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                  <text>Battered world
stocks rally as US
rate cut eyed, A2

.DA: Criminal
charges pt!SSible in
boy's UZI death, A6

•
... .

Printed on 100%

Rocydtd Ne,..sprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o

('I:\

IS • \ol. :;X. :\o. -X

·• Tres.sel notMppy with
offense. See Page Bl

...ww . m~dailysentind.mm

\\ 1.1&gt;:\I· SD .\\, ()(''lOll!'){ :!&lt;1. :.!.tWX

SPORTs
BY BRIAN

J.

•

REED

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

. POMEROY - Meigs
County's sales tax receipts
this month were over $8,000
more than a year ago, con·
tinning a positive trend that
local officials see as a good
economic indicator.
According 1o a sales tax

comparison provided by
County Auditor Mary ByerHiU, the couniy collected
$106,388.15 in August.
Those funds ·were received
earlier this month. Sales tax
receipts are paid to the
county by the Ohio
Department of Taxation tWo
months after collections.
In July,, the county's

c

sales· tax income set a - an increase of more than
record of sorts. The $42,000 over the year before:
Many who track the local
$125,794 check received in
September was the highest economy. see the spike as a
-single month's revenue result of the high cost of
since 200 I, when the audi- fuel and other economic
tor began tracking receipts. indicators. It appears from
The county's collections. the monthly increases in
year to date, are $68,760 collections that local shopover last year's. In 2007, the pers are spending more
county collected $1,179,805 money in the county, r~ther

than shopping out of town .
Economic Development
Director Perry Varnadoe has
said that constrUction of the ·
Pomeroy/Mason Bridge ,
work underway 10 develop
coal mines and o1her ac1ivtty is also contribuling to the
local retail economy, which
results in an increase in
sales tax revenue .

Brown: Meigs,
southern Ohio
counties could
carry Obama
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

..JC1.
~
'.d·~:l

POMEROY
U.S.
Senator SherrOd Brown, DOhio, said Tuesday Senator
Barrack Obama will win
Ohio ·in next week's presidential election, and will
'.'.!.
.•
garner more votes in southeastern Ohio than many are
predicting.
Even some Democratic
Page AS
leaders are pessimistic that
·• William E. Kauff, 59
Obama ·can
carry rural
southern
Ohio counties
like
Meigs,
,. "'··~o-1: a story andin
• Mexico approves
the
New
watered-down oil
Yorker
azine -i,', .. iiiit~·r
indUSfiVreroini:
ed a
:
SeeP&amp;gllAl
' picture fot
• Literary clubs hear
the Illinois senator's
chances here.
review of Hosseini's
Charlene Hoofllch/photoo
Brown was traveling yesnovel. See Page AJ
terday with Gov. Ted Taking a look at an extensive display of letters from veterans. newspapers with accounts of the war years, and music of
.• Family Medicine.
Strickland across . central the World War I and II era is vetera'n Roscoe Wise.
Ohio on behalf of the
.See Page A3
Democratic presidel)tial
·• Holzer health talk
ticket He had been expectand rehab programs.
ed to accompany Strickland
to Pomeroy last week, but
See Page A3
canceled.
• Local Briefs.
In a telephone interview
See Page AS
wi1h The Daily Sentinel
• White House to banks: yesterday, ·Brown said he
was "puzzled" by predicBY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Start lending now.
tions that voters in southHOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
SeePage AS
eastern Ohio will not support Obama as strongly as
• Agricu~ural Society
MIDDLEPORT- "An Evening at
voters
in
other
parts
of
the
the Canteen" dinner dance in celebraelection set for Monday.
state might.
'
tion of Veterans Day bein~ held at the
See Page AS
"I don't see that all," Riverbend Arts .counctl Saturday
· • Automakers seek govt Brown said. ''This election is .night will feature ~ diJplay of memo~
so clearly a strong contrast rabilia dating bacyo the years of
aid beyond bailout and
between two candidates, one World War I and II.
loanS. See Page A6
who is certain and consistent
Included will be a variety of arti- .
facts, along with military ature, newsPluH 1H Brown, AS
papers, popular sheet music, and let~
ters dating back to the war years. The
numerous items on display have been
loaned by descendants of local veterans and others as well as collectors of
war memorabilia for this celebration
of the 90th anniversary of the signing
of the Armistice.
, Pictures, certificates, and flags usually dispJayed at the post home of
BY BETH SERGENT
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Veterans Myron Duffield, left, and Bob Byer look over some of the artifacts and
BSERGENTOMYDA!LYSENliNEL.COM
Legion, will also be on display for the pictures dating back to the time of World Wars I and II.
event. One picture shows . Co. C • .
POMEROY·- All com- Seventh Ohio Infantry, Whtch was Council, the dinner will be catered by in Pomeroy. ·No tickets will be sold at
munities in Meigs County ·organized in .Pomeroy in August 1903 · Millie's Restaurant and followed by lis- the door. Admission ts $25 per person
Debtlla on Page A6.
which have ~')!ported their as a volunteer company of the Ohio tening and dancing to the music of The with a reduced price of $20 for militrick or treat times to The National Guard and was mustered into Jay Flippin Orchestra. The orchestra, tary personnel and veteranJi. There ·
Daily Sentinel will cele• the U.S. Anny .onAug. 5,1917. That with two vocalists singing musiC from will be a prize awarded for 'the best
• brate tomorrow evening.
unit of Meigs men trained in the 1940s and 1950s, will include a 1940s style or military attire worn by
Though the times vary Middleport's PY.thian Park, before musical tribute to the United States someone anending.
Sponsors of the dinner dance are
slightly, below . ill a com- being moved to Chillicothe from Anned Services members and veterans .
2 SEC110NS - 12 PAGES
.
Fanners
Bank, Walmart, Holzer Clinic,
plete hsting of communities where they were se~t overseas. The
Thursday is the last day to purchase
Kin~
Hardware.
Sturbois Electric,
which have called their captain ofthe unit, composed of most- tickets for the dinner dance. They are
Annie's MaUbox
A3 trick
or treat times in to the ly local men, was Tom W. Jones.
available at King Hardware in Dantelle's, People's Bank., Bob's Market
and Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home.
Hosted. by the Riverbend A~;s Middleport and Clark's Jewelry Store
Calendars
A3 newsroom:
Chester, 6-7 p.m., tomorrow;
Reedsville. 6-7 p.m.,
B2-4
·CJ.assifieds
tomorrow, the frre station
Bs siren will signal the beginComics
ning . and end of trick or
BY BETH SERGENT
Freeman, sophomore class · tute teachers are: Carrie Angela Weeks , Elizabeth
treat;
Rutland, 6-7 p.m.
.Editorials
A4
'
tomorrow, also, a youth BSERGENTOM'IDAILYSENT\NEL.OOM advisor; Jennifer Holt, Abbot, Tad Albano, Brent . Wilfong, Judy Williams,
junior class advisor, prom Bissell, lise Burris, Teresa Roxanne Williams, Carrie
Obituaries
As Halloween dance will be
held from 7~10 p.m. on
RACINE - This week advisor, co-yearbook advi- Carr, Janice Curry, Bill Wolfe, Kim Wolfe , Delores
B Section Friday at .the Rutland Civic . the Southern Local School sor; Rashel Yates, co-year- Downie, Michelle Evans, Wolfe. Amber Baker,
Sports
center, costumes are option- Board approved personnel book advisor; Koste El-· Stephanie Evans, Mary Pugh, Andrew Frantz. Samantha
A6
Weather
al, and food and adult super· for a variety of employment Dabaja, quiz bowl advisor; Marge Fetty, Randall Fulks, Shaffner. Peggy Bailey.
.
Essick ,
John
vision will be available.
and volunteer positions in Beth Bay, fitness center Vicki Griffin, Dallas Hill . James
..
@ zoo8 Ohio vaU&lt;y Publlaltlnl Co.
attendant; Jeff Beaver, fit- Jordan Hill, Ron Logan, K.rawsczyn, Kim Ewing.
Syracuse, 6:30-7:30 pm .. the district.
·
County-approved substirute
tomorrow, the ftre house
Hired on a one year sup- ness center attendant; Nick Lester Manuel, Jan Norris .
Dettwiller,
eighth
grade
Nathan
Robinette,
·Palricia
aides
an" : Stephanie Allen,
siren will mark the beginning .plemental contract are:
Struble, Deborah · Sayre,
Tony a Smith, freshman boys basketball.
County-approved
substiRyan Sleight. Evelyn Stanley, Pluse see Southern. AS
·April
class
advisor;
ntc~~ · or trHt. AS

. L.
~

OBITUARIES

!.'

' ~4jJ

' .J
.

.

Proposed Constitutional Amendment
under thj; scqion •holl
thC;u;:c of lWcJliy-onc years. he ~cymcd and rclll:.l".&amp;\L

po&gt;l found

ai the comer of

SiiJI;ucd in CheSler

~

'lbumpsooi.:L2Q.

Townslup. CJinton County.

acre truct (llcl'd Book 276.

Ohio, Virf1inia Military
Nun&gt;'·r
· -,..,
1~..
'.an
· d·
- - QL
_beinj all of rtw remainin&amp;

Plu:!:..J221.

TRACT I

Ftli! text comitwt·J

ion~

No ;.tatutc or rct=ulatinu

so

as the

pfthcSL~~

~omplics

lkcnsc~

with reasnnahlc

laws
N' •ul.·ttJ'on·
or sulxJjvisionthert.'O(,
- -and
- - !.!&lt;II-·-_;!
desi
Gned
10
ensure
1hm
includin~ any rcstrktion
· such t:amiui! agtivitics
un nr condition !'or the
""' •' ""'1'"'1~--·
"''fuirlv
grantinl.!~!JJ any Iken~
~l.LU)I.--- i'""
.}!..!~
honestly
and
umpply
wjth
under this xctjou. shall
il]! lAA and Olhcr regylatlons
limit the amount that m~,
he wage red on gam jug ·1 ~ generally apnlicabiL· 10
restayraJUs hotels. and
actiyjtje:&gt; oermilted under .
tlus section or rhl• days or · other sjmilur busmess
cs!ublishmcnts wjth.in..
hours pf opcrnl.jun of the
the State. The Gaming
casino.
Rci'Jiatocy Commission or
(fl A license 10 conduct
Ohio
Lottery Commission,
aamina activjlies at the
casjno.amhorizcd

undea·

as uoo!jCl!ble, shall eitbcr

this S'1:tjon shall pre-empt
MWII. deny or n:new \he
·lie&lt;nse'
within ninety i901
any local zouina resolution.
days after the applic!ltji!D is
or ordinance that
n:cejmJ by •he ahnlicahle
would O(herwisc preclude
a casjno from gperotjng on Cmnmissioo, If Jhe
tbt; prorerty descrihs:il in tOO applicahlc Coromjs:;jon dw
ngt eid1er apomvc. deny or
Sdtcdule to thjs section Q1'
that would rooujre goy loq.l CCJlCW the"licensc wilhin
!his period, A le!!Ul0!1101
hcarina. vote. variance.
__
license. or coodjtjona]
liceng sba!l be ~ran)ed until

m.

--

use anpmval for the

-

·--·-

· -·-

such time as !he Gamin¥

establishment of a nsino on Regulatory Commission:
either aooroyes. renews
that site.
(Q) lf the Gamjng
m !lenies the anoljcation
Ri:gulatory Commission
for the initinllicense or
10 he established under
its renewaL A denial or
division (Q) js not
reyOt.'aljon of a license
ooeratjonal and functitmj 111 may lx: apm;aled Ul district
wjthjn sjx month.' of
court in the same manner
the: cllectj ve dat¢ of thls
.. proyjded by law jn !he

section its rquJatory and
licensing dutje11 shall be

pcrfooncd by the Ohjo
Lottery Commjssion until
such time as the Gamina

Regyl;nwy Commjuion
js established and able to
perform its duties OqL-s;

the Gamjog Replatory
CommiWgo js s:stablid!M
and able lo ncrfogn jts
duties or in the altcmaliyc
once the Ohjo Lottcrv

"Commjssjcm baa w;wmed
the du1ies of the Gamin¥
Rewlatory

Commission

as provided hereinabove.
the owner or Jessee of the
n:a! nrpncny deyribrd in
· the Schedule to this section
mav aPJ)Iy to lhc Gpmjng
Regu lalory Commjssjoo (M'
Objo l.ollcrv Commjssjoo
as aoolicable. for a ljL"CDSe'
lu woduct ~amjog octiyitjes
at the casino authoriZL-d
undC'r thi&gt;section. A lkcnse

S
- ' tJrvcv
_ _ ,.

parts of two 50.00 arrc trat·ts
fOIIJ."J
"I ~~
R~·.-..1 dt&gt; ~'•••
__
--~ .-~791 ). all of the rcmainjng
part of a 30.00 acre lract.

and heqimjov Ehe line of
'"'"~
A Jt
C 11eu.nisJee
T
•sennog
R · are cvnseu·' upon
..w¥Juas.
rcmainiDll nan nf an orjg'inaJ NAP 83 (J99'il Ohio Stglc
82.85 acre tract (Officjal
Plnne Coqrdinares !South

101ficj31 Rc.:orlll67, I'll!!!!
699) and all of a 5.002 aqc

Reconl292, Paoc 1271 S

Zone&gt; as dcrjved from QPS

~6' 46' 58"

E 306.8~' (0 an
tr.K'I as convevetJ by deed to · hoo pin x:l:
Rm:er L. Plummer and Almu thence continying wjlh Ote
l Plummer ns recorded jn
wcsLedy line ofsajdCollcH
Volume 139. Page 490of
S 6QI J '37.,WJ395 99' to

Obsei)'Jdjons. l)istanccs
used ;tre based upou Ground
Djsrarwes.

the Clin!on Count.y Official

a 5/S"iron pin foond at

Records and bcjno more

the nQllheaslcr)y corDer of
Awan LI.C's 5.923 acre

CliniOJJ, State of Qbio.
Township of Cbestct in
Milillll'Y SurvC)' No. 1994.
bejou non gf !.cit Ng,3 as
&lt;le•iaooed 00 Plat Record
Book No 1. Pam 385-386.

Office of.the
Secretary of State of Ohio
I. lennif&lt;r Brunner. SL.'&lt;R:tary
of State, do hereby renify that
the f&lt;nJOiog is tho lioU t&lt;:xt of
.lhe COilSiitulional amendments

R.,egmnmc
'
'k
at an •ron IP!C

Section J or the Constitudon.or
· ··Stnte of ()bio, '"'""her with tho ~w
ballot langua,.~~ ~plliiWIJW
cenificd to me by the Ohio Ballo!.

particular!~

described as

follows:

tract IOQjcjal Recard 330.

Commeocina for reference

PJae 32!1&gt;:

ala railroad SJiike found at

lbtpce wjlh rtu: northerly

of s .tale Route
~-·- 73 s

the- contt' nut'no Wt'lh the
• 923
westerIY 1·me o r sw·d "•

Rrcord 70. Paae 27). WJd
also hcin&amp; the True Point

nail gt jn the,muerline of
SlilJC Rou!e 73:
!hence with the cent&lt;rline
of Wd road N76°

license. tilt license shall
. . -~
remwn JO ru«J unril cbe
Jk-cnzc SUJJ(n&lt;kiJ the

-

-

--·-

-- -

•

7(;"45'17"
250,00'.•n
· !he ce!IICr of S~JHe"--Route
_ _ ._ E
_ --·,.,_
m
tho MllltheasJedy comer of
acre l!lKI S 6'09'57" W
73 &lt;Harvmburx and
Midwest Land Supply, Inc 's · (J!ussiniJ a II&gt;" iron pin found Wilmin&amp;~on Pikel. mark ina
4 464 gcre tract tOOkial
.Pl 689.8 t ") 7 )9.57' to a mq thj; SQUthmt (jOI'Der of Jaod&amp;

Parcel Numl!er 030-001979-1

herein described:

z:r

thence wjth the easterly line
of staid·4.464 arre trael N
0" 15'34" W(pas•ing a 112

.

ogrtherly linC of said 4.464

acre
1rae1N -76•44'.1
~- . T'
- -W ,
2SO.OO'
"'a
fiftu 'tron
·
m·o
- - · - ~-~ · - --

Coobd jo the ljne of BPI L
.
Pjdccoo's 102
933
acre -ttacl
- -

a 518" irop Din f91111d at
29
SS'l
461,27' to a- 518'"
-- - - · · - i TOQ J)ID
. rtOW) d ;JJCp
tL~

(()fficia.J Record 610. Pace
- - - - - - -·- -

~aid

Scs;ljon 6a of Artjde XV
tbmce CQQljnyjne with the
mqy bg loCated on all oi any military surycy ljne1nd
pwt of the !WO lrac)&gt; of rcl!l so!!lbedy line of said 179.21

ane !&amp;IN 78' 25'44"
E 999,29' to a 10" wood

Toehbm

~h nro .1:8'
,_w
"

Jl§l jlW

!CCL to

fiilall•, I, Jcnn
· ificr 8···-, ·'111 do
AI
ui
cetti.fy that tbe (oreCIINn• •• ··A•~
'
U..lllll
U3ll\ p1n: llll:jlll'C. South 76° . text ofthereft.'fCndum'OII Scedon
~..Itt p

. .111

~nn 110 Jr.

I

·

,I

........-

o.L-

N 76'45'17" w 1•A·oo•
. ,. ...
~- · roa u•
w 06
tlf,!200JIIHeeL!Q
111
" ·ron
c
·
1
d
L•
• •
1
_Jin IWDJOWl jJtr@
QDUJI\IIIDintbeeastliOC
S 13'14'2S" W (muiliE
of Mid In! No 3· Lhcpce,

mpon for the lje&lt;ng nollo li!lC of5Mid Pidp;on awl ·
remain in effect durin¥ the Jbe mmWy survey lineN
time of !.he awea1,
75.33'22" E 1441.82' to •
518" iron pig found gj !he
allrus!' s 179,21 acre b'!!C!
· 1 R • · -·' 2. .,..e
o.....
t OffiK.1aeroru
••"·
~

Board and 'Bf&amp;UO:n:ts subqtiued '

to me by groupt ~by the
to lands of Mat!hia.' Thebbeo General Assembly and tho Qllio
&amp; Laverne Joehben CVoL
BallO( Board.~ prescrib!d by law.
192, Pa&amp;e 66\ being in the
The fon:golng plso «&lt;l!!ains tho
45'1TW701 ·
to tllC
south ·unc of aforesajd Lot
full text of the constitutional
sotJtheastedy coms:r o[
Np 3 bearing North 76?56• ' amendment proposed by iaitiative
Robert L &amp;"ceyrrne F,
06" West 200,00 feet. from fl"lltioo P""""'"' to Alticle II,
Bailey's I ,S88 acre lratt
the 5SJ'llhcast comer of S!!id Scdlon 11~) oflhe C&lt;li!SiilUiion
IOfljcia) Recon! 701 : Page
Lgt No.3: thence from said
of tho Stale of Ohio, Jogctlte&lt; with
70'~ ~,
.
f'·
thebillotl••-••ectrtiflcdto
1uo ; ,
nnmt o pifjoning learin&amp;
-oo--e
the"""
wid!
the
lilies
or
!aid
.,.
thf'
r
·d
""'by
the
Ohio
1
0
- - -· - .._ -- -·W''UJC w Lot
· llret•nv.dS and/orBallollloa'd
e1lnlaoaaionsand ·
Dli1ey~ a I .588 QCre tract
No 3 Jt:aying 'Mid StMe
~;d to toe~:~~alnn KC
lh '-'1
· 9"'M;outc
R
7•
v' ...........,
·-~-tw 0W'D8
_-z.and ruqoio1 witbjn and
. ....,._ots of.lho
..
N 13'1"25"
E.
I
·
·
-··-..
'PM'"E
saidLQtNo3.wjthiA!Mhof
aspresa:ibcdbylaw.

of BQinninl for this trDCt

SCHEPIILE TO SECTION comer of Barbara A, Bay ct

WEATHER

of Subject ownet common

.

..... ...,

3o(Subt.tillllelkMue8iUS45
CIJICtedbyJheOenenlA~l)l:o ·

filed Ia tbcollla:oftho Sec.-y '
lcayjn1 the lands ofspjd·
, ofS!Itt pursuant to Anicle11.
Tnchhrn and nmninc wjtb
Section I(C) of.lhe COI$il!,ltion
lhe rest line of said Ia No.3 of the Stale of ~io. loaeWr wilh
gd rbc east une o( lpresk of
the ballot lanpage L'eltifltd to
subiect OWIII't Ngrtb05'
· mel&gt;y tho Ohio Bollot lloa'd.IIKI
58' H" Em 220,00 fee! !Q
the aia-llllle"Phmllions .
an iron Pin in the mst1ioe
:"".:!::.:!1~r.,:O.:
of lands of !.ayra A, Collen: Bl1! 54~. as pre$&lt;ribed by taw.
lhenw, leavin&amp; 1~ Q1511101l
of sajd lQt No, 3 and the
IN lliSTIMONY WHEREI'dRfl.
I have subscribed mv" name •
land:s of sgjd Collett, w1d
.
.
.
.
.
Columbus.Olli&lt;&gt;lhis
ruoouw tll.ucly w11hm $i1Jd .· September, 2008. 19th day of

·been e&amp;hgm.Jcd unh;ss a
441 .64. to a 518" jmg pin
aS/8" j q ·pin (oWJd at .
2'1111 wjlh juri:Hfictjon ow found jn the ljge of VMS No. 430 27' to the cc;ntcdinc of·
the f!!Val detc;rmjncs that 1994 &amp; 4297;
State fhp•trt 73:
lhcre j5 n rompelling public lhencc rontjnujn~: wjth the
Jbcm;c with the L-cntcrliQc

- .. -.~
· 1c: 1vvwuw
The one pnva
"'""inoauthoritt'&lt;!hv
_ ""'·- - -----· _ _

Containing S 9232 acres. JllW'e
or less.

TRACT II

&lt;

p[S!!id!J!I" N 76"4:5'1TW
711?.44' to dJc True: Poinl of
I!QsilJilins con~nina 88.517
ages of land, nxm; q Jess.
sul!icct to alllepl hiah\vays,
meQJeD)L condilionund

• ·
rgsmcuons
of rcs..'Oill.

Thls oeu.11puon.y•m
'- . . . h __,
uoon a field sum:y
I

Y,t No.3, and entire)y wjtbjo
laod$ pf )ubjecf owner North

76' 56' 06" WesdOO.OO

~9

C.

27

I

lo(Bi.g;...,~.- -

Jeonifcr Bnooncr r
SECRETARY OF STitTE

J)JNNI~Ill)ilN(;J~

J)JSI,I:JlYS S1U~IJ'I,I~

East JOQ,OO feet. to the !!ljjct of
bc:ai-nniug.

Siluate jn ltJe County of .

..... L

license
nurstiam m rhe
.uy,\.
·
-------ol.U1o.
denial
or
revocation.
or
until
thence
with
the line of •..Od
--·-----·--·--R.. ··--··--~all rii!htll of appeal bm
PKII"'oo N iriS'JI "W

liil..

r.·i.

owns:r. along tht~ center of said

the introo:tiou of Old [lenny ~!-~:d?,?3 !""
. ::~~~~ Suryeyqp Rrcords of Clinton pm(X&gt;l&lt;d by jolnl m;"!ulinn by
Road and stat¢ Rmue 73;
~ :z~ ~ ~~ ~ SOO,J! ~ County Qbrg boundrd god rhe l27th General AsseMbly od
tbeQ wjth the centerljne
518., 1·mn n· ft
tiled in the office of the Secretary
- --- ·-moun d: s ·eden·bed !IS &lt;t 011 Qws; ·
of Stole pur.,!IIIU to Article XVI,

" inm pin fOII!ld •I 39,80')
case of an lllil&gt;&lt;al from an 800 00' 10 a SIS" jmn pin
on!eroftbe -LiiiJiorControl
•~·~•· ·
-- - - - -· ~
Commission. If the Gamin&amp; thence oontinuina )!itb the

RemJatozy Commjpjon
dcnie1 a IWcnse renewal.
- -·
or revokes an exi~'tinu
---------··---

720.00 fl.-eL to an jron spike in the
CLINCO &amp; SliTI'ON
SJ!.RYEYORS in Jyly 2001 center of sajd SHill; Route 73. jn
Iron pins referred tollS set
!hr soulh line of said Lot NoJ,
li!D/8" diameter stcl'l and . unq in )he soulh Iinc of lan!ls of
· I
h wu· h a YLilow subject owner. thence. wilh the
.l'0" men~L
cap stunped ..CLlNCO &amp;
WUJh line s&gt;f said l.ol No, 3, and .'
SUlTON":
the soulh line (![ lands of suhiAA!

t'"
lh th I' Q I' said
IK!'IlCC W!C!OC
·. Thompson's SO acre tr4Ct

~.;

·-

•

INSIDE
.

,.,,,.,,~

1\NI)

lTJ~'I'I~lllll1S

Trick or
treat set for
tomorrow

.INDEX

•

Southern ~cal School Board approyes personnel

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.

•

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-·

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,.,.

•

~

"

,

!

~-"'~,-\

•

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\.
'

�.
·The Daily Sentinel

BY PAN PYLAs
AP BUSINESS WA ITER

LONDON - World &gt;tock
·markets rallied strongly on
Tuesday as investors anticipating a cut in U.S . interest
·rates swooped in to buy
·sbares that had been pum. meled just a day earlier.
· The day's trading iri many
ways mirrored Monday. In
Asia , for example. Hong
. :Kong's Hang Seng .iudex
'rose a whopping 14.4 percent - its biggest gain in II
years - a day after plunging more than 12 percent.
The global rally was
capped by a stunning latesession surge on Wall
Street . where the Dow
'i ndustrial s finished up
889.35. or 10.88 percent. to
9,065 .12 . The Dow had
dropped 500 points in th~
' previou&gt; two sessions.
· · While there was no single, overriding factor to fuel
the stock surge , some market watchers speculated that
·1he recent selling spree was
overdone.
"The market can't fall forever," sai d Francis Lun,
general
manager
of
. Fulbright Securities Ltd . in
.Hong Kong.
Early strong gains in the
.Dow and in Asia , where
Japan's Nikkei index recovered from 26-year lows,
pushed Europe's indexes
.even higher. But then weak
&lt;

ARoUND TilE WoRLD

PageA2
Wednesday, October 29, 2008

U.S. economic data took
theirtoll .
The FTSE 100 index of
leading British shares
closed 73.79 points , or 1.9
percent, higher at 3,926.38.
The CAC-40 index of
leading French shares was
up 47.57 'points. or 1.6 percent, at 3,114.92, while
DAX was
Germany's
488.81 points. or 11.3 percent, higher at · 4,823 .45 as
the
share
price
of
Volbwagen AG almost
AP photo
doubled again.
Traders work on the floor of the Brazilian Mercantile and Futures Exchange, in Sao Paulo,
European stocks were Tuesday. Brazilian stocks are up sharply after being battered for weeks on concerns that
somewhat tem~red by the · a global slowdown will throttle Latin America's largest economy. Braz.il's lbovespa index
·conference Board's month- · was up 4.7 percent to 30,810 on Tuesday. The nation's currency, the real, rose against the
ly consumer confidence U.S. dollar.
index that fueled concerns
abou t the likely depth of the after Sunday's announceJapan's
benchmark
The gains Tuesday come
expected rece ssion in the· ment from Porsche that it just as the U.S . Federal Nikkei 225 index surged
U.S. The Conference Board had increased its stake in Reserve begins its two-{!ay 459.02 points, or 6.4 persaid its main index fell to the company to 42.6 percent interest rate deliberations. cent, to 7,621.92 after early
38.0 in October, its lowest as pan of its goal to take a Analysts say the markets falling to fresh 26-year
since the survey staned run- majority stake. lt also said it appear to have priced in a lows.
ning 40 years ago and held an additional 31.5 per· half-percentage point cut in
The Nikkei was helped by
sharply
down
from cent in cash-settled options, the · Fed's benchmark rate the yen's depreciation
September's 61.4.
that would give 'it indirect Wednesday to a four-year against the U.S. dollar. The
The FTSE was helped by control of 74.1 percent of low of 1.00 percent.
dollar, which had fallen to a
a 5.4 percent rise in BP VW shares.
There's even speculation 13~year low against the yen
PLC's share price after the .
Analysts speculated that that the Fed will cut by on Friday, rose 3.2 percent
oil gi_ant revealed a~ 83-pe!- Porsche 's announcement three-quarters of a percent- to 95.96 yen. Traders
cent mcrease m net profit m forced hed¥e funds to age point especially in the remain on guard over possithe three months from July unwind positions aftet tltey wake of the dire consumer ble moves by Japanese
to September to $8.05 bil- had bet, 011 VW's shares ·confidence data.
authorities to mtervene in
lion, while the DAX was falling, especially as the
Earlier, most Asian stock the market to cap the yen's
lifted disproponionately by state of Lower Saxony owns markets rebounded after strength after Sunday's G7
another 97 percent rise in just over 20 percent of VW several days o_f steep statement warning about
Volkswagen shares, which stock. That' means there's declines
as
mvestors excess .yen volatility.
came on top of Monday 's . only around 5 percent of snapped up beaten down
A weaker yen encouraged
near. ISO percent rise.
free -floating VW stock . shares like Honda, Samsung traders to buy exporters
VW 's gains ha've come available .
. ·
and HSBC.
·
whose expon potential are

Holzer health talk
-and rehab programs

limited by a swxmg currency.
Honda Motor Co. surged 14
percent, Toyota Motor Corp.
Jumped 7.8 percent and Sony
Corp. rose 9.6 percent.
Hong Kong s Hang Seng
index leaped 14.4 percent to
12 ,596.29 . South Korea's
. Kospi jumped 5.6 percent to
999.16, helped along by the
South Korean central bank's
interest rate cut on ~ londay.
-Even Shangha i's. mam
index , which had fallen 6
percent earlier, turned positive in the afternoon .
Australia's key stock measure closed down 0 .4 percent. though sharply pared
earlier losses. Singapore·~
market index, also down
more than 5 percent ·in
morning · trading, turned
green in afternoon trading .
In
Latin
America,
Brazilian · stocks were up
after being battered for
weeks on concerns that a
global slowdown . would
throttle the region's lll!gest
economy. Brazil's lbovespa
'index jumped 13 percent to
close at 33.387. The
nation's currency, the real,
rose against the U.S. dollar.
The Mexican stock market
also gained strongly Tuesday,
with the main !PC index up
10 percent to 18,633.
Chile's IPSA was up 1.8
percent to 2,390 and .
Colombia's IGBC index
was gaining 3 percent to
6,657 .
.
Elsewhere , light sweet ·
crude · for December deliv ~
ery feU 49 cents to settle "at
$62.73 a barrel on the New
York Mercantile Excban~e,
the lowest closing pnce
since May 15 , 2007.
The euro rose to $1.2597
from $1.2522 late Monday,
while the British pound
gained to $1.5775 from
$1.5628.

GALLIPOLIS - "The
terms "core strengthening"
and "core stability" have
become popular terms in
recent years to the health
care field and exercise
markets." said Jill Martin
PTA · at the Holzer Clini~
Sycari10re
Branch
Rehab Department m
Gallipolis.
!VIanin explained that the
core is often mistaken for
·the abdominal mu scles
alone: however, they function as a small part of the
·whole. "The core refers to
the group of muscles surrounding our pelvi s and
spine . These muscles control our balance, body
meclianics, arm and leg
-movements. shifi body
.weight, and maintain posture . Basically, it is our
·body's found ation ," she
said . "All of us utilize our
core with every day tasks,
.like reaching overhead for a
glass , golf swing , lifting a
gallon of milk, vacuuming,
.sweeping . o~ mopping , .
walkmg, ltftmg a small ·
·child, athletic participation ,
and pushing mowing, weed-

Public meetings
Saturday, Nov. 1
SYRACUSE - Sutton
.Township Trustees. 10 a.m.
at the Syracuse village hall .
Wednesday, Nov. 5
REEDSVILLE - Olive
. Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m .. township garage.

Clubs and
organizations

•

:

·

-0

. MEXICO CITY (AP) _
Mexico's Congress passed a
. watered-down
energy
. industry refotm Tuesday
.that enables pr1'vate contrac;tors to participate in the
state-owned oil business but
won't likely draw enough
investment to reverse
declining production in the
third-largest oil supplier to
the United States.
The lower house overwhelmingly approved the
reforms despite protests by
leftist lawmakers who
stormed the podium to
·block a bill they said was a
stealth privatization of an
industry that was national· ized in 1938 . The Senate
approved the reform .last
·week .

· Falling oil prices and out·put threaten to slash
Mexico's state oil income,
' which makes up 40 percent
:of the federal budget, just as
'tbe country sees falling
remittances from U.S·
' lnigrants and a plunging
·peso rattles the long-stable
economy .
•
· So far this year, Mexico
·has produced an average of
;2.8 million barrels of ·oil a
day, down 10 percent from
. 2007 levels . At current production rates, experts, say
· Mexico will blow through
'its proven reserves in I0
·years.
· State
oil
monopoly
·Petroleos Mexicanos •.or
Pemex , lacks the technology and expertise for deep• water exploration in the
Gulf of Mexico, believed to
hold many of the country 's
·unproven reserves. But
ex pens say the reform bill
.. past few incentives
fork pri . to ta
, va e compames
e on
;ihe risk and expense of such
&gt;exploration.
: "It 's a big disappointment
:Crom the investor's perspec~tive ," said John Cogan , a
:Houston-based attorney for
·. ~cDermott Will &amp; Emery
~LLP, who focuses on the
;hydrocarbons industry. " It
..:loesn 't do what needs to be
~one if they are going to
:fully benefit _from their
: hydrocarbons
natural
·resources."
~ · Leftists had rallied popu:Iar ~ upport and held street
tprotests to limit the opening
t?f the industry to private
•mvestment.
' After months of arduous
negotiations , the bill was

•

.

613 Elm Street, R•clne, oH·

1

brother Lyle Kercher said at
a news conference.
The victim 's other brother, Jobn, said he was "overwhelmed" when the judge
banded down the guilty verdiet for Guede.
· ·
Kercher, a 21-year-old student from England , was
found dead in the apartment
she shared- with Knox. She

had been stabbed in the neck.
Prosecutors allege Kercher
died during what began as a
sex game, with Sollecito holding her by the shoulders from
behind while Knox touched
her with the point of a knife
and Guede tried to sexually
assault her. Prosecutors say
Knox then fatally stab~
Kercher in the throat.

1 ---------;----:-------------------,

DEBBIE PHILLIPS
OPPOSES JOBS &amp;PROGRESS
IN SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
1. Debbie Phillips is proudly endorsed by "CASH" and "The SIERRA CLUB" {see

· hnp:/www.debbiephillips.net)

2. "CASH" opposed the new US33 route from Darwin to Athens
(See "CASH" petition, page 89 signed by Deborah M. Phillips)
3. l)Je delays in the construction caused by the petition cost Ohio mlllions of extra dollars not to men1ion the
unnecessary accidents on old 33 due to the delay.
4. Debbie (Deborah) Phillips and her allies at the radical sreen Environmentalist organization. (The Sierra Club)
have been leading the fight against the AMP-Ohio Coal-fired power plant in Letart, Meigs County. Ohio
•(Opposing nearly three billion dollars in construction)
,
•(Opposing the creation of approximately t600 new jobs to build)'
•(Opposing the creation of one hundred fifty pennanenl jobs)
*(Opposing the creation of fifteen pemianentjobs at the related fertili.zer plant)
*(Opposing real concrete progress for real, good paying jobs near the homes of families in Southeastern
Ohio)
5. Debbie Phillips allies at the Sierra Club are opposed to &amp; new coal mines and coal fired power plant,.

&lt;

ELMWOOD ftiUCE
APAR.,MINft

Knclx and Sollecitocouidface
life in prison.
.
Kercher's family, iilcluding her mother, father; two
brothers and a sister attended the hearing.
"We are as pleased. as we
can IJI:'.witb the decision . At
the end of the day, we are
bere because our sister
Meredith was murdered,"

DEBBIE PHILLIPS SAYS SHE WANTS ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT IN THIS REGION
It doesn't sound like it!!
·

JILL THOMPSON SUPPORTS THE AMP-OHIO POWER PLANT
WITH JOBS AND PROGRESS FOR SOUTHEASTER OHIO

A Petition
We the undersigned, concem~;d ·citizens of Southeastern Ohio; in
consideration of the Ohio Department of Transportation proposal (Ath/Meg033-30 ~980 (19.25)/0.0000.00) to establish a new right-of-way for lJ.S. Rt. 33
. which extends through Athens and Meigs Counties from the city ofAthen.s to
the Village Darwin. hereby petition the officials of the State of Objo NOT
woceed with the proposed relocatiop of Rt, 33 - Athens in Darwin aiul
reoajr apd uwrade Rt· 33 qn the exjstipg road bed,
·
This proposed project is a WASTE ofTAXPAYER'S MONEY with NO CLEAR
NEED. It will result in the LOSS of FO ST &amp; FARM LAND , and HARM the RURAL
CHARACJ'ER of the REGION, whi NOT RESULTING in the ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT thatAthen
d Meigs counties NEED.

Is accepting applications for I &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments. Rents range up' to $605 .00 per
l.ip('.w!'

740-949·2012 or
TDD 800-750-0750

•

Wednesday, Oct. 29
RUTLAND - Revival at
Rutland Freewi II Baptist
Church , Salem Street,
through Saturday. Services
at 7 p.m . each evening .. Rob
Fulton on Tuesday, Rob
Erwin on Wednesday, Tim
Simpson on Thursday,
Friday
and
Saturday.
Special
singers
each
evening. Pastor Ed Barney,
742-3205.
Friday, Oct. 31
LANGSVILLE
''October Festival" 6:30
p.m .. House of Healing
Ministries .
Campfire,
weather permitting. Food

Why isn't husband standing up for her?
BY KATHY MITCHELL

the case. Why isn't your husband standing up for you? He
should tell Jane to knock it
off, and the rest of his family
should insist she behave in
your presence. That everyone
tolerates this cruelty indicates
they are afraid of Jane or they
dislike you. Tell your husband , calmly and with concern , that it is best if you and
your son no longer have contact with Jane because her
attitude is so poisonous . If he
wishes to see his sister. he can
do so o'n his own.
Dear Annie: Our school's
PTA president and part-time
employee, ''Pat," arrives at
work late every d ay and
parks her car in the one handicapped spot in the teacher's
lot. She is nor disabled, nor
does she have the proper
license plate or placard to
park there . She has told others she has the "right" to use
the spot because she is so
involved in our school.
Several teachers have
informally elected me to do
something about this because
my father is a disabled vet.
What can I do? This lady has
power at my school and a
sense of entitlement beyond
belief. We are afraid to talk to
the principal or the police.-

Torrance, Calir.
Dear Torrance: If you are
too afraid to speak up. Pat
will go on· abusing her parking privi leges. There is safety
in numbers. All of the teachers should go to the principal ,
together. and explain that
Pat's .:ar is parked illegally
and the school administration
could get into senous trouble
if it knowingly pennits her to
continue.
Dear Annie: I'm a bit
alarmed to see the vast
number of letters from men
who aren't getting enough
sex: I wonder if'ihey bother
to use any other organ. .
I've been married to the
same man for 30 years . Two
years ago. I was diagno&gt;cd
with extre me high blood
pressure. Unfortu1iately, the
medications to control it
· also inhibit the sex dri\•e. I
asked my doc.tor whether
there was anything I could
do to in cre&lt;~se my libido. but
the answer was no. I've let
mv husband know I'm
happy to have 'ex with him.
but that's not good enough.
He wants me to be full · of
desire or pretend tu be.
After reading your mail , l
see where I've .gone wrong.
Instead of raising the chi ldr~n .

cooking. cleanin g. doing
laundry. working three jobs to
help make ends meet. putting
up v. ith hb unlovable family
and keeping my&gt;elf fit , I
should just have been having
lots of sex with him and then
conveniently died of a stroke .
Women run to their doctur; to "e if they .can raise
their sexual desire . Have
men ever thought to see if
they cou ld be given &gt;ornething to lowe r their li bido-0
. I' II bet nor. -' I Should Be
D~ad in the Midwest
Dear Midwest: A lot of
women have asked us the
same question. We're sur;:
some me n have tried to
lower their li bido. but we
doubt it's common practice,
Annie's Mailbox i~· written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann , Landers
column. Please e-mail yow
questions . to anniesmailbox@coml'Qst.net, or write
to: Anrtie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box l/8190, Chicago, 1L
60611 . To fiud o11t more
about Atwie.'s Mailbox ,
and read .features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the I
Creaiors Sy11dicate Web
page at www.crealors.com.

Literary clubs hear review of Hosseini's novel

POMEROY
"A tionships of fathers and had buldly seized power in Muslim group· in 1998 .ends
Thousand Splendid Suns" sons. this second book is Afghanistan and. in 1980. the civi l war. but brings
by Klaled Hosseini pub- mme feminine in tone , with they sought political asylum extremely repressive rules ,
lished in 2007, his second most of the main events SfCn in the United States.
especially for women who
novel about Afghanistan from a woman's point of
After going to high school can no longer keep their jobs
during the last 30 to 40 years view, in showing their love. and college here . the young or travel in the streets alone.
Hosseini earned an MD The Tali ban destroy much df
of its tumultuous history. sacritice. and endurance .
was reviewed by Gay Perrin
"Both of Hosseini 's books degree, and started a suc- the cultmal stru cture also,
at a recent meeting of the are at times difficult to cessful internal med icine such as museums. theaters.
Middleport Literary Club.
read ," she said. "because of praciice in California. which an and musiC stores. etc.
The story tells of a young
Perrin said that after the the sad plight and often · he continued until shortly
after
wo
the
release
of
his
first
man wounded by a
success of his first novel merciless treatment of the
published in 2003, 'The Kit ones with whom you've novel. He now works as a bomb. her rescue from the
Runner." also set in come to sympathize. con- Goodwill Envoy for the UN rubble , the bit1h of her chilAfghanistan during the taining beautiful passages High Commi ssioner for dren. and her unsuccessful
same time period which was and tender accounts of lov- Refugees. trying to help escape attempt.
"A Thousand Splendid
alleviate the Afghan refugee
. spent months on the best ing relationships ."
The
author . Kh aled crisis, where war, hunger. Suns" takes its title from a
seller list was made into a
movie, there was some trep- Hosseini was born in Kabul. · and oppression have forced Persian poem which comidation about the success of Afghanistan. in l965 , where millions of people to aban- pares the past glories of the
·the second novel. But, the his father worked fqr the don their homes and settle in area's artists. musicians. and
reviewer said, · it has been Afghanistan
Foreign refugee camps in neighbor- writers · to "splendid suns."
Perrin in her review credits
Ministry. In 1970, his fami- ing Pakistan . .
equally. well received .
This story timeline runs the book with creating abetPerrin described the novel ly. moved to Iran. where his
as an "emotional story of father worked for the through the years in ter ·under,tand,ing of human
two women who become embassy. They returned in a Afghanistan from the depos- courage in the midst of sufmarried to the same Muslim few years to Afghanistan ing of the last king. through fering . provides an underman, a brutal, controlling where . in 1974 the former the Communist · takeover. standing of the mindsets of
Afghani from Kabul, and king Zabir Shah was ousted followed by vicious civil many in that area. and points
much older than they. While from power in a bloodless war among rival Afghani ltp the differences or life
Friday, Oct. 31
The Kite Runner was harsh coup. After spending some factions · struggling . for there and the freedom that
MIDDLEPORT - Free and with a masculine theme. time in France. they found power. The coming of the we know. especially in
community dinner, 4)0 to dealing mainly with the rela- that soon the Communism Taliban , an
extremist regards to women.
6 p.m. , Middleport Church
of Christ Family Life
Center. Chili with cheese,
peanut butter sandwiches,
dessert.
RUTLAND Youth
You can still get inlluenza if you
Question: Mat1y of my co-workers tact with people in any of the high risk
Halloween dance, 7-10
have.
had a llu shot. but it is usually a
groups
should
be
vacc
inated
.
p.m. ,' Rutland Civic Center. got flu shots last year, but I didn't
Anyone in doubt about whether or milder case . The symptoms ofinlluenCostumes optional, food because the place where /work ran out
not
they need a flu shot should check za are a sudden onset of high fever,
of
the
vaccir1e
before
I
got
otle.
I
wasand adult supervision availwith
his or her own primary care headache . fatigue , cough. sore lhroat. ·
'r
sure
if
I
needed
one
anyway.
Could
n
able.
phy
sician
or local health department . runny nose and body aches. If you
you refresh my memory about who
That addresses who should get a tlu have these symptoms . you should see
should.get a flu shot? Several of my coworkers get one every year? Should 1: shot. Now, I'll address when yuu yo ur doctor. espec ially if you are at
.
Answer: I will be happy to take should. get your shot. When the vac- high risk for llu complications !
Thesday, Nov. 4
Even
in
this
era
of
medical
research
thi s opportunity to tell you again who cine becomes available in the fall is
SYRACUSE - Edward should get a flu shot , when you the best time to get your shot since the and ex panding know ledge. hundreds
Wells. Syracuse, will cele- should get it, how long it will last and flu season usually begins just a little of thousands of people annualll' are
brate his 92rid birthday on why it's important to be vaccinated . later. It takes about two weeks after. hospitalized becaltse of flu complicqTuesday, Nov. 4. Cards against the flu . .
the flu shot is given for you to develop tions. many of them children. And
may be sent to him at the
The short answer to who should get immunity. And yes. if you're in a high there are still around 36.000 deaths
Ravenswood Village, 200 a shot is: Everyone over six months of risk group - or even if you aren 't. but each vear frmn intluenza. ·
South
Ritchie
Ave., age when there. is no shonage of the _ there is enough vaccine. available There is anti viral medication availW.Va. vaccine. Groups of people who should .you should get one every year. .
Ravenswood,
able to treat the flu , btl! it needs to be ·
26164.
New · studies are showing that the started early. .
always receive flu. shots are those who
Family Medicine® is a weekly colare in high risk groups for complica- immunity from the vaccine is lasting
utili!
. To submit que.~tio11s , write to
about
a
year.
If.
on
the
other
hand
.
you
tions from the flu. These high risk
Martha
A. Simpson, D.O. , M.BA. ,
groups include people over 65. those don't get your shot in the fall , it is sti II not
with chronic medical conditions, preg- too late to get a tlu shot. Influenza cases Ohio University College of Osteopathic
nant women (yes, flu shots are safe for peak in February, but they can go on into Medicine, 1'.0. Box 110, AthetiS, Ohio
pregnant women), and yo11ng children. April. So if for some rea~on you were 45701 , or via e-mail to readerquesChildren who have never had a flu unable to get a tlu shot in the fall. yo u can tioll s ®fami lymedici nen e ws .orgMedical information in this cplumn is
shot before · need to get two doses of get the vaccine·in January or beyond .
As I mentioned , the limiting factor is provided OS /111 educational service on/y.
vaccine, at least four weeks apart.
All health care workers, including the availability of the flu vaccine. and It does not replace the judgment ofyour
nursing and medical students . should for this year 's flu season . the Centers for personal physician , who should be
get flu shots to avoid spreading infec- Disease Control (CDC) feel s there will relied 011 to diagnose cmd recommend
tion . For the same reason , primary 1;!e adequate vaccine supplies. Flu. vac- treatment for any medical comlitio11s.
caregivers, daY.·care workers , and any- cine can be given in a shot fom1 or in Past co/1111111S are m•ailable online aJ
one else who is in regular, close con- nasal spray for certain grou ps of people. wwwfamilymedicinenews.org.

