by many electors. The secretaty of state's office and the,county ~s of
el~ions check those signatures to make sure they are valid and sufficient. H_J~ ~ would req~II'C the
wy of state to determine if there are enough valid signaruhls on the ~uuon to qualifY rt for
=ment on the ballot by the I OSih day before the election.
.
.
Sometimes, ho_;,ever, people challenge the siBiewide petition and signatures on the petition. HJ_R
· 3 gives the Supreme Court of Ohio the sole authority to hear these challenges. HJR 3 also reqUires
all cJtallenges to be tiled not later ·than.95 days bef~ the electi~ and that the Court must nde on
any challenges not later .than 85 days before the election. In ~1t1on,_ under the new amendm~nl,
if no ruling is made stating that tile petition or signatures are msuffi_c1ent b7 the 85-day ~hoe.
the signatu~ are presumed to be sufficient .in all respects. If there IS a ruhng that th~ pehuon or •
signatures are insufficient and additional signatures are provuled. HJR 3 would reqmre the secretary
of state to detennine whether those additional signatures are sufficient not later than 65 days before
the election.
Challenges can be made ..on those additional signatures, but such challenge must be (iled not
later than SS days before the day ofthe election. The Coon must 01ake ~_ruling on the_add1t1onal.
signatures not later than 45 days before the election. Otherwise, the petlllon and the signatures will
be presumed to be sufficient in all respects.
lfapproved, this proposed amendment will be cff«tive immediately.

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