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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 24, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Southeastern Conference.takes top spots; Oklahoma edges Texas
Alabama, Florida sit 1-2 in latest poll
NEW YORK (AP) The '
Southeastern
Conference title could
have a national championship feel when Alabama
faces
Florida in the
Georgia Dome in two
weeks.
No . I vs. No.2. a month
before the BC'S national
championship game 1s
played .
The Gators moved up to
No . 2 in the AP Top 25 on
Su
behind the

top-ranked Crimson Tide.
If Florida can win its
regular-season finale at
Florida State, and Alabama
can do the same against
Auh~rn . the SEC will sport
t~e f1rst I vs. 2 matchup in
a ·conference title game with the winner likely off
to another 1-2 game in
Miami for the BCS cham pionship.
Meanwhile, in the Big
1_2 , Oklahoma moved up
two spots to No . 3, barely
slipping past Big 12 rival
and No . 4 Texas afler the
Sooners' resounding 65-21
victory against Texas Tech
on Saturday night.
The Red Raiders tumbled five spots to No. 7
.
after
their first loss of the
•.
season.
Pta
Pvl
1,Bal! 1
Southern
California
1,512 3·
moved up one spot to No.5
,_. . 5
1,482 4
and Penn State got a bump
1,352 6
to No.6.
~~ 7
•l.t12 2
Alabama ,
the
only
tzoe e
remaining unbeaten team
i,o&amp;4 9
1,00 10
from the six BCS confer997 11
ences,
received 63 of a
917 12
874 13·
possible 65 first-place
750 15
votes
and I ,622 points
11-G 731
14
11-2 .84G 19 .
from the AP's media panel.
8·3 . 604 21
Florida received the othe•
8-3 · 339
8-3 320. 24
first-place votes and 1.512
11l-2 ':lOll 18
points
.
8-3 3G9
8-3 274 . 17
The Tide and the Gators
8-3 214 ~ are
the !7th set of confer9-3 145
7-4 127
e nce rivals to hold the top
two spots in the poll.
: ~ Vlrglnio
.., "-:·.~54, LSI! 36,
The last time it happened
Mlctligan B.
was
the end of last season ,
carolina 5,
1, Aloe 1.
when LSU and Georgia,
~· ·

•

1\.j.'

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also of the SEC. did it.
Ohio State and Michigan
from the Big Ten were the
last conference rivals to·do
it during the regular season. The Buckeyes and
Wolverines were Nos. I
and 2, respectively, for si«
weeks in 2006.
In
the
latest poll ,
Oklahoma ( 10-1) received
I .48.6 pnints and Te~as
(I 0 - 1) had I ,482, even
though the Longhorns
handed the Sooners their
on ly loss of the season, 4535 in October at the Cotton
Bowl in Dallas.
Texas' only loss was to
Texas Tech ( I 0- 1), 39-33
on a last-second touchdown in Lubbock.
Unbeaten Utah was No.
8 after finishing off its regular sea·s on and virtually
locked
up
a Bowl
Championship Series with
a 48-24 victory over rival
BYU .
No. 9 Boise State also
stayed unbeaten , but will
likely be shut out of the
BCS because of Utah.
Ohio State rounds out the
top 10 .
No. II Oklahoma State
gets another shot to turn
the national championship
race upside down Saturday.
The
Cowboys
host
Oklahoma•
Oklahoma
State is already 0 :2 against
the Big 12's Big Three ,
having lost at Texas and
Texas Tech.
No. 12 Missouri gives
th e Big 12 five of the ' first
12 teams in the poll. The

Obama asks urgent
action on 'historic'
econ crisis, A2

ne
l'rinted on tOO %

RccJcled NcM·sprint

STAFF REPORT

APphoto
Alabama running back Mark Ingram (22) dives in for a touchdown against Mississippi State
in the second h?~lf of an NCAA college football game in Tuscaloosa. Ala. on Saturday.
Alabama won 32-7.
Tigers have already locked
up the North Division and
will play the team that
emerges as the champ of
the South in the Big 12
title game on Dec·. 6 in
Kansas City, Mo.
· Georgia is No.. 13 , followed by TCU and Ball ·
State, the fourth major college football unbeaten
team.
No .. 16 Cincinnati is a
victory away from locking'
up its. first Big East title
and BCS berth. The
Bearcats host Syracuse on

POMEROY - The cases
against 13 charged with
poaching deer and wild
turkeys ·in Meigs County
have concluded , with · the
defendants paying $7 ,995
in fines and costs for I 05
violations.
The Ohio Department of ·
Natural Resources Division
of Wildlife called its investigation
in
the
case
"Operation Enough," Meigs
County Wildlife Officer
Keith Wood and the
Division of Wildlife' s
covert enforcement unit,
conducted the investigation
and was assisted by the
Ohio State Highway Patrol,

Saturday.
game by beating Maryland.
No. !7 Oregon State can
Michigan State slipped
also secure a BCS bid and five spots to No . 22 after
the Pac-JO's Rose Bowl losing 49-18 to Penn State.
berth with a victory in its
Florida State, which has
finale. The Beavers ho st bounced in and out of the
No. 19 Oregon.
. poll much of the season, is
No. 18 Georgia Tech .is back in at No. 23 .
still in the running fo\ a ·· No. 24 Northwestern and
spot _in the Atlantic Coast No. 25 Mississippi are in
Conference title game, but the ranking for the first
needs Virginia Tech to lose ' time this season.
to Virginia for that to hapDropping out this week
pen.
were
North
Carolina,
BYU and Boston College Maryland,
Miami,
are tied at No . 20. BC can Pittsburgh and defending
advance to the ACC title national champion LSU.

Page AS
• Dorothy Fields,·83
• Doris Jean Haynes, 75
• Barbra James, 73
• W. Arnold Merritt, 83

BY BAlAN

.

-.! Fre~loading mu~t
~,~d. ~t ~.me. Jl9int.' ·

yards on t9 ·carries.
Darius Marshall . led the
Thundering Herd (4-7, 3-4)
with 118 yards on the
ground, and tight end Cody
Slate scored the tea m's only
touchdown in the . second
quarter. Marshall finished
the game with 185 yards
rushing, and quarterback
Mark Cann completed just
13 of his 24 passes for 83
yards.
After Saturday's performance, Marshall now has
I ,001 rushing. yards this
season.
Marshall had more time
of possession in the game,
but was just seven- for-17
on third down conversions
in losing its third straight
game.

: See 'Pag{ .6 ...~ ' . ,. -· .
• EaStern"staff approved.
. See Page AS

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:See Page A3

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.$17,995 SALE PRICE
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•'

Dnlll1 on Page A3

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INDEX
• . 2 SironONS -

a 15 year hunting right s without a hunting license,
. revocation an(l five years four counts of hl.\nting deer
probation. Cundiff must without a deer tag . failure to
also successfully complete a temporarily tag deer. failure
hunter edu.cation course .
to permanently check deer,
• Tracey L. Cundiff, 39, of two counts of hunting deer
Langsville: Pled no contest with a shotgun during closed
and found guilty on Nov. 13, season, taking more than
to charges of providing false one antlered deer, possesinformation to a deer check sion of illegal /untagg ed
station and aiding and assist- parts, aid an offender in viaing in taking deer illegally . Iating wildlife laws , and
She was fined $450 plus hunting deer with the aid of
court costs with $450 sus- a motor vehicle.
pended. five years or" huntHe' was fined $3,000 in
mg privilege revocation, f"mes p1us court costs with
two years probation , and $2,250 suspended. Hi s senmust successfu lly' complete tence also ·included .540
a hunter education course .
• Travis L. Cundiff, 20, of . days of jail time with 530
Langsville: Pled no contest suspended, a IS-year huntand found guilty on Nov. 13, ing rights revocation and
of four counts of hunting
Please see Poaching. AS

J. REED

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
The
POMEROY - "Energy and coal
Meigs County Board of
mining projects will help Meigs
Elections will' conduct its
County weatherthe storm," Economic
official count ofballotscast
Development Director Perry Varnadoe
in the Nov. 4 general electold U.S, Senator Sherrod Brown, Dtion
on Tuesday .
Ohio, Monday.
·
The official count will
Brown heard from business leaders,
include ballots cast at local
union labor representatives and educapolling places on Nov. 4, baltors during a town hall meeting in
. lots cast dl)ring the 30-day ·
Pomeroy, focusing on alternative enerearly votin~ period. &lt;Uld the
gy, infrastructure and economic devel228 provisional ballots cast
opment. The group also covered eduby voters who moved our of
cation, the auto industry bailout and
their voting precinct after the
other matters directly affecting the
voter registration deadline.
local business economy.
·
Those provisional ballots
The Senator asked questions and lisi'
were not included in the unoftened, getting input from each area
ficial
Election Night count.
represented - agriculture, public ser- ·
No final outcomes are
vice, education, economic developexpected to change with the
ment, and health care, among them.
official counh&lt;,~&gt;&lt;1 1th ough one
After a series of similar ~;reen enerrace ended \1\:'~~~ a difference
gy roundtables, Brown mtroduced
of just 165 votes. lnthe race
legislation in the U.S. Senate to build
for County Commissioner,
on Ohio's manufacturing heritage
·term beginning Jan. 2,
and create a new generation of green
Republican Thomas Anderson
jobs, he said.
.
received 4.104 votes, and
While the focus of yesterday's town
Democrat A. Thomas Lowery
hall meeting was green energy, most of
received 3.936.
those participating in the roundtable
Although 1he race will not
from local sectors emphasized the
likely be affected. a recount
importance of job creation. The ecois required if ih~ difference
nomic impact of the proposed American
in outcomes ufter the offi- ·
Municipal Power - Ohio clean-coal
cia! count is less than oneplant was a pei:fect fit for the dialogue
half of one percent .
between Brown and local leaders. ·
·
Brian
J
.
Reed/photo
Today's official count in
~conomic Development Director ·
U.S.
Senator
Sherrod
Brown
conducted
a
roundtable
discussion
wiih
communiCoumy will be more
Athens
Perry Varnadoe said the plant will
likely create •400 indirect and direct tY leaders Monday at the Wild Horse ·Cafe. Topics included green energy and the closely watched. With about
permanent jobs, and I ,600 construc- proposed auto industry bailout. Heather Wolf, a teacher at Eastern High School, 2,000 provisionals and other
votes uncounted, the official
and Skip Young of O'Bieness Health Systems is also pictured.
tion jobs while it.is being built,
count
will determine the
'That's huge irr a county of 23,000,
and . it will affect the whole region," financial crisis emerged and talks of a It's not just about General Motors. It's resuks of the race between
recession - or worse - heightened.
about tlie effect of their failure trick- Jill Thompson and Debbie
Varnadoe said.
.
Phillips for the 92nd Ohio
His sales are down for now; he said, ling down into other industries."
He asked Brown for assistance in
streamlining the permitting process on but local banks are "supportive" in
Brown is a co-sponsor of a plan House sear. Only 170 votes
the federal leveL It is expected AMP' extending credit to customers for car developed by senators from Ohio, separate the two, but Phillips
Ohio will break ground m the middle purchases. His concern, instead, he Michigan , Pennsylvania and other has said she is confident the
of next year for the plant, assuming told Brown, is that failure of an states that would use funds set aside official count will widen her
the lengthy state and federal permit- American auto maker would create a . for a $25 million re-tooling initiative margin of victory in that race.
national "depression."
ting process allows it.
to create bridge loans for auto makers
"We are talking about one million through the -U.S .. Department of
Brown also heard from Mark Porter,
owner of Pomeroy 's General Motors . jobs in the industry," Porter said. Commerce. It is one plan that might be
dealership. Business was brisk at the "These are not just people making
Please see Brown, AS
dealership until October, when the cars, but in other .companies as well .

BETH SERGENT

l2

BY BETH SERGENT

PAGFs

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars

..

Sheriff 's Nov. 13, to 17 wildlife
Meigs
Office and Pomeroy Police charges including hunting ·
Department, as they served deer with the aid of a motor
warrants and issued cita- vehicle, transporting a
.tions at seven locations in loaded firearm within a
Fepruary, 2007.
motor vehicle, hunting withAll cases were heard by out permission., taking more
County Court Judge Steven than one wild turkey per day,
Story. Nearly all hunting turkey ·without · a
L.
involved had their hunting wild turkey permit, failure to
privileges revoked illly- tag wild turkey, providing
where from one to 15 years. false information to a check
Those convicted forfeited station , hunting deer without
dozens of white-iailed deer a deer permit,' four counts of
mounts and antl er racks, failure to temporary tag deer,
various hunting' equipment, four counts of failure to
as well · as nearly 40 chec)&lt; deer and hunting outfirearms and three . ali-ter- . side of legal shooting times.
rain vehicles to the Division
Cundiff was fined $5,100
plus court costs with $4,100
of Wildlife.
suspended. He was .senFined were:
• Hobert L. Cundiff, 43, of tenced to 18 months of jail
Langsville: Pled guilty on time and will serve 30 days,

Holidays
bring tradition
Clean water permit being considered for barge facility ofBvcrime

·'""', '"
,

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BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
'

.

Brown holds Meigs County Election
roundtable on energy, economy ~::;:ay

0BITUARIFS

I

The los s came a few
·days after general manager Phil Savage had to
fromPageBl
apologize for a profane email he sent to a fan fol lowing the win over the .
Houston's 10-vard line.
Bills.
Quinn , who was . given
Rosenfels
connected
the JOb following Derek
with Walter on a perfectly
Anderson's early-seaso·n
thrown
17 -yard TD pass to
struggles. wenr 8 of 18 for
94 yar?s. Quinn was play- give the Texans a 7-0 lead .
Houston took .the openmg With a broken right
mdex fmger on hi s throw- ing kickoff and methodiing hand, but the Browns cally marched 79 yards in
neve'r announced any 14 plays, eating up more
_mJury when coach Romeo than eight minutes on the
Crennel pulled the form er clock before Rosenfels
Notre Dame star with threw to the left corner
Cleveland down 16-6 in where the 6-foot-3 Walter
made a leaping, twisting
the third quarter.
Anderson couldn't rall y catch .
The Texans got the ball
the Browns and was again
v1ctlm1zed by wide receiv- right back when Jacques
er Braylon Edwards, who Reeves knocked the ball
dropped one that was right loose from L:ewis, whose
in his hands and couldn't fumble was recovered by
Ryans
at
pull down a leaping DeMeco
attempt in the. end zone Clevela~d's 40.
that could have cut the
,Houston. though , couldmargin to a field goal in n t turn the field position
the fourth quarter. ·
111\0 a touchdown and setAnderson went 5 of 14 tled for Brown's 31-yard
for 51 yards, threw an field goal to go up 10-0 . .
interception and lost a
Cleveland got two field
fumble.
goals from Daw so n to
Browns running back close within 10-6 before
Jamal Lewis had two Brow n kicked another 31uncharacteristic fumbles yarder with three seconds
and kicker Phil Dawson , left to make it 13-6 at halfwho booted a game-win- time .
ning 56-yarder in Buffalo
Brown ki cked a 38 on Monday, missed from ~arder for the only point;
39 in the .fourth when the · 111 a sloppy second hal( by
Browns still had a chance. both clubs.