Other events

Family Medicine

Flu ~hots prevent misery and the spread of infection to others

Birthdays

OAK HILL - Candice
and Bradlee Butler of Oak
Hill announce the birth of
their daughter, Kaylee
Jacksyn · Butler, June 20,
2008. She weighed six
pounds , 15 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Beverly and Andy Fetty of
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are Sharon and
Mike U:wis and George·and.
Ruth Butler. all of Jackson.
Kay.Iee Jackayn Buller
Great grandparents are
Patty and Walter Ridenour,
,Jr .., Leon. W.Va ., and Wanda and Joel Scott of
•Shirley and Charles Fetty, Rock Branch are great-great
:Point Pleasant, W.Va. grandparents.
•

:Rotary makes donations

• FREEM/1 TKhnbl SuppcNt
;0 &amp;-/MI addreUM wiiJI W&amp;brnai~ Not!

introduced Cassie Turner,
MIDDLEPORT
Donations were made to OSU extension agent, who
God's Net and the Rotary presented the program
international project " We "Real Money, Real World" .
Care" at this week's meet- which has been introduced
ing at the Wild Horse in ,to Southern Local seniors
and will be taken into the
Pomeroy.
Hal
Kneen·,
Meigs other school districts in the
County Extension Service, near future.

Call

'

Church events

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Butler birth announced

NOW JUSTWHOIS IT THAT
WANTS PROGRESS

month with. possible rental Assistance. The
institution is an e(ftntl opportunity provider
and Employer.

,l
I

Wednesday, Oct. 29
POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club at
Pomeroy Library. Na\line
'Goebel will review "The
:Other Boelyu Girl by ·
·Phillipa Gregory. The host- .
css will be Pat Holter.
·
Friday, Oct. 3l
. POMEROY - Alzheimer
(and dementia) Support
Group, I : 15 , Meigs .senior
Center, 992-2161,.
Monday, Nov. 3
POMEROY Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting , noon,
Meigs County ·Health
Department, new members
welcome, 992-662(1.

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
the Nazarene .
Sunday, Nov. 9
POMEROY - Revival
services at the Mt . Herman
United Brethren Church ,
each evening starting Nov. 9
continuing through Nov. 12
with the Rev. Clifford
Coleman . Following the
morning service on Nov. 9.
a carry-in dinner will be
held. Special mu sic each
evening.

PageA3

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

eating and raking . Often
AND MARCY SUGAR
times, when the core muscles are weak . we may
. Dear Annie: I have been
experience lower back pain . married for 10 years and
A strong core distributes the have one son. He·s now at
stresses of weight. bearing an age when he is starting to
and helps protect the back , notice how much my ·husMartin said ..
band's sister hates me. I
A core conditioning · pro- nave no idea why. What do I
gram is designed to maxi- say when he asks , "Why
mize the individual's needs does Aunt Jane look at you
and goals. Building core with a mean face? Why
strength is . beneficial for does she laugh at you?"
So far, I have ignored her
general low back pain , muscle strains and spasms, sci- outrageous gossip and slanatica, bulging or herniated der. The · rest of the family
di scs,
fibromyalgi a, . doesn't ·seem to care how
osteoartbritis, and to help she treats me, or ihey prefer
improve posture and bal - to ignore it. I am a well -eduance, accO'rding to the phys- cated , accomplished woman
and am tired, of defending
ical therapist.
She said to maximize core my reputation after Jane is
stability, Hol zer Clinic through trashing it.
At what point can I sue .
offers · physical therapy,
aquatic therapy, fitne ss her for slander and shut her
coaching, and functional up once and for all? What
should I tell my son'? movement screening.
information regarding rite Rising from the Ashf!!
Dear Ashes: You can tell
strengthening program at
Holzer Clinic can be your son that you don 't know
obtained by calling (740) · why Aunt Jane behaves this
446-5769. The strengthen- way. She sounds bitterly jealing program can be provid- ous· of you. However, suing
ed ar all Holzer Clinic her requires that you can
prove her comments are
Rehab locations .
causing you monetary loss,
and that doesh 't seem to be

.Community Calendar

Mexico approves . Lawyer: American, ex~beau indicted in Italy murder
...
d
d
il
·wa1.ere • own. 0
·:ffi
• d\)to: b 'Y '"e· OI'I)}
PERUGIA , Italy (AP) An American college student
.
·
and her · former boyfriend
~
were ordered Tuesday to
~taitd trial in last year's slay.1. '
mg ?f her roomma~. , wh!le
stripped of many of the the JUdge also convt~ted an
most significant changes in lvo~y Coast man 10 the
President Felipe Calderon's kdhng, la~yers sa•d: .
original proposal.
The JUdge
mdtcted
It
11
d
t
Amanda Knox , 21 ; of
a ows · eep-wa er Seattle
and
Raffaele
exploration only on a Sollecito of Italy on charges
straight contractual basis, of murder and sexual viainstead of paying private lence in the stabbing death
companies based on the of Meredith Kercher of
amount of oil found. It also England , said Francesco
would no longer allow pri- Maresca, a lawyer for the
vate investment in the victim's family. Trial forthe
building and operating of two, who deny wrongdoing,
oil refineries, or private will start Dec. 4.
ownership of storage and
A third suspect, Rudy
.transpon facilities.
Hermann Guede of tbe West
Mexico has not built a African nation of Ivory
new refinery in three Coast, was sentenced to 30
decades, and now depends years in prison after being
on U.S. refineries to convert convicted . on the same
much of its crude into gaso- charges in a fast-track trial
line .
.
requested by his defense,
The reform will let Pemex Maresca said. Prosecutors
keep more of its profits for asked for life in jail.
·
invest.ment in exploration
Knox's attorney, Luciano
and development. Arxl.. it Ghirga, said his client "was
does allow for contricts quite disappointed" by the
with incentives, including ruling . "She is ready to start
paying contractors bonuses again,"
Ghirga
told
for early completion of pro- reponers . "The (first) hearjects and for technological ing is very elose, we have to
transfer to Pemex.
reorganize our defense line
!'Investors will wait and 'in time ." ·
see how this reforms transJudge Paolo Micheli
Jates into actual contracts.," emerged with a verdict after
said David Shields, an inde- almost 12 of hours of delibpendent energy exl'ert in · erations. All the . proceedMexico City who has writ- ings were held behind
ten books on Pemex . ."But closed doors and the three
what we won't be able to suspects awaited the ruling
avoid is a maJor drop in oil in separate cells at the courproduction m the · short !house.
term."
Lawyers for · Knox and
Still, the government Sollecito, who were· jailed
managed through its con- shonly after the slaying last
cessions to build consensus Nov. 2, had asked that their
in a divided Congress on clients be granted house arrest
one of the most sensitive if indicted . Lawyers leaving
issues in Mexican politics. the courthouse said Micheli
The compromise bill easily did not rule on the request and
passed in the Senate last -a decision was expected in the
· k.
coming days. If convicted,
wee

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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·The Daily Sentinel

BY PAN PYLAs
AP BUSINESS WA ITER

LONDON - World &gt;tock
·markets rallied strongly on
Tuesday as investors anticipating a cut in U.S . interest
·rates swooped in to buy
·sbares that had been pum. meled just a day earlier.
· The day's trading iri many
ways mirrored Monday. In
Asia , for example. Hong
. :Kong's Hang Seng .iudex
'rose a whopping 14.4 percent - its biggest gain in II
years - a day after plunging more than 12 percent.
The global rally was
capped by a stunning latesession surge on Wall
Street . where the Dow
'i ndustrial s finished up
889.35. or 10.88 percent. to
9,065 .12 . The Dow had
dropped 500 points in th~
' previou&gt; two sessions.
· · While there was no single, overriding factor to fuel
the stock surge , some market watchers speculated that
·1he recent selling spree was
overdone.
"The market can't fall forever," sai d Francis Lun,
general
manager
of
. Fulbright Securities Ltd . in
.Hong Kong.
Early strong gains in the
.Dow and in Asia , where
Japan's Nikkei index recovered from 26-year lows,
pushed Europe's indexes
.even higher. But then weak
&lt;

ARoUND TilE WoRLD

PageA2
Wednesday, October 29, 2008

U.S. economic data took
theirtoll .
The FTSE 100 index of
leading British shares
closed 73.79 points , or 1.9
percent, higher at 3,926.38.
The CAC-40 index of
leading French shares was
up 47.57 'points. or 1.6 percent, at 3,114.92, while
DAX was
Germany's
488.81 points. or 11.3 percent, higher at · 4,823 .45 as
the
share
price
of
Volbwagen AG almost
AP photo
doubled again.
Traders work on the floor of the Brazilian Mercantile and Futures Exchange, in Sao Paulo,
European stocks were Tuesday. Brazilian stocks are up sharply after being battered for weeks on concerns that
somewhat tem~red by the · a global slowdown will throttle Latin America's largest economy. Braz.il's lbovespa index
·conference Board's month- · was up 4.7 percent to 30,810 on Tuesday. The nation's currency, the real, rose against the
ly consumer confidence U.S. dollar.
index that fueled concerns
abou t the likely depth of the after Sunday's announceJapan's
benchmark
The gains Tuesday come
expected rece ssion in the· ment from Porsche that it just as the U.S . Federal Nikkei 225 index surged
U.S. The Conference Board had increased its stake in Reserve begins its two-{!ay 459.02 points, or 6.4 persaid its main index fell to the company to 42.6 percent interest rate deliberations. cent, to 7,621.92 after early
38.0 in October, its lowest as pan of its goal to take a Analysts say the markets falling to fresh 26-year
since the survey staned run- majority stake. lt also said it appear to have priced in a lows.
ning 40 years ago and held an additional 31.5 per· half-percentage point cut in
The Nikkei was helped by
sharply
down
from cent in cash-settled options, the · Fed's benchmark rate the yen's depreciation
September's 61.4.
that would give 'it indirect Wednesday to a four-year against the U.S. dollar. The
The FTSE was helped by control of 74.1 percent of low of 1.00 percent.
dollar, which had fallen to a
a 5.4 percent rise in BP VW shares.
There's even speculation 13~year low against the yen
PLC's share price after the .
Analysts speculated that that the Fed will cut by on Friday, rose 3.2 percent
oil gi_ant revealed a~ 83-pe!- Porsche 's announcement three-quarters of a percent- to 95.96 yen. Traders
cent mcrease m net profit m forced hed¥e funds to age point especially in the remain on guard over possithe three months from July unwind positions aftet tltey wake of the dire consumer ble moves by Japanese
to September to $8.05 bil- had bet, 011 VW's shares ·confidence data.
authorities to mtervene in
lion, while the DAX was falling, especially as the
Earlier, most Asian stock the market to cap the yen's
lifted disproponionately by state of Lower Saxony owns markets rebounded after strength after Sunday's G7
another 97 percent rise in just over 20 percent of VW several days o_f steep statement warning about
Volkswagen shares, which stock. That' means there's declines
as
mvestors excess .yen volatility.
came on top of Monday 's . only around 5 percent of snapped up beaten down
A weaker yen encouraged
near. ISO percent rise.
free -floating VW stock . shares like Honda, Samsung traders to buy exporters
VW 's gains ha've come available .
. ·
and HSBC.
·
whose expon potential are

Holzer health talk
-and rehab programs

limited by a swxmg currency.
Honda Motor Co. surged 14
percent, Toyota Motor Corp.
Jumped 7.8 percent and Sony
Corp. rose 9.6 percent.
Hong Kong s Hang Seng
index leaped 14.4 percent to
12 ,596.29 . South Korea's
. Kospi jumped 5.6 percent to
999.16, helped along by the
South Korean central bank's
interest rate cut on ~ londay.
-Even Shangha i's. mam
index , which had fallen 6
percent earlier, turned positive in the afternoon .
Australia's key stock measure closed down 0 .4 percent. though sharply pared
earlier losses. Singapore·~
market index, also down
more than 5 percent ·in
morning · trading, turned
green in afternoon trading .
In
Latin
America,
Brazilian · stocks were up
after being battered for
weeks on concerns that a
global slowdown . would
throttle the region's lll!gest
economy. Brazil's lbovespa
'index jumped 13 percent to
close at 33.387. The
nation's currency, the real,
rose against the U.S. dollar.
The Mexican stock market
also gained strongly Tuesday,
with the main !PC index up
10 percent to 18,633.
Chile's IPSA was up 1.8
percent to 2,390 and .
Colombia's IGBC index
was gaining 3 percent to
6,657 .
.
Elsewhere , light sweet ·
crude · for December deliv ~
ery feU 49 cents to settle "at
$62.73 a barrel on the New
York Mercantile Excban~e,
the lowest closing pnce
since May 15 , 2007.
The euro rose to $1.2597
from $1.2522 late Monday,
while the British pound
gained to $1.5775 from
$1.5628.

GALLIPOLIS - "The
terms "core strengthening"
and "core stability" have
become popular terms in
recent years to the health
care field and exercise
markets." said Jill Martin
PTA · at the Holzer Clini~
Sycari10re
Branch
Rehab Department m
Gallipolis.
!VIanin explained that the
core is often mistaken for
·the abdominal mu scles
alone: however, they function as a small part of the
·whole. "The core refers to
the group of muscles surrounding our pelvi s and
spine . These muscles control our balance, body
meclianics, arm and leg
-movements. shifi body
.weight, and maintain posture . Basically, it is our
·body's found ation ," she
said . "All of us utilize our
core with every day tasks,
.like reaching overhead for a
glass , golf swing , lifting a
gallon of milk, vacuuming,
.sweeping . o~ mopping , .
walkmg, ltftmg a small ·
·child, athletic participation ,
and pushing mowing, weed-

Public meetings
Saturday, Nov. 1
SYRACUSE - Sutton
.Township Trustees. 10 a.m.
at the Syracuse village hall .
Wednesday, Nov. 5
REEDSVILLE - Olive
. Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m .. township garage.

Clubs and
organizations

•

:

·

-0

. MEXICO CITY (AP) _
Mexico's Congress passed a
. watered-down
energy
. industry refotm Tuesday
.that enables pr1'vate contrac;tors to participate in the
state-owned oil business but
won't likely draw enough
investment to reverse
declining production in the
third-largest oil supplier to
the United States.
The lower house overwhelmingly approved the
reforms despite protests by
leftist lawmakers who
stormed the podium to
·block a bill they said was a
stealth privatization of an
industry that was national· ized in 1938 . The Senate
approved the reform .last
·week .

· Falling oil prices and out·put threaten to slash
Mexico's state oil income,
' which makes up 40 percent
:of the federal budget, just as
'tbe country sees falling
remittances from U.S·
' lnigrants and a plunging
·peso rattles the long-stable
economy .
•
· So far this year, Mexico
·has produced an average of
;2.8 million barrels of ·oil a
day, down 10 percent from
. 2007 levels . At current production rates, experts, say
· Mexico will blow through
'its proven reserves in I0
·years.
· State
oil
monopoly
·Petroleos Mexicanos •.or
Pemex , lacks the technology and expertise for deep• water exploration in the
Gulf of Mexico, believed to
hold many of the country 's
·unproven reserves. But
ex pens say the reform bill
.. past few incentives
fork pri . to ta
, va e compames
e on
;ihe risk and expense of such
&gt;exploration.
: "It 's a big disappointment
:Crom the investor's perspec~tive ," said John Cogan , a
:Houston-based attorney for
·. ~cDermott Will &amp; Emery
~LLP, who focuses on the
;hydrocarbons industry. " It
..:loesn 't do what needs to be
~one if they are going to
:fully benefit _from their
: hydrocarbons
natural
·resources."
~ · Leftists had rallied popu:Iar ~ upport and held street
tprotests to limit the opening
t?f the industry to private
•mvestment.
' After months of arduous
negotiations , the bill was

•

.

613 Elm Street, R•clne, oH·

1

brother Lyle Kercher said at
a news conference.
The victim 's other brother, Jobn, said he was "overwhelmed" when the judge
banded down the guilty verdiet for Guede.
· ·
Kercher, a 21-year-old student from England , was
found dead in the apartment
she shared- with Knox. She

had been stabbed in the neck.
Prosecutors allege Kercher
died during what began as a
sex game, with Sollecito holding her by the shoulders from
behind while Knox touched
her with the point of a knife
and Guede tried to sexually
assault her. Prosecutors say
Knox then fatally stab~
Kercher in the throat.

1 ---------;----:-------------------,

DEBBIE PHILLIPS
OPPOSES JOBS &amp;PROGRESS
IN SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
1. Debbie Phillips is proudly endorsed by "CASH" and "The SIERRA CLUB" {see

· hnp:/www.debbiephillips.net)

2. "CASH" opposed the new US33 route from Darwin to Athens
(See "CASH" petition, page 89 signed by Deborah M. Phillips)
3. l)Je delays in the construction caused by the petition cost Ohio mlllions of extra dollars not to men1ion the
unnecessary accidents on old 33 due to the delay.
4. Debbie (Deborah) Phillips and her allies at the radical sreen Environmentalist organization. (The Sierra Club)
have been leading the fight against the AMP-Ohio Coal-fired power plant in Letart, Meigs County. Ohio
•(Opposing nearly three billion dollars in construction)
,
•(Opposing the creation of approximately t600 new jobs to build)'
•(Opposing the creation of one hundred fifty pennanenl jobs)
*(Opposing the creation of fifteen pemianentjobs at the related fertili.zer plant)
*(Opposing real concrete progress for real, good paying jobs near the homes of families in Southeastern
Ohio)
5. Debbie Phillips allies at the Sierra Club are opposed to &amp; new coal mines and coal fired power plant,.

&lt;

ELMWOOD ftiUCE
APAR.,MINft

Knclx and Sollecitocouidface
life in prison.
.
Kercher's family, iilcluding her mother, father; two
brothers and a sister attended the hearing.
"We are as pleased. as we
can IJI:'.witb the decision . At
the end of the day, we are
bere because our sister
Meredith was murdered,"

DEBBIE PHILLIPS SAYS SHE WANTS ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT IN THIS REGION
It doesn't sound like it!!
·

JILL THOMPSON SUPPORTS THE AMP-OHIO POWER PLANT
WITH JOBS AND PROGRESS FOR SOUTHEASTER OHIO

A Petition
We the undersigned, concem~;d ·citizens of Southeastern Ohio; in
consideration of the Ohio Department of Transportation proposal (Ath/Meg033-30 ~980 (19.25)/0.0000.00) to establish a new right-of-way for lJ.S. Rt. 33
. which extends through Athens and Meigs Counties from the city ofAthen.s to
the Village Darwin. hereby petition the officials of the State of Objo NOT
woceed with the proposed relocatiop of Rt, 33 - Athens in Darwin aiul
reoajr apd uwrade Rt· 33 qn the exjstipg road bed,
·
This proposed project is a WASTE ofTAXPAYER'S MONEY with NO CLEAR
NEED. It will result in the LOSS of FO ST &amp; FARM LAND , and HARM the RURAL
CHARACJ'ER of the REGION, whi NOT RESULTING in the ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT thatAthen
d Meigs counties NEED.

Is accepting applications for I &amp; 2 bedroom
apartments. Rents range up' to $605 .00 per
l.ip('.w!'

740-949·2012 or
TDD 800-750-0750

•

Wednesday, Oct. 29
RUTLAND - Revival at
Rutland Freewi II Baptist
Church , Salem Street,
through Saturday. Services
at 7 p.m . each evening .. Rob
Fulton on Tuesday, Rob
Erwin on Wednesday, Tim
Simpson on Thursday,
Friday
and
Saturday.
Special
singers
each
evening. Pastor Ed Barney,
742-3205.
Friday, Oct. 31
LANGSVILLE
''October Festival" 6:30
p.m .. House of Healing
Ministries .
Campfire,
weather permitting. Food

Why isn't husband standing up for her?
BY KATHY MITCHELL

the case. Why isn't your husband standing up for you? He
should tell Jane to knock it
off, and the rest of his family
should insist she behave in
your presence. That everyone
tolerates this cruelty indicates
they are afraid of Jane or they
dislike you. Tell your husband , calmly and with concern , that it is best if you and
your son no longer have contact with Jane because her
attitude is so poisonous . If he
wishes to see his sister. he can
do so o'n his own.
Dear Annie: Our school's
PTA president and part-time
employee, ''Pat," arrives at
work late every d ay and
parks her car in the one handicapped spot in the teacher's
lot. She is nor disabled, nor
does she have the proper
license plate or placard to
park there . She has told others she has the "right" to use
the spot because she is so
involved in our school.
Several teachers have
informally elected me to do
something about this because
my father is a disabled vet.
What can I do? This lady has
power at my school and a
sense of entitlement beyond
belief. We are afraid to talk to
the principal or the police.-

Torrance, Calir.
Dear Torrance: If you are
too afraid to speak up. Pat
will go on· abusing her parking privi leges. There is safety
in numbers. All of the teachers should go to the principal ,
together. and explain that
Pat's .:ar is parked illegally
and the school administration
could get into senous trouble
if it knowingly pennits her to
continue.
Dear Annie: I'm a bit
alarmed to see the vast
number of letters from men
who aren't getting enough
sex: I wonder if'ihey bother
to use any other organ. .
I've been married to the
same man for 30 years . Two
years ago. I was diagno&gt;cd
with extre me high blood
pressure. Unfortu1iately, the
medications to control it
· also inhibit the sex dri\•e. I
asked my doc.tor whether
there was anything I could
do to in cre&lt;~se my libido. but
the answer was no. I've let
mv husband know I'm
happy to have 'ex with him.
but that's not good enough.
He wants me to be full · of
desire or pretend tu be.
After reading your mail , l
see where I've .gone wrong.
Instead of raising the chi ldr~n .

cooking. cleanin g. doing
laundry. working three jobs to
help make ends meet. putting
up v. ith hb unlovable family
and keeping my&gt;elf fit , I
should just have been having
lots of sex with him and then
conveniently died of a stroke .
Women run to their doctur; to "e if they .can raise
their sexual desire . Have
men ever thought to see if
they cou ld be given &gt;ornething to lowe r their li bido-0
. I' II bet nor. -' I Should Be
D~ad in the Midwest
Dear Midwest: A lot of
women have asked us the
same question. We're sur;:
some me n have tried to
lower their li bido. but we
doubt it's common practice,
Annie's Mailbox i~· written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann , Landers
column. Please e-mail yow
questions . to anniesmailbox@coml'Qst.net, or write
to: Anrtie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box l/8190, Chicago, 1L
60611 . To fiud o11t more
about Atwie.'s Mailbox ,
and read .features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the I
Creaiors Sy11dicate Web
page at www.crealors.com.

Literary clubs hear review of Hosseini's novel

POMEROY
"A tionships of fathers and had buldly seized power in Muslim group· in 1998 .ends
Thousand Splendid Suns" sons. this second book is Afghanistan and. in 1980. the civi l war. but brings
by Klaled Hosseini pub- mme feminine in tone , with they sought political asylum extremely repressive rules ,
lished in 2007, his second most of the main events SfCn in the United States.
especially for women who
novel about Afghanistan from a woman's point of
After going to high school can no longer keep their jobs
during the last 30 to 40 years view, in showing their love. and college here . the young or travel in the streets alone.
Hosseini earned an MD The Tali ban destroy much df
of its tumultuous history. sacritice. and endurance .
was reviewed by Gay Perrin
"Both of Hosseini 's books degree, and started a suc- the cultmal stru cture also,
at a recent meeting of the are at times difficult to cessful internal med icine such as museums. theaters.
Middleport Literary Club.
read ," she said. "because of praciice in California. which an and musiC stores. etc.
The story tells of a young
Perrin said that after the the sad plight and often · he continued until shortly
after
wo
the
release
of
his
first
man wounded by a
success of his first novel merciless treatment of the
published in 2003, 'The Kit ones with whom you've novel. He now works as a bomb. her rescue from the
Runner." also set in come to sympathize. con- Goodwill Envoy for the UN rubble , the bit1h of her chilAfghanistan during the taining beautiful passages High Commi ssioner for dren. and her unsuccessful
same time period which was and tender accounts of lov- Refugees. trying to help escape attempt.
"A Thousand Splendid
alleviate the Afghan refugee
. spent months on the best ing relationships ."
The
author . Kh aled crisis, where war, hunger. Suns" takes its title from a
seller list was made into a
movie, there was some trep- Hosseini was born in Kabul. · and oppression have forced Persian poem which comidation about the success of Afghanistan. in l965 , where millions of people to aban- pares the past glories of the
·the second novel. But, the his father worked fqr the don their homes and settle in area's artists. musicians. and
reviewer said, · it has been Afghanistan
Foreign refugee camps in neighbor- writers · to "splendid suns."
Perrin in her review credits
Ministry. In 1970, his fami- ing Pakistan . .
equally. well received .
This story timeline runs the book with creating abetPerrin described the novel ly. moved to Iran. where his
as an "emotional story of father worked for the through the years in ter ·under,tand,ing of human
two women who become embassy. They returned in a Afghanistan from the depos- courage in the midst of sufmarried to the same Muslim few years to Afghanistan ing of the last king. through fering . provides an underman, a brutal, controlling where . in 1974 the former the Communist · takeover. standing of the mindsets of
Afghani from Kabul, and king Zabir Shah was ousted followed by vicious civil many in that area. and points
much older than they. While from power in a bloodless war among rival Afghani ltp the differences or life
Friday, Oct. 31
The Kite Runner was harsh coup. After spending some factions · struggling . for there and the freedom that
MIDDLEPORT - Free and with a masculine theme. time in France. they found power. The coming of the we know. especially in
community dinner, 4)0 to dealing mainly with the rela- that soon the Communism Taliban , an
extremist regards to women.
6 p.m. , Middleport Church
of Christ Family Life
Center. Chili with cheese,
peanut butter sandwiches,
dessert.
RUTLAND Youth
You can still get inlluenza if you
Question: Mat1y of my co-workers tact with people in any of the high risk
Halloween dance, 7-10
have.
had a llu shot. but it is usually a
groups
should
be
vacc
inated
.
p.m. ,' Rutland Civic Center. got flu shots last year, but I didn't
Anyone in doubt about whether or milder case . The symptoms ofinlluenCostumes optional, food because the place where /work ran out
not
they need a flu shot should check za are a sudden onset of high fever,
of
the
vaccir1e
before
I
got
otle.
I
wasand adult supervision availwith
his or her own primary care headache . fatigue , cough. sore lhroat. ·
'r
sure
if
I
needed
one
anyway.
Could
n
able.
phy
sician
or local health department . runny nose and body aches. If you
you refresh my memory about who
That addresses who should get a tlu have these symptoms . you should see
should.get a flu shot? Several of my coworkers get one every year? Should 1: shot. Now, I'll address when yuu yo ur doctor. espec ially if you are at
.
Answer: I will be happy to take should. get your shot. When the vac- high risk for llu complications !
Thesday, Nov. 4
Even
in
this
era
of
medical
research
thi s opportunity to tell you again who cine becomes available in the fall is
SYRACUSE - Edward should get a flu shot , when you the best time to get your shot since the and ex panding know ledge. hundreds
Wells. Syracuse, will cele- should get it, how long it will last and flu season usually begins just a little of thousands of people annualll' are
brate his 92rid birthday on why it's important to be vaccinated . later. It takes about two weeks after. hospitalized becaltse of flu complicqTuesday, Nov. 4. Cards against the flu . .
the flu shot is given for you to develop tions. many of them children. And
may be sent to him at the
The short answer to who should get immunity. And yes. if you're in a high there are still around 36.000 deaths
Ravenswood Village, 200 a shot is: Everyone over six months of risk group - or even if you aren 't. but each vear frmn intluenza. ·
South
Ritchie
Ave., age when there. is no shonage of the _ there is enough vaccine. available There is anti viral medication availW.Va. vaccine. Groups of people who should .you should get one every year. .
Ravenswood,
able to treat the flu , btl! it needs to be ·
26164.
New · studies are showing that the started early. .
always receive flu. shots are those who
Family Medicine® is a weekly colare in high risk groups for complica- immunity from the vaccine is lasting
utili!
. To submit que.~tio11s , write to
about
a
year.
If.
on
the
other
hand
.
you
tions from the flu. These high risk
Martha
A. Simpson, D.O. , M.BA. ,
groups include people over 65. those don't get your shot in the fall , it is sti II not
with chronic medical conditions, preg- too late to get a tlu shot. Influenza cases Ohio University College of Osteopathic
nant women (yes, flu shots are safe for peak in February, but they can go on into Medicine, 1'.0. Box 110, AthetiS, Ohio
pregnant women), and yo11ng children. April. So if for some rea~on you were 45701 , or via e-mail to readerquesChildren who have never had a flu unable to get a tlu shot in the fall. yo u can tioll s ®fami lymedici nen e ws .orgMedical information in this cplumn is
shot before · need to get two doses of get the vaccine·in January or beyond .
As I mentioned , the limiting factor is provided OS /111 educational service on/y.
vaccine, at least four weeks apart.
All health care workers, including the availability of the flu vaccine. and It does not replace the judgment ofyour
nursing and medical students . should for this year 's flu season . the Centers for personal physician , who should be
get flu shots to avoid spreading infec- Disease Control (CDC) feel s there will relied 011 to diagnose cmd recommend
tion . For the same reason , primary 1;!e adequate vaccine supplies. Flu. vac- treatment for any medical comlitio11s.
caregivers, daY.·care workers , and any- cine can be given in a shot fom1 or in Past co/1111111S are m•ailable online aJ
one else who is in regular, close con- nasal spray for certain grou ps of people. wwwfamilymedicinenews.org.

Other events

Family Medicine

Flu ~hots prevent misery and the spread of infection to others

Birthdays

OAK HILL - Candice
and Bradlee Butler of Oak
Hill announce the birth of
their daughter, Kaylee
Jacksyn · Butler, June 20,
2008. She weighed six
pounds , 15 ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Beverly and Andy Fetty of
Pomeroy. Paternal grandparents are Sharon and
Mike U:wis and George·and.
Ruth Butler. all of Jackson.
Kay.Iee Jackayn Buller
Great grandparents are
Patty and Walter Ridenour,
,Jr .., Leon. W.Va ., and Wanda and Joel Scott of
•Shirley and Charles Fetty, Rock Branch are great-great
:Point Pleasant, W.Va. grandparents.
•

:Rotary makes donations

• FREEM/1 TKhnbl SuppcNt
;0 &amp;-/MI addreUM wiiJI W&amp;brnai~ Not!

introduced Cassie Turner,
MIDDLEPORT
Donations were made to OSU extension agent, who
God's Net and the Rotary presented the program
international project " We "Real Money, Real World" .
Care" at this week's meet- which has been introduced
ing at the Wild Horse in ,to Southern Local seniors
and will be taken into the
Pomeroy.
Hal
Kneen·,
Meigs other school districts in the
County Extension Service, near future.

Call

'

Church events

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Butler birth announced

NOW JUSTWHOIS IT THAT
WANTS PROGRESS

month with. possible rental Assistance. The
institution is an e(ftntl opportunity provider
and Employer.

,l
I

Wednesday, Oct. 29
POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club at
Pomeroy Library. Na\line
'Goebel will review "The
:Other Boelyu Girl by ·
·Phillipa Gregory. The host- .
css will be Pat Holter.
·
Friday, Oct. 3l
. POMEROY - Alzheimer
(and dementia) Support
Group, I : 15 , Meigs .senior
Center, 992-2161,.
Monday, Nov. 3
POMEROY Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting , noon,
Meigs County ·Health
Department, new members
welcome, 992-662(1.

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
the Nazarene .
Sunday, Nov. 9
POMEROY - Revival
services at the Mt . Herman
United Brethren Church ,
each evening starting Nov. 9
continuing through Nov. 12
with the Rev. Clifford
Coleman . Following the
morning service on Nov. 9.
a carry-in dinner will be
held. Special mu sic each
evening.

PageA3

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

eating and raking . Often
AND MARCY SUGAR
times, when the core muscles are weak . we may
. Dear Annie: I have been
experience lower back pain . married for 10 years and
A strong core distributes the have one son. He·s now at
stresses of weight. bearing an age when he is starting to
and helps protect the back , notice how much my ·husMartin said ..
band's sister hates me. I
A core conditioning · pro- nave no idea why. What do I
gram is designed to maxi- say when he asks , "Why
mize the individual's needs does Aunt Jane look at you
and goals. Building core with a mean face? Why
strength is . beneficial for does she laugh at you?"
So far, I have ignored her
general low back pain , muscle strains and spasms, sci- outrageous gossip and slanatica, bulging or herniated der. The · rest of the family
di scs,
fibromyalgi a, . doesn't ·seem to care how
osteoartbritis, and to help she treats me, or ihey prefer
improve posture and bal - to ignore it. I am a well -eduance, accO'rding to the phys- cated , accomplished woman
and am tired, of defending
ical therapist.
She said to maximize core my reputation after Jane is
stability, Hol zer Clinic through trashing it.
At what point can I sue .
offers · physical therapy,
aquatic therapy, fitne ss her for slander and shut her
coaching, and functional up once and for all? What
should I tell my son'? movement screening.
information regarding rite Rising from the Ashf!!
Dear Ashes: You can tell
strengthening program at
Holzer Clinic can be your son that you don 't know
obtained by calling (740) · why Aunt Jane behaves this
446-5769. The strengthen- way. She sounds bitterly jealing program can be provid- ous· of you. However, suing
ed ar all Holzer Clinic her requires that you can
prove her comments are
Rehab locations .
causing you monetary loss,
and that doesh 't seem to be

.Community Calendar

Mexico approves . Lawyer: American, ex~beau indicted in Italy murder
...
d
d
il
·wa1.ere • own. 0
·:ffi
• d\)to: b 'Y '"e· OI'I)}
PERUGIA , Italy (AP) An American college student
.
·
and her · former boyfriend
~
were ordered Tuesday to
~taitd trial in last year's slay.1. '
mg ?f her roomma~. , wh!le
stripped of many of the the JUdge also convt~ted an
most significant changes in lvo~y Coast man 10 the
President Felipe Calderon's kdhng, la~yers sa•d: .
original proposal.
The JUdge
mdtcted
It
11
d
t
Amanda Knox , 21 ; of
a ows · eep-wa er Seattle
and
Raffaele
exploration only on a Sollecito of Italy on charges
straight contractual basis, of murder and sexual viainstead of paying private lence in the stabbing death
companies based on the of Meredith Kercher of
amount of oil found. It also England , said Francesco
would no longer allow pri- Maresca, a lawyer for the
vate investment in the victim's family. Trial forthe
building and operating of two, who deny wrongdoing,
oil refineries, or private will start Dec. 4.
ownership of storage and
A third suspect, Rudy
.transpon facilities.
Hermann Guede of tbe West
Mexico has not built a African nation of Ivory
new refinery in three Coast, was sentenced to 30
decades, and now depends years in prison after being
on U.S. refineries to convert convicted . on the same
much of its crude into gaso- charges in a fast-track trial
line .
.
requested by his defense,
The reform will let Pemex Maresca said. Prosecutors
keep more of its profits for asked for life in jail.
·
invest.ment in exploration
Knox's attorney, Luciano
and development. Arxl.. it Ghirga, said his client "was
does allow for contricts quite disappointed" by the
with incentives, including ruling . "She is ready to start
paying contractors bonuses again,"
Ghirga
told
for early completion of pro- reponers . "The (first) hearjects and for technological ing is very elose, we have to
transfer to Pemex.
reorganize our defense line
!'Investors will wait and 'in time ." ·
see how this reforms transJudge Paolo Micheli
Jates into actual contracts.," emerged with a verdict after
said David Shields, an inde- almost 12 of hours of delibpendent energy exl'ert in · erations. All the . proceedMexico City who has writ- ings were held behind
ten books on Pemex . ."But closed doors and the three
what we won't be able to suspects awaited the ruling
avoid is a maJor drop in oil in separate cells at the courproduction m the · short !house.
term."
Lawyers for · Knox and
Still, the government Sollecito, who were· jailed
managed through its con- shonly after the slaying last
cessions to build consensus Nov. 2, had asked that their
in a divided Congress on clients be granted house arrest
one of the most sensitive if indicted . Lawyers leaving
issues in Mexican politics. the courthouse said Micheli
The compromise bill easily did not rule on the request and
passed in the Senate last -a decision was expected in the
· k.
coming days. If convicted,
wee

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

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~The

Daily Sentinel

.The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

OPINION

:TODAY IN HISTORY

includes his refusal to condemn MoveOn.org 's notorious attack last spring
against the fanner commander of our troops in Iraq,
Gen. David Petraeus. The
comment is even more disturbing than it appears on its
surt'ace because it reflects
poorly on Biden, a~ well.
Obama ·supposedly tapped
the senator for his vice president because he adds foreign-policy heft to the ticket. But on issue after issue ;
Biden, a lawmaker for three
decades and counting. has
been wrong. He helped seal
the deal on defeat in
' Vietnam. He opposed
Ronald Reagan as the Great
Communicator drove a
stake th ro ugh the heart of
the
Soviet empire, and he
·
ran toward surrender in Iraq
after suppot1ing t~e deployment of American troops in
the first place.
These things , along with
Obama 's radical associations
- most notably, his friendships with William Ayers, an
unrepentant terrorist, and the
Rev. Jeremiah Wright of
"God da "* · America" fame
should have given
Americans pause long
before today. But if, in these
tina! days before we head to
the pOlling booths. we take
that pause. it's not too late.
We hitven't gone too far. Yet.
Between· taking fittings
for the coronation. pundits
warn thm the polls may be
inaccurate. Mostly . they

blame the so-called Bradley
effect _:_ named after an
unsuccessful black candidate for governor in
California. The worry is that
non-black
voters
are
uncomfortable with the idea
of a black politician but
won't tell pollsters that for
fear of being·cast as racists.
But if Obama doesn't win
on Election Day, it doesn't
mean we're a nation of closet bigots. It may just mean
that Americans took a deep
breath and realized that this
country can't gamble on an
· inexperienced
president
during a time of war and
economic uncertainty.
As Karl Rove recentlY.
wrote. "Sen. Obama hasn't
closed the sale." Given the
disturbing open questions
about his judgment and
readiness, if America takes
a moment io sober up from
the high of the historic
moment, they may not buy
on Nov. 4 the bill of spoiled
(socialist, recklessly irresponsible , anti-life) goods
the Obama-Biden ticket is
seliing. With Biden 's words
in mind ,voters may choose
to avoid heading into an
"international crisis" with
an untested leader. And they
will. have made that chpice
while there was still time.
(Kathryn· Lopez is the edi·
ror of Nariorwl Review
Online (www.narionalreview.com). She can be contacted at klope~@narional­
review.com.)

'

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Correction Policy

(USPS 213-960)

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lnolde Melgo Countv
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'32.26
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POMEROY - Elections
to the Board of Directors of
th,e
.Meigs
County
Agricultural
Society
will be
RUTLAND - William "Bill'' Edward Kauff. 59, of
Rutland passed away on Thursday, Oct. 23 , 2008 at the held Monday, Nov. 3,
Debbie Watson, secretary,
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W. Va.
announced
todaY..
He. was born on Sept. 5. 1949 in Pomeroy, to Opal
The
polls
wtll be open
(Stobart) Kauff and the late Earl Cecil Kauff. Mr. Kauff
from
S
to
9
p
.m:
with voting
worked as a foreman at the Ohio Pallet Co.
He is also survived by his wife, Jenny Kauff of Rutland
and their daughter. Stephanie Kauff; brothers, Earl Kauff, Jr.,
Rtchard Kauff. and Jeffrey Kauff, all of Pomeroy; sisters,
Debra Burk~ of Racine and Carla Kauff of Pomeroy; children, Cynthta Smith of Rutland, Christina Ferrell of Italy,
ReiJC?cca_ Smtth of Pomeroy. William E. Kauff, ·Jr. of
Gaihpolis Ferry, W.Va., Benjamin Kauff of Racine. and
Joshua Kauff of Racine; three step-daughters, Melinda Clark
WASHINGTON (AP) of Logan, Melissa Clark of Chillicothe and Jennifer Clark of
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; 17 grandchildren; a best friend, · An impatient White House
Sampson Darst of Rutland; and st:veral nieces and nephews. prodded banks and other
financial
companies
He was preceded in death by his father.
Tuesday
to
quit
hoarding
Services were held at I p.m. on Monday, Oct. 27. at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial was billions of dollars flowing
!n the Pine Grove Cemetery in Chester. Visitation was held into their vaults from
two hours prior to the service. In lieu ()f flowers donations Washington and· start makmay be made to the funeral home to help offset the funeral ing more loans. Wall Street
expenses. Online condolences may be sent to . www.ander- 'soared nearly 900 points on
bargain-hunting and hopes
sonmcdaniel ,com
of a hefty interest rate cut by
· the Federal Reserve.
The stock market's amazing climb, with its secondlargest point gain ever, was a
welcome burst of good news
for a nation suffering big job'
losses and seemingly tumbling
into a painful recession.
RACINE - The United Methodist Church at Racine will
Consumer
pessimism
begin sen:ing Election day at II a.m. offering a wide variety
of sandwiches and soups. It is eat in or carry out, with some reac.hed record levels in
delivery in a limited area. For. delivery orders, call949-2457 _ October amid rising unemployment, plunging home
•••
SYRACUSE -The Syracuse Community Center will be prices and shrinking retireinvestment
serving meals at the center on Election day, starting at II ment and
The
Conference
accounts.
a.m. Sandwiches including pulled pork , a variety of soups,
and desserts will be available. Take-out will begin at 7 a.m. Board, a private research
group, said consumer confifor those that vote early and want to take lunch to work.
dence fell to its lowest point
EAST LETART - An election day dinner will be held at since it began tracking conthe East Letart Ohio Methodist Church Tuesday , Serving of sumer sentiment in 1967.
Hopfng to thaw the credit
lunch will begin at II a.m. with soup, Si!ndwiches and
.
freeze
that has chilled the
dessert on the menu. There will be a breakfast of donuts
economy,
the Bush·adminisimd coffee at 7:30a.m. Items can be purchased separately.
tration sent banks an unmis.
Delivery and takeout are available,
takable message to put aside
fears and open up loan windows for cash-starved businesses and consumers who
WILKESVILLE - The Wilkesville Presbyterian Church have pulled back on spendwill have its annual soup and sandwich supper from 5-7 ing.
·
p.m., Saturday at the Wilkesville Community Center. The
"What we're trying to do is
soups served include bean,' potato and chili and sandwich- get banks to do what they are
. es will include chicken, sloppy joes as well as hot dogs.
supposed to do, which is support the system that we have
m America. And banks exist
.
. to lend ·money." White
LANGSVILLE - An Octobe'r festival will be held at House press secretary Dana
6:30 p.m. Friday at the House of Healing Ministries, Perino said. While there are
Langsville. Th_er.e. ,wJH be. a campfire, weather'(!Crmitting, limits to Washington's power
food and drinks wrll be provtded and a pte·auctwn for the to affect banks' behavior, the
building fund will be held.
·
·
·
White House decided it was
time to use its bully pulpit.
"They (regulators) will be
watching very closely. and
'
POMEROY - Plans are movjng forward for the Meigs they're working with the
County chamber of Commerce "Reflections of Christmas banks," Perino said.
Meanwhile,
Treasury
Past" to be held at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 13 at the for. met
Department
·
officials
mer Millennium Teleservices Building on East Main Street.
with
banking
industry
repreResidents interested in sponsoring a tree/wreath to be auctioned off are to contact Michelle at 992-5005. Tickets to sentatives to res.olve a glitch
in the rescue program that
the event are $25.
has temporarily prevented
some 6,000 of the . nation's

Wot-.l't.

Local Briefs

Election Day dinners

...

Fall festival planned

REEDSVILLE - A fall festival with a hayride and soup
.supper will be held at the Eden United Brethren Church on
S.R. 124 between Reedsville and Hockingport, 5 p.m.
Saturday. There will be food, cake walks, country store and
games for the childten. Carryout food will be available.

Tickets available

Sorry, I don)t watch TV
I live next door to the
most annoying couple in the
world. You may have neighbors you don't get a]ong
with or neighbors that ' you
have no use for, or neighbor&gt; with yapping dogs, or
undisciplined children, or
unkempt lawns. But I assure
you, they can't hold a candle to the Fergusons. What
makes the Fergusons sucli
bad
neighbors?
The
Fergusons don't have television.
No. they're not Amish.
No, they are not living off
the grid. No, they are not
pan of some bizarre behavioral experiment; they are
not punishing their children ,
they are just pretentious
snobs who think they are
better than everyone else
·just because they don 't have
television.
Oh, they have a TV set
and they watch movies on
DVD. but they refuse to
hook the thing up to cable or
even an over-the-air-network. So what's the problem? Why do I care? It 's
their business. live and let
live. The problem is they
rub my face in it, they bring
it up every chance they get.
"Aren 't you sick of all the
negative campaign ads," I

.

shows and soap operas. We
waste- our time watching
foreign films from Netflix."
They are so 'smug.
If I can ' t remember that
they don 't have television,
Jim
what .are the .chances I'll
Mulien . remember that Beverly
- - - - Ferguson is allergic to bell
peppers? Too late I remembered I had put green pepmight say when we see each pers in the coleslaw. But
really. can you m11ke ·
other in the driveway.
"No," he says cheerfully, coleslaw any other way?
"We haven't seen any cam- Shouldn't it have been
paign
commercials. Beverly's responsibility to
Remember, we don't have know it's normal to put a litTV.''
. tle green
pepper in
Like it 's my job to coleslaw? If she watched all
remember they are the one the cooking shows on televifamily on the planet that sion she might have known
doesn't have television. that. Sure enough. she .
They just have to be differ- exploded I ike one of those
·ent. People in poorest China contestants on "Fear Factor"
and' India can finally get after eating only half of a
television , but no, not ·the giant, rancid slug.' She could
Fergusons. they're too good have tossed her salad on her
for that.
side of the fence, but no, she
What he means to say · spewed like Old Faithful all
when he says they don't over ours. I don't know what
have te!e,yision is ,that they she had for breakfast but
are better than we are. What now it was all over our rose
he meags to say is "We bushes.
Worse .
the
don't smoke television Fergusons didn't even offer
crack, like you weak-willed. to help clean up the mess.
pathetic
infotainment Don't people without televijunk!es. We have better sion have any manners? A
things to do with our valu- few afternoons of watching
abhi time than watch game Dr. Phil might do the

·. Southern rrom Page At

.

