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·..

Tuesday, November u,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Bengals QB Palmer out for another week· Some Browns tagged
(JNCINNATI (APl With seven ~;ame s left,
there's no indtcation that
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer will
play in any of them .
The Bengals acknowledged on Monday that
Palmer will niiss his fifth
straight game because of an
injuml passing elbow. Ryan
Fitzpatrick will start in his
plm:c
againsl
the
Philadelphia Eagles on
Sunday.
Palmer hurt the elbow during a 26-23 ovet1ime loss to
the Giants in the third week
of the season and played in
only one more game . He has
been doing rehabilitation
work to try to get the elbow
hcilhhy enough to play again
this season .
During the team 's bye
weekend. Palmer went back
to California and had the
elbow checked out. He
'dedi ned to be interviewed
Monday. saying through a
team spokesman that .nothing
had ch,mged.
The Bengals ( 1-8) got their
lirst win without Palmer in
their l:tst game, a 21-19 victory over J:tcksonville.
Fitzpatrick threw a pair of
touchdown passes to Chad
Ocho Cinco and had his best
game yet as the starting
quarterb:tck.
Coach Marvin Lewis said
Palmer would miss practice
again this week to concentrate on his rehabilitation.
There's no indication when
he might test the elbow to
sec if it's healed.
"Same plan," Lew1s said.
"Hasn't changed. It's where
it's been.
"Everything seems to be

BEREA (AP) - Back from
a rare, football-free weekend,
Cleveland
Browns
the
resumed a season that ' has
faded from promising to problematic.
Their record says they're
losers, and upon returnmg,
they had to answer charges
that they're quitters, too.
Following Thursday night's
demoralizing Joss to Denver.
running back Jamal Lewis
accused some unnamed teammates of giving up. Leading
by 13 poin[s, the Browns (36) allowed three touchdowns
in the founh quaner and lost
34-30. just four days after
blowing a 14-point lead in a
37-27 Joss to Baltimore .
Lewis was the only .Player'
to take his opinion ~ubhc, But
AP photo others agreed that t e Browns
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer (9) passes quit.
"When you have a team
in the · second .Quarter under the pressure of Dallas· like that that comes into our
.Cowboys delensive end Jay Ratliff (90) during an NFL foothouse and we're Capable of
ball game Sunday in Irving, Texas.
beating them, that's the first
on schedule as far as every- and stick to it," Lewis said:
thing lhat comes to your
body can tell , which they
Some of Palmer's team- mind, is guys quitting," return
won't know until they say, mates think it would be specialist Joshua Cribbs said.
·Hey. go ahead and start unwise for him to play this "We can't figure out what's in
.throwing.' There's been no season.
everyone's he&lt;1d or in their
·"You want to play because minds, but that's what it
indication he needs surgery,
other than that would be a this is what you Jove to do looked like -that some guys·
and it's fun, but you have to quit.
drastic measure."
.
Palmer ·isn't ready Ia give think beyond that and be rea- · ."V&gt;(e know tf ev~rybody
up the notion of playing this sonable and understand you d1dn t qu1t, we waul~ ve won
season, even though he's have a career ahead of your- . that ball game,': he sa.d. · .
receiver ·
T.J.
Lewts wasn t available for
starting to ru!l out of time. self,"
· said c?mment on Monday, but the
He satd ongmally 1t could Houshmandzadeh
· take up to eight weeks for Monday. "It's never dawned moe-year veteran's charge
the elbow to heal and get on me that ·carson ·would that "some people need to
back to full strength, a come back and play. I've check their egos at the door
timetable that could bring always thought that: just rest and find some .hean," was still
inside
and gel ready for next year. reverberating
him back for December.
"The biggest thing is he The way this has gone, Clevelam!'s locker room.
And because they came
would like to play, so they 're there's no reason to put him
going to go through the out there and jeopardiZe next from the nonnally reserved
timetable they set for him year or the rest of his career." Lewis, the sentiments carry

2008

as ·quitters

more clout. future and the development of
" H i s quanerback Brady Quinn.
input
is who showed poise and patenvery vatu- tial in his debut as a starter
able to this against the Broncos.
team," lineCrennel, who benched
NCJfEBOOK backer and Derek Anderson last week
· co-captain and turned his offense over to
A n d r a . Quinn hinted at more hneup
Davis said. ;,If he says some- chang~s this .week. He.wouldthing like that, guys really n 't reveal them durmg h1s
need to check their egos."
news conference .because he
Defensive tackle Shaun had yet to meet wnh h1s playSmith said Lewis' comments ers .
cut deep.
·
·
Crennel was ~sked if his
"He's an established veter- changes were maJor or mmor.
'an with a Super Bowl ring. so ·. "I would dassi~~ them as
of course everybody 1s gmng secret nght now, he satd.
to listen," Smith said. chuckling.
"Evidently, he wanted to say · Crennel doesn't have many
something. He doesn't say too options, but he could shake
much, so when he does speak things up a bit on a defense
up, it's got to mean some- which has given up 71 pomts
thing."
and allowed nearly I ,000
It doe~ to Cribbs, who yards in the past two games.
ld
h
would be exempt from any
One p&lt;&gt;ssible switc .cou
criticism after another superb be movmg outside linebacker .
performance on special Kamerion Wimbley inside or
teams. He appreciates Lewis' off the field entirely. Since
passion as well as his frustra- selling a rookie club record
lion at not seeing others play with II sacks in 2006, the 6as hard as he does.
foot-3, 255-pound Wimbley
"He goes out there and has been unable to mount a
busts his tail every day, every consistent pass rush and too
game," Cribbs sa1d. "I do the often finds himself out of
same and ·it hurts when play- position to make tackles.
ers don't do the same and
Cornerback
Brandon
don't show the same will and McDonald, toasted several
don't show the same fire and times by the Broncos, would
desire to win. It's a shame be a candidate for demotion
'sometimes, but we just have except that the Browns don :•
to pull together as a team, have much depth at that postweed oil! those guys and ·~lay tion, McDonald was beaten
the rest of the season out.
by rookie Eddie Royal for a
Unless they can win seven 93-yard touchdown that got
straight, beginning il.e xt . the Broncos back in it early in
Monday night at Buffalo, the the fourth quaner and Denver
Browns' chances of making quarterback Jay Cutler piCked
the AFC playoffs. are impossi- on the second-year comer. bly long. Instead, the focus back again for the game-winover the next month or so will ning TO l'ass to Brandon
be on coach RomeoCrennel's Marshall w1th 1:14left.

Egypt unveils
discovery of
pyramid,A2

'

Professor recovers
mastodon bones, A6

~

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint~~

Ordinance allows fire department to recoup expenses
• James scores 41 as
·Cavaliers beat Bucks.
SeePageBl

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTCIMYOAILYSENT!NEL.COM

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Village Council recently
approved the first reading
of an ordinance which will
allow the Pomeroy Fire
Department to seek reimbursement for "fire, safety
and rescue, responses and
hazardous material and
environmental incidents"
it responds to outside the
village.
The ordinance doesn ' t

. affect thos~: living in the
village whose taxes pay to
finance the department.
However, if Pomeroy
responds to a call outside
village limits, the ordinance would permit the
department to seek recov. ery for expenses incurred
relating
to
personnel
hours, use of equipm'ent,
etc. The ordinance would
also allow the department
to charge a "reasonable
flat-rate fee of any false
alarm . responses , or fire

drill responses for which well as the response to
situations
the fire department did not emergency
receive at least 48 hour involving, and/or caused
prior notice."
by. non-resident inpividuThe
ordinance
also als, places a tremendous
reads : "It is recognized financial burden on said
that the duties of fire com, fire companies sufficient
panies require specialized financial assistance to
fire/safety/emergency /res- exist, in an' effort to avoid
cue /environmental / haz- ever-increasing tax burardous material tools , dens of the residents of
equipment, materials , sup- Pomeroy, it is found that
plies and specialized train- the alternative source
ing in order to provide for funding ,
Emergency
the safety of the public · Service
Cost ·
served. Such required , as Reimbursement
(i.e .

response billing) should be
authorized."
·These "reasonable costs"
billed under this ordinance
may be recovered directly
by the fire depanment or
through a third party
billing service. All funds
recovered are to be remitted directly 10 the Village ·
of Pomeroy.
The ordinance requires
two more readings and two
more votes to become effe~­
tive Jan. I, 2009.

Former city
building to
be auctioned
BY HOPE RoUSH
HROUSHCMYDAILYREGISTER.COM

ak .Biinnar

MASON, W.Va. - The
Town of Mason, W.Va. is
preparin~ to a\lction off the
former ctty butldmg located
on Second Street. The auction is set for Thursday.
Mayor Mindy Kearns
announced last week that
Rick, Pearson will serve as
auctioneer. In addition, she
said that Pearson will be
handling
all
auction
arrangements.
The auction will be held
at . I · p.m; J'hur~d~y . at the
i'ormer ' c1ty 6u!lding. The
building formerly housed
the mayor's office, water
works and police station.
The building also has large
spaces, a reception area and
storage areas.
The minimum bid for the
building is set at $35,000.
In other business:
• During a previous meeting an engineer approached
council about possibly
working on Phase II of the
water project. Council
members discussed the
issue and agreed to continue
with
Triad
working
Engineering Inc. for Phase

'

' '

Bill . Thamas-

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
- ~ Augusta Lemley, 86

Sulpnlon&amp;
Bodyllfll

FuiServlce

lm~tallatlon

. Shop'

HOLZER CLINIC
We're Everywhere You Are!

Evary O.y

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I
I

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• Pelosi supports new
help for ailing US
automakers.
SeePageA2
~ Don't write if you don't
believe. See Page A3
. • Family Medicine,
See Page A3
• Ohio GOP offers
prevailing wage plan.
SeePage AS

II.
• Amanda Sutphin . of
Triad Engineering Inc . presented council with the final
drawdown for Phase I of the
water project. The draw~
down totaled $58,213-81.
Sutphin also reponed that
the final walk-through for
the project recently was
completed. Accordmg to
Sutphin, the town has one
year before the warranty for
the project runs out. She
suggested that council
schedule a walk-through
before the warranty expires.
• Sutphin presented council with plans for the wastewater treatment plant. She
said council should decide
what items were most
imponant for the plant in
case something net:cts to be

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"TIE BREAKER''
~otal Points in the Monday Nite _·
Football Game!
Cleveland @ Buffalo ,
~lla on

Page A6

NAME: _ _ _ _ _ _.;;___

F11. Cii. S You A t C:QG~, ; li . St~v!Ct: )'ou DHr~n:'.

ADDRESS:-.!.-'_ _ _ __.._

Please ... Auction. AS
1

a SECttONS ~ ta PAGES

'

PHONE: _

PLEASANT

VALLEY
HOSPITAL
.\04-675-4340

The Family of Pn~(eHionals

~ie'!f ft{ailbox ·
•:. -·
.

__,-~---

Each 1\tesday through Dec, 9, a numbered game wUI ,
appear in each participating merchant's ad.
Indicate your pick of winners and write it beside the
corresponding number.
Entries must be dropped off at the:
.
Gallipolis Daily lribune or mailed to:
Football Smackdown ·
•
cfo Gallipolis Dally lrlhune •
825 3~d Avenue ·
Gallipolis, OH 4563 I
Entries must be postri1arked by Thursday to qualify
for that week's contest. The prize will be awarded
weekly on the basis of most winners selected correctly
and In case of ties, winner will be determined by blind
draw. You must be 16 years of age or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per week.

Members of Drew
Webster Post 39,
American Legion, led
Tuesday's Veterans
Day observance at
the Meigs County
Courthouse.
Brian J. Reed/photos

veterans honored during Tuesday observance
BY· BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDCMYDA!lYSENTINELCOM

. POMEROY - Veterans who have served their country
and the sacrifices they made were honored during the annual Veterans Day program at the Meigs County Counhouse
Tuesday.
·
The service was held at the cqurthouse steps at II a.m. on
Nov, II, in keeping with the traditional observance of
Annistice Day. Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion,
organi~es the event.
·
The Southern High School Band, under the direction of
Chad Dodson, performed patriotic music during the service, which also included an invocation by Rev. Brian
Dunham of the Heath and New Beginnings United
Methodist Church~s and benediction by Rev. Walter Heinz
of Sacred Hean Church.
"Ninety years ago today, World War I ended," said
Adjutant Joe Struble. "Nine decades have passed. This
nation has endured many ups and downs, but the people of
this nation have ~rved whenever called to do so." ·
. Struble also spoke of the service veterans have offered to
their communities, and said such public service is an obligation for all veterans . ·
·
·
"Veterans who served, regardless of when or where, and
received honorable discharge. are not excused from service
to the community," Struble said. "They use their talents,
their abilities and their skills learned in the military to serve
the country."
"To the young people here today, remember you, too,
have an obligation to serve this community, state and
nation. Your time will come," Struble said. "Veterdns Day
has a meaning and a purpose. Let's take the challenge and
high goals set for us and meet them."
County Commissioner-elect and Post Commander Tom The Southern High School Band, Jed by Chad Dodson,
played patriotic music during Tuesday's Veterans Day
Please IH Honored, AS
observance.

Players' present
'A Look Back'

A3

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NEWSIIMYOA!lYSENTINEL.COM

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Th$ River City Players (pictured) plan to "light up" the stage a!J&lt;Iin on Friday, Nov. 21 and
Saturday, Nov. 22 lor their annual Broadway dinner theater. Tickets are now on sale for this
year's production, "A Look Back." The casl will be performing songs from all RCP's past
shows.

.

'~ ~-

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....

..._. .._

.

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-···-·~..- - -..-

...

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004 . . . . . . . . . . . . , ••

- ... -

..

.

POMEROY - The River City Playet$ plan to "light up"
the stage again on Friday. Nov. 21 and Saturday. Nov. 22
for their annual Broadway dinner theater. titled. "A Look
Back."
The cast will be perfonning songs from all RCP's past
shows including. "Oklahoma, Music Man, Wizard of Oz,
Annie Get Your Gun , Bye Bye Bindie, Fiddler on the ~oof,
Suessical , Seven Brides for Seven 13rothers," and songs
from the gt:oup's past revues .
Tickets are now on sale from 10 a.m.- noon and 3 p.m.6 p.m., Monday - Saturday at the RCP's building in
Middleport located next 10 Locker. 219 . All seats are
reserved. Tickets will be sold until noon , Friday, Nov. 21.
For more infonnation call992' 6759 or 416-7860. Also go

Please -

ICP, AS

.

;

�.........

: The Daily Sentinel

- .. . . .

NATION: • WORLD

PageA2
Wednesday, November 12,

APphoto

Egyp~

unveils discovery
of 4, 300-year-old pyramid
BY KATARINA KRATOVAC
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Sf\QQARA. Egypt · Archaeologists have · discovered · a new pyramid
under the sands of
Saqqara, an ancient burial
site _that has yielded a
string of unearthed pyra·
mids in recent years but
remains largely unexplored .
· The
4,300-yea r-o ld
monument · most likely
belonged to the queen
. mother of the founder of
: Egypt's 6th Dynasty. and
· was built several hundred
· years after the famed
Great Pyramids of Giza,
antiquities chief Zahi
Hawass told reporters in
: announcing
the
find
: Tuesday.
The discovery is part of
the sprawling necropolis
and burial site of the rulers
of ancient Memphis, the
· capital of ,E gypt's Old
: Kingdom, about 12 miles
: south of Giza.
All that remains of the
pyramid is a 16-foot-tall
structure that had been
buried under 65 feet of
sand.
"There was so much
: sand dumped here that no
one had any idea there was
something buried underneath," said Ha wass.
Hawass' team had been
excavating at the location
for · two years, but only
determined two months
· ago that the structure, 'with
sides about 72 feet long ,
was the base of a pyramid.
The pnamid is the I 18th
discovered so far in Egypt,
and the 12th to be found in
Saqqara. Most are in
ruins; only about a dozen
pyramids remain intact
across the country.
Archaeologists
also
found parts of the pyramid's white limestone casing - ·believed to have
once covered the entire
structure
·which
enabled them to calculate
that the complete pyramid
was once 45 feet high.
"To find a new pyramid
is always exciting," said
Hawass. "A nd this one is
magical. It belonged to a
queen ."

Hawass said he believes
the pyramid belonged to
Queen Sesheshet, who is
thought to have played a
· significant role in establishiilg the 6th Dynasty
and uniting lwo branches
'ng royal fam 1'
of the 'eud
,. 1 . ruled for
·
ly Her Son Tell
· · a dozen
·
•
about
years
until
his likely assassination, in
a sign of the turbulent
times .
The pyramids of Teti 's
two wives, discovered 100
years ago and in 1994
respectively, lie next to. it,
part of a burial complex
alongside the collapsed
pyramid of Teti himself.
The Egyptian team is
still digging and is two
weeks from entering the
burial chamber inside the
pyramid. where Hawass
hopes they will find proof
of its owner - a sarcophagus or at least an inscription of the queen, he said.
Finding more than that
is unlikely, as robbers in
antiquity looted the pyramid, he said, pointing to a
gaping shaft on the structure's top, .a testament of
the plunder.
On Tuesday, workers
wearing white turbans and
dust-covered robes scurried back and forth, carrying larg~ rocks and bags
heaped with sand away
.from the site.
·
Using an air brush, one
worker cleaned sand from
stunning
hieroglyphic
details on the white limestone
casing ,
while
archaeologists studied the
inscriptions and students
drew blueprints of the
pyramid's base .
Dieter Wildung , a leading Egyptologist and head
of Berlin 's Egyptian
Museum. said it was common in the Old Kin_gdom
for · kmgs to build pyram1ds for their queens and
m?thers next to the1r own,;
·Hawass IS hkely nght
that the pyramid belonged
to
Sesheshet,
said
Wildung', who was not
involved in the dig.
"These parallel situafions
give a very strong argument in favor of his interpretation."
But Joe Wegner. an

OVBLI

associate professor of
Egyptian archaeology at
the
University
of
Pennsyfvani~ . who has
been involved in other
expeditions at Saqqara,
cautioned
that
until
" inscriptional confirmation is found, it's still an
educated guess" .that the
pyramid is Sesheshet's.
Although evidence of
the queen's existence was
found · elsewhere in Egypt
in inscriptions and a
papyrus document - a
medical prescription to
strengthen the queen's
thinning· hair - the site of
her burial was not known.
The find is important
because it adds to the
understanding. of the 6th
Dynasty, which reigned
from 2,322 B.C . to 2,151
B.C. It was the last
dynasty of . the Old
Kingdom, which spanned
the third millennium B.C.
and whose achievements
are considered the first
peak of pharaonic civllization.
Saqqara is most famous
for the Step Pyramid of
King Djoser, built in · the
27th'century B.C.
Excavations have been
going on here for about
150 years, uncovering a
vast Old Kingdom necropolis of pyramids, tombs
and funerary complex.es,
, .as well as tombs datmg
from the New Kingdom
abo~t I ,000 years later. .
Still, only about a third
of the Saqqara complex
has been explored so far,
with recent digging turn·
ing up a number of key
finds.
The last new pyramid.
found here three years
ago, is thought to belong
to the wife of Teti's successor, Pepi I.
In June , Hawass ' team
. d
" d. ·
"
unve1 1e a re 1scover~
at Saqqara - a pyramid
believed to have been
built by Kmg Menkauhor,
l\D obscure pharaoh ':"hose
pyramid was first discov· ered in 1842 but was later
buried in sand.

La~t week, President-elect Committee. to draft legislaBY DAVID ESPO
AP SPECIAl CORRESPONDENT
Obama prodded the Bush tion .
administration to do more to
A companion effort is
WASHINGTON
. _,__ help the indusrry, and on under way in the Senate.
·House Speaker Nancy Monday, aides said he
The Senate is Scheduled
Pelosi called for "emer- raised the issue with to meet next week in a post- '
gency and limited financial President Bush in an Oval election session, but until
assistance" for the battered Office conversation meant Pelosi issued her statement,
auto industry on Tuesday to underscore a smooth it was not clear the House
and urged the outgoing transition of power.
would follow suit.
Bush administration"·to join
OffiCials familiar with the
The House already has
lawmakers in reaching a conversation said the presi- passed legislation• to proquick compromise.
dent replied he was open to vide additional unemployFive days after dismal the idea.
ment insurance benefits for ,.
finanCial repurts from
Before adjourning for the some of the growing ranks
General Motors Corp. and elections, Congress passed of the nation 's jobless, as
Ford Motor Co.. Pelosi legislation providing for $25 well as a separate measure
backed legislation to make billion in government- to stimulate the economy.
the auto makers eligible for backed · loans to the
That meant the Senate
help under the $700 billion automakers to prod them to .. could have passed either or
bailout measure that cleared retool their factories to make both bills and sent them to
Congress in October.
more efficient vehicles. ·
the White House for Bush's
In a written statement. the
Since then, executives signature without further
California Democrat said from GM, Ford and action by the House.
the aid was needed "in order Chrysler LLC and officials
Pelosi 's announcement
to prevent the failure of one in the United Autoworkers changed that, and raised the
or more of the major union have called for more possibility of a postelection
American automobile man- than that toavert a possible session that covers more
ufacturers. which would collapse of one of the areas.
have a devastating impact nation's most basic indusThe Bush administration,
on our economy, particular- tries, including a $25 billion for example, has said that
ly on the men and women loan to help keep the com- enactment of a free trade.
who work in that industryF panics afloat and $25 billion agreement wfth Colombia i's
"Congress and the Bush more to help cover future iis top prio~ty in Congre~s..
administration must · take health care ·payments for
Many Democrats opj&gt;Q~
immediate action," she about 780.000 retirees and the proposed agreement as
added. Administration offi- their dependents.
.
written. But it is , unclear
GM and Ford reported what, if any. compromise
cials have concluded that
the bailout bill that passed last week that they spent might be possible that
earlier does not permit loans down their cash reserves by would allow auto assistance
to the auto industry, but a combined $14.6 billion in and a trade agreement 'to be
lawmakers are expected to the past three months. Ford , the IJist major measures
return to the Capitol for a said it would slash more signed into law by, the outbrief postelection session than 2,000 white collar jobs.. going president.
beginning next week.
Pelosi's statement did not
In her statement, Pelosi
The plight ofthe industry specify how large an aid said any assistance to the
has drawn attention from package she prefers.
industry should include limthe White House and the · Instead, she said she had its on executive compensa. ey Frank, tion, rigorous government
incoming Obama adminis- asked Rep . Bam
tration in recent days, as D-Mass., chairman of the review authority· and other
w,ell as among lawmakers.
House Financial Services taxpayer protections.
· ---------------'------------------

Pakistan: Mili" tants setze
. . convoy tOr
£'.
US -1ed tOrces
£'.

especially large and wellorganized. It also could further strain U .S.-Pakistani
.PESHAWAR, Pakistwl relations over rooting out
Suspected Taliban fighters . Taliban and ai-Qaida milihijacked trucks . carrying tants along the border, which
Humv~s and other supplies remain entrenched despite
for U.S.-Ied troops in military offensives and U.S.
Afghanistan, authorities said missile strikes.
Tuesday after a brazen attack
Some 60 masked milinear the· Khyber Pass that tants blocked the route at
underscored the militants' several points before overgrip across key mountain powering the convoy, said
strongholds.
Fazal Mahmood, a governThe assault highlighted the ment official in Khr,ber
vulnerability of a vital 'supply tribal region. He identified
route for the 65,000 U.S. and the attackers as members
NATOforcesbattlingaresur- of · Pakistan's Taliban
gent Taliban in landlocked . movement.
Afghanistan. A significant
Security forces traded fire
amount of supplies for the with the gunmen, but were
Western force.s go through forced to retreat, he said. The
Pakistan.
militants took about 13 trucks
Separately, in the nearby along with the drivers, who
city of Peshawar, gunmen were believed to be Pakistani.
blocked the car of an
A U.S. military spokesman
American aid worker on in Afghanistan confirmed the
Wednesday and killed him thefts late Thesday.
and his Pakistani driver,
"There were some U.S.
police said.
military materials that were
Attacks on convoys cany- taken - Humvees and water
ing food, fuel and other sup- tank trailers," said Maj. John
plies · are common on the Redfield.
road. But Monday's raid was
Later Monday, a separate
BY RIAZ KHAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

group of insurgents halted
a · truck .carrying what
appeared to be a NATO
jeep, setting the military
vehicle . on fire, Mahmood ·
said. NATO officials .could
be
not
immediately
·reached for comment ()n
that incident.
In the past, U.S. and NATO
officials have played down
their losses along the pass.
But earlier this year.
NATO said it was trying to
reduce it~ dependence on the
route by · negotiatin~ with
Russia and other nauons to
. let it truck "non-lethal" supplies to Afghanistan through
Central Asia.
. Security forces, backed by
heli~opter gunships, hunted
for the missing trucks and
drivers. The military said late
Tuesday it had recovered
some of the stolen materials
but would not specify what.
"We are using all
resources to trace and
recover the hijacked trucks,
some of which were carrying vehicles for the allied
forces · in Afghanistan," ,
· Mahmood saiq.

2nd Annual Turkey Trot .
Fun Run/Walk
. os

·

Community Caiendar
Clubs and
organizations

Rankin and Vera Crow, Gallipolis Freewill Baptist
hostesses.
Church.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 ,. 7 p.m. at
Wednesday, Nov. 12
hall. Dinner at 6:30p.m.
POMEROY ~ Middleport . RACINE - Sonshine
Monday, Nov. 17
Literary · Club, 2 p.m., Circle, 7 p.m. at the
POMEROY
· - Meig~
Pomeroy Library. Jeanne Bethany Church. Take colBowen will review Wild lectibles, turn in noodle ' Athletic Boosters fall SJlOrt'S
Nov.
18. banquet, 6:30 p.m., high
Nights: Stories about the Last orders by
Days of Poe.· Dickinson, Hostesses , Betty Proffitt , school cafeteria. Bring veg·
· Twain ,
James
and Martha Lou Beegle , and etable and dessert.
Hemingway by Joyce Carol Holly Stump.
Oates. Marlene. Kuhn hostess .
Thursday, Nov. 13
CHESTER
Shade
Saturday, Nov. 15 .
River Lodge 452 , at the
LONG
BOTTOM
Friday, Nov. 14
~alL Officers to be elected,
· Ernest Griffin will celebrate
LONG BOTTOM
lime
to
pay
dues. "Heavenly Rush," 7 p.m., his 9.1st birthday on Nov.
Refreshments.
Faith Full Gospel Church, 15 . Cards may be sent to
POMEROY - Alpha Iota Ohio 124.
him at 36606 Post Office
Masters , II :30 a.m .. United
GALLIPOLIS - King's Road , Long Bottom,, Ohio
. Methodist Church . June Van flarve st Singers, 6 p.m., 45743.
.. . .
.

Other events

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My 34year-old nephew brought
his computer to a shop to
· be fixed. On the hard
dri\'e , the repairman found
three videos· and 15 pictures of child pornography. My nephew was
arrested and is facing jail
time. He has asked numerous people to send letters
to the JUdge attesting to
his good character..
. Annie, his character is
NOT good. He could
never hold down a job and ·
is angry at the worfd . His
other aunt is on a mission
to have all family memb'ers write · a letter for him.
l say, let him pay for what
he has. done and maybe he
can get some help in jail
and come out of this a betQuestion: My daughter off a threat or run away wilf also help prevent test ter person. What do you
, is a very smart girl. but from it. This is helpfuL anxiety. Avoiding stimu- . say? - Grandmother of
she doesn 't make grades when yuu are facing an !ants, like · caffeine-based Two
Dear · Grandmother:
that are as good as they actual physical threat.
drinks .and foods, and getUnfortunately,
prison
. could be . She tells me that
However, when the per- ting a good night's sleep
when she has' a test, she ceived danger is an emo- . before the test will also doesn't a) ways translate to
· gets so nervous she makes · tiona! one .like a test . t~o enhance a person's ability therapy, which is what
your . nephew . needs,
silly mistakes that fre: much adrenahn can still to stay' in control.
However.
you · should not
quently cost her a good · cause. the same physical
There - may be help at
11rade. Is this a medical react10~. Unfortunately , school through the guid- write a letter if you don't
Issue or a school issue? once this type ot nervous a:nce counselor or a learn- believe in what you arc
I'm not sure who to talk to reaction starts, it can be ing specialist. Your daugh- saying. If your refusal will
about this - the doctor ,or hard to stop. The more ter should work with them cause a rift, simply tell his
the teacher?
nervous you are. the more to dev'elop · good study. other aunt that you y..oill
Answer: Most of ·us you sweat and shake; the habits . If that's not "do your best." And
experience a surge of more you sweat and shake. enough, she may require apparently, your best is to
energy when faced with a the more nervous you get. medicine to reduce her decline. You don't need to
challenging situation like This can become a vicious ·anxiety symptoms.. An tell her, or anyone else,
having to take a test or .cyd~ that spirals upward. antidepressant in 'the SSRI what choice you've made.
Dear Annie: My family
Bemg. aware that you category or a beta blocker
perform on stage. This
surge can help us stay have this problem IS the used in a low dose the day has been through some
"focused and perform at a firSt step toward resolvmg of the test may help rough times in the past
five years. My stepson's
peak level. However, fo[ It. Once . yo.ur daughter decrease test anxieiy and, wife died of cardiac arrest
some people the surge of recogmz_es that_ an upcom- thus, improve perforthe age of 24, and in his
Medications at
energy can be overwhelm- mg test IS m~kmg her ner- mance.
grief,
went down the
ing and lead to extreme vous, she might attempt a would need to be pre- wrong hepath.
His in-laws
nervl:lusness,
nausea , few self-help measures. scr.ibed by your family are raising the children ,
sweating, vomiting and She should try to calm
h · ·
f
d'
even fainting.
This yourself with deep breath- P. YSICian a ter a me lca 1 and we help out financially and physic.ally. L-ast
appears to be the case with in·g or other relaxation history_ and exa_m_.
.
your daughter. It 's a con- exercises. Many people
Family MediCine® IS ~ winter. I was diagnosed
dition called test anxiety, find this very beneficial. weekl:r column. T? submit
which is caused by release Anotlier way to get around que$tlons, . wnte . to
of excessive amounis of test ~nxiety is to try to . Martha A. S&amp;,mpson_, D,C!.,
adrenalin.
consciously redir-e ct · the M.B.A., Ohw Umver.n~y
· Adrenalin .- a natura) , nervous energy iowardthe Coll~g.e of Osteopathic
body hormone - can be task at hand. By redirect- Medtcme, P:O· Box JJO,
very helpful in certain sit- ing that nervousness, your Afhens, ~h1o 45701, or
l.l'ations. For instance, a lot daughter may find that she . v1a e-mml to .readerquesof adrenalin is released can focus more sharply on tions®familyf!!edi~ine­
when you are confronted test questions .
new~.or~. M~d&amp;ca/ mfo~­
by a bully on the street.
B6ing ptepared for a test mat1?n m thiS colum'! 1s
The adrenalin causes the is a major anxiety reducer provided as an educationheart to beat faster and the for most people. If a pei- a/ service anl:r.lldoes not
breathing rate to incre&amp;se. son is well prepared for a · replace the }l~dgment of
· In response to adrenalin, test it ·can boost confi- your personal physician,
your body also sends more den~e to the point that it who should be relied on
&lt;nutrients to the muscles will override the fear to diagnose and recom·
· &lt;J,nd less blood to the· response, hence less test · mend treatment for any
dieestive system. This is anxiety. Also, learning to medical conditions. Past
called the ''fight or flight" purposely replace nellative columns are available
reaction . It gives you the · thoughts in anticipation of online at www.familymedenergy you need to fight a test with positive ones icinenews.org • .

Birthdays

Church events

FAMILY MEDICINE

Self help, medications help treat anxiety

"No t Really Married,"
who hasn't had sex with
his wife for the last 20 of
their 50 years together.
You were right when
you said, "Sex is only one
aspect of a relationship ." I
have been married for
over 54 years to the girl I
love . I'd do it again even
.
though It has been ":ell
over 20 years smce we ve
had sex. She had a hysterectomy. which. later
caused her some discomfort during sex. Since that
happened , I stopped initi ating it, even though she
made· herself available. If
she couldn't enjoy it , neither couid I. We are still
very close. and at this
stage, sex is not needed.
She gave me two healthy
children (we lost two) and
then four grandchildren
and four great-grandchil dren with whom we are
very close.; What more
could I ask. We still have
plenty of close physical
contact In other ways.
I feel .sorry for. "Not
Really Married." He is
missing so much due to
his faulty attitude. Really Married
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, {ongtime
editors of the Ann
Landers co'lumn. Please
e-mail your que.~tions to
anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or · write to:
Annie's Mailbox P.O
.
.
. '
·•
Box 118190,_ Ch1cago, IL
60611. To ~n,d out.more
about Anme s Mallbox,
and read features. by
ol~er Creators Synd1~ate
writers and cartoomsts,
vi.~il
the
Creators
Syndicate Web page at
www.creators.com.

with a brain tumor that left
me with minor disabilities
and my husband had a
heart attack.
.·
Due to our medical
problems. we . had to l
downscale our JObs . Jvly
husban~, and I enter_ed
counseling. for a bnef
ume, and we fmally seem
to be handlmg all of this
fairly well. Our marriage
is great. We actually found
our sense of humor again.
The problem is our
friends. One by one, the
people we thought cared
ahout us have dropped
away. It is like we have a
disease they are afraid of
catching. One of our
friends actually told us to
call them whe?, we ."get
back to normal.
At first I was angry
becausewe have no 1m med1ate family . In the area
and good fnends would
have been helpful. But
now I am JUSt sad. I could
call several of them back
now. but frankly I don 't
want them.
Annie , you can be the
smartest try the hardest ·
be the m~st careful , but n~
one prepares you for times
like these and they can
happen to anyone. How do
you find great friends who
will stand by you? Doing Wit~out Th~m
Dear Domg _Wtthout:
There IS no magic formula
that will make one friend
see you through thick and
thm, wh1k anotl~e~ runs
away and ~Ides. We. re ternbly sorry your life has
been so tumultuous, · but
we hope you won't give
up on finding people who
know the meaning of true
friendship. If you belong
to a church, consider
becoming involved in
some social groups there.
Dear Annie: This is for

.Let us·Light the ·Way
to a Better Holiday...

· 0 hio abortion numbers keep·declining
COLUMBUS (AP) The two sides on the abor- ·
· tion issue have different·
takes on why Ohio's abortion numbers continue to
decline.
·
A new report from the
. Ohio Department of Health
: shows nearly 30,900 abor, tions were performed iri
: the state last year, down
: more .than 6 percent from
: 2006 and the lowest since
: the state began keeping

track in 1976.
Ohio Right to Life executive
director
Mike
GolJidakis says the figure.s
show that abortion oppo·
nents are persuading people that an unborn fetus is
a baby.
Jaime Miracle with abor- .
tion rights group NARAL
(NAY'-rahl) Pro -Choice
Ohio says more women are
avoiding unwanted pregnancies, resulting in fewer

abortions. ·
State officials say' Ohio
last year had 192 abortions for every 1,000 live
births, lower than the
national rate of .241 per
1.000.

'

Interest Rate

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9.98%
A. P.R.

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Maximum term of 36 months and minimum new loan amounl ol $5,000.00 available wilh credtt ap~va l.
(Example: Amount financed $5.000.00 ai7.75% . 36 monl111y payments of $161 .05. Loan processing fee

of $159.00 . 9.98% A.P.R.) A.P.R. =Annual Percentage Rate . RATE IS SUBJECT TO CHANGE.

telepho.ne banking
...

is switching its local numbers for a new, cl~arer toll

fr:ee

·ow OHIO VALLEY· BANK

Jeff Warner
113W lnd St
Pomeroy, OH 45769

1-888-FONE-OVB·

.(740) 992·5479
warnerj 1@nationwide.com

•

Local OVB Line numbers will be disconnected on or after November 18,
Use the new number now from ANYWHERE and see the dh1erence for yoorself. Don't have OVB Line? OVB ·cuatoi!MII
for the free service by contacting Ohio Valley Bank's Call Center at 1-877-893-2265 or email I
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"

Don't write if you don't believe

'.

Saturday, November 1S, 2008 11 :00 Qm - 3~0 pm
· Located at:the Pame~ Parking Lot/Walking Track ·
.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

\lea\tb screenllle
uea\tb'Y ·vood
t-Sbirt's

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

2008

Pelosi supports new help
for ailing US automakers

Archaeology workers dig at the site of a newly-discovered pyramid. the base of which is
seen center-left, at Saqqara near Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday. Egypt's antiquities chief Zahi
- Hawass announced the discovery of the new pyramid, dated about 4,300 years old and
said to belong to·aueen Sesheshet, the mother of King Teti , founder of the 6th Dynasty of
Egypt's Old Kingdom.

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�.........

: The Daily Sentinel

- .. . . .

NATION: • WORLD

PageA2
Wednesday, November 12,

APphoto

Egyp~

unveils discovery
of 4, 300-year-old pyramid
BY KATARINA KRATOVAC
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Sf\QQARA. Egypt · Archaeologists have · discovered · a new pyramid
under the sands of
Saqqara, an ancient burial
site _that has yielded a
string of unearthed pyra·
mids in recent years but
remains largely unexplored .
· The
4,300-yea r-o ld
monument · most likely
belonged to the queen
. mother of the founder of
: Egypt's 6th Dynasty. and
· was built several hundred
· years after the famed
Great Pyramids of Giza,
antiquities chief Zahi
Hawass told reporters in
: announcing
the
find
: Tuesday.
The discovery is part of
the sprawling necropolis
and burial site of the rulers
of ancient Memphis, the
· capital of ,E gypt's Old
: Kingdom, about 12 miles
: south of Giza.
All that remains of the
pyramid is a 16-foot-tall
structure that had been
buried under 65 feet of
sand.
"There was so much
: sand dumped here that no
one had any idea there was
something buried underneath," said Ha wass.
Hawass' team had been
excavating at the location
for · two years, but only
determined two months
· ago that the structure, 'with
sides about 72 feet long ,
was the base of a pyramid.
The pnamid is the I 18th
discovered so far in Egypt,
and the 12th to be found in
Saqqara. Most are in
ruins; only about a dozen
pyramids remain intact
across the country.
Archaeologists
also
found parts of the pyramid's white limestone casing - ·believed to have
once covered the entire
structure
·which
enabled them to calculate
that the complete pyramid
was once 45 feet high.
"To find a new pyramid
is always exciting," said
Hawass. "A nd this one is
magical. It belonged to a
queen ."

Hawass said he believes
the pyramid belonged to
Queen Sesheshet, who is
thought to have played a
· significant role in establishiilg the 6th Dynasty
and uniting lwo branches
'ng royal fam 1'
of the 'eud
,. 1 . ruled for
·
ly Her Son Tell
· · a dozen
·
•
about
years
until
his likely assassination, in
a sign of the turbulent
times .
The pyramids of Teti 's
two wives, discovered 100
years ago and in 1994
respectively, lie next to. it,
part of a burial complex
alongside the collapsed
pyramid of Teti himself.
The Egyptian team is
still digging and is two
weeks from entering the
burial chamber inside the
pyramid. where Hawass
hopes they will find proof
of its owner - a sarcophagus or at least an inscription of the queen, he said.
Finding more than that
is unlikely, as robbers in
antiquity looted the pyramid, he said, pointing to a
gaping shaft on the structure's top, .a testament of
the plunder.
On Tuesday, workers
wearing white turbans and
dust-covered robes scurried back and forth, carrying larg~ rocks and bags
heaped with sand away
.from the site.
·
Using an air brush, one
worker cleaned sand from
stunning
hieroglyphic
details on the white limestone
casing ,
while
archaeologists studied the
inscriptions and students
drew blueprints of the
pyramid's base .
Dieter Wildung , a leading Egyptologist and head
of Berlin 's Egyptian
Museum. said it was common in the Old Kin_gdom
for · kmgs to build pyram1ds for their queens and
m?thers next to the1r own,;
·Hawass IS hkely nght
that the pyramid belonged
to
Sesheshet,
said
Wildung', who was not
involved in the dig.
"These parallel situafions
give a very strong argument in favor of his interpretation."
But Joe Wegner. an

OVBLI

associate professor of
Egyptian archaeology at
the
University
of
Pennsyfvani~ . who has
been involved in other
expeditions at Saqqara,
cautioned
that
until
" inscriptional confirmation is found, it's still an
educated guess" .that the
pyramid is Sesheshet's.
Although evidence of
the queen's existence was
found · elsewhere in Egypt
in inscriptions and a
papyrus document - a
medical prescription to
strengthen the queen's
thinning· hair - the site of
her burial was not known.
The find is important
because it adds to the
understanding. of the 6th
Dynasty, which reigned
from 2,322 B.C . to 2,151
B.C. It was the last
dynasty of . the Old
Kingdom, which spanned
the third millennium B.C.
and whose achievements
are considered the first
peak of pharaonic civllization.
Saqqara is most famous
for the Step Pyramid of
King Djoser, built in · the
27th'century B.C.
Excavations have been
going on here for about
150 years, uncovering a
vast Old Kingdom necropolis of pyramids, tombs
and funerary complex.es,
, .as well as tombs datmg
from the New Kingdom
abo~t I ,000 years later. .
Still, only about a third
of the Saqqara complex
has been explored so far,
with recent digging turn·
ing up a number of key
finds.
The last new pyramid.
found here three years
ago, is thought to belong
to the wife of Teti's successor, Pepi I.
In June , Hawass ' team
. d
" d. ·
"
unve1 1e a re 1scover~
at Saqqara - a pyramid
believed to have been
built by Kmg Menkauhor,
l\D obscure pharaoh ':"hose
pyramid was first discov· ered in 1842 but was later
buried in sand.