'

NEWSOMYDAILYSENliNELCOM

.

HOUSTON (AP)
Chase Clement threw for
315 yards and four tollchdowns,
becoming
Conference USA's all-time
leader in total touchdowns
and touchdown ·passes, in
the Rice Owls' 35-10 win
over
the
Marshall
Thundering
Heard
on
Saturday afternoon.
Clement, who also ran for
a touchdown Saturday, surpassed former Tulsa player
Paul Smith and now has
114 total touchdowns and
89 passing touchdowns.
The Owls (8-3. 6-1 in CUSA), who only scored
seven points in the fir st
half, improved to 5-0 at
home and have won five
straight ga.mes after losing
three of four from Sept. 13
to Oct. 4.
Jarrett Dillard caught six
passes for 88 yards and two
touchdowns.
Corbin Smiter and Toren
Dixon also caught touchdown passes for R\ce, and
CJ . Ugokwe ran for 79

.cases.

-·13

Clement tosses. 4 TDs in
Rice win over Marshall
'

County's cancer death
rate prompts study, A6

BSERGENTOMYDAILVSENTINELCOM

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•

RACINE - The Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency's Division of Sutface
Water has received an application for a Clean Water Act
401 water quality certification in regards to Gatling,
Ohio's barge loadout facility,
Meigs Point Dock.
The Ohio Division of
Mi.neral
Resources
Management issued the permit for Meigs Point Dock
back in September but now
not only the Ohio EPA but
'the US Army Corps of
Engineers must approve or
deny water quality &lt;;ertification applications.
The applicant states Meigs

Point Dock wishes to install The applicant's proposed veyor for unloading coal into
eight mooring cells along non-degradation alternative, barged docked at the cell.
The conveyor attached to
tl\e right descending bank of if approved, would have no
. the Ohio River at approxi- direct impacts on wasters of the main cell stretches 40
mately rive mile marker the state.
feet from the bank our into
Discharges from the the river and is roughly 30
241, just north of Antiquity.
As required by the activity, if ·;ipproved, would feet in diameter. There will
Anti degradation Rule of the result in degradation to, or be a "clean coal pile" on the
Ohio Administrative Code, lowering of the wat~r quali- actual
mine
site on
. three alternatives have been ty off the Ohio River. Call Yellowbush Road . The coal
submitted for the project 614-644-2001 to view is then placed onto the conThe applicant's proposed copies·of the applications or veyor which will cross Ohio
preferred alternative, if for further questions .
124to reach the Meigs Point
approved, would displace
In regards to Meigs Point Dock facility and eventually
approximately 236 cubic Dock , there will be no coal the barges . Gatling had
yards of river bed material. removal at the 15.6 acre site, already received consent
The applicant's proposed only coal loading onto from the Ohio Department
minimal degradation alter- barges docked at a main cell of Transportation to connative, if approved, would Jo be constructed in the Ohio · struct
covered conveyor
. involve transportation by River. The Ohio Division of over Ohio 124 .
· trucking, rather than river Mineral
Resources
Residents will also notice
barge and would not di s- Management permitted one ponds , diversion ditches
place any river bed material . main cell attached to a coil- and top soil piles at the site.

a

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BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The holidays bring various traditions including a traditional
increase in crime, according
to Pomeroy Chief of Police
Mark E. Proffitt.
Proffitt said two weeks
ago there had been ·a counterfeit $100 bill circulated
in Middleport and another '
$ 100 turned up last week at
the Ohio Valley Bank in
Pomeroy. Proffitt said consumers and merchants
should especially be on the
lookout for these bills this
time of year, adding that
sometimes the
special
magic makers merchants
use doesn't always indicate

Please see Crl111e. A5
;

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The Daily Sentinel

Bv BETH FoullY
, AND DAVID ESPO

ACROSS-THE WORLD

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

CHICP..GO
Forget
about
waiting
for
Inauguration Day.
Looking almost like a co, president. Barack Obama
cited an ."economic crisis of
historic proportions" on
Monday, conferred with the
man who's still in the White
House and urged Congress
to pass a costly,job-creating
stimulus bill as quickly as
,possible.
It was a rare pre-inaugural
call to action, delivered as
the outgoing Bush administration approved fresh · billions to bail out one of the
nation's largest banks.
For a day, it all seemed to
work .
Stock prices surged - the
biggest two-day percentage
gain for the Dow Jones
industrials in 21 years - as
investors took heart from
the actions and words of the
incoming and departing
chief executives.
"If .we do not act swiftly
·lll!d boldly. most experts
now believe that we could
lose mi!Jions of jobs next
year," said President-elect
Obama, 57 days shy of tak- ·
ing office in the sbadow of
the worst economic crisis
since the Great Depression .
He blended criticism of
Detroit's beleaguered Big
Three
automakers
General Motors Corp., Ford
Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC
;_ with a pledge of support
for government aid . to help
them survive . "We can' t
allow the auto industry to ...
vanish," he said , although he
added that a blank check for
an industry resistant to
change was not the solution
to its long-term decline .
At a news conference· in
which he introduced New
York federal Reserve
President Timothy Geithner
as his treasury secretary and
named other top economic
officials, Obama said restoring the economy to health

Tuesday; November 25,2008

crisis

on

asks

PageA2

AP photo
President-elect Barack Obama , accompanied by his Treasury Secretary-designate
Timothy Geithner, left, and others , announces his economic team Monday during a news
conference in Chicago.
took priority over deficit and incoming chief execu- Frjday's gain , that mean an
concerns. Still, he said he tives grappling - publicly 891 point increase over two
would be looking for and simultaneousl;y - with trading days , the qiggest
rise
since
"meaningful cuts and sacri- the economy underscored percentage
fices" to restrain federal the severity of a crisis that October 1987.
spending .
.
has sent joblessness rising ,
O~ama made a point of
The president-elect was caused a large spike in say ing hi s admini stration
expected to stress that mortgage foreclosures and "will honor the public compledge at a second news crippled the credit markets. mitments made by the curconference on Tuesday.
.Bush said his administra- rent administration to
Democrati c officials said he tion 's dramatic overnight ad(jress this crisi&lt;' words
intended to name Peter rescue ofCitigroup Inc. was of reass·urance to the finanOrszag, currently the head · necessary to safeguard the cia! markets.
of
the
Congressional · nation's financial system
Remarkably for a presiBudget Office , to be his and help the economy dent,elect, he said he want·
budget director.
recover. He said more such ed Congress . to act "right
Obama and President moves might follow if other away" on .a stimulus meaGeorge W. Bush spoke. by institutions need help . sure that .would blend
telephone during the day, Oft1cials said the govern- . spending and tax cuts.
their first disclosed con versa- · ment might invest $20 bil-. Asked for details, he said
tion since a visit at the White lion in the firm, and guaran- without elaboration that he
House more than a week ago. tee $306 billion in risky ... wanted a measure "of a size
and each man appeared eager assets.
and scope that is necessary
to show a transition proceedEncouraged by the action, to get thi's economy back on
ing smoothly.
·investors sent the Dow track.''
·
At the same iime , the jux- Jones industrials up 3?7
Democratic officials in
taposition of the outgoing points . .Coupled with Congress said the stimulus

plan could indude aid to to join Democrats in sendcash-strapped states to pro· ing legislation to the White
vide health care to the poor, House as soon as possible.
House -Republica]! Leader
along with road and bridge
funding . ~\hire money for John Boehner of Ohio said
food stamps is ahn likely, he hoped the new administration would listen to those
they said .
· Obama renewed his cam· "who do not believe increaspaign-long call fqr middle . ing,governmentspending is
class tax cuts but said he thc·best way to put our econwould let hi ~ advisers make omy back on track."
Nominall y. Obama called
a recommendation on
the
news conference to
whether to roll back Bush·
era tax cuts for the wealthy. introduce the top members
He offered few details of the economic circle of
about the economic stimu- advi sers who will join his
lus measure he wants from adm inistration . ·
As treasury secretary he
the new Congress , saying he
turned
to Geithner as well as
would ask his new team of ·
advisers to consult .with Pormer Treasury Secretary
Lawrence St1mmers to head
lawmakers.
his
National Economic
As a candidate, he . supported a $175 billion mea- C6unc il.
In recent months, the 47sure, but the t;conom y has.
year-old
Geithner has
worsened since then. ahd
many lawmake1's and econ- worked . closely with the
omists argue. for a more · Bush administration on_the
robust jolt. Obama said his bailout of the financial
goal is to create 2.5 million industry, and earlier in his
jobs by "rebuilding our career was involved in
infrastructure, our roads. responding to iniernational
our bridges, moderni zi ng financial cr.ises overseas.
Obama named Christina
our schools and creating the
Romer,
an economics proclean energy infrastructure
fessor, as chair of his
of the 21st century."
His forecast was sober. Council of Economic
He said' there are neither ·Advisers. Melody Bllfl)es·, a
former aide to· Sen. Edward
shortcuts nor quick fix es.
"The economy is likely to M. Kennedy, was named
. get worse before it gets bet- director of the White House
ter. Full recovery will not Domestic Policy Council.
The appointment of
happen immediately ," he
was the first
Geithner
said . At the same time. he
coupled those sentiments Cabinet selection Obama
with optimism. " I know we has announced. a distinction
can work our way out of this meant to u.nderscore the
crisis because we have done economy's importance as he
prepares to take office.
it before.'!
·
Democratic offiCials have
The new Congress comes
into session on Jan. 6, two said previously the presiweeks before Obama takes dent-elect .is on track to
the oath of office as the name former rival Hillary
Rodham Clinton, the New
nation's 44th president.
Democratic leaders have York senator, as secretary of
said they, are eager to spend state , and former Clinton
the lime before· then work- administration
Justice
ing on the legislation he Department official Eric
·wants , and Obama had Holder as attorney general.
scarcely made his remarks
Robert Gates, defense
when political jockeying secretary during Bush 's last
broke out over the details .
two years in office, is a posSenate Majority Leader sible holdover, at least for
Harry ·Reid ,.D-Nev. , issued several . months, · aides to
·'
a challenge to Republicans · Obama have said.

Astronauts step out for
final spacewalk of mission
first three spacewalks and
new bearings were put in .
Bowen finished the job
CAPE CANAVERAL, . Monday. pavi'ng the way for
Fla. - Astronauts success- a test of the newly.repaired ·
fully carried out one last joint Tuesday. Regardless of
spacewalk Monday, tinish· the outcome , more space- ·
ing an unprecedented clean walks are planned 'on later
and lube job that they began missions for a better,
a week ago at the interna- longer-term fix.
tional space station.
An identical joint on the
Spacewalker
Stephen left side of the orbiting
Bowen wrapped up work on complex has worked pera jammed solar-wing rotary fectly, but .NASA wantP.d ·
joim as his partner, Shane the spacewalkers· to grease
Kimbrough, squirted some it up to ensure its longevity.
extra grease as a precaution Once they opened up th1s
on another joint that is joint , the astronauts noticed
working fine.
.
wear on some parts.
When the repairs .to the
The dialogue between· the
gummed-up . joint were spacewalkers and the astradeemed complete, Mission nauts inside was technical
Control radioed up its and full of numbers denot- ·
applause .
•
ing the various panels on
"Finallv:·
Bowen the joints. 'Too many numexclaimed. '·Thanks for your bers," one of the spacewalk·
work ... rep! ied Mission ers grumbled.
·
Control. erupting in laughter.
As they have before , the
Just. before Monday 's spacewalkers had to share
spacewalk began. NASA grease guns 225 miles up.
added a 16th day to space There was one less tool kit
shuttle Endeavour's mission . after a sack full of grease
Managers wan ted to give the . guns and other items floated
astronauts more ti me to fix a away on the first spacewalk
machine that\ supposed to last Tuesday.
turn unne into drinking
Inside the space st&lt;ition ,
water: addit ional repairs meanwhile, sk ipper Mike
were perfonned Monday for Fincke performed more
the fifth day in a row.
repair work on the new
The $154 million recy- urine processor.
cling equipment was deliv· NASA was hoping for a
ered by Endeavour along full . fo ur-hour test run
with other home m~keover Monday following Fincke 's
items needed to expand the tinkering. On Sunday, the
space station crew to six urine processor shut down
next year.
after operating less than ·
Monday 's spacewalk was three hoUI·s; before, it never
the fourth for Endeavour 's even made it that far.
;astronauts, and it lasted
When informed more
more than six hours. Greasy urine might be needed,
repatr work on the clogged Fincke said, "We ll , we ' ve
JOtnt consumed most of their got a very adeq uate suppl y
time on all four outings .'
of yeste rday's coffee to
The rotary joint on the help ." Mi ssion Control then .
right side of the space sta- joked: "We'll see if we need
tion hasn't worked properly . to add some Diet Coke to
for more than a year, pre- the plan .'' For the record ,
venting the solar wings on there is no Diet Coke - or
that side from pointing any other soda - up there.
automatically toward the
The astronauts ha ve man·Sun . Grinding .parts left the aged to collect samples of
· joint full of metal shavings . the recycled water for return
Almost all the gritty mess to Earth aboard Endeavour.
was cleaned up during the rel}ing mostly on converted
BY MARCIA DUNN

AP AEROSPACE WAITER

-' -

In this image
fiom NASA ·
TV, astronaut
Stephen
Bowen is ·
seen during·
a space walk
outside the ·.
International
· space
Station
Monday. The
, spacewalk
marks the
fourth and
!Ina! spacewalk of
space shuttle
Endeavour's
nearly two·
week visit to
. the orbiting
outpost.
AP photo

condensation. NASA would
prefer more urine in the
mix ; that's the way the systern was designed.
No ·one can drink the recyelect water until tests show it's
safe. Additional samples will
be returned on the next space
s,huttle flight in February, to
confirm everything is worlcing properly. NASA's goal is
to have six people living on
the space station byJune.
· The extra day in space for
Endeavour now means that
the two crews - eight men
and two women - will eelebrate Thanksgiving together and not part company
until Friday. Endeavour's
touchdown is now scheduled for Sunday.