Fergusons a world of good,
Because they don't have
television they haven't even
heard that on Feb, 19. 2009
that all TV sets, even the one
in their house thatthey don't
watch, will explode killing
everyone within a two-mile
radius leaving a fatal radiation hot spot for tens of
thousands of years to come.
I'm sorry, what? II won't
explOde? You just won't get
a signal? And that's only if
your TV set is so old you're
still .getting your TV signal
from rabbit ears? That anyone who is already hooked
up to cable or satelli~ won't
even notice the change? If a
snowy screen is the worst
that can happen, why are
they running all these
announcements 500 times a
day like it's going to be the
end of the entire world?
"I wouldn't luiow," said
Bob Ferguson, "Remember,
we don 'I watch TV."
I do remember. I'm just
hoping they don't read the
newspaper, either.
(Jim Mullen is the author
of "lr Takes a Village Idiot.~
Complicating rhe . Simple
Life" and "Baby's First
Tartoo." You can reach him
a!)im_mullen@myway.com)

The incumbents are
Kenny Buckley, Mike
Parker. Bob Calaway,
David Watson and Steve
Swatzel. Other candidates
who have filed for seats on
the board are James L.
Parker. Brandon Fitch.
Carson Edward ,Yost. Tara

Rose, Larry Life. Danny
Davis , Steven Vance.
Jessica Hupp . and James E.
Watson.
Voters must hold membership cards to qualify to vote.
Terms on the board will be
three years with the first
term to begin on Dec. I .

White House to banks:

Dance/wreath auction

LAYoFFS

to · be held in the
Coonhunters building on the
RoclcSprings Fairgrounds.
Six board members will
be elected, five of which
are incumbents. Those voting can cast their ballots
for one or up to siJt of the·
candidates.

William Edward Kauff

POMEROY - Free tickets are available at Meigs County
Republican Headq~rs for the Fred Thompson rally to be
held at 6 p.m. Thursday at the University of Rio Grande.
· Campa1gn buttons are also still available for purchase.

' Lerrers ro the editor are welcome. They should he less

The Daily Sentinel

Agricultural Soci~ty election set for Monday

Octoberfest planned

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
than 300 words. All lellers are subject to editing. musr he
Signed, and include. address and telephone number. No
unsigned leiters will he published. Lellers should be in
good taste, addressing issues, nor personnliries. Lerren of
rhanks to organizations and individuals will not be acceptl~d for publlcatwn.

'

Community supper set

No,Yov

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Let$ back away from Barack

Janet Jachon sang a pop
·
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
tune back in the 1980s that
(740) 992·2156 •.FAX (740)992-2157
contained som~ good advice
www.mydaUysentlnel.com
that'&gt; relcvam to the presidential election this year:
"Let's wait awhile before
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Kathryn
it's too late . Let 's wait
Lopez
awhile. before we go too
Dan Goodrich
far." I suggest this &lt;:atchy
Publisher
number be on every
American's iPod,cell phone
Charlene Hoeflich
- wherever they'll listen.
The Persian praise came
General Manager-News Editor
Everyone remotely suscep- just
days after Obama's runtible or already intoxi&lt;:ated ning mate . Delaware Sen.
needs to take a breath and Joe Biden. warned that an
get some distance from the international crisis is guarpolitical
rapture
of anteed if Obama becomes
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Obamamania.
president. +With friends like
establishment of religion, or prohibiting tlu~
More than a week before these,
Barack
).
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
Election Day. the Barack Acknowledgin~ what is
Obam:t camp has moved blindingly obvtous - the
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
from cmnpaigning to movpeople peaceably to assemble, an(to petition ' ing into the White House. Illinois senator is untested.
un~carred .
previously
j lt's alr~a&lt;ly setting up a vic- unknown - Biden warned
the Government for a redress of grievances.
tory -night cel~bration in of a coming disaster under
.
.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution Grant Park in Chicago. And an Obama regime. He said.
the rhetoric. as always. "Mark my words ... It will
fl ows copious ly. To a crowd nor be six months before the
of 35.000 in northem · world tests Bantck Obama
Virginia . Obama recently like they did John Kennedy.
announced.
"I fee l like we The world i ~ looking. We 'rc
· Today is Wednesday. Oct. 29. the ~03rd day of 200~.
got
a
righteous
wind at our about to elect a brilliant. 47There are 63 days left in the year.
backs here ...
year-old senator president
·.· Today's Highlight in History:
.
Across
the
globe
,
in
a
of the United States of
On Oc.t. 29. 1929. ''Black Tuesday" descended upon the
very
unrighreous
r~gime,
America ... Watch , we're
New York Stock Exchange. Prices collapsed amid panic
the
speaker
of
the
Iranian
have an international
gonna
sellin~ and thousands of investors were wiped out as
p;trliament.
Ali
Larijani
,
crisis,
a
generated crisis, to
Amenca's "Great Depression" began. ·
·seemed to agree. He sec- test the meule of this guy."
· On this date:
· '··--;·.iio:toa."··
onded former Republican
, While the comment didn ' t
. In 1923, the Republic of Tur~pwclaimcd. ·
Scdctary
of
State
Colin
make
as lllLJCh news as, say,
. : In 1940 .. Secretary of War Henry L.' Stimson drew tlw
by
endorsing
Powell
.
Republican
vice-presidenfirst number - 158 .:.. in America's first peacetime miliObama. say ing that Iran is tial nominee Sarah Palin's
tllfY draft.
·
tlJward
the shoes , it was a bombsheli .' It
In 1956, during the Suez Canal crisis. Israel invaded leanin g
Demo&lt;:ruti&lt;.:
candidate
shined a spotlight on
Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.
In 1966, the National Organization for Women was for- "because he is more flexible Obama 's sketchy rcc.ord of
accomplishment - one that
and rationaL"
mally organized during a conference in Washington.
In 1967; Expo 67 in Montreal. Quebec, Canada. closed
after six months.
In 1979, on the 50th anniversary of the great stock mar~el crash, anti-nuclear protesters tried but failed .to shut
,down the New York Stock Exchange.
. In 1994, a gunman fired more than two dozen shots from
a semiautomatic rifle at the . White House. (Francisco
Martin Duran was later convicted of trying to assassinate
President Clinton and was sentenced to 40 years in prison.)
LOc:?KS LIKE
· Ten years ago: Sen. John Glenn, at age 77. roared back
into space aboard the shuttle Discovery. retracing the trail
I~MGorNGTo
he'd blazed for America's astronauts 36 years earlier. The
government cleared the powerful drug tamoxifen as a way
li~E: To PvT oFF
for healthy women at very high risk of breast cancer to out
K£nREM&amp;JT. ·
their odds of getting a tumor. South Africa's Truth and
Reconciliation Commission condemned both apartheid and
'violence committed by the African National Congress.
Sixty-three people were killed when fire broke out during a
disco party in Goteborg, Sweden.
Five years ~go: International organizations continued
. thetr exodus from Iraq in the wake of car bombin~s in' tile
capital and attacks against coalition troops. A powerful
geomagnetic storm walloped the Earth, knocking out some
airline communications but apparently causing no iarge
power outages or other major problems. Opera star Franco
Carelli d_ied in Milan , Italy. at age 82.
One year ago: A suicide bomber rode his bicycle into a
crowd of police recruits in Baqouba, Iraq. killing some 30
people. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announced he
·had prostate j:ancer, but would continue to perfonn his
duties . Authorities i~ Chad charged six French charity
workers wtth ktdnapptng after they tned to put 103 children
on a plane t.o France, claiming they were .orphans from
Sudan's contlict-wracked Darfur region. (The charity
workers were later convicted, jailed for several months,
lli'en pardoned.) A Moscow court sentenced Alexander
Pichushkin. convicted of 48 murders, to life imprisonment.
ending one of Russia's worst serial killer cases.
· Thought for Today: "Moral indignation is in most cases 2
percent moral. 48 percent indignation, and· 50 percent
envy.'' - Vittorio De Sica. Italian movie director (1901 1974).
.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008 '

Wednesday, October 29,2008

Julie Zirkle, Beverly Allen,
Susan Brauer, Cannel Evans,
Patricia Jones, Carolyn
Searls, Louanna Smeck, Keri
Smith, Connie Soulsby,
Launa Teaford, Angela
Yongue, Sally Caldwell,
Kolleta Fridley, Judith West.
Kim Ewing was approved
as county-approved substi. tute nurse. Richard Moore
and Donna Rose were
approvecj as substitute custodians.
; A lengthy list of volunteers
for the 2008-09 school year
was also approved. A variety
of policy changes ru\d revisions were also approved.
. Also approved was a_reso:
Iution deClaring Red Rabbon

Start lending now
8,500 banks from applying account for 50 percent of all ates banks receiving money
for government support.
U.S . deposits. Anthony to increase their loans .
Tre!iSury is buying pre- Ryan, Treasury 's acting Officials had argued that
ferred shares in banks as a undersecretary for domestic attaching strings to the capway of injecting cash into finance, said the first pay- ital-infusion program would
the institutions. But about ments went out Tuesday. An discourage financial institu6.,000 of the nation's banks additional $125 biflion will tions from participating.
don't have publicly traded start flowing to ·other banks
"The way that · bank;
·Ahares of stock and there- within days, he said. ·
. make money is by lending
fore are not set up in a way
"As these baitks and insti- money." Perino said. "And
to meet ·Treasury's cu.rrent tutions are reinforced and .so they have every incentive
supported with taxpayer to move forward and start
, qualifications. .
Treasury offictals at the· funds, they must meet their using this money."
meeting assured banking responsibility to . lend , and
Other credit-loosening
industry representatives that support the American people efforts have included:
they are working to rework ·and the U.S. economy," Ryan
• A Federal Reserve pro,the application forms so that told the annual meeting of the gram , begun Monday, to
both banks with publicly trad- Securities Industry and purchase the short-term
ed stock and privately held Financial
Markets debt of businesses , known
institutions can .qualify for the Association. "It is in a as commercial paper.
·
program. They said if the strengthened institution's best
• Temporary guarantees by
Nov. 14 deadline for applying fmancial interesno increase the F·!der~l Deposit Insurance
for government support needs · lending once it has received Corp. of new issues of bank
government funding."
to be extended it will be.
debt - fully protecting the
Rep~ Henry Waxman, DWashington has pumped
money, for a fee . even if the
money and confidence-build- Calif., chairman of the House institution fails.
ing measures .into the system Oversight Committee, asked
• Emergency loans from
over recent- weeks to get lend- the banks getting the $125 the Fed for financial instituing, the lifeblood of the cred- billion to detail what they are tions and even other types
it-dependent American econ- paying their executives and of companies. The Fed has
omy, flowing freely again and employees, including bonus- been repeatedly tapping this
to combat the worst financial es.
Depression-era authority to
crisis since· the 1930s. So far,
"I question the appropri- be a lender of last resort.
though, it has not worked . ateness of depleting the capi• New temporary feqeraJ
While the '-TUcial and much- tal that taxpayers just inject- guarantees to assets held in
watched short-tenn le~ding ed into the bank through the . mpney market mutUal funds
rate called the London payment of billions of dollars
Interbank .Offetj!(J Rate, or m bonuses. especially after as of Sept. 19 but not since
Libor, has come down. it . one of the financial indus- then .
• A temporary increase iii
try's worst years on record,"
remains at elevated levels.
the,cap on deposit insurance
On Wednesday, the Waxman said.
froin
$100.000 to $250,000
The infusion of federal
Federal Reserve is expected
on
interest-bearing
accounts.
to announce a cut in' ats fed . money is to rebuild banks'
and
unlimited
deposit
insur~
funds rate - and Wall battered capital reserves so
Street is looking for a drop the institutions would feel mtce for non-interest bearing
in the key interest rate by comfortable resuming more accounts. which small busi,normal lending practices .. nesses often use to cover
half a point to I percent.
At the center of the But that confidence was payrolls ·and other expenses
administration's efforts to undercut somewhat when and which frequently exceed
surfaced
that $250.000.
thaw credit is the $700 bil- reports
• · The Fed's half-point
lion financial bailout plan bankers might use the
approved by Congress .and money to buy other bankS. reduction in its target inter·
signed by President Bush Indeed, the government est rate on Oct. 8. done in
earlier this month. Under approved PNC Financial conjunction wiih rate cuts
that law's authority, the Services Group . Inc. to , by other central bank~
··
administration is doling out receive $7.7 billion in return around the world.
Meanwhile,
layoffs
coih$250 billion to banks in for company stock on
return for partial ownership. Friday and. at the sal)le tinue. Whirlpool Corp. said
The Treasury Department, time, PNC said it was Tuesday it will cut 5.000
which is overseeing the mas- acquiring National City jobs. That's on top of other
recent layoffs of thousands
sive capital injection pro- Corp. for $5.58 billion.
gram ·along with the rest of · There is little federal offi- of workers by Xerox Corp ..
the bailout, will pour $125 cials can do about it. There . drugmaker Merck &amp; Co.
billion into nine of the coun- is no language in the bailout Inc. and financial services
try's largest banks, which bill that specifically oblig- firm National City Corp.

Northeast snowstonn closes major highways, schools
zard in October." said Joe
Orlando, spokesman for the
New Jersey Turnpike
Authority. "We're salting
the roads and we haven't
even gone trick-or-treating
yet."
Up to a foot of snow was
possible in parts of upstate '
New York, with wind blowing at 25 mph and gusting to
40 mph. and as much as 9
inches of snow was forecast
in Vermont's mountains, the
weather service said. Up to
13 inches of snow had fallen hy Tuesday afternoon in

PORTJERVIS, N.Y. (AP)
- The first big snowstorm
of the season in the
Northenst closed sections of
major highways Tuesday
and blacked out more than
100,000 utility customers. ·
The National Weather
Service posted a winter
storm warning for parts of ·
New York state, . in effect
until8 a.m. Wednesday, and
issued winter storm advisories
for
parts
of
Pennsylvania, New Jersey
and Vermont.
"It looked like a mini bliz-

Week to brirlg awareness and
commitment to a substance
free lifestyle in regards to
"saying no" to alcohol,
tobacco and other drugs.
The meeting adjourned
into executive session once
to discuss the power plant about his posataons and
proposed by American another whose strategy has
Municipal Power-Ohio and been very erratic."
purchase service agreement
In fact, Brown said',
with technology coordina- despite some negative pubtor. ·No action was taken licity about Meigs County,
after the session.
including an article in the
Board members present New Yorker magazine.
for the meetmg were Peggy Obama is '!iore Jij{ely to win
Gibbs, Dennie Hill, Don here than in other southeast. Smith, Denny Evans. .
em Ohio counties, such as
The next regular meetmg . Gallia. But, he said, voters
. is at 8 p.m .• No~. 24 in the who study the candidates
hagh school medaa room.
should choose Obama
because of his stands on
social issues affecting rural
communities, such as rural
rrom·PageAt
health c'are.
Brown said he and
and end of trick or treat time, Fire Department immediatevillage streets will be blocked ly following trick or treat; Strickland are working to
to through traffic during · this Portland. trick or treat begins convince· southeastern Ohio
time but Ohio 124 will at 6 p.m. tomorrow; Wolf voters that Obama 's proposremain open; Racine, 6:30- Pen community, trick or treat als will benefit poorer
Ohioans, and working fami7:30 p.m., tomorrow; Letart · . begins at 6 p.m., tomorrow.
Falls, 6-7:30 pm., tomoJTOw,
Pomeroy,6-7 p.m .• tomor- lies. He said Obama's prothose hOmes participating row; Middleport, "6-7 p.m., posals · ·include increased
should tum on porch lights.
tomoJTOw; New Crew Road funding for rural health ciin'
Hattisonville
and area of Pomeroy, 6-7 p.m., ics like the Family Health
Pageville areas, 6-7 p.m., · tomorrow; Danville. trick or 'care office in Middle(iort,
tomoJTOw, there .will be coo- treat begins at ·6. p.m., resi- and veterans health·services.
"I've waited this whole
tume judging and refresh- dents participating should
to hear one thing
campaign,
nients at tile Harrisonville turn on their porch lights .

.

'

•

1

Brown~mPageAl
Strickland . has cam"
that John would do differ- ing Strickland during a campaigned
heavily for Obama
paign
trip
to
Pomeroy
Friday.
ently than George Bush has
in
southern
Ohio. using . a
Brown said he has spent a
done ,"
Brown
said.
"Senator Obama proposes · lot of time with Obama on "one of us" theme in an area
an increase in health. care the campaign trail, and said where Strickland has been
services to veterans, which he has a "strength of charac- popular for years. Democrat
Brown won Meigs County
John McCain has opposed, terthat is·unusual."
and supports better and
"He is unflappable, solid, in his own race two year.s
more health care for low- strong and very predictable. ago against Republican
income children. such as He says what he means and . Incumbent Mike DeWine .
dental health se(Vices."
but by a small margin .
means what he says."
Brown serves on the
Health · Care Committee
with Obama.
"If people are happy with
the way things are going,
they should · vote for John
McCain," Brown said, echoThursday, October 30th
Dinner begins at 4:30
$8.00 Adults - $4.00 6 to 12 • 5 &amp; Under Eat Free

·SACRED HEART
CATHOLIC CHURCH

Trick or treat

,,

Pennsylvania's
Pocono trailer wrecks, state agen~ies
Mountains.
said.
:
Schools closed or delayed
PPL Corp. said abou!
their openings in parts of 39,000 of its customers in
Pennsylvania and New York northeastern Pennsylvania
state.
lost power when the heavy.
New York's Thruway wet snow brought down
Authority said lnterstare ·84 trees and power lines. Utility
was closed for part of the companies in New Jersey
morning al the New York- said abour 67,000 customers
Pennsylvania line in the · lost power. mostly in the
Port Jervis area. It was northern pan · of the staie',
reopened by late morning.
and New York State Electric
Stretches of Interstate 80 in &amp; Gas said about 14.00\l
northeastern · Pennsylvania customers in southern New
were closed intermitteutly York counties were without
because of multiple tractor- electricity Tuesday evening.

MENU
Creamed Baked Chicken or Ham
Homemade Noodles
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans. Coleslaw - Roll &amp; Dessert

AdAr'n McDaniel
&amp; Jamea Anden10n
DIRECTORS

·
F~tll Str'flu PehJtts A.1'11l1Uit

Middleport Pomeroy
992-5141 992-544-1 '
••·w.andmonmtdaiii&lt;Ltom

0

' RAFFLE

1st- $500 • 2nd· $200 • J,4,5th · $100
Door Prizes Every Half Hour
Fancy Stands • Games • Religious· Gifts

e.
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J

�•

~The

Daily Sentinel

.The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

OPINION

:TODAY IN HISTORY

includes his refusal to condemn MoveOn.org 's notorious attack last spring
against the fanner commander of our troops in Iraq,
Gen. David Petraeus. The
comment is even more disturbing than it appears on its
surt'ace because it reflects
poorly on Biden, a~ well.
Obama ·supposedly tapped
the senator for his vice president because he adds foreign-policy heft to the ticket. But on issue after issue ;
Biden, a lawmaker for three
decades and counting. has
been wrong. He helped seal
the deal on defeat in
' Vietnam. He opposed
Ronald Reagan as the Great
Communicator drove a
stake th ro ugh the heart of
the
Soviet empire, and he
·
ran toward surrender in Iraq
after suppot1ing t~e deployment of American troops in
the first place.
These things , along with
Obama 's radical associations
- most notably, his friendships with William Ayers, an
unrepentant terrorist, and the
Rev. Jeremiah Wright of
"God da "* · America" fame
should have given
Americans pause long
before today. But if, in these
tina! days before we head to
the pOlling booths. we take
that pause. it's not too late.
We hitven't gone too far. Yet.
Between· taking fittings
for the coronation. pundits
warn thm the polls may be
inaccurate. Mostly . they

blame the so-called Bradley
effect _:_ named after an
unsuccessful black candidate for governor in
California. The worry is that
non-black
voters
are
uncomfortable with the idea
of a black politician but
won't tell pollsters that for
fear of being·cast as racists.
But if Obama doesn't win
on Election Day, it doesn't
mean we're a nation of closet bigots. It may just mean
that Americans took a deep
breath and realized that this
country can't gamble on an
· inexperienced
president
during a time of war and
economic uncertainty.
As Karl Rove recentlY.
wrote. "Sen. Obama hasn't
closed the sale." Given the
disturbing open questions
about his judgment and
readiness, if America takes
a moment io sober up from
the high of the historic
moment, they may not buy
on Nov. 4 the bill of spoiled
(socialist, recklessly irresponsible , anti-life) goods
the Obama-Biden ticket is
seliing. With Biden 's words
in mind ,voters may choose
to avoid heading into an
"international crisis" with
an untested leader. And they
will. have made that chpice
while there was still time.
(Kathryn· Lopez is the edi·
ror of Nariorwl Review
Online (www.narionalreview.com). She can be contacted at klope~@narional­
review.com.)

'

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lnolde Melgo Countv
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'32.26
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POMEROY - Elections
to the Board of Directors of
th,e
.Meigs
County
Agricultural
Society
will be
RUTLAND - William "Bill'' Edward Kauff. 59, of
Rutland passed away on Thursday, Oct. 23 , 2008 at the held Monday, Nov. 3,
Debbie Watson, secretary,
Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant, W. Va.
announced
todaY..
He. was born on Sept. 5. 1949 in Pomeroy, to Opal
The
polls
wtll be open
(Stobart) Kauff and the late Earl Cecil Kauff. Mr. Kauff
from
S
to
9
p
.m:
with voting
worked as a foreman at the Ohio Pallet Co.
He is also survived by his wife, Jenny Kauff of Rutland
and their daughter. Stephanie Kauff; brothers, Earl Kauff, Jr.,
Rtchard Kauff. and Jeffrey Kauff, all of Pomeroy; sisters,
Debra Burk~ of Racine and Carla Kauff of Pomeroy; children, Cynthta Smith of Rutland, Christina Ferrell of Italy,
ReiJC?cca_ Smtth of Pomeroy. William E. Kauff, ·Jr. of
Gaihpolis Ferry, W.Va., Benjamin Kauff of Racine. and
Joshua Kauff of Racine; three step-daughters, Melinda Clark
WASHINGTON (AP) of Logan, Melissa Clark of Chillicothe and Jennifer Clark of
Point Pleasant, W.Va.; 17 grandchildren; a best friend, · An impatient White House
Sampson Darst of Rutland; and st:veral nieces and nephews. prodded banks and other
financial
companies
He was preceded in death by his father.
Tuesday
to
quit
hoarding
Services were held at I p.m. on Monday, Oct. 27. at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial was billions of dollars flowing
!n the Pine Grove Cemetery in Chester. Visitation was held into their vaults from
two hours prior to the service. In lieu ()f flowers donations Washington and· start makmay be made to the funeral home to help offset the funeral ing more loans. Wall Street
expenses. Online condolences may be sent to . www.ander- 'soared nearly 900 points on
bargain-hunting and hopes
sonmcdaniel ,com
of a hefty interest rate cut by
· the Federal Reserve.
The stock market's amazing climb, with its secondlargest point gain ever, was a
welcome burst of good news
for a nation suffering big job'
losses and seemingly tumbling
into a painful recession.
RACINE - The United Methodist Church at Racine will
Consumer
pessimism
begin sen:ing Election day at II a.m. offering a wide variety
of sandwiches and soups. It is eat in or carry out, with some reac.hed record levels in
delivery in a limited area. For. delivery orders, call949-2457 _ October amid rising unemployment, plunging home
•••
SYRACUSE -The Syracuse Community Center will be prices and shrinking retireinvestment
serving meals at the center on Election day, starting at II ment and
The
Conference
accounts.
a.m. Sandwiches including pulled pork , a variety of soups,
and desserts will be available. Take-out will begin at 7 a.m. Board, a private research
group, said consumer confifor those that vote early and want to take lunch to work.
dence fell to its lowest point
EAST LETART - An election day dinner will be held at since it began tracking conthe East Letart Ohio Methodist Church Tuesday , Serving of sumer sentiment in 1967.
Hopfng to thaw the credit
lunch will begin at II a.m. with soup, Si!ndwiches and
.
freeze
that has chilled the
dessert on the menu. There will be a breakfast of donuts
economy,
the Bush·adminisimd coffee at 7:30a.m. Items can be purchased separately.
tration sent banks an unmis.
Delivery and takeout are available,
takable message to put aside
fears and open up loan windows for cash-starved businesses and consumers who
WILKESVILLE - The Wilkesville Presbyterian Church have pulled back on spendwill have its annual soup and sandwich supper from 5-7 ing.
·
p.m., Saturday at the Wilkesville Community Center. The
"What we're trying to do is
soups served include bean,' potato and chili and sandwich- get banks to do what they are
. es will include chicken, sloppy joes as well as hot dogs.
supposed to do, which is support the system that we have
m America. And banks exist
.
. to lend ·money." White
LANGSVILLE - An Octobe'r festival will be held at House press secretary Dana
6:30 p.m. Friday at the House of Healing Ministries, Perino said. While there are
Langsville. Th_er.e. ,wJH be. a campfire, weather'(!Crmitting, limits to Washington's power
food and drinks wrll be provtded and a pte·auctwn for the to affect banks' behavior, the
building fund will be held.
·
·
·
White House decided it was
time to use its bully pulpit.
"They (regulators) will be
watching very closely. and
'
POMEROY - Plans are movjng forward for the Meigs they're working with the
County chamber of Commerce "Reflections of Christmas banks," Perino said.
Meanwhile,
Treasury
Past" to be held at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 13 at the for. met
Department
·
officials
mer Millennium Teleservices Building on East Main Street.
with
banking
industry
repreResidents interested in sponsoring a tree/wreath to be auctioned off are to contact Michelle at 992-5005. Tickets to sentatives to res.olve a glitch
in the rescue program that
the event are $25.
has temporarily prevented
some 6,000 of the . nation's

Wot-.l't.

Local Briefs

Election Day dinners

...

Fall festival planned

REEDSVILLE - A fall festival with a hayride and soup
.supper will be held at the Eden United Brethren Church on
S.R. 124 between Reedsville and Hockingport, 5 p.m.
Saturday. There will be food, cake walks, country store and
games for the childten. Carryout food will be available.

Tickets available

Sorry, I don)t watch TV
I live next door to the
most annoying couple in the
world. You may have neighbors you don't get a]ong
with or neighbors that ' you
have no use for, or neighbor&gt; with yapping dogs, or
undisciplined children, or
unkempt lawns. But I assure
you, they can't hold a candle to the Fergusons. What
makes the Fergusons sucli
bad
neighbors?
The
Fergusons don't have television.
No. they're not Amish.
No, they are not living off
the grid. No, they are not
pan of some bizarre behavioral experiment; they are
not punishing their children ,
they are just pretentious
snobs who think they are
better than everyone else
·just because they don 't have
television.
Oh, they have a TV set
and they watch movies on
DVD. but they refuse to
hook the thing up to cable or
even an over-the-air-network. So what's the problem? Why do I care? It 's
their business. live and let
live. The problem is they
rub my face in it, they bring
it up every chance they get.
"Aren 't you sick of all the
negative campaign ads," I

.

shows and soap operas. We
waste- our time watching
foreign films from Netflix."
They are so 'smug.
If I can ' t remember that
they don 't have television,
Jim
what .are the .chances I'll
Mulien . remember that Beverly
- - - - Ferguson is allergic to bell
peppers? Too late I remembered I had put green pepmight say when we see each pers in the coleslaw. But
really. can you m11ke ·
other in the driveway.
"No," he says cheerfully, coleslaw any other way?
"We haven't seen any cam- Shouldn't it have been
paign
commercials. Beverly's responsibility to
Remember, we don't have know it's normal to put a litTV.''
. tle green
pepper in
Like it 's my job to coleslaw? If she watched all
remember they are the one the cooking shows on televifamily on the planet that sion she might have known
doesn't have television. that. Sure enough. she .
They just have to be differ- exploded I ike one of those
·ent. People in poorest China contestants on "Fear Factor"
and' India can finally get after eating only half of a
television , but no, not ·the giant, rancid slug.' She could
Fergusons. they're too good have tossed her salad on her
for that.
side of the fence, but no, she
What he means to say · spewed like Old Faithful all
when he says they don't over ours. I don't know what
have te!e,yision is ,that they she had for breakfast but
are better than we are. What now it was all over our rose
he meags to say is "We bushes.
Worse .
the
don't smoke television Fergusons didn't even offer
crack, like you weak-willed. to help clean up the mess.
pathetic
infotainment Don't people without televijunk!es. We have better sion have any manners? A
things to do with our valu- few afternoons of watching
abhi time than watch game Dr. Phil might do the

·. Southern rrom Page At

.

Fergusons a world of good,
Because they don't have
television they haven't even
heard that on Feb, 19. 2009
that all TV sets, even the one
in their house thatthey don't
watch, will explode killing
everyone within a two-mile
radius leaving a fatal radiation hot spot for tens of
thousands of years to come.
I'm sorry, what? II won't
explOde? You just won't get
a signal? And that's only if
your TV set is so old you're
still .getting your TV signal
from rabbit ears? That anyone who is already hooked
up to cable or satelli~ won't
even notice the change? If a
snowy screen is the worst
that can happen, why are
they running all these
announcements 500 times a
day like it's going to be the
end of the entire world?
"I wouldn't luiow," said
Bob Ferguson, "Remember,
we don 'I watch TV."
I do remember. I'm just
hoping they don't read the
newspaper, either.
(Jim Mullen is the author
of "lr Takes a Village Idiot.~
Complicating rhe . Simple
Life" and "Baby's First
Tartoo." You can reach him
a!)im_mullen@myway.com)

The incumbents are
Kenny Buckley, Mike
Parker. Bob Calaway,
David Watson and Steve
Swatzel. Other candidates
who have filed for seats on
the board are James L.
Parker. Brandon Fitch.
Carson Edward ,Yost. Tara

Rose, Larry Life. Danny
Davis , Steven Vance.
Jessica Hupp . and James E.
Watson.
Voters must hold membership cards to qualify to vote.
Terms on the board will be
three years with the first
term to begin on Dec. I .

White House to banks:

Dance/wreath auction

LAYoFFS

to · be held in the
Coonhunters building on the
RoclcSprings Fairgrounds.
Six board members will
be elected, five of which
are incumbents. Those voting can cast their ballots
for one or up to siJt of the·
candidates.

William Edward Kauff

POMEROY - Free tickets are available at Meigs County
Republican Headq~rs for the Fred Thompson rally to be
held at 6 p.m. Thursday at the University of Rio Grande.
· Campa1gn buttons are also still available for purchase.

' Lerrers ro the editor are welcome. They should he less

The Daily Sentinel

Agricultural Soci~ty election set for Monday

Octoberfest planned

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
than 300 words. All lellers are subject to editing. musr he
Signed, and include. address and telephone number. No
unsigned leiters will he published. Lellers should be in
good taste, addressing issues, nor personnliries. Lerren of
rhanks to organizations and individuals will not be acceptl~d for publlcatwn.

'

Community supper set

No,Yov

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

Let$ back away from Barack

Janet Jachon sang a pop
·
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
tune back in the 1980s that
(740) 992·2156 •.FAX (740)992-2157
contained som~ good advice
www.mydaUysentlnel.com
that'&gt; relcvam to the presidential election this year:
"Let's wait awhile before
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Kathryn
it's too late . Let 's wait
Lopez
awhile. before we go too
Dan Goodrich
far." I suggest this &lt;:atchy
Publisher
number be on every
American's iPod,cell phone
Charlene Hoeflich
- wherever they'll listen.
The Persian praise came
General Manager-News Editor
Everyone remotely suscep- just
days after Obama's runtible or already intoxi&lt;:ated ning mate . Delaware Sen.
needs to take a breath and Joe Biden. warned that an
get some distance from the international crisis is guarpolitical
rapture
of anteed if Obama becomes
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Obamamania.
president. +With friends like
establishment of religion, or prohibiting tlu~
More than a week before these,
Barack
).
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
Election Day. the Barack Acknowledgin~ what is
Obam:t camp has moved blindingly obvtous - the
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
from cmnpaigning to movpeople peaceably to assemble, an(to petition ' ing into the White House. Illinois senator is untested.
un~carred .
previously
j lt's alr~a&lt;ly setting up a vic- unknown - Biden warned
the Government for a redress of grievances.
tory -night cel~bration in of a coming disaster under
.
.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution Grant Park in Chicago. And an Obama regime. He said.
the rhetoric. as always. "Mark my words ... It will
fl ows copious ly. To a crowd nor be six months before the
of 35.000 in northem · world tests Bantck Obama
Virginia . Obama recently like they did John Kennedy.
announced.
"I fee l like we The world i ~ looking. We 'rc
· Today is Wednesday. Oct. 29. the ~03rd day of 200~.
got
a
righteous
wind at our about to elect a brilliant. 47There are 63 days left in the year.
backs here ...
year-old senator president
·.· Today's Highlight in History:
.
Across
the
globe
,
in
a
of the United States of
On Oc.t. 29. 1929. ''Black Tuesday" descended upon the
very
unrighreous
r~gime,
America ... Watch , we're
New York Stock Exchange. Prices collapsed amid panic
the
speaker
of
the
Iranian
have an international
gonna
sellin~ and thousands of investors were wiped out as
p;trliament.
Ali
Larijani
,
crisis,
a
generated crisis, to
Amenca's "Great Depression" began. ·
·seemed to agree. He sec- test the meule of this guy."
· On this date:
· '··--;·.iio:toa."··
onded former Republican
, While the comment didn ' t
. In 1923, the Republic of Tur~pwclaimcd. ·
Scdctary
of
State
Colin
make
as lllLJCh news as, say,
. : In 1940 .. Secretary of War Henry L.' Stimson drew tlw
by
endorsing
Powell
.
Republican
vice-presidenfirst number - 158 .:.. in America's first peacetime miliObama. say ing that Iran is tial nominee Sarah Palin's
tllfY draft.
·
tlJward
the shoes , it was a bombsheli .' It
In 1956, during the Suez Canal crisis. Israel invaded leanin g
Demo&lt;:ruti&lt;.:
candidate
shined a spotlight on
Egypt's Sinai Peninsula.
In 1966, the National Organization for Women was for- "because he is more flexible Obama 's sketchy rcc.ord of
accomplishment - one that
and rationaL"
mally organized during a conference in Washington.
In 1967; Expo 67 in Montreal. Quebec, Canada. closed
after six months.
In 1979, on the 50th anniversary of the great stock mar~el crash, anti-nuclear protesters tried but failed .to shut
,down the New York Stock Exchange.
. In 1994, a gunman fired more than two dozen shots from
a semiautomatic rifle at the . White House. (Francisco
Martin Duran was later convicted of trying to assassinate
President Clinton and was sentenced to 40 years in prison.)
LOc:?KS LIKE
· Ten years ago: Sen. John Glenn, at age 77. roared back
into space aboard the shuttle Discovery. retracing the trail
I~MGorNGTo
he'd blazed for America's astronauts 36 years earlier. The
government cleared the powerful drug tamoxifen as a way
li~E: To PvT oFF
for healthy women at very high risk of breast cancer to out
K£nREM&amp;JT. ·
their odds of getting a tumor. South Africa's Truth and
Reconciliation Commission condemned both apartheid and
'violence committed by the African National Congress.
Sixty-three people were killed when fire broke out during a
disco party in Goteborg, Sweden.
Five years ~go: International organizations continued
. thetr exodus from Iraq in the wake of car bombin~s in' tile
capital and attacks against coalition troops. A powerful
geomagnetic storm walloped the Earth, knocking out some
airline communications but apparently causing no iarge
power outages or other major problems. Opera star Franco
Carelli d_ied in Milan , Italy. at age 82.
One year ago: A suicide bomber rode his bicycle into a
crowd of police recruits in Baqouba, Iraq. killing some 30
people. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert announced he
·had prostate j:ancer, but would continue to perfonn his
duties . Authorities i~ Chad charged six French charity
workers wtth ktdnapptng after they tned to put 103 children
on a plane t.o France, claiming they were .orphans from
Sudan's contlict-wracked Darfur region. (The charity
workers were later convicted, jailed for several months,
lli'en pardoned.) A Moscow court sentenced Alexander
Pichushkin. convicted of 48 murders, to life imprisonment.
ending one of Russia's worst serial killer cases.
· Thought for Today: "Moral indignation is in most cases 2
percent moral. 48 percent indignation, and· 50 percent
envy.'' - Vittorio De Sica. Italian movie director (1901 1974).
.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008 '

Wednesday, October 29,2008

Julie Zirkle, Beverly Allen,
Susan Brauer, Cannel Evans,
Patricia Jones, Carolyn
Searls, Louanna Smeck, Keri
Smith, Connie Soulsby,
Launa Teaford, Angela
Yongue, Sally Caldwell,
Kolleta Fridley, Judith West.
Kim Ewing was approved
as county-approved substi. tute nurse. Richard Moore
and Donna Rose were
approvecj as substitute custodians.
; A lengthy list of volunteers
for the 2008-09 school year
was also approved. A variety
of policy changes ru\d revisions were also approved.
. Also approved was a_reso:
Iution deClaring Red Rabbon

Start lending now
8,500 banks from applying account for 50 percent of all ates banks receiving money
for government support.
U.S . deposits. Anthony to increase their loans .
Tre!iSury is buying pre- Ryan, Treasury 's acting Officials had argued that
ferred shares in banks as a undersecretary for domestic attaching strings to the capway of injecting cash into finance, said the first pay- ital-infusion program would
the institutions. But about ments went out Tuesday. An discourage financial institu6.,000 of the nation's banks additional $125 biflion will tions from participating.
don't have publicly traded start flowing to ·other banks
"The way that · bank;
·Ahares of stock and there- within days, he said. ·
. make money is by lending
fore are not set up in a way
"As these baitks and insti- money." Perino said. "And
to meet ·Treasury's cu.rrent tutions are reinforced and .so they have every incentive
supported with taxpayer to move forward and start
, qualifications. .
Treasury offictals at the· funds, they must meet their using this money."
meeting assured banking responsibility to . lend , and
Other credit-loosening
industry representatives that support the American people efforts have included:
they are working to rework ·and the U.S. economy," Ryan
• A Federal Reserve pro,the application forms so that told the annual meeting of the gram , begun Monday, to
both banks with publicly trad- Securities Industry and purchase the short-term
ed stock and privately held Financial
Markets debt of businesses , known
institutions can .qualify for the Association. "It is in a as commercial paper.
·
program. They said if the strengthened institution's best
• Temporary guarantees by
Nov. 14 deadline for applying fmancial interesno increase the F·!der~l Deposit Insurance
for government support needs · lending once it has received Corp. of new issues of bank
government funding."
to be extended it will be.
debt - fully protecting the
Rep~ Henry Waxman, DWashington has pumped
money, for a fee . even if the
money and confidence-build- Calif., chairman of the House institution fails.
ing measures .into the system Oversight Committee, asked
• Emergency loans from
over recent- weeks to get lend- the banks getting the $125 the Fed for financial instituing, the lifeblood of the cred- billion to detail what they are tions and even other types
it-dependent American econ- paying their executives and of companies. The Fed has
omy, flowing freely again and employees, including bonus- been repeatedly tapping this
to combat the worst financial es.
Depression-era authority to
crisis since· the 1930s. So far,
"I question the appropri- be a lender of last resort.
though, it has not worked . ateness of depleting the capi• New temporary feqeraJ
While the '-TUcial and much- tal that taxpayers just inject- guarantees to assets held in
watched short-tenn le~ding ed into the bank through the . mpney market mutUal funds
rate called the London payment of billions of dollars
Interbank .Offetj!(J Rate, or m bonuses. especially after as of Sept. 19 but not since
Libor, has come down. it . one of the financial indus- then .
• A temporary increase iii
try's worst years on record,"
remains at elevated levels.
the,cap on deposit insurance
On Wednesday, the Waxman said.
froin
$100.000 to $250,000
The infusion of federal
Federal Reserve is expected
on
interest-bearing
accounts.
to announce a cut in' ats fed . money is to rebuild banks'
and
unlimited
deposit
insur~
funds rate - and Wall battered capital reserves so
Street is looking for a drop the institutions would feel mtce for non-interest bearing
in the key interest rate by comfortable resuming more accounts. which small busi,normal lending practices .. nesses often use to cover
half a point to I percent.
At the center of the But that confidence was payrolls ·and other expenses
administration's efforts to undercut somewhat when and which frequently exceed
surfaced
that $250.000.
thaw credit is the $700 bil- reports
• · The Fed's half-point
lion financial bailout plan bankers might use the
approved by Congress .and money to buy other bankS. reduction in its target inter·
signed by President Bush Indeed, the government est rate on Oct. 8. done in
earlier this month. Under approved PNC Financial conjunction wiih rate cuts
that law's authority, the Services Group . Inc. to , by other central bank~
··
administration is doling out receive $7.7 billion in return around the world.
Meanwhile,
layoffs
coih$250 billion to banks in for company stock on
return for partial ownership. Friday and. at the sal)le tinue. Whirlpool Corp. said
The Treasury Department, time, PNC said it was Tuesday it will cut 5.000
which is overseeing the mas- acquiring National City jobs. That's on top of other
recent layoffs of thousands
sive capital injection pro- Corp. for $5.58 billion.
gram ·along with the rest of · There is little federal offi- of workers by Xerox Corp ..
the bailout, will pour $125 cials can do about it. There . drugmaker Merck &amp; Co.
billion into nine of the coun- is no language in the bailout Inc. and financial services
try's largest banks, which bill that specifically oblig- firm National City Corp.

Northeast snowstonn closes major highways, schools
zard in October." said Joe
Orlando, spokesman for the
New Jersey Turnpike
Authority. "We're salting
the roads and we haven't
even gone trick-or-treating
yet."
Up to a foot of snow was
possible in parts of upstate '
New York, with wind blowing at 25 mph and gusting to
40 mph. and as much as 9
inches of snow was forecast
in Vermont's mountains, the
weather service said. Up to
13 inches of snow had fallen hy Tuesday afternoon in

PORTJERVIS, N.Y. (AP)
- The first big snowstorm
of the season in the
Northenst closed sections of
major highways Tuesday
and blacked out more than
100,000 utility customers. ·
The National Weather
Service posted a winter
storm warning for parts of ·
New York state, . in effect
until8 a.m. Wednesday, and
issued winter storm advisories
for
parts
of
Pennsylvania, New Jersey
and Vermont.
"It looked like a mini bliz-

Week to brirlg awareness and
commitment to a substance
free lifestyle in regards to
"saying no" to alcohol,
tobacco and other drugs.
The meeting adjourned
into executive session once
to discuss the power plant about his posataons and
proposed by American another whose strategy has
Municipal Power-Ohio and been very erratic."
purchase service agreement
In fact, Brown said',
with technology coordina- despite some negative pubtor. ·No action was taken licity about Meigs County,
after the session.
including an article in the
Board members present New Yorker magazine.
for the meetmg were Peggy Obama is '!iore Jij{ely to win
Gibbs, Dennie Hill, Don here than in other southeast. Smith, Denny Evans. .
em Ohio counties, such as
The next regular meetmg . Gallia. But, he said, voters
. is at 8 p.m .• No~. 24 in the who study the candidates
hagh school medaa room.
should choose Obama
because of his stands on
social issues affecting rural
communities, such as rural
rrom·PageAt
health c'are.
Brown said he and
and end of trick or treat time, Fire Department immediatevillage streets will be blocked ly following trick or treat; Strickland are working to
to through traffic during · this Portland. trick or treat begins convince· southeastern Ohio
time but Ohio 124 will at 6 p.m. tomorrow; Wolf voters that Obama 's proposremain open; Racine, 6:30- Pen community, trick or treat als will benefit poorer
Ohioans, and working fami7:30 p.m., tomorrow; Letart · . begins at 6 p.m., tomorrow.
Falls, 6-7:30 pm., tomoJTOw,
Pomeroy,6-7 p.m .• tomor- lies. He said Obama's prothose hOmes participating row; Middleport, "6-7 p.m., posals · ·include increased
should tum on porch lights.
tomoJTOw; New Crew Road funding for rural health ciin'
Hattisonville
and area of Pomeroy, 6-7 p.m., ics like the Family Health
Pageville areas, 6-7 p.m., · tomorrow; Danville. trick or 'care office in Middle(iort,
tomoJTOw, there .will be coo- treat begins at ·6. p.m., resi- and veterans health·services.
"I've waited this whole
tume judging and refresh- dents participating should
to hear one thing
campaign,
nients at tile Harrisonville turn on their porch lights .

.

'

•

1

Brown~mPageAl
Strickland . has cam"
that John would do differ- ing Strickland during a campaigned
heavily for Obama
paign
trip
to
Pomeroy
Friday.
ently than George Bush has
in
southern
Ohio. using . a
Brown said he has spent a
done ,"
Brown
said.
"Senator Obama proposes · lot of time with Obama on "one of us" theme in an area
an increase in health. care the campaign trail, and said where Strickland has been
services to veterans, which he has a "strength of charac- popular for years. Democrat
Brown won Meigs County
John McCain has opposed, terthat is·unusual."
and supports better and
"He is unflappable, solid, in his own race two year.s
more health care for low- strong and very predictable. ago against Republican
income children. such as He says what he means and . Incumbent Mike DeWine .
dental health se(Vices."
but by a small margin .
means what he says."
Brown serves on the
Health · Care Committee
with Obama.
"If people are happy with
the way things are going,
they should · vote for John
McCain," Brown said, echoThursday, October 30th
Dinner begins at 4:30
$8.00 Adults - $4.00 6 to 12 • 5 &amp; Under Eat Free

·SACRED HEART
CATHOLIC CHURCH

Trick or treat

,,

Pennsylvania's
Pocono trailer wrecks, state agen~ies
Mountains.
said.
:
Schools closed or delayed
PPL Corp. said abou!
their openings in parts of 39,000 of its customers in
Pennsylvania and New York northeastern Pennsylvania
state.
lost power when the heavy.
New York's Thruway wet snow brought down
Authority said lnterstare ·84 trees and power lines. Utility
was closed for part of the companies in New Jersey
morning al the New York- said abour 67,000 customers
Pennsylvania line in the · lost power. mostly in the
Port Jervis area. It was northern pan · of the staie',
reopened by late morning.
and New York State Electric
Stretches of Interstate 80 in &amp; Gas said about 14.00\l
northeastern · Pennsylvania customers in southern New
were closed intermitteutly York counties were without
because of multiple tractor- electricity Tuesday evening.