La~t week, President-elect Committee. to draft legislaBY DAVID ESPO
AP SPECIAl CORRESPONDENT
Obama prodded the Bush tion .
administration to do more to
A companion effort is
WASHINGTON
. _,__ help the indusrry, and on under way in the Senate.
·House Speaker Nancy Monday, aides said he
The Senate is Scheduled
Pelosi called for "emer- raised the issue with to meet next week in a post- '
gency and limited financial President Bush in an Oval election session, but until
assistance" for the battered Office conversation meant Pelosi issued her statement,
auto industry on Tuesday to underscore a smooth it was not clear the House
and urged the outgoing transition of power.
would follow suit.
Bush administration"·to join
OffiCials familiar with the
The House already has
lawmakers in reaching a conversation said the presi- passed legislation• to proquick compromise.
dent replied he was open to vide additional unemployFive days after dismal the idea.
ment insurance benefits for ,.
finanCial repurts from
Before adjourning for the some of the growing ranks
General Motors Corp. and elections, Congress passed of the nation 's jobless, as
Ford Motor Co.. Pelosi legislation providing for $25 well as a separate measure
backed legislation to make billion in government- to stimulate the economy.
the auto makers eligible for backed · loans to the
That meant the Senate
help under the $700 billion automakers to prod them to .. could have passed either or
bailout measure that cleared retool their factories to make both bills and sent them to
Congress in October.
more efficient vehicles. ·
the White House for Bush's
In a written statement. the
Since then, executives signature without further
California Democrat said from GM, Ford and action by the House.
the aid was needed "in order Chrysler LLC and officials
Pelosi 's announcement
to prevent the failure of one in the United Autoworkers changed that, and raised the
or more of the major union have called for more possibility of a postelection
American automobile man- than that toavert a possible session that covers more
ufacturers. which would collapse of one of the areas.
have a devastating impact nation's most basic indusThe Bush administration,
on our economy, particular- tries, including a $25 billion for example, has said that
ly on the men and women loan to help keep the com- enactment of a free trade.
who work in that industryF panics afloat and $25 billion agreement wfth Colombia i's
"Congress and the Bush more to help cover future iis top prio~ty in Congre~s..
administration must · take health care ·payments for
Many Democrats opj&gt;Q~
immediate action," she about 780.000 retirees and the proposed agreement as
added. Administration offi- their dependents.
.
written. But it is , unclear
GM and Ford reported what, if any. compromise
cials have concluded that
the bailout bill that passed last week that they spent might be possible that
earlier does not permit loans down their cash reserves by would allow auto assistance
to the auto industry, but a combined $14.6 billion in and a trade agreement 'to be
lawmakers are expected to the past three months. Ford , the IJist major measures
return to the Capitol for a said it would slash more signed into law by, the outbrief postelection session than 2,000 white collar jobs.. going president.
beginning next week.
Pelosi's statement did not
In her statement, Pelosi
The plight ofthe industry specify how large an aid said any assistance to the
has drawn attention from package she prefers.
industry should include limthe White House and the · Instead, she said she had its on executive compensa. ey Frank, tion, rigorous government
incoming Obama adminis- asked Rep . Bam
tration in recent days, as D-Mass., chairman of the review authority· and other
w,ell as among lawmakers.
House Financial Services taxpayer protections.
· ---------------'------------------

Pakistan: Mili" tants setze
. . convoy tOr
£'.
US -1ed tOrces
£'.

especially large and wellorganized. It also could further strain U .S.-Pakistani
.PESHAWAR, Pakistwl relations over rooting out
Suspected Taliban fighters . Taliban and ai-Qaida milihijacked trucks . carrying tants along the border, which
Humv~s and other supplies remain entrenched despite
for U.S.-Ied troops in military offensives and U.S.
Afghanistan, authorities said missile strikes.
Tuesday after a brazen attack
Some 60 masked milinear the· Khyber Pass that tants blocked the route at
underscored the militants' several points before overgrip across key mountain powering the convoy, said
strongholds.
Fazal Mahmood, a governThe assault highlighted the ment official in Khr,ber
vulnerability of a vital 'supply tribal region. He identified
route for the 65,000 U.S. and the attackers as members
NATOforcesbattlingaresur- of · Pakistan's Taliban
gent Taliban in landlocked . movement.
Afghanistan. A significant
Security forces traded fire
amount of supplies for the with the gunmen, but were
Western force.s go through forced to retreat, he said. The
Pakistan.
militants took about 13 trucks
Separately, in the nearby along with the drivers, who
city of Peshawar, gunmen were believed to be Pakistani.
blocked the car of an
A U.S. military spokesman
American aid worker on in Afghanistan confirmed the
Wednesday and killed him thefts late Thesday.
and his Pakistani driver,
"There were some U.S.
police said.
military materials that were
Attacks on convoys cany- taken - Humvees and water
ing food, fuel and other sup- tank trailers," said Maj. John
plies · are common on the Redfield.
road. But Monday's raid was
Later Monday, a separate
BY RIAZ KHAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

group of insurgents halted
a · truck .carrying what
appeared to be a NATO
jeep, setting the military
vehicle . on fire, Mahmood ·
said. NATO officials .could
be
not
immediately
·reached for comment ()n
that incident.
In the past, U.S. and NATO
officials have played down
their losses along the pass.
But earlier this year.
NATO said it was trying to
reduce it~ dependence on the
route by · negotiatin~ with
Russia and other nauons to
. let it truck "non-lethal" supplies to Afghanistan through
Central Asia.
. Security forces, backed by
heli~opter gunships, hunted
for the missing trucks and
drivers. The military said late
Tuesday it had recovered
some of the stolen materials
but would not specify what.
"We are using all
resources to trace and
recover the hijacked trucks,
some of which were carrying vehicles for the allied
forces · in Afghanistan," ,
· Mahmood saiq.

2nd Annual Turkey Trot .
Fun Run/Walk
. os

·

Community Caiendar
Clubs and
organizations

Rankin and Vera Crow, Gallipolis Freewill Baptist
hostesses.
Church.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 ,. 7 p.m. at
Wednesday, Nov. 12
hall. Dinner at 6:30p.m.
POMEROY ~ Middleport . RACINE - Sonshine
Monday, Nov. 17
Literary · Club, 2 p.m., Circle, 7 p.m. at the
POMEROY
· - Meig~
Pomeroy Library. Jeanne Bethany Church. Take colBowen will review Wild lectibles, turn in noodle ' Athletic Boosters fall SJlOrt'S
Nov.
18. banquet, 6:30 p.m., high
Nights: Stories about the Last orders by
Days of Poe.· Dickinson, Hostesses , Betty Proffitt , school cafeteria. Bring veg·
· Twain ,
James
and Martha Lou Beegle , and etable and dessert.
Hemingway by Joyce Carol Holly Stump.
Oates. Marlene. Kuhn hostess .
Thursday, Nov. 13
CHESTER
Shade
Saturday, Nov. 15 .
River Lodge 452 , at the
LONG
BOTTOM
Friday, Nov. 14
~alL Officers to be elected,
· Ernest Griffin will celebrate
LONG BOTTOM
lime
to
pay
dues. "Heavenly Rush," 7 p.m., his 9.1st birthday on Nov.
Refreshments.
Faith Full Gospel Church, 15 . Cards may be sent to
POMEROY - Alpha Iota Ohio 124.
him at 36606 Post Office
Masters , II :30 a.m .. United
GALLIPOLIS - King's Road , Long Bottom,, Ohio
. Methodist Church . June Van flarve st Singers, 6 p.m., 45743.
.. . .
.

Other events

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My 34year-old nephew brought
his computer to a shop to
· be fixed. On the hard
dri\'e , the repairman found
three videos· and 15 pictures of child pornography. My nephew was
arrested and is facing jail
time. He has asked numerous people to send letters
to the JUdge attesting to
his good character..
. Annie, his character is
NOT good. He could
never hold down a job and ·
is angry at the worfd . His
other aunt is on a mission
to have all family memb'ers write · a letter for him.
l say, let him pay for what
he has. done and maybe he
can get some help in jail
and come out of this a betQuestion: My daughter off a threat or run away wilf also help prevent test ter person. What do you
, is a very smart girl. but from it. This is helpfuL anxiety. Avoiding stimu- . say? - Grandmother of
she doesn 't make grades when yuu are facing an !ants, like · caffeine-based Two
Dear · Grandmother:
that are as good as they actual physical threat.
drinks .and foods, and getUnfortunately,
prison
. could be . She tells me that
However, when the per- ting a good night's sleep
when she has' a test, she ceived danger is an emo- . before the test will also doesn't a) ways translate to
· gets so nervous she makes · tiona! one .like a test . t~o enhance a person's ability therapy, which is what
your . nephew . needs,
silly mistakes that fre: much adrenahn can still to stay' in control.
However.
you · should not
quently cost her a good · cause. the same physical
There - may be help at
11rade. Is this a medical react10~. Unfortunately , school through the guid- write a letter if you don't
Issue or a school issue? once this type ot nervous a:nce counselor or a learn- believe in what you arc
I'm not sure who to talk to reaction starts, it can be ing specialist. Your daugh- saying. If your refusal will
about this - the doctor ,or hard to stop. The more ter should work with them cause a rift, simply tell his
the teacher?
nervous you are. the more to dev'elop · good study. other aunt that you y..oill
Answer: Most of ·us you sweat and shake; the habits . If that's not "do your best." And
experience a surge of more you sweat and shake. enough, she may require apparently, your best is to
energy when faced with a the more nervous you get. medicine to reduce her decline. You don't need to
challenging situation like This can become a vicious ·anxiety symptoms.. An tell her, or anyone else,
having to take a test or .cyd~ that spirals upward. antidepressant in 'the SSRI what choice you've made.
Dear Annie: My family
Bemg. aware that you category or a beta blocker
perform on stage. This
surge can help us stay have this problem IS the used in a low dose the day has been through some
"focused and perform at a firSt step toward resolvmg of the test may help rough times in the past
five years. My stepson's
peak level. However, fo[ It. Once . yo.ur daughter decrease test anxieiy and, wife died of cardiac arrest
some people the surge of recogmz_es that_ an upcom- thus, improve perforthe age of 24, and in his
Medications at
energy can be overwhelm- mg test IS m~kmg her ner- mance.
grief,
went down the
ing and lead to extreme vous, she might attempt a would need to be pre- wrong hepath.
His in-laws
nervl:lusness,
nausea , few self-help measures. scr.ibed by your family are raising the children ,
sweating, vomiting and She should try to calm
h · ·
f
d'
even fainting.
This yourself with deep breath- P. YSICian a ter a me lca 1 and we help out financially and physic.ally. L-ast
appears to be the case with in·g or other relaxation history_ and exa_m_.
.
your daughter. It 's a con- exercises. Many people
Family MediCine® IS ~ winter. I was diagnosed
dition called test anxiety, find this very beneficial. weekl:r column. T? submit
which is caused by release Anotlier way to get around que$tlons, . wnte . to
of excessive amounis of test ~nxiety is to try to . Martha A. S&amp;,mpson_, D,C!.,
adrenalin.
consciously redir-e ct · the M.B.A., Ohw Umver.n~y
· Adrenalin .- a natura) , nervous energy iowardthe Coll~g.e of Osteopathic
body hormone - can be task at hand. By redirect- Medtcme, P:O· Box JJO,
very helpful in certain sit- ing that nervousness, your Afhens, ~h1o 45701, or
l.l'ations. For instance, a lot daughter may find that she . v1a e-mml to .readerquesof adrenalin is released can focus more sharply on tions®familyf!!edi~ine­
when you are confronted test questions .
new~.or~. M~d&amp;ca/ mfo~­
by a bully on the street.
B6ing ptepared for a test mat1?n m thiS colum'! 1s
The adrenalin causes the is a major anxiety reducer provided as an educationheart to beat faster and the for most people. If a pei- a/ service anl:r.lldoes not
breathing rate to incre&amp;se. son is well prepared for a · replace the }l~dgment of
· In response to adrenalin, test it ·can boost confi- your personal physician,
your body also sends more den~e to the point that it who should be relied on
&lt;nutrients to the muscles will override the fear to diagnose and recom·
· &lt;J,nd less blood to the· response, hence less test · mend treatment for any
dieestive system. This is anxiety. Also, learning to medical conditions. Past
called the ''fight or flight" purposely replace nellative columns are available
reaction . It gives you the · thoughts in anticipation of online at www.familymedenergy you need to fight a test with positive ones icinenews.org • .

Birthdays

Church events

FAMILY MEDICINE

Self help, medications help treat anxiety

"No t Really Married,"
who hasn't had sex with
his wife for the last 20 of
their 50 years together.
You were right when
you said, "Sex is only one
aspect of a relationship ." I
have been married for
over 54 years to the girl I
love . I'd do it again even
.
though It has been ":ell
over 20 years smce we ve
had sex. She had a hysterectomy. which. later
caused her some discomfort during sex. Since that
happened , I stopped initi ating it, even though she
made· herself available. If
she couldn't enjoy it , neither couid I. We are still
very close. and at this
stage, sex is not needed.
She gave me two healthy
children (we lost two) and
then four grandchildren
and four great-grandchil dren with whom we are
very close.; What more
could I ask. We still have
plenty of close physical
contact In other ways.
I feel .sorry for. "Not
Really Married." He is
missing so much due to
his faulty attitude. Really Married
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, {ongtime
editors of the Ann
Landers co'lumn. Please
e-mail your que.~tions to
anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or · write to:
Annie's Mailbox P.O
.
.
. '
·•
Box 118190,_ Ch1cago, IL
60611. To ~n,d out.more
about Anme s Mallbox,
and read features. by
ol~er Creators Synd1~ate
writers and cartoomsts,
vi.~il
the
Creators
Syndicate Web page at
www.creators.com.

with a brain tumor that left
me with minor disabilities
and my husband had a
heart attack.
.·
Due to our medical
problems. we . had to l
downscale our JObs . Jvly
husban~, and I enter_ed
counseling. for a bnef
ume, and we fmally seem
to be handlmg all of this
fairly well. Our marriage
is great. We actually found
our sense of humor again.
The problem is our
friends. One by one, the
people we thought cared
ahout us have dropped
away. It is like we have a
disease they are afraid of
catching. One of our
friends actually told us to
call them whe?, we ."get
back to normal.
At first I was angry
becausewe have no 1m med1ate family . In the area
and good fnends would
have been helpful. But
now I am JUSt sad. I could
call several of them back
now. but frankly I don 't
want them.
Annie , you can be the
smartest try the hardest ·
be the m~st careful , but n~
one prepares you for times
like these and they can
happen to anyone. How do
you find great friends who
will stand by you? Doing Wit~out Th~m
Dear Domg _Wtthout:
There IS no magic formula
that will make one friend
see you through thick and
thm, wh1k anotl~e~ runs
away and ~Ides. We. re ternbly sorry your life has
been so tumultuous, · but
we hope you won't give
up on finding people who
know the meaning of true
friendship. If you belong
to a church, consider
becoming involved in
some social groups there.
Dear Annie: This is for

.Let us·Light the ·Way
to a Better Holiday...

· 0 hio abortion numbers keep·declining
COLUMBUS (AP) The two sides on the abor- ·
· tion issue have different·
takes on why Ohio's abortion numbers continue to
decline.
·
A new report from the
. Ohio Department of Health
: shows nearly 30,900 abor, tions were performed iri
: the state last year, down
: more .than 6 percent from
: 2006 and the lowest since
: the state began keeping

track in 1976.
Ohio Right to Life executive
director
Mike
GolJidakis says the figure.s
show that abortion oppo·
nents are persuading people that an unborn fetus is
a baby.
Jaime Miracle with abor- .
tion rights group NARAL
(NAY'-rahl) Pro -Choice
Ohio says more women are
avoiding unwanted pregnancies, resulting in fewer

abortions. ·
State officials say' Ohio
last year had 192 abortions for every 1,000 live
births, lower than the
national rate of .241 per
1.000.

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Saturday, November 1S, 2008 11 :00 Qm - 3~0 pm
· Located at:the Pame~ Parking Lot/Walking Track ·
.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

\lea\tb screenllle
uea\tb'Y ·vood
t-Sbirt's

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

2008

Pelosi supports new help
for ailing US automakers

Archaeology workers dig at the site of a newly-discovered pyramid. the base of which is
seen center-left, at Saqqara near Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday. Egypt's antiquities chief Zahi
- Hawass announced the discovery of the new pyramid, dated about 4,300 years old and
said to belong to·aueen Sesheshet, the mother of King Teti , founder of the 6th Dynasty of
Egypt's Old Kingdom.

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
, w~dnesday, November

12,

~oo8

'

-·

when asked about domesCandidates cannot live by
tic
terrorist Bill Ayers.
the Internet alone, but there
who has played more than
was something clever about
a
cameo role in Presidentformer
Tennessee
elect
Barack Obama's li fe
Republican senator Fred
and
·
c
aree r: "'Th is is an
Thompson's
media
Kathryn
·
unrepentant terrori st who
approach to running for
Lopez
says
he wishes l1e would
president. The former star
have
bombed more penof "Law and Order" could
pie . Remem ber. thi s is a
have flooded every frequenman who bombed the
cy there is. Instead, he went
Pentagon
;mel was happy
straight' to his core audi- and report on some of the
to be bombin g Ameri&lt;.:ans.
ence.
radical anti-American asso- as well. This is not u perThompson
favored ciations of the man who has
Internet videos and talk now been elected president son that the president of
radio. generally refusing to of the United States. the .United States would
bend over backward for Congresswoman gone wild? want to be · assn&lt;.:iated
with."
hostile media, such as the Hardly.
She continued to insist
evening news shows and
But Matthews was a softihat
, had former Republi&lt;.:&lt;tn
papers of record. Some ie compared to left:wing
presidential
nominee John
would call that lazy. r d call radio talk-show host Mike
it smart.
Malloy, who outrageously McCain been hanging OLit
Michelle
Bachmann said df Bachmann: "She 's a . with Ayers, "It would have
learned her lesson the hard . hatemonger. She's the type been a nightl y story. · It
way. The Minnesota mother of person that would have would ha ve been every ·
of five, foster mom of 23 ~ladly rounded up the Jews where."
Bachmann
and others
and tax lawyer .serves as a m Germany and shipped
member of the House of them off to death camps. were right to push the
Representatives. But she She's the . type of person issue. whil'h. sadl y. didn ' t
almost lost her bid for .re- who would have had no have enough of an imp&gt;u:t.
election, and the reason is problem sending typhoid- Obama 's link s with Ayers.
MSNBC, a network that's smeared blankets to Native mtoch like hi s asso..:iation
become ·a playground of the American families awaiting with the Rev. Jeremiah
rabiilleft.
deportation to reservations. Wright , speaks direc tl y
judgment.
Bachmann made the mis- ... This is an evil bitch from about · his
know:,
this and
Bachmann
take of appearing on hell. I mean , just an
tried to point it out, calmly
MSNBCs "Hardball" in absolute evil woman."
mid-October. Host Chris
What . exactly
did and with reason. And fdr
Matthews berated her for · Bachmann · do to deserve doing so. she . was pillo daring to suggest that the this?
ried, held up 10 widespread
·She said to Matthews, ridicule
mainstream media do its job
and
m:arly

111 Court Sti'Ht • Poll1eroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydally11811tlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
•

•

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

TODAY IN H-ISTORY

Today is Wednesday, Nov. 12, the 317th day of 2008.
There are 49 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 12, 1942, the World. War II naval Battle of
Guadalcanal began. (The Allies em!ed up winning a major
victory over the Japanese .)
..
On this date:
.
.
In 1815,American suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton Was
born in Johnstown, N.Y. .,
In 1908, Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun was
born in Nashville, Ill.
In 1927, Jose[Stalin became the undisputed ruler of the
Soviet Union as Leon Trotsky was expelled from the
Communist Party.
. In 1948, former Japanese premier Hideki Tojo and several other World War II Japanese leaders were sentenced to
death by a war crimes tribunal.
·
In 1977, the city of New Orleans elected its first black
mayor, Ernest "Dutch" Moria!, the winper of a runoff.
cTT"A @uo!F~{n'w~ STN2-;-et..EG~~
In 1982; Yuri V.Andropov was elected to suceeed the late f-\ULME
.
·
Leonid I. Brezhnev as general secretary of the Soviet
Communist Party's Central Committee.
In 1990, Japanese Emperor Akihito formally assumed the
Chrysanthemum Throne. · ·
: In 1996, a Saudi Boeing 747 jetliner collided shortly after
takeoff from New Delhi, India, with a Kazak Ilyushin-76
cargo plane, killing 349 ~ople.
In 200 I, American Airlines Flight 587, en route fJ ,.,,
New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport to the
Dominican Republic, crashed after takeoff, killing 265 people.
. Ten years ago: Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley filed a
$433 million dollar lawsuit against .the firearms industry.
lieclaring that it had created a public !1Uisance by flooding
the streets with weapons deliberately marketed to criminals. (A judge dismissed the lawsuit in 2000; an appeals
court ruled in 2002 that the city of Chicago could proceed;
.but the Illinois Supreme Court dismissed the lawsuit in
2004.)
: Five years ago: President Bush and his top foreign advisers reviewed new strategies to speed the transfer of political power in Iraq. A suicide truck bomber attacked the
headquJirlers of Italy's 8aramilitary police in Nasii:iyah,
Iraq, killing more than 3 people. Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat swore in a new Palestmian Cabinet. Actress Penny
,Singleton died in Sherman Oaks, Calif., at age 95. Actor
Jonathan Brandis died in Los Angeles at age 27.
Today's Birthdays: Rhythm-and-blues singer Ruby Nash
Curtis (Ruby and the Romantics) is 69. Actor-playwright
Wallace Shawn is 65. Singer Brian Hyland is 65. Rhythmand-blues singer Jimmy Hayes (Persuasions) is 65. Rock
musician Booker T. Jones (Booker T. &amp; the MGs) is 64.
Singer-songwriter Neil Young is 63.
.
Thought for Today: "Money is always there but the pockets change; it is not in the same pockets after a cliange, imd
that is all there is to say about money." - Gertrude Stein,
American author (1874-19~)- ,

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less

than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, .and include address and telephone .number: No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
One of the great thin~s
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of about the recent election is
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· that we won't have to see
ed for publication.
another political commer-

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Ohio Valley Publishing ·

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GALliPOLIS - Augusta Grace Lemley, 86, Gallipolis:
doed Tuesday, Nov. II . 2008, in the Scenic Hills Nursing
Center.
. She was preceded in death by her husband, Luther Bryan
Lemley .
·
Services will be II a.m. Friday, Nov. 14, 2008, in the
Po_plar Rodge ~re.ewill BaJ?tist~hurch,_with the Rev. Calvi!?
Mmms offictatmg. Bunal wrll be m the Poplar Ridge
Cemetery. Friends may call from 6 to 9 pm. Thursday at
th~ Cremeens Funeral Chapel in Gallipolis, and one hour
pnor to the funeral service at the church.
.~~press ions of sympathy may be sent to the farnily by
VISttmg www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Ohio surrogate grandmother
says she feeLS fine .
BY

M.R. KROPKO

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND - Jaci
Dalenberg decided that if
she could help her daughter
have a baby she would do it.
But at 56, Dalen berg was an
unlikely person to serve as a
pregnancy surrogate , and
she didn't antiCipate three
babies all at once.
Now, a month after three
baby giris were born ,
Dalenberg is recovering
from a Caesarean section
and proud to call the triplets
she carried her granddaughters. Two of them are identical twins.
Dalenberg, of Mansfield
in central Ohio. had to be
closely monitored because
of her age .
"I felt great. I didn 't feel
pregnant with three until I'd
feel three kicking at the
same time,'' she said .
The girls were born Oct.
II - more than two months
premature - and each
weighed less than . three
pounds.
One of the infants might
be home by Friday.
Dalenberg and her daughter,
Kim Coseno. said in an
interv(ew
Tuesday
at
Cleveland Clinic Hillcrest
Hospital in the Cleveland
suburb Mayfield Heights.
The newborns have been in
neonatal intensive care at

the hospital.
"I'm glad that we did it
and that we've had a happy
outcome ," Coseno satd .
"We're thrilled."
Coseno, 36, has two children . now 18 and 13, from a
previous marriage. She and
hu sband Joe Coseno, 29, an
Ashland firefighter, were
unable to have a baby
together becaus7 she's had a
hysterectomy.
Her ovaries could produce
eggs, so the couple agreed to
try in vitro fertilization. The
embryos were implanted in
Dalenberg's uterus. ,
Dalenberg was happy to
keep the births all in the
family.
"I wasn't real -comfortable
about going outside of the
family for a surrogate ,''
Dalenberg said. "Joe's such
a great guy, so I told Kim I'd
do it for Joe." The couple
have been married three
years.
A 56-year-old carrier is
highly unusual , said Dr.
Robert Kiwi. who monitored the pregnancy after he
worked with Dr. James
Goldfarb on the in-vitro fertilization . A typical carrier is
a young, healthy woman
who had a baby previously,
said Kiwi, who was the doctor for the births.
Dalenberg underwent hormonal therap&gt;' to stren. gthen
her uterus , Kowi said,.

WASHINGTON - At a
time when most administrations are getting ready to
tum out the lights. the Bush
administration is still struggling to get the biggest govemment rescue in history up
and run.ning.
. Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson, who is leading the
effort, is facing a lot of criticism and second .guessing
at the moment over how
well the $700 billion bailout
program for the U.S. financial system is being h:tndled . Paulson was scheduled to give an update on
the effort on Wednesday.
Critics are complaining
that the administration is
not being tough enough on
the bmlks who are receiving .
the assistance , that the original centerpiece of the program - government purchases of troubled assets has been left to languish and
that homeowners struggling
with mortgage foreclosures
are not getting the help they
need to stay in their homes.
And in addition to all of
those complaints, the
administration is having to
contend with a number of
industries , led by auto companics, who contend. that
they deserve a share of the
rescue funds.
President-e lect Obama,
when he met with President
Bush at the White House on
Monday, urged Bush to support aid for struggling
automakers and Democrats
in Congress have begun.
drafting legislation that
would give General Motors,
Ford and Chrysler access to
$25 · billion of .the rescue
funds.
The Bush administration
has already committed
$250 billion of the money
for the purchase of bank
stock, giving financial
institutions an infusion of
cash that tile government

Honored rrom Page At
Anderson noted ·that veter. aris organizations, such as
the American Legion,
Disabled
American
:Veterans and Veterans of
Foreign Wars, are committed to helping veterans, but
said the . government and ·
~Jeered officials are als~

called to help.
"Our leaders need to take
responsibility to give our
men and women in uniform
the best · equipment with
which to fight, and the best
medical care possible if
they
are
wounded,"
Anderson said.

RCP frOm Page Al
to www.rc'players.net for
more information. The din- .
ner theater production will
be
lteld
at
Meigs
Elementary School.
Theater-goers can look
forward to seeing both
some new and familiar
faces .this year, inclUding:
The River City Dancers,
Michelle Evans, Jody
Harrison, Junie Maynard,
Katie McClure and Kerrie
VanReeth; · the RCP's ,

.No more cam 1JainJ ads!

cial for two or three months,
when, after a short break,
Jim
the campaign for 2012 elecMullen
tion will begin. Some
reports say the two major
campaigns spent $750 million this year, most of it on
television advertising. That ing, it lands in some beautidoesn 't count money spent ful Shangri-La, a place you
in local races.
·
would love to visit if you
Now, how many ordinary, had the money and when
non-political , TV commer- thf; plilne lands a bunch of
cials have you seen in your happy, smiling passengers
life? Thousands? Hundreds ~et off the plane looking as
of thousands? Yet yo~ rarely 1f they had just step~d out
see a car comniercial that of a re.laxiltion booth. You.
makes you angry or an ad wa!Ch.it, but you don't stand
for a dish washing liquid up, and yell at Ute television,
that makes you want to _ "That's a lie! Those 4)eople
chan$,e the chann('i. Most of just-spent ten · hours on· the
us will even suffer through . tarmac and the toilets .overadult diaper commercials flowed and not orie of them
without feeling strongly is going to get their lugabout them. Cat people will gage! How can they get
watch dog food commer- away with putting that kind
cials and vice versa without of stuff on television . There
complaining.
oughta be a law, l want
So why can't they can't equal _ ti~e ! I will,never lly
make a campaign commer- that_3\rlme agll!n!
.
cia! that doesn't have half
Smce th~ boggest ~~~fer­
the country screaming at the ~nee between most mrhnes
television?
·
ts the c~lor of the llo ght
Why don't we scream ~t attendant s unoform , you
airline commercials? Therr have ~o wonder why they
ads arc all pretty much the · advertise at all . I buy the
same, you see a 'plane fly- cheapest seat I can get. Who

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

·Deaths

Bv MARTIN CRUTSINGER

deprived of her role as "
public servant. .
.
I've spent a little 111ne
with Bachmann and know
her at least well enough to
ht' ab le to combat thi s
"hatemonge r" nonsense.
Death camps?! She and her
husband care . for as many
di sadvantaged children as
they possibly can. ·
·•
As she recently told my
friend. radio talk-show host
Murk Levin, it's amazing
that
any ' "normal
American" would want to
have anything to do with
politics after the "public
. flogging"
Bac hmann
end ured in the final weeks
of her re -election campaign. ·Her story of over·
coming the megaphone of
the mainstream media an entity that proved a
tremendous fundraising
' boon for her opponent and speaki ng directly to the
voters via talk radio and
old-fashioned campaigning
should se rve as an inspiration to good Americans
who want to serve - and
ha ve their voices heard
over the noise.
(Kar/rry11 Lopez is the editor

cares what airline it is?
How many fast-food
commercials have you seen
where the restaurant is spotless. the staff is clean,
friendly and smart enough
to make change. In the
background all the cus: tomers are attractive · and
skinnier than supermodels?
And the reality Is ... ? And
yet few of us yell "Lie&gt;!
Fraud! Distortion' Untruth!
How do they get away with
that?" at the television when
we· see a fasJ-food commercial.
l' ve'never been in a country band, but I'm pretty sure
· if the guitar player started
singing "Viva Viagra" at a
·rehearsa.l , · the other guys
wouldn'tjoin in , they&lt; would
club him to death with their
instruments knowing full
well that no jury would convict them. Yet we watch the
commercial unemotionally,
coolly detached as i! we
could care less.
.
But political commercials
aren't just an noying- they
are offensive ... to their supporters! Every time the guy
I liked ran an ad I wnuld
think. "Is that the best he
can do? Nobody 's going to
fall for that cr.ap . Why don't
you .say this? Why · don 't
you say that? Doesn't any-

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

How to survive media bias

The Daily Sentinel

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Wedn~sday, November 12, 2008

one in your campaign watch
television? Have they ever
seen a commercial bdore?"
I figure if your commercial
offends your supporters,
you're doing it wrong.
Why don't politicians do
what the airlines do? You
show the candidate's ·plane
llying through the-air, it lands
in a beautiful· place -' the
future - where Arabs and
lsmelis walk down the street
holding hands: where -everyone has a high-paying job;.
where no one pays any taxes;
where there are no potholes
and cars run on used coffee
grounds; where all teens are
so well-adjusted and happy;
where stocks never go down,
where all children behave;
where school teachers get
paid like basketball players
and basketball players get
paid ·like reachers; where all
marriages last forever; where
lawyers don't file frivolous
law suits: where CEOs give
tbeir employees a ·raise
before they give one to themselves . .
Wouldn't you buy some
of that?
·
(Jim Muiler1 is tire author
of ': /1 Takes a Village Idiot:
Con'oplicating the Simple

Andrew Bissell , Brady
Bissell, Margaret Evans, ·
Darby Gilmore, Veronica
Grimm, Sharon Hawley,
Matt Hosk~n. Nick- Ingels,
Kylen King, Amy Perrin,
Karen Polcyn, Brian Rice,
Evans Smalley, Kathy
Thomas, Kerr:e VanReeth
and Gary Walker will be
joined by Cris Khun, keyboard, Seth Johnson, bass,
and Morgan Kennedy· on
percussion.

~~'"'111..'1 ~·], 11::'tl~~

1..

111

,

1'

1 ,1

111 jim_rrmllen@myway.com)

Ohio GOP
·offers prevailing wag~ plan ·

,I

More than 4 million
American homeowners. or 9
percent of borrowers with a
mortgage . were either
behind on their payments or
in foreclosure at the end of
June, according to the most
recent · data fro'll the
Mortgage
Hankers
Assoc iation .
The
new
initiative
announced Tuesday .followed announcements frorll
several major banks that
they plan to do more.
Citigroup
said
late
Monday it is ha'lting foreclosures for borrowers who
live in their own homes.
have decent incomes and
stand a . good chance o"f
making lowered mortgage
payments.

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Sign Up OnHnel www.LoealNttcom

••

. •.C-~ IU/IW,..qr IIi!

The Karat Patch Dilrrm•'JiilifsklV~£~
Saturday, November 15,2008 •
·..:;;...;;o ·;
Co111t clt"k "' olll!

W•"t~l JOI lAir ,far'• ltottul loob llfdNdlii6:

' '
Chocelale Pw1ot. Cllocollte Gold, NEW Jlftll1ll.., flreJeloeiiJ•
-, ~""" dolldrt~~'~Jewtlry by Dwttna ~.,.oodo, .
newly
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Col~..,· with every otep...lf" lJI'O"S.

£.,,.,.

'· ,. . , -s,.cW
OJTII.i Dar- .
' . ,.... .......41111infat Holidlydi&lt;orotl.. -

.

.

lines this summer 'that he
said clarified a law that
has increasingly been
ignored by developers .
Ohio has had a prevailing
wage law on public projects since 1931.
.
Carey's bill will be in
committee
starting
Wednesday .

·

SSALE.
FREE
DELIVERY

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,r,. ·~ '••ft
swln'..idlaors~
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Life" and "Baby 's first

Tattoo. " You can-reach him

gram. we wait for a homeowner to be in a failin g
position before doing anything, which often is too
late," said John Taylor.
president and CEO of the
National
Community
Reinvestment Coalition.
Senate
Banking
Committee
Chairman
Christopher Dodd, who has
scheduled hearings for
Thursday on the overall rescue program , called the loan
modification program a
"constructive step forward"
but he said it should not be a
substitute for a program
being pushed by Shelia
Bair, head of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp.,
which would use part of the
$700 billion to provide government guarantees for
mortgages that are modified
to lower payments, thus
providing an ·incentive for
banks to rework the loans.
Bair also criticized the
effort as falling short and
urged adoption of her pro- ·
gram for mortgage guarante7.s. .
.
As we lend . and mvest
hundreds of btlhons of dolIars to help mstttut10ns suffenng leveraged lossei from
defaultmg mortgages, we
must also devote . some of
that money to foxmg the
front-end problem - too
many unaffordable home
loans," she said in a sta\ement.

,

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
Republican lawmaker says
esting.
.
he has a plan to clear up a
• Stover presented council confusing attempt by
with a police report for Ohio's governor to expand
October.
the use of union-scale pr~•· Th~ Christmas parade vailing wages on state
will be Saturday, Dec. 6 at construction projects.
noon. Santa Claus will be at
State Sen . John Carey of
the city building's commu- · Wellston said Tuesday he
nity center following the
parade.
.
· wants developers to pay
• Keams announced that ·prevailing wage for an
there will be a catered entire project if state-dolChristmas lunch for city lars fund 35 percent or
employees Friday, Dec. 19 . more of the project. If
. • Council members unani- state dollars are less than
mously approved giving all 35 percent of the cost - 5
city employees $200 for percent, {or example prevailing wage would be
Christmas bonuses.
paid
only on that 5 per• The meeting adjourned
c¢nt.
at 8: 10p.m.
·
Democratic Gov. Ted
· The nex.t meeting will be
Strickland issued guide7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 20 .

AP photo

Troy Courtney stands on the porch of his Mill Valley, Calif. , home on Saturday, Nov. 1. His
family is aboul to move out of the house following a foreclosure .

Mae and Freddie Mac in
September. announced a
plan designed to speed up
the process for renegotiating hundreds of thousands
of delinquent loans held by
the two mortgage giants. .
Officials hope the new
approach, which . goes into ,
effect Dec. 15., will become
a ·model for loan servicing
companoes, whoch coll~ct
mortgage payments and d1stribute them .to investors.
These comp_a~tes have been
roundly cntocozed for beo~g
slow to respond to a surge m
defaults.
The plan could . have
tremendous . Importance
because Fanme Mae and
Freddoe Mac ow~ or guar- .
antee nearly 31 mtlhonU.S .
mortgages , or nearly st~ of
every
10 ou~standmg.
Govem_ment officoals, ho":ever, dod not have an esttmate of hpw many people
.. .
would quahty for the new
program. .
8
~s~~e ~~~e ~~~~t~ fen~~ wJ~d 6~~~ft~ b~o~ore~~~ ·
ing operations and address three months behind on .
the most severe credit crisis their home loans. and would
in decades. On Monday, the need to owe 90 percent or
administration announced more than the home is curthat it was allocating anoth- rently worth, investors who
er $40 billion as an invest- do not occupy their homes
ment in troubled insurance would be excluded, as
giant
American would borrowers who have
filed for bankruptcy.
International Group.
Those decisions leave
Borrowers would get help
only $60 billion left to allo- in _several ways: The interest
cate of the first $350 billion rate would be reduced so
in · funds approved by that borrowers would not
Congress and that is before pay more than 38 percent of
imy money has been spent their income on housing
to buy · trO\Ibled assets, expenses. Another option is
which origillally had been for loans to be extended
the , administration's chief from 30 years 'to 40 years,
reason· for . requesting the · and for some of the princibailout program, which· ·pal amount to .be deferred
Congress approved on Oc!. mterest-free.
3.
While lenders . have
The government on beefed up their efforts to aid
Tuesday sought to address borrowers over the past
another of the complaints of year, their earlier efforts
critics, that not enough is have not kept up with the
being done to . help worst housing recession in
Americans deal with record decades. The new approach
levels of mortgage defaults. was also attacked by critics
The Federal Housing for not going far enough ..
Finance Agency, which . "Instead of a massive
seized control of Fannie. foreclosure-prevention pro-

Auction rrom Page At
cut due to finances.
C_ouncil mem\lers a~reed
that the.jetter \)'as the highest priority because it is
needed in more emergency
situations. They also agreed
that if an item needed to be
cut, the truck shpuld be the
first to go. In addition , they
requested that a less expensive truck model be used.
Sutphin said she would
get additional cost estimates
for the truck.
• Council ' members discussed the status of dilapidated properties in town.
• Councilwoman Sarah
Stover . reported that she
attended a semi nat for court
clerks. Stover described the
. seminar as being very inter-

.

,.,;)T FDIC ~ NOT GU-1 4W700 i t' i'£0)t£4 &amp;;!II;.

..

~ro ~~/'M YL~VAJ.(E

-·=-:-

,

RA»tDSDJAMFS
FINAHC::IAl IIRVICI:S, ,,.e;,
•••"" w•••u•••t

106 East Main Street •Pomero , OH • 992·3671

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
, w~dnesday, November

12,

~oo8

'

-·

when asked about domesCandidates cannot live by
tic
terrorist Bill Ayers.
the Internet alone, but there
who has played more than
was something clever about
a
cameo role in Presidentformer
Tennessee
elect
Barack Obama's li fe
Republican senator Fred
and
·
c
aree r: "'Th is is an
Thompson's
media
Kathryn
·
unrepentant terrori st who
approach to running for
Lopez
says
he wishes l1e would
president. The former star
have
bombed more penof "Law and Order" could
pie . Remem ber. thi s is a
have flooded every frequenman who bombed the
cy there is. Instead, he went
Pentagon
;mel was happy
straight' to his core audi- and report on some of the
to be bombin g Ameri&lt;.:ans.
ence.
radical anti-American asso- as well. This is not u perThompson
favored ciations of the man who has
Internet videos and talk now been elected president son that the president of
radio. generally refusing to of the United States. the .United States would
bend over backward for Congresswoman gone wild? want to be · assn&lt;.:iated
with."
hostile media, such as the Hardly.
She continued to insist
evening news shows and
But Matthews was a softihat
, had former Republi&lt;.:&lt;tn
papers of record. Some ie compared to left:wing
presidential
nominee John
would call that lazy. r d call radio talk-show host Mike
it smart.
Malloy, who outrageously McCain been hanging OLit
Michelle
Bachmann said df Bachmann: "She 's a . with Ayers, "It would have
learned her lesson the hard . hatemonger. She's the type been a nightl y story. · It
way. The Minnesota mother of person that would have would ha ve been every ·
of five, foster mom of 23 ~ladly rounded up the Jews where."
Bachmann
and others
and tax lawyer .serves as a m Germany and shipped
member of the House of them off to death camps. were right to push the
Representatives. But she She's the . type of person issue. whil'h. sadl y. didn ' t
almost lost her bid for .re- who would have had no have enough of an imp&gt;u:t.
election, and the reason is problem sending typhoid- Obama 's link s with Ayers.
MSNBC, a network that's smeared blankets to Native mtoch like hi s asso..:iation
become ·a playground of the American families awaiting with the Rev. Jeremiah
rabiilleft.
deportation to reservations. Wright , speaks direc tl y
judgment.
Bachmann made the mis- ... This is an evil bitch from about · his
know:,
this and
Bachmann
take of appearing on hell. I mean , just an
tried to point it out, calmly
MSNBCs "Hardball" in absolute evil woman."
mid-October. Host Chris
What . exactly
did and with reason. And fdr
Matthews berated her for · Bachmann · do to deserve doing so. she . was pillo daring to suggest that the this?
ried, held up 10 widespread
·She said to Matthews, ridicule
mainstream media do its job
and
m:arly

111 Court Sti'Ht • Poll1eroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydally11811tlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
•

•

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

TODAY IN H-ISTORY

Today is Wednesday, Nov. 12, the 317th day of 2008.
There are 49 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 12, 1942, the World. War II naval Battle of
Guadalcanal began. (The Allies em!ed up winning a major
victory over the Japanese .)
..
On this date:
.
.
In 1815,American suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton Was
born in Johnstown, N.Y. .,
In 1908, Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun was
born in Nashville, Ill.
In 1927, Jose[Stalin became the undisputed ruler of the
Soviet Union as Leon Trotsky was expelled from the
Communist Party.
. In 1948, former Japanese premier Hideki Tojo and several other World War II Japanese leaders were sentenced to
death by a war crimes tribunal.
·
In 1977, the city of New Orleans elected its first black
mayor, Ernest "Dutch" Moria!, the winper of a runoff.
cTT"A @uo!F~{n'w~ STN2-;-et..EG~~
In 1982; Yuri V.Andropov was elected to suceeed the late f-\ULME
.
·
Leonid I. Brezhnev as general secretary of the Soviet
Communist Party's Central Committee.
In 1990, Japanese Emperor Akihito formally assumed the
Chrysanthemum Throne. · ·
: In 1996, a Saudi Boeing 747 jetliner collided shortly after
takeoff from New Delhi, India, with a Kazak Ilyushin-76
cargo plane, killing 349 ~ople.
In 200 I, American Airlines Flight 587, en route fJ ,.,,
New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport to the
Dominican Republic, crashed after takeoff, killing 265 people.
. Ten years ago: Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley filed a
$433 million dollar lawsuit against .the firearms industry.
lieclaring that it had created a public !1Uisance by flooding
the streets with weapons deliberately marketed to criminals. (A judge dismissed the lawsuit in 2000; an appeals
court ruled in 2002 that the city of Chicago could proceed;
.but the Illinois Supreme Court dismissed the lawsuit in
2004.)
: Five years ago: President Bush and his top foreign advisers reviewed new strategies to speed the transfer of political power in Iraq. A suicide truck bomber attacked the
headquJirlers of Italy's 8aramilitary police in Nasii:iyah,
Iraq, killing more than 3 people. Palestinian leader Yasser
Arafat swore in a new Palestmian Cabinet. Actress Penny
,Singleton died in Sherman Oaks, Calif., at age 95. Actor
Jonathan Brandis died in Los Angeles at age 27.
Today's Birthdays: Rhythm-and-blues singer Ruby Nash
Curtis (Ruby and the Romantics) is 69. Actor-playwright
Wallace Shawn is 65. Singer Brian Hyland is 65. Rhythmand-blues singer Jimmy Hayes (Persuasions) is 65. Rock
musician Booker T. Jones (Booker T. &amp; the MGs) is 64.
Singer-songwriter Neil Young is 63.
.
Thought for Today: "Money is always there but the pockets change; it is not in the same pockets after a cliange, imd
that is all there is to say about money." - Gertrude Stein,
American author (1874-19~)- ,

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less

than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, .and include address and telephone .number: No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
One of the great thin~s
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of about the recent election is
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· that we won't have to see
ed for publication.
another political commer-

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Ohio Valley Publishing ·

Co.
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able.