Holzer Clinic Urge.nt Care Hours
Thanksgiving Weekend

Thanksgiving Day
'

Mairi. Facility
lpm-6pm

HOLZER
CLINIC

.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Freeloading must
·end at some point
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR
Dear Annie: My daughter, "Mattie," is 23 and has a
!-year-old daughter. She
moved in with us when she
found out she was pregnant
and is sti ll here. She has
since lost her job and does
nothing. She gets unemployment and some child
support from the loser
father, and apparently that is
enough for her.
We are at our wits' end. If
it weren't ·for my husband
and .me, our granddaughter
wouldn 't have diapers or
baby food . We are afraid to
kick Mattie out because it
· •vould only hurt our grandchild, and Mattie knows it.
All my daughter cares about
is going out and having fun.
She acts as if the baby is an
inconvenience. She lies on
the couch and lets the baby
roam around the house
unsupervised.
I work nights and my )Iusband is on the swing shift,
It's getting hard to do this. l
never expected to start raising another family this late
in life. We love our granddaughter with all our hearts
and would do anything for
her, but we don 't know what
that is anymore. Any suggestions? - Strugg:lng
Grandparents
Dear Struggling: At
·some point, you're going to
have to decide whether you
are willing to throw Mattie
out of the house . Tell your
daughter
you've
had
enough of her freeloading
and she can ; lay only if she
gets a job and contributes to
th'e household . Make sure
she understands that she is
setting a horrible exart1ple
for her daughter. Help her
look for employment and an
apartment. If necessary,
offer to keep the baby while
she moves out. It won't
solve your problem nO\y,
tiut it will forte Mattie to
get her act together, which
will help all of you in the
long run.
Dear Annie: I have been
dating a great guy for six
. months. He is wonderful,
attentive, caring and treats
me like ·a princess. "Tom"
has two children from his
first marriage, which broke
·. up · b.e~ause his ex had an
affair with a neighbor. He
. forgave her, but she cheated
again, so he divorced her.
They keep in contact
because of the kids, and she
constantly calls him.
My problem is that I am

.

Thesday...Snow showers
likely. Little or no snow
accumulation . Hi~hs in ihe
mid 30s. West wmds 10 to
15 mph. Chance of snow 70
.
percent.
.
Tuesday night ...Cloudy
with a 50 percent chance of
·: snow showers. Cold ,with
· ·lows. in the upper 20s. West
::winds 10 to 15 mph.
·· Wednesday . .. Partly
sunny with a 20 percent
. chance of snow showers.
: . 1-lig~s in the upper 30s.
· West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday night...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in
the mid 20s. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
·
Thanksgiving Day and
Thursday night •••Partly

AEP (NYSE) - 29.15
AkZo (NASDAQ) - 31 .70
Aehland Inc. (NYSE) - 9.58
BIO Loll (NYSE') - 15.99
Bob Evana (NASDAQ) - 14.110
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 20.64
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

Jackson, Athens, Meigs 'Facilities
12pm-6pm

-6.10

Champion (NASDAQ) - 2.40
Channing Shope (NASDAQ) 1.20

'

City Hotdtno (NASDAQ) -

.Frida): Saturda): and Sunday
Main Facility
lpm-9pm
Meigs Facility
11am-9pm
Jackson Facility llani-9pm
Athens Facility
9ani-9pm

BY THE BEND

PageA3
Tuesday, November 25,2008

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Thesday, Nov, 25
POMEROY
Local
Emergency
Planning
Committee, 11 :30 a.m.,
Senior Center. FY-09 exercise to be discussed. Lunc!J
available .
RACINE
Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency, public hearing.
di scuss
Gatling-Ohio's
draft permit-to-install and
draft wastewater discharge
permit application·, 6:30
p.m., Southern Elementary
School.
·
Wednesday, Dec. '3
PAGEVILLE - Regular

monthly meeting of Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., Page ville Town Hall.

Other events

Old Bethel Free Will
Baptist Church, Ohio 7 and
Story's Run Road, 7 p.m.
nightly through Nov. 28.
evangelist Norman Taylor.

Birthdays
Thursday, Nov. 27
TUPPERS PLAINS Ina Jean Weaver will celebrate her 80th birthday on
Nov. 27. Cards may be sent
to her at 18 Cheyenne
Street. Chillicothe, Ohio
4560 I. The family is host- .
ing an open house in her
honor at her home on Nov.
29, 2 to 4 p.m .
Friday,Nov. 28 ·
REEDSVILLE
Virginia Cowdery Walton
will celebrate her 90th
birthday on Nov. 28. cards
may be sent to PO Box 142,
Reedsville . 45772 .