MENU
Creamed Baked Chicken or Ham
Homemade Noodles
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Green Beans. Coleslaw - Roll &amp; Dessert

AdAr'n McDaniel
&amp; Jamea Anden10n
DIRECTORS

·
F~tll Str'flu PehJtts A.1'11l1Uit

Middleport Pomeroy
992-5141 992-544-1 '
••·w.andmonmtdaiii&lt;Ltom

0

' RAFFLE

1st- $500 • 2nd· $200 • J,4,5th · $100
Door Prizes Every Half Hour
Fancy Stands • Games • Religious· Gifts

e.
-

J

�The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS THE NATION

.PageA6

Bl

'J'he Daily Sentinel

,

Wednesday, October 29,2008
Holmes returning to lineup, Page B2

t

OHSAA playoff pairings, Page B6

Today's Forecast

City/Region
High I Low temps

Forecasl for Wldnlldey, Oct. 29

The locked alu" minum gate, left,
is seen at the
main entrance to
the Westfield
Sportman's Club
on Furrowlon
Road in
Westfield, Mass
on Monday.
Eight•year old
Christopher Bizilj
of Ashford,
Conn. died after
accidentally
shooting himself
in the head while·
tiring an Uzi submachine gun at
a gun fair held
on the premises
on Sunday.

Inside

Ohio prep notebook, Page B6

VVednesday,Ck1ober29,2008

Toledo•

47"131 '
Youngstowfl"•

LocAL SCHEDULE

40' I 32'
Mansfield•

Phillies, Rays to resume
Game 5 on Wednesday night

POMEROV - A IC:Mdule of upcoming high
school vsrsllv aporung events ln'fOivlng
team• from M~e and G~lla counlies.

43'129~

Frklq. Octplwr 31

~

· Dayton•
49" 131 '

*Columbus

45' I 32'

.

t?:-_"

~oobH

- Ohio pl1yollo
(7) Meigs at (2) New Lexington, 7;30

p.m.
.

.

Football - Regul•r INaon

Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 7:30
p.m.

· Hannan at Montcalm. 7;30 p.m.

Clncllinatl

Situ'*¥ Noytmlw·,

• 52° I 29°
·

.

Cro10Country
Olvllk:in II girls state championship ~~

~

~loiO

Downs, 2:05 p.m.

-II- Regular_..,.

Pottamouth•

49'13f'

'

Wahama at Parkersburg Catholic, 7:30

p.m.

KY

Cl2008

AP photo

SPORTS ~RIEFS

charges

UZi

"At this point in the invesBennett did not return
ligation I have found no calls Tuesday seeking addilawful authority which tiona! com.ment.
BOSTON - A prosecutor allows an 8-year-old to posThe bor was attending the
said Tuesday he is im esti·- sess or fire a machine gun," gun fair with his father and
gating whether criminal Bennett said in a statement. brother Colin, a sixth-grader.
charges should be filed after . Daniel Vice, senior attar- His father, Charles Bizilj,
an 8-year-old boy acciden- ney with the Washington- said Christopher had experitally killed himself while based Brady Campaign to ence firing handguns and
firing an Uzi submachine Prevent Gun Violence, said rifles, but Sunday was his
gun at a gun fair in western his interpretation is that first time firing an automatic
Massac·husetts.
Massachusetts law specifi - weapon. A certified instructor
Christopher Bizilj (Bah- cally prohibits "furnishing a was with the boy at the time.
SEAL) of Ashford, Conn .. machine gun ro any person
On Monday, Bizilj told The
shot himself in the head under 18 ."
Boston Globe he was about
when he lost control of the
" II is unconscionable that 10 feet behind his son and
9mm micro submachinc the gun fair allowed and reaching for his camera when
gun as it recoiled while he encouraged young children the weapon frred. He said his ·
was firing at a pumpkin. to fire machine guns," · he family
avoided
larger
Police have said the shoot- said in a statement.
weapons, but he let his son try
ing at the · Machine Gun
On Monday, Westfield th~ Uzi because it's a small
Shoot and Firearms Expo at police Lt. Hipolito · Nunez weapon with little recoil. The
the Westfield Sportsman's said it is legal in [amily did not return mesClub on Sunday was an Massachusetrs for children sages for comment Tuesday.
accident.
to fire a weapon if they have
Francis Mitchell, a trustee
Hampden County District permission from a parent or and longtime member · and
Attorney William Bennett · legal guard ian and they are shooting range officer for
said he is investigating supervised by a properly the sportsman's dub,
whether the gun fair violat- certified and licensed declined comment Tuesday,
ed th,e state's firearms law instructor.
saying he was unaware that
by allowing the boy to fire
The section of the statute a crill)inal investigation was
the machine gun, and also that mentions that excep- under way":
"'
whether it was "a reckless tion. however, only lists
Edward . Fleury, owner of
or wanton ·act to·allow an 8- · rifles , shotguns and ammu- COP ·Firearms &amp; Training,
year-old to use ·a fully nition - and is silent on the · . which co,.sponsored the
loaded automatic weapon." use of machine guns.
event, did not immediately ·
BY RODRIQUE NGOWI

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Automakers seek govt aid
beyond bailout and loans
WASHINGTON (AP) Yet industry analysts say wrangling continues, all
Beleaguered U.S. automak- government funding might three. U.S.-based automakers are seeking federal help be necessary to seal a deal ers are having cash troubles,
beyond the money available because of the difficult eco- with Chrysler and GM confor them as part of a finan- nomic conditions and . sidered by industry analysts
cial industry bailout and a frozen credit markets .
to be in the worst shape.
· loan package to fund more
The Bush administration
GM, which is burning ·
fuel-efficient cars, the and Congress would have through more than $1 bilWhite House said Tuesday. an interest in the automak- lion per month, is interested
Whiie House spokes- ers' survival because of the in acquiring Chrysler to
woman Dana Perino said magnitude of the pension access its $11 billion cash
the aljto industry has talked obligations it would face in stockpile. Chrysler, howe:vto the Bush adm,inistration a bankruptcy and the paten- er, has an unspecified
about funding on a much rial for massive job lo.sses . amount of debt, and many
broader scale than the two
Chrysler employs about of its dealers, factories ,
programs approved by 49 ,000 in the U.S. and has ,brands and models .dupliCongress earlier this fall.
about 125,000 pensioners . . cate GM's and likely would
"No "doubt that the GM has 177,000 U.S . work- be shed if GM acquires
automakers are . big impor- ers and around 500,000 peo- Chrysler.
tant companies, important to pie receiving pensions.
GM likely wants governa lot of families and impor- . The
Center
for ment dollars to make the
tan·t to a loi of regions in this Automotive Research in numbers work to acquire
country," Perino said. "We Ann Arbor, Mich., estimates Chrysler, perhaps using
are capable of competing at that for each auto manufac- some of the money to shut
a level where these compa- turing position, there are 7.5 down redundant Chrysler
nies can succeed. they might · jobs with parts makers and operations.
just need a little help. And other companies, meaning
Industry analysts say
that's what Congress asked tbe industry accounts for Chrysler is in such bad
us to help provide them."
millions of jobs.
shape that it could go into
General Motors Corp.,
Any role by the govern- bankruptcy next year if it
which is in talks · about ment in a OM-Chrysler deal doesn't take on a partner or
acquiring Chrysler LLC, is would face scrutiny from isn't ,.acquired by another, ·
pursuing $5 billion to $10 Congress because it would automaker. GM also could
billion in government aid, likely lead to significant job reach the minimum amount
said an industry official ,. losses as the companies of cash needed to pay its
who declined to be identi- combine operations.
bills sometime next year,
fied because the discussions
The White House is analysts have said.
were private. GM officials focused on two major
David Cole , chairman of
declined comment.
options to aid the industry, the Center for Automotive
GM has approached Perino said. They include Research, said the aid
members of Congrass and the $25 billion in govern- would attempt to save some
the administration about a ment loans approved by Chrysler jobs rather than
number of ways that gov- Congfess for fuel -saving lose all of them. Ford or
ernment funding could be technology and 'money to Chrysler also could be in
used to help · the company, free up. credit through the trouble if the global ecoincluding playing a part in a $700 billion Wall Street nomic turmoil continues
Chrysler deal, said a person bailout.
into next year, he said. Cole
briefed on the negotiations .
Perino said the White estimated that 2 million
The ~erson asked not to be House is trying to help jobs, including parts suppliidenufied because no deal automakers access part of ers and other vendors, could
has been completed.
the $25 billion . GM has be lost if GM or Ford went
The requests have come been seeking about $5 bil- under.
as General Motors and lion from the program.
If government funding,
Chrysler LLC are burning
Both Barack Obama aod particularly money from the
up cash because of an auto John McCain, along with fuel -efficiency loans, is
industry sales meltdown Michigan lawmakers, have released, then GM could use
due to the U.S . economic urged the Bush administra- it for fuel efficiency projects
downturn .
lion to expedite the money already in the works , freePerino said the "decisions after estimates that it could ing up money for other
about their futures - and take six to 18 months to areas, said Jack Nerad,
potential merger~ - will be fund the loans. ·
executive market analyst for
· decided by them."
While the government Kelley BlueBook .

Local Weather

return a message left after
business hours.
.
The Republican newspaper
of Springfield reported
Tuesday night that the town
of Pelham, where Fleury has
been police chief since 199 I ,
took undisclosed administrative action after he discharged
a loaded rifle during a gun
safety class he was teaching
in 2003. No one was injured,
and Aeury said in a public
apology he would take steps
to prevent similar incidents.
Pelham
selectl)lan
Edward Martin told the
newspaper Tuesday the
board plans to i·ssue a statement to residents this week
pointing out that Fleury was
at the gun expo on his own
time. Martin called Bizilj's.
death "a tragic accident."
Fleury's company and the
sportsman's club have held
the expo since ·2002. The
newspaper said- Fleury
described it in a 2005 interview as a safe environment
for people "to see and fire
some of the guns that
they've seen in the m0 vies,
or on the History Channel,
or other events that involve
firearms."

Thursday night •.•Mostly
clear. Cold· with lows in the
upper 20s. Light and variable winds.
Friday .. and . Friday
nlght ...Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 60s. Lows in the
lower 40.s.
Saturday .and Saturday
night ...Partly cloudy. Highs ·
in the lower 60s. Lows
around 40.

Wednesday .•• Partly
sunny. Highs in the lower
50s. West winds I 0 to 15
mph .
Wednesday
night ...
Mostly clear. Cold ' with
lows in the upper 20s.
·Northwest winds 5 to I 0
mph .
·
· ·
Thursday...Sunny. Highs
in the mid 50s. Southeast
·winds around 5 mph.

Local Stocks
AEP (NVSE) - 33.01
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 31
Ashland Inc. (NVSE) - 22.41
Big Lots (NVSE) - 22.28
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 20.21
BorgWarnllt' (NYSE)- 23.89
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 10.34
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.07
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 1.26
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 39.52
Collins (N. SE) - 35.54
DuPont (NVSE)- 30.73
US Bank (NVSE) - 30.82
Gannett (NYSE) - 10.22
Ganarat Electric (NYSE) - 19.48,,.
Hartey-Dsvtdaon (NVSE) - 21.28
JP Morll"n (NVSE) - ~7 .60
.
KrOQIIt' (N\"S~) - 26.74 ·
· ••·
Limited Branda (NVSE) - 12.41
Norflllk Souihem (NVSE) - 57.33 .,;
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·

DAQ) - 18.45
BBT (NVSE) - 35.99
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 18.07
Pepsico (NVSE) - 55.83
Pramlar (NASDAQ) - 8.72
Rockwell (NV.SE) - 25.71
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 3.06
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.69
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 57:25
.
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 55.17 '
Wendy's (NVSE) - 3.32
WeaBanco (NVSE) - 25.50
Worthington (NYSE)- 11.17
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET cloalng quoteo of tranaactions for Oct. 28, 2008, provlclad by Edward Jonea flnan•
clal lldvlaore taaac Milts In
Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point ·
. ·
Pleasant at (304) 874·0174. '
Member SIPC.

Let'HQJzec~linlt ~lit yoU&lt;.'·::;
.', ... ·~.:.'f/l~re t~r, th~·; · . . ··
.,

~.,'i·, ·~..- ug,~trJing·.:·fJ~;Seo~p~·

,, .

' ----~~~~,~·~·~
1j~~:~,;·~~:~--~:~-~~~··--~~-~
; -,-~
1 -·~!~~'~t~,~~
· ------~'·

Flu"- Vaccirte~ tlinic ·:
''

'· ·, ',

.

''

'

'

'

;1

I

'

'; .

~

'

..:a·:30 AM -. 4:30 PM

'

'

,.
•

....

,
'

•

.

••

).;

.

''

.,

'

•

OPEN TO 8!1
ADULT
HOLZER
CLINIC PATIENTS
' •I "
.
.
•
,
W,E WI~L SE.PROVII)JNG,
FLU VACCINE ONLY
•
jl

f;

I

~

LOCATION
90 Jackson Pike - Gallipolis, OH

45631

J
·~

'•

•

•

Marauders preparing for history
''.

Football stats ·
needed for AP
~istrict, OVP
nominations

· GALLIPOLIS - With
the end of the football regular ~eason coming this
wi:ekend ,' it is lime to start
compiling slats for the
upcoming AP . district
selection meeting and also
Ohio
~Valley
the .,
Pub1ishing Super 25 team·.
All head varsity football
qoaches are requested to
s;end individual nominations from their respective
t11ams - along with regulpr season stats - to
~ryan Walters of the
i;ports . department in
Gallipolis.
Stilts may. be faxed to
446-3008 or emailed to
bw alters@ mydai lytribune.com
Don't forget to include
offensive and defensive
slats, as well as special
teams for any individual
.
Bryan Walters/photo
nominated.
Meigs running back Jeremy Smith, far right, ta.kes a hanpoff from quartertlack Jacob Well during Tuesday night's practice
All nominations must be at Meigs High School. The Marauders (8-2) will be making their postseason debut this Friday night wheri·the Maroon and
received by Monday, Gold travel north to Perry County to battle New Lexington (9-1) in a Division IV, Region 15 playoff game at Jim Rockwell
November I, to be eligible Stadium in New Lexington. l'vlelgs will be making its first playoff appearance since the school consolidated in 1967 and
for representation at the will be the No. 7 seed in the Region 15 bracket. New Lexington will be the hom6 team with it~ No. 2 seeding.
AP district meeting .
Any questions, call the
sports line at · 446-2342
ext. 33.

Pre-sale football
tickets available
at Meigs HS
. :. ROCKSPRINGS
Tickets for Friday night's
Pivision IV, Region 15
playoff game between
~eigs
and hQst New
J:.exington are now avail!ible for purchase at Meigs
High School during school
liours in the high school

. ':

Please SH Series, BZ

AP photo

Mud covers an on deck batting circle after play was suspended during Game 5 of the baseball World Series
between the Philadelphia Phillies and Tampa Bay Rays in
Philadelphia on Monday. The game suspended on Monday
because of heavy rain, was postponed until Wednesday.

Starks runs for
186 yds, Buffalo
beats Ohio 32-19
ATHENS (AP) - James
Starks ran for 186 yards and
two touchdo.wns, including
a 52-yarder in the fourth
quarter that helped clinch
Buffalo's 32-19 win over
Ohio Tuesday night.
The Bulls (4-4, 2-2 MidAmerican Conference) led
throughout' scoring early on
Starks' three-yard run.
Quarterback Dtew Willy led
two long scoring drives, the
last one ending in a nineyard touchdown pass to
Naam Roosevelt to give
Buffalo a 24-7 halftime
lead.
Neither team scored in the
third quarter. In the fourth,
Ohio's Boo Jackson ran for
a score then threw a 20-yard
pass to Riley Dunlop to get
the Bobcats (2-7, 1-4) within a touchdown with more
than,eight minutes left.
A minute later, Starks
broke free for his long run.
Ohio was held to just three
plays on its next possession
and dido 't get the ball again .
Jackson was 20 of 29 for
290 yards, one interception
and two touchdowns.

Tressel not 'ecstatic' with offense

l

.'

· ROCKSPRINGS
There is a reception honoring the Meigs football
team
on
Thursday,
October 30, in the high
school cafeteria at 5 p.m.
The reception will honor
!his year's playoff bound
Marauders.
All
former
Meigs.
Pomeroy; Middleport and
Rutland players are urged
to attend along w_ith
f-ilarauder fans.

noon, with temperatures in
the upper 30s. by night
"We get to bat four times,
they get to bat three. We get
12 outs, they get nine,"
Phillies. manager Charlie
Manuel said. "We are definitely coming with the
mind-set that we are going
to win that game."
The Phillies lead three
games to one, needing one
more· win for their first
championship since 1980.
There has never been a rainshortened game in Series
history, and this was the first
·suspension.
"We'll stay here if we
have
to
celebrate
Thanksgiving here." Selig
said Monday night when the
suspension was announced.
By the .time Carlos Pena
hit a tying, two-out single in
the sixth for the Rays, every
pitch and every hit had
become an adventure.
"It was terrible. The field
wasn't bad, but it was the

'

• I

· Monaay .. friaav

.

'I

Meigs to hold
·reception for·
playoff bound
Marauders ·

'
PHILADELPHIA
(AP) - Major League Baseball and
In the middle of all this Fox agreed two weeks ago
World Series chaos, Joe to push back Wednesday's
Madden sounded . rather first pitch - originally for
calm.
Game 6 - by about 10 minBumped to a hotel in utes.
Delaware until Game 5
"No one will delay a
resumes Wednesday · night World Series game with an
- if the weather cooperates infomercial when I'm presi- the Tampa Bay manager dent," Republican candidate
and his young team rode out John McCain said to loud
the storm together.
. applause at a Tuesday rally
"I referred to it as kind of in Pennsylvania.
like getting snowed in, if I · Selig said there was no
could.go back to my roots," way to resume play Tuesday.
said Madden, raised in near"While obviously we want
by Hazleton, Pa.
to finish Game 5 as soon as
Rain put the Series on possible, the forecast for
hold Monday night, with the today does not allow for us
Phillies and Tampa Bay to continue the game this
Rays sus~nded iti the sixth evening," he sajd. "We are
inning with the score 2-all. closely monitoring tomorMore rain and possible row's forecast and will consnow showers were expect- tinue to monitor the weather
ed Tuesday, so commission- on an hourly basis, We will
er Bud Selig said Game 5 advise fans as soon as we are
WljS tentatively set to resume able to make. any final deciat 8:37 p.m. Wednesday sions with res~ct to tomornight - after Democratic row's schedule."
president candidate Barack
The
forecast
for
Obama's 30-minute ad on Wednesday called for clearFox and other networks. ing skies by the early after-

OfflC\l .

.

: Pre-sale tickets are $7
ilpiece and will be avail.able. through : Thursday,
~(lith ~ 1.20 of each preS'l.Ie ticket going back to
the Meigs athletic fund.
: Tickets
purchased
P.riday at the gate will be
$9 apiece.

·eoNTAcrUs
.
1-74()-446-2342 ext. 33
Fu - 1-740--4*3006
E...,.ll - aporto!'mydallyoentlnel.com

COLUMBUS (AP) - teams that lie ahead, though. die instead of trying to win
This figures to be a week of Things were pretty much the game by himself.
learning for No. 13 Ohio going their way through ' "For sure the best decision
State.
three quarters against the would have been to stay
No, not necessarily i~ the Nittany Lion_s. They Ied 6-3 focused on really what w~
classroom. Not even tn a m the opemng mmutes of needed at the moment,
football game.
·
· • the fourth quarter and had . Tressel said. "What we
Instead, the Buckeyes will the ball near midfield . Then needed at that moment was a
have a bye week to do noth- the game, and a good part of first down, obviously."
ing but . rehash Saturday their season, spiraled ou.t of After Ohio State was
night's 13-6 loss to No. 3 sight.
.
forced to punt on its next
Penn State that put a severe
Freshman
quarterback possession, Devlin led the
dent in any hopes of winning Terrelle Pryor, rather than Lions down field to set up
the Big Ten title or continu- just keep the ball for the 12 Kevin Kelly's 35-yard fi~ld
in§ as a national contender. mches or so that were need- goal for a 13-6 lead w1th
'You probably lellfO less ed on third and less than a I :07 remaining.
in victory than you learn in yard, decided to bOunce outPryor completed two passdefeat," coach Jitn Tressel side right end in an attempt es to Ray Small for 37 yards
said Tuesday on the Big Ten to. ~et big yardage . Instead, in a last-minute attempt to
coaches conference . call. his Ill-advised move resulted tie the game, but then 'he
"We 'II learn a lot about our- in Mark Rubin punching the tried to hit Brian Hartline
selves."
ball out of his hands, with near the goal line and the
The Buckeyes (7-2, 4-1) Penn
State's Navarro underthrown ball was
have thret: games remaining Bo~man recovering at the picked off by P~nn State's
after Saturday's day away. Ohto State 38.
Lydell Sargeant m the end
They play at Northwestern . Seven plays later, Penn zone.
(6-2, 2-2), at Illinois (4·4, 2- State backup quarterback
It was Tressel who made
3) and at home against Pat Devlin did precisely the decision to put a raw
archrival Michigan (2-6, 1- what he was told to. do on a freshman in as his starting
3) before heading for a bowl sneak and scored from a foot quarterback while benching
game.
out to give the Nittany Lions sixth-year senior Todd
Ohio State will spend a I0-61ead with 6:25 left.
Boeckman in the follrth
most of this week working. Tressel said it was clear game of the season. Tressel
on fundamentals and analyz- that Pryor should have just said in hindsight he wjshed
ing their mistakes before gotten the fll'St down and
even taking a peek at the · then headed back to the budPlean - 'IJuML BZ

AP photo

In this Aug. 30 file photo, Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel,
right, talks to quartertlack Todd Boeckman (17) in Columbus.
Four games into the season Tressel benched Boeckman and
replaced him with true freshman Terrene Pryor.
•

�The Daily Sentinel

ACROSS THE NATION

.PageA6

Bl

'J'he Daily Sentinel

,

Wednesday, October 29,2008
Holmes returning to lineup, Page B2

t

OHSAA playoff pairings, Page B6

Today's Forecast

City/Region
High I Low temps

Forecasl for Wldnlldey, Oct. 29

The locked alu" minum gate, left,
is seen at the
main entrance to
the Westfield
Sportman's Club
on Furrowlon
Road in
Westfield, Mass
on Monday.
Eight•year old
Christopher Bizilj
of Ashford,
Conn. died after
accidentally
shooting himself
in the head while·
tiring an Uzi submachine gun at
a gun fair held
on the premises
on Sunday.

Inside

Ohio prep notebook, Page B6

VVednesday,Ck1ober29,2008

Toledo•

47"131 '
Youngstowfl"•

LocAL SCHEDULE

40' I 32'
Mansfield•

Phillies, Rays to resume
Game 5 on Wednesday night

POMEROV - A IC:Mdule of upcoming high
school vsrsllv aporung events ln'fOivlng
team• from M~e and G~lla counlies.

43'129~

Frklq. Octplwr 31

~

· Dayton•
49" 131 '

*Columbus

45' I 32'

.

t?:-_"

~oobH

- Ohio pl1yollo
(7) Meigs at (2) New Lexington, 7;30

p.m.
.

.

Football - Regul•r INaon

Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 7:30
p.m.

· Hannan at Montcalm. 7;30 p.m.

Clncllinatl

Situ'*¥ Noytmlw·,

• 52° I 29°
·

.

Cro10Country
Olvllk:in II girls state championship ~~

~

~loiO

Downs, 2:05 p.m.

-II- Regular_..,.

Pottamouth•

49'13f'

'

Wahama at Parkersburg Catholic, 7:30

p.m.

KY

Cl2008

AP photo

SPORTS ~RIEFS

charges

UZi

"At this point in the invesBennett did not return
ligation I have found no calls Tuesday seeking addilawful authority which tiona! com.ment.
BOSTON - A prosecutor allows an 8-year-old to posThe bor was attending the
said Tuesday he is im esti·- sess or fire a machine gun," gun fair with his father and
gating whether criminal Bennett said in a statement. brother Colin, a sixth-grader.
charges should be filed after . Daniel Vice, senior attar- His father, Charles Bizilj,
an 8-year-old boy acciden- ney with the Washington- said Christopher had experitally killed himself while based Brady Campaign to ence firing handguns and
firing an Uzi submachine Prevent Gun Violence, said rifles, but Sunday was his
gun at a gun fair in western his interpretation is that first time firing an automatic
Massac·husetts.
Massachusetts law specifi - weapon. A certified instructor
Christopher Bizilj (Bah- cally prohibits "furnishing a was with the boy at the time.
SEAL) of Ashford, Conn .. machine gun ro any person
On Monday, Bizilj told The
shot himself in the head under 18 ."
Boston Globe he was about
when he lost control of the
" II is unconscionable that 10 feet behind his son and
9mm micro submachinc the gun fair allowed and reaching for his camera when
gun as it recoiled while he encouraged young children the weapon frred. He said his ·
was firing at a pumpkin. to fire machine guns," · he family
avoided
larger
Police have said the shoot- said in a statement.
weapons, but he let his son try
ing at the · Machine Gun
On Monday, Westfield th~ Uzi because it's a small
Shoot and Firearms Expo at police Lt. Hipolito · Nunez weapon with little recoil. The
the Westfield Sportsman's said it is legal in [amily did not return mesClub on Sunday was an Massachusetrs for children sages for comment Tuesday.
accident.
to fire a weapon if they have
Francis Mitchell, a trustee
Hampden County District permission from a parent or and longtime member · and
Attorney William Bennett · legal guard ian and they are shooting range officer for
said he is investigating supervised by a properly the sportsman's dub,
whether the gun fair violat- certified and licensed declined comment Tuesday,
ed th,e state's firearms law instructor.
saying he was unaware that
by allowing the boy to fire
The section of the statute a crill)inal investigation was
the machine gun, and also that mentions that excep- under way":
"'
whether it was "a reckless tion. however, only lists
Edward . Fleury, owner of
or wanton ·act to·allow an 8- · rifles , shotguns and ammu- COP ·Firearms &amp; Training,
year-old to use ·a fully nition - and is silent on the · . which co,.sponsored the
loaded automatic weapon." use of machine guns.
event, did not immediately ·
BY RODRIQUE NGOWI

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Automakers seek govt aid
beyond bailout and loans
WASHINGTON (AP) Yet industry analysts say wrangling continues, all
Beleaguered U.S. automak- government funding might three. U.S.-based automakers are seeking federal help be necessary to seal a deal ers are having cash troubles,
beyond the money available because of the difficult eco- with Chrysler and GM confor them as part of a finan- nomic conditions and . sidered by industry analysts
cial industry bailout and a frozen credit markets .
to be in the worst shape.
· loan package to fund more
The Bush administration
GM, which is burning ·
fuel-efficient cars, the and Congress would have through more than $1 bilWhite House said Tuesday. an interest in the automak- lion per month, is interested
Whiie House spokes- ers' survival because of the in acquiring Chrysler to
woman Dana Perino said magnitude of the pension access its $11 billion cash
the aljto industry has talked obligations it would face in stockpile. Chrysler, howe:vto the Bush adm,inistration a bankruptcy and the paten- er, has an unspecified
about funding on a much rial for massive job lo.sses . amount of debt, and many
broader scale than the two
Chrysler employs about of its dealers, factories ,
programs approved by 49 ,000 in the U.S. and has ,brands and models .dupliCongress earlier this fall.
about 125,000 pensioners . . cate GM's and likely would
"No "doubt that the GM has 177,000 U.S . work- be shed if GM acquires
automakers are . big impor- ers and around 500,000 peo- Chrysler.
tant companies, important to pie receiving pensions.
GM likely wants governa lot of families and impor- . The
Center
for ment dollars to make the
tan·t to a loi of regions in this Automotive Research in numbers work to acquire
country," Perino said. "We Ann Arbor, Mich., estimates Chrysler, perhaps using
are capable of competing at that for each auto manufac- some of the money to shut
a level where these compa- turing position, there are 7.5 down redundant Chrysler
nies can succeed. they might · jobs with parts makers and operations.
just need a little help. And other companies, meaning
Industry analysts say
that's what Congress asked tbe industry accounts for Chrysler is in such bad
us to help provide them."
millions of jobs.
shape that it could go into
General Motors Corp.,
Any role by the govern- bankruptcy next year if it
which is in talks · about ment in a OM-Chrysler deal doesn't take on a partner or
acquiring Chrysler LLC, is would face scrutiny from isn't ,.acquired by another, ·
pursuing $5 billion to $10 Congress because it would automaker. GM also could
billion in government aid, likely lead to significant job reach the minimum amount
said an industry official ,. losses as the companies of cash needed to pay its
who declined to be identi- combine operations.
bills sometime next year,
fied because the discussions
The White House is analysts have said.
were private. GM officials focused on two major
David Cole , chairman of
declined comment.
options to aid the industry, the Center for Automotive
GM has approached Perino said. They include Research, said the aid
members of Congrass and the $25 billion in govern- would attempt to save some
the administration about a ment loans approved by Chrysler jobs rather than
number of ways that gov- Congfess for fuel -saving lose all of them. Ford or
ernment funding could be technology and 'money to Chrysler also could be in
used to help · the company, free up. credit through the trouble if the global ecoincluding playing a part in a $700 billion Wall Street nomic turmoil continues
Chrysler deal, said a person bailout.
into next year, he said. Cole
briefed on the negotiations .
Perino said the White estimated that 2 million
The ~erson asked not to be House is trying to help jobs, including parts suppliidenufied because no deal automakers access part of ers and other vendors, could
has been completed.
the $25 billion . GM has be lost if GM or Ford went
The requests have come been seeking about $5 bil- under.
as General Motors and lion from the program.
If government funding,
Chrysler LLC are burning
Both Barack Obama aod particularly money from the
up cash because of an auto John McCain, along with fuel -efficiency loans, is
industry sales meltdown Michigan lawmakers, have released, then GM could use
due to the U.S . economic urged the Bush administra- it for fuel efficiency projects
downturn .
lion to expedite the money already in the works , freePerino said the "decisions after estimates that it could ing up money for other
about their futures - and take six to 18 months to areas, said Jack Nerad,
potential merger~ - will be fund the loans. ·
executive market analyst for
· decided by them."
While the government Kelley BlueBook .

Local Weather

return a message left after
business hours.
.
The Republican newspaper
of Springfield reported
Tuesday night that the town
of Pelham, where Fleury has
been police chief since 199 I ,
took undisclosed administrative action after he discharged
a loaded rifle during a gun
safety class he was teaching
in 2003. No one was injured,
and Aeury said in a public
apology he would take steps
to prevent similar incidents.
Pelham
selectl)lan
Edward Martin told the
newspaper Tuesday the
board plans to i·ssue a statement to residents this week
pointing out that Fleury was
at the gun expo on his own
time. Martin called Bizilj's.
death "a tragic accident."
Fleury's company and the
sportsman's club have held
the expo since ·2002. The
newspaper said- Fleury
described it in a 2005 interview as a safe environment
for people "to see and fire
some of the guns that
they've seen in the m0 vies,
or on the History Channel,
or other events that involve
firearms."

Thursday night •.•Mostly
clear. Cold· with lows in the
upper 20s. Light and variable winds.
Friday .. and . Friday
nlght ...Mostly clear. Highs
in the mid 60s. Lows in the
lower 40.s.
Saturday .and Saturday
night ...Partly cloudy. Highs ·
in the lower 60s. Lows
around 40.

Wednesday .•• Partly
sunny. Highs in the lower
50s. West winds I 0 to 15
mph .
Wednesday
night ...
Mostly clear. Cold ' with
lows in the upper 20s.
·Northwest winds 5 to I 0
mph .
·
· ·
Thursday...Sunny. Highs
in the mid 50s. Southeast
·winds around 5 mph.

Local Stocks
AEP (NVSE) - 33.01
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 31
Ashland Inc. (NVSE) - 22.41
Big Lots (NVSE) - 22.28
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 20.21
BorgWarnllt' (NYSE)- 23.89
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 10.34
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.07
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 1.26
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 39.52
Collins (N. SE) - 35.54
DuPont (NVSE)- 30.73
US Bank (NVSE) - 30.82
Gannett (NYSE) - 10.22
Ganarat Electric (NYSE) - 19.48,,.
Hartey-Dsvtdaon (NVSE) - 21.28
JP Morll"n (NVSE) - ~7 .60
.
KrOQIIt' (N\"S~) - 26.74 ·
· ••·
Limited Branda (NVSE) - 12.41
Norflllk Souihem (NVSE) - 57.33 .,;
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·

DAQ) - 18.45
BBT (NVSE) - 35.99
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 18.07
Pepsico (NVSE) - 55.83
Pramlar (NASDAQ) - 8.72
Rockwell (NV.SE) - 25.71
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 3.06
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.69
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 57:25
.
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 55.17 '
Wendy's (NVSE) - 3.32
WeaBanco (NVSE) - 25.50
Worthington (NYSE)- 11.17
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET cloalng quoteo of tranaactions for Oct. 28, 2008, provlclad by Edward Jonea flnan•
clal lldvlaore taaac Milts In
Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point ·
. ·
Pleasant at (304) 874·0174. '
Member SIPC.

Let'HQJzec~linlt ~lit yoU&lt;.'·::;
.', ... ·~.:.'f/l~re t~r, th~·; · . . ··
.,

~.,'i·, ·~..- ug,~trJing·.:·fJ~;Seo~p~·

,, .

' ----~~~~,~·~·~
1j~~:~,;·~~:~--~:~-~~~··--~~-~
; -,-~
1 -·~!~~'~t~,~~
· ------~'·

Flu"- Vaccirte~ tlinic ·:
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~

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..:a·:30 AM -. 4:30 PM

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•

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''

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•

OPEN TO 8!1
ADULT
HOLZER
CLINIC PATIENTS
' •I "
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W,E WI~L SE.PROVII)JNG,
FLU VACCINE ONLY
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jl

f;

I

~

LOCATION
90 Jackson Pike - Gallipolis, OH

45631

J
·~

'•

•

•

Marauders preparing for history
''.

Football stats ·
needed for AP
~istrict, OVP
nominations

· GALLIPOLIS - With
the end of the football regular ~eason coming this
wi:ekend ,' it is lime to start
compiling slats for the
upcoming AP . district
selection meeting and also
Ohio
~Valley
the .,
Pub1ishing Super 25 team·.
All head varsity football
qoaches are requested to
s;end individual nominations from their respective
t11ams - along with regulpr season stats - to
~ryan Walters of the
i;ports . department in
Gallipolis.
Stilts may. be faxed to
446-3008 or emailed to
bw alters@ mydai lytribune.com
Don't forget to include
offensive and defensive
slats, as well as special
teams for any individual
.
Bryan Walters/photo
nominated.
Meigs running back Jeremy Smith, far right, ta.kes a hanpoff from quartertlack Jacob Well during Tuesday night's practice
All nominations must be at Meigs High School. The Marauders (8-2) will be making their postseason debut this Friday night wheri·the Maroon and
received by Monday, Gold travel north to Perry County to battle New Lexington (9-1) in a Division IV, Region 15 playoff game at Jim Rockwell
November I, to be eligible Stadium in New Lexington. l'vlelgs will be making its first playoff appearance since the school consolidated in 1967 and
for representation at the will be the No. 7 seed in the Region 15 bracket. New Lexington will be the hom6 team with it~ No. 2 seeding.
AP district meeting .
Any questions, call the
sports line at · 446-2342
ext. 33.

Pre-sale football
tickets available
at Meigs HS
. :. ROCKSPRINGS
Tickets for Friday night's
Pivision IV, Region 15
playoff game between
~eigs
and hQst New
J:.exington are now avail!ible for purchase at Meigs
High School during school
liours in the high school

. ':

Please SH Series, BZ

AP photo

Mud covers an on deck batting circle after play was suspended during Game 5 of the baseball World Series
between the Philadelphia Phillies and Tampa Bay Rays in
Philadelphia on Monday. The game suspended on Monday
because of heavy rain, was postponed until Wednesday.

Starks runs for
186 yds, Buffalo
beats Ohio 32-19
ATHENS (AP) - James
Starks ran for 186 yards and
two touchdo.wns, including
a 52-yarder in the fourth
quarter that helped clinch
Buffalo's 32-19 win over
Ohio Tuesday night.
The Bulls (4-4, 2-2 MidAmerican Conference) led
throughout' scoring early on
Starks' three-yard run.
Quarterback Dtew Willy led
two long scoring drives, the
last one ending in a nineyard touchdown pass to
Naam Roosevelt to give
Buffalo a 24-7 halftime
lead.
Neither team scored in the
third quarter. In the fourth,
Ohio's Boo Jackson ran for
a score then threw a 20-yard
pass to Riley Dunlop to get
the Bobcats (2-7, 1-4) within a touchdown with more
than,eight minutes left.
A minute later, Starks
broke free for his long run.
Ohio was held to just three
plays on its next possession
and dido 't get the ball again .
Jackson was 20 of 29 for
290 yards, one interception
and two touchdowns.

Tressel not 'ecstatic' with offense

l

.'

· ROCKSPRINGS
There is a reception honoring the Meigs football
team
on
Thursday,
October 30, in the high
school cafeteria at 5 p.m.
The reception will honor
!his year's playoff bound
Marauders.
All
former
Meigs.
Pomeroy; Middleport and
Rutland players are urged
to attend along w_ith
f-ilarauder fans.

noon, with temperatures in
the upper 30s. by night
"We get to bat four times,
they get to bat three. We get
12 outs, they get nine,"
Phillies. manager Charlie
Manuel said. "We are definitely coming with the
mind-set that we are going
to win that game."
The Phillies lead three
games to one, needing one
more· win for their first
championship since 1980.
There has never been a rainshortened game in Series
history, and this was the first
·suspension.
"We'll stay here if we
have
to
celebrate
Thanksgiving here." Selig
said Monday night when the
suspension was announced.
By the .time Carlos Pena
hit a tying, two-out single in
the sixth for the Rays, every
pitch and every hit had
become an adventure.
"It was terrible. The field
wasn't bad, but it was the

'

• I

· Monaay .. friaav

.

'I

Meigs to hold
·reception for·
playoff bound
Marauders ·

'
PHILADELPHIA
(AP) - Major League Baseball and
In the middle of all this Fox agreed two weeks ago
World Series chaos, Joe to push back Wednesday's
Madden sounded . rather first pitch - originally for
calm.
Game 6 - by about 10 minBumped to a hotel in utes.
Delaware until Game 5
"No one will delay a
resumes Wednesday · night World Series game with an
- if the weather cooperates infomercial when I'm presi- the Tampa Bay manager dent," Republican candidate
and his young team rode out John McCain said to loud
the storm together.
. applause at a Tuesday rally
"I referred to it as kind of in Pennsylvania.
like getting snowed in, if I · Selig said there was no
could.go back to my roots," way to resume play Tuesday.
said Madden, raised in near"While obviously we want
by Hazleton, Pa.
to finish Game 5 as soon as
Rain put the Series on possible, the forecast for
hold Monday night, with the today does not allow for us
Phillies and Tampa Bay to continue the game this
Rays sus~nded iti the sixth evening," he sajd. "We are
inning with the score 2-all. closely monitoring tomorMore rain and possible row's forecast and will consnow showers were expect- tinue to monitor the weather
ed Tuesday, so commission- on an hourly basis, We will
er Bud Selig said Game 5 advise fans as soon as we are
WljS tentatively set to resume able to make. any final deciat 8:37 p.m. Wednesday sions with res~ct to tomornight - after Democratic row's schedule."
president candidate Barack
The
forecast
for
Obama's 30-minute ad on Wednesday called for clearFox and other networks. ing skies by the early after-

OfflC\l .

.

: Pre-sale tickets are $7
ilpiece and will be avail.able. through : Thursday,
~(lith ~ 1.20 of each preS'l.Ie ticket going back to
the Meigs athletic fund.
: Tickets
purchased
P.riday at the gate will be
$9 apiece.

·eoNTAcrUs
.
1-74()-446-2342 ext. 33
Fu - 1-740--4*3006
E...,.ll - aporto!'mydallyoentlnel.com

COLUMBUS (AP) - teams that lie ahead, though. die instead of trying to win
This figures to be a week of Things were pretty much the game by himself.
learning for No. 13 Ohio going their way through ' "For sure the best decision
State.
three quarters against the would have been to stay
No, not necessarily i~ the Nittany Lion_s. They Ied 6-3 focused on really what w~
classroom. Not even tn a m the opemng mmutes of needed at the moment,
football game.
·
· • the fourth quarter and had . Tressel said. "What we
Instead, the Buckeyes will the ball near midfield . Then needed at that moment was a
have a bye week to do noth- the game, and a good part of first down, obviously."
ing but . rehash Saturday their season, spiraled ou.t of After Ohio State was
night's 13-6 loss to No. 3 sight.
.
forced to punt on its next
Penn State that put a severe
Freshman
quarterback possession, Devlin led the
dent in any hopes of winning Terrelle Pryor, rather than Lions down field to set up
the Big Ten title or continu- just keep the ball for the 12 Kevin Kelly's 35-yard fi~ld
in§ as a national contender. mches or so that were need- goal for a 13-6 lead w1th
'You probably lellfO less ed on third and less than a I :07 remaining.
in victory than you learn in yard, decided to bOunce outPryor completed two passdefeat," coach Jitn Tressel side right end in an attempt es to Ray Small for 37 yards
said Tuesday on the Big Ten to. ~et big yardage . Instead, in a last-minute attempt to
coaches conference . call. his Ill-advised move resulted tie the game, but then 'he
"We 'II learn a lot about our- in Mark Rubin punching the tried to hit Brian Hartline
selves."
ball out of his hands, with near the goal line and the
The Buckeyes (7-2, 4-1) Penn
State's Navarro underthrown ball was
have thret: games remaining Bo~man recovering at the picked off by P~nn State's
after Saturday's day away. Ohto State 38.
Lydell Sargeant m the end
They play at Northwestern . Seven plays later, Penn zone.
(6-2, 2-2), at Illinois (4·4, 2- State backup quarterback
It was Tressel who made
3) and at home against Pat Devlin did precisely the decision to put a raw
archrival Michigan (2-6, 1- what he was told to. do on a freshman in as his starting
3) before heading for a bowl sneak and scored from a foot quarterback while benching
game.
out to give the Nittany Lions sixth-year senior Todd
Ohio State will spend a I0-61ead with 6:25 left.
Boeckman in the follrth
most of this week working. Tressel said it was clear game of the season. Tressel
on fundamentals and analyz- that Pryor should have just said in hindsight he wjshed
ing their mistakes before gotten the fll'St down and
even taking a peek at the · then headed back to the budPlean - 'IJuML BZ

AP photo

In this Aug. 30 file photo, Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel,
right, talks to quartertlack Todd Boeckman (17) in Columbus.
Four games into the season Tressel benched Boeckman and
replaced him with true freshman Terrene Pryor.
•

�•

Wednesday, October 29, 2008
'

• Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 29. :zooS

www .mydailysentinel.com

Sports Shorts

PITTSBURGH (AP)
The Pittsburgh Steelers
won't f.urther pumsh w1de
rece1ver Santomo Holmes
CANTON (AP) - Defens1ve end Bruce Smith, defen- tor bemg charged la st
stve back Rod Woodson and light end Shannon Sharpe are week with a manjuanaamong first-year cand1dares for mduction into the Pro related offense and plan to
Football Hall of Fame
start h1m Monday night in
. The list mcludes 110 players, seven coaches and 16 con- Washmgton
tnbutors, mcludmg former NFL Comm1sswner Paul
Holmes, who Jed the
:ragliabue and longt1me team owners Bud Adams, Jerry NFL 111 yards -per-catch
~ones , Art Modell and Ralph Wtlson.
last season, was benched
Hall of Fame selectors w1ll choose 25 candidates who for the Steelers ' 21-14 los&gt;
will be announced later th1s month as semifinalists. The Sunday to the New York
iield w1ll then be narrowed to IS by a mail ballot. The Gtants and was not m um inductees w1ll be selected from among those I 5 and the two fo rm He was allowed to
semor nommees prev1ously announced, Bob Hayes and return to the team after
Claude Humphrey. They were selected m August by a speaking to h1s teammates
;semor selection comm1ttee
and 1ssumg a public apoloThe class of inductees will be chosen at the selection gy on Monday
~ommlttee 's annual meetmg on Jan 31, 2009, m Tampa,
The NFL could punish
fla., the day before the 2009 Super Bowl As few as four Holmes once h1 s case IS
and as many as seven can be selected.
resolved, but coach M1ke
To be considered for Hall of Fame election , a nom mated Tomlin sa1d there Will be
player or coach must be ret1red for at least five years. A no addtllonal action take n
contributor, who has. made outstandmg career contnbutlons by the team. Tomhn dtd
lo pro football m capactues other than playmg or coachmg, not say 1f Holmes was
)nay still be active m h1s pro football career
fined , although he likely
was
·Ex-Ohio lawmaker ordered to pay tine Holmes, a th1rd-year
COLUMBUS (AP) - A 'former state lav.maker who
adm1tted he bought Ohio State Univers1ty football tickets
w1th campa1gn money and sold them for a personal prof1t
:won't have to serve Jall time
But a Franklm County JUdge on Tuesday d1d order former
state Rep John Wtdowfield to pay $2,000 in fines after
Wtdowfield pleaded gu1lty to two fust degree misdemeanor
charges - fihng a false financ1al dtsclosure statement aod
convertmg campaign funds mto personal use.
Both of the charges earned a posstble six month jail sentence.
The Repubhcan from Cuyahoga (keye-uh-HOH' -guh)
Falls near Akron res1gned from the Legi slature m May He
apolog1zed earher th1 s month and sa1d he had re1mbursed
h1s campa1gn $13 ,676 to cover the profit from the ticket
sales
mel fect1ve on offense w1th
the conservative Tressel
callmg the shots. ln his 98
games as head coach, the
fromPageBl
Buckeyes have fad ed to
score an offens1ve touchPryor would have run or down mne limes.
thrown the ball away
made 11 cle&lt;~r that
mstead of making that final h1sTressel
ent1re offense - wh1ch
pass. '
"We probably could have has not produced a touchp1cked up about 15 yards down m three of the Iast
and that would have been seven games - was to
my first preference b0cause blame mstead of smgl mg
then we would have been out Ptyor or the offens1ve
somewhere mstde the 20 hne .
"The inconsistency that
and maybe we had three
shots at the end zone," he we've had across the board
swd "But c~rtamly, you'd - and not JUSt up front,
love to throw 11 away and across the board - has lent
1tself to not bemg ecstatic
live to see another play"
This 1s not the hrst ume about our offensive perforthat Oh10 State has been mance," he sa1d.