Bush administration still working on $700B rescue

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Mall Subscription

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AP ECONOMICS WRITER

,1·· Natio11al

Online ·

Review ·

(www.~w.rionalre­

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racted at klope:@rurtional- .
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!
I

GALliPOLIS - Augusta Grace Lemley, 86, Gallipolis:
doed Tuesday, Nov. II . 2008, in the Scenic Hills Nursing
Center.
. She was preceded in death by her husband, Luther Bryan
Lemley .
·
Services will be II a.m. Friday, Nov. 14, 2008, in the
Po_plar Rodge ~re.ewill BaJ?tist~hurch,_with the Rev. Calvi!?
Mmms offictatmg. Bunal wrll be m the Poplar Ridge
Cemetery. Friends may call from 6 to 9 pm. Thursday at
th~ Cremeens Funeral Chapel in Gallipolis, and one hour
pnor to the funeral service at the church.
.~~press ions of sympathy may be sent to the farnily by
VISttmg www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Ohio surrogate grandmother
says she feeLS fine .
BY

M.R. KROPKO

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CLEVELAND - Jaci
Dalenberg decided that if
she could help her daughter
have a baby she would do it.
But at 56, Dalen berg was an
unlikely person to serve as a
pregnancy surrogate , and
she didn't antiCipate three
babies all at once.
Now, a month after three
baby giris were born ,
Dalenberg is recovering
from a Caesarean section
and proud to call the triplets
she carried her granddaughters. Two of them are identical twins.
Dalenberg, of Mansfield
in central Ohio. had to be
closely monitored because
of her age .
"I felt great. I didn 't feel
pregnant with three until I'd
feel three kicking at the
same time,'' she said .
The girls were born Oct.
II - more than two months
premature - and each
weighed less than . three
pounds.
One of the infants might
be home by Friday.
Dalenberg and her daughter,
Kim Coseno. said in an
interv(ew
Tuesday
at
Cleveland Clinic Hillcrest
Hospital in the Cleveland
suburb Mayfield Heights.
The newborns have been in
neonatal intensive care at

the hospital.
"I'm glad that we did it
and that we've had a happy
outcome ," Coseno satd .
"We're thrilled."
Coseno, 36, has two children . now 18 and 13, from a
previous marriage. She and
hu sband Joe Coseno, 29, an
Ashland firefighter, were
unable to have a baby
together becaus7 she's had a
hysterectomy.
Her ovaries could produce
eggs, so the couple agreed to
try in vitro fertilization. The
embryos were implanted in
Dalenberg's uterus. ,
Dalenberg was happy to
keep the births all in the
family.
"I wasn't real -comfortable
about going outside of the
family for a surrogate ,''
Dalenberg said. "Joe's such
a great guy, so I told Kim I'd
do it for Joe." The couple
have been married three
years.
A 56-year-old carrier is
highly unusual , said Dr.
Robert Kiwi. who monitored the pregnancy after he
worked with Dr. James
Goldfarb on the in-vitro fertilization . A typical carrier is
a young, healthy woman
who had a baby previously,
said Kiwi, who was the doctor for the births.
Dalenberg underwent hormonal therap&gt;' to stren. gthen
her uterus , Kowi said,.

WASHINGTON - At a
time when most administrations are getting ready to
tum out the lights. the Bush
administration is still struggling to get the biggest govemment rescue in history up
and run.ning.
. Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson, who is leading the
effort, is facing a lot of criticism and second .guessing
at the moment over how
well the $700 billion bailout
program for the U.S. financial system is being h:tndled . Paulson was scheduled to give an update on
the effort on Wednesday.
Critics are complaining
that the administration is
not being tough enough on
the bmlks who are receiving .
the assistance , that the original centerpiece of the program - government purchases of troubled assets has been left to languish and
that homeowners struggling
with mortgage foreclosures
are not getting the help they
need to stay in their homes.
And in addition to all of
those complaints, the
administration is having to
contend with a number of
industries , led by auto companics, who contend. that
they deserve a share of the
rescue funds.
President-e lect Obama,
when he met with President
Bush at the White House on
Monday, urged Bush to support aid for struggling
automakers and Democrats
in Congress have begun.
drafting legislation that
would give General Motors,
Ford and Chrysler access to
$25 · billion of .the rescue
funds.
The Bush administration
has already committed
$250 billion of the money
for the purchase of bank
stock, giving financial
institutions an infusion of
cash that tile government

Honored rrom Page At
Anderson noted ·that veter. aris organizations, such as
the American Legion,
Disabled
American
:Veterans and Veterans of
Foreign Wars, are committed to helping veterans, but
said the . government and ·
~Jeered officials are als~

called to help.
"Our leaders need to take
responsibility to give our
men and women in uniform
the best · equipment with
which to fight, and the best
medical care possible if
they
are
wounded,"
Anderson said.

RCP frOm Page Al
to www.rc'players.net for
more information. The din- .
ner theater production will
be
lteld
at
Meigs
Elementary School.
Theater-goers can look
forward to seeing both
some new and familiar
faces .this year, inclUding:
The River City Dancers,
Michelle Evans, Jody
Harrison, Junie Maynard,
Katie McClure and Kerrie
VanReeth; · the RCP's ,

.No more cam 1JainJ ads!

cial for two or three months,
when, after a short break,
Jim
the campaign for 2012 elecMullen
tion will begin. Some
reports say the two major
campaigns spent $750 million this year, most of it on
television advertising. That ing, it lands in some beautidoesn 't count money spent ful Shangri-La, a place you
in local races.
·
would love to visit if you
Now, how many ordinary, had the money and when
non-political , TV commer- thf; plilne lands a bunch of
cials have you seen in your happy, smiling passengers
life? Thousands? Hundreds ~et off the plane looking as
of thousands? Yet yo~ rarely 1f they had just step~d out
see a car comniercial that of a re.laxiltion booth. You.
makes you angry or an ad wa!Ch.it, but you don't stand
for a dish washing liquid up, and yell at Ute television,
that makes you want to _ "That's a lie! Those 4)eople
chan$,e the chann('i. Most of just-spent ten · hours on· the
us will even suffer through . tarmac and the toilets .overadult diaper commercials flowed and not orie of them
without feeling strongly is going to get their lugabout them. Cat people will gage! How can they get
watch dog food commer- away with putting that kind
cials and vice versa without of stuff on television . There
complaining.
oughta be a law, l want
So why can't they can't equal _ ti~e ! I will,never lly
make a campaign commer- that_3\rlme agll!n!
.
cia! that doesn't have half
Smce th~ boggest ~~~fer­
the country screaming at the ~nee between most mrhnes
television?
·
ts the c~lor of the llo ght
Why don't we scream ~t attendant s unoform , you
airline commercials? Therr have ~o wonder why they
ads arc all pretty much the · advertise at all . I buy the
same, you see a 'plane fly- cheapest seat I can get. Who

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

·Deaths

Bv MARTIN CRUTSINGER

deprived of her role as "
public servant. .
.
I've spent a little 111ne
with Bachmann and know
her at least well enough to
ht' ab le to combat thi s
"hatemonge r" nonsense.
Death camps?! She and her
husband care . for as many
di sadvantaged children as
they possibly can. ·
·•
As she recently told my
friend. radio talk-show host
Murk Levin, it's amazing
that
any ' "normal
American" would want to
have anything to do with
politics after the "public
. flogging"
Bac hmann
end ured in the final weeks
of her re -election campaign. ·Her story of over·
coming the megaphone of
the mainstream media an entity that proved a
tremendous fundraising
' boon for her opponent and speaki ng directly to the
voters via talk radio and
old-fashioned campaigning
should se rve as an inspiration to good Americans
who want to serve - and
ha ve their voices heard
over the noise.
(Kar/rry11 Lopez is the editor

cares what airline it is?
How many fast-food
commercials have you seen
where the restaurant is spotless. the staff is clean,
friendly and smart enough
to make change. In the
background all the cus: tomers are attractive · and
skinnier than supermodels?
And the reality Is ... ? And
yet few of us yell "Lie&gt;!
Fraud! Distortion' Untruth!
How do they get away with
that?" at the television when
we· see a fasJ-food commercial.
l' ve'never been in a country band, but I'm pretty sure
· if the guitar player started
singing "Viva Viagra" at a
·rehearsa.l , · the other guys
wouldn'tjoin in , they&lt; would
club him to death with their
instruments knowing full
well that no jury would convict them. Yet we watch the
commercial unemotionally,
coolly detached as i! we
could care less.
.
But political commercials
aren't just an noying- they
are offensive ... to their supporters! Every time the guy
I liked ran an ad I wnuld
think. "Is that the best he
can do? Nobody 's going to
fall for that cr.ap . Why don't
you .say this? Why · don 't
you say that? Doesn't any-

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

How to survive media bias

The Daily Sentinel

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Wedn~sday, November 12, 2008

one in your campaign watch
television? Have they ever
seen a commercial bdore?"
I figure if your commercial
offends your supporters,
you're doing it wrong.
Why don't politicians do
what the airlines do? You
show the candidate's ·plane
llying through the-air, it lands
in a beautiful· place -' the
future - where Arabs and
lsmelis walk down the street
holding hands: where -everyone has a high-paying job;.
where no one pays any taxes;
where there are no potholes
and cars run on used coffee
grounds; where all teens are
so well-adjusted and happy;
where stocks never go down,
where all children behave;
where school teachers get
paid like basketball players
and basketball players get
paid ·like reachers; where all
marriages last forever; where
lawyers don't file frivolous
law suits: where CEOs give
tbeir employees a ·raise
before they give one to themselves . .
Wouldn't you buy some
of that?
·
(Jim Muiler1 is tire author
of ': /1 Takes a Village Idiot:
Con'oplicating the Simple

Andrew Bissell , Brady
Bissell, Margaret Evans, ·
Darby Gilmore, Veronica
Grimm, Sharon Hawley,
Matt Hosk~n. Nick- Ingels,
Kylen King, Amy Perrin,
Karen Polcyn, Brian Rice,
Evans Smalley, Kathy
Thomas, Kerr:e VanReeth
and Gary Walker will be
joined by Cris Khun, keyboard, Seth Johnson, bass,
and Morgan Kennedy· on
percussion.

~~'"'111..'1 ~·], 11::'tl~~

1..

111

,

1'

1 ,1

111 jim_rrmllen@myway.com)

Ohio GOP
·offers prevailing wag~ plan ·

,I

More than 4 million
American homeowners. or 9
percent of borrowers with a
mortgage . were either
behind on their payments or
in foreclosure at the end of
June, according to the most
recent · data fro'll the
Mortgage
Hankers
Assoc iation .
The
new
initiative
announced Tuesday .followed announcements frorll
several major banks that
they plan to do more.
Citigroup
said
late
Monday it is ha'lting foreclosures for borrowers who
live in their own homes.
have decent incomes and
stand a . good chance o"f
making lowered mortgage
payments.

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lines this summer 'that he
said clarified a law that
has increasingly been
ignored by developers .
Ohio has had a prevailing
wage law on public projects since 1931.
.
Carey's bill will be in
committee
starting
Wednesday .

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Life" and "Baby 's first

Tattoo. " You can-reach him

gram. we wait for a homeowner to be in a failin g
position before doing anything, which often is too
late," said John Taylor.
president and CEO of the
National
Community
Reinvestment Coalition.
Senate
Banking
Committee
Chairman
Christopher Dodd, who has
scheduled hearings for
Thursday on the overall rescue program , called the loan
modification program a
"constructive step forward"
but he said it should not be a
substitute for a program
being pushed by Shelia
Bair, head of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp.,
which would use part of the
$700 billion to provide government guarantees for
mortgages that are modified
to lower payments, thus
providing an ·incentive for
banks to rework the loans.
Bair also criticized the
effort as falling short and
urged adoption of her pro- ·
gram for mortgage guarante7.s. .
.
As we lend . and mvest
hundreds of btlhons of dolIars to help mstttut10ns suffenng leveraged lossei from
defaultmg mortgages, we
must also devote . some of
that money to foxmg the
front-end problem - too
many unaffordable home
loans," she said in a sta\ement.

,

COLUMBUS (AP) - A
Republican lawmaker says
esting.
.
he has a plan to clear up a
• Stover presented council confusing attempt by
with a police report for Ohio's governor to expand
October.
the use of union-scale pr~•· Th~ Christmas parade vailing wages on state
will be Saturday, Dec. 6 at construction projects.
noon. Santa Claus will be at
State Sen . John Carey of
the city building's commu- · Wellston said Tuesday he
nity center following the
parade.
.
· wants developers to pay
• Keams announced that ·prevailing wage for an
there will be a catered entire project if state-dolChristmas lunch for city lars fund 35 percent or
employees Friday, Dec. 19 . more of the project. If
. • Council members unani- state dollars are less than
mously approved giving all 35 percent of the cost - 5
city employees $200 for percent, {or example prevailing wage would be
Christmas bonuses.
paid
only on that 5 per• The meeting adjourned
c¢nt.
at 8: 10p.m.
·
Democratic Gov. Ted
· The nex.t meeting will be
Strickland issued guide7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 20 .

AP photo

Troy Courtney stands on the porch of his Mill Valley, Calif. , home on Saturday, Nov. 1. His
family is aboul to move out of the house following a foreclosure .

Mae and Freddie Mac in
September. announced a
plan designed to speed up
the process for renegotiating hundreds of thousands
of delinquent loans held by
the two mortgage giants. .
Officials hope the new
approach, which . goes into ,
effect Dec. 15., will become
a ·model for loan servicing
companoes, whoch coll~ct
mortgage payments and d1stribute them .to investors.
These comp_a~tes have been
roundly cntocozed for beo~g
slow to respond to a surge m
defaults.
The plan could . have
tremendous . Importance
because Fanme Mae and
Freddoe Mac ow~ or guar- .
antee nearly 31 mtlhonU.S .
mortgages , or nearly st~ of
every
10 ou~standmg.
Govem_ment officoals, ho":ever, dod not have an esttmate of hpw many people
.. .
would quahty for the new
program. .
8
~s~~e ~~~e ~~~~t~ fen~~ wJ~d 6~~~ft~ b~o~ore~~~ ·
ing operations and address three months behind on .
the most severe credit crisis their home loans. and would
in decades. On Monday, the need to owe 90 percent or
administration announced more than the home is curthat it was allocating anoth- rently worth, investors who
er $40 billion as an invest- do not occupy their homes
ment in troubled insurance would be excluded, as
giant
American would borrowers who have
filed for bankruptcy.
International Group.
Those decisions leave
Borrowers would get help
only $60 billion left to allo- in _several ways: The interest
cate of the first $350 billion rate would be reduced so
in · funds approved by that borrowers would not
Congress and that is before pay more than 38 percent of
imy money has been spent their income on housing
to buy · trO\Ibled assets, expenses. Another option is
which origillally had been for loans to be extended
the , administration's chief from 30 years 'to 40 years,
reason· for . requesting the · and for some of the princibailout program, which· ·pal amount to .be deferred
Congress approved on Oc!. mterest-free.
3.
While lenders . have
The government on beefed up their efforts to aid
Tuesday sought to address borrowers over the past
another of the complaints of year, their earlier efforts
critics, that not enough is have not kept up with the
being done to . help worst housing recession in
Americans deal with record decades. The new approach
levels of mortgage defaults. was also attacked by critics
The Federal Housing for not going far enough ..
Finance Agency, which . "Instead of a massive
seized control of Fannie. foreclosure-prevention pro-

Auction rrom Page At
cut due to finances.
C_ouncil mem\lers a~reed
that the.jetter \)'as the highest priority because it is
needed in more emergency
situations. They also agreed
that if an item needed to be
cut, the truck shpuld be the
first to go. In addition , they
requested that a less expensive truck model be used.
Sutphin said she would
get additional cost estimates
for the truck.
• Council ' members discussed the status of dilapidated properties in town.
• Councilwoman Sarah
Stover . reported that she
attended a semi nat for court
clerks. Stover described the
. seminar as being very inter-

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�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

'

MEMBER EXCHANGE

The Daily Sentinel

Bl

"

IW!Yes back in Big Ten nw:e, Page B6

About the mastodon

rec•rs

on llle
Amerlcan ,..rodon:

Facfs./IIMI flguret

• Mastodons 'l'ere sturdy elephant-like animals that roamed
open swamp areas and spruce

Wednesday, November 12,2008

forests .
• Size: Mastodons stood about 9
BY KEVIN MAYHOOD
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

ROSSBURG (AP) - A
minute's walk from the only
stoplight in th'is western .
Oh10 town, a dozen men,
women and children delicately dig and sift through
the dirt in a small pasture.
"Just 8 inches down is
12,000 years old," said Tom
Kitchen, a West Jefferson
Middle School reacher and
occasional volunteer here .
At thai depth, dozens of
volunteers, led by Ohio
State University geology
professor Dale Gnidovec, .
have sp~nt the past five
summers uncovering the
Darke County mastodon.
"I thought we were done,
but we had a backhoe oul
here, scraping off an inch at
a time around the perimeter
of all we 'd dug by hand,"
Gnidovec said. "He uncovered four more .bones.':
That was late September. ·
· Three weeks later, the
backhoe uncovered two
· more bones. Gnidovec estimates that he and his crew
membets have uncovered
about hal{ the skeleton; scattered in no apparent pattern
just beneath the surface.
He's not sure whether to
dig deeper or wider; maybe
both, maybe neither.
Gnidovec, curator of the
Orton Museum of Natural
History at Ohio State, still
gets excited each time he
kneels down and starts
pushing a trowel into the
ground, wondering what he
might find next.

But, he's lhinldng of calling it quits. ''I'm a lillie
tired of the drive."
Gnidovec did not unearth
anything new - mastodons
are the most common ire-age
remains found in Ohio. He said
he kept the dig going to teach
people interested in fossils how
10 tread into prehistory..
About $1,000 in donations covered costs for tools
and supplies.
'"They can learil some skills
and, in the future, if they
make a discovery on their
own,they'll know more about
the . proper way to recover
material and the ethics of
excavating," said Martha
Otto, curator of archaeology
at the Ohio Historical Society,
Olto said human remains
must be left alone . .thai
property owners own fossils
and artifacts found on their
land , and thai when anything is dug up, evidence of
the past has been disturbed,
This dig had its start in
December 2002, when
Gnidovec took a phone call
from farmer Henry Post.
who'd bought the land and
smacked an odd-looking
bone with his plow.
Gnidovec srud he gets a lot
of phone calls like this one,
Mosl of the time. the finds
are cow or horse bones.
He asked Post to bring in
what he· d found.
"That's a mastodon
tooth ," he told Post. "An
adult, but not old."
Mastodons , which stood
about 9 feel al the shoulder
and weighed 4 to 5 tons,
roamed forest fringes and

feet tall at the shoulder and
weighed 4 to 5 tons .
• Dlotlnctlvo quaiRJ.o: Coneshape teeth, .shaggy hair, long
tusks.
·Where round: The mastodon

lived across Nor1h America durtng the Ice age . It was hunted by
early humanS. In Ohio , most
complete specimens have been
found in the sediments of former
glacial lakes where they broke

through the ice in winter or
became bogged down in mud.

Some specimens show evidence of having been butchered
by Paleoindians.
• Extinction: About 10,000
years ago.
• Remains: Bones and teeth

from about 90 mastodons have
been found In Ohio .
Sou'ree: The Columbus Dispatch.

Ohio Slate University geology professor Dale Gnidovec holds a model of a mastodon skeleton as he poses in Columbus, Ohio, Wednesday, Oct. 15 with a bone from the skeleton of a
mastodon he has been digging up near Rossburg for five years.
marshes in Ohio from al
least 3.5 million years ago
10 about 10,000 years ago,
when they became extinct.
The animal lived on a diet
of leaves and twigs .and was
·· shoner and bulkier than its
grass-gazing cousin, the
woolly mammoth.
"A mammoth· is a kind of
elephant." Gnidovec said.
"A mastodon is a much
older species, a third cousin
once removed. It was a fossi l in its own time."

Post sold the land to the
local fire department, which
has allowed Gnidovec 10
keep digging.
The department is considering donating at least some
of the bones to Orton and
keeping some for a display.
Neighbor Leon Kissinger
moved in shottly before the

percent chance of showers.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Friday night ...Showers
likely. Lows in lhe tDid 40s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Saturday ...Cloudy with a
50 percent chance of showers, Highs in the mid 40s.
Satbrday nlght...Cioudy
with a chance of rain and
snow
showers.
Lows
around 30. Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
Sunday ...Mostly cloudy
with a.chance of snow shoW'
ers. Highs in the lower 40s.
Chance of snow 30 percent.
Sunday night ... Mostly
cloudy
in
. the
evening ...Then . becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in the
mid 30s.

'first shovel turned the ground.
"I'm told this was a
swampy
,that it was never
fanned until it was sold 10
Henry Post," Kissinger said.
Kissinger put a small shed
.on the property so Gnidovec
can leave tools and necessities instead of hauling them
to town each weekend.
He also mows the area,
pumps out standing water
thai forms when it rains, and
brings lemonade to the site ·
on hot days.
.
His grandchildren have
helped on the dig.
"A lot of people get to do
something they never did
before," Kissinger said.
On some days, Gnidovec
· and Steve Krichbaum, a
. rock hound and supervisor
with the state fire marshal's
office, are the only diggers.

area

But on some afternoons,
the site teems with 40 second-graders who gel a leelure and a turn in the dirt.
To find bones, diggers look
for an orange linr in the dirt
as they lower the elevation
by half-inches. The bones
aren't petrified, but they are
light, fragile and, except for
their pores, resemble the dirt
that entombed them.
The mastodon's kneecap
is about the size of a grapefruit; a toe bone covers half
a woman's size 8 shoe . A
humerus and femur are each
about a yard long.
Sisters Josie Tiberi, 8, and
Anna, 10, of New Albany,
spent a recent Saturday
morning sifting through the
dirt. They found several
bone fragments.
They went to the site with

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Rio Grande·gearing up to host 2008 Bevo Weekend
.

. '

14

BY MARK WILUAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

F-11 _: Cillo AA p11yo1fo
Point Pleasant at (8) Magnolia, 7:30

RIO GRANDE - The University
Grande is gearing for its
football
biggest
weekend
outside of gradua:egic)nal .playoff pairings
tion; the Bevo Francis weekend,
which includes homecoming, the
DIVISION I
hall of fame banquet and inductions,
two basketball tournaments and a
M caw 7 Am fW]rder
celebration of one of the most phenomena,lteams ln t)le history of college basketball.
The Red Storm men's and
· women's teams will host· their basketball tournaments with the women
facing West Virginia Tech on Friday
night at 16/.m. Rio Grande (1-0)
had a soli outing in game one,
defeated NAIA Division ll pre-season No. 17 Daemen, 81-72 last

of Rio

Gi

ace

Friday night.
West Virginia Tech (0-1) sports a
young team. The Golden Bears
opened the season with a 65-55 loss
at Bluefield College. They played.
Thomas
Nelson , Community
College in an exhibition and won
7.3-48 on Monday.
St. Catharine's (KY). new to the
NAlA this year, and Milligan (TN)
will open the tournament on Friday
when they tip-off at 2 p.m. The'
Patriots have · the attention of Rio
Grande, having already scored victories over Union (KY) College and
Berea College. both of whom were

in the NAIA Division II Tournament
last year.
Milligan (0-1) returns to Rio
.Grande after panicipaling · in the
Bevo last year. The Buffaloes
opened the season with a 98-63 loss
lo Lee University.
The two winners and losers will
hook up on Saturday. There are
changes 10 the game times on
Saturday. The four games are slated
to run II a.m., I p.m ., 3 p.m. and 5
p.m,
On the men's side, the RedStorm
(2-0) look lo continue to build on a
fast stat1 as they play host lo Ohio
State-Mansfield on Friday al 8 p.m.
Rio collected a pair of come-frombehind wins at a tournament in
Ta.ylor University last weekend, led
by the play of senior guard/forward

Brandon Ivery.
The Mavericks '(0-3) have , truggled out of the gate, including suffering a 121-61 loss lo Huntington
(IN) College. OSU-Mansfield was
slated to play Wright State Lake on
Monday, no result was given at press
lime.
Fellow
American
Mideast
Conference combatant Wilberforce
(1 -0) will tangle with a very talented
Bethel (TN) College (3-0) team at 4
p.m. on Frjday. Wilberforce sports a
lot of new faces from last year. The
Bulldogs opened up with a 117-45 '
·shellacking of Ohio State-Marion.
Bethel iJossesses one of the premier players in the NAIA in forward
Anllone Lesesene. The 6-6, 220

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54.73

NEW YORK (AP) Tim Lincecum won the
National
League
Cy
Young •Award by a cotilfonable margin Tuesday,
Cincinnati Wtnion
taking
home pitching's
ve. (~) ' Cinclntiati
highest honor in his secPrinceton Mancuoo
ond major league season.
The slender kid with the
· DIVISION 'IIi · ·
whirling windup joined
Mike McCormick (1967)
as the only San Francisco
Giants pitchers to win a
Cy Young.
· Lincecum received 23 of
32 first-place votes and
137 points in balloting by
the Baseball Writers'
,(2) Clrctsvitle+ogan Elm
Association of America.
(4) COlumbus Eastmobr
Webb of the
Brandon
t1H J, Gahanna Lincoln
..
Arizona Diamondbacks
::;
got four first-place votes
and finished second with
73 points. .
·
"I was definitely surprised. I thought it was
going to be a lot closer," .
Lincecum saii:l on a con-·
ference call. ,
Listed at 5-foot-11 and
160 pounds, tiny by
tpday's standards for a big
league pitcher, Lincecum
defied detractors - and
the laws of physics - by
firing 97 mph fastballs
past one hulking slugger
after another.
The 24-year-old righthander was 18-5 with a
2.61 ERA and_ a major
league-best 265 'slrikeouts,
remarkable numbers for a
fourth-place team that finished 72-90. '
been
·" People have
doubling me my whole
life ," he said. "I dt;&gt;n 't let
them bring me down.''
Lincecum led the NL in
winning
percentage
AP photo
(.783), ranked second in In this Sept. 18 file photo, San Francisco Giants' Tim Lincecum works against the Arizor:ta
ERA and was third with Diamondbacks during a baseball game in Phoenix. Lincecum is the National League Cy
227 innings. He made his Young Award winner, taking home pitching's highest honor in hil&gt; second major league season. The sl~nder kid with the Whirling windup on Tuesday joined Mike McCormick (1967)
Please sea Llncec•m. 81 as the only San Fran~isco Giants pitchers to win a Cy Young.

Steelers' RB Parker ·
leXIJ~tct•ed to Sunday
PITTSBURGH (AP) Pittsburgh Steelers running
back Willie Parker will
return
to
practice
Wednesday and coach Mike
·T{ltmlin is optimistic he \\ill
p I a y
s ·unday
against .the
San Diego
Chargers.
Parker
has played
~~~~~only once
::
since
spraining
Sept. 21 in
~!adelphia. He returned
3 and had 70 yilrds on
carries in a Monday
.· win against the
Redskins in
dislocated his

Bradwav Dlnn•
Best of River City Ployers: "A LOOK BACK"
Friday, Nonmber21· Saturday, Nonmber 22
6pm •Dinner • 7pm •Show
Me~ Elemeatary School

Rt 124 • Rutland, OH

Tid.ets: $2S.M •Senm $20.10
Tid.ets available at ~t Ri~er City Players Headquarters
N. 2ad A•e., Middlepert, OH -llllm-NOGII &amp;3p1Hpm
Moaday.Saturday •Reserved ~Only!
For liNI1't mrormation mti7S9 or 416-7860

denied repons that
has a tom labrum.
"The shoulder popped out
. llri•~flv dunng the course of
Reclskins !lame and it
popped back mto place;"
Tomlin said. "Adrenaline or
what have you didn't allow ·
him to recognize it during
the course of game . He
clune in (last) Tuesday. tpok

wu.rcplayers.net

........

-

PI•••-Staalen,86
~

...·. '

&lt;

James scores 41 as Cavaliers beat Bucks
CLEVELAND (AP) LeBron James matched a
season high with 41 points,
finally putting . Milwaukee
away with a steal and soaring dunk in the final min~
utes, and Mo Williams
·scored 16 against his former
team as . the Cleveland
Cavaliers won their fifth
straight, 99-93 over the
Bucks on Tuesday night.
James scored 12 in the
fourth quarter and didn 1t
come out in the second half
while playing a season-best
43 ininutes.
With Cleveland' leading
by five, James poked away a
pass intended for Richard
Jefferson, streaked to the
other end and lifted off one
step inside the foul line
before smashing the ball
through the hoop. Moments
later, he dropped an ·outside
jumper and then drove
through the lane for a finger
roll to give the Cavs an 11point lead'
.
It was the third time in
four gaines that James _has
scored41.
Zydrunas llgauskas added
15 points and Anderson
VareJBO 13 with I0 rebounds
for Cleveland.
,
Jefferson scored 19 and

'

Please SH linD, 81

NlCV

.~·

1
Will be given in MEIGS COUNTY by
I ff Be/tone HEARING AID CENTER
1
.Dr. A. Jackson Balles Office
I .. 507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH
· FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14th • 9:001m·noon ,-., , ,,,. ,. ...,...
I Call Toll Free 1·800-634·5265 for an Immediate appointment.
I
1

(AP)

their mother, Jen, and grandmother, Gwynne .Campbell,
after hearing Gnidovec speak
at Orton. Others volunteered
after hearing Gnidovec speak
at rock or paleontology clubs
across the stale.
"It was one of the best
things I've done with my .
girls," Jen Tiberi said,
When someone finds a
bone, they ate taught ID
p;1instakingly scrape and
brush away dirt to expose the.
top and some of the sides.
Then they dig a circle in
the dirt around the bone .
"Most ice-age bones can
be picked up and carried
off. bur these are too fragmentary," Gnidovec said.
Over the ages, weather and
· plant roots have taken a toU, so
the diggers use a technique
used on much older dinosaur
bones. They cast the bones and
the dirt beneath them in plaster
of Paris before removing them.

COUPON
-----~~~~-----

Local Weather
Wednesday...Cloudy. A
slight chance of rain in the
morning ...Then a chance of
rain in the afternoon, Highs
in the lower 50s. Southeast
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
Wednesday night.. .Rain,
Not as cool with lows in the
mid 40s. Southeast ' winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 90 percent.
Thlirsday ... Rain. Highs
in the lower 60s. South
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 90 percent.
Thursday night ...Mostl y
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows
aro und 50, Southwest winds
5 to 10 mph.
· Friday ...Cloudy with a 50

.

AP photo/Columbus Dlspalch, Eric Albrachl

ScliEDULE
AWf'&lt;lLIS -;- A IICheGJie 01 "J)CCOT''ing: hi!j1
v.sily !lpOI'Ihg ...ants ~ teams
Galil. Maeon and Meigs eountias.

Luke Ridnour 17 - 14 in
the third - 10 pace the
Bucks, who were again
without leading . scorer
Michael Redd. He missed
his fourth straight game with
a sprained ri~hl ankle . Redd
tried to practice on Tuesday,
but "was noticeably limpin$," coach Scott Skiles
swd. "II was clear he wasn't
ready."
Williams, acquired by
Cleveland in a trade this
summer from Milwaukee,
downplayed
his
first
matchup against his old
team sayin~ it_ was "just
another day.'
His new
teammates
played like it was just anoth~
er game for much of the
night before closing out the
Bucks, who were within 8883 when 'James made his
game-sealing steal and
dunk .
The Cavs led by six points
at half and quickly pushed
their lead 10 U as W11liams
hit a 3-pointer and dropped
two free throws to open lhe
third quarter.
But Ridnour gol hot. He
hit two 3-poinlers and went
5-for-5 from the field in the Cleveland Cavaliers' Mo Willia,ms, right, tries to get past
Milwaukee Bucks guard Charlie Bell in the second quarte~
PI•••-C.Vs,INi
of an NBA basketball game1Tuesday in Cleveland.

Buckeyes,
again, build
with youth
COLUMBUS (AP) Ask Thad Matta to talk in
detail about his Ohio Stale
Buckeyes and he falters,
'"Ummmm." he says. ·'I

would say, uh.,let's see, ..."
It's hard lo describe
somebody y&lt;w hardly know.
And for the third year in ~
row, Malia has a collection
of players who are primarily
first- and second:year. players.
So when he opened practice a few weeks ago,
maybe Matta should have
hosted a meet-and-greet.
There are no seniors on the
roster and only one scholarship player, junior David
Lighty, has been on the .
floor for even the past two
years.
"I was used lo looking up
to seniors, but I guess I'm
the guy who people are
looking up lo," Lighty said . .
Other than Lighty, and
maybe sophomores Jon
Diebler and Evan Turner,
who saw substantial playing
time a year ago, about the
only way you'd know most
of the others is if you read
recruiting magazines. The
Buckeyes have lots of players who were · megastars in
high school, including 7foot freshman B.J. Mullens,
considered one of the plum
recruits in the country, and
reigning
Ohio
Mr.
Basketball William Buford.
They make up the core of a
class that gives Malta a lot
of talent to work with but
keeps him up nights
because of their lack of
experience.
"We have prelty much a
little bit of everything," said
Turner, who stepped in lo a
young team a year ago to
log valuable minutes. "We
could have a , very special
team; we just have 10 put the
pieces together."
·
Yoll may remember that
two years ago Matta had to
mix several veterans with
an extraordinary recruiting
class that included three
players (Greg Oden, Mike
Conley Jr. and Daequan
Cook) who went in the first
two dozen picks in the NBA
draft after playing one year
for the Buckeyes, That learn
went 35-4 and made il all
the way to the NCAA title
game before losing to ·
defending champ Florida.
Last year. Malta picked
up the pieces again. rebuilt
around rhe one returning
staner (Jamar Butler) and
posted a 24-13 record , missing oul on the NCAA but
going on lo win the
National
Invitation
Tournament. Butler graduated and prized freshman
big man Kosta Koufos went
in the first round of the

PluM- OSU, 86

�PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

'

MEMBER EXCHANGE

The Daily Sentinel

Bl

"

IW!Yes back in Big Ten nw:e, Page B6

About the mastodon

rec•rs

on llle
Amerlcan ,..rodon:

Facfs./IIMI flguret

• Mastodons 'l'ere sturdy elephant-like animals that roamed
open swamp areas and spruce

Wednesday, November 12,2008

forests .
• Size: Mastodons stood about 9
BY KEVIN MAYHOOD
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

ROSSBURG (AP) - A
minute's walk from the only
stoplight in th'is western .
Oh10 town, a dozen men,
women and children delicately dig and sift through
the dirt in a small pasture.
"Just 8 inches down is
12,000 years old," said Tom
Kitchen, a West Jefferson
Middle School reacher and
occasional volunteer here .
At thai depth, dozens of
volunteers, led by Ohio
State University geology
professor Dale Gnidovec, .
have sp~nt the past five
summers uncovering the
Darke County mastodon.
"I thought we were done,
but we had a backhoe oul
here, scraping off an inch at
a time around the perimeter
of all we 'd dug by hand,"
Gnidovec said. "He uncovered four more .bones.':
That was late September. ·
· Three weeks later, the
backhoe uncovered two
· more bones. Gnidovec estimates that he and his crew
membets have uncovered
about hal{ the skeleton; scattered in no apparent pattern
just beneath the surface.
He's not sure whether to
dig deeper or wider; maybe
both, maybe neither.
Gnidovec, curator of the
Orton Museum of Natural
History at Ohio State, still
gets excited each time he
kneels down and starts
pushing a trowel into the
ground, wondering what he
might find next.

But, he's lhinldng of calling it quits. ''I'm a lillie
tired of the drive."
Gnidovec did not unearth
anything new - mastodons
are the most common ire-age
remains found in Ohio. He said
he kept the dig going to teach
people interested in fossils how
10 tread into prehistory..
About $1,000 in donations covered costs for tools
and supplies.
'"They can learil some skills
and, in the future, if they
make a discovery on their
own,they'll know more about
the . proper way to recover
material and the ethics of
excavating," said Martha
Otto, curator of archaeology
at the Ohio Historical Society,
Olto said human remains
must be left alone . .thai
property owners own fossils
and artifacts found on their
land , and thai when anything is dug up, evidence of
the past has been disturbed,
This dig had its start in
December 2002, when
Gnidovec took a phone call
from farmer Henry Post.
who'd bought the land and
smacked an odd-looking
bone with his plow.
Gnidovec srud he gets a lot
of phone calls like this one,
Mosl of the time. the finds
are cow or horse bones.
He asked Post to bring in
what he· d found.
"That's a mastodon
tooth ," he told Post. "An
adult, but not old."
Mastodons , which stood
about 9 feel al the shoulder
and weighed 4 to 5 tons,
roamed forest fringes and

feet tall at the shoulder and
weighed 4 to 5 tons .
• Dlotlnctlvo quaiRJ.o: Coneshape teeth, .shaggy hair, long
tusks.
·Where round: The mastodon

lived across Nor1h America durtng the Ice age . It was hunted by
early humanS. In Ohio , most
complete specimens have been
found in the sediments of former
glacial lakes where they broke

through the ice in winter or
became bogged down in mud.

Some specimens show evidence of having been butchered
by Paleoindians.
• Extinction: About 10,000
years ago.
• Remains: Bones and teeth

from about 90 mastodons have
been found In Ohio .
Sou'ree: The Columbus Dispatch.

Ohio Slate University geology professor Dale Gnidovec holds a model of a mastodon skeleton as he poses in Columbus, Ohio, Wednesday, Oct. 15 with a bone from the skeleton of a
mastodon he has been digging up near Rossburg for five years.
marshes in Ohio from al
least 3.5 million years ago
10 about 10,000 years ago,
when they became extinct.
The animal lived on a diet
of leaves and twigs .and was
·· shoner and bulkier than its
grass-gazing cousin, the
woolly mammoth.
"A mammoth· is a kind of
elephant." Gnidovec said.
"A mastodon is a much
older species, a third cousin
once removed. It was a fossi l in its own time."

Post sold the land to the
local fire department, which
has allowed Gnidovec 10
keep digging.
The department is considering donating at least some
of the bones to Orton and
keeping some for a display.
Neighbor Leon Kissinger
moved in shottly before the

percent chance of showers.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Friday night ...Showers
likely. Lows in lhe tDid 40s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Saturday ...Cloudy with a
50 percent chance of showers, Highs in the mid 40s.
Satbrday nlght...Cioudy
with a chance of rain and
snow
showers.
Lows
around 30. Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
Sunday ...Mostly cloudy
with a.chance of snow shoW'
ers. Highs in the lower 40s.
Chance of snow 30 percent.
Sunday night ... Mostly
cloudy
in
. the
evening ...Then . becoming
partly cloudy. Lows in the
mid 30s.

'first shovel turned the ground.
"I'm told this was a
swampy
,that it was never
fanned until it was sold 10
Henry Post," Kissinger said.
Kissinger put a small shed
.on the property so Gnidovec
can leave tools and necessities instead of hauling them
to town each weekend.
He also mows the area,
pumps out standing water
thai forms when it rains, and
brings lemonade to the site ·
on hot days.
.
His grandchildren have
helped on the dig.
"A lot of people get to do
something they never did
before," Kissinger said.
On some days, Gnidovec
· and Steve Krichbaum, a
. rock hound and supervisor
with the state fire marshal's
office, are the only diggers.

area

But on some afternoons,
the site teems with 40 second-graders who gel a leelure and a turn in the dirt.
To find bones, diggers look
for an orange linr in the dirt
as they lower the elevation
by half-inches. The bones
aren't petrified, but they are
light, fragile and, except for
their pores, resemble the dirt
that entombed them.
The mastodon's kneecap
is about the size of a grapefruit; a toe bone covers half
a woman's size 8 shoe . A
humerus and femur are each
about a yard long.
Sisters Josie Tiberi, 8, and
Anna, 10, of New Albany,
spent a recent Saturday
morning sifting through the
dirt. They found several
bone fragments.
They went to the site with

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Rio Grande·gearing up to host 2008 Bevo Weekend
.

. '

14

BY MARK WILUAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

F-11 _: Cillo AA p11yo1fo
Point Pleasant at (8) Magnolia, 7:30

RIO GRANDE - The University
Grande is gearing for its
football
biggest
weekend
outside of gradua:egic)nal .playoff pairings
tion; the Bevo Francis weekend,
which includes homecoming, the
DIVISION I
hall of fame banquet and inductions,
two basketball tournaments and a
M caw 7 Am fW]rder
celebration of one of the most phenomena,lteams ln t)le history of college basketball.
The Red Storm men's and
· women's teams will host· their basketball tournaments with the women
facing West Virginia Tech on Friday
night at 16/.m. Rio Grande (1-0)
had a soli outing in game one,
defeated NAIA Division ll pre-season No. 17 Daemen, 81-72 last

of Rio

Gi

ace

Friday night.
West Virginia Tech (0-1) sports a
young team. The Golden Bears
opened the season with a 65-55 loss
at Bluefield College. They played.
Thomas
Nelson , Community
College in an exhibition and won
7.3-48 on Monday.
St. Catharine's (KY). new to the
NAlA this year, and Milligan (TN)
will open the tournament on Friday
when they tip-off at 2 p.m. The'
Patriots have · the attention of Rio
Grande, having already scored victories over Union (KY) College and
Berea College. both of whom were

in the NAIA Division II Tournament
last year.
Milligan (0-1) returns to Rio
.Grande after panicipaling · in the
Bevo last year. The Buffaloes
opened the season with a 98-63 loss
lo Lee University.
The two winners and losers will
hook up on Saturday. There are
changes 10 the game times on
Saturday. The four games are slated
to run II a.m., I p.m ., 3 p.m. and 5
p.m,
On the men's side, the RedStorm
(2-0) look lo continue to build on a
fast stat1 as they play host lo Ohio
State-Mansfield on Friday al 8 p.m.
Rio collected a pair of come-frombehind wins at a tournament in
Ta.ylor University last weekend, led
by the play of senior guard/forward

Brandon Ivery.
The Mavericks '(0-3) have , truggled out of the gate, including suffering a 121-61 loss lo Huntington
(IN) College. OSU-Mansfield was
slated to play Wright State Lake on
Monday, no result was given at press
lime.
Fellow
American
Mideast
Conference combatant Wilberforce
(1 -0) will tangle with a very talented
Bethel (TN) College (3-0) team at 4
p.m. on Frjday. Wilberforce sports a
lot of new faces from last year. The
Bulldogs opened up with a 117-45 '
·shellacking of Ohio State-Marion.
Bethel iJossesses one of the premier players in the NAIA in forward
Anllone Lesesene. The 6-6, 220

I
1

·I
..

· Reed &amp; Daur Insurance Agency
2:!0 East Mai11 Sttl'l't

Pomcm) . C&gt;H 45769
740-9\&gt;2 ··3600

www.rccdbaur.com
jdi llon («-reed baur. ~;·om
Call ....,.,, lt~fHtKirln#
ID

~•tllbd•y

•

••lr ~tt IHJr H u t l l - f H II' PuiJtr.y!

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) .:.. 30 .50
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 36.56
·Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 19.15
Big Lola (NYSE)- 16.94
8ob Evans (NASDAQ) - 17.89
Bo·rgWarner (NYSE) - 17.75
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) 12
Champion (NASDAQ) - 3.06
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 19.90
BBT (NYSE) - 29.85
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 17.67
. Pepsico (NYSE) - 55.08
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.51
Rockwell (NYSE) - 25.95
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 3.47
Royal Dutch Shell - 50.45
Soars Holding ·(NASDAQ) 50.22
.
1.09
Wai· Mart (NYSE) - 54.75
City Holding (NAS!JAQ) - 37.70
Collins (NYSE) - 33.55
Wendy's (NYSE) - 3.42
DuPonl (NYSE) - 28.76
WosBanco (NYSE) - 24.41'
Worthington (NYSE)- 11.18
US Bank (NYSE) - 26.60
, Dally stock reports are the 4 p.m.
Gannett (NYSE) - 9.59
ET closing quotes of transacGeneral Electric (NYSE) - 17.81
Hsrloy·Oevldson (NYSE) - 19.27 llona lor Nov, 11, 2008, provided
by Edward Jones financial adviJP Morgan (NYSE) - 36.35
sors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
Kroger (NYSE) - 27.73
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Limited Branda (NYSE) - 9.38
Marrero in Point Pleasant at
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) (304) 874-0174, Member SIPC.
54.73

NEW YORK (AP) Tim Lincecum won the
National
League
Cy
Young •Award by a cotilfonable margin Tuesday,
Cincinnati Wtnion
taking
home pitching's
ve. (~) ' Cinclntiati
highest honor in his secPrinceton Mancuoo
ond major league season.
The slender kid with the
· DIVISION 'IIi · ·
whirling windup joined
Mike McCormick (1967)
as the only San Francisco
Giants pitchers to win a
Cy Young.
· Lincecum received 23 of
32 first-place votes and
137 points in balloting by
the Baseball Writers'
,(2) Clrctsvitle+ogan Elm
Association of America.
(4) COlumbus Eastmobr
Webb of the
Brandon
t1H J, Gahanna Lincoln
..
Arizona Diamondbacks
::;
got four first-place votes
and finished second with
73 points. .
·
"I was definitely surprised. I thought it was
going to be a lot closer," .
Lincecum saii:l on a con-·
ference call. ,
Listed at 5-foot-11 and
160 pounds, tiny by
tpday's standards for a big
league pitcher, Lincecum
defied detractors - and
the laws of physics - by
firing 97 mph fastballs
past one hulking slugger
after another.
The 24-year-old righthander was 18-5 with a
2.61 ERA and_ a major
league-best 265 'slrikeouts,
remarkable numbers for a
fourth-place team that finished 72-90. '
been
·" People have
doubling me my whole
life ," he said. "I dt;&gt;n 't let
them bring me down.''
Lincecum led the NL in
winning
percentage
AP photo
(.783), ranked second in In this Sept. 18 file photo, San Francisco Giants' Tim Lincecum works against the Arizor:ta
ERA and was third with Diamondbacks during a baseball game in Phoenix. Lincecum is the National League Cy
227 innings. He made his Young Award winner, taking home pitching's highest honor in hil&gt; second major league season. The sl~nder kid with the Whirling windup on Tuesday joined Mike McCormick (1967)
Please sea Llncec•m. 81 as the only San Fran~isco Giants pitchers to win a Cy Young.

Steelers' RB Parker ·
leXIJ~tct•ed to Sunday
PITTSBURGH (AP) Pittsburgh Steelers running
back Willie Parker will
return
to
practice
Wednesday and coach Mike
·T{ltmlin is optimistic he \\ill
p I a y
s ·unday
against .the
San Diego
Chargers.
Parker
has played
~~~~~only once
::
since
spraining
Sept. 21 in
~!adelphia. He returned
3 and had 70 yilrds on
carries in a Monday
.· win against the
Redskins in
dislocated his