secretiy jealous of his ex.
It's not that he talks about
Wednesday, Nov.-26
her in an affectionate .way
RACINE - Coin ex hibi- he doesn't. But I've
tion and photo display at the
asked him questions about
Rac ine Home National
the way they met and such,
Bank by Bob Graham.
Tuesday, Nov. 25
and he describes a relationPicture puzzle of the Cross
POMEROY - Oh-Kan
ship that sounds ideal , as if
Store an.d Racine Banking Coin Club. 7 p.m at the
they were soul mates.
Co. to be given in a free Pomeroy Library. Public
We don't have that kind
drawing.
welcome .
of relationship, and while
Monday, Dec. 1
Tom assures me often that
POMEROY
. he loves me, he adds that
Rot11ry
Middleport-Pomeroy
each love is different. He
Club
to
meet
at
noon,
Bun 's
1\Jesday, Nov. 25
says he wants to marry me,
CHESHIRE - Revival at 'Party Bam .
but I can't get past the fact
that he loved his ex and
made a life with her for 12
years, and that they would
still be together if she hadn 't
cheated. What should I do?
BY LISA CORNWELL
- Gretn Eyes
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Dear (}reen Eyes: Are
you looking for trouble? Of
CINCINNATI - One of
course Tom loved his wife,
three
children killed when a
but if you obsess over it,
·
fire
swept
through their
you're going .to mess up
house
early
Monday was
whatever chance you have
for a life with this man. standing on the porch roof
Here 's the only question that being coaxed by her father
matters: If his ex could con- . to jump as the roof colvince him that she wants him lapsed, fire officials satd.
Flames and smoke were
back, would he go? If the
from both floors
billowing
answer is "no," then get over
the
smgle-family
home,.
of
it If the answer is something
and the blaze was raging in
else, cut him loose .
full
force by the time fireDear Annie: "Confused
fighters
arrived shortly after
Out West" says her husband
volunteers to referee. He 2:30 a.m., said Capt. Mike
Washington
of
the
may be lying .
Cincinnati
fire
department.
My husband has been a
"When one of the battalion
referee for years. He gets
paid for these assignments . chiefs arrived in his car, he
Even the YMCA pays their saw the girl on the rocif of
refs. Sure , we have to put the porch," Washington said.
out some money for uni- "She was lost in the fire.'' ·
The children were 2-yearforms and gas, but he makes
.
old
Robert Joseph Hulett, 5up for it during the season.
And the hotel expenses are year~old Jasinine Hulett and
9-year-old Julia Hulett,
usually covered.
Almost every sports orga- according to the Hamilton
nization pa~s for refereeing, County coroner's office.
All · three bodies were
especially 1f thby are orgafound
inside after the blaze
nized enough to hold outwas
•extinguished,
with one
of-town toumamenis. If she
has questions, she can con- on the first floor and the other
tact any state athletic asso- two on the second floor.
The children's father,
ciation. - M.S.
Dear M.S.: We don't Robert Hulett, was in serious
have all the details on the . condition with bums, accord· .man's arrangements, but .we ing to University Hospital.
hope his wife will look into He had leaped from the
porch roof. The mother, April
the matter.
Hulett,
escaped the blaze,
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
Washington
said.
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Two nearby fire crews
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers arrived about two minutes
column. Please e-mail your after a series of 911 phone
questions to anniesmail- calls, Washington said.
box@comcast.net, or write · More than 50 firefighters
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. battled the blaze.
"We
fought
hard,"
Box 118190, Chicago, lL
· 60611. To find out more Washington said. "It was an
about Annie's Mailbox, intense fire and it was a
and read features by other valiant effort on the fireAP photo
Creators Syndicate writers fighters' part.''
and cartoonists, visit th11 · The cause of the fire that This is the charred remnants after a house fire left three children dead in the early morn(reators Syndicate Web destroyed the home has not ing hours Monday in Cincinnati. All the children were under the age of 10. A fire official said
page at www.creators.com. been determined. Washington a man escaped the fire by jumping from a roof. Authorities said he was seriously injured
said Mpnday evening.
and was taken to University Hospital.
Julia Hulett was in the
third grade at Oyler School ,
"It's a delicate situation ed in preschool and knew in case of a fire , and school
officials were also answera Cincinnati public school when it involves a young- both her and her father.
"Every time you saw Julia. ing their .questions about
that serves children from ster," said Hockenberry.
pre:kindergarten through
Hockenberry said Julia you saw her father." said fire safety Monday.
cloudy. Highs in the mid 12th grade. Counselors, psy- . Hulett's classmates decorat- Hockenberry. "He would . Seven Ohioans have died
40s . Lows in the upper 20s. chologists and social work- ed her empty desk Monday 'always walk her all the way in fires in the past three
· _Frid.ay.-Partly
sunny. ers were on hand to talk with with drawings and pictures to her classroom when he days, said Shane Cartmill,
H1ghs m the m1d 40s.
· Julia's classmates, who were of her and 'with letters and brought her to school."
spokesinan for the State
Friday · · night ...Mostly stunned and upset - many cards saying how much they
The principal said that Fire Marshal 's Office. ·
cloudy with a chance ofrain of them crying - after he!ll'· missed her.
The total fire deaths so far
many students also were
an&lt;:! snow. Lows in the ing the news, said principal
Hockenberry said Julia had frightened, asking questions this year is !55, compared
upper 20s. Chance of pre: Craig Hockenberry.
been at Oyler since she start- about what tbey should do with 129 in 2007, he said.
c1pitation 40 percent.
Saturday ...Partly sunny
with a chance of rain and
show showers. Highs in the
111id 40s. Chance of precipi·
tation 30 percent.
NEWARK (AP) - Bonnie ny's products, Matthews for4to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the obviously," Matthews said.
Saturday night through Jean Gist Longaber:ger, the said. The matriaroh 's love Dresden Chapel of VensiiWednesday
morning's
Sunday
night...Mostly 100-year-&lt;Jid matriarch of the of ·
daffodils
led Orr &amp; Chute Funeral Home. funeral service at Dresden
cloudy. Lows in the upper family
"She was beloved by our. United Methodist Church
~hind
Ohio's Longaberger to offer bas· 20s. Highs in the lower 40s. Longaberger basket company, kets designed to hold and employees and home con- will be followed by a priMonday...Partly sunny .has died, the company said.
display the flowers. he said. sultants and will be missed. vate family burial.
with a chance of rain show"
The company ·operates
"Grandma Bonnie," as she
ers. Highs in the lower 40s. was known within the com- out of a seven-story, basket·
Chance of rain 3q percent. .pany, died Sunday at a nurs- shaped building in Newark,
Before Old Man Winter
ing home in Coshocton, -said about 30 mlles east of
Tom
Matthews,
a Columbus.
Arrives, Prepare with
Bonnie
Longaberger
was
Longaberger
Co.
spokesman.
'• '
Ohio's Home Energy
No cause of death was born July 16 , 1908 in .the
Assistance 'Programs
eastern Ohio village of
illliJiediately given.
47.84
ln a letter on the compa- Trinway. At a home in nearOhio Valley Bane Corp. (NASny's Web site , chief execu- by Dresden , she raised 12
DAQ) -19.23
Foran
• Home Energy Assistance
tive and president Tami children next to a workshop
·aaT (NYSE) - 27.41 .
Application
Peoptee (NASDAQ) - 16.86
Longaberger said her grand- where her h!lsband , J .W.
• Percentage of Income
Pepetco (NYSE) - 55.86
Loc11tlon Near You,
mother had remained active Longaberger, made baskets
Payment Plans
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.90
in the company and the com- by hand and taught the craft ·
Caii1·BOG-331·2644 .
ROCkwell (NYSE) - 27.33
· • EmergencyHeating
to
his
children.
munity
until
recent
years
and
Rocky Bootl (NASDAQ) - 3.18
or visit:
Assistance
The company was found·
was a resilient, loving
Roylll Dutch Shell - SOAO
www.ara~agency8.org
Seers Holding (NASOAQ) ed in 1973 by the couple's
woman with a zest,for life.
35.33
.
"She had a commonsense son Dave Longabergcr, who
Wat-Mert (NYSE) - 52.77 ·
Programs for Eligible Low-income Ohioans
attitude
and enjoyed simple died in L999 and was the
Wendy'e (NYSE) - 3.55
living. She never com- father of the current CEO.
WesBIInco (NYSE) - 23.90
WOrthington (NYBE) - 10.112
/"'\~
plained," Tami Longaberger The company relies on
Dlllty llock reporte .... ihe 4
approximately
45,000
inde"She
always
recalled.
p.m. ET ctoetng quote• Of
~~~ Area Ag('l1CY op Agin g
believed in forging ahLad, pendent consultants throughtranuc:tlona lor Nov. 24, 2008,
and she did it with a wit and out the U.S. who sell its basprovided by Eclwenl Jon.
A Program of Buckeye Hllts~ockfng
llnanclallldVIeon IIIIC Mille tn sense of humor .that made us kets, pottery and other prod·
V.lley Regional Development District
Galllpolla 111 (740) 441·8441 t~nd chuckle out loud.''
ucts directly to customers .
Serv.ng seniors in At'1ens, Hoe;king, Meigs, Monroe ,
Leoley Me;,.ro In l'olnt
She also provided inspiraVisitation for Bonnie
Mo'llan , Noble, Perry &amp; Washington Counties
Pt-nt at (304) 874-0174.
tion
for
many
of
the
compaLongaberger
is scheduled
Member SIPC.

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

3 children dead in Cincinnati fire

35.30

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US Bonk (NYSE) - 25.10
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Basket matriarch Bonnie Long~berger dies

\I

,..

•

'
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~

Local Weather

Local Stocks

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The Daily Sentinel

t

•

�''

•
&lt;

'

The Daily Sentinel

Bv BETH FoullY
, AND DAVID ESPO

ACROSS-THE WORLD

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

CHICP..GO
Forget
about
waiting
for
Inauguration Day.
Looking almost like a co, president. Barack Obama
cited an ."economic crisis of
historic proportions" on
Monday, conferred with the
man who's still in the White
House and urged Congress
to pass a costly,job-creating
stimulus bill as quickly as
,possible.
It was a rare pre-inaugural
call to action, delivered as
the outgoing Bush administration approved fresh · billions to bail out one of the
nation's largest banks.
For a day, it all seemed to
work .
Stock prices surged - the
biggest two-day percentage
gain for the Dow Jones
industrials in 21 years - as
investors took heart from
the actions and words of the
incoming and departing
chief executives.
"If .we do not act swiftly
·lll!d boldly. most experts
now believe that we could
lose mi!Jions of jobs next
year," said President-elect
Obama, 57 days shy of tak- ·
ing office in the sbadow of
the worst economic crisis
since the Great Depression .
He blended criticism of
Detroit's beleaguered Big
Three
automakers
General Motors Corp., Ford
Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC
;_ with a pledge of support
for government aid . to help
them survive . "We can' t
allow the auto industry to ...
vanish," he said , although he
added that a blank check for
an industry resistant to
change was not the solution
to its long-term decline .
At a news conference· in
which he introduced New
York federal Reserve
President Timothy Geithner
as his treasury secretary and
named other top economic
officials, Obama said restoring the economy to health

Tuesday; November 25,2008

crisis

on

asks

PageA2

AP photo
President-elect Barack Obama , accompanied by his Treasury Secretary-designate
Timothy Geithner, left, and others , announces his economic team Monday during a news
conference in Chicago.
took priority over deficit and incoming chief execu- Frjday's gain , that mean an
concerns. Still, he said he tives grappling - publicly 891 point increase over two
would be looking for and simultaneousl;y - with trading days , the qiggest
rise
since
"meaningful cuts and sacri- the economy underscored percentage
fices" to restrain federal the severity of a crisis that October 1987.
spending .
.
has sent joblessness rising ,
O~ama made a point of
The president-elect was caused a large spike in say ing hi s admini stration
expected to stress that mortgage foreclosures and "will honor the public compledge at a second news crippled the credit markets. mitments made by the curconference on Tuesday.
.Bush said his administra- rent administration to
Democrati c officials said he tion 's dramatic overnight ad(jress this crisi&lt;' words
intended to name Peter rescue ofCitigroup Inc. was of reass·urance to the finanOrszag, currently the head · necessary to safeguard the cia! markets.
of
the
Congressional · nation's financial system
Remarkably for a presiBudget Office , to be his and help the economy dent,elect, he said he want·
budget director.
recover. He said more such ed Congress . to act "right
Obama and President moves might follow if other away" on .a stimulus meaGeorge W. Bush spoke. by institutions need help . sure that .would blend
telephone during the day, Oft1cials said the govern- . spending and tax cuts.
their first disclosed con versa- · ment might invest $20 bil-. Asked for details, he said
tion since a visit at the White lion in the firm, and guaran- without elaboration that he
House more than a week ago. tee $306 billion in risky ... wanted a measure "of a size
and each man appeared eager assets.
and scope that is necessary
to show a transition proceedEncouraged by the action, to get thi's economy back on
ing smoothly.
·investors sent the Dow track.''
·
At the same iime , the jux- Jones industrials up 3?7
Democratic officials in
taposition of the outgoing points . .Coupled with Congress said the stimulus

plan could indude aid to to join Democrats in sendcash-strapped states to pro· ing legislation to the White
vide health care to the poor, House as soon as possible.
House -Republica]! Leader
along with road and bridge
funding . ~\hire money for John Boehner of Ohio said
food stamps is ahn likely, he hoped the new administration would listen to those
they said .
· Obama renewed his cam· "who do not believe increaspaign-long call fqr middle . ing,governmentspending is
class tax cuts but said he thc·best way to put our econwould let hi ~ advisers make omy back on track."
Nominall y. Obama called
a recommendation on
the
news conference to
whether to roll back Bush·
era tax cuts for the wealthy. introduce the top members
He offered few details of the economic circle of
about the economic stimu- advi sers who will join his
lus measure he wants from adm inistration . ·
As treasury secretary he
the new Congress , saying he
turned
to Geithner as well as
would ask his new team of ·
advisers to consult .with Pormer Treasury Secretary
Lawrence St1mmers to head
lawmakers.
his
National Economic
As a candidate, he . supported a $175 billion mea- C6unc il.
In recent months, the 47sure, but the t;conom y has.
year-old
Geithner has
worsened since then. ahd
many lawmake1's and econ- worked . closely with the
omists argue. for a more · Bush administration on_the
robust jolt. Obama said his bailout of the financial
goal is to create 2.5 million industry, and earlier in his
jobs by "rebuilding our career was involved in
infrastructure, our roads. responding to iniernational
our bridges, moderni zi ng financial cr.ises overseas.
Obama named Christina
our schools and creating the
Romer,
an economics proclean energy infrastructure
fessor, as chair of his
of the 21st century."
His forecast was sober. Council of Economic
He said' there are neither ·Advisers. Melody Bllfl)es·, a
former aide to· Sen. Edward
shortcuts nor quick fix es.
"The economy is likely to M. Kennedy, was named
. get worse before it gets bet- director of the White House
ter. Full recovery will not Domestic Policy Council.
The appointment of
happen immediately ," he
was the first
Geithner
said . At the same time. he
coupled those sentiments Cabinet selection Obama
with optimism. " I know we has announced. a distinction
can work our way out of this meant to u.nderscore the
crisis because we have done economy's importance as he
prepares to take office.
it before.'!
·
Democratic offiCials have
The new Congress comes
into session on Jan. 6, two said previously the presiweeks before Obama takes dent-elect .is on track to
the oath of office as the name former rival Hillary
Rodham Clinton, the New
nation's 44th president.
Democratic leaders have York senator, as secretary of
said they, are eager to spend state , and former Clinton
the lime before· then work- administration
Justice
ing on the legislation he Department official Eric
·wants , and Obama had Holder as attorney general.
scarcely made his remarks
Robert Gates, defense
when political jockeying secretary during Bush 's last
broke out over the details .
two years in office, is a posSenate Majority Leader sible holdover, at least for
Harry ·Reid ,.D-Nev. , issued several . months, · aides to
·'
a challenge to Republicans · Obama have said.

Astronauts step out for
final spacewalk of mission
first three spacewalks and
new bearings were put in .
Bowen finished the job
CAPE CANAVERAL, . Monday. pavi'ng the way for
Fla. - Astronauts success- a test of the newly.repaired ·
fully carried out one last joint Tuesday. Regardless of
spacewalk Monday, tinish· the outcome , more space- ·
ing an unprecedented clean walks are planned 'on later
and lube job that they began missions for a better,
a week ago at the interna- longer-term fix.
tional space station.
An identical joint on the
Spacewalker
Stephen left side of the orbiting
Bowen wrapped up work on complex has worked pera jammed solar-wing rotary fectly, but .NASA wantP.d ·
joim as his partner, Shane the spacewalkers· to grease
Kimbrough, squirted some it up to ensure its longevity.
extra grease as a precaution Once they opened up th1s
on another joint that is joint , the astronauts noticed
working fine.
.
wear on some parts.
When the repairs .to the
The dialogue between· the
gummed-up . joint were spacewalkers and the astradeemed complete, Mission nauts inside was technical
Control radioed up its and full of numbers denot- ·
applause .
•
ing the various panels on
"Finallv:·
Bowen the joints. 'Too many numexclaimed. '·Thanks for your bers," one of the spacewalk·
work ... rep! ied Mission ers grumbled.
·
Control. erupting in laughter.
As they have before , the
Just. before Monday 's spacewalkers had to share
spacewalk began. NASA grease guns 225 miles up.
added a 16th day to space There was one less tool kit
shuttle Endeavour's mission . after a sack full of grease
Managers wan ted to give the . guns and other items floated
astronauts more ti me to fix a away on the first spacewalk
machine that\ supposed to last Tuesday.
turn unne into drinking
Inside the space st&lt;ition ,
water: addit ional repairs meanwhile, sk ipper Mike
were perfonned Monday for Fincke performed more
the fifth day in a row.
repair work on the new
The $154 million recy- urine processor.
cling equipment was deliv· NASA was hoping for a
ered by Endeavour along full . fo ur-hour test run
with other home m~keover Monday following Fincke 's
items needed to expand the tinkering. On Sunday, the
space station crew to six urine processor shut down
next year.
after operating less than ·
Monday 's spacewalk was three hoUI·s; before, it never
the fourth for Endeavour 's even made it that far.
;astronauts, and it lasted
When informed more
more than six hours. Greasy urine might be needed,
repatr work on the clogged Fincke said, "We ll , we ' ve
JOtnt consumed most of their got a very adeq uate suppl y
time on all four outings .'
of yeste rday's coffee to
The rotary joint on the help ." Mi ssion Control then .
right side of the space sta- joked: "We'll see if we need
tion hasn't worked properly . to add some Diet Coke to
for more than a year, pre- the plan .'' For the record ,
venting the solar wings on there is no Diet Coke - or
that side from pointing any other soda - up there.
automatically toward the
The astronauts ha ve man·Sun . Grinding .parts left the aged to collect samples of
· joint full of metal shavings . the recycled water for return
Almost all the gritty mess to Earth aboard Endeavour.
was cleaned up during the rel}ing mostly on converted
BY MARCIA DUNN

AP AEROSPACE WAITER

-' -

In this image
fiom NASA ·
TV, astronaut
Stephen
Bowen is ·
seen during·
a space walk
outside the ·.
International
· space
Station
Monday. The
, spacewalk
marks the
fourth and
!Ina! spacewalk of
space shuttle
Endeavour's
nearly two·
week visit to
. the orbiting
outpost.
AP photo

condensation. NASA would
prefer more urine in the
mix ; that's the way the systern was designed.
No ·one can drink the recyelect water until tests show it's
safe. Additional samples will
be returned on the next space
s,huttle flight in February, to
confirm everything is worlcing properly. NASA's goal is
to have six people living on
the space station byJune.
· The extra day in space for
Endeavour now means that
the two crews - eight men
and two women - will eelebrate Thanksgiving together and not part company
until Friday. Endeavour's
touchdown is now scheduled for Sunday.

Holzer Clinic Urge.nt Care Hours
Thanksgiving Weekend

Thanksgiving Day
'

Mairi. Facility
lpm-6pm

HOLZER
CLINIC

.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Freeloading must
·end at some point
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR
Dear Annie: My daughter, "Mattie," is 23 and has a
!-year-old daughter. She
moved in with us when she
found out she was pregnant
and is sti ll here. She has
since lost her job and does
nothing. She gets unemployment and some child
support from the loser
father, and apparently that is
enough for her.
We are at our wits' end. If
it weren't ·for my husband
and .me, our granddaughter
wouldn 't have diapers or
baby food . We are afraid to
kick Mattie out because it
· •vould only hurt our grandchild, and Mattie knows it.
All my daughter cares about
is going out and having fun.
She acts as if the baby is an
inconvenience. She lies on
the couch and lets the baby
roam around the house
unsupervised.
I work nights and my )Iusband is on the swing shift,
It's getting hard to do this. l
never expected to start raising another family this late
in life. We love our granddaughter with all our hearts
and would do anything for
her, but we don 't know what
that is anymore. Any suggestions? - Strugg:lng
Grandparents
Dear Struggling: At
·some point, you're going to
have to decide whether you
are willing to throw Mattie
out of the house . Tell your
daughter
you've
had
enough of her freeloading
and she can ; lay only if she
gets a job and contributes to
th'e household . Make sure
she understands that she is
setting a horrible exart1ple
for her daughter. Help her
look for employment and an
apartment. If necessary,
offer to keep the baby while
she moves out. It won't
solve your problem nO\y,
tiut it will forte Mattie to
get her act together, which
will help all of you in the
long run.
Dear Annie: I have been
dating a great guy for six
. months. He is wonderful,
attentive, caring and treats
me like ·a princess. "Tom"
has two children from his
first marriage, which broke
·. up · b.e~ause his ex had an
affair with a neighbor. He
. forgave her, but she cheated
again, so he divorced her.
They keep in contact
because of the kids, and she
constantly calls him.
My problem is that I am

.

Thesday...Snow showers
likely. Little or no snow
accumulation . Hi~hs in ihe
mid 30s. West wmds 10 to
15 mph. Chance of snow 70
.
percent.
.
Tuesday night ...Cloudy
with a 50 percent chance of
·: snow showers. Cold ,with
· ·lows. in the upper 20s. West
::winds 10 to 15 mph.
·· Wednesday . .. Partly
sunny with a 20 percent
. chance of snow showers.
: . 1-lig~s in the upper 30s.
· West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday night...Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in
the mid 20s. Southwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
·
Thanksgiving Day and
Thursday night •••Partly

AEP (NYSE) - 29.15
AkZo (NASDAQ) - 31 .70
Aehland Inc. (NYSE) - 9.58
BIO Loll (NYSE') - 15.99
Bob Evana (NASDAQ) - 14.110
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 20.64
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

Jackson, Athens, Meigs 'Facilities
12pm-6pm

-6.10

Champion (NASDAQ) - 2.40
Channing Shope (NASDAQ) 1.20

'

City Hotdtno (NASDAQ) -

.Frida): Saturda): and Sunday
Main Facility
lpm-9pm
Meigs Facility
11am-9pm
Jackson Facility llani-9pm
Athens Facility
9ani-9pm

BY THE BEND

PageA3
Tuesday, November 25,2008

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Thesday, Nov, 25
POMEROY
Local
Emergency
Planning
Committee, 11 :30 a.m.,
Senior Center. FY-09 exercise to be discussed. Lunc!J
available .
RACINE
Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency, public hearing.
di scuss
Gatling-Ohio's
draft permit-to-install and
draft wastewater discharge
permit application·, 6:30
p.m., Southern Elementary
School.
·
Wednesday, Dec. '3
PAGEVILLE - Regular

monthly meeting of Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., Page ville Town Hall.

Other events

Old Bethel Free Will
Baptist Church, Ohio 7 and
Story's Run Road, 7 p.m.
nightly through Nov. 28.
evangelist Norman Taylor.

Birthdays
Thursday, Nov. 27
TUPPERS PLAINS Ina Jean Weaver will celebrate her 80th birthday on
Nov. 27. Cards may be sent
to her at 18 Cheyenne
Street. Chillicothe, Ohio
4560 I. The family is host- .
ing an open house in her
honor at her home on Nov.
29, 2 to 4 p.m .
Friday,Nov. 28 ·
REEDSVILLE
Virginia Cowdery Walton
will celebrate her 90th
birthday on Nov. 28. cards
may be sent to PO Box 142,
Reedsville . 45772 .

secretiy jealous of his ex.
It's not that he talks about
Wednesday, Nov.-26
her in an affectionate .way
RACINE - Coin ex hibi- he doesn't. But I've
tion and photo display at the
asked him questions about
Rac ine Home National
the way they met and such,
Bank by Bob Graham.
Tuesday, Nov. 25
and he describes a relationPicture puzzle of the Cross
POMEROY - Oh-Kan
ship that sounds ideal , as if
Store an.d Racine Banking Coin Club. 7 p.m at the
they were soul mates.
Co. to be given in a free Pomeroy Library. Public
We don't have that kind
drawing.
welcome .
of relationship, and while
Monday, Dec. 1
Tom assures me often that
POMEROY
. he loves me, he adds that
Rot11ry
Middleport-Pomeroy
each love is different. He
Club
to
meet
at
noon,
Bun 's
1\Jesday, Nov. 25
says he wants to marry me,
CHESHIRE - Revival at 'Party Bam .
but I can't get past the fact
that he loved his ex and
made a life with her for 12
years, and that they would
still be together if she hadn 't
cheated. What should I do?
BY LISA CORNWELL
- Gretn Eyes
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Dear (}reen Eyes: Are
you looking for trouble? Of
CINCINNATI - One of
course Tom loved his wife,
three
children killed when a
but if you obsess over it,
·
fire
swept
through their
you're going .to mess up
house
early
Monday was
whatever chance you have
for a life with this man. standing on the porch roof
Here 's the only question that being coaxed by her father
matters: If his ex could con- . to jump as the roof colvince him that she wants him lapsed, fire officials satd.
Flames and smoke were
back, would he go? If the
from both floors
billowing
answer is "no," then get over
the
smgle-family
home,.
of
it If the answer is something
and the blaze was raging in
else, cut him loose .
full
force by the time fireDear Annie: "Confused
fighters
arrived shortly after
Out West" says her husband
volunteers to referee. He 2:30 a.m., said Capt. Mike
Washington
of
the
may be lying .
Cincinnati
fire
department.
My husband has been a
"When one of the battalion
referee for years. He gets
paid for these assignments . chiefs arrived in his car, he
Even the YMCA pays their saw the girl on the rocif of
refs. Sure , we have to put the porch," Washington said.
out some money for uni- "She was lost in the fire.'' ·
The children were 2-yearforms and gas, but he makes
.
old
Robert Joseph Hulett, 5up for it during the season.
And the hotel expenses are year~old Jasinine Hulett and
9-year-old Julia Hulett,
usually covered.
Almost every sports orga- according to the Hamilton
nization pa~s for refereeing, County coroner's office.
All · three bodies were
especially 1f thby are orgafound
inside after the blaze
nized enough to hold outwas
•extinguished,
with one
of-town toumamenis. If she
has questions, she can con- on the first floor and the other
tact any state athletic asso- two on the second floor.
The children's father,
ciation. - M.S.
Dear M.S.: We don't Robert Hulett, was in serious
have all the details on the . condition with bums, accord· .man's arrangements, but .we ing to University Hospital.
hope his wife will look into He had leaped from the
porch roof. The mother, April
the matter.
Hulett,
escaped the blaze,
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
Washington
said.
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Two nearby fire crews
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers arrived about two minutes
column. Please e-mail your after a series of 911 phone
questions to anniesmail- calls, Washington said.
box@comcast.net, or write · More than 50 firefighters
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. battled the blaze.
"We
fought
hard,"
Box 118190, Chicago, lL
· 60611. To find out more Washington said. "It was an
about Annie's Mailbox, intense fire and it was a
and read features by other valiant effort on the fireAP photo
Creators Syndicate writers fighters' part.''
and cartoonists, visit th11 · The cause of the fire that This is the charred remnants after a house fire left three children dead in the early morn(reators Syndicate Web destroyed the home has not ing hours Monday in Cincinnati. All the children were under the age of 10. A fire official said
page at www.creators.com. been determined. Washington a man escaped the fire by jumping from a roof. Authorities said he was seriously injured
said Mpnday evening.
and was taken to University Hospital.
Julia Hulett was in the
third grade at Oyler School ,
"It's a delicate situation ed in preschool and knew in case of a fire , and school
officials were also answera Cincinnati public school when it involves a young- both her and her father.
"Every time you saw Julia. ing their .questions about
that serves children from ster," said Hockenberry.
pre:kindergarten through
Hockenberry said Julia you saw her father." said fire safety Monday.
cloudy. Highs in the mid 12th grade. Counselors, psy- . Hulett's classmates decorat- Hockenberry. "He would . Seven Ohioans have died
40s . Lows in the upper 20s. chologists and social work- ed her empty desk Monday 'always walk her all the way in fires in the past three
· _Frid.ay.-Partly
sunny. ers were on hand to talk with with drawings and pictures to her classroom when he days, said Shane Cartmill,
H1ghs m the m1d 40s.
· Julia's classmates, who were of her and 'with letters and brought her to school."
spokesinan for the State
Friday · · night ...Mostly stunned and upset - many cards saying how much they
The principal said that Fire Marshal 's Office. ·
cloudy with a chance ofrain of them crying - after he!ll'· missed her.
The total fire deaths so far
many students also were
an&lt;:! snow. Lows in the ing the news, said principal
Hockenberry said Julia had frightened, asking questions this year is !55, compared
upper 20s. Chance of pre: Craig Hockenberry.
been at Oyler since she start- about what tbey should do with 129 in 2007, he said.
c1pitation 40 percent.
Saturday ...Partly sunny
with a chance of rain and
show showers. Highs in the
111id 40s. Chance of precipi·
tation 30 percent.
NEWARK (AP) - Bonnie ny's products, Matthews for4to 8 p.m. Tuesday at the obviously," Matthews said.
Saturday night through Jean Gist Longaber:ger, the said. The matriaroh 's love Dresden Chapel of VensiiWednesday
morning's
Sunday
night...Mostly 100-year-&lt;Jid matriarch of the of ·
daffodils
led Orr &amp; Chute Funeral Home. funeral service at Dresden
cloudy. Lows in the upper family
"She was beloved by our. United Methodist Church
~hind
Ohio's Longaberger to offer bas· 20s. Highs in the lower 40s. Longaberger basket company, kets designed to hold and employees and home con- will be followed by a priMonday...Partly sunny .has died, the company said.
display the flowers. he said. sultants and will be missed. vate family burial.
with a chance of rain show"
The company ·operates
"Grandma Bonnie," as she
ers. Highs in the lower 40s. was known within the com- out of a seven-story, basket·
Chance of rain 3q percent. .pany, died Sunday at a nurs- shaped building in Newark,
Before Old Man Winter
ing home in Coshocton, -said about 30 mlles east of
Tom
Matthews,
a Columbus.
Arrives, Prepare with
Bonnie
Longaberger
was
Longaberger
Co.
spokesman.
'• '
Ohio's Home Energy
No cause of death was born July 16 , 1908 in .the
Assistance 'Programs
eastern Ohio village of
illliJiediately given.
47.84
ln a letter on the compa- Trinway. At a home in nearOhio Valley Bane Corp. (NASny's Web site , chief execu- by Dresden , she raised 12
DAQ) -19.23
Foran
• Home Energy Assistance
tive and president Tami children next to a workshop
·aaT (NYSE) - 27.41 .
Application
Peoptee (NASDAQ) - 16.86
Longaberger said her grand- where her h!lsband , J .W.
• Percentage of Income
Pepetco (NYSE) - 55.86
Loc11tlon Near You,
mother had remained active Longaberger, made baskets
Payment Plans
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.90
in the company and the com- by hand and taught the craft ·
Caii1·BOG-331·2644 .
ROCkwell (NYSE) - 27.33
· • EmergencyHeating
to
his
children.
munity
until
recent
years
and
Rocky Bootl (NASDAQ) - 3.18
or visit:
Assistance
The company was found·
was a resilient, loving
Roylll Dutch Shell - SOAO
www.ara~agency8.org
Seers Holding (NASOAQ) ed in 1973 by the couple's
woman with a zest,for life.
35.33
.
"She had a commonsense son Dave Longabergcr, who
Wat-Mert (NYSE) - 52.77 ·
Programs for Eligible Low-income Ohioans
attitude
and enjoyed simple died in L999 and was the
Wendy'e (NYSE) - 3.55
living. She never com- father of the current CEO.
WesBIInco (NYSE) - 23.90
WOrthington (NYBE) - 10.112
/"'\~
plained," Tami Longaberger The company relies on
Dlllty llock reporte .... ihe 4
approximately
45,000
inde"She
always
recalled.
p.m. ET ctoetng quote• Of
~~~ Area Ag('l1CY op Agin g
believed in forging ahLad, pendent consultants throughtranuc:tlona lor Nov. 24, 2008,
and she did it with a wit and out the U.S. who sell its basprovided by Eclwenl Jon.
A Program of Buckeye Hllts~ockfng
llnanclallldVIeon IIIIC Mille tn sense of humor .that made us kets, pottery and other prod·
V.lley Regional Development District
Galllpolla 111 (740) 441·8441 t~nd chuckle out loud.''
ucts directly to customers .
Serv.ng seniors in At'1ens, Hoe;king, Meigs, Monroe ,
Leoley Me;,.ro In l'olnt
She also provided inspiraVisitation for Bonnie
Mo'llan , Noble, Perry &amp; Washington Counties
Pt-nt at (304) 874-0174.
tion
for
many
of
the
compaLongaberger
is scheduled
Member SIPC.