Tressel

player out
of Ohto
State, was
c harged
wtth
a
m1 sdeNOTEBOOK me an or
count of
possession
of a small amount of manJUOna followmg a police
stop Thursday. Holmes has
a prehmmary heanng
before a Ptltsburgh distnct
JUdge on Nov 24
"As a football team and
an orgamzat10n, m terms
of our v1ew of the situation, we 've latd it to bed ,"
Tomhn sa1d Tuesday.
''Satisfactory action• has
been taken from our standpow!. . For us, we're
movmg forward."
Tomlm doesn't care 1f
the NFL players ' umon is
unhappy the Steelers chose
to effect1vely suspend
Holmes for an 1ssue that is
covered by the NFL's sub-

th1s
one
Whenever
resumes , it will pick up
where 1t left off, With the
Phtl!ies about to bat in the
fromPageBl
bottom of the s1xth.
Ace p1tcher Cole Hamels
worst condtllons I've ever
1s
set to lead off for the
played m," Tampa Bay th1rd
Phds
For sure, the Phllhes
baseman Evan Longona
wlll send up a pmch-hitter
smd
agamst
Grant Balfour,
A puddle formed on home who'd prevwusly
reheved
plate and umpue Jeff
Kazm1r.
starter
Scott
Kellogg resorted to using a
Then what? Do the Rays
to.,.,el rather than the usual counter
w1th another pttchwh1sk broom to w1pe 1t er, and Immediately pull
clean
Balfour?
Batters kept blmkmg back
If Pena had not tied 11,
the ram drops and p1tchers Selig sa1d he would not
struggled w1th the1r footing. have let the Ph1llies wm
Strong gusts dropped the , wtlh a game that was called
wmd-ch1ll factor mto the after six innings.
30s, and fielders covered
"It's not a way to end a
the1r bare hands between World Series," he sa1d "I
p1tches.
'would not have allowed a
All-Star shortstop J1mmy World Series to end this
Rollins of the Phlllies way."
chased a popup all over and
Fine by the Rays
dropped it for a tough error
"The World Series always
m the fifth There were should be dec1ded by nine
pools of water at every base inmngs w1th somebody
and the Phtlhe Phanattc- makmg the final out, not the
wore a ram shcker for hi s weather or natural disasters
routme .
or whatever," rehever
"The mfield was tough Trever Mlller sa1d "That's
The ball would do funny what fans pay to see. That's
thmgs," Pht!lies second what we work hard for all
bas~man. Chase Utley sa1d
year."
"It was in bad shape. It was
Tuesday was supposed to
not playable."
be a travel day, tf necessary.

Series

stance abuse pohcy.
"I'm not concerned
about the1r vtew whether
we chose to ac uvate h1m ,"
Tomhn sa1d "We've got
53 men on the team. We
chose to activate 45 for a
part1cular game. That's
what we chose to do and
move forward."
The Steelers never sa1d
before the Gtants' game
that Holmes was suspended . mstead handlin g the
matter by deacttvattng
h1m .
Holmes' absence hurt the
Steelers· offt:nse dunng a
game m wh1ch, except for
a 65-yard touchdown pass
to Nate Washington on
Pittsburgh 's fmt flay of
the second hul , Ben
Roethhsberger did not
complete a pass to a w1de
rece iver longer than 14
yards
Roethh sberger
was
under a heavy pass rush
and was sacked five times,
Instead . the teams w1ll stay
m the area and then head
back to Trop1cana Fteld 1f
the Rays v-1n.
The delay , however,
forced the Rays to find a
10
comfortable
hotel
W1lmmgton, Del., about 25
nules away.
About 10 minutes after
tbe game was officially suspended,' an announcement
was made telling fans
wrapped m plastic sheets
they were done for the
mght.
By then , many had left
the1r seats and streamed mto
the
concotfrses. They
crowded six or seven deep,
uyi ng lo see any of the
game before the umps signaled for the tarp
Because it was only hghtly raining when the game
started, MLB hoped 1! could
play a fu!J nine mnings . It
quickly became apparent
this rain wouldn't quit.
By the middle inmngs,
the grounds crew was runmng shuttles onto the field ,
carrymg bags of a drying
agent - baseba!l 's version
of cat litter ~ to absorb the
water.
No luck.
"A lot of guys couldn't
beheve we were shll play-

pushmg h1s season total to
23 - th1rd most m the
league
As
a
result,
Roethli sberger IS dealmg
aga m w1th a sore right
shoulder - he was dtagnosed several weeks ago
wllh a slight separation and may offtctally return
to the team's IDJUry hst
Wednesday
Roetlllisberger may not
practice Wednesday or
Thursday beca use the
Steelers have an' extra day
to prepare for the Monday
n1ght game
"Same thm~ . nght shoulder," Tomlin said of
Roethhsberger 's IDJury.
"That 's going to contmue
to be week to week . It was
better last week because he
rarely got h1t (Oct. I 9) versus the Bengals He got h1t
a few limes on Sunday.
We' II see how he feels
when he \;O mes m here on
Wednesday"
mg." Rays shortstop Jason
Bartletl sa1d.
.
B ,J Upton beat out an
infield hll with two outs m
the s1xth on , a ball that
Rollins bobbled. Upton
stole second and made an
impress1ve dash home on
Pena 's h1t, navtgatmg the
slippery basepaths and shdmg m when left fte!der Pat
Burrell's throw plopped
mto a puddle.
Fans showed up hoping
they• d be Witnesses to a
World Senes championship
Shane Vtctonno got them
' cheenng w1th bases-loaded
smgle 10 the first for a 2-0
lead off Kazm1r
Maddon tinkered with his
lmeup , droppmg the slumping Pena and Longoria one
spot each 'C. they were a
combined 0-for-29 with' 15
stnkeouts after feur games.
The Tampa Bay stars
ended theu h1tless ruts m
the fourth when Pena dol.lbled off the nght-f1eld wall
and Longona followed with
an RBI smgle up the middle
that made 11 2-1.
A few mnings later, it was
lime to go.
"You couldn't do anythmg you normally do out
there," Rays outfielder Carl
Crawford sa1d.

CLASSIFIED

NOTICE OF PUBLICA· Interest they may have
TION
In seld premises or be
IN THE
COMMON forever berred, that
PLEAS COURT OF uponlalturaofsald~aMEIGS COUNTY, OHIO lendants to pay or to
Meigs County Clerk of cause to be paid said
Courts
judgment within three
P.O Box 151100E. 2nd days from Ill rendition
Sl
lhotan Order of Sale be
Pomeroy, OH 45769
IUI\ed to the Sllertlt of
United States of Amar- Meigs County, Ohio, to
lea vs. , Marian appraise, advertise In
Durham, deceased, at the legal Publication
al.
Dally Sentinel and sell
Case No. 08-CV·137
said real estate, lhel
The unknown hetra, eta- the premises be sold
vlsees, legatees, ax- free and clear of all
ecutors, executrixes, claims, llenaandlnteradministrators, admln- est of any of the parties
lstralrlxes and a• herein, that the pro·
algneas of Marian ceecta from the sale .of
Durham,
daceased, said pramlaea be apwhose addresses are plied to the Pialntlff 'a
unknown, will hereby judgment and for such
taka noloce that on Sep- other relief to
!ember 8, 2008, United which United Stelas or
Stales of America, flied Amerlcels entitled
Its Complaint In Fora- Said Defendants are dl·
closure
and Mar· rected to tile Complaint
shalttng ot Liens In the wherein notice under
Common Pleas Court the lair debt collection
of Meigs County, Ohio, practice act Ia given.
100 E
2nd 51, Said Defendants ant rePomeroy, OH 45769 qulred to answer within
being Case No 08.CV- twenty-eight days alter
137 against Marian the publication. Said
Durham,
deceased Delandanto will take
praylnglorludgmentln nollcethat you are ro·
the
amount
of qui red to answer said
$36,418.29 with 1nterest Complaint on or before
thereon according to the 261h day of Nov ,
the terms of the note 2008 or judgment will
lrpmJuly15, 2008untll be rendered accord·
paid and lor toreclo· tngly
sure ol aald Mortgage United States of AmerDeed on the following lea, Plaintiff
deacrlbed real estate, Stephen D. Miles
of which aald Dolan· Vincent A Lewis
donto, Morlan Durham, Attorneys lor Plaintiff
daceaoed wao the 18 W. Monument Av·
owner of:
enue Dayton. Ohio
Real ntate located at 45402
38384 S. R. 6M, (10) 22,29 (Ill 5, 12, 19.
'omaroy, OH 45769
26
•• further deacrlbed tn
Plolntlffa
mortgage
recorded on March 9,
Public Notice
1890 In Volume 178
page 311 of the Mort- IN THE COURT OF
gege Recorda of Molgo COMMON PLEAS
CountY, Ohio.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
lmd that Dolendanta, CltiFinanctal, lnc
unknown holro, d.. Plaintiff
VI-. itgltHo, ex- vo
eculora, erecutrlxeo, Franklin D Ghesn (Doldmlnlatrotoro, admln· ceaaed), ttal.
latratrtxea and ••· Dolondenll
olgneeo of Marian C1ae No. OBCV130
Durham, dactued, be Judge Stephen C
required to 111 up any Crowe

LEGALNOTICE
Unknown hairs, the dovlaees , legatesa, ex·
a c u I o r s ,
administrators, and assigns of Franklin D.
Gheen, and the unknown guardians of
minor and/or lncompatent heirs of Franklin
D Gheen, will lake nolice thot on Auguat 27,
2008, CIIIFinanclal, Inc
flied Ha
Complaint In the Court
of Common Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio,
Case No. 08 CV 130
The object of, and ciamand for relief In, the
Complaint Ia to loreclose the lien of plainIIIIa mortgage recorded
upon the realllllala detcrlbed below and In
which plalnllll alleges
!hal the foregoing defondant has or claims
to heve an Interest·
Situated In the Townohlp of Sallllbury,
Melga County, State of
Ohio:
PARCEL NO.I :
SHualed In the north
partolthetpartofiOO
acre lot No. 157 which
lleo e11t oland edjolnlng Section 29, Town 1.
Range 13 In Sall1bury
Township,
Metg•
County, described aa
follows:
Commencing at the
southeaat comer of a
tot deeded by V.I . Horton
and
Marcua
Bosworth, Moy 27, 1864
to Anthony Roblon;
thence south 2fl 112
deg. well along the
north line of the olreel,
2071est; thence south
26 112 dog. weat along
the north nne of 11id
atreet alorHiid, 30
fHI thence north 25
west to a point 30
IHI from tho northwest
comer of 101 owed by
Donnlo Morrow·
thence eall 30' lest to
Donnil Morrow's northwall comer; thence
along tho well line of
Morrow'a lotto oouthwool com or of aamo
and to tho north llno 0 j
oatd street aloreoald,
and being promloeo

ctag:

- J-------~-

conveyed by deed
recorded In Vol. 71
page 89 Melgo County
DeedRocorda.
PARCEL N0.2·
The easterly hall altha
following
deacrtbed
reelllllate.
Baing a part of lot 157
In Bosworth's AddHion
to the Village of Mlddtaport, Meigs County,
Ohio, commencing at
Mary E. Pennington's
comer, running 40 112
lest along main rosd;
thence across eald lot
toba~klence; thence
to said Pannlngton'a
comer, 431IHII;
thence across said lot
to the place of beginnlng.
Being part of the property by deed recorded
In Vol. 139 page 528
Meigs County Desd
Records.
The defendant named
above Ia required to an·
ower the Complaint
wHhtn twenty-eight (28)
daya altar the last publlcotlon of thlalagel noIlea on Nov. 26, 2008.
l'hlslll!llllnollcewlllbe
published once a weak
lor· six successive
weeks. '
(10) 22, 29 (11) 5, 12, 19,
26
Publlr:Notlce
OWNER'S NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO DECLARE MINERAL INT E R E S T S
ABANDONED
(Ohio
RevtlldCodl5301 .56)
Millon H &amp; Thelma R
Circle and Slmuot M &amp;
Carrie Gainer; and the
unknown heirs, ••·
olgM, executor• or ed·
mlnlatrotors at them all
(tho 'Hotdars" , whOse
oddrueeo are un·
known, Are hereby
given nollce In eccor·
dance with ' and
ouantto Ohio Rev
Coda Slcllon 5301.511
of !he folloWing: That R
• F Farm (herllnlfter
the ''Dwnlr" ) le the
owner of !he following
deacrtbed l'ltll llotete
(lhl "Real Eatall").

:d

PARCEL NO.I: Begin·
nlng at the northwllll
comer of Slcllon No.2,
Town No.3, Range No.
12 of the Ohio Com·
pany'a Purchase, and
being In Sutton Township, Meigs County,
Stale of Ohio; thence
eeat 2740 fest to the
center of the north line
of aaklaecllon; lhonce
south 2640 feet to the
canter of said section;
thence weal1870 IHI;
thence north 1880 feel;
thence east 375 lest to
thecanteroflhepubllc
rood, thence north 16
112 lest, lhence well
1244 fest to the weal
line of said Socllon
No.2,thence north 960
lest to the place of beginning,
containing
133.6 acres, mora or
leu, except 0.6 acre
oul of the north aide
used asa cemetery. Audltor'a Parcel Number:
18-11156.000. Except
from the above deacrtbed reel aotsla,lhe
following: Situated tn
Sulton
Township,
MelgoCounty,SIIteot'
Ohio and being In Seclion 2, Town 3 North,
Range 12 West Dflha
Ohlp Company's Purchall and being d•
ocrtbed as follows·
beglnnlngalthelnltr•
aactlonoiCounlyRoad
28 and County Road
31 ; thence S 61' 39 minuteo 01 eeconda E, a
dlatsnce of 183.7998
feet along the centerline of CoUnty Road 31
toapolnt;thanceS7f
37 mlnutea 41 IIConda
E, a distance of
136.2470 lest along the
centerline or said
County Road 31 to a
point, thence S M ' 41
mlnutea 07 lleCDnda E,
a dlatance of 986.3498
feel along tho centerof uld Coun!Y
ROid 31 to a point;
thence S 88' 00 min·
u111 24 uconda E, a
dte..noe of 133.5707
feet along the - r·
nne of ..ld County
Road 31 to a point;
thence
co min·
ulel 42 ucondo E, 1

nne

s oo·

dlotance
feet to en Iron pin aet,
PMtlng 1n Iron pin lei
at80.37491eetlorrefer·
ence; thence N 88' 07
mlnu... 17 IICOnda W,
a dlotance ol1127.6434
teet along lha agreed
upon property line betwesn the Smith's and
tile Powell's to an Iron
pin aet ; !hence thelollowing alx cello being
10.0 feet East of the
Centerline of a private
road, which Ia a1110
agreed upon property
lines betwesn the
Smllh'a and the Pow·
ell's; N 60' 51 minutes
30 ..condo w, a dlatance of 50 0450 feel; N
52' 27 minutes 12 saconda W, a dlatance of
188.9128 IHI; N 61' 36
minutes 3918C0nds W,
a dlotanca of 225.0103
feel; N 25' 15 mlnutea
59 seconds W, a dla·
lance of 49.7782 teet; N
05" 00 minutes 08 IOC·
onds E, a dletance of
40.0221 lest; N 20' 56
mlnutea 15 IICando W,
a dlolonce of 48.4015
lest to a point In lhl
centerline of Coun!X
Rood 211; thence N 27
35 minutes 52 eeconds
E, 1 distance of
127.2251 teet along the
centerline of aald
county Roed 28 to a
polnl;thanceN22" 43
mlnutea 54 MCondo E,
a distance of 236.0325
lest; to the POINT OF
BEGINNING, said etascribed lrect containtng 18.8150 Acree,
mareorletlo, e•ceptlng
all legal-niland
rlghll of way. Reference Oeeda: Volume
294, Page 181 and Vol·
ume 336, Page 749,
Melga County Dead
Rocordo. lleerlnga are
aaaumtd and are "1r
angle
muauroment
only. The above de.alptlon Ia beNd on 1
ourvey In July IIH by
Robert A. Eaaon, Ohio
P.8. No. 7033. PARCEL
N0.2:
'
Beginning at !he IIOt'lhwell comer of the
northeall quartor of
Section No.2, Town

Rango No. 12;
lhencell0111112115 teet
to the center of 1111
lluh.,.PorllendRoed;
thlnce1101th82' and39
minutes Hll along the
center of said road 6~
teet; thence north 57'
29 mlnute1 ee1t 15'
teet; thence north 1940
feel to the north line of
said Section No.2;
lhoihce west 7481eet to
tlie pliCa of beginning,
containing 34 acres,
more or leaa. Audltor!a
Parcel
Number
18·01160.000. PARCEL
N0.3: Beginning at the
southeast corner altha
aouthweat quarter of
Sactlon No 3, In Town
No.3, Range No. J 2 of
thiJ Ohio
Company'a Purchoae,
and In Cheater Townahlp, County ond State
aforat18ld; lhtnce noilh
882.7 teet; lhlnce west
888.9 feet; thence
south
882.7 feel;
thence east 886.9 feet
to the place of beginnlng, containing 18.05
acres, more or lou. Au·
dllor 'aParceiNumben
03.01164.000
and
03·01162.000. PARCEL
N0.4: Being In Cheater
Townahlp, County and
11111 1fore11ld, and In
Slcllon No.3, and beglnnlng886.91eetweol
ollh8110utheaotcomer
of the IOIIIhweat quarllr of said Section
No.2; thence wnl to
!he centsr of thl
Baahln Racine ROIICI, a
dlotance of 780 feel;
thence along t h e of uld road north 4' 40
mlnutea east580 feet;
thence north 21" 10
mlnuteo oall133 IHI;
thence north 83" 30
mlnuteo Hat 251 teet;
thence north 26' aaot
721 ~; lhance 110uth
74-314 eeot 138 feet;
aoulh 1405 feet
to the place of beginntng, containing It
· more or Ieee. Audltor'l Parcel Number
0301113.000. PARCEL
N0.5: The following,._
acrlllld roel -~~ toceted In tile Townlhlp
of Sutton, County of

•

Melgo and State of
Ohio, and being tn Seclion No.2, Town No.3,
Range No. 12 altha
Ohio Company's Purcha.., and boundad
and described aa lotIowa: Beginning altha
aoulhweal cornor of
northweet quarter of
oald Section No 2,
thance eell about 53
rods and 9 112 fest to
Peter Falla (now owned
by SA MC:CUIIo1!9h and
wile) southwest corner;
then~• north along S.
A. McCullough't west
line to within 1 rod of
the south line of S A
McCullough, wast of
the
llaahen-Raclne
Road; lhlnce eaat to
the canter of the
Bothan·Raclne Road;
thence north 1 rod;
lhoihce wmto the west
line of said Section
No.2; thence aouth to
the place of beginning,
containing about 34
acrn, more or lest Au·
dllor'a Parcel Number
1801161 000. Excepting
4 ecree, more or leas,
conveyedtoRoboirtl.
Byare end Nola Jean
Byars
by
deed
recorded In Volume
249, Page 871, Melgo
County Oeed Recorda.
Reference Oeed: Vol·
ume 264, Page 181 ,
Melgo County Dead
Recorda. That the
owner obtained title to
the Fleal Eotale by
virtue of a Oeed doled
March 9, 2000, and
recorded In Volume
t03,el page 179ofthe
Recorder Rocordo of
Malga County, Ohio ;
That the Real Eolale Is
oub]ect to an exception
and reeervotton of all or
part ot the all and gel
!!he "Mineral Interest")
n the underlying l*cel
one Filar EIUII, which
woa lllcopled and ,....
served In levor of Mil·
ton H &amp; Thelma Fl
Circle, In a Dead wHh
on unknown dote, and
racordld In Volume unknown, ol page unknown otto parcel• 1
through 5; In favor of
Bomuel M &amp; Corrie

Gainer, In a deed dated
August 18, 191!6 , and
recordlld In Volume
129,a1Page223,olthe
records
of
Meigs
County, Ohio., aa to
parcels number 1 and
4; That nona of lila
events apacHI\Id In dlv~
alan (B)(3) of Sactlon
5301.56 of the Ohio R•
vllld Code have Decurred within twenty
(20) years Immediately
preceding the dais on
which, this notice Ia
served, and; That the
._rlntendatollteln
the olllca of the Melga
County, Ohio Rocorctar,
a1 affidavit of Abondonmant regarding !he
Mineral lntereat In the
Real Ealsla at leoal
thirty (30), but not later
than sixty (60), days
alter the date on which
this nollce Is given.
(10)29

Oeatl&amp;ir~

Wprd Ads

HOW I0 Wff.E Afj 6Q
SUccess u Ads
Should Include Tltese Items
To Help Get Response ...

«POLICIES«
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edt~
reject or cancel any
ad at any lime.
Errors Must
rted on the firs
ay of publlcotlo
n4 the Trlbun
ntinet·Reglolor wll
responsible lor n
ore then tho cost

5~:~:::~

.f1

AnnoLnccr'1r.~h

200

Loot &amp; Found
LOST-Forest Run Rl 7
Area .2 DOGS small yellowtsh color M and F

10/23 pLEASE
740-411Hl799-

CALL

Home lmpro"""anto

lost

white

500

Sc:ftool
Gallipolis Career

College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call TOdayt 74()..446·4367

Other S.rvi...

1·800·214·0452

Cremai!Ons

gaM tpoll!scareercolege edu
Accred ited MemberAccred11

Call

""'""""""""'""='"""""""'
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI

2 Female 1!2 Jack Aussell, 1!2 Australian Shepherd m1x 1 brawn 1
black 304 675-5313
CKC Rat terners 6 wks
old
$100
each

lees or Insurance
0
1 c
0

Call

onsumer
free
at

1 866 278.(1()()3 to learn

;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,,;,;,;;,;;;;;,;,,.,., II lt1e mortgage broker or

Domestia /Janitorial

lender

Is

::::::;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;~~~~~ censed (ThiS

.. . ...•.

....••.....••........•.310

ChlldiEiderly Care
• ••.. • •••• .• • 312
Computers. .......... .. ....... ........ .. .... 314
Contractors . •... • • •............................ 316
Domest1cs1Janltorla1 ............... .................... 318
Electrical.............
•• • .... • •••• •..• 320
Financial..........
•. ...• . ................ 32~
Health ••.•• . ....•••.
•• ..... . ......... ..326
Heating &amp; Coaling ... • ............ •• ••..
•.•• 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance .................................................... 332
Lawn Service........ .. ...... . ..••... ....••.. • ..• 334
Muolc/Danc:e/Droma ... . ••.•• . ..••.. . ..••. 336

other Services. ... ... .... ...

.... 338

Plumbing/Electrical • ••• ••••• • .•• •
• •.340
Proteaalonal Services. ••••••••• •................. 342

Jlepal1'11 •......•.•••.....•...••..•.•••.•••• ..••••..•....•..••344
Roofing ................................. .. ...... . .... 346
Security................. . . . ..... ... . ....
.. ... 348
Trur/Accountlng.
. . •.. , ...
350
Travel/Entertainment . ......
..... 352

Publishing Company)

www comtc:s.com

© 2008

male
$300 oo
vet
checked 1st shots &amp;
wormed,w/ papers
parents on prermses call
304·593·6256

Recreational Vehlclea .•••.........•..•.•............ 1000
AT'V .................... •• ........................ • ••• 1005
Bicycles... . . , .•.....
.•... ......•..1010
Boata/Acceaaorlea •• •••
•• .• 1015
CamperiRVa &amp; Trailers. •••.•
• •.••••• 1020
Motorcycles. .
. ..••••....: .......•••........• 1026
Oth............ .........................................., ....1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automollve ••........................ .......... . . 2000
Auto RentaVLeaee ...... .
...• . ....•...•2005
Autoa .••••
. .. 2010
Claaalc/Antlquee
• 2015
Commerclalllnduatrla1 ......... ............. .. 2020
Parts &amp; Acc•aorlea..................................2025

Sports Utility ..• ••.•••.•...•........•••....•.....•...•2030

Truck............. .....•....... .. • ..•.. .. ·t•······2035
Utility Trailer•··. .. . .......
...... ... 2QIIO
Vane • ••••• •. •• .•.•••••••
• .•••• •••••••••• 2045
Want to buy.. .. ......... .........................2060
Rul Elltata Sal• ...................................... 3000
CanMttery Plote ................................ . ... ,..•.3005
Commercial
.•• •••••••
•....... 3010
Condomlnlume ... . ••••• • . .• • • •••• 3015
For Sale by Owner••_. •
............3020
HouUII for Sale
....... • • .................... 3026
Land (Ac:ntogo) ••• -. .......................... .......... 3030
Lola ............ •............................................3035
Want to buy . ....•..... . ....................3040
Real Eatate Rental&amp;...
• ..•..•. ............ 3500
Apartmenta/Townhouaea ••• •••.••• ••••••••• 3505

Commercial.... .•.•. •

....•.••..•..•..•.••..•3$10

Condomln1uma ......................................... 3515
HouMa for Rent ............................... ....... 3520

Land (Acr&lt;Nige) ..•...
Storaae...
. .........
Financial ... .
.......................................400• Want to Rent
•• •••••
Financial Servlcea ....................................... 405 Manufactured Houelng

Insurance .............................................410
MollltYtO Lend . . ......... . •............ 415
Education . •••.• •••• • •. •..•••. • • •••• . .••.. 500
Bualneaa &amp; Trade SchoOl.... . ••••..........•.• 505
tnetrucuon &amp; Training •••••••••••• ,••••••• , .......... 510
•........................................ 515
Leaaona • ••••
Pe1'11onal .................................................... 520
Animate............... .
. ••....... ..••. • . ..•• 600
Animal Supplies
... ...... ..••
. .•. 605

Horwt...
.

IO·l4

available. (740)992·1328

ences 304-773·5814

............... 610

..

•......................................81G

......................... ........................820

Want to buy..... ...................

•••••••• 625

Agriculture...... . . .. ..•. ..•. .
Fann Equlp"*'t •.. .. • .•
O.rden a Produce... •.

..•.. 700
.•... 705

• ••••. .. ••••••••• 710

Hay, FMd, Seed, Grain .......................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ....................... .................. 720
Want to buy ...............................................725
Merchandlae ...............,.... .. ... .•.. ......•.. 900
Antlquoa •• ••. ···-·-··• ...... .......... ........905
Appliance ...••...•.....•........••.... .....••••. 910
Auctions . •...........................................915
Bargain Basement ....................................920

Collecllblea.... •..••••......•... . .• •.
.... 925
Compotere ........................... . ·--···-· • ....•• $30
Equlpment/Suppllea....
..•. · · ········ · .a36
Flu Marketa ••• • •••• •••• •••• . •••••••• •• • ••••• 940
Fuel 011 Cooi/Woad/Ooa ••.•••.. •..•••••••• ......••• 145
Furniture . ....... ....................... ••..
·- i50

Hobby/Hunt6 Sport.......

... .
. ...•

...•••. . 955
• .•.•960

3525
...... •.. ...... 353$

•. •.••. • . •••••. 3540
.......•••.............. 4000
Lota .............................................................4005
Movere...................... .. ........ , .•.•, ...4010
~ntela ............. • •..•••• • • •••••••• •
..4015
sa... ...... . . ......... .. . . .... . . ...... 4020
Supptlea ...., . ..• . •...... . . •...........•. 4025
Went to Buy .. •• ....... •••• •••••••••••••.•• 4030
R.roort Property .......................................5000
Resort Property for ule. . .•.•. ..........• 5025
Resort Property tor rent
5050

EmploymeM. •....••.

.

•.•...6000

AccountlngiFinanclal.. ••• ••••
.•••.•••••.6002
Admlnlatratlva1Profesalonal .....................6004
Ceshl•!Cierk ..........~................................6006

Child/Elderly c........... .... ....... . ......- 6008
Clerteal ...... . ...•.. . •. .••... ...•...• .6010
Construction ............

•

•·r· • •

••• •

6012

brlvera &amp; Delivery ......
...... .. ... _, ... 6014
Education ........................... .,.................... 8018
Elec:lrfcal Plumbing ..................................6018
Employ"*'! AgenclrM.............. .. •... . .. 6020
En-111..-t.. .•.•.••...•. . ..••••..• ,•.••..•.. .602~
Food S..VIcea ••••••••••••••••••••• - •••• 6024'"
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .•... ..•...........6026
Help •ntad- General ................................ 8028
Lew Erifon:e"*1t.....................................6030

Melntenance1Domeatlc ••...•..••••....•..•.••....,.6032
Men~pen~IIIOfY ···- .•.• •.•11034
U.Chanlce ••••••• ••
Medical
Mualcel. •• • • ••••• •

.••••••••• ·····-···... . .
..••. . •. .•••
. .•••••• •.......... 6040

Pan-n .....TomporarfH ............................ 6042

Mlacellaneou&amp; . ..•.. . • . . ...
- .•.•.... 1i165
Want to buy. ...... ••••••••••. ...... .•••• • .. ........... 870

Rntliuranta ..................
• ..••• • •••• -~ .8044
Sa..a........................ . . •... • •.. . .•• •
&amp;048
Technical Trac:te. ... •• • • . •. • •• ••••••••• •6050

Yard S.le .................................................... 975

TextlleiiF.cto&lt;y....

Kkt's Corner•• ······-··· ...

Aportmenb/
Townhouas

or

~
NEA, Inc.

,...

tlons Office of Consumer
Affa1rs BEFORE you rell
nance your home or Obta1n a loan BEWARE of
requests for any large
adyance
payments
of

.•••.. 6052

ReR.Ials

~

Money To Lend
i-74;.;0,.·9~85~·-41~38~"!"''"'::~
;;;;;;io;;;;=;i;;;;o;;;;o;;;;o;;;;;;; For Sale Shth Tzu Pup· ""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"' """'""'""'""'""'""'""' ""'""'""'""'""'""'"""'
NOTICE Borrow Smart pies
Mlocoltanaouo
Compero/ RVo &amp;
Contact the OhiO DIVI· Bom
08·28·08
CKC
Trailero
puppiBS
for NEW AND USED STEEL
sian of Financta! lnstltu Reg 1 female $350 00 3 Shih tzu

Looking to take care of the
Htce
lt1e Elderly Have Refer Afflars
toll

Wanted ....... .•... . . • . ..•. • . ••... .
235
Services....... • •••• • ••
•• •• • •• •••••••••• 300
Appliance Service.. . • ,.••.• •..••••••• 302
Automotive ..••• ••••:.... ••• .. •••••••••••••••••••••••••• , 304
Building Materlala ...................................... 306
Bualneaa ..................................................... 308

Petti.

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

446·2115 ask for Lon

Ca
ChI'ld t•u-rly
•re

Noticeo ..••••..•.•........ .. .-.............. ....•• . .. 225
Peraonala.. ...... . .
...... ....... . .... 230

Llveatock •••

:.:&lt;7::::40:)!:99=2=0=17=4===: ut1l ties patd no pets
dep
&amp;
ref
Real Esta1e (740)992 0165

::;:
3500

properly I!
IS a publtc
Will dO housekeepmg 10 serv1ce
announcement
Gallipolis
area
Call from the Ohio Valley

OhiO

Twtn R1vers Tower ts ac·
cepting app1 1cahons for
walt ng ltst for HUD sub·
sld1zed 1 BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled

2 350011 axles 2 wheel ~"";;;'1.;;67;.;5~6;,;67;.;9~.._-"'"!
brakes w/ramp for 5 Beech St Middleport 2
acres n Meiijs County br furnished apartment

sale part~ally housebro· Steel Beams P1pe Rebar
ken &amp; 3 months old far
Concrete
Angle
(740)416·6449
Channel Flat Bar Steel
::-.oi-":!:"'~-:~--- Oratmg for Ora~ns OnveYoride Ftupp1es for sale ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
s;350 &amp; $450 Vet recOm· Scrap Metals Open Mon
8 wks old Tue
Wed
&amp;
Frl
Free 1o good home One mended
adull (F) black and while
earn 4 30pm
Closed
cat, 1 (M) black cal. Cal·
Thurs
"Sat
&amp;
Sun
leo ktHens 339-9744
74Q-446 7300
?-==~~;;.;...~.
Free to good home Cap· ::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; New Lennox Pulse Fur·
per nose Beagle looks """":
nace down draft With ex
young
Call
fal'llll EquipmMI
tra parts, 90 000 BTU
740..645·0235 aher 6pm
$699 00 740446 _4306
Miniature
Schnauzers EBV,
INTEGRITY,

Dr

... 100
.••. ..... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .. . ....
. ...205
Happy Ada... ••••••••••• •• •••••• •• . •• •
•..210
Last &amp; Found ..•.•...........••........••............215
Memorymtank You ..................... ............... 220

Catorlng . ....... .

;;;;;;;o.-~~:;;:-;ii;i'::-;;
Trad e 1995 Chevy Con
vers1on Van, excellent
condit1on easy on gas
also
wftratler
76'x 16

Pill

Now taking bids tor
pa1nt1ng and or cleantng
AKC Reg Lab puppies
of vacant units Must pro- ...,.,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,., far sale 1st shots &amp;
vide proof at Workers =
wormed
$250

Free
Rent
SpecJal!ll
2&amp;3BR and up Central
A1r WID hookup tenant
pAys electnc EHO Elm
Vtew
Apts
(304)882 3017
~--~-~:-·
Spnng
Valley
Green
Apartments 1BR tor rent
$375
month

""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"' 740·446·1599
Lond (Al:raago)

1ng Counc1l for Independent
and Sct1oa1s 1'274B

Co ~ ages

74Q-379·9515
74Q-645·6857

Compansa11on and l1abU

tGwn
hw &amp; t1l e floors
updated kitchen &amp; baths
pnvacy fence &amp; above
ground
pool
secunty
system much more 130
Bast1an1 Dr S129 OOOFor
p1cs and mformat1on go
to
www orvb com
446 2923

Buoineu &amp; Trade

puppy.laSI seen 1n Syra· 740-446 3745
cuse area $50 reward for
retum 740·591 ·71137
Proluaional S.rviceo

&lt;ty
lllSurance Please
call Honey Suckle Hills
Apts
740-446-3344 or
by offiCe at 266 Co-

Aportmanto/
Townho-•
4 bed 2 balh &amp; off ce tn ;;;;;;;=--==;;;;;;;---;;;

kttncarlyle@comcast.net

Basement
Waterproofing
Uncondlt onal lifellme
guarantee Local refer
ences furn1shed Estab
ltshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs
74Q-446.0870 Rogers
Basement Wateproof1ng

Maltese Pel

Houoeo For Salt

Edu:ll1on

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals....... .. ..•... . .
Announcements

Sunday Display: 1 :00 p.m.

Thursday for Sundays Pa

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Numller And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 D•ys

Wantocl

We
will
no
nowtngty accept on
tlvertlsement
I
lotation of the law

In-Column: 9~00 a.m.

For Sundays Paper

• All ada must be prepaid'

PUBLISHING CO
rec·
No Fee Unless We Wmt
ommends that you do
1·888·582 3345
business wi th people you ~---------~
know, and NOT to send Homes or busmess to
money through the mall ct ean permanent or one
unttl you have lnvest1gat 11me
$,0 hrly
Call
1ng the offering
740.245-5273
please
leave a message

This
newspape
&lt;;eepts only hel
anted eds maetln
OE standards.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Day• Prior To
Publication

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

AEWAADIIII !I

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY

Current rote car
pplles

ui

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00forlarge

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Noticoo

Box number ada a
lways confldanlial.

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In ~ Column : 9.:00 a.m.
Monday- Friday for ln!lertlon
In Next Day's Paper

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

968.

.
of 534.03511 No.3,

·

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In One Week With Us
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Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446·3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

All Real Estal
vertisemenll a
ubjectiD lha Fodera
atr HoUsing Act

'IE-tllJI;:Io•lc::": J'""ooifc.t:l.c::":e- l..:ra J"'looiloe-,.......Npap~-s
""trOJ1Ua- IC.Aght t&lt;» I .I&lt;: . . o"YV. I&gt;-etA&amp;verec:l. R.Ag:ht 't.e&gt; ""!!r:'"c::» ... r I&gt;c:.c::»r..

tster

mrtbune - Sentinel -

Holnies to return to Steelers' lineup vs. Redskins

Smith, Woodson, Sharpe among
NFL Hall of Fame candidates

www.mydallysentinel.com

KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE
STOCK
TRAILERS.
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP
MENT
TRAILERS
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
S3999 VIEW OUR ENTIRE TRAILER lNVENTORYAT
WWW CARMICHAEL·
TR ~ILERS COM
740-446-3825
~---""':'~~~~
Have you pnced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpnsedl Check out our
used
Inventory
at
wwwCAREQ eom
CarmiChael
Equ1pmenl

STEEL ARCH
BUILDINGS

• at

Carm1chael

740 446 3825
~~~~~~~~

Automotive

2000

Autoo
~~~='"!"=~~
2001 PontiaC Grand AM
payments
take
over
304·675·3166
2006 Durango 4 wheel
dnve, leather sun roof &amp;

Mat:le tn USA Three
player
$10 000
cancelled orders
wtH DVD
256·
1618
sell for bal ance owed
16x24 &amp; 2Sx36 Call
Tnrcb
today to save thou·

sands' 800·352·0469
Travel

trunk

14•

14"/Whlgh

1998
lr

GMC

$650ren1

-=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=~
ir
ave- n pee a
Clip th1s AD and take t
w1th you when you viSit
our commun1ty to get
thiS spectal dtscount
Move 1n m Nov and get
$100 00 off your 2BA
Apt n Dec Currently
rentmg 1 &amp; 2 BA untts
Spac1ous lloor plans
ranch &amp; townhome style
llvmg playground &amp;
basketball court on s1te
laundry fac1llty 24 hr
emergency mamle·
nance QUiBI coun try lo
catton close to maJor
medical
facilities
ph alil1aC1es grocery
store 1ust mm utes
aW!y from other major
shopping tn the area
Honeysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colontal Dr ve S-113

Bidwell Ohtc 4561 4
740·446·3344
OH1ce Hours M W F
9AM 5PM

98439 0

Beautiful Apts at Jackson Estates. 52 West·
wood Or from $365 to
$560
740 446 2568
Equal Houstng Opportu
ntty ThiS 1nst tul1on ts an
Equal Opportumty Pro
vtder and Employer
Brand new duplex wtth 2
BR 1 s baths attached
gar front 1 back porche&amp;
Land for your flowers I
garden
tully equipped
kitchen
wheelchair ac
cesst ble
Midway
between Jackson and Gallt
polls on H1ghway 35
Rent $600 Call for app11
cat1on to 740 236 1872
or e ma11 ro southohto
INmg @gmall cam
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts at V1Hage
Manor
and
R1vers1de
Apts In Middleport from
10
$327
$592
740 992 5064
Equal
Housing Opportuntty
Ntce
Clean
Ground
Floor 2br WID hookup
Reterences/OeposttiNo
PelS 304 675 5162

Don1

Now acceptmg
appi!CBIIOflS at
Valley Vtew Apartments
BOO State Route 325
Thurman Oh10 45685

leather · StenCiled S A need
COL
$6 500
Couch Pt Pleasant Va 304 773-5343
dtd May t858·phone 304 ;;;;,;,;,;;;,;;;;,;;:,,.,,.,,.,,. ·

Vans

592 1547 1n evenmg

Wont To Buy

01 Oldsmob&lt;IO Stlhouene

!!'"'~~!""'-:"'~~ 98000 mtle

1 owner
Buymg tools sell or trade ovo player great cond
mechamc-carpenter lawn $5495 740 441·9322
&amp; garden power tools
Call 740 388 • 1515 or ceR
Want To Buy

7 ~208 • 0320

~-.-.-::""'::":--~
Top Dollar • s!l
ver/gotd
co1ns
any
t01()f4KI18K gold Jew
elly dentaJ gold, pre
1935
US
currency

proollmlnl

se1S.