Bradwav Dlnn•
Best of River City Ployers: "A LOOK BACK"
Friday, Nonmber21· Saturday, Nonmber 22
6pm •Dinner • 7pm •Show
Me~ Elemeatary School

Rt 124 • Rutland, OH

Tid.ets: $2S.M •Senm $20.10
Tid.ets available at ~t Ri~er City Players Headquarters
N. 2ad A•e., Middlepert, OH -llllm-NOGII &amp;3p1Hpm
Moaday.Saturday •Reserved ~Only!
For liNI1't mrormation mti7S9 or 416-7860

denied repons that
has a tom labrum.
"The shoulder popped out
. llri•~flv dunng the course of
Reclskins !lame and it
popped back mto place;"
Tomlin said. "Adrenaline or
what have you didn't allow ·
him to recognize it during
the course of game . He
clune in (last) Tuesday. tpok

wu.rcplayers.net

........

-

PI•••-Staalen,86
~

...·. '

&lt;

James scores 41 as Cavaliers beat Bucks
CLEVELAND (AP) LeBron James matched a
season high with 41 points,
finally putting . Milwaukee
away with a steal and soaring dunk in the final min~
utes, and Mo Williams
·scored 16 against his former
team as . the Cleveland
Cavaliers won their fifth
straight, 99-93 over the
Bucks on Tuesday night.
James scored 12 in the
fourth quarter and didn 1t
come out in the second half
while playing a season-best
43 ininutes.
With Cleveland' leading
by five, James poked away a
pass intended for Richard
Jefferson, streaked to the
other end and lifted off one
step inside the foul line
before smashing the ball
through the hoop. Moments
later, he dropped an ·outside
jumper and then drove
through the lane for a finger
roll to give the Cavs an 11point lead'
.
It was the third time in
four gaines that James _has
scored41.
Zydrunas llgauskas added
15 points and Anderson
VareJBO 13 with I0 rebounds
for Cleveland.
,
Jefferson scored 19 and

'

Please SH linD, 81

NlCV

.~·

1
Will be given in MEIGS COUNTY by
I ff Be/tone HEARING AID CENTER
1
.Dr. A. Jackson Balles Office
I .. 507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH
· FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14th • 9:001m·noon ,-., , ,,,. ,. ...,...
I Call Toll Free 1·800-634·5265 for an Immediate appointment.
I
1

(AP)

their mother, Jen, and grandmother, Gwynne .Campbell,
after hearing Gnidovec speak
at Orton. Others volunteered
after hearing Gnidovec speak
at rock or paleontology clubs
across the stale.
"It was one of the best
things I've done with my .
girls," Jen Tiberi said,
When someone finds a
bone, they ate taught ID
p;1instakingly scrape and
brush away dirt to expose the.
top and some of the sides.
Then they dig a circle in
the dirt around the bone .
"Most ice-age bones can
be picked up and carried
off. bur these are too fragmentary," Gnidovec said.
Over the ages, weather and
· plant roots have taken a toU, so
the diggers use a technique
used on much older dinosaur
bones. They cast the bones and
the dirt beneath them in plaster
of Paris before removing them.

COUPON
-----~~~~-----

Local Weather
Wednesday...Cloudy. A
slight chance of rain in the
morning ...Then a chance of
rain in the afternoon, Highs
in the lower 50s. Southeast
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 50 percent.
Wednesday night.. .Rain,
Not as cool with lows in the
mid 40s. Southeast ' winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 90 percent.
Thlirsday ... Rain. Highs
in the lower 60s. South
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 90 percent.
Thursday night ...Mostl y
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. Lows
aro und 50, Southwest winds
5 to 10 mph.
· Friday ...Cloudy with a 50

.

AP photo/Columbus Dlspalch, Eric Albrachl

ScliEDULE
AWf'&lt;lLIS -;- A IICheGJie 01 "J)CCOT''ing: hi!j1
v.sily !lpOI'Ihg ...ants ~ teams
Galil. Maeon and Meigs eountias.

Luke Ridnour 17 - 14 in
the third - 10 pace the
Bucks, who were again
without leading . scorer
Michael Redd. He missed
his fourth straight game with
a sprained ri~hl ankle . Redd
tried to practice on Tuesday,
but "was noticeably limpin$," coach Scott Skiles
swd. "II was clear he wasn't
ready."
Williams, acquired by
Cleveland in a trade this
summer from Milwaukee,
downplayed
his
first
matchup against his old
team sayin~ it_ was "just
another day.'
His new
teammates
played like it was just anoth~
er game for much of the
night before closing out the
Bucks, who were within 8883 when 'James made his
game-sealing steal and
dunk .
The Cavs led by six points
at half and quickly pushed
their lead 10 U as W11liams
hit a 3-pointer and dropped
two free throws to open lhe
third quarter.
But Ridnour gol hot. He
hit two 3-poinlers and went
5-for-5 from the field in the Cleveland Cavaliers' Mo Willia,ms, right, tries to get past
Milwaukee Bucks guard Charlie Bell in the second quarte~
PI•••-C.Vs,INi
of an NBA basketball game1Tuesday in Cleveland.

Buckeyes,
again, build
with youth
COLUMBUS (AP) Ask Thad Matta to talk in
detail about his Ohio Stale
Buckeyes and he falters,
'"Ummmm." he says. ·'I

would say, uh.,let's see, ..."
It's hard lo describe
somebody y&lt;w hardly know.
And for the third year in ~
row, Malia has a collection
of players who are primarily
first- and second:year. players.
So when he opened practice a few weeks ago,
maybe Matta should have
hosted a meet-and-greet.
There are no seniors on the
roster and only one scholarship player, junior David
Lighty, has been on the .
floor for even the past two
years.
"I was used lo looking up
to seniors, but I guess I'm
the guy who people are
looking up lo," Lighty said . .
Other than Lighty, and
maybe sophomores Jon
Diebler and Evan Turner,
who saw substantial playing
time a year ago, about the
only way you'd know most
of the others is if you read
recruiting magazines. The
Buckeyes have lots of players who were · megastars in
high school, including 7foot freshman B.J. Mullens,
considered one of the plum
recruits in the country, and
reigning
Ohio
Mr.
Basketball William Buford.
They make up the core of a
class that gives Malta a lot
of talent to work with but
keeps him up nights
because of their lack of
experience.
"We have prelty much a
little bit of everything," said
Turner, who stepped in lo a
young team a year ago to
log valuable minutes. "We
could have a , very special
team; we just have 10 put the
pieces together."
·
Yoll may remember that
two years ago Matta had to
mix several veterans with
an extraordinary recruiting
class that included three
players (Greg Oden, Mike
Conley Jr. and Daequan
Cook) who went in the first
two dozen picks in the NBA
draft after playing one year
for the Buckeyes, That learn
went 35-4 and made il all
the way to the NCAA title
game before losing to ·
defending champ Florida.
Last year. Malta picked
up the pieces again. rebuilt
around rhe one returning
staner (Jamar Butler) and
posted a 24-13 record , missing oul on the NCAA but
going on lo win the
National
Invitation
Tournament. Butler graduated and prized freshman
big man Kosta Koufos went
in the first round of the

PluM- OSU, 86

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Bevo

•
•

standout Gary Hamson on
Saturday
The Hall of Fame Banquet
Will follow the ba&gt;ketball
games at 7 p m on Saturday
cvenmg
.
The centerp1ece of the
weekend w1ll ~ the Bevo
Fran&lt;:IS led team&gt; from
1952-54, as they return
home to be a pan of the
weekend Dunng the week
end. the umve1S1ty w1ll mr
the PBS Documentary (that
on gmally a1red Monday
mght) · They Could Re.tlly
Play The Game ' The fi rst
showmg 1s set for 4 p m on
Fnday m Bob Evans Fanns
Hall . Room 118 A second
Vlewmg w1ll be on Saturday
at noon also m Bob Evans
Farms Hall , Room 11 8
The Redmen team went
60 7 m the two yea rs,
mcludmg a perfect 39-0 sea
son 111 195 2-5 3 under the
d1rect10n of head coach
Newt Oliver Bevo Francis
holds the all-ume smgle
game NCAA sconng record
of 11 1 pomts. wh1ch
occurred February 2, 1954 111
Jackson HIS
11 6-pomt
etfort .1gamst Ashland Jumor
Coll ege the prev1ous season
1s recogmzed b} the NA IA

from Page 81
pound Washmgton , D C.
native 1s averag111g 13 :l
pomts and mne rebounds per
game through the fiJ'St three
• games The W1ldcats have
posted
v1ctones
over
Knoxville College (94-62).
Umon (KY) Colle$e (74-54)
and St Cathanne s (79-68)
They lost an exh1b111on to
NCAA
D1v1 s1on
I
Tennessee Martm. 90-71
and play an exhibition contest on Tuesday (tomght)
agamst Murray State
The wmners and losers
Will play on Saturday
Regardless of the outcome
, Rm w11l pia) the 5 p m
: game. The first men's game
1
on Saturday w11l up-off at I
p.m
The weekend also "111
feature homecommg on
Fnday mght. the mtroductmn of" the 2007-08 R10
Athletes of the Year and the
Rio Athletic Hall of Fame
mductmns of former soccer
AII-Amencan S1mon Lowey
and former men 's ba.~ke tball

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

Lincecum
from PageBI
f1rs t All-Star squad . but an
Illness prevented h1m from
appeanng 111 the July 15
game at Yankee StadiUm
New York Mets ace
Johan Santana. who led
the leag ue m ERA (2 .53)
and mmngs (234 1-:l), also
garnered four f1rst-place
votes and came 1n th1rd
The other fnst -pl ace
vote we nt to M 11 waukee
lefty CC Sabath1a , last
yea r 's AL wmner wh o
was traded by Cleveland
mto the National League
on July 7 He went 11 -2
w1th a I 65 ERA and
seve n complete games 111
17 starts tor the Brewers.
p1 tc hm g them to th e1r
f1rst playoff berth s1nce
1982
"I def1mtely thought he
was 111 fa1 r contention.''
L111cecum smd
Sabath1a came 111 fifth
Brad L1d ge, the star closer who had a perfect seaso n for the World Senes
c hampwn Phlladelphw

Phllhes , was fourl h
Webb. the NL wmne r m
2006. was ru nner- up lor
the second consecu ll ve
season after gm ng 22-7
With a 3 30 ERA m 226 23 mmngs
The
baby-faced
Lmcecum.
m.:knamed
"Franchi se." 1s an aberra tion 111 almost every way
He eats JUnk food before
starts and doesn't 1ce h1 s
arm When he was called
up from the mmors 111
May 200 7. ballpark sec unty workers 111 Sa n
Franc1sco thought he was
a bat boy
Late th1s season. some
teammates even asked for
h1 s autogra ph - mcludmg
veteran
catcher
Beng1e Mohna
"The key I S to contmue
to get bette r," G~ants outfielder Randy Wmn smd
"W1th the usage of v1deo
that h1tters use. now people are gomg_to see hm1 a
httle more People are
gmng to have a better
1dea of what hi S p1tche s
look hke and how he
attacks h1tters The pitchers who have been good
for a long time are pitch-

ers who contmu e to get
better"
Draft ed lOth ove rall out
of Washtngton 111 2006.
Lmcecum sa1d h1s maJOr
league ex pen ence last
season def1mtely helped'
h1m succeed th1s year He
also credited an 1mproved
change up . wh1ch he threw
more often after fmdmg a
comfortable gnp
''I' ve alway s take n
pnde tn trymg to stnk e
people out I've always
been that guy," he sa1d
"That's the one (stall stlc)
that kmd of gets me f1red
up ..
Lmcecum sa1d he "as
on h1 s couch watchmg
NFL h1 ghhghts w1th h1 s
roommate when he got
the news. One of the f1rst
people he called was San
Franc1sco clo se r Bnan
Wilson
" Me and Tun talked
about th1 s a lot. I alway s
pumped h1m up and sa1d ,
' Dude . you know you're
gotng to wtn the Cy
Young ?"' W1lson sa1d 111 a
telephone
1nterv1 ew.
''Th1 s was before the season He had the best fastball , best changeup and

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

best curveball He pretty
much dommated eve ry
start We wou ld set goals
and I wou ld say, I bet
yo u won't stnke out I0
and not "alk anybody.'
and he d stnke out 12 .
Each game he p1tched he
kept addmg up the tally
Soon Amenca was gomg
to know he was the best."
McCorm1ck won 111 the
fnst year the BBWAA
honored a p1tcher 1n each
leag ue From 1956-66,
only one Cy Young
Award was presented for
both leagues
Th iS year's Amencan
League wmner will be
,m nounced
Thursday,
w1th Cleve land lefty
C hff Lee
a heav y
favonte AL and NL
Managers of the Year are
Wed nesday
Santana, a two-lime AL
Cy Youn g Wilmer With
Mmne sota , rece1ved a
$50.000 bonus for f1111sh mg th1rd Sabath1a got
$75,000 for com1ng tn
f1fth Webb 's secondplace fm1sh mcreased the
buyout of h1 s $8 5 mll hon 20 I 0 club opt1on by
$500 ,000 to $2 m1lhon

www.mydallysentinel.com

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Galli a
County
OH

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Shorlff Sales
Case Number D8CVD87
Homo National Bank
Plaintiff

vo
AnthonyAdamoetal
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Malgs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of oalt to me dlreeled from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale al public aucllon
on the front slaps of
the Motgs County Court
House on Friday, Decomber 12. 2008 at
10 DO am , of said day,
the following described
real estate
(Real Estate and ManulaciUred Home to be
appraised and sold
separ8tely)
Situated In the Townof
Lebanon,
ahlp
County of Meigs, and
State ot Ohio
Being a part ot a 95.00

actual survey made on
the II th day of March,
2002, by Ohio Professlonal Surveyor,l6844
Relerenca Deed. Volume 150, Page 797,
Meigs County Official
Records
Auditor s Parcel No
D7.00182.D01
Proptlrty known as.
50310 Nease Hollow
Rood,
Racine,
OH
45771
Also a 2002 Clayton
manufactured home,
I D ICAP012862TNAB,
Ohio Certificate of Title
#53D0162406, a copy of
which
Is attached
hereto and made a.part
hereof
Land &amp; mobile home
sold seperslely
Current Owner Anthony Adams at at
Proparty at· 50310
Nease Hollow Rd ,
Racine, OH
PP# 07.00182 D01
Prior deed references.
volume 150, Page 797

acres, more or less, Land $6,00D
lract olland lranolerred
to Ricky L88 Deeter as
recorded In Official
Records Volume 27 at
277,
Meigs
Page
County Recorder s 01flee, Meigs County,
Ohio, also being a part
of Section 36, Townohlp- 2 North, Range11-Wost,
Lebanon
Township,
Meigs
County State of Ohio
and more particularly
deacrlbed as tallows
Beginning at a point
which bears South 01
deg 54' 2B" West a dislance of 1628.93 loot
and North 89 deg 45'
44" East a distance of
1649 311eetlrom an ex·
lallng Iron pin found at
lhe northwest comer of
said 95 OD acres, more
or less, tract and being
a point In the centerline
of Township Road
#106, Nease Hollow
Road.
Thence leaving said
centerllne North 23
deg 09 16" East passlng through a 518 ' Iron
pin with I d cap set at a
dlatance ol 20 OD 1881
and going a total distanceof121D71eettoa
518" Iron pin with I d
cap set,
Thence South 74 deg
DD' 26 " Easl a distance
ol366 21 leetto a 518 '
Iron pin with I d cap
set,
Thence South 13 dog
42' 50" East a dlatance
ol 6B 44 (set to a 518"
Iron pin with I d cap
se!
Thence South 27 deg
59 58" West passing
through a 518" Iron pin
with I d cap set at a
distance ol133 971881
and going a total dlalance of 153 971eet to a
polnl In tho centerline
of said Township Road

Appraised at $52,500
Mobile Home.
Terms of Sale
Can•ot be sold for less
than 213rds ot the appraised value
10% down on day ot
sale, cash or certified
check, balance due on
confirmation of ""to.
The appraisal did not
Include an Interior examlnatlon of the house.
Robert
E
BNgle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the plaintiff
Little, Sheets &amp; Warner
211-213 E Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992-6689
(11) 5, 1219

POINT OF BEGINNING,
said described tract
containing 0.25 Acr88,
more or lass, oxcepllng
all legal utility easementa and rlghta of
way
Relerenco Deed: Off!clal Recordo Volume 4,
Page 807, Parca12
Bearings lr8 assumed
and are for angle meaeurement only.
Current Owner· Scotty
Baker etaf
Property at. 617 High
Street
Middleport, Ohio
PP#15-0022~1

Pnor Deed References:
Volume 214, Page 457
Appraised at $50,000
Terms of Sale Cannot
be sold lor less than
213rda altha appralead
value. 10% down on
day of aate, cash or certilled check, balance
due on contlrmetlon of
aale
Tho appralaal did not
Include an Interior exami nation of the house
Robert
E.
Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney lor the Plaintiff
Urner Sampson R
Rothfuss
120 East Fourth St, 8th
Floor
Cincinnati, OH 452022007
5t3-241-31DO
(11) 5,12,19

field to Harriet McClure
and Lucinda Powell,
thence40 rodlsouth or
to the line betwaon tho
said George W. BradfleldandJS. Bredfleld;
thence West 56 rods
along the said line;
thence North 40 rods,
thence East 56 rods to
thoplaceofbeglnnlng,
and being In Section 7,
Range14, Town 7 of the
Ohio Company's Purchase, containing 14
acres
Parcel Three Also lhe
following
described
real estate, situated In
the Township of Scipio,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio
Being a part of Section
No Seven (7) In the
seventh township of
tho fourteenth ranga, In
the Township Of Scipio,
bounded aa follows:
Beginning at the southwest comer oloaldsection seven (7) thence
running East one hun-

dred and sixty rodsi tlfled check, balance
duo on conflrmotlon of

thence North eighty
rods; thence West one
hundred and sixty
rods; thence, South to
the place of beginning
bounded West on Payton's land and the
South on Township
line, and North on a
tract aold to Zachariah
Bradfield, and containlng eighty
acrea, more or leas
Excepting a,.t ReservPublic Notice
lng the following de·
scribed parcel of real
Sheriff Salas
eatale, situate In the
Caaa Number 08CV039 Township of Scipio,
City National Bank of Malga County, $tate ol
West VIrginia
Ohio, and being a Plrl
Plaintiff
of the South hell of the
vs
Southweat quarter ol
William &amp; Melinda Section No 7, of TownGibbs at al
ship No 7 North and
PubliC NotiCe
Defendants
Ran~ No. 14 West and
Court of Common further being a part ofa
Sheriff Sales
Pleas, Meigs Counly, 80 0 acre tracl of land
CaseNumberOBCV053 Ohio
as recorded In Deed
Peoples Bank NA
In pursuance of an Volume 161, Paga 223,
Plaintiff
order of sale to me dl- Meigs
County
vs
reeled from said court Recorder'• Office and
Scotty Baker et al
In the above entitled being more particularly
Delendanla
act1on,l will expose to described as follows:
Court of Common sale at public auction Beginning at a point,
Pless, Meigs County, on lhe lront steps of said point being the
Ohio
the Meigs County Court point ot lntaroectlon of
In pursuance of an House on Friday, De- the North tina of the
ordarotoaletomedl- cember12,200Bat1D Southhalloltheaouthreeled from sold court a m of said day, the lol- west quarter ol said
In the above entitled lowing described real Section No 7 with the
acllon, I will expose to eslate
center of Townahlp
sale at public auction EXHIBIT A
Road No. 171 (Zlon
on the front stapa of The
following
de- Road) also told North
the Meigs County Court scribed raaleatatasltu- line being the North
House on Friday, De- ate In the Township ot line of the above aald
comber 12, 2008 at 10 Slliplo; County
of BD Dacre tract of land,
a m , of said day, the Meigs, and, State ot thence with aald North
following
described Ohio, bounded and de' line, South 85 degrees
rest estate
scribed es follows: Par- 30' East, 982 031eet to
Situated In Sallobury eel Ona Situated In tho an Iron pin, thence With
Township, In tho VIllage Townahlp of Scipio, a new line through the
of Middleport, part of County of Motgo, Stata tract of which this Ia a
Lot290 of tht V.B. Hor- of Ohio, In Sactlon 7, part of, South 35 deton Addition to L - Town 7, Range 14, ba- grees 15' Weot, 526 30
Pomeroy, ae recorded ginning at the north- 1881 to a 24 Inch HickIn the Melga County 1111 corner ola10 acre ory tree, thence South
Plat Records Volume 2, lot
con..yed
by 44 degr8ee DO' Wool,
Page12, Molgl County, Thomal Dye to John 17.DO feet to the center
State of Ohio ond betnf1 Bradfield by dead olaald t R. 171' thlll1C8
1106,
In Section 28, Town 1 dated December 8, with the canter of llld
Thoncealong said cen- North, Rangt 13 Weot 1848, recorded In Vol- T.R 171, North 48 deterllne the following oflhe Ohio Company'• umt13, on Page• 110 grNa DO' Wool, 31 .85
thr88 coursoo
Purchase and !Ming de- and 111, to which rofw- !HI and North 48 de1.North59deg 56' 38" ocrlbed at follows: 1»- anca 11 hereby made gma 48'Waat, 41000
Weal a dlllanco of ginning at an Iron r,ln hlr a mora clellnlto de- !HI and continuing
140.DO !ttl to 1 point, oo~ aald Iron pin 1M ng ocrlptlon; thence South wlllt aald center, North
2. North 81 deg 34' 27"
09' 48" E. 1 dla• 40 roda, thence Weet 51 degreaa Sl' Weal
, Wilt t dlotanco of lonco of 222 .40' from 40 roda; thence North 4011.111Ht for 1M pi138.71 fttl too point , an Iron pin tound 1 t tho 40 rode; thonce Eaet 40 of beginning oontaln·
3. North 80 deg. 14 32' north1111 CDt'nor of Lot rodt to the placa of be- lng 1.07 - . or
Wilt 1 dlollnca of 214olthtVB Horton glnnlng,contalnlng10 1HIIntllubj10110111
114.121Nttothtprtn- Addition to Lower 10,.1, mora or 1111, logll hlghwtya 1nd
•
olpal point of btgln· Pomoroy, •• rHordad and fa the olml 10 • • • - " •·
ntng, oontalnlng 1 500 In tht Mtlgo County 10 ,.1 of land' deeded The aiiOvo d1191tptlon
tcree, mor8 or teat, Plot Recorda Volume 2, by George
Bradfield wat
lumlaltH by
ond wtf11 to Harriet Me- Ronald M. lharr8lt,
1ubject to all logol Pago12,
eaNmento tnd rlghll thence 8
09' 48" E, Cluro and Luclndo Raotablt'ad lurvwyor
of way.
I dlttenco ot
68' to Powell.
1511711 ptfltllrVWY of
Sllrlnga aro otoumad an lr_on pin ut, thence Parcal Two A too lito S.pllm ~ er 20, 1174.
1nd ar8for the -rml- S 89 50 14', o dlttance following
daacrlbad Further Excepting lnd
nation olangiH only.
of 140 00' to en Iron pin root eatatt altuatad In ~aarvlng from the
Alllronplnoar8518" by ttl ,
tho County o1 Melgo abovaciHcrtbadatghty
30" reblr with pl11tlc thence N
09' 48" w and state of Ohio and 10,. fllrtll twenty-lour
• t.d. ~P atampad "CTB- a dlllonco ot 77 B&amp;'t~ In SclploTownohlp, be- (24) aero~. mora or
• 8844
an lr~n pin HI; thence ginning al the north- leu IMing the 11 m1
• The obovo det~crlptlon N 88 50 14" E, 1 dla- weatcomorola 1 1cre reaiHtataconvayadby
wao pr8pal'8d lrom an Ianoe ot 140 DO' to tha tot wttled by John Brad- Rhonda Stockwlll 10

s o·

w

oo·

n

oo·

o

Thomes 1\Jckor and
Lori 1\Jcker, signed
March 13, 1982, recalved
lor record
March 16, 1982 at 4:26
p.m.' and recorded In
Volume 285, Page 257,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Tha abova daocrlbed
reai,.W.haabMnaatlgnad Auditor's Ptrctll
Numbers 17.00746.000
and 17-G0747 ODD
DEED
REFERENCE:
Book 7, Poge 521, 0111clal Recorda of Melgt
County.
PRIOR REFERENCE:
Book 61, Page 925, 01flclel Recorda of Meigs
County.
Current Owner William
&amp; Melinda Glbbt
Property et 36220 Zion
Road, Rutland, OH
Appr8laad at S1DO,OOO
Termo of Solo: Cannot
1M sold lor leoithen 213
of of tho appraleed
value 10% down on
clay of sale, Cllh orcer-

required to HI up any
I n - they may ha..
In eald preml- or 1M
lore..r barred, that
upon lallur8 oleald Delendentato pay orlo
.ceuH to 1M ptlld oeld
Iudgment within thrwe
clayo from Ito reftdHion
thatanOrdero!Sotelie
lsauadtotheSilerlflol
Meigs Coui!IY, Ohio, to
appralae, advartiM In
the Legal Publication
Dally Sentinel and tell
..td rHI eotate, that
the prom!- 1M sold
,,.. and clear of 111
clalmt, Ilona 1nd Inti,..
etll olany olthe ptlrtiH
.,.,.In, that the proceecla from the salt ol
eetd preml"'o 1M applied to the PlelniiWo
jljdgment and lor such
other relief to
which United Stllllo o1
America Is entitled.
Said Delandanta are d~
reeled to tho Complaint
wherein notice under
1,1\elalr cltbt collection
practice act Ia given~
Said Delenclenta ar8 requlred to an•- within
twenty-eight dayt alter
the publication Said
Defendants will take
notice that you are requlred to answer eald
Complaint on or before
the 26th day of NOV.,
2008 or Iudgmant will
be r8nderad accordlngly
Unllld Statea of Amor·
lea, Plolntllf
Stephen D Mllea
VIncent A. L""''
Attorney• for Plaintiff
18 W. Monument Avanue Dey1on, Ohio

thence south 26 112
deg west along the
north line ofthe street,
2071881, thence south
26 1/2 deg. west along
the north line oloald
street aforesaid, 30
feet; thence north 25
deg west to • point 30
teetlromthenorthweot
comer allot owed by
Dennie Morrow,
thonce east 30 loot to
Dennis Morrow's northwest comer, thence
along the wetllllne of
Morrow'a lot to southwest comer ol same,
and to the north line of
oold street alore11ld,
and being premlaas
conveyed by deed
recorded In Vol. 71
page 89 Meigs County
Deed Records
PARCEL NO.2:
The easterly half oltha
following
daecrlbad
reeloatate·
Being 1 pt1rl of lot 157
In Bosworth's Addition
lathe VIllage of Middle-

pori,

grees East 20 feat,
thence South 27-t/2 degr88a Weal 20 1881,
thence North 62-112 degrses West 20 feet to
theplaceolbeglnnlng',
containing 400 square
feet and also a right of
way to and from said
tract which Is hereby
reserved by former
Grantors Above surveyad by J. F. Parker,
March 21, 1935
PROPERTY AODRESS:
68053 State Route124,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772
PP,N D!l-00073000
Current Owner Danny
Barber et al
Prior deed ralerenceo:
Volume 246, page 757
Appralaed at $25,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold lor tess than
213rds of tho appraised
value 10% down on
day of aale, caoh or certilled c~k, balance
due on confirmation of
oale
The apprelaal did In-

this survey.
Thence North 01 dogr88s 34' 58" eaat 616 37 1881 to an Iron
pin sal this survey
Thence North tO degrees 25' 11' Wast 178 58 h!et with the
centerline of a gravel
driveway to a point In
thecenterllneo!Kingabury Road (CR 18) and
passing an Iron pin ott
this survey at 148 58
feet
Thence the following 3
courses with the conterllne of Kingsbury
Road (CR 18)
North 64 degreea 48'
49" East- 268 06 fNI to
a paint North 71 de·
greeo 43' 33" East 67 16 feet to a point
North 78 degreoe 15'
21 ' East - 39 50 feet to
a point
Thence ltavlng Klngabury Road (CRIB),
South 01 degroeo 34'
58' Weal- 68119faet
to an Iron pin aet this

Ohio Yllloy
Publlohlng rourvea
the r~ht to edit,

Lo• &amp; Found

s1n~er

Found a loading mmp for only

ad at any ttme
Errors

Cremations
estab- Pet
lished
soutnemlclassiC 740 446-3745
rock band Senous lnq

Lead

Must

a tra11er on Rt 141 Must
descnbe 645 5402
Lost 2 male Jack Russel
Dogs Around Flrospecl
Church Ad area Since
Oct 31 answers to Ode
&amp; Beau Reward lor safe
return
Call
Kelly
446 7019 or 645 3282
Found 3 horses call to
ID (740)949 7000

reoponlible lor
then the cost

space

tile error ond
first lnHrtlon
1 nol be liable

for

Robert
E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney lor the Plain·
tiff
KeHh D Weiner &amp; Assoelates Co
75 Publ c Square 4th
Floor
Cleveland, OH 44113
216·771-&amp;SDO
(11) 12, 19, 26
Public Notice
Sheriff Sa lao
Caae Number 0Bcv043
Farmers Bank l Savlngt Co.
Plaintiff
va
R&amp;J Food Shop LLC
Ronnie l
Jennifer
Spaun
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In purauance of an
order of sale to me dlreeled from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will axpoae to
sale at public auction
on the front atepa of
the Metgo County Court
Houta on Frldey, Deo
com!Mr 19, 2008 at 10
a m , of oald day, the
following
described
realaatate
EXHIBIT "A"
RONALO A SPAUN
AND JENNIFER L.
SPAUN
Being a part of the
Southeaat Quarter of
Sactlon 8, T-7-14 1·R·14W, Scipio ToW!Johlp,
Malgo County, Ohio of
the Ohio Company Purchsaa and being a ptlrt
of Volume 282 at Page
261, of the Deed
Recorda of
Malga
County Racordera 01flee and being mora
fully d88crlbed 11 folIowa:
Beginning attht Southuat corner of Sactlon
6, Scipio Townahlp,
MtlgoCounty,Ohloato
4' While Ook found 11
lht comtr of tht Stclion From which on
Iron pin set thlnurvoy
on the oouth line ot
Soctlon I, !Mirt N. II
daoreet48'12"WHt1.00 !HI and another
lronp(ntttthlolurvoy
on tho 111111ne olllectlon I, !Mara N. 01 degreat 34' 56"Eiat- I.DO
fttl. Thence with the
aouth line of Section 8,
North 81 degrweo 48'
12" weet1128 !ttl to
on Iron pin ..tthlo turvay. Thencallorth 50
degrNa 45' 09" Ellt 385.65 lttt to an Iron
pin ttl thlo ourvoy. This
pin to the principal
plact of beglnhlng lor

n

at30 DO feet.
Thence South 50 degrees 45' 09" West •
401 50 feet to an Iron
pin set this eurvey This
pin Is the principal
place ol beginning lor
thla survey. This survey
contains 5.330 acres,
mor8 or loes.
In addition, a 30.0Dioot
wide easement lor
Ingress and egreaslor
Lot 3 and Lot 4 with the
gravel drl. . between
Lots 3 and 4 and havlng the following canterllne
description.
Beginning at the northwelt corner of thla tract
at a point In tho centorline of Kingsbury Road
(CR 18) thence with the
following canlerllne of
a grovel drive, South 10
degrNI 25' 11" Eaal
17&amp;58feet to an Iron
pin sllthlaourvey,aald
pin being the termlnut
of thlo centerline euemont deacrlptlon
All Iron plna aet thla
aurvey are 5181nch X 30
Inch rebar and have a
plaatlc cap on them
atampad Dale EKIIne
P.S.6722.
All couroeo are rotated
to matth North as PI' a
Survey
by
Robart
Eason PS 7033 on
06/1411999 olthls farm
Subject lo all legal
ea..mento and right of
waya not listed above
Surveyed
on
0912312002 - 10/1112D02
by Apptllachlan Proteoslonel Associates 254
Exline Road, Jackson,
Ohio 45640, Dele A Exlin• P.S. 6722.
Current Owner: Ronnie
&amp; Jennifer Spaun eta!
Proptlrty at: 36838
Klngbury Rd
Pomeroy, Ohio
PP117-D0328 D04
Prior deed relerencea
Volume 202, P,e169
Appralotd at 52,5DO
Tormo ol Sale C1nnot
1M told lor leao than
213rdo of tho opprollld
v1lut 10% down on
clay olalla, caoh or otr·
tlflod ohock, bat1nce
due on conllrmttlon of
aato.
Tho opprataat did not
Include an lnta11orax·
lmlnatlonolthahouH.
Ro!Mrt
! . llllgta,
Melga County Sheriff
Attorney lor tho Ploln·
tiff
Kegler, Brown, Hill &amp;
Rlttor
81 E. Stela St., Suitt
1800
Columbut,OH43215
614-462-5400
(11) 12, 1i, 28

t

Can

rk;.~rlV!~~~~~==================~----"1 FDI'klo8y~er

NEW
CONSTRUCTION
2 new homes
1200
sq It 2 br home 2 bath
1st II laundry oak 6
panel mler or doors lnm
&amp; kit cab1nets
fully
equ1p kit 1 car gar
basement
w/
ground
level entry rn rear (per
feet tor f1n1sh1ng as a FR
or e)(tra BAs) In Galllpo
11s and does qiJallfy tor
the 10 year 75% tax
abatement on dwelling 1
IS rearly fo r occupancy
now!
$145 000
Call
740 503 6734
....,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""!!!!!:""'""

740 446 1974 Georges

Portable Saw11 d • h 1
r Logs
1
~-~-~~-~ m • on' au you
Now takrng brds for to the Mrll JUst call
pa1ntmg and or cleaning 304-675 1957
ot vacant umts Must pro- !!!!~!!!!!!!!!!....!!!!!!!!!!""
vide proof of Workers
Profeuional Services
compensatiOI'I and llablirty
rnsurance Please
TURNED DOWN ON
call Honey Suckle H1lls
SOCIAL
SECURITY SSt
Apts
7~6 3344 or
No Fee Uoless We Wrnl
slop by office at 266 Co
1 688 582 3345
lonlal Dr Bidwell,
eves after 6PM

4(JO

F1'1,111CI.JI

NOTICE Borrow Sman
Contact the OhiO D1vr
slon of F~nanc!al 'nstltu
1
tlons Office ot Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refr
nance your home or ob
ta1n a loan BEWARE of
Farm Equipment
"'!"-...~~:-;;-:"~
requests for any large
Have you pnced a John
advance payments of
Deere lately? You 11 be
tees or Insurance Call
Bulinau &amp; Trod.
surpnsedl Check out our
the OffiCe ol Consumer
used
Inventory
at
Alflars
toH
free
at
School
Car
1 866-278-0003 to learn •;;;;;;;"'!!!'~"!!'iiii-iii www CAREQ com
michael
Equipment
!I the mortgage b(oker or
Gallipolis Clreer
740 446 2412
lender rs properly uCollege
censed {Thrs Is a pubttc (Careers Close To Home)
service
announcement Call Today, 740 44&amp;4367
1 ~00-214-0452
from lhe Ohio Valley
galnpollscareercolage adu
Publr9hlng Company)
Acer&amp;difed Mamher AccretJ11
lllQ Got.roclltor Independent

~;w;ww;;c;o;m;";";";o;m~~;;;;;;;;;;;'©~20011~~b~y~~~ln~c;.!