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

3 children dead in Cincinnati fire

35.30

Collin• (NYSE) - 31 .64
DuPont (NYSE) - 24.29
US Bonk (NYSE) - 25.10
Gannlll (NYSE)- 7.29
General Electric (NYSE) 15.26

'

Herley-Devldaon (NYSE) 14.33' '

JP M01111n {NYSE) - 27.58
Kroglf (NYSE) - 26.95
Llmlttd B,.ndl (NYSE) - 8.25
Noffolk Soulllem (NYSE) -

Basket matriarch Bonnie Long~berger dies

\I

,..

•

'
'

~

Local Weather

Local Stocks

'
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The Daily Sentinel

t

•

�OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
JUesday, November 25,

Tuesday, November ·25, 2008

2008

Obituaries

First
step
to
GOP
recovery:
.
F
ire
Rush
Limbaugh
· The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street · Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting a11
establisllment of religion, or prohibitinx the
.fi'ee exercise thereoj; or abrid,l!in:~ the freedom
of speeclt, or of tiiC press; or the ri,l!lrt of the
people peaceably to assemble, and 111 petition
tlte Government for a redress i!f':~rievaiiCI'S .
•• - The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

·TODAY IN HISTORY

How can the Republtcan
Party rebound? The first
s t~p wuuld be to quit letting
Ru sh Limb augh. Sean
Hannity
and
Laura
Ingraham set its agc mlu .
A second step would he tor.
Congressional Republicans to
actually try to help Prr~ ident ·
det:t Bamck Obama suL'!:ecd
in adt.!re ~" n g the country's
dire problems - offeting better ideas where appmprinte
and opposing just wht•n nee,
cssary, not reflexively.
And the third - maybr
the biggest one - would be
for GOP governors to usc
their posts to show the
country how conservatives
can solve problems. especially the dismal state ·of
Am~ncan educatton and its
menac ing cousin. fagg ing
Amet'ican competitiveness..
If one governor would fully
tmplement a widely circular-·
ed proposal to transform U.S.
education - based on having
most children graduate after
I Oth gmde and using the savings to pay teachers like professionals - it could serve.as
a model for the nation and
bring the United States back
to world standards.
But step I is to fire
Limbaugh and his ilk as the
intellectual bosses of the
GOP. They shouldn 't be muzzled . as some liberal• want to
do by reviving the "fairness
doctrine'' in broadcasting.
just ignored more frequently ..
In
recent
-years,
Republicans have let rightwing talk-show hosts whip
the GOP base into frenzies
- over inunigration , brainvictim
Terry
damage
,Schiavo and same-sex marriage - that have branded
the party as troglodyte.
The result is that the
demographic groups representmg the future of
American politics shifted
decisively to the Democratic
Party in 2008 - Latinos,
young people , the well-edtt('atcd , moderates. working

Morton

Kondracke

wo m~n. first-time voters,
. anu. I " secuIars."
Stl bur bmutes

As former White House
political guru Karl Rove
observed last week, "the
GOP wi ll find it hard to
regain the majority" if it
keeps losing Latinos.
lmmigrdtion .&gt;carcely was
an issue during the fall campaign. But the damage was
done over the past two years
its the radto screamers roused
the rabble. who then beat on
GOP members of Congress ,
presidential candidates and
~ve n the Bush administration
not just to control the border
but treat undocumented residents as felons
At a briefing last week
jointly sponsored by · the
"New Democrat" Progressive
Policy Institute and Web site
Dcmocratk Strategist, author
Ruy Teixeira said that the gist
of hb 2002 book, "The
Emerging
Democratic
MaJority.'· i.s now becoming
reality.
"Demonats are going
where they 're growing," he
sa id, while Republtcans are
isolating themselves in a fad ing pollion of the population
- old . white, less-educated.
high[y religious Southerners.
Others at the briefing ,
notably Bill Galston . a former C linton White House
aide now ;tt the Brookings
lnstitutton. cautioned that
the country has not taken a
sharp left turn . a re-align ment has not yet occurred
and that Democrats should
b~ware of overreaching .
Whid1 llrings us to step 2
for Republicans: Be rfositive and pragmn tir . nnt neg-