~iiii:"'iiiiiOO~~:'
CarS Trucks and GMC
Satum Bwck SUV s wnh
warranty
y 151 t us at
(gocdookmotors com)
Cook Motors 328 Jack
son Pike 740·446-0103

ma·

b-----,;,.,/1
18A Apt

W/D hookups

satellite TV tnsJ ~ w/rent
close to hospital Call

740·339 0362
2 bedroom hvtng room
kitchen bath Apartment
Have Central Atr fur
mshed
With
couch
cha1rs
washer
dl)'er
stove m1crowave beds
dm1ng table and cha1rs
$400 depOSit $450 a

monlh

740.245-9170
1 2 Bedroom Apartments
w1th appliances tum1shed
On s te laundry tacll1ty
Call for details or p1ck up
apphcaiiOn at rental
OffiCe
Posstb1hty of rental
aSSIStance
Equal Hous1ng
Opportunity

TOO# 419-526-0466
'ThiS 1nSt1tu110n IS an
Equal Opportumty
'prov1der and Employer"

Call

monds MTS Co1n Shop Wan1
~-------.-.--~:Leave
Wood I Gao
to buy Junk Cars 304 882 2523
-;;;==~==;;;;-~ · 151 2nd Avenue, GaUl call 740 388 0884
Message and Number if

'Seasoned Ftrewood CAA polls 446 2842
HEAP
accepted

not at Home
~
2 ~B~A·A~pa·n•m•e•n•1~&amp;~2~BR
House on 5lh St P1

&amp;15·5946or44Hl941

Yard Sale

Hardwood 446 9204

35 Grape St Fn &amp;
InSide
and
Outside

'='s.·a·SOI--10&lt;1~--:F~"~ew'"ood~

740 591 5174

or44 1·0 110

m1leS 7 0 eng1ne gas 5
speed trans 24 ft bed

tooled GVW 25950 lbS

740-446-;,;,;~2
~
~4~1 2~~~~ Absolute

fwA 1~ 1Cool/

RV
Servtce
Trailers

3BR 1000 sq ft Hard
wood floors WID No pet

sat ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
HouMa for Sale

Ael1red Teachers Salel ~~--""!'=~=;;;
StiCkers
toys posters 186 North Park Dr call
~~~~#.~""':':" et~ Clothes household, 304 675 5640
or
Jet Aeratton MotOfS re· b1kas Jewelry
304·593 1204 w1t1 sell on
pa1red, new &amp; rebUttt 1n ~~"'::"~-::-- Land Contract or Oul
stock Call Ron Evans Yard
Sale
Syracuse R1ght Also a We lhngton
1288 P1ano call to{ appomt
1 800-537 9528
Fn 10131 &amp;Sat 1111
Dusky St
furniture
he both
FOf Sale Wood Burner tools hOusehold 1tems
ment to see 1 m

Miactlloneous

Pleasant
304 81 2 4350
ask lor Don
:Ta~ra____":""o·w-.nh~ous~e
2BR APT
441·0194

C1A

(740) Apartments • 2BR 1 5
bath back pai!O pool
~~~!"""--~ playground {trash sewJ br S400 a mo I br age
water
pd )
$295 a mo plu s uttllties 425/rent
$425/sec
&amp;
depostt
3rd
St
'7 40 367 0541
Racme (740)24 7·4292
dep Call

s

3 rooms and balll up
Comrnoroal
sta1rs
Complelely fur
Movmg
Sale
Cvunlry 2 br 1 b full basement mshed w•th WID No 2 bay servtce statiOn 1
Far Sale· One
?0,000 Home decor and tum1 above ground pool de
Jackson
P1ke
Lease
BTU floor furnace $50 00 lure At 218 to Netghbor- !ached double garage pels Ref Aeq 441 0245
reqUired Call 446 3644
304-675·2902
hood Ad Oct 30, Nov 1
fenced-In back yard mce ~
2B~A:-"c~lo~se-t~o~hos·p-.
,ta':'l ;;;;lo;,;rmi!o!!re!!'i!nf!;!
o;,,.,,.,,.,
GIVeaway • maple stereo Oct 31 &amp; Nov1 at 169 netghbofhood m Ractne wid hookup appl fur =
With mdlo 304-675 1765
Buckridge
Ad
(740)992-1424
nt$hed 74o 441 3702 or -;;;;•Hou=•-iiiiiifor;i;;;;R;;;antiiiiii=
~••-y Bak1ng
Now 9am
--::::"'~:'::::"":!~~!:" 74Q-286 5789
~
nuwuo
BD HOUSE IN CHES· ~~~~~-~:" '\:: ! \~ flWI ' " bed 1 bath
a~8llablej ~~g choc::o~~~ l'EROhCONTACT
CONVENIENTLY
LO Ban~ Rcpu' l~"'i- do~~on t &lt;.
lales g az
ruit nuts
740-985-4131
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD H ''"' R&lt;"y APR 1 lm 11 "' 10 1!~
~~..,....,..,.,---~

$350 00 Ca11740 2370

3

4

~~~ ~~gandCo:,v~

-"":-::'·:•"
:-~'~~-":",_"."-~'~=

ABLEI Townhouse apam rt
1 S4wmo .. deposit 1BA
5 81
Bed 2 Bath HUD ments
and/or
.- . . , . , . , , . , . , , , . , , . , Homes' Oflly S19 900 tor hOuses tor rent
Call Rg&amp;Ret
turn
W&amp;O
i-!i'~~~~--"':!'~
Campen f IV• &amp;
hsungs 80Q.620 4946 ex 740-44 I 1111 lor apph hookup No sleps Very
Molktlan
Carpet
Fall
Trailers
A019
cation &amp; tnlormatiOn
clean
114 Slate St
Spec~a1 20 oz Commer·
740 441-Q596

Camdu5
SlOre
74()..379.tt 10

Cl81

Carpet

3

Ad

$6 95/yard

RV

serviCe

Several
Colors chael
740-446-7444 Quality al 740446 •3825

low P.-1

at

Carmt Fl1r Sale 2 ~hlP. at :!" I~ \It 28A garage Apartn.ent
'\\e Pt Ple1-.an1 OOwntown $425 mth rent Small 2br House S400
4br lba 1~ b.t-..: :t~l•ng
utthtteS NO PETS month
No Pets
No
St&lt;OOOO J0.1 671 2601
446.()415
Smokmg 304-773-9192

Tmiters \t!mtm

+"

�•

Wednesday, October 29, 2008
'

• Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 29. :zooS

www .mydailysentinel.com

Sports Shorts

PITTSBURGH (AP)
The Pittsburgh Steelers
won't f.urther pumsh w1de
rece1ver Santomo Holmes
CANTON (AP) - Defens1ve end Bruce Smith, defen- tor bemg charged la st
stve back Rod Woodson and light end Shannon Sharpe are week with a manjuanaamong first-year cand1dares for mduction into the Pro related offense and plan to
Football Hall of Fame
start h1m Monday night in
. The list mcludes 110 players, seven coaches and 16 con- Washmgton
tnbutors, mcludmg former NFL Comm1sswner Paul
Holmes, who Jed the
:ragliabue and longt1me team owners Bud Adams, Jerry NFL 111 yards -per-catch
~ones , Art Modell and Ralph Wtlson.
last season, was benched
Hall of Fame selectors w1ll choose 25 candidates who for the Steelers ' 21-14 los&gt;
will be announced later th1s month as semifinalists. The Sunday to the New York
iield w1ll then be narrowed to IS by a mail ballot. The Gtants and was not m um inductees w1ll be selected from among those I 5 and the two fo rm He was allowed to
semor nommees prev1ously announced, Bob Hayes and return to the team after
Claude Humphrey. They were selected m August by a speaking to h1s teammates
;semor selection comm1ttee
and 1ssumg a public apoloThe class of inductees will be chosen at the selection gy on Monday
~ommlttee 's annual meetmg on Jan 31, 2009, m Tampa,
The NFL could punish
fla., the day before the 2009 Super Bowl As few as four Holmes once h1 s case IS
and as many as seven can be selected.
resolved, but coach M1ke
To be considered for Hall of Fame election , a nom mated Tomlin sa1d there Will be
player or coach must be ret1red for at least five years. A no addtllonal action take n
contributor, who has. made outstandmg career contnbutlons by the team. Tomhn dtd
lo pro football m capactues other than playmg or coachmg, not say 1f Holmes was
)nay still be active m h1s pro football career
fined , although he likely
was
·Ex-Ohio lawmaker ordered to pay tine Holmes, a th1rd-year
COLUMBUS (AP) - A 'former state lav.maker who
adm1tted he bought Ohio State Univers1ty football tickets
w1th campa1gn money and sold them for a personal prof1t
:won't have to serve Jall time
But a Franklm County JUdge on Tuesday d1d order former
state Rep John Wtdowfield to pay $2,000 in fines after
Wtdowfield pleaded gu1lty to two fust degree misdemeanor
charges - fihng a false financ1al dtsclosure statement aod
convertmg campaign funds mto personal use.
Both of the charges earned a posstble six month jail sentence.
The Repubhcan from Cuyahoga (keye-uh-HOH' -guh)
Falls near Akron res1gned from the Legi slature m May He
apolog1zed earher th1 s month and sa1d he had re1mbursed
h1s campa1gn $13 ,676 to cover the profit from the ticket
sales
mel fect1ve on offense w1th
the conservative Tressel
callmg the shots. ln his 98
games as head coach, the
fromPageBl
Buckeyes have fad ed to
score an offens1ve touchPryor would have run or down mne limes.
thrown the ball away
made 11 cle&lt;~r that
mstead of making that final h1sTressel
ent1re offense - wh1ch
pass. '
"We probably could have has not produced a touchp1cked up about 15 yards down m three of the Iast
and that would have been seven games - was to
my first preference b0cause blame mstead of smgl mg
then we would have been out Ptyor or the offens1ve
somewhere mstde the 20 hne .
"The inconsistency that
and maybe we had three
shots at the end zone," he we've had across the board
swd "But c~rtamly, you'd - and not JUSt up front,
love to throw 11 away and across the board - has lent
1tself to not bemg ecstatic
live to see another play"
This 1s not the hrst ume about our offensive perforthat Oh10 State has been mance," he sa1d.

Tressel

player out
of Ohto
State, was
c harged
wtth
a
m1 sdeNOTEBOOK me an or
count of
possession
of a small amount of manJUOna followmg a police
stop Thursday. Holmes has
a prehmmary heanng
before a Ptltsburgh distnct
JUdge on Nov 24
"As a football team and
an orgamzat10n, m terms
of our v1ew of the situation, we 've latd it to bed ,"
Tomhn sa1d Tuesday.
''Satisfactory action• has
been taken from our standpow!. . For us, we're
movmg forward."
Tomlm doesn't care 1f
the NFL players ' umon is
unhappy the Steelers chose
to effect1vely suspend
Holmes for an 1ssue that is
covered by the NFL's sub-

th1s
one
Whenever
resumes , it will pick up
where 1t left off, With the
Phtl!ies about to bat in the
fromPageBl
bottom of the s1xth.
Ace p1tcher Cole Hamels
worst condtllons I've ever
1s
set to lead off for the
played m," Tampa Bay th1rd
Phds
For sure, the Phllhes
baseman Evan Longona
wlll send up a pmch-hitter
smd
agamst
Grant Balfour,
A puddle formed on home who'd prevwusly
reheved
plate and umpue Jeff
Kazm1r.
starter
Scott
Kellogg resorted to using a
Then what? Do the Rays
to.,.,el rather than the usual counter
w1th another pttchwh1sk broom to w1pe 1t er, and Immediately pull
clean
Balfour?
Batters kept blmkmg back
If Pena had not tied 11,
the ram drops and p1tchers Selig sa1d he would not
struggled w1th the1r footing. have let the Ph1llies wm
Strong gusts dropped the , wtlh a game that was called
wmd-ch1ll factor mto the after six innings.
30s, and fielders covered
"It's not a way to end a
the1r bare hands between World Series," he sa1d "I
p1tches.
'would not have allowed a
All-Star shortstop J1mmy World Series to end this
Rollins of the Phlllies way."
chased a popup all over and
Fine by the Rays
dropped it for a tough error
"The World Series always
m the fifth There were should be dec1ded by nine
pools of water at every base inmngs w1th somebody
and the Phtlhe Phanattc- makmg the final out, not the
wore a ram shcker for hi s weather or natural disasters
routme .
or whatever," rehever
"The mfield was tough Trever Mlller sa1d "That's
The ball would do funny what fans pay to see. That's
thmgs," Pht!lies second what we work hard for all
bas~man. Chase Utley sa1d
year."
"It was in bad shape. It was
Tuesday was supposed to
not playable."
be a travel day, tf necessary.

Series

stance abuse pohcy.
"I'm not concerned
about the1r vtew whether
we chose to ac uvate h1m ,"
Tomhn sa1d "We've got
53 men on the team. We
chose to activate 45 for a
part1cular game. That's
what we chose to do and
move forward."
The Steelers never sa1d
before the Gtants' game
that Holmes was suspended . mstead handlin g the
matter by deacttvattng
h1m .
Holmes' absence hurt the
Steelers· offt:nse dunng a
game m wh1ch, except for
a 65-yard touchdown pass
to Nate Washington on
Pittsburgh 's fmt flay of
the second hul , Ben
Roethhsberger did not
complete a pass to a w1de
rece iver longer than 14
yards
Roethh sberger
was
under a heavy pass rush
and was sacked five times,
Instead . the teams w1ll stay
m the area and then head
back to Trop1cana Fteld 1f
the Rays v-1n.
The delay , however,
forced the Rays to find a
10
comfortable
hotel
W1lmmgton, Del., about 25
nules away.
About 10 minutes after
tbe game was officially suspended,' an announcement
was made telling fans
wrapped m plastic sheets
they were done for the
mght.
By then , many had left
the1r seats and streamed mto
the
concotfrses. They
crowded six or seven deep,
uyi ng lo see any of the
game before the umps signaled for the tarp
Because it was only hghtly raining when the game
started, MLB hoped 1! could
play a fu!J nine mnings . It
quickly became apparent
this rain wouldn't quit.
By the middle inmngs,
the grounds crew was runmng shuttles onto the field ,
carrymg bags of a drying
agent - baseba!l 's version
of cat litter ~ to absorb the
water.
No luck.
"A lot of guys couldn't
beheve we were shll play-

pushmg h1s season total to
23 - th1rd most m the
league
As
a
result,
Roethli sberger IS dealmg
aga m w1th a sore right
shoulder - he was dtagnosed several weeks ago
wllh a slight separation and may offtctally return
to the team's IDJUry hst
Wednesday
Roetlllisberger may not
practice Wednesday or
Thursday beca use the
Steelers have an' extra day
to prepare for the Monday
n1ght game
"Same thm~ . nght shoulder," Tomlin said of
Roethhsberger 's IDJury.
"That 's going to contmue
to be week to week . It was
better last week because he
rarely got h1t (Oct. I 9) versus the Bengals He got h1t
a few limes on Sunday.
We' II see how he feels
when he \;O mes m here on
Wednesday"
mg." Rays shortstop Jason
Bartletl sa1d.
.
B ,J Upton beat out an
infield hll with two outs m
the s1xth on , a ball that
Rollins bobbled. Upton
stole second and made an
impress1ve dash home on
Pena 's h1t, navtgatmg the
slippery basepaths and shdmg m when left fte!der Pat
Burrell's throw plopped
mto a puddle.
Fans showed up hoping
they• d be Witnesses to a
World Senes championship
Shane Vtctonno got them
' cheenng w1th bases-loaded
smgle 10 the first for a 2-0
lead off Kazm1r
Maddon tinkered with his
lmeup , droppmg the slumping Pena and Longoria one
spot each 'C. they were a
combined 0-for-29 with' 15
stnkeouts after feur games.
The Tampa Bay stars
ended theu h1tless ruts m
the fourth when Pena dol.lbled off the nght-f1eld wall
and Longona followed with
an RBI smgle up the middle
that made 11 2-1.
A few mnings later, it was
lime to go.
"You couldn't do anythmg you normally do out
there," Rays outfielder Carl
Crawford sa1d.

CLASSIFIED

NOTICE OF PUBLICA· Interest they may have
TION
In seld premises or be
IN THE
COMMON forever berred, that
PLEAS COURT OF uponlalturaofsald~aMEIGS COUNTY, OHIO lendants to pay or to
Meigs County Clerk of cause to be paid said
Courts
judgment within three
P.O Box 151100E. 2nd days from Ill rendition
Sl
lhotan Order of Sale be
Pomeroy, OH 45769
IUI\ed to the Sllertlt of
United States of Amar- Meigs County, Ohio, to
lea vs. , Marian appraise, advertise In
Durham, deceased, at the legal Publication
al.
Dally Sentinel and sell
Case No. 08-CV·137
said real estate, lhel
The unknown hetra, eta- the premises be sold
vlsees, legatees, ax- free and clear of all
ecutors, executrixes, claims, llenaandlnteradministrators, admln- est of any of the parties
lstralrlxes and a• herein, that the pro·
algneas of Marian ceecta from the sale .of
Durham,
daceased, said pramlaea be apwhose addresses are plied to the Pialntlff 'a
unknown, will hereby judgment and for such
taka noloce that on Sep- other relief to
!ember 8, 2008, United which United Stelas or
Stales of America, flied Amerlcels entitled
Its Complaint In Fora- Said Defendants are dl·
closure
and Mar· rected to tile Complaint
shalttng ot Liens In the wherein notice under
Common Pleas Court the lair debt collection
of Meigs County, Ohio, practice act Ia given.
100 E
2nd 51, Said Defendants ant rePomeroy, OH 45769 qulred to answer within
being Case No 08.CV- twenty-eight days alter
137 against Marian the publication. Said
Durham,
deceased Delandanto will take
praylnglorludgmentln nollcethat you are ro·
the
amount
of qui red to answer said
$36,418.29 with 1nterest Complaint on or before
thereon according to the 261h day of Nov ,
the terms of the note 2008 or judgment will
lrpmJuly15, 2008untll be rendered accord·
paid and lor toreclo· tngly
sure ol aald Mortgage United States of AmerDeed on the following lea, Plaintiff
deacrlbed real estate, Stephen D. Miles
of which aald Dolan· Vincent A Lewis
donto, Morlan Durham, Attorneys lor Plaintiff
daceaoed wao the 18 W. Monument Av·
owner of:
enue Dayton. Ohio
Real ntate located at 45402
38384 S. R. 6M, (10) 22,29 (Ill 5, 12, 19.
'omaroy, OH 45769
26
•• further deacrlbed tn
Plolntlffa
mortgage
recorded on March 9,
Public Notice
1890 In Volume 178
page 311 of the Mort- IN THE COURT OF
gege Recorda of Molgo COMMON PLEAS
CountY, Ohio.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
lmd that Dolendanta, CltiFinanctal, lnc
unknown holro, d.. Plaintiff
VI-. itgltHo, ex- vo
eculora, erecutrlxeo, Franklin D Ghesn (Doldmlnlatrotoro, admln· ceaaed), ttal.
latratrtxea and ••· Dolondenll
olgneeo of Marian C1ae No. OBCV130
Durham, dactued, be Judge Stephen C
required to 111 up any Crowe

LEGALNOTICE
Unknown hairs, the dovlaees , legatesa, ex·
a c u I o r s ,
administrators, and assigns of Franklin D.
Gheen, and the unknown guardians of
minor and/or lncompatent heirs of Franklin
D Gheen, will lake nolice thot on Auguat 27,
2008, CIIIFinanclal, Inc
flied Ha
Complaint In the Court
of Common Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio,
Case No. 08 CV 130
The object of, and ciamand for relief In, the
Complaint Ia to loreclose the lien of plainIIIIa mortgage recorded
upon the realllllala detcrlbed below and In
which plalnllll alleges
!hal the foregoing defondant has or claims
to heve an Interest·
Situated In the Townohlp of Sallllbury,
Melga County, State of
Ohio:
PARCEL NO.I :
SHualed In the north
partolthetpartofiOO
acre lot No. 157 which
lleo e11t oland edjolnlng Section 29, Town 1.
Range 13 In Sall1bury
Township,
Metg•
County, described aa
follows:
Commencing at the
southeaat comer of a
tot deeded by V.I . Horton
and
Marcua
Bosworth, Moy 27, 1864
to Anthony Roblon;
thence south 2fl 112
deg. well along the
north line of the olreel,
2071est; thence south
26 112 dog. weat along
the north nne of 11id
atreet alorHiid, 30
fHI thence north 25
west to a point 30
IHI from tho northwest
comer of 101 owed by
Donnlo Morrow·
thence eall 30' lest to
Donnil Morrow's northwall comer; thence
along tho well line of
Morrow'a lotto oouthwool com or of aamo
and to tho north llno 0 j
oatd street aloreoald,
and being promloeo

ctag:

- J-------~-

conveyed by deed
recorded In Vol. 71
page 89 Melgo County
DeedRocorda.
PARCEL N0.2·
The easterly hall altha
following
deacrtbed
reelllllate.
Baing a part of lot 157
In Bosworth's AddHion
to the Village of Mlddtaport, Meigs County,
Ohio, commencing at
Mary E. Pennington's
comer, running 40 112
lest along main rosd;
thence across eald lot
toba~klence; thence
to said Pannlngton'a
comer, 431IHII;
thence across said lot
to the place of beginnlng.
Being part of the property by deed recorded
In Vol. 139 page 528
Meigs County Desd
Records.
The defendant named
above Ia required to an·
ower the Complaint
wHhtn twenty-eight (28)
daya altar the last publlcotlon of thlalagel noIlea on Nov. 26, 2008.
l'hlslll!llllnollcewlllbe
published once a weak
lor· six successive
weeks. '
(10) 22, 29 (11) 5, 12, 19,
26
Publlr:Notlce
OWNER'S NOTICE OF
INTENTION TO DECLARE MINERAL INT E R E S T S
ABANDONED
(Ohio
RevtlldCodl5301 .56)
Millon H &amp; Thelma R
Circle and Slmuot M &amp;
Carrie Gainer; and the
unknown heirs, ••·
olgM, executor• or ed·
mlnlatrotors at them all
(tho 'Hotdars" , whOse
oddrueeo are un·
known, Are hereby
given nollce In eccor·
dance with ' and
ouantto Ohio Rev
Coda Slcllon 5301.511
of !he folloWing: That R
• F Farm (herllnlfter
the ''Dwnlr" ) le the
owner of !he following
deacrtbed l'ltll llotete
(lhl "Real Eatall").

:d

PARCEL NO.I: Begin·
nlng at the northwllll
comer of Slcllon No.2,
Town No.3, Range No.
12 of the Ohio Com·
pany'a Purchase, and
being In Sutton Township, Meigs County,
Stale of Ohio; thence
eeat 2740 fest to the
center of the north line
of aaklaecllon; lhonce
south 2640 feet to the
canter of said section;
thence weal1870 IHI;
thence north 1880 feel;
thence east 375 lest to
thecanteroflhepubllc
rood, thence north 16
112 lest, lhence well
1244 fest to the weal
line of said Socllon
No.2,thence north 960
lest to the place of beginning,
containing
133.6 acres, mora or
leu, except 0.6 acre
oul of the north aide
used asa cemetery. Audltor'a Parcel Number:
18-11156.000. Except
from the above deacrtbed reel aotsla,lhe
following: Situated tn
Sulton
Township,
MelgoCounty,SIIteot'
Ohio and being In Seclion 2, Town 3 North,
Range 12 West Dflha
Ohlp Company's Purchall and being d•
ocrtbed as follows·
beglnnlngalthelnltr•
aactlonoiCounlyRoad
28 and County Road
31 ; thence S 61' 39 minuteo 01 eeconda E, a
dlatsnce of 183.7998
feet along the centerline of CoUnty Road 31
toapolnt;thanceS7f
37 mlnutea 41 IIConda
E, a distance of
136.2470 lest along the
centerline or said
County Road 31 to a
point, thence S M ' 41
mlnutea 07 lleCDnda E,
a dlatance of 986.3498
feel along tho centerof uld Coun!Y
ROid 31 to a point;
thence S 88' 00 min·
u111 24 uconda E, a
dte..noe of 133.5707
feet along the - r·
nne of ..ld County
Road 31 to a point;
thence
co min·
ulel 42 ucondo E, 1

nne

s oo·

dlotance
feet to en Iron pin aet,
PMtlng 1n Iron pin lei
at80.37491eetlorrefer·
ence; thence N 88' 07
mlnu... 17 IICOnda W,
a dlotance ol1127.6434
teet along lha agreed
upon property line betwesn the Smith's and
tile Powell's to an Iron
pin aet ; !hence thelollowing alx cello being
10.0 feet East of the
Centerline of a private
road, which Ia a1110
agreed upon property
lines betwesn the
Smllh'a and the Pow·
ell's; N 60' 51 minutes
30 ..condo w, a dlatance of 50 0450 feel; N
52' 27 minutes 12 saconda W, a dlatance of
188.9128 IHI; N 61' 36
minutes 3918C0nds W,
a dlotanca of 225.0103
feel; N 25' 15 mlnutea
59 seconds W, a dla·
lance of 49.7782 teet; N
05" 00 minutes 08 IOC·
onds E, a dletance of
40.0221 lest; N 20' 56
mlnutea 15 IICando W,
a dlolonce of 48.4015
lest to a point In lhl
centerline of Coun!X
Rood 211; thence N 27
35 minutes 52 eeconds
E, 1 distance of
127.2251 teet along the
centerline of aald
county Roed 28 to a
polnl;thanceN22" 43
mlnutea 54 MCondo E,
a distance of 236.0325
lest; to the POINT OF
BEGINNING, said etascribed lrect containtng 18.8150 Acree,
mareorletlo, e•ceptlng
all legal-niland
rlghll of way. Reference Oeeda: Volume
294, Page 181 and Vol·
ume 336, Page 749,
Melga County Dead
Rocordo. lleerlnga are
aaaumtd and are "1r
angle
muauroment
only. The above de.alptlon Ia beNd on 1
ourvey In July IIH by
Robert A. Eaaon, Ohio
P.8. No. 7033. PARCEL
N0.2:
'
Beginning at !he IIOt'lhwell comer of the
northeall quartor of
Section No.2, Town

Rango No. 12;
lhencell0111112115 teet
to the center of 1111
lluh.,.PorllendRoed;
thlnce1101th82' and39
minutes Hll along the
center of said road 6~
teet; thence north 57'
29 mlnute1 ee1t 15'
teet; thence north 1940
feel to the north line of
said Section No.2;
lhoihce west 7481eet to
tlie pliCa of beginning,
containing 34 acres,
more or leaa. Audltor!a
Parcel
Number
18·01160.000. PARCEL
N0.3: Beginning at the
southeast corner altha
aouthweat quarter of
Sactlon No 3, In Town
No.3, Range No. J 2 of
thiJ Ohio
Company'a Purchoae,
and In Cheater Townahlp, County ond State
aforat18ld; lhtnce noilh
882.7 teet; lhlnce west
888.9 feet; thence
south
882.7 feel;
thence east 886.9 feet
to the place of beginnlng, containing 18.05
acres, more or lou. Au·
dllor 'aParceiNumben
03.01164.000
and
03·01162.000. PARCEL
N0.4: Being In Cheater
Townahlp, County and
11111 1fore11ld, and In
Slcllon No.3, and beglnnlng886.91eetweol
ollh8110utheaotcomer
of the IOIIIhweat quarllr of said Section
No.2; thence wnl to
!he centsr of thl
Baahln Racine ROIICI, a
dlotance of 780 feel;
thence along t h e of uld road north 4' 40
mlnutea east580 feet;
thence north 21" 10
mlnuteo oall133 IHI;
thence north 83" 30
mlnuteo Hat 251 teet;
thence north 26' aaot
721 ~; lhance 110uth
74-314 eeot 138 feet;
aoulh 1405 feet
to the place of beginntng, containing It
· more or Ieee. Audltor'l Parcel Number
0301113.000. PARCEL
N0.5: The following,._
acrlllld roel -~~ toceted In tile Townlhlp
of Sutton, County of

•

Melgo and State of
Ohio, and being tn Seclion No.2, Town No.3,
Range No. 12 altha
Ohio Company's Purcha.., and boundad
and described aa lotIowa: Beginning altha
aoulhweal cornor of
northweet quarter of
oald Section No 2,
thance eell about 53
rods and 9 112 fest to
Peter Falla (now owned
by SA MC:CUIIo1!9h and
wile) southwest corner;
then~• north along S.
A. McCullough't west
line to within 1 rod of
the south line of S A
McCullough, wast of
the
llaahen-Raclne
Road; lhlnce eaat to
the canter of the
Bothan·Raclne Road;
thence north 1 rod;
lhoihce wmto the west
line of said Section
No.2; thence aouth to
the place of beginning,
containing about 34
acrn, more or lest Au·
dllor'a Parcel Number
1801161 000. Excepting
4 ecree, more or leas,
conveyedtoRoboirtl.
Byare end Nola Jean
Byars
by
deed
recorded In Volume
249, Page 871, Melgo
County Oeed Recorda.
Reference Oeed: Vol·
ume 264, Page 181 ,
Melgo County Dead
Recorda. That the
owner obtained title to
the Fleal Eotale by
virtue of a Oeed doled
March 9, 2000, and
recorded In Volume
t03,el page 179ofthe
Recorder Rocordo of
Malga County, Ohio ;
That the Real Eolale Is
oub]ect to an exception
and reeervotton of all or
part ot the all and gel
!!he "Mineral Interest")
n the underlying l*cel
one Filar EIUII, which
woa lllcopled and ,....
served In levor of Mil·
ton H &amp; Thelma Fl
Circle, In a Dead wHh
on unknown dote, and
racordld In Volume unknown, ol page unknown otto parcel• 1
through 5; In favor of
Bomuel M &amp; Corrie

Gainer, In a deed dated
August 18, 191!6 , and
recordlld In Volume
129,a1Page223,olthe
records
of
Meigs
County, Ohio., aa to
parcels number 1 and
4; That nona of lila
events apacHI\Id In dlv~
alan (B)(3) of Sactlon
5301.56 of the Ohio R•
vllld Code have Decurred within twenty
(20) years Immediately
preceding the dais on
which, this notice Ia
served, and; That the
._rlntendatollteln
the olllca of the Melga
County, Ohio Rocorctar,
a1 affidavit of Abondonmant regarding !he
Mineral lntereat In the
Real Ealsla at leoal
thirty (30), but not later
than sixty (60), days
alter the date on which
this nollce Is given.
(10)29

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...• . ....•...•2005
Autoa .••••
. .. 2010
Claaalc/Antlquee
• 2015
Commerclalllnduatrla1 ......... ............. .. 2020
Parts &amp; Acc•aorlea..................................2025

Sports Utility ..• ••.•••.•...•........•••....•.....•...•2030

Truck............. .....•....... .. • ..•.. .. ·t•······2035
Utility Trailer•··. .. . .......
...... ... 2QIIO
Vane • ••••• •. •• .•.•••••••
• .•••• •••••••••• 2045
Want to buy.. .. ......... .........................2060
Rul Elltata Sal• ...................................... 3000
CanMttery Plote ................................ . ... ,..•.3005
Commercial
.•• •••••••
•....... 3010
Condomlnlume ... . ••••• • . .• • • •••• 3015
For Sale by Owner••_. •
............3020
HouUII for Sale
....... • • .................... 3026
Land (Ac:ntogo) ••• -. .......................... .......... 3030
Lola ............ •............................................3035
Want to buy . ....•..... . ....................3040
Real Eatate Rental&amp;...
• ..•..•. ............ 3500
Apartmenta/Townhouaea ••• •••.••• ••••••••• 3505

Commercial.... .•.•. •

....•.••..•..•..•.••..•3$10

Condomln1uma ......................................... 3515
HouMa for Rent ............................... ....... 3520

Land (Acr&lt;Nige) ..•...
Storaae...
. .........
Financial ... .
.......................................400• Want to Rent
•• •••••
Financial Servlcea ....................................... 405 Manufactured Houelng

Insurance .............................................410
MollltYtO Lend . . ......... . •............ 415
Education . •••.• •••• • •. •..•••. • • •••• . .••.. 500
Bualneaa &amp; Trade SchoOl.... . ••••..........•.• 505
tnetrucuon &amp; Training •••••••••••• ,••••••• , .......... 510
•........................................ 515
Leaaona • ••••
Pe1'11onal .................................................... 520
Animate............... .
. ••....... ..••. • . ..•• 600
Animal Supplies
... ...... ..••
. .•. 605

Horwt...
.

IO·l4

available. (740)992·1328

ences 304-773·5814

............... 610

..

•......................................81G

......................... ........................820

Want to buy..... ...................

•••••••• 625

Agriculture...... . . .. ..•. ..•. .
Fann Equlp"*'t •.. .. • .•
O.rden a Produce... •.

..•.. 700
.•... 705

• ••••. .. ••••••••• 710

Hay, FMd, Seed, Grain .......................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ....................... .................. 720
Want to buy ...............................................725
Merchandlae ...............,.... .. ... .•.. ......•.. 900
Antlquoa •• ••. ···-·-··• ...... .......... ........905
Appliance ...••...•.....•........••.... .....••••. 910
Auctions . •...........................................915
Bargain Basement ....................................920

Collecllblea.... •..••••......•... . .• •.
.... 925
Compotere ........................... . ·--···-· • ....•• $30
Equlpment/Suppllea....
..•. · · ········ · .a36
Flu Marketa ••• • •••• •••• •••• . •••••••• •• • ••••• 940
Fuel 011 Cooi/Woad/Ooa ••.•••.. •..•••••••• ......••• 145
Furniture . ....... ....................... ••..
·- i50

Hobby/Hunt6 Sport.......

... .
. ...•

...•••. . 955
• .•.•960

3525
...... •.. ...... 353$

•. •.••. • . •••••. 3540
.......•••.............. 4000
Lota .............................................................4005
Movere...................... .. ........ , .•.•, ...4010
~ntela ............. • •..•••• • • •••••••• •
..4015
sa... ...... . . ......... .. . . .... . . ...... 4020
Supptlea ...., . ..• . •...... . . •...........•. 4025
Went to Buy .. •• ....... •••• •••••••••••••.•• 4030
R.roort Property .......................................5000
Resort Property for ule. . .•.•. ..........• 5025
Resort Property tor rent
5050

EmploymeM. •....••.

.

•.•...6000

AccountlngiFinanclal.. ••• ••••
.•••.•••••.6002
Admlnlatratlva1Profesalonal .....................6004
Ceshl•!Cierk ..........~................................6006

Child/Elderly c........... .... ....... . ......- 6008
Clerteal ...... . ...•.. . •. .••... ...•...• .6010
Construction ............

•

•·r· • •

••• •

6012

brlvera &amp; Delivery ......
...... .. ... _, ... 6014
Education ........................... .,.................... 8018
Elec:lrfcal Plumbing ..................................6018
Employ"*'! AgenclrM.............. .. •... . .. 6020
En-111..-t.. .•.•.••...•. . ..••••..• ,•.••..•.. .602~
Food S..VIcea ••••••••••••••••••••• - •••• 6024'"
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .•... ..•...........6026
Help •ntad- General ................................ 8028
Lew Erifon:e"*1t.....................................6030

Melntenance1Domeatlc ••...•..••••....•..•.••....,.6032
Men~pen~IIIOfY ···- .•.• •.•11034
U.Chanlce ••••••• ••
Medical
Mualcel. •• • • ••••• •

.••••••••• ·····-···... . .
..••. . •. .•••
. .•••••• •.......... 6040

Pan-n .....TomporarfH ............................ 6042

Mlacellaneou&amp; . ..•.. . • . . ...
- .•.•.... 1i165
Want to buy. ...... ••••••••••. ...... .•••• • .. ........... 870

Rntliuranta ..................
• ..••• • •••• -~ .8044
Sa..a........................ . . •... • •.. . .•• •
&amp;048
Technical Trac:te. ... •• • • . •. • •• ••••••••• •6050

Yard S.le .................................................... 975

TextlleiiF.cto&lt;y....

Kkt's Corner•• ······-··· ...

Aportmenb/
Townhouas

or

~
NEA, Inc.

,...

tlons Office of Consumer
Affa1rs BEFORE you rell
nance your home or Obta1n a loan BEWARE of
requests for any large
adyance
payments
of

.•••.. 6052

ReR.Ials

~

Money To Lend
i-74;.;0,.·9~85~·-41~38~"!"''"'::~
;;;;;;io;;;;=;i;;;;o;;;;o;;;;o;;;;;;; For Sale Shth Tzu Pup· ""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"' """'""'""'""'""'""'""' ""'""'""'""'""'""'"""'
NOTICE Borrow Smart pies
Mlocoltanaouo
Compero/ RVo &amp;
Contact the OhiO DIVI· Bom
08·28·08
CKC
Trailero
puppiBS
for NEW AND USED STEEL
sian of Financta! lnstltu Reg 1 female $350 00 3 Shih tzu

Looking to take care of the
Htce
lt1e Elderly Have Refer Afflars
toll

Wanted ....... .•... . . • . ..•. • . ••... .
235
Services....... • •••• • ••
•• •• • •• •••••••••• 300
Appliance Service.. . • ,.••.• •..••••••• 302
Automotive ..••• ••••:.... ••• .. •••••••••••••••••••••••••• , 304
Building Materlala ...................................... 306
Bualneaa ..................................................... 308

Petti.

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

446·2115 ask for Lon

Ca
ChI'ld t•u-rly
•re

Noticeo ..••••..•.•........ .. .-.............. ....•• . .. 225
Peraonala.. ...... . .
...... ....... . .... 230

Llveatock •••

:.:&lt;7::::40:)!:99=2=0=17=4===: ut1l ties patd no pets
dep
&amp;
ref
Real Esta1e (740)992 0165

::;:
3500

properly I!
IS a publtc
Will dO housekeepmg 10 serv1ce
announcement
Gallipolis
area
Call from the Ohio Valley

OhiO

Twtn R1vers Tower ts ac·
cepting app1 1cahons for
walt ng ltst for HUD sub·
sld1zed 1 BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled

2 350011 axles 2 wheel ~"";;;'1.;;67;.;5~6;,;67;.;9~.._-"'"!
brakes w/ramp for 5 Beech St Middleport 2
acres n Meiijs County br furnished apartment

sale part~ally housebro· Steel Beams P1pe Rebar
ken &amp; 3 months old far
Concrete
Angle
(740)416·6449
Channel Flat Bar Steel
::-.oi-":!:"'~-:~--- Oratmg for Ora~ns OnveYoride Ftupp1es for sale ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
s;350 &amp; $450 Vet recOm· Scrap Metals Open Mon
8 wks old Tue
Wed
&amp;
Frl
Free 1o good home One mended
adull (F) black and while
earn 4 30pm
Closed
cat, 1 (M) black cal. Cal·
Thurs
"Sat
&amp;
Sun
leo ktHens 339-9744
74Q-446 7300
?-==~~;;.;...~.
Free to good home Cap· ::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; New Lennox Pulse Fur·
per nose Beagle looks """":
nace down draft With ex
young
Call
fal'llll EquipmMI
tra parts, 90 000 BTU
740..645·0235 aher 6pm
$699 00 740446 _4306
Miniature
Schnauzers EBV,
INTEGRITY,

Dr

... 100
.••. ..... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .. . ....
. ...205
Happy Ada... ••••••••••• •• •••••• •• . •• •
•..210
Last &amp; Found ..•.•...........••........••............215
Memorymtank You ..................... ............... 220

Catorlng . ....... .

;;;;;;;o.-~~:;;:-;ii;i'::-;;
Trad e 1995 Chevy Con
vers1on Van, excellent
condit1on easy on gas
also
wftratler
76'x 16

Pill

Now taking bids tor
pa1nt1ng and or cleantng
AKC Reg Lab puppies
of vacant units Must pro- ...,.,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,., far sale 1st shots &amp;
vide proof at Workers =
wormed
$250

Free
Rent
SpecJal!ll
2&amp;3BR and up Central
A1r WID hookup tenant
pAys electnc EHO Elm
Vtew
Apts
(304)882 3017
~--~-~:-·
Spnng
Valley
Green
Apartments 1BR tor rent
$375
month

""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"' 740·446·1599
Lond (Al:raago)

1ng Counc1l for Independent
and Sct1oa1s 1'274B

Co ~ ages

74Q-379·9515
74Q-645·6857

Compansa11on and l1abU

tGwn
hw &amp; t1l e floors
updated kitchen &amp; baths
pnvacy fence &amp; above
ground
pool
secunty
system much more 130
Bast1an1 Dr S129 OOOFor
p1cs and mformat1on go
to
www orvb com
446 2923

Buoineu &amp; Trade

puppy.laSI seen 1n Syra· 740-446 3745
cuse area $50 reward for
retum 740·591 ·71137
Proluaional S.rviceo

&lt;ty
lllSurance Please
call Honey Suckle Hills
Apts
740-446-3344 or
by offiCe at 266 Co-

Aportmanto/
Townho-•
4 bed 2 balh &amp; off ce tn ;;;;;;;=--==;;;;;;;---;;;

kttncarlyle@comcast.net

Basement
Waterproofing
Uncondlt onal lifellme
guarantee Local refer
ences furn1shed Estab
ltshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs
74Q-446.0870 Rogers
Basement Wateproof1ng

Maltese Pel

Houoeo For Salt

Edu:ll1on

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals....... .. ..•... . .
Announcements

Sunday Display: 1 :00 p.m.

Thursday for Sundays Pa

Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Numller And Addreu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 D•ys

Wantocl

We
will
no
nowtngty accept on
tlvertlsement
I
lotation of the law

In-Column: 9~00 a.m.

For Sundays Paper

• All ada must be prepaid'

PUBLISHING CO
rec·
No Fee Unless We Wmt
ommends that you do
1·888·582 3345
business wi th people you ~---------~
know, and NOT to send Homes or busmess to
money through the mall ct ean permanent or one
unttl you have lnvest1gat 11me
$,0 hrly
Call
1ng the offering
740.245-5273
please
leave a message

This
newspape
&lt;;eepts only hel
anted eds maetln
OE standards.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Day• Prior To
Publication

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

AEWAADIIII !I

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY

Current rote car
pplles

ui

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Jm
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00forlarge

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Noticoo

Box number ada a
lways confldanlial.

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Dally In ~ Column : 9.:00 a.m.
Monday- Friday for ln!lertlon
In Next Day's Paper

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

968.

.
of 534.03511 No.3,

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Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446·3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

All Real Estal
vertisemenll a
ubjectiD lha Fodera
atr HoUsing Act

'IE-tllJI;:Io•lc::": J'""ooifc.t:l.c::":e- l..:ra J"'looiloe-,.......Npap~-s
""trOJ1Ua- IC.Aght t&lt;» I .I&lt;: . . o"YV. I&gt;-etA&amp;verec:l. R.Ag:ht 't.e&gt; ""!!r:'"c::» ... r I&gt;c:.c::»r..

tster

mrtbune - Sentinel -

Holnies to return to Steelers' lineup vs. Redskins

Smith, Woodson, Sharpe among
NFL Hall of Fame candidates

www.mydallysentinel.com

KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE
STOCK
TRAILERS.
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP
MENT
TRAILERS
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
S3999 VIEW OUR ENTIRE TRAILER lNVENTORYAT
WWW CARMICHAEL·
TR ~ILERS COM
740-446-3825
~---""':'~~~~
Have you pnced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpnsedl Check out our
used
Inventory
at
wwwCAREQ eom
CarmiChael
Equ1pmenl

STEEL ARCH
BUILDINGS

• at

Carm1chael

740 446 3825
~~~~~~~~

Automotive

2000

Autoo
~~~='"!"=~~
2001 PontiaC Grand AM
payments
take
over
304·675·3166
2006 Durango 4 wheel
dnve, leather sun roof &amp;

Mat:le tn USA Three
player
$10 000
cancelled orders
wtH DVD
256·
1618
sell for bal ance owed
16x24 &amp; 2Sx36 Call
Tnrcb
today to save thou·

sands' 800·352·0469
Travel

trunk

14•

14"/Whlgh

1998
lr

GMC

$650ren1

-=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=~
ir
ave- n pee a
Clip th1s AD and take t
w1th you when you viSit
our commun1ty to get
thiS spectal dtscount
Move 1n m Nov and get
$100 00 off your 2BA
Apt n Dec Currently
rentmg 1 &amp; 2 BA untts
Spac1ous lloor plans
ranch &amp; townhome style
llvmg playground &amp;
basketball court on s1te
laundry fac1llty 24 hr
emergency mamle·
nance QUiBI coun try lo
catton close to maJor
medical
facilities
ph alil1aC1es grocery
store 1ust mm utes
aW!y from other major
shopping tn the area
Honeysuckle Hills
Apartments
266 Colontal Dr ve S-113

Bidwell Ohtc 4561 4
740·446·3344
OH1ce Hours M W F
9AM 5PM

98439 0

Beautiful Apts at Jackson Estates. 52 West·
wood Or from $365 to
$560
740 446 2568
Equal Houstng Opportu
ntty ThiS 1nst tul1on ts an
Equal Opportumty Pro
vtder and Employer
Brand new duplex wtth 2
BR 1 s baths attached
gar front 1 back porche&amp;
Land for your flowers I
garden
tully equipped
kitchen
wheelchair ac
cesst ble
Midway
between Jackson and Gallt
polls on H1ghway 35
Rent $600 Call for app11
cat1on to 740 236 1872
or e ma11 ro southohto
INmg @gmall cam
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts at V1Hage
Manor
and
R1vers1de
Apts In Middleport from
10
$327
$592
740 992 5064
Equal
Housing Opportuntty
Ntce
Clean
Ground
Floor 2br WID hookup
Reterences/OeposttiNo
PelS 304 675 5162

Don1

Now acceptmg
appi!CBIIOflS at
Valley Vtew Apartments
BOO State Route 325
Thurman Oh10 45685

leather · StenCiled S A need
COL
$6 500
Couch Pt Pleasant Va 304 773-5343
dtd May t858·phone 304 ;;;;,;,;,;;;,;;;;,;;:,,.,,.,,.,,. ·

Vans

592 1547 1n evenmg

Wont To Buy

01 Oldsmob&lt;IO Stlhouene

!!'"'~~!""'-:"'~~ 98000 mtle

1 owner
Buymg tools sell or trade ovo player great cond
mechamc-carpenter lawn $5495 740 441·9322
&amp; garden power tools
Call 740 388 • 1515 or ceR
Want To Buy

7 ~208 • 0320

~-.-.-::""'::":--~
Top Dollar • s!l
ver/gotd
co1ns
any
t01()f4KI18K gold Jew
elly dentaJ gold, pre
1935
US
currency

proollmlnl

se1S.

~iiii:"'iiiiiOO~~:'
CarS Trucks and GMC
Satum Bwck SUV s wnh
warranty
y 151 t us at
(gocdookmotors com)
Cook Motors 328 Jack
son Pike 740·446-0103

ma·

b-----,;,.,/1
18A Apt

W/D hookups

satellite TV tnsJ ~ w/rent
close to hospital Call

740·339 0362
2 bedroom hvtng room
kitchen bath Apartment
Have Central Atr fur
mshed
With
couch
cha1rs
washer
dl)'er
stove m1crowave beds
dm1ng table and cha1rs
$400 depOSit $450 a

monlh

740.245-9170
1 2 Bedroom Apartments
w1th appliances tum1shed
On s te laundry tacll1ty
Call for details or p1ck up
apphcaiiOn at rental
OffiCe
Posstb1hty of rental
aSSIStance
Equal Hous1ng
Opportunity

TOO# 419-526-0466
'ThiS 1nSt1tu110n IS an
Equal Opportumty
'prov1der and Employer"

Call

monds MTS Co1n Shop Wan1
~-------.-.--~:Leave
Wood I Gao
to buy Junk Cars 304 882 2523
-;;;==~==;;;;-~ · 151 2nd Avenue, GaUl call 740 388 0884
Message and Number if

'Seasoned Ftrewood CAA polls 446 2842
HEAP
accepted

not at Home
~
2 ~B~A·A~pa·n•m•e•n•1~&amp;~2~BR
House on 5lh St P1

&amp;15·5946or44Hl941

Yard Sale

Hardwood 446 9204

35 Grape St Fn &amp;
InSide
and
Outside

'='s.·a·SOI--10&lt;1~--:F~"~ew'"ood~

740 591 5174

or44 1·0 110

m1leS 7 0 eng1ne gas 5
speed trans 24 ft bed

tooled GVW 25950 lbS

740-446-;,;,;~2
~
~4~1 2~~~~ Absolute

fwA 1~ 1Cool/

RV
Servtce
Trailers

3BR 1000 sq ft Hard
wood floors WID No pet

sat ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
HouMa for Sale

Ael1red Teachers Salel ~~--""!'=~=;;;
StiCkers
toys posters 186 North Park Dr call
~~~~#.~""':':" et~ Clothes household, 304 675 5640
or
Jet Aeratton MotOfS re· b1kas Jewelry
304·593 1204 w1t1 sell on
pa1red, new &amp; rebUttt 1n ~~"'::"~-::-- Land Contract or Oul
stock Call Ron Evans Yard
Sale
Syracuse R1ght Also a We lhngton
1288 P1ano call to{ appomt
1 800-537 9528
Fn 10131 &amp;Sat 1111
Dusky St
furniture
he both
FOf Sale Wood Burner tools hOusehold 1tems
ment to see 1 m

Miactlloneous

Pleasant
304 81 2 4350
ask lor Don
:Ta~ra____":""o·w-.nh~ous~e
2BR APT
441·0194

C1A

(740) Apartments • 2BR 1 5
bath back pai!O pool
~~~!"""--~ playground {trash sewJ br S400 a mo I br age
water
pd )
$295 a mo plu s uttllties 425/rent
$425/sec
&amp;
depostt
3rd
St
'7 40 367 0541
Racme (740)24 7·4292
dep Call

s

3 rooms and balll up
Comrnoroal
sta1rs
Complelely fur
Movmg
Sale
Cvunlry 2 br 1 b full basement mshed w•th WID No 2 bay servtce statiOn 1
Far Sale· One
?0,000 Home decor and tum1 above ground pool de
Jackson
P1ke
Lease
BTU floor furnace $50 00 lure At 218 to Netghbor- !ached double garage pels Ref Aeq 441 0245
reqUired Call 446 3644
304-675·2902
hood Ad Oct 30, Nov 1
fenced-In back yard mce ~
2B~A:-"c~lo~se-t~o~hos·p-.
,ta':'l ;;;;lo;,;rmi!o!!re!!'i!nf!;!
o;,,.,,.,,.,
GIVeaway • maple stereo Oct 31 &amp; Nov1 at 169 netghbofhood m Ractne wid hookup appl fur =
With mdlo 304-675 1765
Buckridge
Ad
(740)992-1424
nt$hed 74o 441 3702 or -;;;;•Hou=•-iiiiiifor;i;;;;R;;;antiiiiii=
~••-y Bak1ng
Now 9am
--::::"'~:'::::"":!~~!:" 74Q-286 5789
~
nuwuo
BD HOUSE IN CHES· ~~~~~-~:" '\:: ! \~ flWI ' " bed 1 bath
a~8llablej ~~g choc::o~~~ l'EROhCONTACT
CONVENIENTLY
LO Ban~ Rcpu' l~"'i- do~~on t &lt;.
lales g az
ruit nuts
740-985-4131
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD H ''"' R&lt;"y APR 1 lm 11 "' 10 1!~
~~..,....,..,.,---~

$350 00 Ca11740 2370

3

4

~~~ ~~gandCo:,v~

-"":-::'·:•"
:-~'~~-":",_"."-~'~=

ABLEI Townhouse apam rt
1 S4wmo .. deposit 1BA
5 81
Bed 2 Bath HUD ments
and/or
.- . . , . , . , , . , . , , , . , , . , Homes' Oflly S19 900 tor hOuses tor rent
Call Rg&amp;Ret
turn
W&amp;O
i-!i'~~~~--"':!'~
Campen f IV• &amp;
hsungs 80Q.620 4946 ex 740-44 I 1111 lor apph hookup No sleps Very
Molktlan
Carpet
Fall
Trailers
A019
cation &amp; tnlormatiOn
clean
114 Slate St
Spec~a1 20 oz Commer·
740 441-Q596

Camdu5
SlOre
74()..379.tt 10

Cl81

Carpet

3

Ad

$6 95/yard

RV

serviCe

Several
Colors chael
740-446-7444 Quality al 740446 •3825

low P.-1

at

Carmt Fl1r Sale 2 ~hlP. at :!" I~ \It 28A garage Apartn.ent
'\\e Pt Ple1-.an1 OOwntown $425 mth rent Small 2br House S400
4br lba 1~ b.t-..: :t~l•ng
utthtteS NO PETS month
No Pets
No
St&lt;OOOO J0.1 671 2601
446.()415
Smokmg 304-773-9192

Tmiters \t!mtm

+"

�Plge 84 • .The Daily Sentinel

I

iOTOR VEHICLES FOR SALE
DONWOODNC AUTOMOTIVE

GREAT USED
COS WITH

yow cell

plloae.
Jut ftlf , Jfocl: Jlfllllter to
42355

99 GMCSitna Axi Ext Cob !10511( .
00 I~ R111 HWD 111661L ..,,l&lt;l• .
OJ Hyundci A«tr1 G5 tii!MO,Ill .
01 Civyllw 300M lllall D,ll •
..
02 ~ Ao:M GS lltlll( l•"""

02 B.iclltS!m 1911710.... .
04 1M v,. 1101111,
04 f011! fllO Xll G61 7IIID,
041u&lt;l C.o!Jry t6162l0.1. "' Xlol.
04 PoMacG~nd Prix GilIliAD ;o1.n• . ·" '' m
04 V~bwagtn New lltliolillll!l.bl&lt;l ..
05 en...,~ 6617~. .
05 Chi'!) Sil..ado 1500 71110110 ""·Ji.. ,.. J.&gt;'Y&gt;
05 !uicllaaolst G6llll0.\ llol. &lt;!1 . ... .. . '.....,
Olloyaio Cny XlE 71C166114""'
05 GMC !itrro ll001161U71~11ol.lll• .. ! !D•!!"

bath, all appliances in·
or cludeCI $37,000 located
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma·
~-~-...,.-~- son City30"675·2117
house

in

MaSOI'l

a mon.
+
$325.00 dep.
no pets Brand new 3bed 2bath
304·882-3652.
on + -halt acre 1n Pt.
3BR house on SA 160 Pleasant

Manufacturrd
Housmg

2BR trailer
367-7762

.. . ... .. . $7,999

129
Oi ltep Glald Chtrolet liOallt•... l'l .. . ..$5,999 $99

1113

)37
1~
IW Poni~&lt;Gn.dAM IIIIMII. ...,,ll&lt; . .. .. .$11,999 169
Olehl'l)l~l!f161~ ,0 ' ' ... ' $10,999 159
05 Chi'!) C*' 1111912JA •. ~~·• . .. .. .$10,999 179
07 r. Spottagt IX ~ttn'611h. *• .. $1~,999 219
07 H)M A«t~~~ "'16WA .....~~ . .... $1~, m 219
07H)ME1m 1161167llW.111;,. .......$15,A99 229
07H)MSooalaGtSHti101MAd • .$15,999 .. $239
07H)'JndaiAm11611061l ""lll . ..... $17,950 $214
lll H)M T-1161771llllok,.
$15,000 $219

lor

rent .