Meigs County, elude an Interior exam- survey artd pasalng an
lnstion of the houaa
Iron pin setlhlo survey

Ohio, commencing at
aale.
Mary E Pennington's
The appralaal did not
comer, running 40 112
Include an lntarlor axfeet along main road;
amlnatlon of the houH
thence serosa seld lot
Robert
E
Beegle,
to back fence, thence
Meigs County Sheriff
to sold Pennington's
Attorney lor tho .Plaincomer, 43faet,
!HI
thence acroat said lo1
Wolfe &amp; Jlenti"V
to the place of begin425 Center St.
nlng.
Ironton, OH 45638
Being part of the prop740-532-7000
orty by deed recorded
(11) 5, 12, 19
In Vol. 139 page 528
Melgo County Deed
Recorde
Public Notice
The defendant named
abovalt required to anNOTICE OF PUBLICAawar the Complaint
TION
45402
•
within twenty-eight (28)
IN THE
COMMON (10) 22, 29 (11) 5, 12. 19, daya alter the 1111 pubPLEAS COURT OF 26
llcatlon ofthlolegal noMEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
lice on Nov 26, 2D08
Meigs County Clerk of
This legal notice will be
Courts
Public NQtlce
published once a week
PO Box 1511DOE 2nd
lor six aucceaslva
St
IN THE COURT OF weeka.
Pomeroy,OH45769
COMMON PLEAS
(10)22, 29(11)5,12,19,
United States of Amer- MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO 26
lea vs
, Marian CltiFinanclat, Inc.
Durham, deceased , et Ptalntlft
at
va
Public Notice
Case No 08-CV-137
Fr8nklln D Gheen (DeTho unknown holr8, de- ceased), at at,
Sheriff Saloe
vi sees, legatoea, ex- Defendants
Case Number 08cv104
ocutora, ••eculrtxeo, Caaa No 08CV130
Beneficial Ohio Inc.
administrators, admln- Judge Stephen C. Plaintiff
lltratrtxeo and sa- Crowe
'
va
algnsea of Marian LEOA~NOTICE
Danny Barber et 11
DIJrham,
deceaaed, Utlknown heirs, the de- Defendanll
whose addresses are vloNs, legatHs, ax· Court of Common
unknown, will hereby o c u t o r a , Pleas, Melga County,
take notice that on Sap- admlnlstr8loro, and aa· Ohio
tem!Mr 8, 2008, United 81gni of Franklin D. In pureuance of an
Stalls of America, flied Gheen, and- the un- order oleate to me dlIts Complaint In Fore- known guardian• of rected trom aid court In
cloture
and
Mar- minor and/or lncompe- 1he abova entitled acshalllng of Llano In the tent helra of Frtnkllr. tlon, 1 will axpoat to
Commori Pleas Court D. Gheen, wllltako no- aale at public auction
of Molga County, Ohio, tlce thot on Auguat 27, on the front stope of
1DO
E.
2nd
St , 2008, CIIIFinanclal,lnc. the Molga Count Court
Pomeroy, OH 45769 flied Ita
Houae on Friday, DeIMing Coaa No 08-CV- Complalntln the Court camber 18, 2008 st 10
137 agatnat Marian of Common Pleao, a.m olaald clay, tha fo~
Durham,
dtctalld Molga County, Ohio, lowing dtocrlbad roll
preying for judgment In Caoe No 08 CV 130. eetata:
the
amount
of The obltct of, and de- DESCRIPTION
OF
$38,418.29 with lntar8at mend lor rellet In, the LAND
thereon according to Complolnt It to fora- Beginning at a atone on
tho Ierma of lhe nolo cloll tho lion of ploln- the Eaot lido of Highfrom July 15, 2DOB until tlflamortgage riCOrcled way No. 124, at the
pt1ld and lor loreclo- uponthor8aleatatada- Northwest corner of a
our8 of eald Mortgogt ocrlbad IMiow and In 35 Acre Troct; thence
Doad on the following which ptolntlff ollogot Eaat15rodltoutone;
dNcrlbad rul ootata, that tho foregoing de- thenot North 13-314 deof which 11ld Dolan· 11lndant hao or c111m1 greet Eatt18 rod1to 1
clenta, Morlan Durhlm, to havt an lnt8r8at:
atono, thenoe Waat 11
d._Hd wao tho 8ltu1tod In tho Tow"' rocla to the hat oldo of
-of:
ohlp of Sallobury, abovo road; thence
Real eetall tocotad 11 Molgt County, 8tata of along utd road Iouth
38384 8. 11. 114, Ohio:
1341'4degl'IHWMI11
Pomeroy,OH417ee
PAACILN0.1:
roclatothoplaotofbelafurthlrdltorlbad In 8ttuatecl In the north ginning, oonta(nlng 1·
Plllntllll
mortgao• flirt of thot flirt of 100 112 1orea.
rwconfacl on March I, ION Lot No 117 whloh !xcepllng
however
1tl0 In Volume 171 liN Nil of end adjol"' from tha above lr8CII
page HI of tho Mort• lng 8ectlon 2t, Town 1. certain portion thereof
PM R-rdo of Melgo Rango 13 In Sollabury DOundod I I follows:
County, Olllo.
Townohlp,
Melgo Beginning Eaot 7 rodo
1nd llttl Deftlldtnto, County, doocrlbad aa lind 8 llnka end Iouth
unknown helra, de- followo:
' 21-1/4 degr- Ellt 11
w l -, tagalllo, IX- Commencing ot the rode and 311nulrom
ecutoro, exoeutrlxea, ooutheaat comer of 1 Northwaot corner of
admlnltlr8toro, odml"' lot dHdld by VB Hor- above cletcrlbad tract ;
11trotrtxa1 and 11- ton
ana
Marcut thence North 27-112 deotgnaoo of Marlin - - t h, May27, 1814 gr- Ellt 20 Ito!;
Durham, claceaaad. 1M to Anthony Robaon,
thlnce South 62-112 de-

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Other Sorvi011

Wanlad

A 1rouncemen1s

'

reject or cancel any

POUCIES Ohio \Iaiiey Publlt hing reNJWI the right to t&lt;llt. ~1, or cancel •nv ad at any time Errort mutt bf reported on the flrtt day ot publlcallon tl'\d the
Trlbune-Sentlnet Regllter will bt mpontlble for ng more than the col1'0f tM spiCe oc:cul)led by the trrot 1nd only tht flrtt Insertion Wt ahall not be liable tor
any 1011 or npen• that ruults from tha publlcdon ~ ominlon of an •dvtrtl..mtnl Corr.ctlon will bl mtlde In th• tlrtt available edit ion BoM numbet ada
art alwayt contldantlal ·Current rate c.rd appllaa All rtal tatatt advertlsam1nt• na tubjeel to th• FDdertl Fair Houalng Act gf 1861 • Thla nawapjlper
accept• only htlp wanl.clldt matting EOE tlandarda We will not knowingly ICCipt any actvartlalng In ~lolallon ollha ltw Will ngt be rt•pon.lble for any
in an ad tabn over 1M phone

..-rors

•
•
'
200

Sunday Display 1 : 00
Thursday for sundays·----

Now you can have borders and graphics
"'"-'
added to your classiHed ads
S,~
!r'!'!
Borders $3.00/per ad
t!!
Graphics SOC for small
$1 .00 for large

only
ado

Want lo buy a long shaft
CJtJt board mo1or 10 to 35
HP wrth manual tiller
Also a workrng propane
refrigerator
740-256-6827
or
740·610·4875

Wo

Beaement
Waterproofing

Unconditional lifetime
guarantee LOcal refer
ences fumrshed ES1ah
lfshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs
740 446 0870 Rog ers
Basement Waterproofing

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Logelo .
.. .. ..
..... 1DO
Announcemenll .... .
• . 200
Blrthdey/Annlvoroary
• •
.. .. 205
Happy Ads. • ... . ... .. • .... ... ... . .. • 210
Lost &amp; Found . .
215
MemoryiThank You. .. .. ....... . ..... 220
NotiCetl..
225
Peraonals
•. .... 230
Wanted .. ... . • ... .. .... ....... .. .. • 235
Sorvlcea. ..
.
300
Appliance Service .. .... .. .......
.. 302
Aulomotlve.. • ... . .. .....
304
Building Material• • ...
306
Buolnesa .. ·... ............ .. 308
Catering .. • .
310
Child/Elderly Care
312
Compulera. ......... ..
314
Contractore
• •
316
Domestlco/Jonltortal.. • ... ............ .. .... 318
Electrical...... ... • . • •
... .. 320
Flnanclol.. .
... . .......322
Hoelth.
326
HHtlng &amp; Cooling . .
328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance.. . .•
.
332
Lawn Service.
.. .......... 334
Muolc!Dance!Drama..
336
Othar Sorvlcea . ..
.338
Plumblng/Ettctrlcal.........
.340
Proleoolonal Services
342
Rapatra .. . .. • ..
. • .. • ......... .344
Roofing.
.. ...... ...
• . • .. 346
Security... .. .
•.............. 348
Til&lt;/Accounting ..... ... .... .. . .. .. 350
Tr~rvaVEntertllnment •
352
Flnonclol •
.... ... . .. . .. 4DO
Flnanclot Services... .....
. . 405
Insurance . •. .
• • ............. 410
Money to Lend.... ........ .. ... .. ........ 415
Educ:atlon... _ .•
.. :. .
• .. 5DO
Butlneoa &amp; Trada School ... . ............... 505
Instruction &amp; Training... ..
- .. . - 510
LIIIOIII
.. ......... . ..... 515
Peraonal .. ....... .. ..
. ..
520
Anlmolo.. ... ..
. .. ..... ......... 600
Animal Supplies ............ .... ... .. .. .. 605
Horoaa......... ..
- .. 610
Llv88tocl&lt;
615
Palo
..
620
Want to buy .. ..
......625
Agriculture ....... ..
. . 700
Farm Equipment ... . . .
......... 705
; Gorden &amp; Produce. ... ........ . . .. • 710
Hoy, Feed, seed, Grain
• • •• .. . 715
HunU!Itl &amp; Land. - .. ..............................., 720
Want to buy ................................: .. 725
Merchtndlse ..... . .. .. .. .................... 100
Antlquaa • .. ............ ... .... ...
905

Appll•nu.... .•.... ..

•.

1•

••

910

Auctions
... ... ..
915
BorJIIIIn Baaomant .
920
Colllellblto • .
925
Computers .......... .
. ••• .
930
Equipment/Supplleo ... ......................935
Flea Morkelt .... ... ..
840
Fuel 011 CooVWood/Gao • • ..
945
Furniture
.. .. 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport
• • • . • . 955
Kld'o Comer. . ...... • .... ........... ......... ..960
MJ-IIonoout.... .. ..
.. .. , .. 965
w.nttobuy • .,.....
. , ..
.970
Yord Sole ..........................................i75

Racreallonal Vehicles
... t 000
ATV ....... .... ... ... .. . • •
.1005
Bicycles.
.
. .. ...
.1010
Boats!Acceaaorles ..... ........... •• . ••
..1015
Camper/RV,s &amp; Trailers
,
1020
Motorcycloa .... ... ... .... .............. • ...1 025
Other..... .... ..
. 1030
Wantto buy .. . .
.
.. I 035
Automotive. • ...................... .... ... .. 2000
Auto Rt11tai/Lease .
.. 2005
Autos
. ..... •• .. ...................... 2010
Ctaaalc/Anllquaa . ... ... .. ... .. ..
.2015
Commerclalnnduotrlal .. .. .. ..
2020
Porto &amp; Accesoorlea
........2025
Sports Utility. . .
. 2030
Trucks
... 2035
.. 2040
UtliHy ll'otters ..... .... ..... ... •
Vans • . .. . .
.
• 21145
want to buy.. ......... • ... ........................ 2050
Real Eatate So leo • .... .... .. ...
•• 30qtl
Cametery Plata.. . .. ....... ... .. ....... 3005
Commercial.. .... .... . ... ...
3010
Condominium&amp;.. •
-·
. 3015
For Sale by Owner. .•• , ..
3020
Houses lor Sale
3025
Land (Acraaga).. .. ... ... ................ 3030
.. ..... 3035
Lola ...... ...... ... .. .. .. ... •
Want to buy.. • .. • •
.
304Ii
Real Esttte Rentalo ..... .. . .. .. • .... 3500
Apartmento/Townhouaeo . . .. • ..
.. 3505
Commercial. • ... ..... .• . .................. 3510
Condomlnlumt. ..
3515
Houses tor Rent •• •. .• ..... •................ 3520
Land (Acruge)... .. ....
..
. . 3525
Storage
. • . .. ... ..
. ... .... . 3635
Want to Rent ....... ........... ..... .... ...... 3540
Manufactured Housing ..
4000
Lots •
.. ... ... ............................ ..4005
4010
Rentals ... .... .... .- .... ... .. ... .. ........ 4015
Sella.... ... ....................................... . • .4020
Suppllea ... .., .... ..... • •• .. • . .... ..4025
Want to Buy .. .. .......... ..... ...... ... ...... 4030
Reoort Property.. .... ..
• .. .5000
Reaort Proptlrty lor sate.. • -· . .. .,........ 5025
Rooort Proptlrty lor r8nt ... . .. . ... •
5050

Mo................ ..... .... .. ... .. . ... .

Employment •...• ,

..

..•.8000

Accounllng/Financlll.................. .. . ..8002
Admlnfllratlvo/Prolnslonol.. .. 8004
Caohlor/Ciork. ... . .... .. ................ 6006
Child/Elderly Cere ... • .... .. .. ..,. ..
.6008
Clerlcol ... .. .. , .. ... • ... . •• • .6010
Conatructlon. •••••• ••• .• ••. ...• ••.•. •••• • .• 6012
Drlvera &amp; Delivery ... ... .. •........ 8014

EducaUon ............................ ..,................. 8011
Etectrk:at Plumbing...,..........,............... 1!011

Employment Ag•ncl*ll........ :...... ............. 1020

Eritertalnmont............. ............... • .. .. ..•.,8022
Food Servlcaa.. ..... ... . • ........ • . .. 1024
Government a F-at Jobo..... • .. •..... 1026
'Help tilled- General
' • 1026
Law EnfDI'ctment ... . - ... .. ..
8030
Molntenence/Domeatlc ........ " ........... 6032
ManagemoiJIISuporvlsory ... . .. ... ..... 1034
Mochonlco..... •.....................................-

-leal.

.... 10M

Musical
• .. e&lt;MO
Part-Time-Temporariaa ......................8042

Ae1taurentw. •. • • •••• •• .•.
• •• to44
Sotn.... .................................................8048
Technical Tradao.. •...................1050

Teldlloo!FICiory .. .. .

. .. . . . 1052

WantTo Buy
•-=;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Absolute Top Dollar s1l
ver/gold
co1ns
any
10KI14K/1SK gold Jew
elry dental gold pre

::Show Steers fo r sate- All

Eash Ma1n Sl Pomeroy
/All
0
M
DE
WHO
x WH
A
F---1
u. 1Oil/ Coal/
11.
Angus HaHer bro keWood / Gas
S1 000
OBO
Call ~~~~~----~~
7597
:.;740-;;,;6'\:i!!!!·.;.;o;;;,.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Seasoned FI18Wood CAA
==
HEAP
accepted
•=;;;;;=;;P;;III_""!__ 645·5946 or 441 -Q941
~
Brg
Rooster
&amp;
a ~~~--~~~
black/white kitten to Q'Ye Seasoned
Firewood
away 446-3732
Hardwood 446-9204
~~~-~~~~
Reg
Lab
puppies 1st

shors&amp;wormed
$200 985 4138
~~---""':~=.~
GCKC
Registered
btack/tan
lon9halr
Dachshund
males
shots
wolllled
$250

Rrewood for sale 1or InII
t
llo
orrna n
ca
740-379 2891
or
740-446 2513

Mitcellaneous

For eakt German Shep- Mollohan
Carpet
Fall
held &amp; Belglun Mallnola Spetl81 20 oz Oommerpupo
__
cia! Carpel $6 95/)'aid
55911
304
Se~era~
Colors
::FR~E~E~2~8::-wks:--.ol"!'d,~P::Ou-J&gt; 740-446 7444 OuaiiiY ol
p1es 112 Jack Rusoell &amp; Low Pncosl
t/2 mix 304-675-5313
,'ll{:i

:

"1'

''

'

----

j~~=~==

NEW AND USEO STEEL
Steel Beams Pipe Rebar
fOf
Concre1e ~ Angle

or 740·367·773 1

==-o::::::-0::':'
iidt MCH IUilOIN09- MUST 00 ASAPI
Clearance alld cancellad
oide11&gt;
20x24 3Qx44
Huge Cltscounts can save
you 110u~ CaN today
tor
savings!

866-3S2.o489

Eltrtordlnary

Property

Spectlculer view of lhe
Ohio River
Prrvate drive ott Lrncoln
HI!!
Pomeroy
Oh io
woods on three srdes
(4+)acresC1rca
to a 1900
htstorfcal5
home

bedrooms 2 frreplaces 2
;;;;;;;;~~;;; . luU balhs, 2 s!a 'cases
;
beaiJtlful ong1nal wood
Campen/
RV1
&amp;
work many prcture wm
TrGI.,oro
dows moslly new wm
~-=-=----- dows large kitchen and
RV
breakfast room beaut I
Service · at Carmichael fully landscaped w1th 1n
Trar!ers
ground pool s1t en th~
740 446 3825
wrap around porch and
--:':""':~~~~~~ enJOY the
spectacular
'::
VIew of the OhiO Rrver 2
RV SeJVIte at Carmr
chaet
Trailers car detached garage and
2 out butld1ngs Would
740-446 3825
make &amp; wonderful famtly
home o' bed &amp; breaktaSI
Prfllate and Picturesque
SPECTACUlAR VIEW
Sanous 1 nq u~res only
•·~lea
o992 3678
I'WtVI
P se ca1174

========

RE'nta s

""'""""""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""
Aportmonll/

Townhou111
and 2 BR apatrtments
for rent near downtown
Pornt Pleasant All utrll
t es
patd
No pets
Please
call
304 360 0163

Apartment ava1lable now
N
Atverbend Apts
ew
Haven WV Now accept
rng
applications
lor
HUD substdlzed
one
Bedroom Apts Utiht es
ncluded Based on 3()0/o
of adjusted mcome Call
304 882 3121 1 allallable
for Semor and Disabled

CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD
ABLEI Townhouse apan
m8flts
andfor
small
houses for rent Call
740 441 1111 tor applf
cation &amp; mformat1on
:o.;.;;;;:.;;,.;::~;;;;;::::;.~~
-=-Free
Aent
5 pec 1a 11 ,.
2&amp;3BA and up Central
Atr WID hookup tenant
pays electric EHO E!m
VIew
(304)682·30 17

Apts

Spnng
Valley
Green
Apartments 1BA lor rent
$375
month

£.:74~0:;;44:;;6;;.:.15;:;99~-~~
Tw1n RtVSrs Tower IS ac

ceptlng appl cat1ons for
waiting hst lor HUD sub
sldlzed 1 BR apartment
for the etderly/d 1sabled
call 675 6679
::"':-...,:--~:-::2 br upsta1rs wlbath IN
1ngroom
dln~ngroom
k !chen washroom half
balh available Dec 3id

(740)992 20 12
Beech Sl M•ddleport 2
b t 1 hed llln&lt;&gt;nmant
E
200
r um s
....,......
xcephonal
acre uhhl1es pa1d no pels
caltle larm m Galha Co dep
&amp;
ref
OH
60+
acres
well drained
bottomland (740)992 -() 165
along Raccoon Creek Beech
Street
Mtddle
SO+ acres pasture bat port
2 bedroom fur
ar.ce wooded Stock wa ntshed apartment ut!ti
ter pond, 2 springs wen has pa1d no pets deFarm has carried 40-45 pos•t
&amp;
rererences
94 ChiYSier Lebaron 4dr COWS wlcalves Modem (740)992 0165
Sedan Approx 112 OliO
ml $1800 For Info call brick ranch style house New Haven furnished 1
wl finished
walk-oul Bd Apt has W/D No
245 5494 aHer 6pm
basement 937·596 6774
pets dep Ref 992 0165

~=La~nd_.(Acrwa;;;;;:;~gei;;;i;);;;;;;;

~~~-~-:--~ , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
Neon 4 door 5
speed $1500 ooo Call
256 1652 01 256 1233

96

Vans

~~~~§:;:""~~

=======

CAAOO/CONCESSION
Tliii'M 64
I+W
GOO!!fNI'CK I'I.ATl!ED
$3999 VIEW OUR EN
TIRE TRAILER INVEN
TORY AT
W&gt;NW CARMICHAELTRAILERS COM
740-446-3825

3BR 2 Bath $299 month
446 3384

~--~~---~

Channel forFlatDra1ns
Baf OnveSteel 03 Kla Sedona under
Grating
ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L Warranty
$7 500
Scrop Mol&amp;la Open Mon 3()4.675-2550
EB'Ij
'
~. Tuo, ' \'iad
&amp;
Frl
XIEfEJIIIIJil,T, : illom-4;:!opm
Closed
Wlll\tTO luy
'-'.Ll.Ev i'lof!SEILIVE· Tlfu, • • S.ill &amp; sun ~~~-:-~~
STOCK
TRAILERS, 740-446-7300
Wlln1 lo buy Junk CIIIS
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
C&lt;~ll740-388-0684
MENT
TRAILERS, ~~-:-~-~~
qr,1 E-'~1•
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; Nice Spi~OI Plano $300 WDO
·-~' '
HOMESTEADER
304.s82..336 2

fann E• 'P lllnf

446 2923

1935
US
currency
prooflmlnl
sets
dta
mon
MTS Coin Shop
151 2nd AveniJe Galli
;;;;,,..,..,
-

Jet AerattOn MOtors reparred, new &amp; reburlt 10 ~~....~~iO":'"":~
AKC Mini Dachshund Slock Call Ron Evans 02 Honda Accord V6
loaded, 92 000
mtles
$300
Call 1·800·537-9528
Pup
Call 740 245-5526
740 256 1498
~~~':"'::~~~ ~~--:---~ ----:::---"::':'~=
For sale 5-,Shihtzu pup A Kenmore heavy duty 1996
Oldsmoble
ptes 6 wks old, 1 (f) upfight freezer rn good Achieva, 120 000 mrles
$250 00 4 (m) $200 00, conditron tor $200 Call Asking
$500
Contact
full blooded but not reg aher 5pm 740·949·3059
o•
74 441 5460
304 87.-4625

_•ach~-304"':':~59~3-38~20~~

Rt•l E~lll•

1BR Apt W/0 hookups
satellite TV incl w/renl
close to hosprtal Call
740 339 0362
2 br apts 6 m from Hoi
zer Some utlht1es pd or
.. Hau.., For Sal•
appl ances
.. ava11
$400/mo
+
dep
3 Bed 2 Bath' Only 740-418 5288
or
388 8039
$15 500
for
11shngs ~~~:-~~~~
800 620 4946 ex R019
2BR APT CIA (740)
441 0194
4 bed 2 bath a office n ~3~b~i-:$4::00~a~m~o~1~bl
town
hw &amp; t1le 1loors $295 a mo plus uttllt 1es
updated kttchen &amp; baths &amp; deposit
3rd
St
pnvacy fence &amp; above Racine (740)247 4292
ground
pool
security
system much more 130 3 rooms and ball'! up·
Basl!am Dr $1 29 OOOFor sta rs
Completely fur
1
pies and nformatton
go pets
mshedRef wllh
WID No
to
wwworvbcom
Res 441-0245

~~;...~~~~':":
Avoiding foreclosure 14
payments left make one
move In 446 3093
~:::"':~"!:"'~~~~
3 BR 2 ba&amp;h attached ga
rage w/1 acre on Morn
lngstar Road new fur
nace &amp; heat pump
$125 000 740-949 2009

Open1ng Thnh Shop 482
ancr
121•e
Horton St Mason WV,
Crlssy s Ol:ids &amp; Enps, Thursdays &amp; Saturdays
large seleCtiOll of salt &amp; 9am-3pm each week,
pepper
shakers
Fire bargalnsl
also
free
c)Othes &amp; stuff
Ktng
glassware
~-:!I.Malodt~#.~;;o,;;;-::: 8 vv-r
~. 00 Mon Fn L'.tV:!
\1\/U

J~OO

Find all the
news that
matters
to

----~-

-------For Salt ly &lt;&gt;w-'
House on SR 588 tor
more •nlormatton and
pictures go to orvb com
I d number IS browning
740-446 7204

~alhpolls

laatlp l!l:nbunr

Jamt fillrasant !Rrqtstrr
The Da1ly Sentmel
jlunbap OI:unrs -jlrnlmrl

•

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Bevo

•
•

standout Gary Hamson on
Saturday
The Hall of Fame Banquet
Will follow the ba&gt;ketball
games at 7 p m on Saturday
cvenmg
.
The centerp1ece of the
weekend w1ll ~ the Bevo
Fran&lt;:IS led team&gt; from
1952-54, as they return
home to be a pan of the
weekend Dunng the week
end. the umve1S1ty w1ll mr
the PBS Documentary (that
on gmally a1red Monday
mght) · They Could Re.tlly
Play The Game ' The fi rst
showmg 1s set for 4 p m on
Fnday m Bob Evans Fanns
Hall . Room 118 A second
Vlewmg w1ll be on Saturday
at noon also m Bob Evans
Farms Hall , Room 11 8
The Redmen team went
60 7 m the two yea rs,
mcludmg a perfect 39-0 sea
son 111 195 2-5 3 under the
d1rect10n of head coach
Newt Oliver Bevo Francis
holds the all-ume smgle
game NCAA sconng record
of 11 1 pomts. wh1ch
occurred February 2, 1954 111
Jackson HIS
11 6-pomt
etfort .1gamst Ashland Jumor
Coll ege the prev1ous season
1s recogmzed b} the NA IA

from Page 81
pound Washmgton , D C.
native 1s averag111g 13 :l
pomts and mne rebounds per
game through the fiJ'St three
• games The W1ldcats have
posted
v1ctones
over
Knoxville College (94-62).
Umon (KY) Colle$e (74-54)
and St Cathanne s (79-68)
They lost an exh1b111on to
NCAA
D1v1 s1on
I
Tennessee Martm. 90-71
and play an exhibition contest on Tuesday (tomght)
agamst Murray State
The wmners and losers
Will play on Saturday
Regardless of the outcome
, Rm w11l pia) the 5 p m
: game. The first men's game
1
on Saturday w11l up-off at I
p.m
The weekend also "111
feature homecommg on
Fnday mght. the mtroductmn of" the 2007-08 R10
Athletes of the Year and the
Rio Athletic Hall of Fame
mductmns of former soccer
AII-Amencan S1mon Lowey
and former men 's ba.~ke tball

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

www .mydailysentinel.com

Lincecum
from PageBI
f1rs t All-Star squad . but an
Illness prevented h1m from
appeanng 111 the July 15
game at Yankee StadiUm
New York Mets ace
Johan Santana. who led
the leag ue m ERA (2 .53)
and mmngs (234 1-:l), also
garnered four f1rst-place
votes and came 1n th1rd
The other fnst -pl ace
vote we nt to M 11 waukee
lefty CC Sabath1a , last
yea r 's AL wmner wh o
was traded by Cleveland
mto the National League
on July 7 He went 11 -2
w1th a I 65 ERA and
seve n complete games 111
17 starts tor the Brewers.
p1 tc hm g them to th e1r
f1rst playoff berth s1nce
1982
"I def1mtely thought he
was 111 fa1 r contention.''
L111cecum smd
Sabath1a came 111 fifth
Brad L1d ge, the star closer who had a perfect seaso n for the World Senes
c hampwn Phlladelphw

Phllhes , was fourl h
Webb. the NL wmne r m
2006. was ru nner- up lor
the second consecu ll ve
season after gm ng 22-7
With a 3 30 ERA m 226 23 mmngs
The
baby-faced
Lmcecum.
m.:knamed
"Franchi se." 1s an aberra tion 111 almost every way
He eats JUnk food before
starts and doesn't 1ce h1 s
arm When he was called
up from the mmors 111
May 200 7. ballpark sec unty workers 111 Sa n
Franc1sco thought he was
a bat boy
Late th1s season. some
teammates even asked for
h1 s autogra ph - mcludmg
veteran
catcher
Beng1e Mohna
"The key I S to contmue
to get bette r," G~ants outfielder Randy Wmn smd
"W1th the usage of v1deo
that h1tters use. now people are gomg_to see hm1 a
httle more People are
gmng to have a better
1dea of what hi S p1tche s
look hke and how he
attacks h1tters The pitchers who have been good
for a long time are pitch-

ers who contmu e to get
better"
Draft ed lOth ove rall out
of Washtngton 111 2006.
Lmcecum sa1d h1s maJOr
league ex pen ence last
season def1mtely helped'
h1m succeed th1s year He
also credited an 1mproved
change up . wh1ch he threw
more often after fmdmg a
comfortable gnp
''I' ve alway s take n
pnde tn trymg to stnk e
people out I've always
been that guy," he sa1d
"That's the one (stall stlc)
that kmd of gets me f1red
up ..
Lmcecum sa1d he "as
on h1 s couch watchmg
NFL h1 ghhghts w1th h1 s
roommate when he got
the news. One of the f1rst
people he called was San
Franc1sco clo se r Bnan
Wilson
" Me and Tun talked
about th1 s a lot. I alway s
pumped h1m up and sa1d ,
' Dude . you know you're
gotng to wtn the Cy
Young ?"' W1lson sa1d 111 a
telephone
1nterv1 ew.
''Th1 s was before the season He had the best fastball , best changeup and

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

best curveball He pretty
much dommated eve ry
start We wou ld set goals
and I wou ld say, I bet
yo u won't stnke out I0
and not "alk anybody.'
and he d stnke out 12 .
Each game he p1tched he
kept addmg up the tally
Soon Amenca was gomg
to know he was the best."
McCorm1ck won 111 the
fnst year the BBWAA
honored a p1tcher 1n each
leag ue From 1956-66,
only one Cy Young
Award was presented for
both leagues
Th iS year's Amencan
League wmner will be
,m nounced
Thursday,
w1th Cleve land lefty
C hff Lee
a heav y
favonte AL and NL
Managers of the Year are
Wed nesday
Santana, a two-lime AL
Cy Youn g Wilmer With
Mmne sota , rece1ved a
$50.000 bonus for f1111sh mg th1rd Sabath1a got
$75,000 for com1ng tn
f1fth Webb 's secondplace fm1sh mcreased the
buyout of h1 s $8 5 mll hon 20 I 0 club opt1on by
$500 ,000 to $2 m1lhon

www.mydallysentinel.com

CLASSIFIED
Galli a
County
OH

E-mail
classJfled@mydaJlytribune com

To

l\egt~ter

Place

(304) 675·1333
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW I0 W§IfE Afj 6Q
SuCcess:?Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

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Display Ads

Deily ln~Column . 9 DO a.m .
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column ; 9:00 a m.
Frl&lt;••v For Sundays Paper

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• All ada must b8 prepaid'

• St•rt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlonl
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Shorlff Sales
Case Number D8CVD87
Homo National Bank
Plaintiff

vo
AnthonyAdamoetal
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Malgs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of oalt to me dlreeled from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale al public aucllon
on the front slaps of
the Motgs County Court
House on Friday, Decomber 12. 2008 at
10 DO am , of said day,
the following described
real estate
(Real Estate and ManulaciUred Home to be
appraised and sold
separ8tely)
Situated In the Townof
Lebanon,
ahlp
County of Meigs, and
State ot Ohio
Being a part ot a 95.00

actual survey made on
the II th day of March,
2002, by Ohio Professlonal Surveyor,l6844
Relerenca Deed. Volume 150, Page 797,
Meigs County Official
Records
Auditor s Parcel No
D7.00182.D01
Proptlrty known as.
50310 Nease Hollow
Rood,
Racine,
OH
45771
Also a 2002 Clayton
manufactured home,
I D ICAP012862TNAB,
Ohio Certificate of Title
#53D0162406, a copy of
which
Is attached
hereto and made a.part
hereof
Land &amp; mobile home
sold seperslely
Current Owner Anthony Adams at at
Proparty at· 50310
Nease Hollow Rd ,
Racine, OH
PP# 07.00182 D01
Prior deed references.
volume 150, Page 797

acres, more or less, Land $6,00D
lract olland lranolerred
to Ricky L88 Deeter as
recorded In Official
Records Volume 27 at
277,
Meigs
Page
County Recorder s 01flee, Meigs County,
Ohio, also being a part
of Section 36, Townohlp- 2 North, Range11-Wost,
Lebanon
Township,
Meigs
County State of Ohio
and more particularly
deacrlbed as tallows
Beginning at a point
which bears South 01
deg 54' 2B" West a dislance of 1628.93 loot
and North 89 deg 45'
44" East a distance of
1649 311eetlrom an ex·
lallng Iron pin found at
lhe northwest comer of
said 95 OD acres, more
or less, tract and being
a point In the centerline
of Township Road
#106, Nease Hollow
Road.
Thence leaving said
centerllne North 23
deg 09 16" East passlng through a 518 ' Iron
pin with I d cap set at a
dlatance ol 20 OD 1881
and going a total distanceof121D71eettoa
518" Iron pin with I d
cap set,
Thence South 74 deg
DD' 26 " Easl a distance
ol366 21 leetto a 518 '
Iron pin with I d cap
set,
Thence South 13 dog
42' 50" East a dlatance
ol 6B 44 (set to a 518"
Iron pin with I d cap
se!
Thence South 27 deg
59 58" West passing
through a 518" Iron pin
with I d cap set at a
distance ol133 971881
and going a total dlalance of 153 971eet to a
polnl In tho centerline
of said Township Road

Appraised at $52,500
Mobile Home.
Terms of Sale
Can•ot be sold for less
than 213rds ot the appraised value
10% down on day ot
sale, cash or certified
check, balance due on
confirmation of ""to.
The appraisal did not
Include an Interior examlnatlon of the house.
Robert
E
BNgle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the plaintiff
Little, Sheets &amp; Warner
211-213 E Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992-6689
(11) 5, 1219

POINT OF BEGINNING,
said described tract
containing 0.25 Acr88,
more or lass, oxcepllng
all legal utility easementa and rlghta of
way
Relerenco Deed: Off!clal Recordo Volume 4,
Page 807, Parca12
Bearings lr8 assumed
and are for angle meaeurement only.
Current Owner· Scotty
Baker etaf
Property at. 617 High
Street
Middleport, Ohio
PP#15-0022~1

Pnor Deed References:
Volume 214, Page 457
Appraised at $50,000
Terms of Sale Cannot
be sold lor less than
213rda altha appralead
value. 10% down on
day of aate, cash or certilled check, balance
due on contlrmetlon of
aale
Tho appralaal did not
Include an Interior exami nation of the house
Robert
E.
Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney lor the Plaintiff
Urner Sampson R
Rothfuss
120 East Fourth St, 8th
Floor
Cincinnati, OH 452022007
5t3-241-31DO
(11) 5,12,19

field to Harriet McClure
and Lucinda Powell,
thence40 rodlsouth or
to the line betwaon tho
said George W. BradfleldandJS. Bredfleld;
thence West 56 rods
along the said line;
thence North 40 rods,
thence East 56 rods to
thoplaceofbeglnnlng,
and being In Section 7,
Range14, Town 7 of the
Ohio Company's Purchase, containing 14
acres
Parcel Three Also lhe
following
described
real estate, situated In
the Township of Scipio,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio
Being a part of Section
No Seven (7) In the
seventh township of
tho fourteenth ranga, In
the Township Of Scipio,
bounded aa follows:
Beginning at the southwest comer oloaldsection seven (7) thence
running East one hun-

dred and sixty rodsi tlfled check, balance
duo on conflrmotlon of

thence North eighty
rods; thence West one
hundred and sixty
rods; thence, South to
the place of beginning
bounded West on Payton's land and the
South on Township
line, and North on a
tract aold to Zachariah
Bradfield, and containlng eighty
acrea, more or leas
Excepting a,.t ReservPublic Notice
lng the following de·
scribed parcel of real
Sheriff Salas
eatale, situate In the
Caaa Number 08CV039 Township of Scipio,
City National Bank of Malga County, $tate ol
West VIrginia
Ohio, and being a Plrl
Plaintiff
of the South hell of the
vs
Southweat quarter ol
William &amp; Melinda Section No 7, of TownGibbs at al
ship No 7 North and
PubliC NotiCe
Defendants
Ran~ No. 14 West and
Court of Common further being a part ofa
Sheriff Sales
Pleas, Meigs Counly, 80 0 acre tracl of land
CaseNumberOBCV053 Ohio
as recorded In Deed
Peoples Bank NA
In pursuance of an Volume 161, Paga 223,
Plaintiff
order of sale to me dl- Meigs
County
vs
reeled from said court Recorder'• Office and
Scotty Baker et al
In the above entitled being more particularly
Delendanla
act1on,l will expose to described as follows:
Court of Common sale at public auction Beginning at a point,
Pless, Meigs County, on lhe lront steps of said point being the
Ohio
the Meigs County Court point ot lntaroectlon of
In pursuance of an House on Friday, De- the North tina of the
ordarotoaletomedl- cember12,200Bat1D Southhalloltheaouthreeled from sold court a m of said day, the lol- west quarter ol said
In the above entitled lowing described real Section No 7 with the
acllon, I will expose to eslate
center of Townahlp
sale at public auction EXHIBIT A
Road No. 171 (Zlon
on the front stapa of The
following
de- Road) also told North
the Meigs County Court scribed raaleatatasltu- line being the North
House on Friday, De- ate In the Township ot line of the above aald
comber 12, 2008 at 10 Slliplo; County
of BD Dacre tract of land,
a m , of said day, the Meigs, and, State ot thence with aald North
following
described Ohio, bounded and de' line, South 85 degrees
rest estate
scribed es follows: Par- 30' East, 982 031eet to
Situated In Sallobury eel Ona Situated In tho an Iron pin, thence With
Township, In tho VIllage Townahlp of Scipio, a new line through the
of Middleport, part of County of Motgo, Stata tract of which this Ia a
Lot290 of tht V.B. Hor- of Ohio, In Sactlon 7, part of, South 35 deton Addition to L - Town 7, Range 14, ba- grees 15' Weot, 526 30
Pomeroy, ae recorded ginning at the north- 1881 to a 24 Inch HickIn the Melga County 1111 corner ola10 acre ory tree, thence South
Plat Records Volume 2, lot
con..yed
by 44 degr8ee DO' Wool,
Page12, Molgl County, Thomal Dye to John 17.DO feet to the center
State of Ohio ond betnf1 Bradfield by dead olaald t R. 171' thlll1C8
1106,
In Section 28, Town 1 dated December 8, with the canter of llld
Thoncealong said cen- North, Rangt 13 Weot 1848, recorded In Vol- T.R 171, North 48 deterllne the following oflhe Ohio Company'• umt13, on Page• 110 grNa DO' Wool, 31 .85
thr88 coursoo
Purchase and !Ming de- and 111, to which rofw- !HI and North 48 de1.North59deg 56' 38" ocrlbed at follows: 1»- anca 11 hereby made gma 48'Waat, 41000
Weal a dlllanco of ginning at an Iron r,ln hlr a mora clellnlto de- !HI and continuing
140.DO !ttl to 1 point, oo~ aald Iron pin 1M ng ocrlptlon; thence South wlllt aald center, North
2. North 81 deg 34' 27"
09' 48" E. 1 dla• 40 roda, thence Weet 51 degreaa Sl' Weal
, Wilt t dlotanco of lonco of 222 .40' from 40 roda; thence North 4011.111Ht for 1M pi138.71 fttl too point , an Iron pin tound 1 t tho 40 rode; thonce Eaet 40 of beginning oontaln·
3. North 80 deg. 14 32' north1111 CDt'nor of Lot rodt to the placa of be- lng 1.07 - . or
Wilt 1 dlollnca of 214olthtVB Horton glnnlng,contalnlng10 1HIIntllubj10110111
114.121Nttothtprtn- Addition to Lower 10,.1, mora or 1111, logll hlghwtya 1nd
•
olpal point of btgln· Pomoroy, •• rHordad and fa the olml 10 • • • - " •·
ntng, oontalnlng 1 500 In tht Mtlgo County 10 ,.1 of land' deeded The aiiOvo d1191tptlon
tcree, mor8 or teat, Plot Recorda Volume 2, by George
Bradfield wat
lumlaltH by
ond wtf11 to Harriet Me- Ronald M. lharr8lt,
1ubject to all logol Pago12,
eaNmento tnd rlghll thence 8
09' 48" E, Cluro and Luclndo Raotablt'ad lurvwyor
of way.
I dlttenco ot
68' to Powell.
1511711 ptfltllrVWY of
Sllrlnga aro otoumad an lr_on pin ut, thence Parcal Two A too lito S.pllm ~ er 20, 1174.
1nd ar8for the -rml- S 89 50 14', o dlttance following
daacrlbad Further Excepting lnd
nation olangiH only.
of 140 00' to en Iron pin root eatatt altuatad In ~aarvlng from the
Alllronplnoar8518" by ttl ,
tho County o1 Melgo abovaciHcrtbadatghty
30" reblr with pl11tlc thence N
09' 48" w and state of Ohio and 10,. fllrtll twenty-lour
• t.d. ~P atampad "CTB- a dlllonco ot 77 B&amp;'t~ In SclploTownohlp, be- (24) aero~. mora or
• 8844
an lr~n pin HI; thence ginning al the north- leu IMing the 11 m1
• The obovo det~crlptlon N 88 50 14" E, 1 dla- weatcomorola 1 1cre reaiHtataconvayadby
wao pr8pal'8d lrom an Ianoe ot 140 DO' to tha tot wttled by John Brad- Rhonda Stockwlll 10

s o·

w

oo·

n

oo·

o

Thomes 1\Jckor and
Lori 1\Jcker, signed
March 13, 1982, recalved
lor record
March 16, 1982 at 4:26
p.m.' and recorded In
Volume 285, Page 257,
Meigs County Official
Records.
Tha abova daocrlbed
reai,.W.haabMnaatlgnad Auditor's Ptrctll
Numbers 17.00746.000
and 17-G0747 ODD
DEED
REFERENCE:
Book 7, Poge 521, 0111clal Recorda of Melgt
County.
PRIOR REFERENCE:
Book 61, Page 925, 01flclel Recorda of Meigs
County.
Current Owner William
&amp; Melinda Glbbt
Property et 36220 Zion
Road, Rutland, OH
Appr8laad at S1DO,OOO
Termo of Solo: Cannot
1M sold lor leoithen 213
of of tho appraleed
value 10% down on
clay of sale, Cllh orcer-

required to HI up any
I n - they may ha..
In eald preml- or 1M
lore..r barred, that
upon lallur8 oleald Delendentato pay orlo
.ceuH to 1M ptlld oeld
Iudgment within thrwe
clayo from Ito reftdHion
thatanOrdero!Sotelie
lsauadtotheSilerlflol
Meigs Coui!IY, Ohio, to
appralae, advartiM In
the Legal Publication
Dally Sentinel and tell
..td rHI eotate, that
the prom!- 1M sold
,,.. and clear of 111
clalmt, Ilona 1nd Inti,..
etll olany olthe ptlrtiH
.,.,.In, that the proceecla from the salt ol
eetd preml"'o 1M applied to the PlelniiWo
jljdgment and lor such
other relief to
which United Stllllo o1
America Is entitled.
Said Delandanta are d~
reeled to tho Complaint
wherein notice under
1,1\elalr cltbt collection
practice act Ia given~
Said Delenclenta ar8 requlred to an•- within
twenty-eight dayt alter
the publication Said
Defendants will take
notice that you are requlred to answer eald
Complaint on or before
the 26th day of NOV.,
2008 or Iudgmant will
be r8nderad accordlngly
Unllld Statea of Amor·
lea, Plolntllf
Stephen D Mllea
VIncent A. L""''
Attorney• for Plaintiff
18 W. Monument Avanue Dey1on, Ohio

thence south 26 112
deg west along the
north line ofthe street,
2071881, thence south
26 1/2 deg. west along
the north line oloald
street aforesaid, 30
feet; thence north 25
deg west to • point 30
teetlromthenorthweot
comer allot owed by
Dennie Morrow,
thonce east 30 loot to
Dennis Morrow's northwest comer, thence
along the wetllllne of
Morrow'a lot to southwest comer ol same,
and to the north line of
oold street alore11ld,
and being premlaas
conveyed by deed
recorded In Vol. 71
page 89 Meigs County
Deed Records
PARCEL NO.2:
The easterly half oltha
following
daecrlbad
reeloatate·
Being 1 pt1rl of lot 157
In Bosworth's Addition
lathe VIllage of Middle-

pori,

grees East 20 feat,
thence South 27-t/2 degr88a Weal 20 1881,
thence North 62-112 degrses West 20 feet to
theplaceolbeglnnlng',
containing 400 square
feet and also a right of
way to and from said
tract which Is hereby
reserved by former
Grantors Above surveyad by J. F. Parker,
March 21, 1935
PROPERTY AODRESS:
68053 State Route124,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772
PP,N D!l-00073000
Current Owner Danny
Barber et al
Prior deed ralerenceo:
Volume 246, page 757
Appralaed at $25,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold lor tess than
213rds of tho appraised
value 10% down on
day of aale, caoh or certilled c~k, balance
due on confirmation of
oale
The apprelaal did In-

this survey.
Thence North 01 dogr88s 34' 58" eaat 616 37 1881 to an Iron
pin sal this survey
Thence North tO degrees 25' 11' Wast 178 58 h!et with the
centerline of a gravel
driveway to a point In
thecenterllneo!Kingabury Road (CR 18) and
passing an Iron pin ott
this survey at 148 58
feet
Thence the following 3
courses with the conterllne of Kingsbury
Road (CR 18)
North 64 degreea 48'
49" East- 268 06 fNI to
a paint North 71 de·
greeo 43' 33" East 67 16 feet to a point
North 78 degreoe 15'
21 ' East - 39 50 feet to
a point
Thence ltavlng Klngabury Road (CRIB),
South 01 degroeo 34'
58' Weal- 68119faet
to an Iron pin aet this