· ·Today· i~ Tuesday. Nov. 25 , the 330th day of2008. There
are 36 days left in the year.
• "&gt;..Today 's 'Higblight in History: One hundred years ago, on
' ill!)~. ;zs.- )908, the first issue of The Christian Science
· IY,tonitor wllli published.
.
. &lt;?!'this date1In 1758. during the French und Indian War. the
·B'ritish captilred Fort Duquesne in present-day Pittsburgh.
: ·•.tn '1783, the British evacuated New York. their last military
:positiop in the United States during the Revolutionary War.
In 1881 ; Pope John XXIII was born Angelo Giuseppe
. .
Roncalli near Bergamo. Italy. .
•. 1 ]n 1947 , mo vte studto excc:uttves meetm g m New York
ag~d to blacklist the "'Holl ywood Ten" who'd been cited
for contempt of Congress the day before .
• ' In 1957, Preside nt Eisenhower suffered a slight stroke .
-, In 1963 , the 'body of President Kennedy was laid to rest
,at Aclin.,gton National Cemetery.
, ln 197J. Greek President George Papadopoulos was
·Qusted in a bloodless military coup .
', In J 974, former U.N . Secretary-General U Than! died in
;!!&gt;lew York at age 65 .
! I In 1986 , the Iran-Contra alfair erupted as President
,Reagan and Attorney Genera l Edwin Meese revealed that
-,profits from secret arn1s sales to Iran had been divet1ed to
Nicaraguan rebels .
, In 2002. President Bush signed legislation creating the
:Depanment nf Homeland Securit y, ant.! appointed Tom
1Ridge to be tts head .
1 Five yen rs ago: The Senate gave fin·nJ congress ional
.approval I&lt;&gt; hi, toric Medkm e legislation combining a new·
;prescription drug benefit wtlh measures to control c:osts
before the baby boom generatton reaches retirement age . . - · - - - - - -- - - ---'Semen arrested Mohammet.! Hamdi ai-Ahdal, a top alQaida member suspe&lt;"ted of masterminding the 2000
bomhing of the USS Colt: ami the 2002 bombing of a
·.French oi I tanker off Yemen's mast (A 1-Ahdal was I ater
:sentenced to three years for the French tanker attack. but'
was not charged in the Cole case .) Gail Knisley, 62, was
'shot and killed while riding in a &lt;.:ar on a highway m
Columbus , Ohio; it was the pnly fatality in a series of
:shootings that terrified area dri vers . (Charles A. McCoy Jr.
.later pleaded guilty to manslaughter and 10 other charges.
and was sentenced to 27 yenrs in prison .)
Today 's Binhdays: Actor Ric:ardo Mnntalban is RR.
·Act ress Noel Neill is 8X. Ac:tress Kathryn Crosby is 75 .Actor
Matt Clark is 72. Singer Percy Sledge is 68. Author, actor
and game show host Ben Stein is 64. Actor John Larroquette .
ts 61 . Actor Tracey Walter is 61. Movie director Jonathan
. Kaplan is 61 . Singer Amy Grant is 48 . Rock musician Eric
Grossman (K's Choice) is 44. Rllck singer Mark Lanegan is
44 . Rock singer-musician Tim Armstrong is 43. Singer Stacy
.Lalli""' is 42 .. Rock musician Rodney Sheppard (Sugar
.Ray) is 42. Rapper-producer Erick Sermon is 40. Actress Jill
. Hennessy is 39. Actress Christina Applegate is 37. Actor
Edolie Steeples ("My Name Is Earl") is 35.
Thought for Today: "Reject lmtrcd without hating ." Mat) f1aker Eddy, American religious leader and .founder
During a July 17, 2007
of 'llw Christian ScieQce Monitor ( 1821- 19 10)_
speech bel'ore the Planned
Parenthood Action Fund. then
Sen.
Burack Obamu pledged:
LETTERS TO THE
'The first thing I'd do as presI;:DITOR
ident b sign the Freedom of
Nat
Choice Act.'' Thitt is a bizarre
I &lt;"( /en tn 1i1e editur are welcume. Tlu:r should he le.1s way '"to hring us together,"
Hentoff
tlw" 3()( ) " nrd1·. All leiters arc .wl~je&lt;'t to editing , mtW be another goal of his as presi1it:ned. ,,,d ll lr'lude addres.\ ruul telephone ·number No dent. When Sen. Barbara
11 11 11~ 11• ·· 1 lme1.1 •viii bP pul&gt;li.l!ted. Letten should he in
Boxer, D-Calif., reintroduced
· t:, ,, ,tf 1u' rt·. wJd ,-(',\'sing ;_,·~:rre'. nol pn·.wnalrltt!., . Le11ers i~f'
the FOCA in 2007, her press what would undeniabl y be
· t hr u 1~' rr · Ol l!,fl/1 1-oti o n'l am/ rmliridlf(l/.\ n·i/1 not he lU'ccpt · rekase .
triumphantly seen during pregnancy as a
• t cf {n f fJi t h f /( ·1/ lftJ I I .
.
expla.ined that this draconian baby in ultrasound - for
- - -del'tnition of "Freedom of reasons of her health .
Choice" would mecm:
But the Supreme Court in
"Women would have the 1'17 3. the same ·year as Roe
absolute right to i:hoose v. Wade , in Doe v. Bolton
whether to continue or tenni-· defined
(USPS 213-960)
Reader SeJVi ces
very
broadly
nate their pregnancies before "health" us justification for
Ohio Vallel:ubllshlng
fetal viability. and that right aborting a via ble human
Correction Policy
Published ·every atternoon. Momlay
would he protected by this being. as "physical. eillo- ·
(JoJo rna 1n COilC91tl Ill all S\()1185 iS lu
lhro ugh Fr 1day, 11 t Co llrt' Street
legislation. The Freedom of tiona! , psychological. familtit ~u.urate I! you krmw ol an error Pomeroy Oh•o. Second-class postage
Choice
· Act also supersedes tal and the woman's age."
•n c story can the rmw":&gt;room at (740) pa1d &lt;tt Pomeroy
any
law,
regulation or local Nearly a blank check to dis9'122156
Member : The Assodated Press anrl
ordinance that impinges on a pose of that aborted person.
the Ohio Newspa per Assoc•at!On
,
Postmastar:
Send
address
correcwoman's right to choose ."
,
Our main number is
It 's no wonder that Obama
llons to The Da•ly Sent1n el, 111 Court
With regard to "fetal via- oppose.;! the Supreme Court
1740) 992· 2156.
Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
bility" - the ability to sur- decision that eventually
Department extensions are :
vive
on his or her own - the ruled against the lawfulness
Subscription Rates
ardent
supponers of FOCA of "partial-birth abortion"
By carrier or motor route
News
One month
'1 0.27
slide over the language in that the late Democratic Sen.
£dflor: Charl ene Hoeflich E:tr 12
1115.84
One year.
the surviving 2007 version Daniel Patrick Moynihan ~ Reporter; Brran Reed bt 1&lt;1
Dally
50'
of
FOCA bill that, ..as who was pro-choice - said
Senior Citizen rates
,1 Ft.porter: Beth Sergen t E:tt 13 One month
Douglas Johnson of the was infanticide.
'10.27
National Right to Life
One year
103.90
The rahidly pro-abollion
e;. ;rlY.~ sht::Md remit Hl advance
Committee points out: Freedom of Choice Act he
:•
Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Hams E.O'f 1~ ·~-x,t to ti'IP. Daly Sentinel No su b··contains no objective crite- suppons, unless there is an
Sr.rtohon ~ mall pernutled tn areas
OUtalde Selee: Brenda Dao~rs F.: lit lfl
ria for "viability,' but rather. unlikely successful filibuster
m~re hoi'~ c.a rr ter serviCe rs avat!·
Claea./Circ.: Judy Clark E ~t tO
require.' that the judgment in the Democratically cona(&gt;le
regarding 'viability' he left trolled Senate . would invaliMall Subscription
entirely in the hands of 'the date parehtal-notification
• General Manager.
••
lnolde Meigs County
laws; any state's requirement
attending physician ."'
I 3 Weeks
' 32 26
• Charlene Hoeflich Ext t ?
rull disclosure of the physof
Guess
who
that
would
be?
26 Weeks
' 64.20
ical and emotional risks
The abon ionist!
52 Weeks
' 127. 71
E-mail :
There's
more.
The
restricinherent in abortion; and news @rnydaflysenlinel.com
Outside Meigs County
tion~ on "the absolute right can vou believe this? - all
13 Weeks
'53.55
to choose" would also apply laws· prohibitin g medical
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107 tO
even after " viability" if a personnel other than Iicensed
www.myda!lysentrnel com
52 Week s
'2 74 .21 .
physicians from performi ng
woman wan ted to abort ~.~------~-----------.)
j,

ati ve and fundamentalist. If
Dem&lt;~cra ts go off the left
end. following their Rush
Limbaughs in the blogosphere. the GOP may only
need to sit and wait until the
inevitable reaction occurs.
But Obama appears to be
a pragmatist und is hiring,
pragmatists - Rep. Rahm
Emanuel. D-111 .. in the lead
'-- to run hi s administration.
So Republicans shouid follow the advice of Senate
Republican
Conference
Chaim1an Lamar Alexander
(Tenn.): "Ji' (Obama) governs
from the center. we'll support
him and suggest better ways ·
of domg things. If he goes too
far len. we'll object ."
Part of the problem. of
course. lies in deciding
what's ·•center" and "too
left .'' Right now, Republicans
are merely saying "'No" to a
new economic stimulus and
rescues for auto companies
and homeowners rather than
uev ising alternatives.
Conservative economist
· Martin Feldstein of Harvard
Untvcrsity. for mstance : contends that the government
should prevent a cascade .of
· mortgage foreclosures by
lending "underwater" homeowners pat1 of the difference
between their home 's value
and what they owe - but on
terms that allow garnishment
of their wages if they don't
pay the debt.
Longer
range,
as
-Alexander says. Republicans
can't simply dust off 20ycar-o lt.! mantras of the
Reagan era , but have to
devise 21st-century solutions
for America's problems like
health care, entitlements,
energy and transponation.
And . GOP members of
Congress should do everything po~;s ible to assist GOP
go~e rn o r s in addressing
thetr problems - and also
learn from what they are ·
doing to solve them.
Which brings us to step 3.
Go,c rnors like Sarah Palin

HARTFORD, W.Va. Dorothy Virginia (Gibbs)
Fields , 83, of Hartford
went to be with the Lord
Sunday, Nov. 23, 2008 at
her restdence surrounded by
her family.
·
She was a beloved wife to
her late husband Clyde for
59 years and lived her life
in devotion to her children
and grandchildren. Dorothy
was a homemaker and
member of Father's House
Church in Hartford .
Born Oct. 20, 1925 in
Clifton, she was a daughter .
of the late D~wey and Willa:
Dorothy Fleldl
(Edwards) Gtbbs .
In addition to her parenis, she was preceded in death by
her husband , James Clyde Fields; son, JimmY. Fieldl!;
brothers, Roland , Jack, Da11ny and William Gtbbs; a11d
Sisters, Ehzabeth Johnson , Maysel Zirkle and· Sandra
MacKnight:
She is surv.ived by her daughters, Linda Fields of Letan,
N.ancy (Hulmg) Greene of Letan and Karen (Mike)
Fmmcum of Letart; sons, Larr~ (Linda) Fields of
Syr11cuse, Ohio, and Danny (Lisa) Ftelds of Mason ~ daughler-m-law, Conme Ftelds of Hanford; 12 grandchildren ,
Stephanie Roush, .Stacey Miller, Brent (Melissa) Fields ,
Dou~ (Brandy) Ftelds , Robbie (Cathy) Greene, Steven
(Jesstca) Greene, Andy (Arnie) Fields; Kevin (Betsy)
Fields, Joe (Ashley) Finnicum, Jennifer (Lenny) Tennant,
Amber (Joel) Lloyd and Danni .Marie Fields: great-.grandchildren , Kyle and Kendall ~ush, Bryant and Noah
Miller, Connor Fields, Bryce and Parker Fields, Kaitlyn
and 1)!1er Gr.eene, Trevor, Bransen and Chase Fields,
Maycee and Adyson Fields, Carson Finnicum, Allison and
Kaycee T~&lt;nnant and · Hayden Lloyd: sisters, Grace ·
Goodnite of Hanford and Janice (Jimmie) Goodnite of
· New Haven; sisters-in-law, Geraldine Crites of Arcadia,
Fla., Doris (Bill) Grueser of Pomeroy, Ohio, Mona Gibbs
of Gibbstown and Virginia Gibbs of Ravenswood; brothers-in-law, John MacKnight of New Haven , Earl Fields of
Hanford, Gene (Betty) Fields of Letart, Donnie Fields of
Hanford and Wayne Fields of Michigan; and a .special
friend, Louise Hall of Landrum, S.C.
Funeral services will be I p.m . Wednesday, Nov. 26 at ·
Foglesong Tucker Funeral Home in Mason with Pastors
Mike Finnicum and Huling Greene officiating. Burial will
follow in Zerkle Cemetery. Visitation will be 6-9 p.m.
today at the funeral home.
.
Brent Fields, Doug Fields , Robbie Greene , Sleven
Greene, Andy Fields , Kevin Fields, Joe Finnicum and Kyle
Roush will serve as pall bearers.
·
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the
Father's House Church Building Fund, P.O. Box 205,
Hanford, WV 25247.
,
Co11dolences may be e-mailed to foglesongtucker@verizon.l)et.

-

~------ -----~

The Daily Sentinel

~

1

'

•

abortions because such
restri.:tions might "interfere"
with access to this .absolute
right to abonion . This is
respect for women?
As of now, before our abortion president gets his wish,
26 states have informed-consent laws, 36 have parentalin volvement laws and 34
states have restrictions on
funding for abortions,
AIso disposed of will be
the "conscience ri~hts" in
many states . They include,
Johnso n reminds us, "all
laws allowing doctors, nurses or other slate-licensed
professionals . and hospitals
or other · health care
providers. to decline to pro·
vide or pay for abortions.''
What about religiously
base.d hospitals and clinics
that refuse to perform abortions'' At presidential press
conterences, can we depend
on at least some niembers of
the Washington press corps to
ask Obama about that provis'ion or the others I've cited?
Sen. Dianne Feinstein , DCalif., heralded the election
of Obama as "a new birth of
freedom.'' Not, however, for
the early-stage human ,
beings, each with his or her
own distinct DNA , who ,
under this law. could never
become citilcns.
Matt Bowman. an attorney with pro-life Alliance.
Defense. Fund. projects that
if FOCA i&gt; passed into law
(Lifenews.com, Sept. 24).
there wi ll be an increase in
aborti.on "by 125.000 per
)Car.. in the United States
because of the abolition of
law' 111 state' thnt have

'

•

.OEAL

The abortion president

Eastern staff approved

Dorothy Fields

(Alaska). Tim . Pawlenty
(Minn·.), Bobby Jindal (La.),
Haley Barbour (Miss .).
Charlie Crist (Fla.) and others actually have responsibility for implementing health
care_ programs. building
infrastructure , saving energy,
developing ecoryomies and
balancing budgets.
Three governors
Republican Jon Huntsman
Jr. (Utah) and Democrats
Deval Patrick (Mass.) and
John Lynch (N.H.) - have
set up pilot projects partially implementing proposals
of the New Commission on
the Skills of the American
Workforce, is:.ued last year.
Significantly. their initiarives have been blessed by
leaders of the National
Education
Associarion .
though its .rival, the
American Federation · of
Teachers. opposes them. ·
Under the proposal ,.states
would take over schools
from local boards, teachers
would form corporations to
run schools on contract and
hire principal s. salaries
would go up significantly to
attract first-rate teachers
and standards would be set
to international norms.
Most students would
graduate after lOth grade
and go on to upgraded trade
or tech sc hools, while others
stayed and took collegelevel courses. And money
saved would also fund
preschool for needy kids .
If · one governor fully
implemented the proposal,
his or her state could be a
competitiveness juggernaut,
set a model tor the nation and begin solving America's
biggest long-term problem.
Actually solving big jJToblems - not pandering to a
shrinking· demographic base
- is the key to Republican
success. Good luck.
(Morwn Kondracke is
executive editor of Ro/1.
Cull. the newspaper oj
Capitol Hill.) ·