Seeking
driver
lots , w/COUHazmat qualitica(no pets) in Ashton WV tions lor lull time employ304-576·2.942.
ment @ propane busiScenic location, conven· ness, send resumes to:
ien1 to town anQ afford- Daily Sentinel. PO Box
able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms 729·23,
Pomeroy,
Oh
available
call ;::45;;;7,;;6;;,9=====.,
(740)992-5639
d

=

Sal

Foo Servige1

to

McDonald's
oI · Al·o
16x32 Grande now hiring morn·
Deck, 112 qcre. Jerry's ing shift. flexible hours,
Run
Rd.
$46,500 . pard· Holidays and Vaca304-576-3111
tion . .Apply within

00 fold t..,. 161714. ." "" ' .... ' .. " ..
01 Niuall X1rnt XI1611111A.""'" ...
02 Dodge CIXolo SXI16llllll. ,; ... ........ .

03 ~ llttrir 16112111, .1. ..... .
03 FOld Crown Yidoria 1101211111 ..
IW Ponlodonli~ 161973ll
Oi Cllf&lt;1 lrOirJoar ~ IWD 1617491."' &lt;110. .
05 Hy..doi Sonlofe 1111111. "" '" "" '•' .
05 FOld fllO Ill Ill liM Kl;,lndtfti
1(16 S,mli~ 16lllll l~ ...

'06 Sillrolon f611M5. .
. .... .. .
07 Otevy ll1iltlozwlS 161677111. "'lhloo

07 Mania IS 161144MA •04 • ... .. ... .
07 Mania Ml!rr 161&amp;WIA ilollll ... .... .
II/ kio Spottagt IX f617lllll. ""'· lll•
07 Cit~'!) MalillllS 16110lMA ... 11.. ....
II/ 1\rioc G6 FIIIIOI. l:l• .. .... ..
07 fold fmZU Sf61710MA " · m• ....
II/ fold r..... sn ,.,17W.,.,.lll • ..
(li

lll fold

ISIIOIJ, '~"" ..
f6167U. .

CIA.

In Memory

In Memory

Larry Griffin
Remembering you on
your birthday
October 29th
Lovea a missea by
WifeGrace ·
Brady Jr/Terri · Greg!Lii · Beth/Rob
Father· Ernie fr granachilaren

~edery::~l

'!~;;;;;;~Jo.,;,;b~t;;;;:;;;=~
PoST

OFFICE

Help Wanted· General
$250 Sign on Bonus
Ten positions ne&amp;d filled
by next week!.
No Sales!
No Collections!
Recruit volunteers for
non-profil organizations
s"uch as St. Jude
Children's ResearCh
Hospital.
Get paid to make a
difference!

t

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• New

· Patio •nd Porch O.Ckl

WV036725

V.C. YOUN G Ill
992-62' ~
Oh1o
Loc.11 ElpP''"'K '

Pv,nNu~

25

VP ,Jr &lt;,

r------"""'1
L &amp; L Tire Barn
44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
iS Poin1s)

repair.

~ .... _.btfiQI,nlbpJ.Ii;wi'T S2.5X)O!J ~ ~~

..-.MBbtfllltbm!ta- CtfOI.,_~
~·

Dfetiti!J"s""

-..,-

-

·.)-

0

11
IOfllj; 1191J131lm

'·

BRIDGE

Full and Part-time
Positions
Day and Evening
Shilts
Professional Work
Environment!
Medical, Dental, EAP,
401K!
On-site Doctor
Weekly Pay and
Bonus lncenti'.!'es!
,,.

Call TODAYf
~ntarvlew

TOMORROWU
Work NEXT WEEK!U

HI811-IMC-PAYU
Ext. 1941
""'- 'Jobs.lntoclslon.com
Ohio
valley
l:tome
Health, Inc. hiring Home
Health
Aides.
STNA.

CNA, .CHHA, PCA may
apply at 14800 Jackson

.11111111M, 9

7

..__...,cr ,

• Gatages
• Complete .

Remodeling

~. ~~!:~L~ 140-992-1171
Houts

sume
to
LLC@CAREO.COM
or
fax to 740-446-9104
An Excellent way to earn
.money. The New AVon.
Call
Marilyn
304-682·2645

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

lucuonaar:
·BIIIV R.lollla Jr.
740-41&amp;-1164
E-mail: captb11165@yahoo.com

·

www.auctlonzlp.com
#5548 .

South

Mt AIU'.H.I

roryo~

YOV'/t~ 5VPPOS~l&gt; TO 1~
VNl&gt;~fl(;OVf:fl···l&gt;flf:fS
· LIIC~ Tttf:

AL

n

...."IWIMG
I ,..,

.-.-.7. /
/

COP5 IN 2
P•ANt:
8;
...
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m'
CL 0 ru ~s ,I ~

orLit:{l
.
.....
TIMVtL~fl$.

I"

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bul·ines~·

BARNEY

www.t:~on~Jooweo-!Jiaoir)'.-

WHAT'Re YOU
G!TTIN' ALL

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding 1 Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653-9657

FANCIEl) UP
FER,
PAW?

Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019
'•

Cell: 7411-416-5047

~~

Paul Rowe

i

(

ABODE
Health
Care
Services,
Inc,
Hiring
Careglvem in Leon, &amp; in
Mason
. County.
304-588·944 1 or toll free
1-866-327-7262

·d 1 1h
ua s w t menta 1 retar-

VI

dation and developmental d•sabilitles. Interested
.applicants may apply at
8204 Carla Drive. Galli·
polis, Ohio 45631 . or
e-mail a res ume to dab·
shire3@suddenlink.net
·

RNiauranb

~=~-~=;;;;;;;;;;;;
Now Hinng ExperlenceQ,
waitstaff, cooks,
dishwashers &amp; delivery driY·
ers apply In person
Harry's
Famous
Hot
Oog,s New Haven

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Additions, RemodeUng,
Roofs, Siding, Decks,
Licensed &amp; Insured

~~~~:;==:!~~~~~~~=~
Quality Seamless
Gutters
Mamtenance
•
PIus
C{lmmercia/ &amp;: Ri'sid,ntial

Vinyl
Siding/Replacement

Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740·992·1493 Office
740-416·8339 Cell
Free Esrimaled
Pomeroy , Ohio

iW.H

.........,

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Rooflng
·Decks
• Garages
• Pale BUildings
•.Room Addltlont

Owner:
JameaKeeoeell
742·2332

PEANUTS
SO WHAT ARE •
'(OU DOING, MA~IE'

*Prompl and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Jnsured
•Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740·591-8044
Please leave messa e

Compltto 11'00 Core

Concrel8

STYlf. ..

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Joh~&amp;IU'"
141-912-5882

NOMATTCDI
WHATYOU.RI

..,.....,..~

--.""""'f40-441-1317

,.,_,_

Raot;ng. s;d;ng,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Conbacto&lt;

YOU EV£12 WOND£11
WHY NO ONE WIIESTL£5
LIONS, ANYMO'&lt;E?

j'
GARFIELD

740.367.()544
Free Eatl""""

7 40.367.0538

For Remodelbig and New House BuDding

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

Can:

... TilE

IIUII..aeii,IWIU
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bouom, OH

740-985-4141
liAS
SOMETHING
fOR YOU!!

PaM

No rth
Dbl.
Pau

16 Robin Cook

lhrilltr
17 Vanna's
bo11
, 18 Kindled
19 Unlidy per·
aon

Eaat

Pa"

PaM

Cell: 740-4 16-1834

GRIZZWELLS
~5\.E \\\

~?~;&gt;

Thurtday, Oct. 30, 2008
NO
By Bemlce Bede Oaol
PRESSURE.
In the year ahead, knO'Medge and tenacTtl01J6tt .
ity wi ll be required to fu !IIWworthY objectives, and ~ou will possess plenty ol
these important trails to accorrip lish your
goals, even those you previously lhOO!,lht
wera unattainable.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - II you
require a partner to accomplish something big and Important, go to a reli able
friend or co·worker first W1th the right
help, that whiCh· was overwhelming will
be redu ced to a manageable size.
SAGITIARIUS (NOY. 23-Dec. 21 ) - You
won't be afraid of a lillie competition,
especiallY where work or career is con cerned. Rivalry Is what encourages peo·
to lake on huge challenges .
DO't'OV WEAR
JUST LYl N6
SURE,
THER~S NO DOU8i pte
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - What
'{OU.R 6LA5SE5
SED
you leam - through personal experiences or !rom books - will be retained
WHEN '{()IJ'RE
and used to your advanta!,]e later In ways
you never would have suspected.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -There
WEIRD..
are times when a little bravado can be
skillfully applied to mask a shaky situaUon. Your bluffs wWI prove to be quite useful and Sffeclive.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - This
might be one of those days where you
fin(j it lmpo~sible to work tlllngs oul by
yourself. Seek advice from someone you
trust, like a lrl'"d or tamlly member who
can offer Wise counsel,
ARIES (MarCh 21-Aprtl tO} - Larger
earnings than usual can be generated
WELL,
SHE
LOOKS
AN
CUZ THEY'VE BLED
from more than ooe source. Some new
AWFUL LOT LIKE ALION
TO DEATH? AND
posslbllllieS to cash in are righl under
AND THEREFOR£ DESE11VES
your nose, so instead of doing business
THAfS NOT ALION.
TO BE TAKEN DOWN. SO
as usual, look a~ound.
lfS ABARil CAT
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - A current
ON
THE
COUNT
OF
THREE
.•.
WITH A WIG.
partnership arrangement will continue to
grow considerably, providing larger benefits lor both partners as the event$ of
the dby should prove.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- There's a
strong possibility that, il') a siluatlon
where you weren't fairty compensated or
acknowledged. som90ne has gone to
..,_
bal for you, making it possible to reclify
_.,.
•. ,
1 "this "eglect.
U.J..---:::
""::.1 ,;;:;::._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. L-----'--....;---1 CANCER (June ,21 -July 221- Your great
dmgence and patience in carefully plan·
ning and executing an important project
will pay ott. You don't have to move
mountains; you merely have to apply a
strong, sustained effort .
·OR "T"HSI~
LEO (July 23-Aug. 2?) - Through hard
work, an opportunity will enable you to
aher a negative situation that's been
standing In your way. You 'll now realize
the rewards you deser.oe.
VIRGO (Au!,]. 23-Sepl. 22) - Merely
keeping busy won'1cut the mustard. Vou
must have something to do where your
industrious Inclinations can come into
p!ay and produce some worthy rewards.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Th9le are
strong possibilities fOr financial gains,
but, when the dust settles. il will become
clear that your large gainS were all due to
lhe strong efforts you applied toward
these ends.
•

IN
READIN6

SLEEPIN&amp;"?

--"v.-,

l

SO r
CAN SEE WHAT
I'M DREAMING

IN M'&lt; MIND,
MARCIE, TllAT '{OIJ
ARE EXCESSII/EL'(

1 Blazo up
.2 Stair part
3 Planitl's
opon

18 Glasgow
20

21
22
24

4 Zorro'a ·

23 Joie de
marks
vivre
5 Mag.
25 Arizona cily
tlafftrl
26 Kind of
6 Technical

26
27

word

48 Miniblind

girl
EnUct
Leave oul
AliCozy seal
Piquancy
Sicilian
landmark

part

.49 Run away .
50

hastily
Oslrich
cousin

51

Kind of instinct

52

28 Get closer

Subway
oppo1itea

29 Wide cravat 7 Worried
30 Boathouse
32 --eye
8 Remind loo
item•
otoak
ofton
31 Duo
33 Cousteau's 9 Kind of aya- 37 Least
eummer

tern

34 Boloney t
35 Depot info
36 Break suddenly
38 Heavy molal
40 Olin·-

tanned

10 Cave , often
11 Junk e-mail
12 Open lo
debate
16 Sealing a
deal

Fine poinl
41 Goals
43 Fray
44 Ms . Papas
45 Dispatched
47 Singletons

39

CELEBRITY CIPHER

''

by Luis Campos
Celebnty CioM! CT\illtgrams ar&amp;,I&amp;I!IKJ !tom quelallons t11 larnoos people paSI and p·esert
Each taner rn lhecipner stantls 101 anomer

Today'sctue· LequalsU

"ZB

CGT

CRATS

BPTTYUF

RNRK

UB

CGTS

YLFO

HZXTSC

NT

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HXRLMGCTP . " -

CGT

FRK

HITTDG

OT

XTY.

ZH

RSY
XZAT

HGT l l

MTUPMT

NRHGZSMCUS
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The chief duly of government is to keep lhe peaco
and stand out ollhe sunshine ollhe people ·· James A. Gart ield

T=~:t~~l $©~~~-~ttf~•
Wllod

ORearrange
letters of
lour scrambled words

~r

CLAY R.

WOlD
GAM I

POI\~11

the

b.- ·
lew to form. four simple worW.

.,

AMADM

f-r.-1
~r'-1,--1lr.-l!
"Of all the lhmgs you
.wear," the mom infomted

I

CA T NI T

I

her dnughler, "y~ur

expressi~n is lite most

··.:;;;;,~~... ••• chucl&lt;l· Qvored
0
1
. ....1
by lilling in the mi111ng words
l -.l..1_.l..1 _J..1_J..-l.
~.,.....~-r~..;;_;:.I...:.,.,9:--1

you develop from step No 3 below:

.r~o PRINI NUMBmo
'# lETifR~
oft UNSCRAMBlE

W ANSWEi

I'

fOil

I' I' I' I' I' I' I' 1 j
IIIIIIIII
1

S~RA M-LETS

• ANSWERS 10128108
Rosary .:. Nudge - Young ·· Argosy - YOU DO
"The.real way 10 success," lectured lhe moliV8tional speake~
"is to like you, whal you do, and how YOU DO it"'

. ARLO &amp; JANIS

t

f

SOUP TO NUTZ

15+ ytan uptritnct Fr., Esti-•

Advertise
in this space for
· $64 per month
&gt;I

DOWN

. meditation

W~!J?!,

....... ... ..... - -··
BIG"NATI:

RICK PRICE

Sl.lliMPI

Jean Roush

West

without

olate
15 Zoneo

f~~Astro-

Accepting
applications
for full &amp; part time EMT,
and
Param~ics .
We
haYe a benefits package
available. $15.00/hr Applications can be ob·
tained lro m the Mason
County EMS 911 Emergency Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 br online
at masoncountyoes.com,
follow the EMS link.
Middleton Estates is accepting applications tor · a .
fulllime LPN Supervisor
and PRNILPN's. You will
be part of a team · that
provides services ti indl·

r----..r- v-- .----.,.--'---

1

r

'

Modica I

~E\JE.R RE./&gt;-.L.l.'&lt; &lt;:.E.T ~'/WJ.lU£.1

l.IK.E'.Tfl.l~ ~KI~ C:f.\l&gt;.llit. ...

email:
jrshadfrm@eol.com

I

91

'\naPS 1&lt;\E W~Y. BUTl ""q

l j\r.&gt;T l'E-N..IlE~ 1&lt;\'( Cl&gt;.m.~

Jon Van Meter &amp;

9-87642

Look al1he North-South diamond holdings in tooay 's diagram . u yoo were
Soulh . having played a diamond 1owerd
Ihe king-jac\1, would you call lor the jack
odor the king?
Who knows? Bul often the bidding can
supply a clue.
West opened two spades, a weak twobid usually promising a six-card suit.
With seven, one would normally open
three spades. North cQfrectly doubled for
takeout (Yes, his poinl·counl was low,
but at1er a pre-empt, the player short in
the opponent's suit shOuld strain to enter
the auction.) True, ihis might have resull·
ed in a heart (fontract In a 4·3 tit, but It
would have been worse to oVercall three
clubs with such an anemic sUit. Now
South jumped to lour hearts. Wllh a six- ·
card major, two aces and one king, he
was right to go lor game.
West led the spade queen. Declarer won
with his ace and took dummy's two top
hearts, getting the bad news. South
played dUmmy's second spade, East
discarding the diamond two. Declarer
won with his king and ruffed his last
spade on the board, East overruffing
and shifting to the club king.
South won wilh his ace and return ed a
club to d!Jmmy's nine, but East won with
his 10 and continued with the club
queen. Declarer ·ruf1ed and led a diamond. West ducking smooth ly. Should
South have called for dummy's jat:l&lt; or
for the king?
The clue was We st's opening bid. With
seven decent spades and th e diamond
ace, he would have opened th ree
spades . But with only !he diamond
queen, two spades was comprehensl·
ble . So declarer called for the diamond
jack and made his contract

~ !l ~
~3
. 3

.

Silt.S:OOilm - 12

We apprecinte yt1ur

Owners :

p-I
56 Vogue

Usetheshape
to place the cards

we'LL IE

" • 191

HardWood cabinetry And FurnHurt

14 Eugene's

up
wollpopor

Opening lead: • Q

~~~,~~~------------------------------~

atitchet
54 Potenlial

cake

55 Puppies

2•

4•

AI~

49 Fable

13 PUll

Dealer: West

'R:IKl am - 4:30 pm

Wanted·
Part
Time
Room Attenda~t at tile
Gallipolis Holiday Inn, 17:~:::::~=~:-':':::-1
Must be willing to wo•k WINTER STORAGE
weekends and holidays.
~1eigs Co. Fairg10unds
Experience preferred but
Oct. 25. 2008
we will train. Apply in
9:00a.m. - II:U0a.m.
person. Absolutely
no
Rel~!ase: April25. 2009
phone calls.
A f~c ·of $20.00 will be
chargt.'d for et1rl y arrivaL
late arrival, early rc::mov&amp;l ,
late rt'moval, or anylime
Management
uc~·cs~
is wante d to
Supervisory
faiq:ruunds dthcr than
stntcd dated. Build ing
., pace i~ firs t come fiiSI
Propertv Management
~rvc .
P.T. Community Man Inside Storuge $4.001\f
Open Span• $2.00flf
agar needed for looal
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf
apartm ent community lo·
cated in GallipoliS, Ohio.
.
ideal candidate will have

~~~~~-'"'!'-

48 Poych out

• KJ 7

Vulnerable: Both

· M on-Fri .

port.

•••

ice

6 Adjuolod ,

•• P
AKJ

• 8 5
"' A 4

t / 1411 mo pd

Domestic

Aural Development
wages,
mileage
reimbursement and benefils property, excellent communication and organizaincluding health insurtional skills and be deance &amp; much more.
pendable. Health lnsurHelp wanted-Apt. Main- ance &amp; 40 1k available.
tenance person. Apply in Salary dependent upon
person by Nov. 1, 08 at ex"perience. Submit re329 N. 3rd AYe.. Middle- sur"lle &amp; salary ret;~uire­
10:()(}.2:dopm
ments to: Gallipolis C.M.,
~0-ve"'ro"'roo_k,_"!R;:;eh;;.ao.bi~.lil-al".'io-n Gorsuch Mgt., P.O. Box
Center is currently ac- 190, Lancaster OH
43130-0 190 or email to:
cepting appllcallons for d
@
ba
full time cook posi!ton, k A9bury em
EOErqma•l.com
6 am- 1 :~m.
Anyone In·
terested please pick up
an application at 333
Medical
Page Slreel, Middleport, -=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
OH. E.O.E. &amp; a ParticiHealth
Care
pant of the Drug-Free ABODE
Workplace Program.
Services, Inc Accepting
new dients and transfers
Service Manager &amp; Serv- for AID Waiver and VA
ice Technician · positions ·programs
rn
Mason
available. Health care &amp; County 304 _586_9441 or
Retirement plans avail- 1011 free 1_866_327 _7262
able. Please send re·

1 Turned to

12 Threaten

.

Stop &amp;Compare

7:00AM· 8:00 PM

11119 rill

. J9653
Weal
Eul
•Q J98432
• 1
• 5 '
• Q tO 3
• '! 9 4
+ ?10632
• .7 2
"'K Q t O 8
Soulb
• A K tO

• New Homes

(740) 992-5344 .

"H&amp;H
Guttering

Nortb

Maintenance I

~!~· ~~:!-~~d:~itl~ a~;~~~~; ~~~~~~~;

41 USN rank
42 Toll nower
46 -time no

automobile 52 Dico lhrow
11 Cullht
53 Keop•in

City. I.-

SWN. Clfl II

2331

Light refreshments
will be served.

~•-­
H~DSON&amp;

..

.

h«p:l~obs . lnloclslon.com

SAT&amp;SUN.
NOV. 1 &amp; 2.;
1 to 3 PM .

866-539-4165

~

We service and

1-877-463-6247 Ext.

OPEN HOUSE:

OR CALL FOR A FREE BROCHURE

Road

wmteri1.e 00.1.ts and
RV's

Call today!

Public is cordially tnvltedl

~

.

.._.,. ......
"- ,.all

1111111
CIISJMI.

45771
746-949-2217

New &amp; Used Tires, ·
We buy. used tires,
coltlputer wheel
alignments. light
1nechanic work.
complete servit:c oil
changes , small Crigine

IOBUT

Racine. Ohio

G•nve•

• Eleclrlclll Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutter1
• VInyl Skiing 6 P1lntlng

Sian doing work you can
be proud ot. Start doing
work that makes a
differ.erice. Start your
new career tod~yl ·

M~L

Get All The Details At

29670 Bashan

• Room Addltlont 6
Remodeling

Earn up lo $8,50/hour
Medical, Dental, EAP,
and 401K
t On site doctor!
t Full and part-lime
schedules

PVH Vol.unteer
of the Year,
Northwestern District
Volunteer of the Year &amp;
West Virginia State
Volunteer of the Year
Thursday,
November 6, 2008
2 pmto4 pm
Buxton Conference
Room (Downstairs)

""""'t

H1ll s Self
Sto rage

YOUN G'S

Special Reception
for

Get )OJ rod lure .. .., """ \OJ ..... ~ to()
STARTNJ 005. r ,.,..·re t&gt;.¥rG )W" fist ranoor
yw: 101t&gt; 1tiS Yfi'il, loOafs ~
m ""'
niles """' .... "' idBal tire fCJ ~ iJ Wvt

..

NEA Crosaword Puzzle

aaan

All types Masonry, bnck,
block,: stone, concrete.
F~ee
•
Es11mate,
304-593-6421

Thll home Hltlng via "BID NOW ONUNE
It -HudlonAndMallhlll.com
Agent Bobb'" Jo Ross
I HllmE•fi;;(ief..Local
Really Specianoes. 30-4·61 5-2818

..

1.· :; :

ACROSS

Help us make calls on
behalf of Conservative
Political organizations,
Candidates and causes.
t

.

The Daily SenTinel • Page·BS ::

Phillip
Alder

elections and we
need YOU !

Real Estate

Real Estate

•.

We are getting ready
for the 2008

NOW

HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
or
$57Kiyr,
includes
Fed.Ben, OT. Place by
adSource, •· not attiHated
with USPS who hires
1-866403-2562
,;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;,..,..,....

Adminiolra\ivo/

For Rent
-•· h
•
Muvlle
omes a

3BRI2BA,

Government &amp;

www.mydailysentlnel.com
.' ·•• 1D Cfj.t&amp;RAT£ AU.eY OOPS 7S" ~.

APPty

Local
home
medical
equipment company now
seeking
experienced
medical billing specialis1
With
customer
service
ski lls. Fax res ume a ,d
salary requirements to
740·441-1648

Federal Funds just re·
Prolenional
leased for Land Owners.
No closing cost and · The Board of Comrnis:
ZERO DOWN! Will do sioners of Gallia Metro·
land
improvemenls. polltan Housing Authority
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit is taking applications to
OK. 2: 3, 4 :ind 5 bed- fill the position of E)(ecurooms
available. tive
Director.
Position
740446-3384'
available March 1, 2009.
Housing and administra·
Mobile home lor rent.
tive expenence is pre·
740..446·4234
or
!erred Resume , · experi740-209-7861
ellce and s8.1ary require2 br. mobile home for ments should be '$ent to
rent,
no
pets, Gallia MHA. 38 1 Buck
(740)742-20 14
Ridge Road. Bidwell , OH
;_.;;...,;..;.;.._.,....__ 45614 on or before No2 trr., 2 bath in Syracuse, vember 3, 2008. For fur·
all electric, $400 a mo. ther
information
call
plus dep. &amp; utilities; 2 br, 740446•0251
1
bath,
14:ao, ;,;;;;,;,;;;.,.;;;,;..,!!!!!!!!!!""'
(740)992-7680
Drive" &amp; Delivery

·

C N A's f DIETARY
HELPER. Interviews Are
Currenfiy
Being
Conducted
For
FuM· Time.
Experienced CNA PosiManagement
tions &amp; 1 Experienced
OpPortunities
Dietary
H8tper_ Appli·
We seek career oriented cao1s Thai En)oy • The
individuals who will striVe Healthcare Industry &amp;
to achieve the "Besr in
Workmg With The Ekterty May Apply. Competi·
· Customer Sabstactlon
and taam work. If you
t1ve Wages, Pa1d Vacahave a desirt to succeed tion, Paid Meals Differenwith a goal driven, team
1181 Pay Discounts, No
Dues, Come &amp; Experioriented and grow•ng
companv. we oHer:
ence
Worl&lt;ing
In A
Pleasanl, Homelike AtHealth. dental. and hfe
insurance, prescription ' mosphere. Call For Your
card. bonus pmgram ,
Confidential
Interview
paid vacation,
Today. You'll Be .Glad
You
Dkill!304-273-5893
management apparel.
advancement from
Or Stop In &amp; See Us @ '
withm.
1113
Washington
St.,
in person at the
Ravenswood, WV. Ref·
Burger King Restaurant
erences
Required
. 65 Upper Atver Ad or
E.O.E.
mall resume to:
AVON! All Areas!
To
Burger King
PO Box 2407
Buy or
Sell
Sh1rley
Hunlington, INV 25725 or Spears 304~675t429.
fax resum·a to:
Wante.d
Welder.
Iron
740-446-3400 or
workers, Pipe Fitters, &amp;
304·529·0055
crane
operators.
Top
EOE
Pay.304·763-2694
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!., -,..--..,.,--.,....

Accounting I Financial

1, 2BR, Trailer also 1BR
Apartment
Please Call
304-593-6197 for more
Info

9! ClryoltrGnulll61176li•W• .. ...... .$5,999 $104
00Nillt11Maliroii112U ia;bolod . .....$5,490 $19
01liKk llgtll tsltlllOI~,... m• .... .. ..$6,999 ·$99
01I'll Jdo 11017211 ....... .. . ... ... ..$6,999 $129
01 Pllliac Glaid Prix Gl l!IIOI2JA ..... ... ...$8,999 1137
02 a.y,lr PI Cniter i611091L ........ ,.$6,999 121

Fl·

near North Gatha High' NANCE '
AVAILABLE .
SchooL $500 rent + $500 (7401446-3570
ctepos1t. 446·8495
Mobile
Home
2BR house for rent rn 1996
2854
Georges
Eureka. Deposit $400 16xBO
rem
$400. 256-6408 , Creek Ad . MUST BE
MOVED, new heat pump
441-0583, 25&amp;6716
3BR, 2 bath stovelrefr
3BR , 1 112 bath on Jack- $15.000. t;atl •446·4743
son Pike. No pets. S675 or 245-5045
per month. + Deposit.
740·446-4051 .
,.,..-,..,~-...,.-New 3 Bedropm homes
Church parsonage . 3BA. from $214.36 per month,
2 bath, full basemen!, 2 includes many upgrades,
car
garage
Includes delivery
s.
set-up.
WID. new tndge and 740-385-2434
range. Sits on nearly 2
acres. S700 plus sec. --- - - .2 .2006
,.
Pr1ces
Reduced
dep. For mfo or · mspec16x80 2 bed ;:: bath, 1
tron call 245-0031
2000 16x70 2 bed 1
House For Rent m Porn! bath. 1 1999 16x80 2
Pleasant
2-stor-y house. bed 2 bath . gas. 1 1997
Main St. Point Pleasant. 14&lt;70 .2 bed 2 bath gas,
2
br.,2
ba.
2 1 2002 16•80 3 bed 2
lr ..dr. .kitchen w/stove. re- bath. Pnced deliveted
frigerator. 112 basement,
blocked , leveled and anlarge yard. no pe ts.
chored.
Day
Ph.
$550.00,dep. S. ret. req. 740&lt;388·0000
&amp;
&amp;
caii30H75·23 19.
740 _388 _8513
Evenings
New 2BR. 2 bath, fridge. 740·245·92 15
&amp;
weekendS
Ph.
slove, dishwasher 1nc1.
WID hookup . $600 rno .+ 740: 388 -80 17
&amp;
$600 dep. 740·446-7029
74Q.245·9215
&amp;
74Q.794 ·0460
Pomeroy. 2 br.. 1 bath, !':::;..;;..::~~-~-,
no pets, no smoking, Pt.
Pleasant
area.
$475
plus
deposit. bank owned double
(740)992-5181
w1de on lg flat lot.
close to town $2 4.900
4 Dr. Brokers Realty Mike
house &amp; 2 br. cabin on Slack
Broker
200 acres · close
to 304 _542_5888 _
Pomeroy. available •m- ~;;;;;;~
mediately,
:
(740)99g-459P
o'
740·416-7538
6000
Employmenl

Ronlalo

I

OWNER

Wedn8sday, October 29, 2008
ALLEYOOP

Holp Wantwcl • Gonoral

Food Sorrico•

References
304·682-3512
304-488-7946

4000

06ChryioriCO!&amp;Couni-yVon116167U.. ...... m .!'Yl
07 Chi'!) Uil&lt;li IS GIIISOMA " ·l&lt;l'"' .
07 IOI'c!a Carola., ' S' Model Gillilt ....

OiHyMElanroGIS116116l!J ,.,m .. ....$8,200
04 Chi'!) Mo~t Carlo llll~l b•a.l. ... , $9,5~
o. Hondo Cr.ic HyW 116""'~ ,.w .. ..... ..$9,999

Sate.

2br on the River in Ma· 2004 Ooublewide in new
son. $500.00 a mon . cond1t10n . 4 bedroom, 2

0510)010 locomo 7!011111. "' 1..11.• ..

03 Mazda MF'I FIII1J. ..

Rent

$325.00

Fill re•lcle
•llfory report
01

Houtetfor

2br.

TO HIDE!

VVednesda~Ckrtober29,2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

\

•
•

�Plge 84 • .The Daily Sentinel

I

iOTOR VEHICLES FOR SALE
DONWOODNC AUTOMOTIVE

GREAT USED
COS WITH

yow cell

plloae.
Jut ftlf , Jfocl: Jlfllllter to
42355

99 GMCSitna Axi Ext Cob !10511( .
00 I~ R111 HWD 111661L ..,,l&lt;l• .
OJ Hyundci A«tr1 G5 tii!MO,Ill .
01 Civyllw 300M lllall D,ll •
..
02 ~ Ao:M GS lltlll( l•"""

02 B.iclltS!m 1911710.... .
04 1M v,. 1101111,
04 f011! fllO Xll G61 7IIID,
041u&lt;l C.o!Jry t6162l0.1. "' Xlol.
04 PoMacG~nd Prix GilIliAD ;o1.n• . ·" '' m
04 V~bwagtn New lltliolillll!l.bl&lt;l ..
05 en...,~ 6617~. .
05 Chi'!) Sil..ado 1500 71110110 ""·Ji.. ,.. J.&gt;'Y&gt;
05 !uicllaaolst G6llll0.\ llol. &lt;!1 . ... .. . '.....,
Olloyaio Cny XlE 71C166114""'
05 GMC !itrro ll001161U71~11ol.lll• .. ! !D•!!"

bath, all appliances in·
or cludeCI $37,000 located
at 176 Zuspan Lane Ma·
~-~-...,.-~- son City30"675·2117
house

in

MaSOI'l

a mon.
+
$325.00 dep.
no pets Brand new 3bed 2bath
304·882-3652.
on + -halt acre 1n Pt.
3BR house on SA 160 Pleasant

Manufacturrd
Housmg

2BR trailer
367-7762

.. . ... .. . $7,999

129
Oi ltep Glald Chtrolet liOallt•... l'l .. . ..$5,999 $99

1113

)37
1~
IW Poni~&lt;Gn.dAM IIIIMII. ...,,ll&lt; . .. .. .$11,999 169
Olehl'l)l~l!f161~ ,0 ' ' ... ' $10,999 159
05 Chi'!) C*' 1111912JA •. ~~·• . .. .. .$10,999 179
07 r. Spottagt IX ~ttn'611h. *• .. $1~,999 219
07 H)M A«t~~~ "'16WA .....~~ . .... $1~, m 219
07H)ME1m 1161167llW.111;,. .......$15,A99 229
07H)MSooalaGtSHti101MAd • .$15,999 .. $239
07H)'JndaiAm11611061l ""lll . ..... $17,950 $214
lll H)M T-1161771llllok,.
$15,000 $219

lor

rent .

Seeking
driver
lots , w/COUHazmat qualitica(no pets) in Ashton WV tions lor lull time employ304-576·2.942.
ment @ propane busiScenic location, conven· ness, send resumes to:
ien1 to town anQ afford- Daily Sentinel. PO Box
able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms 729·23,
Pomeroy,
Oh
available
call ;::45;;;7,;;6;;,9=====.,
(740)992-5639
d

=

Sal

Foo Servige1

to

McDonald's
oI · Al·o
16x32 Grande now hiring morn·
Deck, 112 qcre. Jerry's ing shift. flexible hours,
Run
Rd.
$46,500 . pard· Holidays and Vaca304-576-3111
tion . .Apply within

00 fold t..,. 161714. ." "" ' .... ' .. " ..
01 Niuall X1rnt XI1611111A.""'" ...
02 Dodge CIXolo SXI16llllll. ,; ... ........ .

03 ~ llttrir 16112111, .1. ..... .
03 FOld Crown Yidoria 1101211111 ..
IW Ponlodonli~ 161973ll
Oi Cllf&lt;1 lrOirJoar ~ IWD 1617491."' &lt;110. .
05 Hy..doi Sonlofe 1111111. "" '" "" '•' .
05 FOld fllO Ill Ill liM Kl;,lndtfti
1(16 S,mli~ 16lllll l~ ...

'06 Sillrolon f611M5. .
. .... .. .
07 Otevy ll1iltlozwlS 161677111. "'lhloo

07 Mania IS 161144MA •04 • ... .. ... .
07 Mania Ml!rr 161&amp;WIA ilollll ... .... .
II/ kio Spottagt IX f617lllll. ""'· lll•
07 Cit~'!) MalillllS 16110lMA ... 11.. ....
II/ 1\rioc G6 FIIIIOI. l:l• .. .... ..
07 fold fmZU Sf61710MA " · m• ....
II/ fold r..... sn ,.,17W.,.,.lll • ..
(li

lll fold

ISIIOIJ, '~"" ..
f6167U. .

CIA.

In Memory

In Memory

Larry Griffin
Remembering you on
your birthday
October 29th
Lovea a missea by
WifeGrace ·
Brady Jr/Terri · Greg!Lii · Beth/Rob
Father· Ernie fr granachilaren

~edery::~l

'!~;;;;;;~Jo.,;,;b~t;;;;:;;;=~
PoST

OFFICE

Help Wanted· General
$250 Sign on Bonus
Ten positions ne&amp;d filled
by next week!.
No Sales!
No Collections!
Recruit volunteers for
non-profil organizations
s"uch as St. Jude
Children's ResearCh
Hospital.
Get paid to make a
difference!

t

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• New

· Patio •nd Porch O.Ckl

WV036725

V.C. YOUN G Ill
992-62' ~
Oh1o
Loc.11 ElpP''"'K '

Pv,nNu~

25

VP ,Jr &lt;,

r------"""'1
L &amp; L Tire Barn
44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
iS Poin1s)

repair.

~ .... _.btfiQI,nlbpJ.Ii;wi'T S2.5X)O!J ~ ~~

..-.MBbtfllltbm!ta- CtfOI.,_~
~·

Dfetiti!J"s""

-..,-

-

·.)-

0

11
IOfllj; 1191J131lm

'·

BRIDGE

Full and Part-time
Positions
Day and Evening
Shilts
Professional Work
Environment!
Medical, Dental, EAP,
401K!
On-site Doctor
Weekly Pay and
Bonus lncenti'.!'es!
,,.

Call TODAYf
~ntarvlew

TOMORROWU
Work NEXT WEEK!U

HI811-IMC-PAYU
Ext. 1941
""'- 'Jobs.lntoclslon.com
Ohio
valley
l:tome
Health, Inc. hiring Home
Health
Aides.
STNA.

CNA, .CHHA, PCA may
apply at 14800 Jackson

.11111111M, 9

7

..__...,cr ,

• Gatages
• Complete .

Remodeling

~. ~~!:~L~ 140-992-1171
Houts

sume
to
LLC@CAREO.COM
or
fax to 740-446-9104
An Excellent way to earn
.money. The New AVon.
Call
Marilyn
304-682·2645

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

lucuonaar:
·BIIIV R.lollla Jr.
740-41&amp;-1164
E-mail: captb11165@yahoo.com

·

www.auctlonzlp.com
#5548 .

South

Mt AIU'.H.I

roryo~

YOV'/t~ 5VPPOS~l&gt; TO 1~
VNl&gt;~fl(;OVf:fl···l&gt;flf:fS
· LIIC~ Tttf:

AL

n

...."IWIMG
I ,..,

.-.-.7. /
/

COP5 IN 2
P•ANt:
8;
...
"
m'
CL 0 ru ~s ,I ~

orLit:{l
.
.....
TIMVtL~fl$.

I"

![

l ':·
~ ~~

~

,_

bul·ines~·

BARNEY

www.t:~on~Jooweo-!Jiaoir)'.-

WHAT'Re YOU
G!TTIN' ALL

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding 1 Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653-9657

FANCIEl) UP
FER,
PAW?

Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019
'•

Cell: 7411-416-5047

~~

Paul Rowe

i

(

ABODE
Health
Care
Services,
Inc,
Hiring
Careglvem in Leon, &amp; in
Mason
. County.
304-588·944 1 or toll free
1-866-327-7262

·d 1 1h
ua s w t menta 1 retar-

VI

dation and developmental d•sabilitles. Interested
.applicants may apply at
8204 Carla Drive. Galli·
polis, Ohio 45631 . or
e-mail a res ume to dab·
shire3@suddenlink.net
·

RNiauranb

~=~-~=;;;;;;;;;;;;
Now Hinng ExperlenceQ,
waitstaff, cooks,
dishwashers &amp; delivery driY·
ers apply In person
Harry's
Famous
Hot
Oog,s New Haven

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Additions, RemodeUng,
Roofs, Siding, Decks,
Licensed &amp; Insured

~~~~:;==:!~~~~~~~=~
Quality Seamless
Gutters
Mamtenance
•
PIus
C{lmmercia/ &amp;: Ri'sid,ntial

Vinyl
Siding/Replacement

Windows/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740·992·1493 Office
740-416·8339 Cell
Free Esrimaled
Pomeroy , Ohio

iW.H

.........,

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Rooflng
·Decks
• Garages
• Pale BUildings
•.Room Addltlont

Owner:
JameaKeeoeell
742·2332

PEANUTS
SO WHAT ARE •
'(OU DOING, MA~IE'

*Prompl and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Jnsured
•Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @
740·591-8044
Please leave messa e

Compltto 11'00 Core

Concrel8

STYlf. ..

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Joh~&amp;IU'"
141-912-5882

NOMATTCDI
WHATYOU.RI

..,.....,..~

--.""""'f40-441-1317

,.,_,_

Raot;ng. s;d;ng,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Conbacto&lt;

YOU EV£12 WOND£11
WHY NO ONE WIIESTL£5
LIONS, ANYMO'&lt;E?

j'
GARFIELD

740.367.()544
Free Eatl""""

7 40.367.0538

For Remodelbig and New House BuDding

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

Can:

... TilE

IIUII..aeii,IWIU
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bouom, OH

740-985-4141
liAS
SOMETHING
fOR YOU!!

PaM

No rth
Dbl.
Pau

16 Robin Cook

lhrilltr
17 Vanna's
bo11
, 18 Kindled
19 Unlidy per·
aon

Eaat

Pa"

PaM

Cell: 740-4 16-1834

GRIZZWELLS
~5\.E \\\

~?~;&gt;

Thurtday, Oct. 30, 2008
NO
By Bemlce Bede Oaol
PRESSURE.
In the year ahead, knO'Medge and tenacTtl01J6tt .
ity wi ll be required to fu !IIWworthY objectives, and ~ou will possess plenty ol
these important trails to accorrip lish your
goals, even those you previously lhOO!,lht
wera unattainable.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - II you
require a partner to accomplish something big and Important, go to a reli able
friend or co·worker first W1th the right
help, that whiCh· was overwhelming will
be redu ced to a manageable size.
SAGITIARIUS (NOY. 23-Dec. 21 ) - You
won't be afraid of a lillie competition,
especiallY where work or career is con cerned. Rivalry Is what encourages peo·
to lake on huge challenges .
DO't'OV WEAR
JUST LYl N6
SURE,
THER~S NO DOU8i pte
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - What
'{OU.R 6LA5SE5
SED
you leam - through personal experiences or !rom books - will be retained
WHEN '{()IJ'RE
and used to your advanta!,]e later In ways
you never would have suspected.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -There
WEIRD..
are times when a little bravado can be
skillfully applied to mask a shaky situaUon. Your bluffs wWI prove to be quite useful and Sffeclive.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - This
might be one of those days where you
fin(j it lmpo~sible to work tlllngs oul by
yourself. Seek advice from someone you
trust, like a lrl'"d or tamlly member who
can offer Wise counsel,
ARIES (MarCh 21-Aprtl tO} - Larger
earnings than usual can be generated
WELL,
SHE
LOOKS
AN
CUZ THEY'VE BLED
from more than ooe source. Some new
AWFUL LOT LIKE ALION
TO DEATH? AND
posslbllllieS to cash in are righl under
AND THEREFOR£ DESE11VES
your nose, so instead of doing business
THAfS NOT ALION.
TO BE TAKEN DOWN. SO
as usual, look a~ound.
lfS ABARil CAT
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - A current
ON
THE
COUNT
OF
THREE
.•.
WITH A WIG.
partnership arrangement will continue to
grow considerably, providing larger benefits lor both partners as the event$ of
the dby should prove.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- There's a
strong possibility that, il') a siluatlon
where you weren't fairty compensated or
acknowledged. som90ne has gone to
..,_
bal for you, making it possible to reclify
_.,.
•. ,
1 "this "eglect.
U.J..---:::
""::.1 ,;;:;::._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. L-----'--....;---1 CANCER (June ,21 -July 221- Your great
dmgence and patience in carefully plan·
ning and executing an important project
will pay ott. You don't have to move
mountains; you merely have to apply a
strong, sustained effort .
·OR "T"HSI~
LEO (July 23-Aug. 2?) - Through hard
work, an opportunity will enable you to
aher a negative situation that's been
standing In your way. You 'll now realize
the rewards you deser.oe.
VIRGO (Au!,]. 23-Sepl. 22) - Merely
keeping busy won'1cut the mustard. Vou
must have something to do where your
industrious Inclinations can come into
p!ay and produce some worthy rewards.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Th9le are
strong possibilities fOr financial gains,
but, when the dust settles. il will become
clear that your large gainS were all due to
lhe strong efforts you applied toward
these ends.
•

IN
READIN6

SLEEPIN&amp;"?