Ohio Yllloy
Publlohlng rourvea
the r~ht to edit,

Lo• &amp; Found

s1n~er

Found a loading mmp for only

ad at any ttme
Errors

Cremations
estab- Pet
lished
soutnemlclassiC 740 446-3745
rock band Senous lnq

Lead

Must

a tra11er on Rt 141 Must
descnbe 645 5402
Lost 2 male Jack Russel
Dogs Around Flrospecl
Church Ad area Since
Oct 31 answers to Ode
&amp; Beau Reward lor safe
return
Call
Kelly
446 7019 or 645 3282
Found 3 horses call to
ID (740)949 7000

reoponlible lor
then the cost

space

tile error ond
first lnHrtlon
1 nol be liable

for

Robert
E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney lor the Plain·
tiff
KeHh D Weiner &amp; Assoelates Co
75 Publ c Square 4th
Floor
Cleveland, OH 44113
216·771-&amp;SDO
(11) 12, 19, 26
Public Notice
Sheriff Sa lao
Caae Number 0Bcv043
Farmers Bank l Savlngt Co.
Plaintiff
va
R&amp;J Food Shop LLC
Ronnie l
Jennifer
Spaun
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In purauance of an
order of sale to me dlreeled from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will axpoae to
sale at public auction
on the front atepa of
the Metgo County Court
Houta on Frldey, Deo
com!Mr 19, 2008 at 10
a m , of oald day, the
following
described
realaatate
EXHIBIT "A"
RONALO A SPAUN
AND JENNIFER L.
SPAUN
Being a part of the
Southeaat Quarter of
Sactlon 8, T-7-14 1·R·14W, Scipio ToW!Johlp,
Malgo County, Ohio of
the Ohio Company Purchsaa and being a ptlrt
of Volume 282 at Page
261, of the Deed
Recorda of
Malga
County Racordera 01flee and being mora
fully d88crlbed 11 folIowa:
Beginning attht Southuat corner of Sactlon
6, Scipio Townahlp,
MtlgoCounty,Ohloato
4' While Ook found 11
lht comtr of tht Stclion From which on
Iron pin set thlnurvoy
on the oouth line ot
Soctlon I, !Mirt N. II
daoreet48'12"WHt1.00 !HI and another
lronp(ntttthlolurvoy
on tho 111111ne olllectlon I, !Mara N. 01 degreat 34' 56"Eiat- I.DO
fttl. Thence with the
aouth line of Section 8,
North 81 degrweo 48'
12" weet1128 !ttl to
on Iron pin ..tthlo turvay. Thencallorth 50
degrNa 45' 09" Ellt 385.65 lttt to an Iron
pin ttl thlo ourvoy. This
pin to the principal
plact of beglnhlng lor

n

at30 DO feet.
Thence South 50 degrees 45' 09" West •
401 50 feet to an Iron
pin set this eurvey This
pin Is the principal
place ol beginning lor
thla survey. This survey
contains 5.330 acres,
mor8 or loes.
In addition, a 30.0Dioot
wide easement lor
Ingress and egreaslor
Lot 3 and Lot 4 with the
gravel drl. . between
Lots 3 and 4 and havlng the following canterllne
description.
Beginning at the northwelt corner of thla tract
at a point In tho centorline of Kingsbury Road
(CR 18) thence with the
following canlerllne of
a grovel drive, South 10
degrNI 25' 11" Eaal
17&amp;58feet to an Iron
pin sllthlaourvey,aald
pin being the termlnut
of thlo centerline euemont deacrlptlon
All Iron plna aet thla
aurvey are 5181nch X 30
Inch rebar and have a
plaatlc cap on them
atampad Dale EKIIne
P.S.6722.
All couroeo are rotated
to matth North as PI' a
Survey
by
Robart
Eason PS 7033 on
06/1411999 olthls farm
Subject lo all legal
ea..mento and right of
waya not listed above
Surveyed
on
0912312002 - 10/1112D02
by Apptllachlan Proteoslonel Associates 254
Exline Road, Jackson,
Ohio 45640, Dele A Exlin• P.S. 6722.
Current Owner: Ronnie
&amp; Jennifer Spaun eta!
Proptlrty at: 36838
Klngbury Rd
Pomeroy, Ohio
PP117-D0328 D04
Prior deed relerencea
Volume 202, P,e169
Appralotd at 52,5DO
Tormo ol Sale C1nnot
1M told lor leao than
213rdo of tho opprollld
v1lut 10% down on
clay olalla, caoh or otr·
tlflod ohock, bat1nce
due on conllrmttlon of
aato.
Tho opprataat did not
Include an lnta11orax·
lmlnatlonolthahouH.
Ro!Mrt
! . llllgta,
Melga County Sheriff
Attorney lor tho Ploln·
tiff
Kegler, Brown, Hill &amp;
Rlttor
81 E. Stela St., Suitt
1800
Columbut,OH43215
614-462-5400
(11) 12, 1i, 28

t

Can

rk;.~rlV!~~~~~==================~----"1 FDI'klo8y~er

NEW
CONSTRUCTION
2 new homes
1200
sq It 2 br home 2 bath
1st II laundry oak 6
panel mler or doors lnm
&amp; kit cab1nets
fully
equ1p kit 1 car gar
basement
w/
ground
level entry rn rear (per
feet tor f1n1sh1ng as a FR
or e)(tra BAs) In Galllpo
11s and does qiJallfy tor
the 10 year 75% tax
abatement on dwelling 1
IS rearly fo r occupancy
now!
$145 000
Call
740 503 6734
....,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""!!!!!:""'""

740 446 1974 Georges

Portable Saw11 d • h 1
r Logs
1
~-~-~~-~ m • on' au you
Now takrng brds for to the Mrll JUst call
pa1ntmg and or cleaning 304-675 1957
ot vacant umts Must pro- !!!!~!!!!!!!!!!....!!!!!!!!!!""
vide proof of Workers
Profeuional Services
compensatiOI'I and llablirty
rnsurance Please
TURNED DOWN ON
call Honey Suckle H1lls
SOCIAL
SECURITY SSt
Apts
7~6 3344 or
No Fee Uoless We Wrnl
slop by office at 266 Co
1 688 582 3345
lonlal Dr Bidwell,
eves after 6PM

4(JO

F1'1,111CI.JI

NOTICE Borrow Sman
Contact the OhiO D1vr
slon of F~nanc!al 'nstltu
1
tlons Office ot Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refr
nance your home or ob
ta1n a loan BEWARE of
Farm Equipment
"'!"-...~~:-;;-:"~
requests for any large
Have you pnced a John
advance payments of
Deere lately? You 11 be
tees or Insurance Call
Bulinau &amp; Trod.
surpnsedl Check out our
the OffiCe ol Consumer
used
Inventory
at
Alflars
toH
free
at
School
Car
1 866-278-0003 to learn •;;;;;;;"'!!!'~"!!'iiii-iii www CAREQ com
michael
Equipment
!I the mortgage b(oker or
Gallipolis Clreer
740 446 2412
lender rs properly uCollege
censed {Thrs Is a pubttc (Careers Close To Home)
service
announcement Call Today, 740 44&amp;4367
1 ~00-214-0452
from lhe Ohio Valley
galnpollscareercolage adu
Publr9hlng Company)
Acer&amp;difed Mamher AccretJ11
lllQ Got.roclltor Independent

~;w;ww;;c;o;m;";";";o;m~~;;;;;;;;;;;'©~20011~~b~y~~~ln~c;.!

Meigs County, elude an Interior exam- survey artd pasalng an
lnstion of the houaa
Iron pin setlhlo survey

Ohio, commencing at
aale.
Mary E Pennington's
The appralaal did not
comer, running 40 112
Include an lntarlor axfeet along main road;
amlnatlon of the houH
thence serosa seld lot
Robert
E
Beegle,
to back fence, thence
Meigs County Sheriff
to sold Pennington's
Attorney lor tho .Plaincomer, 43faet,
!HI
thence acroat said lo1
Wolfe &amp; Jlenti"V
to the place of begin425 Center St.
nlng.
Ironton, OH 45638
Being part of the prop740-532-7000
orty by deed recorded
(11) 5, 12, 19
In Vol. 139 page 528
Melgo County Deed
Recorde
Public Notice
The defendant named
abovalt required to anNOTICE OF PUBLICAawar the Complaint
TION
45402
•
within twenty-eight (28)
IN THE
COMMON (10) 22, 29 (11) 5, 12. 19, daya alter the 1111 pubPLEAS COURT OF 26
llcatlon ofthlolegal noMEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
lice on Nov 26, 2D08
Meigs County Clerk of
This legal notice will be
Courts
Public NQtlce
published once a week
PO Box 1511DOE 2nd
lor six aucceaslva
St
IN THE COURT OF weeka.
Pomeroy,OH45769
COMMON PLEAS
(10)22, 29(11)5,12,19,
United States of Amer- MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO 26
lea vs
, Marian CltiFinanclat, Inc.
Durham, deceased , et Ptalntlft
at
va
Public Notice
Case No 08-CV-137
Fr8nklln D Gheen (DeTho unknown holr8, de- ceased), at at,
Sheriff Saloe
vi sees, legatoea, ex- Defendants
Case Number 08cv104
ocutora, ••eculrtxeo, Caaa No 08CV130
Beneficial Ohio Inc.
administrators, admln- Judge Stephen C. Plaintiff
lltratrtxeo and sa- Crowe
'
va
algnsea of Marian LEOA~NOTICE
Danny Barber et 11
DIJrham,
deceaaed, Utlknown heirs, the de- Defendanll
whose addresses are vloNs, legatHs, ax· Court of Common
unknown, will hereby o c u t o r a , Pleas, Melga County,
take notice that on Sap- admlnlstr8loro, and aa· Ohio
tem!Mr 8, 2008, United 81gni of Franklin D. In pureuance of an
Stalls of America, flied Gheen, and- the un- order oleate to me dlIts Complaint In Fore- known guardian• of rected trom aid court In
cloture
and
Mar- minor and/or lncompe- 1he abova entitled acshalllng of Llano In the tent helra of Frtnkllr. tlon, 1 will axpoat to
Commori Pleas Court D. Gheen, wllltako no- aale at public auction
of Molga County, Ohio, tlce thot on Auguat 27, on the front stope of
1DO
E.
2nd
St , 2008, CIIIFinanclal,lnc. the Molga Count Court
Pomeroy, OH 45769 flied Ita
Houae on Friday, DeIMing Coaa No 08-CV- Complalntln the Court camber 18, 2008 st 10
137 agatnat Marian of Common Pleao, a.m olaald clay, tha fo~
Durham,
dtctalld Molga County, Ohio, lowing dtocrlbad roll
preying for judgment In Caoe No 08 CV 130. eetata:
the
amount
of The obltct of, and de- DESCRIPTION
OF
$38,418.29 with lntar8at mend lor rellet In, the LAND
thereon according to Complolnt It to fora- Beginning at a atone on
tho Ierma of lhe nolo cloll tho lion of ploln- the Eaot lido of Highfrom July 15, 2DOB until tlflamortgage riCOrcled way No. 124, at the
pt1ld and lor loreclo- uponthor8aleatatada- Northwest corner of a
our8 of eald Mortgogt ocrlbad IMiow and In 35 Acre Troct; thence
Doad on the following which ptolntlff ollogot Eaat15rodltoutone;
dNcrlbad rul ootata, that tho foregoing de- thenot North 13-314 deof which 11ld Dolan· 11lndant hao or c111m1 greet Eatt18 rod1to 1
clenta, Morlan Durhlm, to havt an lnt8r8at:
atono, thenoe Waat 11
d._Hd wao tho 8ltu1tod In tho Tow"' rocla to the hat oldo of
-of:
ohlp of Sallobury, abovo road; thence
Real eetall tocotad 11 Molgt County, 8tata of along utd road Iouth
38384 8. 11. 114, Ohio:
1341'4degl'IHWMI11
Pomeroy,OH417ee
PAACILN0.1:
roclatothoplaotofbelafurthlrdltorlbad In 8ttuatecl In the north ginning, oonta(nlng 1·
Plllntllll
mortgao• flirt of thot flirt of 100 112 1orea.
rwconfacl on March I, ION Lot No 117 whloh !xcepllng
however
1tl0 In Volume 171 liN Nil of end adjol"' from tha above lr8CII
page HI of tho Mort• lng 8ectlon 2t, Town 1. certain portion thereof
PM R-rdo of Melgo Rango 13 In Sollabury DOundod I I follows:
County, Olllo.
Townohlp,
Melgo Beginning Eaot 7 rodo
1nd llttl Deftlldtnto, County, doocrlbad aa lind 8 llnka end Iouth
unknown helra, de- followo:
' 21-1/4 degr- Ellt 11
w l -, tagalllo, IX- Commencing ot the rode and 311nulrom
ecutoro, exoeutrlxea, ooutheaat comer of 1 Northwaot corner of
admlnltlr8toro, odml"' lot dHdld by VB Hor- above cletcrlbad tract ;
11trotrtxa1 and 11- ton
ana
Marcut thence North 27-112 deotgnaoo of Marlin - - t h, May27, 1814 gr- Ellt 20 Ito!;
Durham, claceaaad. 1M to Anthony Robaon,
thlnce South 62-112 de-

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Other Sorvi011

Wanlad

A 1rouncemen1s

'

reject or cancel any

POUCIES Ohio \Iaiiey Publlt hing reNJWI the right to t&lt;llt. ~1, or cancel •nv ad at any time Errort mutt bf reported on the flrtt day ot publlcallon tl'\d the
Trlbune-Sentlnet Regllter will bt mpontlble for ng more than the col1'0f tM spiCe oc:cul)led by the trrot 1nd only tht flrtt Insertion Wt ahall not be liable tor
any 1011 or npen• that ruults from tha publlcdon ~ ominlon of an •dvtrtl..mtnl Corr.ctlon will bl mtlde In th• tlrtt available edit ion BoM numbet ada
art alwayt contldantlal ·Current rate c.rd appllaa All rtal tatatt advertlsam1nt• na tubjeel to th• FDdertl Fair Houalng Act gf 1861 • Thla nawapjlper
accept• only htlp wanl.clldt matting EOE tlandarda We will not knowingly ICCipt any actvartlalng In ~lolallon ollha ltw Will ngt be rt•pon.lble for any
in an ad tabn over 1M phone

..-rors

•
•
'
200

Sunday Display 1 : 00
Thursday for sundays·----

Now you can have borders and graphics
"'"-'
added to your classiHed ads
S,~
!r'!'!
Borders $3.00/per ad
t!!
Graphics SOC for small
$1 .00 for large

only
ado

Want lo buy a long shaft
CJtJt board mo1or 10 to 35
HP wrth manual tiller
Also a workrng propane
refrigerator
740-256-6827
or
740·610·4875

Wo

Beaement
Waterproofing

Unconditional lifetime
guarantee LOcal refer
ences fumrshed ES1ah
lfshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs
740 446 0870 Rog ers
Basement Waterproofing

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Logelo .
.. .. ..
..... 1DO
Announcemenll .... .
• . 200
Blrthdey/Annlvoroary
• •
.. .. 205
Happy Ads. • ... . ... .. • .... ... ... . .. • 210
Lost &amp; Found . .
215
MemoryiThank You. .. .. ....... . ..... 220
NotiCetl..
225
Peraonals
•. .... 230
Wanted .. ... . • ... .. .... ....... .. .. • 235
Sorvlcea. ..
.
300
Appliance Service .. .... .. .......
.. 302
Aulomotlve.. • ... . .. .....
304
Building Material• • ...
306
Buolnesa .. ·... ............ .. 308
Catering .. • .
310
Child/Elderly Care
312
Compulera. ......... ..
314
Contractore
• •
316
Domestlco/Jonltortal.. • ... ............ .. .... 318
Electrical...... ... • . • •
... .. 320
Flnanclol.. .
... . .......322
Hoelth.
326
HHtlng &amp; Cooling . .
328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance.. . .•
.
332
Lawn Service.
.. .......... 334
Muolc!Dance!Drama..
336
Othar Sorvlcea . ..
.338
Plumblng/Ettctrlcal.........
.340
Proleoolonal Services
342
Rapatra .. . .. • ..
. • .. • ......... .344
Roofing.
.. ...... ...
• . • .. 346
Security... .. .
•.............. 348
Til&lt;/Accounting ..... ... .... .. . .. .. 350
Tr~rvaVEntertllnment •
352
Flnonclol •
.... ... . .. . .. 4DO
Flnanclot Services... .....
. . 405
Insurance . •. .
• • ............. 410
Money to Lend.... ........ .. ... .. ........ 415
Educ:atlon... _ .•
.. :. .
• .. 5DO
Butlneoa &amp; Trada School ... . ............... 505
Instruction &amp; Training... ..
- .. . - 510
LIIIOIII
.. ......... . ..... 515
Peraonal .. ....... .. ..
. ..
520
Anlmolo.. ... ..
. .. ..... ......... 600
Animal Supplies ............ .... ... .. .. .. 605
Horoaa......... ..
- .. 610
Llv88tocl&lt;
615
Palo
..
620
Want to buy .. ..
......625
Agriculture ....... ..
. . 700
Farm Equipment ... . . .
......... 705
; Gorden &amp; Produce. ... ........ . . .. • 710
Hoy, Feed, seed, Grain
• • •• .. . 715
HunU!Itl &amp; Land. - .. ..............................., 720
Want to buy ................................: .. 725
Merchtndlse ..... . .. .. .. .................... 100
Antlquaa • .. ............ ... .... ...
905

Appll•nu.... .•.... ..

•.

1•

••

910

Auctions
... ... ..
915
BorJIIIIn Baaomant .
920
Colllellblto • .
925
Computers .......... .
. ••• .
930
Equipment/Supplleo ... ......................935
Flea Morkelt .... ... ..
840
Fuel 011 CooVWood/Gao • • ..
945
Furniture
.. .. 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport
• • • . • . 955
Kld'o Comer. . ...... • .... ........... ......... ..960
MJ-IIonoout.... .. ..
.. .. , .. 965
w.nttobuy • .,.....
. , ..
.970
Yord Sole ..........................................i75

Racreallonal Vehicles
... t 000
ATV ....... .... ... ... .. . • •
.1005
Bicycles.
.
. .. ...
.1010
Boats!Acceaaorles ..... ........... •• . ••
..1015
Camper/RV,s &amp; Trailers
,
1020
Motorcycloa .... ... ... .... .............. • ...1 025
Other..... .... ..
. 1030
Wantto buy .. . .
.
.. I 035
Automotive. • ...................... .... ... .. 2000
Auto Rt11tai/Lease .
.. 2005
Autos
. ..... •• .. ...................... 2010
Ctaaalc/Anllquaa . ... ... .. ... .. ..
.2015
Commerclalnnduotrlal .. .. .. ..
2020
Porto &amp; Accesoorlea
........2025
Sports Utility. . .
. 2030
Trucks
... 2035
.. 2040
UtliHy ll'otters ..... .... ..... ... •
Vans • . .. . .
.
• 21145
want to buy.. ......... • ... ........................ 2050
Real Eatate So leo • .... .... .. ...
•• 30qtl
Cametery Plata.. . .. ....... ... .. ....... 3005
Commercial.. .... .... . ... ...
3010
Condominium&amp;.. •
-·
. 3015
For Sale by Owner. .•• , ..
3020
Houses lor Sale
3025
Land (Acraaga).. .. ... ... ................ 3030
.. ..... 3035
Lola ...... ...... ... .. .. .. ... •
Want to buy.. • .. • •
.
304Ii
Real Esttte Rentalo ..... .. . .. .. • .... 3500
Apartmento/Townhouaeo . . .. • ..
.. 3505
Commercial. • ... ..... .• . .................. 3510
Condomlnlumt. ..
3515
Houses tor Rent •• •. .• ..... •................ 3520
Land (Acruge)... .. ....
..
. . 3525
Storage
. • . .. ... ..
. ... .... . 3635
Want to Rent ....... ........... ..... .... ...... 3540
Manufactured Housing ..
4000
Lots •
.. ... ... ............................ ..4005
4010
Rentals ... .... .... .- .... ... .. ... .. ........ 4015
Sella.... ... ....................................... . • .4020
Suppllea ... .., .... ..... • •• .. • . .... ..4025
Want to Buy .. .. .......... ..... ...... ... ...... 4030
Reoort Property.. .... ..
• .. .5000
Reaort Proptlrty lor sate.. • -· . .. .,........ 5025
Rooort Proptlrty lor r8nt ... . .. . ... •
5050

Mo................ ..... .... .. ... .. . ... .

Employment •...• ,

..

..•.8000

Accounllng/Financlll.................. .. . ..8002
Admlnfllratlvo/Prolnslonol.. .. 8004
Caohlor/Ciork. ... . .... .. ................ 6006
Child/Elderly Cere ... • .... .. .. ..,. ..
.6008
Clerlcol ... .. .. , .. ... • ... . •• • .6010
Conatructlon. •••••• ••• .• ••. ...• ••.•. •••• • .• 6012
Drlvera &amp; Delivery ... ... .. •........ 8014

EducaUon ............................ ..,................. 8011
Etectrk:at Plumbing...,..........,............... 1!011

Employment Ag•ncl*ll........ :...... ............. 1020

Eritertalnmont............. ............... • .. .. ..•.,8022
Food Servlcaa.. ..... ... . • ........ • . .. 1024
Government a F-at Jobo..... • .. •..... 1026
'Help tilled- General
' • 1026
Law EnfDI'ctment ... . - ... .. ..
8030
Molntenence/Domeatlc ........ " ........... 6032
ManagemoiJIISuporvlsory ... . .. ... ..... 1034
Mochonlco..... •.....................................-

-leal.

.... 10M

Musical
• .. e&lt;MO
Part-Time-Temporariaa ......................8042

Ae1taurentw. •. • • •••• •• .•.
• •• to44
Sotn.... .................................................8048
Technical Tradao.. •...................1050

Teldlloo!FICiory .. .. .

. .. . . . 1052

WantTo Buy
•-=;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Absolute Top Dollar s1l
ver/gold
co1ns
any
10KI14K/1SK gold Jew
elry dental gold pre

::Show Steers fo r sate- All

Eash Ma1n Sl Pomeroy
/All
0
M
DE
WHO
x WH
A
F---1
u. 1Oil/ Coal/
11.
Angus HaHer bro keWood / Gas
S1 000
OBO
Call ~~~~~----~~
7597
:.;740-;;,;6'\:i!!!!·.;.;o;;;,.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Seasoned FI18Wood CAA
==
HEAP
accepted
•=;;;;;=;;P;;III_""!__ 645·5946 or 441 -Q941
~
Brg
Rooster
&amp;
a ~~~--~~~
black/white kitten to Q'Ye Seasoned
Firewood
away 446-3732
Hardwood 446-9204
~~~-~~~~
Reg
Lab
puppies 1st

shors&amp;wormed
$200 985 4138
~~---""':~=.~
GCKC
Registered
btack/tan
lon9halr
Dachshund
males
shots
wolllled
$250

Rrewood for sale 1or InII
t
llo
orrna n
ca
740-379 2891
or
740-446 2513

Mitcellaneous

For eakt German Shep- Mollohan
Carpet
Fall
held &amp; Belglun Mallnola Spetl81 20 oz Oommerpupo
__
cia! Carpel $6 95/)'aid
55911
304
Se~era~
Colors
::FR~E~E~2~8::-wks:--.ol"!'d,~P::Ou-J&gt; 740-446 7444 OuaiiiY ol
p1es 112 Jack Rusoell &amp; Low Pncosl
t/2 mix 304-675-5313
,'ll{:i

:

"1'

''

'

----

j~~=~==

NEW AND USEO STEEL
Steel Beams Pipe Rebar
fOf
Concre1e ~ Angle

or 740·367·773 1

==-o::::::-0::':'
iidt MCH IUilOIN09- MUST 00 ASAPI
Clearance alld cancellad
oide11&gt;
20x24 3Qx44
Huge Cltscounts can save
you 110u~ CaN today
tor
savings!

866-3S2.o489

Eltrtordlnary

Property

Spectlculer view of lhe
Ohio River
Prrvate drive ott Lrncoln
HI!!
Pomeroy
Oh io
woods on three srdes
(4+)acresC1rca
to a 1900
htstorfcal5
home

bedrooms 2 frreplaces 2
;;;;;;;;~~;;; . luU balhs, 2 s!a 'cases
;
beaiJtlful ong1nal wood
Campen/
RV1
&amp;
work many prcture wm
TrGI.,oro
dows moslly new wm
~-=-=----- dows large kitchen and
RV
breakfast room beaut I
Service · at Carmichael fully landscaped w1th 1n
Trar!ers
ground pool s1t en th~
740 446 3825
wrap around porch and
--:':""':~~~~~~ enJOY the
spectacular
'::
VIew of the OhiO Rrver 2
RV SeJVIte at Carmr
chaet
Trailers car detached garage and
2 out butld1ngs Would
740-446 3825
make &amp; wonderful famtly
home o' bed &amp; breaktaSI
Prfllate and Picturesque
SPECTACUlAR VIEW
Sanous 1 nq u~res only
•·~lea
o992 3678
I'WtVI
P se ca1174

========

RE'nta s

""'""""""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""
Aportmonll/

Townhou111
and 2 BR apatrtments
for rent near downtown
Pornt Pleasant All utrll
t es
patd
No pets
Please
call
304 360 0163

Apartment ava1lable now
N
Atverbend Apts
ew
Haven WV Now accept
rng
applications
lor
HUD substdlzed
one
Bedroom Apts Utiht es
ncluded Based on 3()0/o
of adjusted mcome Call
304 882 3121 1 allallable
for Semor and Disabled

CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD
ABLEI Townhouse apan
m8flts
andfor
small
houses for rent Call
740 441 1111 tor applf
cation &amp; mformat1on
:o.;.;;;;:.;;,.;::~;;;;;::::;.~~
-=-Free
Aent
5 pec 1a 11 ,.
2&amp;3BA and up Central
Atr WID hookup tenant
pays electric EHO E!m
VIew
(304)682·30 17

Apts

Spnng
Valley
Green
Apartments 1BA lor rent
$375
month

£.:74~0:;;44:;;6;;.:.15;:;99~-~~
Tw1n RtVSrs Tower IS ac

ceptlng appl cat1ons for
waiting hst lor HUD sub
sldlzed 1 BR apartment
for the etderly/d 1sabled
call 675 6679
::"':-...,:--~:-::2 br upsta1rs wlbath IN
1ngroom
dln~ngroom
k !chen washroom half
balh available Dec 3id

(740)992 20 12
Beech Sl M•ddleport 2
b t 1 hed llln&lt;&gt;nmant
E
200
r um s
....,......
xcephonal
acre uhhl1es pa1d no pels
caltle larm m Galha Co dep
&amp;
ref
OH
60+
acres
well drained
bottomland (740)992 -() 165
along Raccoon Creek Beech
Street
Mtddle
SO+ acres pasture bat port
2 bedroom fur
ar.ce wooded Stock wa ntshed apartment ut!ti
ter pond, 2 springs wen has pa1d no pets deFarm has carried 40-45 pos•t
&amp;
rererences
94 ChiYSier Lebaron 4dr COWS wlcalves Modem (740)992 0165
Sedan Approx 112 OliO
ml $1800 For Info call brick ranch style house New Haven furnished 1
wl finished
walk-oul Bd Apt has W/D No
245 5494 aHer 6pm
basement 937·596 6774
pets dep Ref 992 0165

~=La~nd_.(Acrwa;;;;;:;~gei;;;i;);;;;;;;

~~~-~-:--~ , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ,
Neon 4 door 5
speed $1500 ooo Call
256 1652 01 256 1233

96

Vans

~~~~§:;:""~~

=======

CAAOO/CONCESSION
Tliii'M 64
I+W
GOO!!fNI'CK I'I.ATl!ED
$3999 VIEW OUR EN
TIRE TRAILER INVEN
TORY AT
W&gt;NW CARMICHAELTRAILERS COM
740-446-3825

3BR 2 Bath $299 month
446 3384

~--~~---~

Channel forFlatDra1ns
Baf OnveSteel 03 Kla Sedona under
Grating
ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L Warranty
$7 500
Scrop Mol&amp;la Open Mon 3()4.675-2550
EB'Ij
'
~. Tuo, ' \'iad
&amp;
Frl
XIEfEJIIIIJil,T, : illom-4;:!opm
Closed
Wlll\tTO luy
'-'.Ll.Ev i'lof!SEILIVE· Tlfu, • • S.ill &amp; sun ~~~-:-~~
STOCK
TRAILERS, 740-446-7300
Wlln1 lo buy Junk CIIIS
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
C&lt;~ll740-388-0684
MENT
TRAILERS, ~~-:-~-~~
qr,1 E-'~1•
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; Nice Spi~OI Plano $300 WDO
·-~' '
HOMESTEADER
304.s82..336 2

fann E• 'P lllnf

446 2923

1935
US
currency
prooflmlnl
sets
dta
mon
MTS Coin Shop
151 2nd AveniJe Galli
;;;;,,..,..,
-

Jet AerattOn MOtors reparred, new &amp; reburlt 10 ~~....~~iO":'"":~
AKC Mini Dachshund Slock Call Ron Evans 02 Honda Accord V6
loaded, 92 000
mtles
$300
Call 1·800·537-9528
Pup
Call 740 245-5526
740 256 1498
~~~':"'::~~~ ~~--:---~ ----:::---"::':'~=
For sale 5-,Shihtzu pup A Kenmore heavy duty 1996
Oldsmoble
ptes 6 wks old, 1 (f) upfight freezer rn good Achieva, 120 000 mrles
$250 00 4 (m) $200 00, conditron tor $200 Call Asking
$500
Contact
full blooded but not reg aher 5pm 740·949·3059
o•
74 441 5460
304 87.-4625

_•ach~-304"':':~59~3-38~20~~

Rt•l E~lll•

1BR Apt W/0 hookups
satellite TV incl w/renl
close to hosprtal Call
740 339 0362
2 br apts 6 m from Hoi
zer Some utlht1es pd or
.. Hau.., For Sal•
appl ances
.. ava11
$400/mo
+
dep
3 Bed 2 Bath' Only 740-418 5288
or
388 8039
$15 500
for
11shngs ~~~:-~~~~
800 620 4946 ex R019
2BR APT CIA (740)
441 0194
4 bed 2 bath a office n ~3~b~i-:$4::00~a~m~o~1~bl
town
hw &amp; t1le 1loors $295 a mo plus uttllt 1es
updated kttchen &amp; baths &amp; deposit
3rd
St
pnvacy fence &amp; above Racine (740)247 4292
ground
pool
security
system much more 130 3 rooms and ball'! up·
Basl!am Dr $1 29 OOOFor sta rs
Completely fur
1
pies and nformatton
go pets
mshedRef wllh
WID No
to
wwworvbcom
Res 441-0245

~~;...~~~~':":
Avoiding foreclosure 14
payments left make one
move In 446 3093
~:::"':~"!:"'~~~~
3 BR 2 ba&amp;h attached ga
rage w/1 acre on Morn
lngstar Road new fur
nace &amp; heat pump
$125 000 740-949 2009

Open1ng Thnh Shop 482
ancr
121•e
Horton St Mason WV,
Crlssy s Ol:ids &amp; Enps, Thursdays &amp; Saturdays
large seleCtiOll of salt &amp; 9am-3pm each week,
pepper
shakers
Fire bargalnsl
also
free
c)Othes &amp; stuff
Ktng
glassware
~-:!I.Malodt~#.~;;o,;;;-::: 8 vv-r
~. 00 Mon Fn L'.tV:!
\1\/U

J~OO

Find all the
news that
matters
to

----~-

-------For Salt ly &lt;&gt;w-'
House on SR 588 tor
more •nlormatton and
pictures go to orvb com
I d number IS browning
740-446 7204

~alhpolls

laatlp l!l:nbunr

Jamt fillrasant !Rrqtstrr
The Da1ly Sentmel
jlunbap OI:unrs -jlrnlmrl

•

�• ••• 7

~ Ta•t•

.._,....,

t!

*'

Wanlocl ·o-ral Holp Wanlocl • Genoral

2 br.ln Countly, out bact&lt; Scenic location, oonven·
1 tr\11 Aplo. • - - 10 NeW WV Hud lent to town and af1onl·
1111 ' p • 1 52 West· ~ ~-3~ n .
able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms

Dr., 11om
$365
"' 2br on ~
7•~ ...
2568
·~ R•"~ In Ma· (740)992·5639

--

~
HouM1g
Opportu·· son.

•o

01 e-mail to SOU1honlohlngO~II.com

•

u.
nv

882 3512

!, H:~k.

~:

La~

40.
for details
7 992 5094

740-992-5064.

.- .g Clppot1unity.

Equal

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!!
llonlala

8111ciot11 3BR apt. to. _ ill Gallipolis. $650

·.rnonct\
lrlltlh, .

Includes

-•110·

749-5'J1-5174

water, 2 and 3 bedrooms. ExiTa
No pets nice! AU electric. Call
6r
or 740-446-4234

:::44~1:..;.0;.:.11;.:0;...~=-'-.-- _740-~208~-7~86-1!"'"!"'"-

:

,.
~
Townhoose Fode&lt;at F~nds lust re~ . 2BA, t :5 ·~ased tor land Ownert~ .

bl.th, back patio, pool, No closing cost and
pllyground, (trash, ssw- ZERO OOWNI Will do

wa.ter

IQO,

pd.)

·
IS
•mPfovemen ·

$425/sec. Bankruptcy: &amp; Bad Credit

1'25/rent.

OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed-

dip. CaJ1740-367-o547

CaDDIIdal

,

2 boy aeMce station 1

JocUon

land

Pike.

Nqtllred. Call
tor more Info.

laase
448·36+1

0111co building iocatad in
OIIIpotil OH 28 Cedar
St. Rent $450 mth. + de-

....~;,;56~868~1"""':!!!!
-:;.~!Ollfl#7401 ' - ,_ ....,,

rooms
available.
~740;;;.,.;446-;;;;.;3384;;;;;,i-':"'-~
Double wide tor rent
38R , 2 bath, Porter area
$600 rent
+ deposit.
laase l\lil!u 1
yea.,r.
740367
~
740-645-3413 .
38R 2 bath on farm $760

gradiJite. FuU time potiona $580 por week,
rapid advancements and
· For an ;nterYiew

tile

.call746-446-77118.

population!

160, Gallljlolls, up and some 'light con45631 . WoOdtand structlon. Call 992-5094
1990, Centers, Inc. is an and loave -message.
layton, 3 bl,
14x70 ·
"'""'I
w•...,. ancas, AAIEEO.
An EKCellent way to eam
must
be
moved,
The Ne AV
$t3,000, (740)992-5924
o.;..,. &amp; D..... ,
money.
w on.
· Call
Marilyn
F
1e 1987 Fie "'" Oriverti neodod:
COL _.304~-882~·2;;:64;_;;5;....'""::""!~
or sa
m""'
.,
Homes Single
Wide, Drivertl willing to drive tor AVONI All Areas! To BIJy
4 70 A
,._...,, •---1
ready lx
S
t K '
verage ~N• ~
.,
oom- or Sail Shirley pears
tioo,
$6800, .
Call pony. Experience Is pre- 304.675-1429
(740)992-6049 to&lt; de- tarred but not necessary.
tans. must be moved .
Driver must be willing to Domino's now hiring safe
do pre-maintenance on drivers at all locations,
.,...._ _ _ _ _...,...
must be t 8"rs
old • A~•·
Government funds avail- trucks and equipment,
1
•
..-r-•r
able for home buyers yardlplant and other mls- in person .
w11o own land. .so floWn , oaflartoous chores.
Ex· -H-Iri_ng_!m_mtcl...,l·a.llty-Call
toll
free perlence
operaling ·
877·31o-2577 IO&lt; pre-ap- equipment and exiTa
$$250$$

~--"!""~-~ OH

"· " c

proval.

=

. s.kllls such as ~ng a

pluo. Starting pay bi!SO&lt;f
on experience and drivlng reoonl. Bemillts Ineluding health ·InsuranCe,
available af1er meeting
employment

Sign on Bonus
No experle!'ICe required!
No Credit C8rd 'sal.esl
No COllections!

man·

WINTER STORAG,E
Mcig_s Co . Fairgrounu~

Oct . 25 . 200!
9:00a .m . II :OO u.ru.

Travel re·

require·

at · Darwin. chOre&lt;t.

Day

Ph.

;::;o=.-;;-G.i~i:. 740-388.0000

New &amp; Used Tire~ .
We bu y used ti res.

computer wheel
lllignn1enb.ligh1 ·

needed (references re·
qulred). Must be depend·
able and honest Call ·

fnt.-chntiic: work .

~:l9-;;,;t;,21"'0""'"""="""""'

complelc se rv ic~ ui)
changt.!s. small en gine

-,.;;;;;;..;;M~u..
oical~;;;;;;=

rcpuir.

iii

We service :md
winterize bQat~ ami
RV's

Band Look·
lng lor singer, range hom
Skynar d to Pan tera, Se rt··
ous Inquiries on·ly con·
tact OJ (740)992·9904,
Mart&lt; 740-4t6·1090

Rock/Metal

a

master's

WV.304JOHN
576-2220
ASK
FOR
G, GOOD
~AV, AND FUN WORK:

degree

in able.

!'lease

re--

send

is required. sume
10
Pteaaa email a cover let· LLCOCAREO.COM
or
18 ' 0
retui'T19 to tctan· tax to 74D-446-9104
lckiOgliUipollscareercol·
-':"",_.~,...~~tege.odU or faK It to
Ten ..-hfono nMd
740-446-4124.
1tttod by next woofd

Your lllgbllo Klmt, Dollvmd Rlaittto

y,., Door.