.·

Doris Jean Haynes

MIDDLEPORT - poris Jean Haynes , 75, Middleport,
passed away at her residence on Nov. 21, 2008 after a
brief ilmess .
·
She was born July 12, 1933 in Hamlin, W.Va. She was
the daughter of the late Mary Ann, Kerns and James Albert
Pack . In addition to her parents , she was preceded in death
by several brothers and sist~rs and son Ronald L. Dailey.
She WaS the youngest swvivor of 13 children. She was a
homemaker and o member of the Ash Street Church.
She is survived by her three daughters: Kathy Strickland
and Christy Dailey, both ·of . Middlepon; and Carol A.
Dailey-Hubbard of SouJh Point. She has 14 grandchildren,
·30 great-grandchildren and several· nieces and nephews. ·
He,r $pedal friends include Carol Scarberry, Dottie
Sizemore, and. Sue Holley. Special thanks to Holzer
Hospice and Grant Medical-Center.
.
·
Services will be held at I p.m. today, Nov. 25,2008 at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Middlepon with The
Reverends Walker and Morrow officiating. Interment will
follow in Riverview Cemc;tery in Middlepon. Visitation.
was held from 2-4 p.m. and 6-9 p.m: yesterday; An online
registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

•

Ladona Stephens.
• Approved the following
substitutes for the remain TUPPERS PLAINS der of the 2008-09 school
The Eastern Local Board of year. as follows : Michelle
Education hired substitute Holsinger, coc;.k and secre:
•teachers and supplemental tary: Michelle · Milliron.
staff at last week regular cook and secretary: Cathy
meeting .
.
Pickens, cook.
· After meeting in execu• Approved Mrs. Mary
tive session, the board:'
Anne Moore to provide
• Approved the following home instruction for a stusubstitute teachers for the dent in the district.
2008-09 school year, pend• Approved the following proper .cenification: ing supplemental contracts
Rose Marie Isgrigg , Jessica for the 2008-09 school
Marcum, Ed·ward Safranek, year as follow s: Brian
Sandra Southern , and Bowen , winter weight
STAFF REPORT

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

s

room coordinator; Josh
Fogle, cross country
(retroactive to Aug. I);
Mel.i ssa Ijarker, quiz bowl
advtsor; Alys sa Holrer,
assistant varsity girls basketball coach.
.
• Approved Kim Carl as a
secretary on a one year contract effective Nov. 20.
The board al so:
• Approved a requ est for
di sposal of books and
other library or media
assets that have been
deemed un suitable fo r
continued district use as
submitted by Library

Barbra E.

Media Specialist, Chad
Griffith .
• Approved a request from
Griffith to panicipate in a
program surponing the ·
public library s campaign to
provide food and baby
ttemo to local food banks in
exchange for forgiving fines
and fees owed to Eastern
Local for lost or damagejl
library books .
• Ser the next regular
meeting at 6:30 p.m. on
Dec·. IS , in the library conference room for the next
regular meeting of the
Board of Education.

Poaching from Page At
five · ye~rs
probation .
Cundiff must also successfully complete a hunter education course.
• Jason L. Miller, 26 , of
Langsville: Pled no contest
and found guilty on Nov.
13, of hunting without permission, taking a second
antlered deer, failure to
temporary 'tag a deer, failure to permanently tag ·a
deer,' two charges of hunting with a shotgun during
closed season, and hunting
deer with the aid of a motor
vehicle.
Miller was fined $2,100
with $1 ,600 suspended, 90
days of jail time, suspend.ed, 100 hours of community service , five years hunt·
ing privilege revocation ,
two . years probation, and
must successfully complete a hunter education
course.
• Gerald W. McQuin, 66,
of Grove City: Pled guilty
in March, 2007 to charges
of possession of illegal deer
parts , hunting and taking
deer with the aid of a motor
vehicle and providing a
check station with false
information .
He was sentenc " to a
$600 fine plus coutt costs ,
150 days in jail, suspended ,
one year hunting privilege
revocation, two years probation, and must successfully complete a bunter education course.
• Dannie! L. McQuirt, 43,
of Grove City: Pled guilty
in March, 2007 to hunting
without permission, hunting
with the aid of a motor vehicle , transponing ·a loaded
firearm in a motor vehicle;
and pled no contest to the

charge of hunting without a permit, hunting without a
·licel)Se, possess ion of
fur-taker permit.
He was sentenced to a improperly. tagged deer and
$690 fin e plus court costs, providing. fal se information
300 day s in jail, suspended, to a check station .
one year hunting privilege · He was ordered to pay
revo~ati on, two years pro$360 in fines plu s court
bation , and must successful- costs. Further sentencing
ly pass a hunter education included 240 days m jail,
suspended, two years of
course.
• Sharon A. Thomas,61 of hunting license revocation ,
Langsville: Pled guilty in three years probation, 200
February, 2007 to three hours of community serwildlife related charges vice and must successfully
including attaching a tem- complete ~ h~nter safety
porary tag to a deer killed course.
• Mark J. Minshall. 33, of
by another, receiving or
possessing an untagged deer Pomeroy: Pled guilty in
and providing false infor- February, 2007, to eight
wildlife related chaq;es
mation to a check station.
She was sentenced to pay including: two huntmg
a $390 fine plu s court without a license, providing fal se information to a
co~ts, serve 60 days of jail
time, suspended, one year ch6ck station, two counts
hunting privilege revoca- of hunting deer without a
permit , possess
tion, two years probation deer
and must successfully improperly tagged deer,
complete a hunter educa- failure to attach temporary
tion course.
· Jag and failure to perma• Darrell L. Thomas,65 of nently tag a deer.
Minshall was ordered to
Langsville: Pled guilty in
February, 2007 to four pay a $600 fine plus cou11
wildlife related charges costs. Further sentencing
including improperly tag a included 270 days of jail
deer, two deer permit viola- time with 260 days sustions and hunting without a pended, a six year hunting
revocation, three years prolicense.
He was fined $340 plus bation , 50 hours community
court costs, sentenced to 60 service, and must ·Successda:rs of jail time, suspended, fully complete a hunter eduone year hunting license cation course.
• Rex H Briggs, 48 , of
revocation, two years pro-· bation ~ and must successful- Langsville: Pled no contest
ly complete a hunter educa- to 23 charges in July, 7007,
tJon course.
·
_ including five counts of
• Jeffery E. Fowler, 28, of improperly tagging deer,
Pomeroy: . Pled guilty in four counts of taking posFe);truary, 2007 to five sessio~\ of improperly
wildlife related charges tagged deer, five counts of.
including; possession of providing false information
slugs during youth season, to a check station, failure to
hunting deer without a lfeer permanently tag deer, two

Brown rrom tiageAt

The following were invit- Aluminum· and Democratic
considered next month
:when House and Senate . ed to panicipate in the dis- Pany Chairman: _ Horace
leaders again consider a cussion, Brown . said: Joe · Karr, Owner of the Wild
" bailout.''
Bolin, Meigs County Soil Horse Cafe ; Hal Kneen ,
"The needs of Ohio's and Water Conservation OSU Extension Agent;
middle class families must District; Mark Bridenbaugh, Herman Koby, President,
Health
Care; Rio Grande Communitf.
be heard in Washington," Family
said Brown . "This round- Commissioners Jim Sheets College; Troy Ferrel ,
table discussion is a way and Mick Davenpon; Tony President ffiEW Local 972;
Superintendent, Porter; Judge Scott Powell;
that we can work to$ether to Deem ,
~(Stiln
set new
polictes in Southern Local School Paul Reed, President of
MARIEITA ~ Barbra E. (Still) Jimes, 73, Marietta and Washington that reflect the District; MiddlePort Mayor Farmers Bank; Tom Reed,
Mike · Gerlach; Henry Gallia-Meigs· Community
formed~ of Meigs County, died Nov. 22, 2008 at Marietta values of families in Meigs
ij.unter,
retired from Kaiser Action Agency ; Beth
County."
Memonal Hospital, Marietta.
She was born to the late Elmer Still and Addie Mae
QUalls: She was a member of the Forest Run Baptist
Church, a veteran of the US Army, an alumni of the
from Page At
University of Rio Grande, a member of the Forest Run
Choir, a past president missionary Sunday school sect.
She is survived by sons Lawrence (Sherry) Coats, a counterfeit bill , only prob- phones which can be ·used this time of year and be on
the lookout for suspicious
or sold.
Parkersburg, W.Va., Ronald Coats, Orient, Timmy Coats, able cause it might be one.
"No
one
's
stealing
behavior.
Proffitt also said reported .
Pomeroy, Heinz Coats, Pomeroy; ste]lChildren, Carol Petty,
Proffitt also said this time
Bidwell, Greg .and Jamce James, Btdwell, Lon Laffeny, shoplifting incidents are on food ," Proffitt said of
Bidwell; brothers, Raben (Mary) Sttll , Dayton , Davtd Still, the rise as well with four s tolen items that range of year merchants ·will likeColumbus, Lawrence (Maxine) Still, Hopewell , Va., Mike people (two juveniles, two · from batteries to makeup ly have even more checks tp
Still, Middlepon, Mark (Carol) Sti~I. Middleport; six adults) arrested in two dif- and not just at Dollar scrutimze and should call
ferent incidents at Dollar General but at businesses the bank to. check them out
grandchildren ; and eight great grandchtldren. .
if they are suspicious.
addition to her parents, !\lie was prece~ed m death by General on East Main Street all over the village .
Businesses are reminded
Proffitt said employees
last week, Proffi tt said
husband, John James, Jr., grandson , Ronald Coats.
·
to
lock the doors at night
Afuneral service will be held at II a.m. Wednesday, Nov. thieves are trying to make should be even more vigi26. at Ewing Fun~ral Home. wit~· Pastors Arius Hurt and off with items like cell fant than they already are and leave a light on, making
Lonnie Coats offictated. Bunal wtll follow at Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call for visitation from 6-9. p.m.
tonight at the .funeral·.home.

.

parental
involvement,
informed-consent laws and
fu,nding restrictions.
"Even with this mini mum." Bowman adds,
"that's 125,000 children that
were not. killed this year
because we (still) have these
laws, and 125 ,000 (ad&lt;jed to
the ex isting 1.3 million
abonions) who will' be
killed in 2009" and beyond.
On Jan . 22, 2008 - · the
35th anniversary of Roe v.
Wade , Obama said with
pride: ·"Throughoul my
career, I've been a consistent and strong supponer of
reproductive jusuce and
·have consistently had a 100
percent pro-choice rating
with Planned Parenthood
and NARAL Pro-Choice
America ...
"To truly honor (Roe v.
Wade), we need to update the
social contract so that women
can free themselves and their
~hildren from violent relationships."
What, Mr.
President , can be more violent than murder by abortion'!
AI veda King; niece of Dr.
Manin Luther King, ~aid on
Nov. II (lifenews.com) that
"his dream of full equality
remams JUst a dream a\ lung
as unborn children continue
to be treated no better than
property. .. .The e l e~tiun h
are over. The pro-life battle
begins anew."
(Nar Hell/off is a natimwlly renowned a11tlwriry on the
First Amendmell/ and the
Bill of Rights and autlror oj
many books. including "The
War on the Bill of Rights and
tire Gatheri11g Resistance ..
(Seve/J Stories Prel-.&gt;. 2004) .

The Daily Sentinel • Page As ·

www .mydailysentinel.com

Jaiiies

counts of failure to temporarily tag wild · turkey,
three counts of failure to
permanently tag wild
turkey, taki ng more than the
legal bag limit of wild
turkey, and two counts of
taking more than the legal
bag limit of deer.
Briggs was fined $1,000
plu s court cos ts. Further
se ntencing included 690
days in jail, suspended, 10
year hunting privilege
revocation, five years probation , forfeiture of all
equipment used in illegal
taking , revocation
of
wildlife check station operator status , and must successfully complete a hunter
education course .
• Mary E. Nel son , 51,
Langsville: Pled guilty in
August , 2007, to four
counts of providing false
mforrnation to a check station , failure to ·proper! y tag
deer. possess a deer that is
improperly tagged , failure .
to permanently tag a wild
turkey, hunting without a
license and hunting deer
without a deer tag . .
She was fined$3,150 plus
co urt costs, with $2,625
suspended , 30 days of jail
time, suspended, and faces a
six -year hunting license
revocation with five years_
of probation and must successfully complete a hunter
education course.
• Ronald E ~ Hawkins , 49,
of Middleport: Pled no
r.ontest in February, 2007
to two counts of ·improP.er
tagging
of
wild)tfe,
improper record keeping,
and illegal tran spon of
migratory game birds. He
was fined $ 1,240.

'

Shaver, DireCtor Council'on
Aging. ·
Jennifer Sheets, Attorney
and President of Ohio
Board of Education; Mike
Swisher. Trustee, Rio
Grande
Community
College; Perry Vernadoe,
Mei gs County Economic
Development
Director;
Heather Wolf, Teacher and
Director of Curriculum; and
Clifford Young, O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital .

Crime

In

.

.

f()caJ BriefS

Deaths

Anaold Mea itt

CHESHIRE - W. Arnold
Merritt, 83, Cheshire. di~
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Post 128 of the American Sunday, Nov. 23 , 20()8. in the
Legion will not meet on Nov. 26. The next meeting will b:e Holzer Senior Call' Center.
He is swvived by a sister,
held at 7 p.m., Dec. 10. The Executive Committee will
Phyllis (Carnell) Vance,
meet 'at 6 p.m .
The annual Chirstmas Dinner for members and guests Cheshire.
Funeral serVices will be l
will be al 6 p.m., Dec. J7 . In keep~~ with the ann~,
p.m.
Priday, Nov. 28, 2008,
Christmas witll Santa, post members will sack candy, fruit
m the Cremeens Funeral
and nuts after the dinner.
The candy will be distributed by Santa on Christmas Eve Chapel. Pastor Merle Wood
will officiate. Burial will be
at Post 128 headquanersin the Gravel Hill Cemetery,
'
Cheshire. Friends may call
from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday
•
RACINE - Friendship Circle of the Carmel-Sutton at the. fun · 1111 chapel. .
Expressions · of syrnP.athy
United Methodist Church will serve lunch from I I a.m. to
ma~ be sent to the fanuly by
2 p.m., [)ec . 1-6, at·the ~eltowship Hall on Carmel Road:
Soups sandwiches, drin);.s and homemade desserts wtll visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
be served for donations toward local ou~ach projeru.

PET

Feeney-Bennett meetings

f

Comolunity luncheon

'

All Styles included
FREE 7/16" Pad w/purchase of Carpet
FBEE No Obligation Quotes
FREE Removal of Old Carpet
FREE Furniture Moving

it easier for officers to ctO
their n1ghtly business
checks. Residents are also
asked to keep vehicles
locked and any sharping
bags in the trunks o cars
and out of view.
'"We live in a different
society tliese days," Proffitt
said: "There's always been
thieves but they seem to be
doing more and more.''