--"v.-,

l

SO r
CAN SEE WHAT
I'M DREAMING

IN M'&lt; MIND,
MARCIE, TllAT '{OIJ
ARE EXCESSII/EL'(

1 Blazo up
.2 Stair part
3 Planitl's
opon

18 Glasgow
20

21
22
24

4 Zorro'a ·

23 Joie de
marks
vivre
5 Mag.
25 Arizona cily
tlafftrl
26 Kind of
6 Technical

26
27

word

48 Miniblind

girl
EnUct
Leave oul
AliCozy seal
Piquancy
Sicilian
landmark

part

.49 Run away .
50

hastily
Oslrich
cousin

51

Kind of instinct

52

28 Get closer

Subway
oppo1itea

29 Wide cravat 7 Worried
30 Boathouse
32 --eye
8 Remind loo
item•
otoak
ofton
31 Duo
33 Cousteau's 9 Kind of aya- 37 Least
eummer

tern

34 Boloney t
35 Depot info
36 Break suddenly
38 Heavy molal
40 Olin·-

tanned

10 Cave , often
11 Junk e-mail
12 Open lo
debate
16 Sealing a
deal

Fine poinl
41 Goals
43 Fray
44 Ms . Papas
45 Dispatched
47 Singletons

39

CELEBRITY CIPHER

''

by Luis Campos
Celebnty CioM! CT\illtgrams ar&amp;,I&amp;I!IKJ !tom quelallons t11 larnoos people paSI and p·esert
Each taner rn lhecipner stantls 101 anomer

Today'sctue· LequalsU

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NT

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MTUPMT

NRHGZSMCUS
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The chief duly of government is to keep lhe peaco
and stand out ollhe sunshine ollhe people ·· James A. Gart ield

T=~:t~~l $©~~~-~ttf~•
Wllod

ORearrange
letters of
lour scrambled words

~r

CLAY R.

WOlD
GAM I

POI\~11

the

b.- ·
lew to form. four simple worW.

.,

AMADM

f-r.-1
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"Of all the lhmgs you
.wear," the mom infomted

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her dnughler, "y~ur

expressi~n is lite most

··.:;;;;,~~... ••• chucl&lt;l· Qvored
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by lilling in the mi111ng words
l -.l..1_.l..1 _J..1_J..-l.
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you develop from step No 3 below:

.r~o PRINI NUMBmo
'# lETifR~
oft UNSCRAMBlE

W ANSWEi

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I' I' I' I' I' I' I' 1 j
IIIIIIIII
1

S~RA M-LETS

• ANSWERS 10128108
Rosary .:. Nudge - Young ·· Argosy - YOU DO
"The.real way 10 success," lectured lhe moliV8tional speake~
"is to like you, whal you do, and how YOU DO it"'

. ARLO &amp; JANIS

t

f

SOUP TO NUTZ

15+ ytan uptritnct Fr., Esti-•

Advertise
in this space for
· $64 per month
&gt;I

DOWN

. meditation

W~!J?!,

....... ... ..... - -··
BIG"NATI:

RICK PRICE

Sl.lliMPI

Jean Roush

West

without

olate
15 Zoneo

f~~Astro-

Accepting
applications
for full &amp; part time EMT,
and
Param~ics .
We
haYe a benefits package
available. $15.00/hr Applications can be ob·
tained lro m the Mason
County EMS 911 Emergency Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550 br online
at masoncountyoes.com,
follow the EMS link.
Middleton Estates is accepting applications tor · a .
fulllime LPN Supervisor
and PRNILPN's. You will
be part of a team · that
provides services ti indl·

r----..r- v-- .----.,.--'---

1

r

'

Modica I

~E\JE.R RE./&gt;-.L.l.'&lt; &lt;:.E.T ~'/WJ.lU£.1

l.IK.E'.Tfl.l~ ~KI~ C:f.\l&gt;.llit. ...

email:
jrshadfrm@eol.com

I

91

'\naPS 1&lt;\E W~Y. BUTl ""q

l j\r.&gt;T l'E-N..IlE~ 1&lt;\'( Cl&gt;.m.~

Jon Van Meter &amp;

9-87642

Look al1he North-South diamond holdings in tooay 's diagram . u yoo were
Soulh . having played a diamond 1owerd
Ihe king-jac\1, would you call lor the jack
odor the king?
Who knows? Bul often the bidding can
supply a clue.
West opened two spades, a weak twobid usually promising a six-card suit.
With seven, one would normally open
three spades. North cQfrectly doubled for
takeout (Yes, his poinl·counl was low,
but at1er a pre-empt, the player short in
the opponent's suit shOuld strain to enter
the auction.) True, ihis might have resull·
ed in a heart (fontract In a 4·3 tit, but It
would have been worse to oVercall three
clubs with such an anemic sUit. Now
South jumped to lour hearts. Wllh a six- ·
card major, two aces and one king, he
was right to go lor game.
West led the spade queen. Declarer won
with his ace and took dummy's two top
hearts, getting the bad news. South
played dUmmy's second spade, East
discarding the diamond two. Declarer
won with his king and ruffed his last
spade on the board, East overruffing
and shifting to the club king.
South won wilh his ace and return ed a
club to d!Jmmy's nine, but East won with
his 10 and continued with the club
queen. Declarer ·ruf1ed and led a diamond. West ducking smooth ly. Should
South have called for dummy's jat:l&lt; or
for the king?
The clue was We st's opening bid. With
seven decent spades and th e diamond
ace, he would have opened th ree
spades . But with only !he diamond
queen, two spades was comprehensl·
ble . So declarer called for the diamond
jack and made his contract

~ !l ~
~3
. 3

.

Silt.S:OOilm - 12

We apprecinte yt1ur

Owners :

p-I
56 Vogue

Usetheshape
to place the cards

we'LL IE

" • 191

HardWood cabinetry And FurnHurt

14 Eugene's

up
wollpopor

Opening lead: • Q

~~~,~~~------------------------------~

atitchet
54 Potenlial

cake

55 Puppies

2•

4•

AI~

49 Fable

13 PUll

Dealer: West

'R:IKl am - 4:30 pm

Wanted·
Part
Time
Room Attenda~t at tile
Gallipolis Holiday Inn, 17:~:::::~=~:-':':::-1
Must be willing to wo•k WINTER STORAGE
weekends and holidays.
~1eigs Co. Fairg10unds
Experience preferred but
Oct. 25. 2008
we will train. Apply in
9:00a.m. - II:U0a.m.
person. Absolutely
no
Rel~!ase: April25. 2009
phone calls.
A f~c ·of $20.00 will be
chargt.'d for et1rl y arrivaL
late arrival, early rc::mov&amp;l ,
late rt'moval, or anylime
Management
uc~·cs~
is wante d to
Supervisory
faiq:ruunds dthcr than
stntcd dated. Build ing
., pace i~ firs t come fiiSI
Propertv Management
~rvc .
P.T. Community Man Inside Storuge $4.001\f
Open Span• $2.00flf
agar needed for looal
Inside Fence: $1.00/lf
apartm ent community lo·
cated in GallipoliS, Ohio.
.
ideal candidate will have

~~~~~-'"'!'-

48 Poych out

• KJ 7

Vulnerable: Both

· M on-Fri .

port.

•••

ice

6 Adjuolod ,

•• P
AKJ

• 8 5
"' A 4

t / 1411 mo pd

Domestic

Aural Development
wages,
mileage
reimbursement and benefils property, excellent communication and organizaincluding health insurtional skills and be deance &amp; much more.
pendable. Health lnsurHelp wanted-Apt. Main- ance &amp; 40 1k available.
tenance person. Apply in Salary dependent upon
person by Nov. 1, 08 at ex"perience. Submit re329 N. 3rd AYe.. Middle- sur"lle &amp; salary ret;~uire­
10:()(}.2:dopm
ments to: Gallipolis C.M.,
~0-ve"'ro"'roo_k,_"!R;:;eh;;.ao.bi~.lil-al".'io-n Gorsuch Mgt., P.O. Box
Center is currently ac- 190, Lancaster OH
43130-0 190 or email to:
cepting appllcallons for d
@
ba
full time cook posi!ton, k A9bury em
EOErqma•l.com
6 am- 1 :~m.
Anyone In·
terested please pick up
an application at 333
Medical
Page Slreel, Middleport, -=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
OH. E.O.E. &amp; a ParticiHealth
Care
pant of the Drug-Free ABODE
Workplace Program.
Services, Inc Accepting
new dients and transfers
Service Manager &amp; Serv- for AID Waiver and VA
ice Technician · positions ·programs
rn
Mason
available. Health care &amp; County 304 _586_9441 or
Retirement plans avail- 1011 free 1_866_327 _7262
able. Please send re·

1 Turned to

12 Threaten

.

Stop &amp;Compare

7:00AM· 8:00 PM

11119 rill

. J9653
Weal
Eul
•Q J98432
• 1
• 5 '
• Q tO 3
• '! 9 4
+ ?10632
• .7 2
"'K Q t O 8
Soulb
• A K tO

• New Homes

(740) 992-5344 .

"H&amp;H
Guttering

Nortb

Maintenance I

~!~· ~~:!-~~d:~itl~ a~;~~~~; ~~~~~~~;

41 USN rank
42 Toll nower
46 -time no

automobile 52 Dico lhrow
11 Cullht
53 Keop•in

City. I.-

SWN. Clfl II

2331

Light refreshments
will be served.

~•-­
H~DSON&amp;

..

.

h«p:l~obs . lnloclslon.com

SAT&amp;SUN.
NOV. 1 &amp; 2.;
1 to 3 PM .

866-539-4165

~

We service and

1-877-463-6247 Ext.

OPEN HOUSE:

OR CALL FOR A FREE BROCHURE

Road

wmteri1.e 00.1.ts and
RV's

Call today!

Public is cordially tnvltedl

~

.

.._.,. ......
"- ,.all

1111111
CIISJMI.

45771
746-949-2217

New &amp; Used Tires, ·
We buy. used tires,
coltlputer wheel
alignments. light
1nechanic work.
complete servit:c oil
changes , small Crigine

IOBUT

Racine. Ohio

G•nve•

• Eleclrlclll Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutter1
• VInyl Skiing 6 P1lntlng

Sian doing work you can
be proud ot. Start doing
work that makes a
differ.erice. Start your
new career tod~yl ·

M~L

Get All The Details At

29670 Bashan

• Room Addltlont 6
Remodeling

Earn up lo $8,50/hour
Medical, Dental, EAP,
and 401K
t On site doctor!
t Full and part-lime
schedules

PVH Vol.unteer
of the Year,
Northwestern District
Volunteer of the Year &amp;
West Virginia State
Volunteer of the Year
Thursday,
November 6, 2008
2 pmto4 pm
Buxton Conference
Room (Downstairs)

""""'t

H1ll s Self
Sto rage

YOUN G'S

Special Reception
for

Get )OJ rod lure .. .., """ \OJ ..... ~ to()
STARTNJ 005. r ,.,..·re t&gt;.¥rG )W" fist ranoor
yw: 101t&gt; 1tiS Yfi'il, loOafs ~
m ""'
niles """' .... "' idBal tire fCJ ~ iJ Wvt

..

NEA Crosaword Puzzle

aaan

All types Masonry, bnck,
block,: stone, concrete.
F~ee
•
Es11mate,
304-593-6421

Thll home Hltlng via "BID NOW ONUNE
It -HudlonAndMallhlll.com
Agent Bobb'" Jo Ross
I HllmE•fi;;(ief..Local
Really Specianoes. 30-4·61 5-2818

..

1.· :; :

ACROSS

Help us make calls on
behalf of Conservative
Political organizations,
Candidates and causes.
t

.

The Daily SenTinel • Page·BS ::

Phillip
Alder

elections and we
need YOU !

Real Estate

Real Estate

•.

We are getting ready
for the 2008

NOW

HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
or
$57Kiyr,
includes
Fed.Ben, OT. Place by
adSource, •· not attiHated
with USPS who hires
1-866403-2562
,;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;,..,..,....

Adminiolra\ivo/

For Rent
-•· h
•
Muvlle
omes a

3BRI2BA,

Government &amp;

www.mydailysentlnel.com
.' ·•• 1D Cfj.t&amp;RAT£ AU.eY OOPS 7S" ~.

APPty

Local
home
medical
equipment company now
seeking
experienced
medical billing specialis1
With
customer
service
ski lls. Fax res ume a ,d
salary requirements to
740·441-1648

Federal Funds just re·
Prolenional
leased for Land Owners.
No closing cost and · The Board of Comrnis:
ZERO DOWN! Will do sioners of Gallia Metro·
land
improvemenls. polltan Housing Authority
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit is taking applications to
OK. 2: 3, 4 :ind 5 bed- fill the position of E)(ecurooms
available. tive
Director.
Position
740446-3384'
available March 1, 2009.
Housing and administra·
Mobile home lor rent.
tive expenence is pre·
740..446·4234
or
!erred Resume , · experi740-209-7861
ellce and s8.1ary require2 br. mobile home for ments should be '$ent to
rent,
no
pets, Gallia MHA. 38 1 Buck
(740)742-20 14
Ridge Road. Bidwell , OH
;_.;;...,;..;.;.._.,....__ 45614 on or before No2 trr., 2 bath in Syracuse, vember 3, 2008. For fur·
all electric, $400 a mo. ther
information
call
plus dep. &amp; utilities; 2 br, 740446•0251
1
bath,
14:ao, ;,;;;;,;,;;;.,.;;;,;..,!!!!!!!!!!""'
(740)992-7680
Drive" &amp; Delivery

·

C N A's f DIETARY
HELPER. Interviews Are
Currenfiy
Being
Conducted
For
FuM· Time.
Experienced CNA PosiManagement
tions &amp; 1 Experienced
OpPortunities
Dietary
H8tper_ Appli·
We seek career oriented cao1s Thai En)oy • The
individuals who will striVe Healthcare Industry &amp;
to achieve the "Besr in
Workmg With The Ekterty May Apply. Competi·
· Customer Sabstactlon
and taam work. If you
t1ve Wages, Pa1d Vacahave a desirt to succeed tion, Paid Meals Differenwith a goal driven, team
1181 Pay Discounts, No
Dues, Come &amp; Experioriented and grow•ng
companv. we oHer:
ence
Worl&lt;ing
In A
Pleasanl, Homelike AtHealth. dental. and hfe
insurance, prescription ' mosphere. Call For Your
card. bonus pmgram ,
Confidential
Interview
paid vacation,
Today. You'll Be .Glad
You
Dkill!304-273-5893
management apparel.
advancement from
Or Stop In &amp; See Us @ '
withm.
1113
Washington
St.,
in person at the
Ravenswood, WV. Ref·
Burger King Restaurant
erences
Required
. 65 Upper Atver Ad or
E.O.E.
mall resume to:
AVON! All Areas!
To
Burger King
PO Box 2407
Buy or
Sell
Sh1rley
Hunlington, INV 25725 or Spears 304~675t429.
fax resum·a to:
Wante.d
Welder.
Iron
740-446-3400 or
workers, Pipe Fitters, &amp;
304·529·0055
crane
operators.
Top
EOE
Pay.304·763-2694
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!., -,..--..,.,--.,....

Accounting I Financial

1, 2BR, Trailer also 1BR
Apartment
Please Call
304-593-6197 for more
Info

9! ClryoltrGnulll61176li•W• .. ...... .$5,999 $104
00Nillt11Maliroii112U ia;bolod . .....$5,490 $19
01liKk llgtll tsltlllOI~,... m• .... .. ..$6,999 ·$99
01I'll Jdo 11017211 ....... .. . ... ... ..$6,999 $129
01 Pllliac Glaid Prix Gl l!IIOI2JA ..... ... ...$8,999 1137
02 a.y,lr PI Cniter i611091L ........ ,.$6,999 121

Fl·

near North Gatha High' NANCE '
AVAILABLE .
SchooL $500 rent + $500 (7401446-3570
ctepos1t. 446·8495
Mobile
Home
2BR house for rent rn 1996
2854
Georges
Eureka. Deposit $400 16xBO
rem
$400. 256-6408 , Creek Ad . MUST BE
MOVED, new heat pump
441-0583, 25&amp;6716
3BR, 2 bath stovelrefr
3BR , 1 112 bath on Jack- $15.000. t;atl •446·4743
son Pike. No pets. S675 or 245-5045
per month. + Deposit.
740·446-4051 .
,.,..-,..,~-...,.-New 3 Bedropm homes
Church parsonage . 3BA. from $214.36 per month,
2 bath, full basemen!, 2 includes many upgrades,
car
garage
Includes delivery
s.
set-up.
WID. new tndge and 740-385-2434
range. Sits on nearly 2
acres. S700 plus sec. --- - - .2 .2006
,.
Pr1ces
Reduced
dep. For mfo or · mspec16x80 2 bed ;:: bath, 1
tron call 245-0031
2000 16x70 2 bed 1
House For Rent m Porn! bath. 1 1999 16x80 2
Pleasant
2-stor-y house. bed 2 bath . gas. 1 1997
Main St. Point Pleasant. 14&lt;70 .2 bed 2 bath gas,
2
br.,2
ba.
2 1 2002 16•80 3 bed 2
lr ..dr. .kitchen w/stove. re- bath. Pnced deliveted
frigerator. 112 basement,
blocked , leveled and anlarge yard. no pe ts.
chored.
Day
Ph.
$550.00,dep. S. ret. req. 740&lt;388·0000
&amp;
&amp;
caii30H75·23 19.
740 _388 _8513
Evenings
New 2BR. 2 bath, fridge. 740·245·92 15
&amp;
weekendS
Ph.
slove, dishwasher 1nc1.
WID hookup . $600 rno .+ 740: 388 -80 17
&amp;
$600 dep. 740·446-7029
74Q.245·9215
&amp;
74Q.794 ·0460
Pomeroy. 2 br.. 1 bath, !':::;..;;..::~~-~-,
no pets, no smoking, Pt.
Pleasant
area.
$475
plus
deposit. bank owned double
(740)992-5181
w1de on lg flat lot.
close to town $2 4.900
4 Dr. Brokers Realty Mike
house &amp; 2 br. cabin on Slack
Broker
200 acres · close
to 304 _542_5888 _
Pomeroy. available •m- ~;;;;;;~
mediately,
:
(740)99g-459P
o'
740·416-7538
6000
Employmenl

Ronlalo

I

OWNER

Wedn8sday, October 29, 2008
ALLEYOOP

Holp Wantwcl • Gonoral

Food Sorrico•

References
304·682-3512
304-488-7946

4000

06ChryioriCO!&amp;Couni-yVon116167U.. ...... m .!'Yl
07 Chi'!) Uil&lt;li IS GIIISOMA " ·l&lt;l'"' .
07 IOI'c!a Carola., ' S' Model Gillilt ....

OiHyMElanroGIS116116l!J ,.,m .. ....$8,200
04 Chi'!) Mo~t Carlo llll~l b•a.l. ... , $9,5~
o. Hondo Cr.ic HyW 116""'~ ,.w .. ..... ..$9,999

Sate.

2br on the River in Ma· 2004 Ooublewide in new
son. $500.00 a mon . cond1t10n . 4 bedroom, 2

0510)010 locomo 7!011111. "' 1..11.• ..

03 Mazda MF'I FIII1J. ..

Rent

$325.00

Fill re•lcle
•llfory report
01

Houtetfor

2br.

TO HIDE!

VVednesda~Ckrtober29,2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

\

•
•

�..

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 29. :zoo8

www.mydailysentinel.com

McCollum exhibit

•.

OHSAA Regienal
quarterfmal
football pairings
DIVISION I

Bv RusTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER

All games at 7 p,m. Saturday
Region 1 -

(8) Lakewood St. Edward

16·4) aii1J Clew. St.lgna1ius (9·1): (7)
Euclid (7·3) a1 (2) S1rongsville (9·1): (6)
Willoughby South (8·2) a1 (3) Mentor (8·

2) ; (5) Ekecksvllle Br_9adview-Hts. (7-3)
at (4} Cleve. Glenville (1Q..O)
Region 2 - (8) Massman Washington
(6-4) at (1) Nor111 Canton Hoover (9·1 ):
(7) Canton McKinley (6-4) at (2) Canton
GtenOak (8·2); (6) Macedonia Nordonia
(?·3) at (3) Brunswick (9-1) i (5) Amherst

Steele (8·2) at (4) Twinsburg (8·2)

Region 3 - (8) Grove City (6-4) at ( 1)
Hilliard Davidson (9·1); (7) Marysville (7-

3) at. (2) Upper Arlington (9·1) ; (6)
Delaware
Hayes (7-3)
at
(3)
Pickerington
Cent.
( 10-0);
(5)
Worthington Kilbourne (8-2) at (4) Cots.
Brookhaven (9-1)
Region 4 - (8) Cin. ArchbishOp
Moelljtr (6·4) at (1) Cin. Colerain (9·1);
(7) Kettering Fairmont (7 -3) at (2)
Clay1on Northmont (9- t): (6).Centerville

(7·3) at (3) Cin. Eider 19·1): 15) Cin

Woodward (10·0) at {4) . Huber Hts.

Wayne (7·3)

DIVISION II
All ·games at7:30 P·rt:' · Friday
Region 5 .:_ (8) Kent Roosevelt (8-2) at

(1) Mayfield (9-1): (7) Madison 17·3) a1
121 East Cleve. Shaw (9·0): (6)
Tall madge (7·3) at (3) Parma Padua
Franciscan (8·2): 15) Akron Hoban (6·4)
at (4) Warren Howland (7-3)
Region 6 (8) Powell Otentangy
Li berty
0): {7) Lewis Center Olentangy {7·3) at
(2) Sylvania Southview (10-0) : (6) Lodi
Cloverleaf (8-2) at (3) lexington (tO-O):
(5) Avon Lake (S·2) at (4) Medina

17·3) at (1) Tot: Cent. Calh. l10·

Highland 19·1)
Region 7. - (8) Cols. Watterson (5-5)
at (1) Cois. DeSaies (10-0): (7) Cois.
Independence (7·3) at (2) Louisville (100); (6) Dublin Jerome (6·4) at (3) Logan

(10.0):

(5) Cots. BeechcroH 19·1 ) atl4)

Cols. Marlon - Fran~Un' (9·1)
Region 8 - (8) Day £?unbar (8-2) at

(I) Cin. Winton Woods (9·1): (7) Mounl

Orab Western Brown ( t 0·0) at (2) New
Carlisle Tecumseh {10·0); (6) Trenton

Edgewood (8·2) at13) Cin. Anderson (8·
Turpin 19·1)

2): (5) Kings Mills Kings (7-3) at (4) Cin.

DIVISION Ill
All games at 7 p.m . Saturday
~egion

(8) Mogadore Field (8·2)

9 -

at (1) Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit (72): (7) Chardon Notre Dame Cathedral. Latin (5·5) at (2) Aurora (8·2) : (6)

Ravenna (7·3) at (3) Hubbard (8;21: (51
19·2)

C:hagnn Falls {7·3) at (4) Youngs. Liberty ·

Region 10- (B) Defiance (8-2) at (1)
Avo(! (1D-0); (7) Sunbury B1g Walnut (8- .
2)
Si.
Memorial (8·2) at (3) ·Tipp Cily
Tippecanoe (9- 1); (5) Tiffin Columbian

a1 (2) Clyde 19·1): (6)

Marys

(8·2) atl4) Beiievuel8·2)
Region 11 - (S) New Philadelphia (82) at (1) Dover (9·1): (7) Rayland

Buckeye Local (7-3). at (2) Newark
Licking Valley (9-1); (6) Granville (8·2) at
(3) Poland Seminary (8-2) ; (5) Canal
Fulton Northwest (8·2) at (4) Canton
South (7·3)
Region 12- {8) Franklin (6-4) at {1)
Thornville Sheridan (10-0): (7) Cols.
Bexley (7·3) at (2) Circla"VIIIe Logan Elm
(10-0): {6) Canal Winchester {9-i) at (3)
Chillicothe. (7·3); (5) Germantown Va.!ley
View (7-3) at (4) Cols. Eastmoor Acad

(9·1)

DIVISION IV
All games at 7:30 p.m. Friday
Region 13 - (B) Coshocton (9-1) at
(1) Steubenville (10-0); (7) Leavittburg
LaBrae {9·1) at Massillon Tustaw (9·1):

(6) Wooster Triway 18·2) at (3Werry (9·

1 ); (5) Cuyahoga Va!lsy Christian Acad .
(9-1) at (4) Youngs. Cardinal Mooney (82)
.
Region 14- (8) Sparta Highland (6·4)
at (1) FOstoria (9-1) ; (7) O«awa·Giandorf
(6-4) at (2) lorain Clearview (10-0); (6)
Pemberville Eastwood (8-2) at (3)
Marion Pleasant (9-1) ; (5) Huron (8-2) at
(4) Genoa Area (H)-0)'
Region 15- (8) Cols. Hartley ~6·3) at
(1) Martins Ferry (9-1); (7) Pomeroy
Meigs (8 -2) at (2) New lexington (9· 1):
(6) Williamsport Westfall (8-2) at (3)
Ironton (7·3); (5) St. Clairs"Ville (7·3) at
{4) Belmont Union Local (9·1)
Region 16 - (8) Cln. North College

Hili 17·3) at (1) Codwe1er 110·0): (7)

Hamillon Badin (7·3) at (2) Clarksville
Clinton-Massie {10.0); (6) Kettering Alte.r

(9·2) at 13) Brookville (1().0): (5) Day.
Oakwood

(7-3)

at

(4)

Plain

Missing pad helps Lodi Celtics down Cavs in season_opener
Cloverleaf make playoffs

City

Jonathan Alder (8-2)

DIVISIONV
All games at 7 p.m . Saturday
Region 17 - (8) Cuyahoga Hts. (9-1)
at (1) Youngs. Ursuline (10-Q) ; (7) App!e
Creek Waynedale
{8-2)
at (2)
Columbiana Crestview (9·1 ); (6) North
lima Sout~ Range {8·2) at (3) Kirtland

l10·0)i15) Creston Norwayne (8·2) atl4)

Gates Mills Gilmour Acad. (9-1)
Region 18 - {8) Ashland Crestview
(9· 1] at (1) Hamler Patrick HenrY (to-o);

(7) Delphos Jefferson (9·1) at (2)

F1ndlay Liberty-Benton (10·0): (6)
Archbold (8-2)" at (3) Uberty Center (91):
SherwoOd Fairview (9· 1)
Reg1on 19 (8) West Lafayette
.Ridgewood (8-2) at (1) Portsmouth West
(7)
Wneelersburg {9·1) ; {6) Ballimore
Liberty Un1on (9-1) at (3) Nelson"Ville ~

winnin~ percentage. Since the
beginnm~ of the 2003 season,

Steubenville is 76-3.
Lodi Cloverleaf sneaked
RUSH CHAIRMEN ...
into the playoffs - by the Travis Spilnale carried 43
seat of an opposing player's times for 378 yards in
pants.
Defiance's win over Celina;
Medina Highland recov- Pa1rick
Henry's
Justin
ered a fumble in the fll"St over· Buenger rushed for 267 yards
time and was abOut to kick and 4 TDs in a 47-0 win over
whal would be the gume-win· Wauseon lo break lhe
ning field goal when school 's season record with
· s·, Jos.·h Ham~ton
Cl overIea f ,s coac h"mg sla f"f I 37.5 yard
poinled out lo officials that became Hamilton
ew
kicker Eric Duale wasn't Mi·ami 's season and career
wearing 1he required 1ailbone rushing leader in a 32:15vic·
pad. Afler a IS-yard penally, tory over Dayton Christian;
the 30-yard kick became a 45- Delphos Jefferson's Aaron
yarder and Duale missed it Schuerman amassed 425 allwide righl.
purpose yards in a 62-7 win
Highland fumbled in the over Spencerville, scoring on
second overtime. Cloverleaf\ runs of 20 , 40, 67, 57 and 39
Allen Binaker recovering. lo yards and a 90-yard Junt
set up Kyle Juszczyk's 16- return; Ben Cline rushe for
yard touchdown run which 279 yards on 21 canies in a
h c 1 · h 1 ff 57-0 win over Canton
put t e o.ts m t e p ayo s Timken , breaking Wooster
. for the very firsl time . ·
Cloverleaf's coaches had Tri\vay's season record with
I ,519 yards;
noticM Dua\e wasn't wearing
DARN GLAD TO MEET
the pad earlier in the game but YOU: Christian Albe·rtson
waited to tell lhe referees.
ran 14 times for 274 yards
"Thai was the game right and four TDs as Little Miami
there," said Cloverleaf coach beat Amelia 53 _27 ., Cincinnati
Kevin Gault. "It was the tum·
ing point. It's hard to come Summit Country Day's CJ.
back when that happens."
Collins ran for 240 yards and
three TDs, had I05 yards
. Highland coach Tom passing with two TDs, and
Lombardo was mystified by returned a kickoff 83 yards
the .tum of events.
for a TD in a 46-22 win over ·
· "I'm as baffled as you Cincinnati Christian; Cade
guys," Lombardo said to McCullough of Zanesville ·
reporters.
. West Muskingum canied 26
WHO'S
LAUGHING times for 251 yards and two
NOW?
Cincinnati touchdowns in a 20-6 win
Woodward capped a 10-0 over Zanesville Maysville ;
season by beating Shroder 30- Jordan Sandidge rushed for
17. The Bulldoss will make 204 yards on on 38 carries
their tirst DivisiOn I playoff and .scored once in Madison's
appearance, "becoming only 28-7 win over Painesville
the second Cincinnali Public Riverside; and , Derrell
Schools team to reach the McCaleb ran for 259 yards.on
·toumamenl al the big-school 26 carries, but Ashtabula
level. The other was Western Lakeside still lost to Eastlake
Hills in 2000.
North 24-21 on a field goal as
"Three years ago. these. time expired.
kids won one game and were
QUICK
TURNlaughed ut throughout the AROUND: Defending state
city," Woodward coach BT champion
Maria . Stein
Shem1an said. "'II shows hard Marion Local won't have to
work pays off."
wait a year io avenge last
Meanwhile.
defending week's loss to Anna - the
Division I s1a1e champion teams meet in the first round
Cincinnati Sl. Xavier mtssed oflhe Division V playoffs this.
the playoffs with a.\7-14\oss Saturday.
.
1o Moeller in the final minDEFENSE
NEVER
utes. lt was enough to vault RESTS: Liberty-Benton's
Mighty Moe into the eighth defense has posted five con· ·
and final playoff spot.
secutive shutouts and has
FLYING HIGH: Ryan seven for the season. ·
O'Rourke of Avon completed
BULLETIN-BOARD
the regular season with 30 TD MATERIAL:
Pandorapasses without .an intercep· Gilboa converted 7-of-9
tion ; Liberty-Benton's Aaron fourth-down situations in a ·
Craft finally threw his first 33-21 win over Arlington;
imerception in Week 10, fin· Heath Jackson, an All-Ohio
ishing the season 141-of-168 end for Ada in 2006 who
passing (83.9 percent) for transferred from
North
2.150 yards and 27 TDs (he's Carolina back 10 his former
also rushed for 748 yards and school .in the middle of this
15 scores); Fostoria's Micah season, scored his second
Hyde had over 500 yards total game-winning TD in as many
offense in lhe Redmen 's 50-0 games as the Bulldogs comwio over Upper Sandusky, pleted lhe firsl \0-0 season in
throwing for 385 yards and 4 school history with a 28-21
TDs and rushing for 120 win over Lima Central
yards and 2 scores. also Catholic; McComb (500-332·
returning a kickoff 72 yards 45) beat Van Buren 41-14 for
for a TD : and Sherwood the SOOth win in school histoFairview's James Eichinger ry; Orrville shut out Wooster
passed for 390 yds and 6 TDs 31-0 for lhe third year in a
m a win over Ayersville, giv· row in the 98th meeling of a
ing him 52 TD passes and series lhl)l dates backlo 1903;
only three interceptions for Creston Norwayne clinched
the regular season.
just its second Wayne County
RED
, ALERT: Athlelic Leal'ue title (and first
Steubenville Big Red became since 1965) m54 years in the.
the third program in Ohio and league, sharing the crown
28th in the nation to reac!i 700 with Apple Creek Waynedale:
wins with a 34-14 win over Cincinnati Mariemont coach
Tonawanda (N .Y) Cardinal Tom Crosby recorded his
O'Hara. Big Red has also 2001h career win with a 34-6
won 60 stra1ght regular sea- win over Deer Park; and
son g!l"lrs and 54 in a row at Mansfield Madison fumbled
Harding" Sladium. Head \6 times, losing five, in a 26coach Reno Saccoccia is 267- 0 loss to crosstown rival
46 in his 26 years - an .853 Mansfield Senior.

BOSTON (AP) - Banner
No. 17 is up in the rafters,
and win No. I is in the
books.
NB"A finals MVP Paul
Pierce scored 27 points as
lhe defending champion
Boston Ce)tics followed an
emotional ring ~eremony
and banner raising with a
90-85 viclory over the
Cleveland Cavaliers on
Tuesday night. LeBron
James scored 22 , but he
missed a driving layup with
41 seconds lefl and lwo free
throws in the last II seconds.
In their first meaningful
game since beating the Los
Angeles Lakers at the new
Boston Garden to clinch
their record 17th NBA title,
lhe Celtics began the festivities with a 20-minute ceremony to honor the 2007-08
team that brought Pierce to
lears .
The Celtics captain - and
the longesl-tenured member
of the team - choked up
when he was handed the
championship trophy from
Hall of Farner John
Havlicek , and again when he
received his ring from
owner Wyc Grousbeck . .
Once all the players had
received lheir gaudy dia·
mond and emerald baubles,
AP photci
Pierce took the lead in
Cleveland
Cavaliers'
Mo
Williams
releases
a
jump
shot
over
pulling the ropes that slid the
"2008. World Champions" Boston Celtics' Eddie House during the first half of an basbanner into the rafters ketball game in Boston on Tuesday.
among all the others.
into a four-point lead.
the dunk and foul.
The Cavaliers chose not to
The Celtics led 86-80 with
After his missed ·free
watch , having been deprived 1:15 left when Mo Williams, throw, James gol another
of a chance for a title of their Cleveland's big offseason chance at the line, this time
own when they lost lo acquisition, hit a 3-pointer with the Cavaliers down 88Boston in Game 7 of the from the "left side. Williams 84 and 4.8 seconds left . He
Eastern Conference semifi- lhen grabbed the rebound of missed the first , and Ray
nals. James oulscored Pierce Leon Powe's miss, but All
f
h.
en 11 a pair of ree
45-41 in thai man-on-man James drove through traffic
shootout, but Pierce's team · to the baskel and couldr\ 't throws 10 clinch il.
Allen scored eight points,
got the better of James' in muscle the ball inlo the basand
Kevin. Garnett had just
k
the series, and again on
e~.ierce
missed
a
jumper,
II
with
six rebounds in an
Tuesday.
Pierce had II points in the and afler James got the otf night for the Big Three.
Excepl for Pierce.
third quarter, when the rebound he was fouled hard
There were two other
Celtics outscored Cleveland going to the basket; he
24-13 to take a 67-63 lead. missed the first of two free games on the league's openBoston scored 12 of the first throws, cutting it to 86-84. ing night, with Milwaukee at
14 points in lhe third , then Pierce cleared the full-court Chicago and Portland at the
the last. eight of the quarter pressure with a long pass to Western Conference chamto tum a four-point deficit Powe under the basket for pion Lakers.

OIJilllllJ.lVE Vlrt'S

On 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 peac~.
This Veteran's Day, the Sunday Times-Sentinel will publish a very special tribute honoring area veterans. You can join in our. salute by including the veteran in your life, living or deceased, who has served or 's currently serving in any branch of the U.S.Armed Forces.

Your choice of 1\vo Styles ...
Ad Only $10.00
(shown actual size)

Min1ord 18·2) et (2)

York 19·2): (5) Cois. Ready 16·2) at (4)

Jcihn stown-Mqnme (8-2)
Reg1on 20 - (8) Lees Creek East
Clinton (7·3) at ( 1) C1n. Hills Chnstian
Acad . (10·0). {7) Maria Stein Marion
Local (8·2) at (2) Anna {9· 1): (6) West
liberty-Salem (9· 1) at (3) Waynesville
(8·2) ; (5) Casstown M1ami East (9·t) at
(4) West Jefterson (8·2)

DIVISION VI
All games at 7:30p.m . Friday
Region .21 - {8) Columbiana (7·3) at
(1) Bascom Hopewell-Loudon {1 0-0); (7)
East Canton (l.-3) at (2 ) Norwalk St
Paul (10-Q); (6) Berlin Center Western

Reserva (8·21 at 13) McDonald (10·0):
(5) Leetonia (8·2) at (4) Mogadorel9·1 )
Region 22- (8) West Uni1y Hililop 18·
2) a1l1) Ada (10-0): (7) McComb 17·3) at
(2)Carey 19·1 ): (6) Arlinglon 17·3)ot l31
Delphos St. Johns (8·2) : (5) Mr
Blanchard Riverdale (8·2) at (4)
Pandora-Gill&gt;oa (9·1)
Region 23- (8) Zanesville Rosecrans
(6-4) at (1) Hannibal River (1Q.Q): (7)
Bridgeport (6-4) at (2) Malvern (10-Q):
(6) BealisvHie (9-1) a1 13) Shadysido (B·
2) : (5) Caldwell 18·2) at (4) GiouS1er
Trimble {8·2)
Region 24 -

(8) Hamilton New Miami

17·3) ot•(IJ Mec.h~ntcstxlrv 11o-o): (7)
Ansonia 17·3) afl21 Sidney Lehman (8·
1):(6) Springfield Gath. t:;ent17-3) at 131
Portsmouth SClo10Yiiie eommunily 19·
1): (5) Lockianid 17·3) a1 (4) Covl,g,on
(8-2)

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The Daily Sentinel

1991-1992

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

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\ ol. ;,X.

SPORTS

:&gt;; 11 • -•1

TIIURSIIA\', Ol""J OHER :so. :.!ool-1

•

"~"' '")d ."l"o·utinr I,"'"

involved in hydroelectric project

.~ A long time coming:
"TCPA received the excluBY BETH SERGENT
Phillies win World Series. BSERGENTO MYDAILYSENTINELCOM sive right to develop the
power project at lhe
SeePageBl
COLUMBUS
American Municipal Power·
Ohio has announced it has
·entered into various agreements to "expedite the development . of the Bluestone
Hydroelectric Project at the
US Army
Corps of
J;:ngineers' Bluestone Dam ."
AMP-Ohio has entered
into these variou~ agreements
with Mayor Cleo Mathews,
chair of the Tri-Cities Power
Authority (TCPA) which
includes the towns of Hinton ,
Philippi and While Sulphur
Springs, W.Va.
According to AMP-Ohio:

Bluestone Dam site lhrough
federal legi slation and has
been working to develop
the project for a considerable time."
. In addition to providing
power and services for 123
mtmicipal systems in Ohio,
Pennsylvania , Michigan,
Virginia, West Virginia and
Kentucky, AMP-Ohio, also
serves as the project manag·
er for groul?s of mu~icipali­
lles parttctpatmg m JOtnl
generation facilitie s, including hydro projects.
According 10 AMP-,Ohio:
"Mayor Mathews noted that

·while TCPA believed that it
was critical to develop the
Bluestone Projecl promptly
especially in light of the
recent fuel crisis, il could
not move the project forward satisfactorily under the
condilions under which it
was working. Accordingly,
TCPA decided lo seek
another developer 10 assist it
in its efforts."
As part of that agreement,
AMP-Ohio will prepare a
feasibility report by early
next year before malt:ing a
final deci sion to begin con· ·
struction , in conjunction
with .TCPA. AMP-Ohio has
already begun work on the
feasibility study which is to

be completed by no laler
than Jan. 31. 2009.
·
According to · a press
release from AMP-Ohio,
TCPAhas designated AMPOhio as its exclusive agenl
to manage all aspects of the
development, permitting ,
design. construction , maintenance, repair and financing of the facility. TCPA has
proposed a power facility
capable of producing
approximately
20
megawatts of electric gener·
ation and AMP Ohio is
studying whether and how
that output might be opti·
mized. In contrast, AMPOh.io's proposed coal-fire
power planl for Letart Falls

would produce I ,000 MW
of electric generation.
"AMP-Ohio is commilted
_to developing new hydro·
electric facilities as part of a
balanced generation portfolio for our member communities ,"
AMP-Ohio
Prd ident and CEO Marc
Gerken said. "Our experi·
ence with building ~nd
operating hydro facilities
gives us a unique perspec·
tive · on this generation
resource. -This project will
add to the more than 300
MW of hydroelectric projects currenlly under development. These projects are

Please see AMP, AS

Celebrating Red Ribbon Week

I

r

Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFLICH 0 MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY - The five
year financial forecast for
the Mei~s Local School
District ftled with the State
Department of Education
· Page AS
this week shows the district
• Bessie Floccari, 84
moving into a deficit opera·
tion in 2010.
.
, '" '
• Linda'Summers, 61
The Meigs Local Board
of Educalion at its Tuesday ,
night's meeting heard '
Treasurer Mark Rhonemus
detail the financial position
of the district. This shows
• Tuming your clock
the district moving into a
.back Sunday may help
deficit position of $3411,0 14
your heart. See Page A2 in 2010 and increasing to
$3,835,770 by 2013. The
, .• Program helps
treasurer emphasized that
·women cancer patients. all figures for the next five
year are based on "assump·
See Page A3
· tions" and the only way to
• Morgan tops losers.
alter the figures ·is lo
See Page A3
"increase
revenue
or
decrease expenditures over
• Cuts to force
the nexl five years ."
temporary closure
He presented a recap of
of historic s~es. ·
some of the assumptions on
which he based lhe projec·
:See Page AS
tions,
reporting that the
. • Steve Miller Band
largest percentage of district
to perform in
expenses, 77 percent, soes
homecoming concert.
toward salaries and fnnge
.
benefits. "The bi~ issues
See Page A6
here is an increase m health
insurance expenses, the
declining enrollment which
results in less state aid, and
the reduction in tax collec·
tions on property taxes."
BY BRIAN J. REED
Rhonemus noted thai we
BAEEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
just have to go "year by
year" because "our school is , POMEROY - Morgan
funded 79 percent by the County Commissioner Rick
state and that depends on Shriver met with· local busiwhat they do in the way of ness owners Wednesday to
school financing ." He said discuss a five-point ecohe is projecting for the fore- nomic plan he has proposed
cast no increase in state as the Democratic candidate
fundin~ but added tho.t "lhis for the 20th Senate District.
is a hving and breathing
The plan, he said, would
Detallo on Page A3
document and we could see "revitalize and update the
changes." .
economy of Southeastern
In his report to the board Ohio," and create jobs.
the treasurer ·spoke to the
"With an unemployment
reductions in force (RIF) rate of over 10 percent, Meigs
whlch occurred in May and County can 'I afford aoother
•• rot SECI"IONS- Ill PAGES
note~ lhat the financial four years of failed economic
results
reflected in the policies," Shriver said.
Annie's Mailbox
A3 current are
five year forecast. "Mining and manufacturing
Calendars
A3 He said the RIF eliminaled jobs are being outsourced
II aide positions , provided
passifieds
83-4 for various teacher transrelirements and attriComics
Bs fers,
tion, and personnel ser·
Bv BETH SERGENT
Editorials
A4 vices/salaries, and eliminated four bus routes resulting BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
Obituaries
As in an expenditure decrease
of $327,000.
· RACINE - Though the
A6
Places to go
As for tax collections, contract calls for a compleB
Section Rhonemus noted in his tion date of Nov. I, the
Sports
'
report that the collection Racine Boat Ramp will likerate for the second half of ly not be completed unnl
Weather
tax year 2007 (billed in mid·November. according
(\? aoo8 Oblo Volley Publlshlni Co.
2008) was collected at only to Gus Smithhisler of the
84 percent, 13 percent Ohio Department of NJtural
below the historic level of Resources.
.
97 percent reducing the
Although Smithhisler said
ODNR's projecl was "very
PIHse-Melp.AS

OBITUARIES

Abby Harris presents
Red ijibbon Week
material being dis·
tiibuted to students
to Meigs Local
Board of Education
president, Scott
Walton at Tuesday
nigh!'s meeting.
Charlene Hoelllclllphoto

INSIDE

Senate candidate shares .five-point plan fu Pomeroy

Dates of Active Duty

YourName: ________~---------

In Honor Of

on display at
Greer Museum, A6

Meigs Playoff edition
inside today's Sentinel

INDEX

every day,
and there are
nol
nearly
enough jobs
to
replace
what we· are
losing. My
pl1111 will rein·
Rick Shriver vigorate lhe
economy and
b1ing back the jobs lhat hard
working Ohioans are willing
to fill."
Recenl unemployment
statistics list Meigs County
as having the highest unemployment in Ohio, at 10.8
percent. Most of the other
counties in Southeast Ohio
are near! y at 10 percent.
Shriver unveiled the economic plan in Pomeroy sev-

era\ weeks ago as part of his
"Jobs for Ohio" tour. .
"While there is no one
solution to bring new life to
the economy of southeastern
Ohio, I believe this plan will
help our region move in the
right direction," Shriver said.
The plan calls for:
• Updatin~ Ohio's tax
.code, regulations and laws
10 ensure they are competi '
tive with neighboring stales.
• Improving . access to
higher education by supporting lhe creation Qf
learning centers that bring
college educations closer to
residents of rural counties .
• Investing in renewable
energy and clean coal tee h. nology so that Ohio can

take advantage of these
emerging industries.
• Finding new ways to
market southeaslem Ohio's
labor force and quality of life
10 prospective employers.
• Streamlining the state's
recruitment process to make ·
Ohio's efforts to altract new
industry more effective.
. ''After speaking with hundreds of Ohioans this year, it
has become clear thai ther,
wanl change in Columbus,'
added Shriver. "I am 1101 a
career politician, and when I
represent the 20th Senate
Districl,l will work on behalf
of all the people. not just the
special interesiS. After years
of lost jobs and lower wages,
it is time for a change."

Racine boat ramp completion pushed to mid-November

'

. '

•

'

close" to being completed,
"little things'' had held it up
in tenns of meeting that
Nov. 1 deadline. Smithhisler
also added that contractor
Alan Stone Company had
legitimate rain delay days
entitled to it so at this point
the company will not .be
penalized for not meetmg
the completion date.
The original price tag on
the boal fdmp was $2 million' plus
though

Smithhisler said that is likely to change after processing fina_I change orders on
the proJeCt. ODNR would
like to.· have the contract
"closed out" by the end of
November when a final cost
shoul~ lx; reported .
.
· Sm•thh1sler S31d ' th~re IS
sulllme pamlmg to do m the
parkmg lol , s1te earth work
and the contractor 1s sttll
pouring the porti~n of the
concrele ramp wh1ch ts oul

of the water. The underwaler
cofferdam has been removed
and all underwater work has
been fimshed . The electncal
work and separate .contract
have also been finahzed.
··Metgs County will have
the use of !~e ramp ~opefully
very soon, Sm11hhtsler_ sa1d.
Though the ramp w1ll be
open to the pubhc as soon as
completed,_a grand opem~
ceremony ts bemg constdered for the spnng.

•

•
•

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