Go......... ,~
PUIUC NOT?CE
CLERK, OHIO ENVI· 676232
Jabo
THE FOLLOW?NG AP. RONMENTAL PROTEC. TH?S FINAL ACTION
POStAL JOBS
PUCAnONS ANDIOR noN AGENCY, P.O. NOT PRECEDED BY
V!!R?P?!!D
COM- BOX 1041, COLUM· PROPOSED · ACTION $17.69-$28.27/HR., now
PLAINTS WERE RE· IUS, OHIO 432161048 AND ?S APPEALABLE hiring. For application
CE?VED, AND THE (TELEPHONE: 614-614- TO ERAC. DETAIL and free govemm011t (ob
FOUOW?NG DRAFT. 2129). "FINAL AC· I"LANS
FOR Into, calf American As·
PROPOSED.ORF?NAL nONS: ARE ACTIONS PWSIO:OH5300112 soc.
of
labor
ACT?ON8 WERE 18- OF THE DIRECTOR PLAN N0:678232 RE· 1·913-599-8228, 24/hrs.
SUED, IY THE OH?O WHICH ARE EFFEC· GARDING RA?N80W emp. sarv.
ENV?RONMENTAL nVE UPON ISSUANCE R?DGE RD. AND SWAN ~PO~S:::T~O:::F=F~IC::'E"'"':N~O~W
PAOTEC11!)H.AGENCY OR A STATED EFFEC. RD., MEIGS COUNTY, HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
(OEPA) LAST WEEK. TIVE · DATE. PUR· 01!10
or $S7Ktyr.
Includes
"ACTIONS" ?NCLUDE SUAHT
TO OHIO (11) 12
-"
THE ADOPT?ON, MODI- REVISED CODE SEC·
.Fou.Ben, OT. Place · by
FICAT?ON, DR REPEAL nON 3745.04, A F?NAL - - - - - - - - - adSouiOO, not afllill!ed
OF ORDERS (OTHER ACTION MAY BE AP·
Public Nodce
wltt1 USPS who hires.
THAN EMERGENCY PEALED TO THE ENV?·
f ·868-403-2582
ORDERS); · THE 18- RONMENTAL REVIEW PUBUC NOnCE
BUANCE,
DENIAL, APPEALS COMM?S- NOTICE: lo h.,.;,y
IIOD?F?CATION OR RE· SION (ERAC) (FOR· given t1lat on s.turday,
VOCAT?ON OF L~ MEALY KNOWN AS Nowmber 15, 2008 II
CENSES, PERM?TS, THE ENVIRONMENTAL 10:00 a.m., a public
LEASES, VARIANCES, BOARD OF REV?EW) Hie will be held ot
DR CERTIF?CATES; BY A PERSON WHO 43111
SR
124;
AND . THE APPROVAL WAS A PARTY TO A PoloerOy, Ohio. The
OR D?SAPPROVAL OF PROCEEDING
IE· Farmentlank and SavPLANS AND SPECIFJ. FORE THE DIRECTOR lngo C!lftiPIIny II HI~
CAT?ONS. '"DRAFT AC. BY F?LING AN APPEAL lng lor caah In hand or
T?ONS" ARE WR?TTEN WITHIN. 30 ' DAYS OF cer?lflld check the lo~
STAT!MENTS OF THE NOnCE OF THE F?NAL lowing callllettll:
D?RECTOR OF ENYI· ACTION. PURSUANT 1989'240-A Timberjack
RONMENTAL PR011i:C· TO OHIO REVISED Cable Sklddlr 7696
nON'S (DIRECTOR'S) CODE
SECTION 1995 Frelgh?llner s.m?
?NTENT WITH RE· 3745.07, A FINAL AC· 1FUYODYB6SH41541?1?1
SPECT TO THE 18- TION ISSUING, DENY· The Farmerl Bank ond
SUANCE,
DENIAL, ?NG,
MODIFY?NG, Savlngo
Company,
eTC. OF A
REVOKING, OR RE· Pomeroy, Ohio, ,..
PERMIT,
L?CENSE, MEWING A PERMIT, L7- Hrveathe rlgh? to bid
ORDER, ETC. INTER· CENSE, OR VAR?ANCE 111hll oalo, end to w?lhUTED PERSONS MAY WHICH IS NOT PRE· draw 1he above cal?lt·
SUBMIT
WRITTEN CEDED BY A· PRO· .,.., , prior 10 ulo.
COMMENTS .OR RE· .POSED ACTION, MAY Further, The Ferment
OUEST A PUBLIC BE APPEALED TO THE lank and Savlnge
MEETING REGARD?NG ERAC 8Y FILING AN Company,_,.,.. 1he
DRAFT
ACT?ONS. APPEAL WITHIN 30 rlgh? to re)lct eny or a?l
· COMMENTS OR PUB· DAYS OF ?SSUANCE bldo oubml-. .
L?C MEETING RE· OF THE F?NAL ACT?ON. The above deocriOUISTS. MUST BE ERAC APPEALS, AC· colla18ral will be oold
IUIWTTED WITHIN 30 COMPANIED BY A $70 '"11 lo-where II'", wl1h
DAYS OF NOT?CE OF FILING FEE WHICH not expreooad or 1mTHE DRAFT ACTION. THE COMMISSION IN piled we"""" given.
"PROPOSED
AC· ?TS D?SCRETION MAY For IUr?her lnfOI'ml1lcln,
110NS" ARE WRmEN REDUCE IF 8Y AFF?· or lor on appointment
STATEMENTS OF THE DAV?T THE· APPEL· 1o ?nopoct collaterol,
D?RECTOR"S ?NTENT L
A
N
T prior 10 ule date conWITH RESPECT TO D E M 0 N S T RATE S lltC1 Cynclle or Ken at
THE ?SSUANCE, DE· THAT PAYMENT OF 992·2138.
NIAL, MODIF?CATION, THEFULLAMOUNTOF (11)12, 13,14
REVOCAT?ON, OR RE· THE FEE WOULD
.
·
NEWAL OF A PERMIT, CAUSE
EXTREME
UCENSE, OR VARI· HARDSHIP, MUST BE __P_u_b_llc_No_tl_ce
__ p:=:-l.
ANCE. WRITTEN COM- FILED W?TH: ENV~
MENTS
' AND RONMENTAL REVIEW The Home Natlona?
REQUESTS FOR A APPEALS COMII?&amp;- lank will ouC11on ?he
PUBLIC MEET?NG RE· S?ON, 309 SOUTH following Item on Sat·
QARO?NQ A PRO. FOURTH
STREET, urday1 November 15,
POSED ACTION MAY ROOM 222, COLUM- 2008, It .10:110 a.m. II
liE
SUBMmED BUS, OHIO 43215. A ?llllank'l partdng lo?.
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF COPYOFTHEAPPEAL 2004
Iuick
RenNOT?CE OF THE PRD- MUST IE SERVED ON d I t v o u I
POSED ACnON. AI? THE
DIRECTOR 3G6DA03E0415727'11
AD.IUD?CAT?ON HEAR- WITHIN 3 DAYS AFTER 19M Jeep . GriiM! ·
1NCI IIAY BE HELD ON F?LING THE APPEAL C h I r D k I I
A PROPOSED ACTION WITH THE ERAC.
· 1J4M~SRC221102
?F A HEARING RE· FINAL APPROVAL OF Tho Home Na?lonll?
OUEST OR OBJEt- PLANS AND SPECIFI· Bank rmrne ... right
liON 78 RECE?VED BY CAt?ONS
to r$cf eny llld ,171
'rH7! OEPA W?THIN 30 T U P P E R b?cla. A?? viii?D?II DAYS OF ISSUANCE PLA?NS/CH!!STER aotd, u ,la wilwe 71,
OF THE PROPOSED WATER
DISTRICT with no ........U. - ·
WRmEN 39561 BAR 30 ROAD
preeoad or lnlf!?lld. For
RE· REEDSVILLE OH AC. on appoln?ITtlli? 10 - ·
PUBL?C TION DA11i:: 10130121108 call 949-2210, Ilk lor
FACILITY DESCRIP· Sheila.
T?ON:
COMMUNITY (11) 12
BE WA11i:R SYSTEM
HEAR?NQ tDENT?FICATION NO. :

No experience required!
No Sales!
No CQUeet:lonsl.

Full and Pan-tfme

PositionsI
On-site Dootor
Medical,' Dental, 401KI
Bonus Incentives!

•

•

•

45771
740·949-2217

Slza.s:x10'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM. 8:00PM
1 11 41 1

Wt&amp;t
•KQJto 8 7
•

YOUNG'S
CARPENHR
SERVICE

-------.6

Dealer: West
Vulnerable : Bolh

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

South

rT...;;:,.;.;~ll:::--:-r.r-:------_;_-_:.,
YOIJ'/l~

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

I I It

II

I

I'

I

''

'•

It

ma
~ ·

BARNEY
THAT LUREEN

RUN

OFF WIF

A TRAVELIN'
SALESMAN !!

THAT MIZ
PRUNELLY
GOT ENGAGED !!

l
I

THI'&lt;EETWOONEZEI'&lt;O ...

!! THAR
TERMS!!

....

~LL II\'&lt; ()ff\(.LE.TS TUI&lt;:.~ OU\~

I

00~.

l'lOT
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Pau? Rowe

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

to&amp;JU5i
XFW&lt;\BLE.t:&gt;

!&gt;.CAl~!

E&amp;6S!

Hoalfh Caro

experience· bo·

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Training

~304)·372-8346

Company

By Blll'nice Bed• O.ol
If you know Individuals wh o are privy to
big Ideas, keep your eyes and ears open
when in their

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dee. 21 ) -

740-992·6971

tratlon and

know-how. get them out of
the way as early as possible. Your Jem·

H&amp;H
Guttering

Quality Seamless

Seamless Guuers
Roofing. Siding , Gut1ers

Maintenance Plus

740-653·9657

EMPLOYMENT

If

you have .any tasks that require concen·

Free

Insured ill3ondlld

presence In the year

ahead. There Is a good chance you could
pick up some interesting things that
would prove to be valuable.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - One of
your biggest probl&amp;ms will be an inclina·
lion to treat minor situations in a heavyhanded manner. Try not to take everything so seri ously. Relax and let live.

'

Classifleds!

23 Farm
wagon

item 45

24 Osaka

need
Razor

feature

sashes

46 Kind

26 Lhasa of pool
27 Venison
47 -~
28 Morays and 48 Stockholm

8 Distribute
9 Circulars
tO Yr . parte
t 1 London
park
12 Fertilizer

congers

30 Quivering

carrier

49 Beluga
delicac~

dessert

32 Compass
pt.
36 Nature

chemical ·

51 Goblin

f 7 Skip sto~es
(prel.)
19 Swahili
39 Actress
honorifics
- Sedll'!'ick

Gutters
Crl/lllm'n wl ,(:

N.t·~ idt'nl iu!

Vinyl

Sid i ng/Replace1nent
Windows/Remodelin g
Bonded &amp; I nsurcd .

740-992-7493 Oll'i ce ·
740-416-8339 Cell
Free EstinmtCll
Pomemy, Ohio

RDIII HYSlllS
WAll
llRtiU.....,_II

740-882-5682

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
f'

I

perament and patience me.y lose control
. as the clock ticks on .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Your

'f"E:S. MP:.AM,
HE'S M'( D06..
WELL, SORT OF..

NO, I DON'T

Prompt lind Quality
Wurk

* ln sureU

Johnson's Tree
Service
·

social gi-aces might not have a whole lot
of staying power, so try to make early
retreats or &amp;Its when socializing with
others. The less time spent with people

AT ATTENTION ..

cow and BOY

,.;..--------.. ..---------. ..--------..,...,
w

740-367-os_M
Free Es11ma1e~

740·367-!)536

t'or Remodeling and New House Building
Can: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding o Roofing o Pole
Barns • Pa1io's, Porches and Decks

.1111 W. MARCUM, DWIIER
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bouom, OH

740-985-4i4l
Cdl : 740-41 6-1834
25+ years experience Free E.~timafts

Adve'r tise
in this space for
$64 per month

as ·a know-It-all; this person could

ers
.. (March 21-April 19) ...:... Before you
ARIES
start spending Incoming funds on your
present desires, It might be wise to pay
off some old ~lgati ons . Once cJeared

.

Each 1ener1n IM r:1Dt!al stands tor a1olhar
Today·~

"CYRXM C EBTBR

RN

RLX JXCHL ,

BR'T LCMP · R .N JXABXEX RLCR
ABEX

'•

clue: Uequa_ls P

BD C WCRXMBCA

ZX

ZNMAP . " .

eHe THINKS SHe G07.JW
PWCI&lt; A CHICKeN IN

...r....,.AIIOUf A HAU'·HO?JR

.,

.,

UCW TLCZ

•

PREVIO USSOlUTION - "Adream doesn't become a 1eality through magiC ;~
it takes sweat , determination and hard work · . Gene1a1 Colin Powell
:

I

ICI

form four .almpla words.

KNUDNI

·I I I I P
p s 0 w0

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

CEN UL

'

f-....,-,.-,-..,.--! N
7
I~
J

I

. I

r--:-:-::-~-:--:--::-~-.

I
,. I I e

H A WL IE

I! I

My ·neighbor sighed,
"When gmndparent1 enter
tlte door. discipline gO&lt;.'S oul

the --···."

the cho~&lt;kle quoted
?vCompleio
filling in the missing words

you develop from step Nc. 3 below .

UNSC ~AMBlE

ABOVE lETTE RS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 11111108
Zither - Logic - Joint - Quiver - GET to IT
I've noticed some people always get in the last word , while
o?hers ntrely seem to GET lo IT.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

e new person.
TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20) - If you are
forced to spend time with someoni:l wilh
whom you've previously had contrary
words, don't respond negatively, even if
you sense storm clouds brewing. Stay
above the tray.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - Others
won 't be In th e mood to cater ro your
whims, so don't e)(pect them to do any·
thing thai you can easily do yournelf.
up.

9-IZIIL

Local Contractor

courage
of your
convictions.
don't be
lntlrilldated
by someone
whoand
comes
on ··

r~--:~:-...llllii::::-,

0"19-81-f

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

.

aHempl to put you down in lronl of olh· .

• ''"!"""'-'"
Ttcl-4t1-tll7

• VInyl Siding
·Replacement
'Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
•G'arages
• Pole !lulldings
• Room Adldi11ons
Owner:
~ames Keeset) It
742·2332

is high.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20)- Have the

~!!!.:.::~==~==U!!JI!i!li!!!!!£'!.!12!!!i!IIJ!~:::::_::..::::::::::::~~~~£:~~

111....-d

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

by Luis Campos

Calabn i ~Oi11 Eif ~l)'lllt:g ram5 aiD c1n1a1 1ran clJOlai"IYJS ll~ ' am~specp:e paS! and pr&amp;SEV11

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It's rare
that you show your temper, but when you
do, woe unto tho se wh o anger you. This
COuld be one of those days when the
possibility for misinterpretlng intentions

Complete Tree Care

J&amp;L
Construction

.

the beher.

KNOWWAAT
HE'S DOIN6
HERE ..

*Reasom1blc Rules

*Experienced
References A.vailabh~ !
Call Gary Stanley @
. 740-591 -8041
Please leave messa e

ASK HER HOW LON6
I HAVE TO KEEP TIIESE
TROOPS 5TANDIN6

CELEBRITY CIPHER
'

low

RICK PRICE

http:lllOH.IrtiOcltiOfl.com

CO

. -~=

New Homes. Room Addllions. Remode?lng,
Metal &amp;
lle&lt;ks,

··, ;

Shop

43 Kind
of poodle

•

44 Accused's ·

look

0 Rearrange
letters of the
four scrornblod words bo-

Thursday, Nov. 13, 2008

SAVINGS

1-888-IIIC.PAYU
Ext. 1911
· Chock uo out If

shout

Astro·Graph

•

nuses

David Lewis

1he ax to
40 Bleacher.

queen, !he odds heavily favor finessing.
.But pause for a lew moments to count
!he high-card points.
Dummy has 9 and you hold 19. That
leaves only 12 for !he opponenls, and
West opened lhe bidding. He musl have
all of !hose honor-cards. (Note !hat ~
East had started with jack-doubleton of
spades, h6 would have played his jack a1
trick ona.) After taking your spade ace,
cash Ihe ace and king· of diamonds.
Here, you gel nothing less than your jusl
deserts, dropping West's queen and raking in 10 tricks.
II you can count only one tt1ing at the
bridge table, make it high-card points.

Home Health Care aides
needed
immedl,.tely .
muot be certified or have

.

38 Gives

of range .

22 Unpleasant 42 Thin fog

cream your contract

Racine, Ohio 740-247-201 ~

on

21 A"nd so on

Instead, you must run the diamonds.
Normally, with eight cards m1ssing the

THE BORN LOSER

Get A Jump

37 Telegraph
code

All pa.!18

2U Imagines 40 Googplanli
as possible 41 Out
•

100 percent true. The OVElrcaller might
' w1th
have only a good 17, 18 or19 po1n1S
a good siK·card minor - .for example,
the South hand in today's diagram. (Wi1h
14-16 poinls, lhe fourth hand makes a
jump overcall in his minor. In this position, it is not a weak jump overcall.)
If you were Soulh and landed m three
no-lrump, how would you plan the play
aher Wesl leads the spade king?
You would love to. play on clubs, but you
know that West has the ace. He will lake
!he !riel&lt; and cash all of his spades lo

z 2.

~3

I TOLD 'WEEZY I TOLD ELVINEY

brow1er
52 Warrior
woman

shelter

turnover

Pass

giGtiT -~· Wtf~/l~ "MAIN
worth extra points
/ fT/l~ET" C/lOSSES "WAL£. ~- In yeslerday's column, I said that it the
STDI:~T",· Ttfl: ~•AMI: i; ~ dealer opens lhe bidding wnh one of a
.·. •. :
,..J.o~
1- ,...
lio ~ .. :r
suit and two passes follow, a jump·over/LlA ~·/.~ T
aa ~ call of two no-trump by the tourth hand
1.1"' ''"U';;S
0 . ~~ ~ says lhat, given lhe chance, he would
"St'll) ~OW~
~; ~
have opened 1wo no-trump.That was nol

U· II

1: ~:~:1l~::::l~g

available contact
Kay
or
Shelley.
1:86ti·368·1f 00.

3 NT

Eut

__-, ·A long suit is

Room Addition• &amp;

Wc&gt;r/1' NEXT WEEKlll

'Mlit-

Pass

44 Pleads
48 Exo1ic
vacation
50 Bookthop

ttandt

35 Home

Op eni~s lead: • K

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Remodeling

28 Years Experience

sulating SeNiee

Weal · North
1•
Pass

2 NT

;;;;;;;;;;;;i.;;;;;;i;~;i;;;;;;;;;;;

1 year

~

... A 6 2
• A Q
t A K 10 g 7 4.
• Q' 3

~----;;;;;;;;;m
" 'o'"'p"-'
d ~

. .....,..ttmlt..r.:.-kcabiDotey•....,.

8 6 5

South

CAll US TODAY
FOR .RHJUCETJ
WINTER RATES
DEC. ·FEB

C./I TODAY/
.lnllrvlow
TOMORROW/I

WV 80 Hr. AJlllrontlce
Miner Ctasa MSHA • 24
Hr. CJ&amp;R W"' Mine Forman Ctase Safety Con-

•

Stop &amp; Compare

Hardwood Calnecry And FurnHtlre

• 5
.97 5 4 2
• 853

10 6 3

T40-992-1m

140-41&amp;-11&amp;4

3

Puzzle

Crossword

12 l1&amp;101aadin 53 Adjuslt,
13 Complicalod,
at fires
M 1 p«&gt;&gt;l7om 54 Spoil of
14 Archipelago
indulgence
dota
55 Loave
15 Realizes
in a hurry
16 Insect killer
18 Caaual we11
DOWN
19 Goatee··
21 Macaroni
1 Novelist
ehape
-Grey
25 Rose Bowl 2 Woodwind
evenl
3 Nutritious
29 Pekoe
graint
cke1
4 Santa Fe
hrs.
[ wds./
31 onica
5 Vegas
tenia
lead~n
33 -Dion
6 HaPf'y tune
34 Flip-chart
7 Toward

11 12 011

Ea•t '

• Q 2
• A7

• Complete
Rem udeling

Aucuoneer:
BIIIV Ro Goblalr.

alternative
10 River
of 10ng

• J 6
.KJ! 092

• New Homes
• Garages

husillf!.\'S

CJ .ASSIFIEDS

•

Racine , Ohio

~

f Skyrocket
5 Burro

• KJ 8

!!!iii!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!!!!!!!

Waekjy Pay and
$260 S~n On Bonus!

29670 Bashan Road

• g

We appreciate your

THE LOCKS AND DAM
IN GALUI'OLIS FERRY

mathemattcs

ROBERT
BISSELl
CIIISliiCTIII

Mon-Fri.
8:0(J"am . 4:30 pn,.
Sitt. K:OO mn · 12

Work NEXT WEEKIII
740-388-8513
&amp; email a cover letter and
Now Hiring Experienced,
1-888-IMC·PAYU
~740-~36;;:.;..7·.;.;77;.;:62;;..._ _ _ 740-245-9215
Evenllgs resume to jdanickiOgefllwaltstaff. cooks, dish·
Ext. 2321
For Rent '
&amp;
weekends
Ph. poltscareercoleQ9.edu or
washers &amp; , delivery drivfax
tt
to
740-446-4124
Apply
Online:
Mobile homes &amp; !ots • 740-388-8017
&amp;
ers apply fn person
hltp:fJiobt.lntocllk)n.corn
(no pats) In Ashton WV 740-245·9215
&amp;
Harry's
Famous
Hot
GallipoliS Caretr College Service Uanager &amp; Serv304-576-2942.
740· 794-()460
Dog,s New HaVen
Is accepting resumes fm Ice Technician positions
a
mathematics av4Vlable. Health care &amp;.
instructor.A minimum of Rdrement plans avail- .
lo

Hill's Self
Storage

North

(740) 992-5344

GOODTIMES BAR IS
NEEDING ENERGETIC,

C.U TODAYJ
lntervlfirt
TOMORROW/I

degree In account- ·
&amp; ~ is required. Please

(5 Points) ·

-';;;;;;;;;~~....;;;;;;;;;i;;;
iii
Pan~tlme
Housekeeper

401KI
On-site Doctor
Weekly Pay and
Bonus lncenti".lesl

Envlron11*1U
Medical, Dental, EAP,

lo(S

""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!==...,.
Main?ona-/
"---...._
"""'~

TENDER'S
WAITRE·
SES,
BIKINI
BAR,
DANCERS AND A SE·
CURITYIOOOR
MAN,
MUST HAVE GREAT
PERSONALITY,
AND
DRIVE
TO
MAKE
GREAT MONEV.APPLV
AT t22 8 HUNTINGTON
RD (RT2,) NEXT TO

Profeuiontl Wor..

or 740·797-4356 Ia. bloekad, .leveled · and -an· A mlninum Q1 a Bache· .

Pomt..,.oy, OH

PROFESSIO~Al,BAR·

Full and Part-time
Poaitlona
Dt.y and Evening Shifts

Home, 2Bedroom, 2bath, bed 2 bath gas, .t 1997
1br.hooae lg. kitchen, full vinyl siding, shingle roof, 14&lt;70 2 bed 2 bath gas, GaMipoio Ce~r COllege
· btl, laundry nn. &amp; stor· lhermapavne
window, 1 2002 t61180 3 bed 2 Is accepting resumes for
llfll· Dep &amp; ref. no pe_ls, 20ft.porch 740-664-4356
bath.
Priced deivered an accounting Instructor.

304-882-3900.
2 BR house In GallipoliS,
W/0 mnn.
$415/mo
1150/dep. You pay all
utllittea. No section B or
HUD.
Cell
wayne
--3802

case

Route

home

~!"'"""::~--~.....
New 3 BediOO!l' . homes
from $214.36 per month,
mth.
utilities included. inctudes many upgrades,
oc540:::;.;
·7.:;29-;;.1:.;:33:;.1;...~~- delivery
&amp;
set-up.
740-385--2434
Trailer tor ient in Mercer· ~-.,...--.,....,..,..,..,

or caled

progressive

agement.
Must enjoy
"""'-"g With the youth

740-4.23-9728

for ist time
buyers who own

Available

inp.

30+593-6076

and ~---=:-~

management

:a oo;;

16" 80 2 bed 2 bath, 1 schedule an interview
Bak Repo! (~% down, 15
Call446-2458
yean, 811 APR) for listinx s ~~~;:;;~~= 2000 16x70 2 bed 1
14" 7.()
2005
I(X).6:zo.4946 ex R027
Mobile bath, 1 1999 161180 2
!ducaHon

Haven

re-

manent position com· source&lt;.
ra,il~at~
pany lrlfning provided meetings and WOII&lt;5hops
must be a High School a......,...ts, data entry.

m011ts. Calf Veltey Brook
!'!~f!lla~~~~!" ville $450 rent $500 de- ~
Concrete corporate orftce
~19\llm! 3 bod, 2 balh, pos~ No Pats No Smak· Prices Reduood 2 2006 at
304-773.5519
to

New

Phillip
Alder

presenta·

devetoping

NEA
ACROSS

land or have land or
have 1am1ly lana. Zero
Down Easv Financing.
Cell to be Pre-Qualified.

NANCE
AVAilABLE.
(740) 446-3570
~"!""~--~:-~

The Daily Sentinel • Page B~.

www.mydailysentin~l.com

BRIDGE

quired. Position requires
Rdea)C!: Apnl 2:'U !Mt&lt;1
Oh~
Yaltey
Home a BAIBS and at least 1 A fet! of $.2fl.t.Ml will he
Health, Inc. hiring Home years eKperience in lden· charged for early arriva l.
and late arrival. curly r~·tn\wa l.
Health
Aides.
STNA, tirylng, developing
la~t remo\·~1. or ;uwtimc
CNA, CHHA, PCA may securing · resources for · accc\~ b wuntctl to
apply at 1480 Jackson diverse population.
Ex- fair~rl)Unth t&gt;ttK'f than
Pike, Gallipollt, Ohio or ce11ent futl-time opportu· stated dat.:-d. IJ uildi n~
n:.;~ries and
phOne 740-441 -1393 tor nlty
with
OOnelits. sp;~w i'l 1"1N ~:om~· fi r..t
P
swe
ne
more Info. Competitive !'lease Forward Cover se rve.
package. lnlefe&amp;ted ap- wages, mileaQe
reim- Letter and Resume to
ln~ idc S•nragc S~ .I !OI I f
pllcanto lhoutd ......... by b
d ~- "IS
A
.
Op&lt;n s"''"' Sl .(KIIIf
_,...,
ursemenl an
Lm118u
wmonterossovrossprov.
Inside Fence: Sl .IMJ/Jf .
e-maillng
re84JfT16S
to including health insur· com Equal Opportunity ~!~~':::::~
· ~·::
kmocklwoodlandcenters.
anc:e &amp; miJCh more.
Employer/Program
org, or mailing resumes
Auxiliary Aids and Serv·
L &amp; L Tire Barn
to Kevan Mock, Manager Needed. Someone Part ices are available upon
ol HR. Woodl8ncl cen. time, some evenings, request
44087 Wipple Rd.
ters, lni:. 3086 State some Saturday&amp;. C~an

'I. Uvlng 1 and 2 48R house. in Gallipol~. "AA' Govemment Funds

._oom Apt&amp;. at Vllage
Mitior and Riverside 740-367·n62
AI*. In Mldd1eport, from
ta27
to
$592 .

Q""'''

servioo department. No ckJde
mental
..
eiperience required ·per· tions.

&amp;pplO'Jod . !!!!!!II!!!!!!"""!!!!!!!!!!!!~ a

~nesda~November12,2008
ALLEYOOP

Youth Cese Manager
Local ""'"'&gt;l&gt;l)' wltt1 1uH tor wolldo100 de·
time and pen time po- '.181opment program in

~==~~==~
"'woodland c011 ·-~•· Inc ..

community
nlly. Tlil -.ticn 11 an ~ _
""'"or"'
,.....__
healtt1 agency serv&gt;&lt;&gt;ng
~ Oppoo1unity Pro- ~
Gallia. Jackson, and
111 South........ and Employer.
:!04-488-1'94ti
03 Mansion 70 x 28 Dou· Meigs Countlos
2br, 1ba, Quite Neigheastern Ohio fo~ OV8f 30
1loand ,_ duplox with 2 borhood, No Smot&lt;ing. :;::;, !'\ua ~: years Is ICOO!&gt;tinQ appU8R, 1.5 bathe, attached No Pets 5450· month plus
cations tor lhe position of
IJOI. tronl I bact&lt; porches. Depsolt &amp; Raference, Full bath off tamily room Account Clollt. This po~ for YOlK flowers I watariTrasiVSewer pakl. wl fin!place, Don, Spa· s111on wilt be rMJ)onsible
glldln, fully equipped ,:
74;:0;..;I;;:4 6::;;::6939~-"!""-. clous kit w/ large DR ' for 5en Pay BlUing, Post__,, wheelchair ac- ':"!
$40,000.
Must
ITIO'II&amp; lng and ReconciHalion of
celltie.
Mktway
be· Very nice ttome 1or rent vourself.l 740-645-5286
1st and 3f'CI Party Cash
•-~--- and Galli· In
Micklleport,
good
A.,....-... Preparation of
..-.-.,.,
neighborhOOd. Newty re......,......,
New apptl- Btand new 3bed 2bath Cash Deposits, .and pur·
-po111 on Highway 35. modeled.
Alnt $600, can for apptl· '
8d
on + -half acre In Pt. chasing. WOO&lt;IIand CenCldon 10 740-236--1872 ances, 2
·· 1 bath, P*easant. OWNER Fl· t~rs, Inc., offers competl·
·
Equll

W~dnesday, November 12, 2008

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Pllgl 14 • The Daily'Sentinel

1'T""---."T""--------,
... DAP?

ARe YOU SURE

GOOP fNOI.)(fH
FOR YOU, ec&gt;N?

~e·s

~' lll~~ellike

Instead, be willing to do what you can for
Ihem.
CAN CER (Jun"e 21-July 22) ~
Regardless of how right you think you
. are, don't attempt to impose your views
on othetl;. You might win the opening
rounds, but if you keep It up. yourtrlends
are apt to apply a knodtoul punch.
u~:o (July 23-Aug. 22) - Unless you
fully explain what you see from your vantage point lor making changes, your famIly is likely to rebe l. Instead ot maldng
waves. taklt lhti lime to explain your
Intended actions.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Someone
With whom you'rv achieving a common
goal might have a ~ner Idea than you
cto, but If your pride affecta your ego,

yo U'll sh.lbbornly deny Ita value.

LIBRA (S.pt. 23-oet . .23}- You might be

aharp 11 a whip 1;, advltlng anolhet
about managing hit or her aftalfl , but

when 11 comea your own deallnga, thl1
wlldom oould be totally loet on you - Of
lgno~ .

SOUP TO NUTZ
SO

r

Da.t'T DuMP
'/ouR 'I~RD.

THeM tN

�• ••• 7

~ Ta•t•

.._,....,

t!

*'

Wanlocl ·o-ral Holp Wanlocl • Genoral

2 br.ln Countly, out bact&lt; Scenic location, oonven·
1 tr\11 Aplo. • - - 10 NeW WV Hud lent to town and af1onl·
1111 ' p • 1 52 West· ~ ~-3~ n .
able, 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms

Dr., 11om
$365
"' 2br on ~
7•~ ...
2568
·~ R•"~ In Ma· (740)992·5639

--

~
HouM1g
Opportu·· son.

•o

01 e-mail to SOU1honlohlngO~II.com

•

u.
nv

882 3512

!, H:~k.

~:

La~

40.
for details
7 992 5094

740-992-5064.

.- .g Clppot1unity.

Equal

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!!
llonlala

8111ciot11 3BR apt. to. _ ill Gallipolis. $650

·.rnonct\
lrlltlh, .

Includes

-•110·

749-5'J1-5174

water, 2 and 3 bedrooms. ExiTa
No pets nice! AU electric. Call
6r
or 740-446-4234

:::44~1:..;.0;.:.11;.:0;...~=-'-.-- _740-~208~-7~86-1!"'"!"'"-

:

,.
~
Townhoose Fode&lt;at F~nds lust re~ . 2BA, t :5 ·~ased tor land Ownert~ .

bl.th, back patio, pool, No closing cost and
pllyground, (trash, ssw- ZERO OOWNI Will do

wa.ter

IQO,

pd.)

·
IS
•mPfovemen ·

$425/sec. Bankruptcy: &amp; Bad Credit

1'25/rent.

OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed-

dip. CaJ1740-367-o547

CaDDIIdal

,

2 boy aeMce station 1

JocUon

land

Pike.

Nqtllred. Call
tor more Info.

laase
448·36+1

0111co building iocatad in
OIIIpotil OH 28 Cedar
St. Rent $450 mth. + de-

....~;,;56~868~1"""':!!!!
-:;.~!Ollfl#7401 ' - ,_ ....,,

rooms
available.
~740;;;.,.;446-;;;;.;3384;;;;;,i-':"'-~
Double wide tor rent
38R , 2 bath, Porter area
$600 rent
+ deposit.
laase l\lil!u 1
yea.,r.
740367
~
740-645-3413 .
38R 2 bath on farm $760

gradiJite. FuU time potiona $580 por week,
rapid advancements and
· For an ;nterYiew

tile

.call746-446-77118.

population!

160, Gallljlolls, up and some 'light con45631 . WoOdtand structlon. Call 992-5094
1990, Centers, Inc. is an and loave -message.
layton, 3 bl,
14x70 ·
"'""'I
w•...,. ancas, AAIEEO.
An EKCellent way to eam
must
be
moved,
The Ne AV
$t3,000, (740)992-5924
o.;..,. &amp; D..... ,
money.
w on.
· Call
Marilyn
F
1e 1987 Fie "'" Oriverti neodod:
COL _.304~-882~·2;;:64;_;;5;....'""::""!~
or sa
m""'
.,
Homes Single
Wide, Drivertl willing to drive tor AVONI All Areas! To BIJy
4 70 A
,._...,, •---1
ready lx
S
t K '
verage ~N• ~
.,
oom- or Sail Shirley pears
tioo,
$6800, .
Call pony. Experience Is pre- 304.675-1429
(740)992-6049 to&lt; de- tarred but not necessary.
tans. must be moved .
Driver must be willing to Domino's now hiring safe
do pre-maintenance on drivers at all locations,
.,...._ _ _ _ _...,...
must be t 8"rs
old • A~•·
Government funds avail- trucks and equipment,
1
•
..-r-•r
able for home buyers yardlplant and other mls- in person .
w11o own land. .so floWn , oaflartoous chores.
Ex· -H-Iri_ng_!m_mtcl...,l·a.llty-Call
toll
free perlence
operaling ·
877·31o-2577 IO&lt; pre-ap- equipment and exiTa
$$250$$

~--"!""~-~ OH

"· " c

proval.

=

. s.kllls such as ~ng a

pluo. Starting pay bi!SO&lt;f
on experience and drivlng reoonl. Bemillts Ineluding health ·InsuranCe,
available af1er meeting
employment

Sign on Bonus
No experle!'ICe required!
No Credit C8rd 'sal.esl
No COllections!

man·

WINTER STORAG,E
Mcig_s Co . Fairgrounu~

Oct . 25 . 200!
9:00a .m . II :OO u.ru.

Travel re·

require·

at · Darwin. chOre&lt;t.

Day

Ph.

;::;o=.-;;-G.i~i:. 740-388.0000

New &amp; Used Tire~ .
We bu y used ti res.

computer wheel
lllignn1enb.ligh1 ·

needed (references re·
qulred). Must be depend·
able and honest Call ·

fnt.-chntiic: work .

~:l9-;;,;t;,21"'0""'"""="""""'

complelc se rv ic~ ui)
changt.!s. small en gine

-,.;;;;;;..;;M~u..
oical~;;;;;;=

rcpuir.

iii

We service :md
winterize bQat~ ami
RV's

Band Look·
lng lor singer, range hom
Skynar d to Pan tera, Se rt··
ous Inquiries on·ly con·
tact OJ (740)992·9904,
Mart&lt; 740-4t6·1090

Rock/Metal

a

master's

WV.304JOHN
576-2220
ASK
FOR
G, GOOD
~AV, AND FUN WORK:

degree

in able.

!'lease

re--

send

is required. sume
10
Pteaaa email a cover let· LLCOCAREO.COM
or
18 ' 0
retui'T19 to tctan· tax to 74D-446-9104
lckiOgliUipollscareercol·
-':"",_.~,...~~tege.odU or faK It to
Ten ..-hfono nMd
740-446-4124.
1tttod by next woofd

Your lllgbllo Klmt, Dollvmd Rlaittto

y,., Door.

Go......... ,~
PUIUC NOT?CE
CLERK, OHIO ENVI· 676232
Jabo
THE FOLLOW?NG AP. RONMENTAL PROTEC. TH?S FINAL ACTION
POStAL JOBS
PUCAnONS ANDIOR noN AGENCY, P.O. NOT PRECEDED BY
V!!R?P?!!D
COM- BOX 1041, COLUM· PROPOSED · ACTION $17.69-$28.27/HR., now
PLAINTS WERE RE· IUS, OHIO 432161048 AND ?S APPEALABLE hiring. For application
CE?VED, AND THE (TELEPHONE: 614-614- TO ERAC. DETAIL and free govemm011t (ob
FOUOW?NG DRAFT. 2129). "FINAL AC· I"LANS
FOR Into, calf American As·
PROPOSED.ORF?NAL nONS: ARE ACTIONS PWSIO:OH5300112 soc.
of
labor
ACT?ON8 WERE 18- OF THE DIRECTOR PLAN N0:678232 RE· 1·913-599-8228, 24/hrs.
SUED, IY THE OH?O WHICH ARE EFFEC· GARDING RA?N80W emp. sarv.
ENV?RONMENTAL nVE UPON ISSUANCE R?DGE RD. AND SWAN ~PO~S:::T~O:::F=F~IC::'E"'"':N~O~W
PAOTEC11!)H.AGENCY OR A STATED EFFEC. RD., MEIGS COUNTY, HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr
(OEPA) LAST WEEK. TIVE · DATE. PUR· 01!10
or $S7Ktyr.
Includes
"ACTIONS" ?NCLUDE SUAHT
TO OHIO (11) 12
-"
THE ADOPT?ON, MODI- REVISED CODE SEC·
.Fou.Ben, OT. Place · by
FICAT?ON, DR REPEAL nON 3745.04, A F?NAL - - - - - - - - - adSouiOO, not afllill!ed
OF ORDERS (OTHER ACTION MAY BE AP·
Public Nodce
wltt1 USPS who hires.
THAN EMERGENCY PEALED TO THE ENV?·
f ·868-403-2582
ORDERS); · THE 18- RONMENTAL REVIEW PUBUC NOnCE
BUANCE,
DENIAL, APPEALS COMM?S- NOTICE: lo h.,.;,y
IIOD?F?CATION OR RE· SION (ERAC) (FOR· given t1lat on s.turday,
VOCAT?ON OF L~ MEALY KNOWN AS Nowmber 15, 2008 II
CENSES, PERM?TS, THE ENVIRONMENTAL 10:00 a.m., a public
LEASES, VARIANCES, BOARD OF REV?EW) Hie will be held ot
DR CERTIF?CATES; BY A PERSON WHO 43111
SR
124;
AND . THE APPROVAL WAS A PARTY TO A PoloerOy, Ohio. The
OR D?SAPPROVAL OF PROCEEDING
IE· Farmentlank and SavPLANS AND SPECIFJ. FORE THE DIRECTOR lngo C!lftiPIIny II HI~
CAT?ONS. '"DRAFT AC. BY F?LING AN APPEAL lng lor caah In hand or
T?ONS" ARE WR?TTEN WITHIN. 30 ' DAYS OF cer?lflld check the lo~
STAT!MENTS OF THE NOnCE OF THE F?NAL lowing callllettll:
D?RECTOR OF ENYI· ACTION. PURSUANT 1989'240-A Timberjack
RONMENTAL PR011i:C· TO OHIO REVISED Cable Sklddlr 7696
nON'S (DIRECTOR'S) CODE
SECTION 1995 Frelgh?llner s.m?
?NTENT WITH RE· 3745.07, A FINAL AC· 1FUYODYB6SH41541?1?1
SPECT TO THE 18- TION ISSUING, DENY· The Farmerl Bank ond
SUANCE,
DENIAL, ?NG,
MODIFY?NG, Savlngo
Company,
eTC. OF A
REVOKING, OR RE· Pomeroy, Ohio, ,..
PERMIT,
L?CENSE, MEWING A PERMIT, L7- Hrveathe rlgh? to bid
ORDER, ETC. INTER· CENSE, OR VAR?ANCE 111hll oalo, end to w?lhUTED PERSONS MAY WHICH IS NOT PRE· draw 1he above cal?lt·
SUBMIT
WRITTEN CEDED BY A· PRO· .,.., , prior 10 ulo.
COMMENTS .OR RE· .POSED ACTION, MAY Further, The Ferment
OUEST A PUBLIC BE APPEALED TO THE lank and Savlnge
MEETING REGARD?NG ERAC 8Y FILING AN Company,_,.,.. 1he
DRAFT
ACT?ONS. APPEAL WITHIN 30 rlgh? to re)lct eny or a?l
· COMMENTS OR PUB· DAYS OF ?SSUANCE bldo oubml-. .
L?C MEETING RE· OF THE F?NAL ACT?ON. The above deocriOUISTS. MUST BE ERAC APPEALS, AC· colla18ral will be oold
IUIWTTED WITHIN 30 COMPANIED BY A $70 '"11 lo-where II'", wl1h
DAYS OF NOT?CE OF FILING FEE WHICH not expreooad or 1mTHE DRAFT ACTION. THE COMMISSION IN piled we"""" given.
"PROPOSED
AC· ?TS D?SCRETION MAY For IUr?her lnfOI'ml1lcln,
110NS" ARE WRmEN REDUCE IF 8Y AFF?· or lor on appointment
STATEMENTS OF THE DAV?T THE· APPEL· 1o ?nopoct collaterol,
D?RECTOR"S ?NTENT L
A
N
T prior 10 ule date conWITH RESPECT TO D E M 0 N S T RATE S lltC1 Cynclle or Ken at
THE ?SSUANCE, DE· THAT PAYMENT OF 992·2138.
NIAL, MODIF?CATION, THEFULLAMOUNTOF (11)12, 13,14
REVOCAT?ON, OR RE· THE FEE WOULD
.
·
NEWAL OF A PERMIT, CAUSE
EXTREME
UCENSE, OR VARI· HARDSHIP, MUST BE __P_u_b_llc_No_tl_ce
__ p:=:-l.
ANCE. WRITTEN COM- FILED W?TH: ENV~
MENTS
' AND RONMENTAL REVIEW The Home Natlona?
REQUESTS FOR A APPEALS COMII?&amp;- lank will ouC11on ?he
PUBLIC MEET?NG RE· S?ON, 309 SOUTH following Item on Sat·
QARO?NQ A PRO. FOURTH
STREET, urday1 November 15,
POSED ACTION MAY ROOM 222, COLUM- 2008, It .10:110 a.m. II
liE
SUBMmED BUS, OHIO 43215. A ?llllank'l partdng lo?.
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF COPYOFTHEAPPEAL 2004
Iuick
RenNOT?CE OF THE PRD- MUST IE SERVED ON d I t v o u I
POSED ACnON. AI? THE
DIRECTOR 3G6DA03E0415727'11
AD.IUD?CAT?ON HEAR- WITHIN 3 DAYS AFTER 19M Jeep . GriiM! ·
1NCI IIAY BE HELD ON F?LING THE APPEAL C h I r D k I I
A PROPOSED ACTION WITH THE ERAC.
· 1J4M~SRC221102
?F A HEARING RE· FINAL APPROVAL OF Tho Home Na?lonll?
OUEST OR OBJEt- PLANS AND SPECIFI· Bank rmrne ... right
liON 78 RECE?VED BY CAt?ONS
to r$cf eny llld ,171
'rH7! OEPA W?THIN 30 T U P P E R b?cla. A?? viii?D?II DAYS OF ISSUANCE PLA?NS/CH!!STER aotd, u ,la wilwe 71,
OF THE PROPOSED WATER
DISTRICT with no ........U. - ·
WRmEN 39561 BAR 30 ROAD
preeoad or lnlf!?lld. For
RE· REEDSVILLE OH AC. on appoln?ITtlli? 10 - ·
PUBL?C TION DA11i:: 10130121108 call 949-2210, Ilk lor
FACILITY DESCRIP· Sheila.
T?ON:
COMMUNITY (11) 12
BE WA11i:R SYSTEM
HEAR?NQ tDENT?FICATION NO. :

No experience required!
No Sales!
No CQUeet:lonsl.

Full and Pan-tfme

PositionsI
On-site Dootor
Medical,' Dental, 401KI
Bonus Incentives!

•

•

•

45771
740·949-2217

Slza.s:x10'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM. 8:00PM
1 11 41 1

Wt&amp;t
•KQJto 8 7
•

YOUNG'S
CARPENHR
SERVICE

-------.6

Dealer: West
Vulnerable : Bolh

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

South

rT...;;:,.;.;~ll:::--:-r.r-:------_;_-_:.,
YOIJ'/l~

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

I I It

II

I

I'

I

''

'•

It

ma
~ ·

BARNEY
THAT LUREEN

RUN

OFF WIF

A TRAVELIN'
SALESMAN !!

THAT MIZ
PRUNELLY
GOT ENGAGED !!

l
I

THI'&lt;EETWOONEZEI'&lt;O ...

!! THAR
TERMS!!

....

~LL II\'&lt; ()ff\(.LE.TS TUI&lt;:.~ OU\~

I

00~.

l'lOT
Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Pau? Rowe

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

to&amp;JU5i
XFW&lt;\BLE.t:&gt;

!&gt;.CAl~!

E&amp;6S!

Hoalfh Caro

experience· bo·

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Training

~304)·372-8346

Company

By Blll'nice Bed• O.ol
If you know Individuals wh o are privy to
big Ideas, keep your eyes and ears open
when in their

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dee. 21 ) -

740-992·6971

tratlon and

know-how. get them out of
the way as early as possible. Your Jem·

H&amp;H
Guttering

Quality Seamless

Seamless Guuers
Roofing. Siding , Gut1ers

Maintenance Plus

740-653·9657

EMPLOYMENT

If

you have .any tasks that require concen·

Free

Insured ill3ondlld

presence In the year

ahead. There Is a good chance you could
pick up some interesting things that
would prove to be valuable.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - One of
your biggest probl&amp;ms will be an inclina·
lion to treat minor situations in a heavyhanded manner. Try not to take everything so seri ously. Relax and let live.

'

Classifleds!

23 Farm
wagon

item 45

24 Osaka

need
Razor

feature

sashes

46 Kind

26 Lhasa of pool
27 Venison
47 -~
28 Morays and 48 Stockholm

8 Distribute
9 Circulars
tO Yr . parte
t 1 London
park
12 Fertilizer

congers

30 Quivering

carrier

49 Beluga
delicac~

dessert

32 Compass
pt.
36 Nature

chemical ·

51 Goblin

f 7 Skip sto~es
(prel.)
19 Swahili
39 Actress
honorifics
- Sedll'!'ick

Gutters
Crl/lllm'n wl ,(:

N.t·~ idt'nl iu!

Vinyl

Sid i ng/Replace1nent
Windows/Remodelin g
Bonded &amp; I nsurcd .

740-992-7493 Oll'i ce ·
740-416-8339 Cell
Free EstinmtCll
Pomemy, Ohio

RDIII HYSlllS
WAll
llRtiU.....,_II

740-882-5682

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
f'

I

perament and patience me.y lose control
. as the clock ticks on .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Your

'f"E:S. MP:.AM,
HE'S M'( D06..
WELL, SORT OF..

NO, I DON'T

Prompt lind Quality
Wurk

* ln sureU

Johnson's Tree
Service
·

social gi-aces might not have a whole lot
of staying power, so try to make early
retreats or &amp;Its when socializing with
others. The less time spent with people

AT ATTENTION ..

cow and BOY

,.;..--------.. ..---------. ..--------..,...,
w

740-367-os_M
Free Es11ma1e~

740·367-!)536

t'or Remodeling and New House Building
Can: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding o Roofing o Pole
Barns • Pa1io's, Porches and Decks

.1111 W. MARCUM, DWIIER
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bouom, OH

740-985-4i4l
Cdl : 740-41 6-1834
25+ years experience Free E.~timafts

Adve'r tise
in this space for
$64 per month

as ·a know-It-all; this person could

ers
.. (March 21-April 19) ...:... Before you
ARIES
start spending Incoming funds on your
present desires, It might be wise to pay
off some old ~lgati ons . Once cJeared

.

Each 1ener1n IM r:1Dt!al stands tor a1olhar
Today·~

"CYRXM C EBTBR

RN

RLX JXCHL ,

BR'T LCMP · R .N JXABXEX RLCR
ABEX

'•

clue: Uequa_ls P

BD C WCRXMBCA

ZX

ZNMAP . " .

eHe THINKS SHe G07.JW
PWCI&lt; A CHICKeN IN

...r....,.AIIOUf A HAU'·HO?JR

.,

.,

UCW TLCZ

•

PREVIO USSOlUTION - "Adream doesn't become a 1eality through magiC ;~
it takes sweat , determination and hard work · . Gene1a1 Colin Powell
:

I

ICI

form four .almpla words.

KNUDNI

·I I I I P
p s 0 w0

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

CEN UL

'

f-....,-,.-,-..,.--! N
7
I~
J

I

. I

r--:-:-::-~-:--:--::-~-.

I
,. I I e

H A WL IE

I! I

My ·neighbor sighed,
"When gmndparent1 enter
tlte door. discipline gO&lt;.'S oul

the --···."

the cho~&lt;kle quoted
?vCompleio
filling in the missing words

you develop from step Nc. 3 below .

UNSC ~AMBlE

ABOVE lETTE RS
10 GET ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 11111108
Zither - Logic - Joint - Quiver - GET to IT
I've noticed some people always get in the last word , while
o?hers ntrely seem to GET lo IT.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

e new person.
TAURUS (April :ZO.May 20) - If you are
forced to spend time with someoni:l wilh
whom you've previously had contrary
words, don't respond negatively, even if
you sense storm clouds brewing. Stay
above the tray.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - Others
won 't be In th e mood to cater ro your
whims, so don't e)(pect them to do any·
thing thai you can easily do yournelf.
up.

9-IZIIL

Local Contractor

courage
of your
convictions.
don't be
lntlrilldated
by someone
whoand
comes
on ··

r~--:~:-...llllii::::-,

0"19-81-f

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

.

aHempl to put you down in lronl of olh· .

• ''"!"""'-'"
Ttcl-4t1-tll7

• VInyl Siding
·Replacement
'Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
•G'arages
• Pole !lulldings
• Room Adldi11ons
Owner:
~ames Keeset) It
742·2332

is high.
PISCES {Feb. 20-March 20)- Have the

~!!!.:.::~==~==U!!JI!i!li!!!!!£'!.!12!!!i!IIJ!~:::::_::..::::::::::::~~~~£:~~

111....-d

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

by Luis Campos

Calabn i ~Oi11 Eif ~l)'lllt:g ram5 aiD c1n1a1 1ran clJOlai"IYJS ll~ ' am~specp:e paS! and pr&amp;SEV11

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It's rare
that you show your temper, but when you
do, woe unto tho se wh o anger you. This
COuld be one of those days when the
possibility for misinterpretlng intentions

Complete Tree Care

J&amp;L
Construction

.

the beher.

KNOWWAAT
HE'S DOIN6
HERE ..

*Reasom1blc Rules

*Experienced
References A.vailabh~ !
Call Gary Stanley @
. 740-591 -8041
Please leave messa e

ASK HER HOW LON6
I HAVE TO KEEP TIIESE
TROOPS 5TANDIN6

CELEBRITY CIPHER
'

low

RICK PRICE

http:lllOH.IrtiOcltiOfl.com

CO

. -~=

New Homes. Room Addllions. Remode?lng,
Metal &amp;
lle&lt;ks,

··, ;

Shop

43 Kind
of poodle

•

44 Accused's ·

look

0 Rearrange
letters of the
four scrornblod words bo-

Thursday, Nov. 13, 2008

SAVINGS

1-888-IIIC.PAYU
Ext. 1911
· Chock uo out If

shout

Astro·Graph

•

nuses

David Lewis

1he ax to
40 Bleacher.

queen, !he odds heavily favor finessing.
.But pause for a lew moments to count
!he high-card points.
Dummy has 9 and you hold 19. That
leaves only 12 for !he opponenls, and
West opened lhe bidding. He musl have
all of !hose honor-cards. (Note !hat ~
East had started with jack-doubleton of
spades, h6 would have played his jack a1
trick ona.) After taking your spade ace,
cash Ihe ace and king· of diamonds.
Here, you gel nothing less than your jusl
deserts, dropping West's queen and raking in 10 tricks.
II you can count only one tt1ing at the
bridge table, make it high-card points.

Home Health Care aides
needed
immedl,.tely .
muot be certified or have

.

38 Gives

of range .

22 Unpleasant 42 Thin fog

cream your contract

Racine, Ohio 740-247-201 ~

on

21 A"nd so on

Instead, you must run the diamonds.
Normally, with eight cards m1ssing the

THE BORN LOSER

Get A Jump

37 Telegraph
code

All pa.!18

2U Imagines 40 Googplanli
as possible 41 Out
•

100 percent true. The OVElrcaller might
' w1th
have only a good 17, 18 or19 po1n1S
a good siK·card minor - .for example,
the South hand in today's diagram. (Wi1h
14-16 poinls, lhe fourth hand makes a
jump overcall in his minor. In this position, it is not a weak jump overcall.)
If you were Soulh and landed m three
no-lrump, how would you plan the play
aher Wesl leads the spade king?
You would love to. play on clubs, but you
know that West has the ace. He will lake
!he !riel&lt; and cash all of his spades lo

z 2.

~3

I TOLD 'WEEZY I TOLD ELVINEY

brow1er
52 Warrior
woman

shelter

turnover

Pass

giGtiT -~· Wtf~/l~ "MAIN
worth extra points
/ fT/l~ET" C/lOSSES "WAL£. ~- In yeslerday's column, I said that it the
STDI:~T",· Ttfl: ~•AMI: i; ~ dealer opens lhe bidding wnh one of a
.·. •. :
,..J.o~
1- ,...
lio ~ .. :r
suit and two passes follow, a jump·over/LlA ~·/.~ T
aa ~ call of two no-trump by the tourth hand
1.1"' ''"U';;S
0 . ~~ ~ says lhat, given lhe chance, he would
"St'll) ~OW~
~; ~
have opened 1wo no-trump.That was nol

U· II

1: ~:~:1l~::::l~g

available contact
Kay
or
Shelley.
1:86ti·368·1f 00.

3 NT

Eut

__-, ·A long suit is

Room Addition• &amp;

Wc&gt;r/1' NEXT WEEKlll

'Mlit-

Pass

44 Pleads
48 Exo1ic
vacation
50 Bookthop

ttandt

35 Home

Op eni~s lead: • K

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Remodeling

28 Years Experience

sulating SeNiee

Weal · North
1•
Pass

2 NT

;;;;;;;;;;;;i.;;;;;;i;~;i;;;;;;;;;;;

1 year

~

... A 6 2
• A Q
t A K 10 g 7 4.
• Q' 3

~----;;;;;;;;;m
" 'o'"'p"-'
d ~

. .....,..ttmlt..r.:.-kcabiDotey•....,.

8 6 5

South

CAll US TODAY
FOR .RHJUCETJ
WINTER RATES
DEC. ·FEB

C./I TODAY/
.lnllrvlow
TOMORROW/I

WV 80 Hr. AJlllrontlce
Miner Ctasa MSHA • 24
Hr. CJ&amp;R W"' Mine Forman Ctase Safety Con-

•

Stop &amp; Compare

Hardwood Calnecry And FurnHtlre

• 5
.97 5 4 2
• 853

10 6 3

T40-992-1m

140-41&amp;-11&amp;4

3

Puzzle

Crossword

12 l1&amp;101aadin 53 Adjuslt,
13 Complicalod,
at fires
M 1 p«&gt;&gt;l7om 54 Spoil of
14 Archipelago
indulgence
dota
55 Loave
15 Realizes
in a hurry
16 Insect killer
18 Caaual we11
DOWN
19 Goatee··
21 Macaroni
1 Novelist
ehape
-Grey
25 Rose Bowl 2 Woodwind
evenl
3 Nutritious
29 Pekoe
graint
cke1
4 Santa Fe
hrs.
[ wds./
31 onica
5 Vegas
tenia
lead~n
33 -Dion
6 HaPf'y tune
34 Flip-chart
7 Toward

11 12 011

Ea•t '

• Q 2
• A7

• Complete
Rem udeling

Aucuoneer:
BIIIV Ro Goblalr.

alternative
10 River
of 10ng

• J 6
.KJ! 092

• New Homes
• Garages

husillf!.\'S

CJ .ASSIFIEDS

•

Racine , Ohio

~

f Skyrocket
5 Burro

• KJ 8

!!!iii!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!!!!!!!

Waekjy Pay and
$260 S~n On Bonus!

29670 Bashan Road

• g

We appreciate your

THE LOCKS AND DAM
IN GALUI'OLIS FERRY

mathemattcs

ROBERT
BISSELl
CIIISliiCTIII

Mon-Fri.
8:0(J"am . 4:30 pn,.
Sitt. K:OO mn · 12

Work NEXT WEEKIII
740-388-8513
&amp; email a cover letter and
Now Hiring Experienced,
1-888-IMC·PAYU
~740-~36;;:.;..7·.;.;77;.;:62;;..._ _ _ 740-245-9215
Evenllgs resume to jdanickiOgefllwaltstaff. cooks, dish·
Ext. 2321
For Rent '
&amp;
weekends
Ph. poltscareercoleQ9.edu or
washers &amp; , delivery drivfax
tt
to
740-446-4124
Apply
Online:
Mobile homes &amp; !ots • 740-388-8017
&amp;
ers apply fn person
hltp:fJiobt.lntocllk)n.corn
(no pats) In Ashton WV 740-245·9215
&amp;
Harry's
Famous
Hot
GallipoliS Caretr College Service Uanager &amp; Serv304-576-2942.
740· 794-()460
Dog,s New HaVen
Is accepting resumes fm Ice Technician positions
a
mathematics av4Vlable. Health care &amp;.
instructor.A minimum of Rdrement plans avail- .
lo

Hill's Self
Storage

North

(740) 992-5344

GOODTIMES BAR IS
NEEDING ENERGETIC,

C.U TODAYJ
lntervlfirt
TOMORROW/I

degree In account- ·
&amp; ~ is required. Please

(5 Points) ·

-';;;;;;;;;~~....;;;;;;;;;i;;;
iii
Pan~tlme
Housekeeper

401KI
On-site Doctor
Weekly Pay and
Bonus lncenti".lesl

Envlron11*1U
Medical, Dental, EAP,

lo(S

""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!==...,.
Main?ona-/
"---...._
"""'~

TENDER'S
WAITRE·
SES,
BIKINI
BAR,
DANCERS AND A SE·
CURITYIOOOR
MAN,
MUST HAVE GREAT
PERSONALITY,
AND
DRIVE
TO
MAKE
GREAT MONEV.APPLV
AT t22 8 HUNTINGTON
RD (RT2,) NEXT TO

Profeuiontl Wor..

or 740·797-4356 Ia. bloekad, .leveled · and -an· A mlninum Q1 a Bache· .

Pomt..,.oy, OH

PROFESSIO~Al,BAR·

Full and Part-time
Poaitlona
Dt.y and Evening Shifts

Home, 2Bedroom, 2bath, bed 2 bath gas, .t 1997
1br.hooae lg. kitchen, full vinyl siding, shingle roof, 14&lt;70 2 bed 2 bath gas, GaMipoio Ce~r COllege
· btl, laundry nn. &amp; stor· lhermapavne
window, 1 2002 t61180 3 bed 2 Is accepting resumes for
llfll· Dep &amp; ref. no pe_ls, 20ft.porch 740-664-4356
bath.
Priced deivered an accounting Instructor.

304-882-3900.
2 BR house In GallipoliS,
W/0 mnn.
$415/mo
1150/dep. You pay all
utllittea. No section B or
HUD.
Cell
wayne
--3802

case

Route

home

~!"'"""::~--~.....
New 3 BediOO!l' . homes
from $214.36 per month,
mth.
utilities included. inctudes many upgrades,
oc540:::;.;
·7.:;29-;;.1:.;:33:;.1;...~~- delivery
&amp;
set-up.
740-385--2434
Trailer tor ient in Mercer· ~-.,...--.,....,..,..,..,

or caled

progressive

agement.
Must enjoy
"""'-"g With the youth

740-4.23-9728

for ist time
buyers who own

Available

inp.

30+593-6076

and ~---=:-~

management

:a oo;;

16" 80 2 bed 2 bath, 1 schedule an interview
Bak Repo! (~% down, 15
Call446-2458
yean, 811 APR) for listinx s ~~~;:;;~~= 2000 16x70 2 bed 1
14" 7.()
2005
I(X).6:zo.4946 ex R027
Mobile bath, 1 1999 161180 2
!ducaHon

Haven

re-

manent position com· source&lt;.
ra,il~at~
pany lrlfning provided meetings and WOII&lt;5hops
must be a High School a......,...ts, data entry.

m011ts. Calf Veltey Brook
!'!~f!lla~~~~!" ville $450 rent $500 de- ~
Concrete corporate orftce
~19\llm! 3 bod, 2 balh, pos~ No Pats No Smak· Prices Reduood 2 2006 at
304-773.5519
to

New

Phillip
Alder

presenta·

devetoping

NEA
ACROSS

land or have land or
have 1am1ly lana. Zero
Down Easv Financing.
Cell to be Pre-Qualified.

NANCE
AVAilABLE.
(740) 446-3570
~"!""~--~:-~

The Daily Sentinel • Page B~.

www.mydailysentin~l.com

BRIDGE

quired. Position requires
Rdea)C!: Apnl 2:'U !Mt&lt;1
Oh~
Yaltey
Home a BAIBS and at least 1 A fet! of $.2fl.t.Ml will he
Health, Inc. hiring Home years eKperience in lden· charged for early arriva l.
and late arrival. curly r~·tn\wa l.
Health
Aides.
STNA, tirylng, developing
la~t remo\·~1. or ;uwtimc
CNA, CHHA, PCA may securing · resources for · accc\~ b wuntctl to
apply at 1480 Jackson diverse population.
Ex- fair~rl)Unth t&gt;ttK'f than
Pike, Gallipollt, Ohio or ce11ent futl-time opportu· stated dat.:-d. IJ uildi n~
n:.;~ries and
phOne 740-441 -1393 tor nlty
with
OOnelits. sp;~w i'l 1"1N ~:om~· fi r..t
P
swe
ne
more Info. Competitive !'lease Forward Cover se rve.
package. lnlefe&amp;ted ap- wages, mileaQe
reim- Letter and Resume to
ln~ idc S•nragc S~ .I !OI I f
pllcanto lhoutd ......... by b
d ~- "IS
A
.
Op&lt;n s"''"' Sl .(KIIIf
_,...,
ursemenl an
Lm118u
wmonterossovrossprov.
Inside Fence: Sl .IMJ/Jf .
e-maillng
re84JfT16S
to including health insur· com Equal Opportunity ~!~~':::::~
· ~·::
kmocklwoodlandcenters.
anc:e &amp; miJCh more.
Employer/Program
org, or mailing resumes
Auxiliary Aids and Serv·
L &amp; L Tire Barn
to Kevan Mock, Manager Needed. Someone Part ices are available upon
ol HR. Woodl8ncl cen. time, some evenings, request
44087 Wipple Rd.
ters, lni:. 3086 State some Saturday&amp;. C~an

'I. Uvlng 1 and 2 48R house. in Gallipol~. "AA' Govemment Funds

._oom Apt&amp;. at Vllage
Mitior and Riverside 740-367·n62
AI*. In Mldd1eport, from
ta27
to
$592 .

Q""'''

servioo department. No ckJde
mental
..
eiperience required ·per· tions.

&amp;pplO'Jod . !!!!!!II!!!!!!"""!!!!!!!!!!!!~ a

~nesda~November12,2008
ALLEYOOP

Youth Cese Manager
Local ""'"'&gt;l&gt;l)' wltt1 1uH tor wolldo100 de·
time and pen time po- '.181opment program in

~==~~==~
"'woodland c011 ·-~•· Inc ..

community
nlly. Tlil -.ticn 11 an ~ _
""'"or"'
,.....__
healtt1 agency serv&gt;&lt;&gt;ng
~ Oppoo1unity Pro- ~
Gallia. Jackson, and
111 South........ and Employer.
:!04-488-1'94ti
03 Mansion 70 x 28 Dou· Meigs Countlos
2br, 1ba, Quite Neigheastern Ohio fo~ OV8f 30
1loand ,_ duplox with 2 borhood, No Smot&lt;ing. :;::;, !'\ua ~: years Is ICOO!&gt;tinQ appU8R, 1.5 bathe, attached No Pets 5450· month plus
cations tor lhe position of
IJOI. tronl I bact&lt; porches. Depsolt &amp; Raference, Full bath off tamily room Account Clollt. This po~ for YOlK flowers I watariTrasiVSewer pakl. wl fin!place, Don, Spa· s111on wilt be rMJ)onsible
glldln, fully equipped ,:
74;:0;..;I;;:4 6::;;::6939~-"!""-. clous kit w/ large DR ' for 5en Pay BlUing, Post__,, wheelchair ac- ':"!
$40,000.
Must
ITIO'II&amp; lng and ReconciHalion of
celltie.
Mktway
be· Very nice ttome 1or rent vourself.l 740-645-5286
1st and 3f'CI Party Cash
•-~--- and Galli· In
Micklleport,
good
A.,....-... Preparation of
..-.-.,.,
neighborhOOd. Newty re......,......,
New apptl- Btand new 3bed 2bath Cash Deposits, .and pur·
-po111 on Highway 35. modeled.
Alnt $600, can for apptl· '
8d
on + -half acre In Pt. chasing. WOO&lt;IIand CenCldon 10 740-236--1872 ances, 2
·· 1 bath, P*easant. OWNER Fl· t~rs, Inc., offers competl·
·
Equll

W~dnesday, November 12, 2008

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Pllgl 14 • The Daily'Sentinel

1'T""---."T""--------,
... DAP?

ARe YOU SURE

GOOP fNOI.)(fH
FOR YOU, ec&gt;N?

~e·s

~' lll~~ellike

Instead, be willing to do what you can for
Ihem.
CAN CER (Jun"e 21-July 22) ~
Regardless of how right you think you
. are, don't attempt to impose your views
on othetl;. You might win the opening
rounds, but if you keep It up. yourtrlends
are apt to apply a knodtoul punch.
u~:o (July 23-Aug. 22) - Unless you
fully explain what you see from your vantage point lor making changes, your famIly is likely to rebe l. Instead ot maldng
waves. taklt lhti lime to explain your
Intended actions.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Someone
With whom you'rv achieving a common
goal might have a ~ner Idea than you
cto, but If your pride affecta your ego,

yo U'll sh.lbbornly deny Ita value.

LIBRA (S.pt. 23-oet . .23}- You might be

aharp 11 a whip 1;, advltlng anolhet
about managing hit or her aftalfl , but

when 11 comea your own deallnga, thl1
wlldom oould be totally loet on you - Of
lgno~ .

SOUP TO NUTZ
SO

r

Da.t'T DuMP
'/ouR 'I~RD.

THeM tN

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, November 12,

2008

SroRTS BRIEFS

Eastern fall sports banquet Monday
TUPPERS PLAINS - The banquet for fail sport s
(football, volleyball, golf. cross country and cheerleaders) wtll be Monday, November 17, In the high school
gymnastum at 6 p.m.
Each family is being asked to bring two covered dishes (vegetable and dessert). The Athletic Boosters will
provide the meat, drink s and table service.

Cavs ·
fromPageBl
period
as
Milwaukee
opened a 69-66 .lead with
2:20 left. James, though,
responded by making three
straight outside jumpers, the
last one at the hom to give
Cleyeland a 74-71 lead
entering the fourth.
James was in China at the
Beijing Olympics when the
Cavaliers
acquired
Wllhams, trading forward
Joe Smith and guard
Damon Jones in a threeteam trade with Milwaukee
and Oklahoma City. Jones
isn't even with the Bucks,
who are allowing him to
pursue other opportunities
in the league.

James couldn ' I remember
his first thought at learning
of the deal. but he knew he
liked it.
"I knew the type of player that he was," James said.
"He has explosiveness. He
took over games." .
He did against the Cavs.
Williams
helped
Milwaukee go 3-l agamst
Cleveland last season, averaging 26 points and nine
assists in the four games.
Notes: Longtime Cavs
radio
play-by-play
announcer Joe Tail led the
crowd in a standing ovation
before the opening tip for
former Indians pitcher and
broadcaster Herb Score,
who died Tuesday at the
age of 75. Tait called
Indians games on the radio
alongside Score from 1973. 79.

•

Printedon 100%

·• Point Pleasant
prepped for playoff
trip.to Magnolia,
, ·.See Page Bl ·

Bv BETH SERGENT ·

BsERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
POMEROY .:... As construction winds down on !he
replacement for the old
Pomeroy Mason Bridge,
the signs have been ordered
for the new one which will
be called the "Medal of .
Honor Bridge," according
to the Ohio Department of
Transportation.
As previously reported,
the Ohio approach has been
named after the late Gen.
James Hartinge'r and the
West Virginia approach will

~~~ 1~ J)Uut,u
$~ h01.ret~ek4!5U..

fromPageBl
NBA draft to Utah.
So for the third year in a
row , Matta finds he not
only has to put the pieces
together again but that he's
starting with entirely dif·
ferent pieces.
. ''I'll tell' you where my
mind is: Be 1-0 after Nov.
20," he said with a laugh,
refernng to the seasonopener against Delaware
State, which will be played
at old St. John Arena
because of a sched-uling
conflict at the team's home
court at Value City Arena.
Matta believes that the
Buckeyes have loads of talent. but it's raw. He knows
they:re versatile and deep,
but tl may take a while to
find Out who should be
starting or even what position they Should be playing.
"It's going to take time ,"

Steelers
fromPageBl
a look at it and of course it
was very painful."
Parker · was leading the .
NFL m rushing last season
before breaking his leg during the next-to-last regular
season game in St. Louis.
He has 333 yards and four
. touchdowns on 87 carries
this season.
With rookie Rashard
Mendenhall out for the season with a broken shoulder.
Mewelde Moore has been
Pittsburgh's featured back
in three of the past four
games. Although he has
scored six touchdowns, the
Steelers' rushing offense
has struggled ·in recent
weeks, totaling only 214
yards on the ground the past
three games.
The return of left tackle
Marvel Smith could help
the runnmg game. Smith
hasn't played since Oct. 5
because of a b~ck injury, but
Tomhn satd tl s possible he
wtll practice this week.
Smith had a favorable
workout Tuesday, Tomlin·
satd.
·
"He 's got to show us quite
a bit ," Tomlin said. ''He's
missed some time. Not only
m tenns of health , but technically he's got to be up m
speed. He's got to knock the
rust off quickly if he's going
to play for us this weekend."

Max Starks ha:. been
starting at left tackle, protecting
Ben ·
Roethlisberger's blind side.
Roethlisberger has thrown
eishr interceptions during
his past 10 quarters of play
and has been bothered by an
injured throwing shoulder.

Tomlin
chara.cterized
Roethli sberger's condition
as "status quo" but said he
was likely to practice thi s
week. Roethlisberger was
severely limited in practice
last week and threw three
interceptions in a loss to the
Indianapolis c. olts.
Tomlin indicated that
•Roethlisberger would have
hJ practice more this week
to be able to play atier he
pointed out timing and
cohesion
issues
in
Roethlisberger's
play
against the Colts.
"I think it's important that
you practice and get physical reps," Tomlin said. "One
of the things we've. been
dealing with in regards to
his situation is a little shortterm misery, if you will.''
Tomlin.
applauded
Roethh sberger
taking
accountability for the defeat
after the game and hinted
that the blame for the interceptions could also at least ·
partly fall with intended
recetver Santonin Holmes.
But the coach did not totally absolve hts quarterback,
who has thrown more inter-

·Meigs

ing." said 6-8, 255-pound
power forward Dallas
Lattderda le, who has toned
and stre ngthened his body
after seemg only minimal ·
actiOn a year ago. "But if
we don 't come mentally
prepared, I see anybody
being able to beat us ."
Mulle ns will undoubtedly be presented the chance
to live up to his advance
billing. Lighty, a defen sive .
specialist, and Turner, who
developed as the season
went on last year, will definitely be in the top rotation ..
At point guard, Matta
says he.'s sorting through
six candidates: Turner, P.J.
Hill (a juco transfer from a
year
ago),
Jeremie
Simmons (a juco transfer
this year) and freshmen
Anthony Crater, Buford
and Walter Offutt. That's a
lot of inexperience at a
position that supposed to
be the metronome for a
team.
"That's the main focus
right now, teaching guys

ceptions (II) than touchdowns ( 10) this season.
"It wasn't a winning performance," Tomlin said.
"That's the reality of it.
We've got to take citre of
the football, and we didn't
d '
o II. They had intercepltons and we didn't."
Notes: The team signed
·veteran
cornerback
Fernando
Bryant . · on
Monday. A former firstround
pick
of
the
Jacksonv ille · Jaguars who
played the past four seasons
with the Detroit Lions,
Bryant was needed because
cornerbacks
Bryant ·
McFadden (broken forearm) and Deshea Townsend
(ankle) will not play .... LB
LaMarr Woodley, fifth in
the league in sacks with 9
l/2, should be able to praclice thi ~ week _after missing
the lndtanapohs game wuh
a calf injury .... Tomlin said
TE Heath Miller (ankle)
was "questionable at best"
for this week and likely will
need another week or two
before returning.

County ·

las a Bright Future••••

Thank You
· for 8great years
as your
County Commissioner

how to play hard, focused
and smart for the whole 40
minutes a~~ !!Ot just for
one penod, satd Lighty, an
elder statesman at 20. ·
Matta has his fingers
crossed. He's once allain
like a chef presented wtth a ·
dozen ingredients and no
recipe.
·
"There's a spot for
everyone to contribute" he
said.
'
But first, he has to get
their names down pat.

Meigs Elementary School
Advance Tickets $6.00
Tickets available at:
Quality Print Shop
Rutland Dept. Store
Pomeroy Flower Shop

be named after the late Staff
Sgt. Jimmy G. Stewart .
After completed, the bridge
will belong to the state of
West Virginia.
So just when will it open?
In October, OOOT officials
were saying possibly "late
November"
or
"~arly
December."
Yesterday,
Karen Pawloski, spokesperson for ODOT, said the
agency is "cautiouslY. optimistic the earliest it wtll open
is the second week of
December." Pawloski said
she might know a finner date
next week. Still, all indica-

tions appear traffic will be
utili~ing the bridge soon. , ,
Though there has been no
official
announcement,
ODOT hopes to have a
grand opening ceremony
ani:!. plans to extend invitations to both Ohio Gov. Ted
Strickland and W.Va. Gov.
Joe Manchin.
One of the final pieces to
opening the bridge to traffic
is upcoming work and
inspection done by a sub, contractor involvirtg destressing of the_ cabfes, of
which there are 96. There is
no time frame for this

,' Local
election
costs at
$26K

'

U1wiN; ~ ai 5 pm

osu

en
Recycled Newsprint

.R~ .v~ IJ~ · ~ept. ·

he said. "I don't think that
we're going to have a lot of
a~swers until we 've played
etght .. mne , 10 games. How
does this team do on the
road'' How do we handle ·
· runs made by other teams? .
Those are the . things that
quttc honestly we ha've to
see before I could ever say
that,hey,_ thi s team is going
to wm thts many games."
The team -could do a "We
Are The World" sing-along. There are eight new
faces, including four scholarship freshmen, two
junior-college transfers and
transfers from V;mderbilt
and UAB.There are players from ftve states (Ohio,
Mtchigan. lndi~na , Illinois
and Minnesota), Serbia and
Greece. There are two ?footers, two others who are
relative shrimps at 6-1 and ·
about
everything
In
between.
. "If we come into every
stng)e game mentally
ready, prepared to go hard
I don't really see us los~

Ohio elections
chief looks to expand
early voting, A6

Salon Series
resumes Nov. 21
at local winery, A2

process involving structural
geometry of the bridge at
the moment.
The width of the . new
bridge is 74.08 feet, compared to the width of the ·
existing bridge which has a
20-foot span from curb to
curb. The new bridge is
l ,852.51 feet long while the
existing bridge is I ,847.75
long. The piers go 90 feet
below the nver surface with
the top of the towers being
248.5 feet above the water
and 168 feet above the ro-ddway. There are 120 miles of
cable on the bridge. 16

-tl&gt;

miles of longitudinal deck
tendons and 6.9 million
pounds of rebar. The tubes
which house the cable have ·
spirals on their exteriors to
combat ice and wind.lnside
these tubes may be as many
as 27, 31 and 61 strands of
5/8-inch cable with the larger amount of cable being
placed towards the center of
the bridge.
The latest price tag on the
structure is at $64 .'7 million .
The original contract on the
bridge was signed April 24,
2003 with an original completion date of Aug. 31,2006.

Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The "Keep Your
. Fork 5K Run/Walk" has grown
into its seventh year with this
year's race scheduled for II a.m.,
Nov. 29 at Meigs High School.
The race/walk is becoming a
holiday tradition in Meigs County
Bv BRIAN J. REED
with the race being held the
BREEDCIMYDAILYSENTlNEL.COM
Saturday after . Thanksgiving
every year. Last year's race
POMEROY While
attracted a record amount of runvoting is free, running an
ners and funds used for academic
election can cost a lot · of
scholarships given to Meigs High
money.
School graduates who have parThis . month's general
ticipated in high school cross
_election cost the county
·
country and field and track. Last
·. Page AS
around $26,000, a Jot of
year 217 runners/walkers partici·money to be sure, btit 'not
· ·· - ~Ioria J, .Statcher, 61
pate~ in the race, _up from 181 the ·
much more than past elec• Harold Weaver, Jr., 85 tions
prev10us year, raiSlng $4,000 for :
have. cost, despite the
the
Brandi Thomas Memorial ·
rising cost of doing busi' .. ... ~ .... "" i
'
~ ~ 'i't ' .• " •... • \~
Fund.
Scholarship
.,.
ness, Board of Elections
Race day registration will be
Director Rita Smith said
'
from
9-10:30 a.m. and is $16. The
Wednesday.
first
150
entrants will receive a !The bOard has submitted
shirt
and
134 have already prereg.• Choir concert set
for payment all expenses
istered, making organizets hopeassociated with last week's
;at MarShall University.
ful
this year's race .will be even
election, Smith said, except
See Page A2
bigger
and better.
.
for some publication costs
Plaques
will
be
awarded
to the
·• Entertainment Briefs.
associated with advertising
top three male and female finishlocal tax issues.
·
SeePageAl
ers.
Medals for first place and
As . always, the biggest
• Social Security ribbons
for second through fifth
cost of elections was per•
places will be awarded in each
for all stages of life.
sonnel. The county paid
of
the following male/female .
$13,795 directly to poll
'See Page A3
age
groups: six-13; 14-17; 18· workers who operated the
• Delta to trim Cincinnati polling places on Election
22; 23-29; 30-39; 40 -49; 50-59;
60 and over. There will be a speftights. See Page A3
Day. Those workers are
cial award for the winner of the
becoming harder to find,
• For the Record.
14-17 age group: Those particibecause fewer people are
pants
under 18 must have a par·See Page A5
. available to work on a
ent 's signature to participate in
weekday. .
.
:• Democrats urge
the race.
The workers - four in'
federal stake in big auto each
In addition to scholarship funds,
of the county's 27 votthe race also raises the memory of·
companies. See Page AS ing precincts ~ received· a
the late Brandi Thomas. a member
payraise this year, from _$90
of
the Meigs High School Cross
for the day to $100. They
Country
Track and Field Team
also received $25 for trainwho died in 2002 as a result of
ing, and mileage reimburseinjuries sustained in an automoment if they drove ballots to
bile
accident. Shortly before the
the Board of Elections in
accident
Brandi registered to be an
Pomeroy or drove to a
organ donor and she went on to
precinct other than their own
assist
others with her organ and
to work on Election Day.
tissue
donations after her death.
The
second
largest
Submitted phOto
This
is
another issue the run/walk
expense involved with the The Seventh Annual Keep Your Fork 5K Walk/Run will be held Saturday, Nov. 29 at
election was the printing of Meigs High School. The event raises money for academic scholarships in memory of helps to promote.
ballots, which cost $11,000.
Please see Race, AS
·
A separate ballot is printed the late Brandi -Thomas (pictured here) .
for eai:h of the precincts,
with the order of candidates
'&lt;
r .,
r
rotating on each ballot.
llltolte on Peg. A3
The board also paid
$1,500 for extra election
During the meeting the service aide/secretary for
BY CHAfiLENE HOEFLICH
ed in the RIF plan put into
help. A part-time clerk was
Board voted to return bus the remainder of the school
hired to assist board staff HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM effect earlier this year (ll drivers from a five-hour-a- year on an as-needed basis.
reduce expenditures by the
with processing registration
POMEROY
financially strapped school day pay structure to time Added to ihe substi tute
applications before the reg: • 2 .SECI'IONS - 12 PAGES
mileage. Since four bus teachers' li st were Carl
istration deadline, as well as Grievances filed by the district in -its effort to stay and
positions were not Bruggeman , Rose Marie
application for early voting Ohio Association of Public out of fi scal emergency driver
Annie's Mailbox
Employees which could result in the filled this year due to the Isgrigg. Sally Jeffery,
and walk-in voters . The School
finanCial
restructuring. Jessica Marcum , Edward
c;:alendars
b.oard also paid part-time (OAPSE) 017 wtth the appointmenr- by the Ohio routes
Ladohna
longer Safranek ,
help to assist with the actual Meigs · Local Board of Department of Education .of meaningaretheynow
Stephens and Sandra
Classitieds
ballot count ' on election Education have been denied . a commission to oversee time to complete.take more Southern. ·Awarded one
, school finances.
night, and for assistance by a vote pf 4 to I.
Approved by the Board year contracts were John
~omics
The
vote
on
the
matter
Of the II aides in the
with the computer system .
••
pertaining to a reduction in reduction of force plan, two members was an excess G. Gomez, custodian at
The
board
must
also
pay
EditorialS'
contract with the Meigs Elementary School,
rent and janitorial expenses force (RIF) was taken at the retired, one returned to bus costs
and Georgann Dobbs , hus
Athens-Meigs
for virtually all of its polling regular Board meeting driving, a position previ- Service Center Educational
~laces to go
driver.
to
provide
places. Those rental and Tuesday night. Voting to , ously held, and one was services related to special . A variety of new policies
Obituaries
As Janitor costs were $840, deny the grievances were called back to assist with a and gifted education for the and changes/ revisions or
Board members , Roger health handicapped stusaid.
current school year in the deletions to policies preSports
B Section Smith
There was a little relief Abbott, Barbara Musser, dent. That leaves seven estimated
amount
of sented earlier at a meeting
Ron Logan, and Scott who have not been called
for
the
local
board,
Smith
were approved. The finanWeather
A3 said. The cost of publishing Walton, with Larry Tucker ·back. The board will now $842.433.
cial
report for October subIn
personnel
matters,
the
ballot language for state casting the one dissenting send a letter to OAPSE that resignation of Joyce Frye mitted by Treasurer/CFO
~ 2008 Ohio Volley PubJlohln&amp; CD.
issues, inserted in The vote. Earlier the Board had the Board has denied the as a bus driver effective Mark
Rhonemus was
Daily Sentinel before given . unanimous approval grievance and then they Dec : 5 was approved. approved . Superintendent
will vote as a union
Election Day; was paid by to the RIP plan.
The
matter
revolved
whether or nor to go into Kolletta Fridley was hired William Buckley presented
the Ohio · Secretary of
as a substitute purchased information on personnel. ·
around the II aides includ- arbritation.
State's office this year.

O:OnuARIFS

•.

~.

INSIDE

••

81

•
am1

Coming Soon To
6allla, ~elgs &amp; Mason
Counties

We need yourInspirational Stories!
Summit Your Stories To .
· · Matt Rodgers
·
mrodgers@ mydail ytribune.com
.
or mail to
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Att: Matt Rodgers
-P.O. Box 469 ·
Gallipolis, OH 45631

And four Story
~lght Be lnclu~ed
In This
faith Based
~agazine

WEATHER

Meigs Board addresses OAPSE grievances

i·: ~UH

•

.'

-,

•

•

. '.

;•

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