!

''
'

�OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
JUesday, November 25,

Tuesday, November ·25, 2008

2008

Obituaries

First
step
to
GOP
recovery:
.
F
ire
Rush
Limbaugh
· The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street · Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 law respecting a11
establisllment of religion, or prohibitinx the
.fi'ee exercise thereoj; or abrid,l!in:~ the freedom
of speeclt, or of tiiC press; or the ri,l!lrt of the
people peaceably to assemble, and 111 petition
tlte Government for a redress i!f':~rievaiiCI'S .
•• - The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

·TODAY IN HISTORY

How can the Republtcan
Party rebound? The first
s t~p wuuld be to quit letting
Ru sh Limb augh. Sean
Hannity
and
Laura
Ingraham set its agc mlu .
A second step would he tor.
Congressional Republicans to
actually try to help Prr~ ident ·
det:t Bamck Obama suL'!:ecd
in adt.!re ~" n g the country's
dire problems - offeting better ideas where appmprinte
and opposing just wht•n nee,
cssary, not reflexively.
And the third - maybr
the biggest one - would be
for GOP governors to usc
their posts to show the
country how conservatives
can solve problems. especially the dismal state ·of
Am~ncan educatton and its
menac ing cousin. fagg ing
Amet'ican competitiveness..
If one governor would fully
tmplement a widely circular-·
ed proposal to transform U.S.
education - based on having
most children graduate after
I Oth gmde and using the savings to pay teachers like professionals - it could serve.as
a model for the nation and
bring the United States back
to world standards.
But step I is to fire
Limbaugh and his ilk as the
intellectual bosses of the
GOP. They shouldn 't be muzzled . as some liberal• want to
do by reviving the "fairness
doctrine'' in broadcasting.
just ignored more frequently ..
In
recent
-years,
Republicans have let rightwing talk-show hosts whip
the GOP base into frenzies
- over inunigration , brainvictim
Terry
damage
,Schiavo and same-sex marriage - that have branded
the party as troglodyte.
The result is that the
demographic groups representmg the future of
American politics shifted
decisively to the Democratic
Party in 2008 - Latinos,
young people , the well-edtt('atcd , moderates. working

Morton

Kondracke

wo m~n. first-time voters,
. anu. I " secuIars."
Stl bur bmutes

As former White House
political guru Karl Rove
observed last week, "the
GOP wi ll find it hard to
regain the majority" if it
keeps losing Latinos.
lmmigrdtion .&gt;carcely was
an issue during the fall campaign. But the damage was
done over the past two years
its the radto screamers roused
the rabble. who then beat on
GOP members of Congress ,
presidential candidates and
~ve n the Bush administration
not just to control the border
but treat undocumented residents as felons
At a briefing last week
jointly sponsored by · the
"New Democrat" Progressive
Policy Institute and Web site
Dcmocratk Strategist, author
Ruy Teixeira said that the gist
of hb 2002 book, "The
Emerging
Democratic
MaJority.'· i.s now becoming
reality.
"Demonats are going
where they 're growing," he
sa id, while Republtcans are
isolating themselves in a fad ing pollion of the population
- old . white, less-educated.
high[y religious Southerners.
Others at the briefing ,
notably Bill Galston . a former C linton White House
aide now ;tt the Brookings
lnstitutton. cautioned that
the country has not taken a
sharp left turn . a re-align ment has not yet occurred
and that Democrats should
b~ware of overreaching .
Whid1 llrings us to step 2
for Republicans: Be rfositive and pragmn tir . nnt neg-

· ·Today· i~ Tuesday. Nov. 25 , the 330th day of2008. There
are 36 days left in the year.
• "&gt;..Today 's 'Higblight in History: One hundred years ago, on
' ill!)~. ;zs.- )908, the first issue of The Christian Science
· IY,tonitor wllli published.
.
. &lt;?!'this date1In 1758. during the French und Indian War. the
·B'ritish captilred Fort Duquesne in present-day Pittsburgh.
: ·•.tn '1783, the British evacuated New York. their last military
:positiop in the United States during the Revolutionary War.
In 1881 ; Pope John XXIII was born Angelo Giuseppe
. .
Roncalli near Bergamo. Italy. .
•. 1 ]n 1947 , mo vte studto excc:uttves meetm g m New York
ag~d to blacklist the "'Holl ywood Ten" who'd been cited
for contempt of Congress the day before .
• ' In 1957, Preside nt Eisenhower suffered a slight stroke .
-, In 1963 , the 'body of President Kennedy was laid to rest
,at Aclin.,gton National Cemetery.
, ln 197J. Greek President George Papadopoulos was
·Qusted in a bloodless military coup .
', In J 974, former U.N . Secretary-General U Than! died in
;!!&gt;lew York at age 65 .
! I In 1986 , the Iran-Contra alfair erupted as President
,Reagan and Attorney Genera l Edwin Meese revealed that
-,profits from secret arn1s sales to Iran had been divet1ed to
Nicaraguan rebels .
, In 2002. President Bush signed legislation creating the
:Depanment nf Homeland Securit y, ant.! appointed Tom
1Ridge to be tts head .
1 Five yen rs ago: The Senate gave fin·nJ congress ional
.approval I&lt;&gt; hi, toric Medkm e legislation combining a new·
;prescription drug benefit wtlh measures to control c:osts
before the baby boom generatton reaches retirement age . . - · - - - - - -- - - ---'Semen arrested Mohammet.! Hamdi ai-Ahdal, a top alQaida member suspe&lt;"ted of masterminding the 2000
bomhing of the USS Colt: ami the 2002 bombing of a
·.French oi I tanker off Yemen's mast (A 1-Ahdal was I ater
:sentenced to three years for the French tanker attack. but'
was not charged in the Cole case .) Gail Knisley, 62, was
'shot and killed while riding in a &lt;.:ar on a highway m
Columbus , Ohio; it was the pnly fatality in a series of
:shootings that terrified area dri vers . (Charles A. McCoy Jr.
.later pleaded guilty to manslaughter and 10 other charges.
and was sentenced to 27 yenrs in prison .)
Today 's Binhdays: Actor Ric:ardo Mnntalban is RR.
·Act ress Noel Neill is 8X. Ac:tress Kathryn Crosby is 75 .Actor
Matt Clark is 72. Singer Percy Sledge is 68. Author, actor
and game show host Ben Stein is 64. Actor John Larroquette .
ts 61 . Actor Tracey Walter is 61. Movie director Jonathan
. Kaplan is 61 . Singer Amy Grant is 48 . Rock musician Eric
Grossman (K's Choice) is 44. Rllck singer Mark Lanegan is
44 . Rock singer-musician Tim Armstrong is 43. Singer Stacy
.Lalli""' is 42 .. Rock musician Rodney Sheppard (Sugar
.Ray) is 42. Rapper-producer Erick Sermon is 40. Actress Jill
. Hennessy is 39. Actress Christina Applegate is 37. Actor
Edolie Steeples ("My Name Is Earl") is 35.
Thought for Today: "Reject lmtrcd without hating ." Mat) f1aker Eddy, American religious leader and .founder
During a July 17, 2007
of 'llw Christian ScieQce Monitor ( 1821- 19 10)_
speech bel'ore the Planned
Parenthood Action Fund. then
Sen.
Burack Obamu pledged:
LETTERS TO THE
'The first thing I'd do as presI;:DITOR
ident b sign the Freedom of
Nat
Choice Act.'' Thitt is a bizarre
I &lt;"( /en tn 1i1e editur are welcume. Tlu:r should he le.1s way '"to hring us together,"
Hentoff
tlw" 3()( ) " nrd1·. All leiters arc .wl~je&lt;'t to editing , mtW be another goal of his as presi1it:ned. ,,,d ll lr'lude addres.\ ruul telephone ·number No dent. When Sen. Barbara
11 11 11~ 11• ·· 1 lme1.1 •viii bP pul&gt;li.l!ted. Letten should he in
Boxer, D-Calif., reintroduced
· t:, ,, ,tf 1u' rt·. wJd ,-(',\'sing ;_,·~:rre'. nol pn·.wnalrltt!., . Le11ers i~f'
the FOCA in 2007, her press what would undeniabl y be
· t hr u 1~' rr · Ol l!,fl/1 1-oti o n'l am/ rmliridlf(l/.\ n·i/1 not he lU'ccpt · rekase .
triumphantly seen during pregnancy as a
• t cf {n f fJi t h f /( ·1/ lftJ I I .
.
expla.ined that this draconian baby in ultrasound - for
- - -del'tnition of "Freedom of reasons of her health .
Choice" would mecm:
But the Supreme Court in
"Women would have the 1'17 3. the same ·year as Roe
absolute right to i:hoose v. Wade , in Doe v. Bolton
whether to continue or tenni-· defined
(USPS 213-960)
Reader SeJVi ces
very
broadly
nate their pregnancies before "health" us justification for
Ohio Vallel:ubllshlng
fetal viability. and that right aborting a via ble human
Correction Policy
Published ·every atternoon. Momlay
would he protected by this being. as "physical. eillo- ·
(JoJo rna 1n COilC91tl Ill all S\()1185 iS lu
lhro ugh Fr 1day, 11 t Co llrt' Street
legislation. The Freedom of tiona! , psychological. familtit ~u.urate I! you krmw ol an error Pomeroy Oh•o. Second-class postage
Choice
· Act also supersedes tal and the woman's age."
•n c story can the rmw":&gt;room at (740) pa1d &lt;tt Pomeroy
any
law,
regulation or local Nearly a blank check to dis9'122156
Member : The Assodated Press anrl
ordinance that impinges on a pose of that aborted person.
the Ohio Newspa per Assoc•at!On
,
Postmastar:
Send
address
correcwoman's right to choose ."
,
Our main number is
It 's no wonder that Obama
llons to The Da•ly Sent1n el, 111 Court
With regard to "fetal via- oppose.;! the Supreme Court
1740) 992· 2156.
Street, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
bility" - the ability to sur- decision that eventually
Department extensions are :
vive
on his or her own - the ruled against the lawfulness
Subscription Rates
ardent
supponers of FOCA of "partial-birth abortion"
By carrier or motor route
News
One month
'1 0.27
slide over the language in that the late Democratic Sen.
£dflor: Charl ene Hoeflich E:tr 12
1115.84
One year.
the surviving 2007 version Daniel Patrick Moynihan ~ Reporter; Brran Reed bt 1&lt;1
Dally
50'
of
FOCA bill that, ..as who was pro-choice - said
Senior Citizen rates
,1 Ft.porter: Beth Sergen t E:tt 13 One month
Douglas Johnson of the was infanticide.
'10.27
National Right to Life
One year
103.90
The rahidly pro-abollion
e;. ;rlY.~ sht::Md remit Hl advance
Committee points out: Freedom of Choice Act he
:•
Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Hams E.O'f 1~ ·~-x,t to ti'IP. Daly Sentinel No su b··contains no objective crite- suppons, unless there is an
Sr.rtohon ~ mall pernutled tn areas
OUtalde Selee: Brenda Dao~rs F.: lit lfl
ria for "viability,' but rather. unlikely successful filibuster
m~re hoi'~ c.a rr ter serviCe rs avat!·
Claea./Circ.: Judy Clark E ~t tO
require.' that the judgment in the Democratically cona(&gt;le
regarding 'viability' he left trolled Senate . would invaliMall Subscription
entirely in the hands of 'the date parehtal-notification
• General Manager.
••
lnolde Meigs County
laws; any state's requirement
attending physician ."'
I 3 Weeks
' 32 26
• Charlene Hoeflich Ext t ?
rull disclosure of the physof
Guess
who
that
would
be?
26 Weeks
' 64.20
ical and emotional risks
The abon ionist!
52 Weeks
' 127. 71
E-mail :
There's
more.
The
restricinherent in abortion; and news @rnydaflysenlinel.com
Outside Meigs County
tion~ on "the absolute right can vou believe this? - all
13 Weeks
'53.55
to choose" would also apply laws· prohibitin g medical
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107 tO
even after " viability" if a personnel other than Iicensed
www.myda!lysentrnel com
52 Week s
'2 74 .21 .
physicians from performi ng
woman wan ted to abort ~.~------~-----------.)
j,

ati ve and fundamentalist. If
Dem&lt;~cra ts go off the left
end. following their Rush
Limbaughs in the blogosphere. the GOP may only
need to sit and wait until the
inevitable reaction occurs.
But Obama appears to be
a pragmatist und is hiring,
pragmatists - Rep. Rahm
Emanuel. D-111 .. in the lead
'-- to run hi s administration.
So Republicans shouid follow the advice of Senate
Republican
Conference
Chaim1an Lamar Alexander
(Tenn.): "Ji' (Obama) governs
from the center. we'll support
him and suggest better ways ·
of domg things. If he goes too
far len. we'll object ."
Part of the problem. of
course. lies in deciding
what's ·•center" and "too
left .'' Right now, Republicans
are merely saying "'No" to a
new economic stimulus and
rescues for auto companies
and homeowners rather than
uev ising alternatives.
Conservative economist
· Martin Feldstein of Harvard
Untvcrsity. for mstance : contends that the government
should prevent a cascade .of
· mortgage foreclosures by
lending "underwater" homeowners pat1 of the difference
between their home 's value
and what they owe - but on
terms that allow garnishment
of their wages if they don't
pay the debt.
Longer
range,
as
-Alexander says. Republicans
can't simply dust off 20ycar-o lt.! mantras of the
Reagan era , but have to
devise 21st-century solutions
for America's problems like
health care, entitlements,
energy and transponation.
And . GOP members of
Congress should do everything po~;s ible to assist GOP
go~e rn o r s in addressing
thetr problems - and also
learn from what they are ·
doing to solve them.
Which brings us to step 3.
Go,c rnors like Sarah Palin

HARTFORD, W.Va. Dorothy Virginia (Gibbs)
Fields , 83, of Hartford
went to be with the Lord
Sunday, Nov. 23, 2008 at
her restdence surrounded by
her family.
·
She was a beloved wife to
her late husband Clyde for
59 years and lived her life
in devotion to her children
and grandchildren. Dorothy
was a homemaker and
member of Father's House
Church in Hartford .
Born Oct. 20, 1925 in
Clifton, she was a daughter .
of the late D~wey and Willa:
Dorothy Fleldl
(Edwards) Gtbbs .
In addition to her parenis, she was preceded in death by
her husband , James Clyde Fields; son, JimmY. Fieldl!;
brothers, Roland , Jack, Da11ny and William Gtbbs; a11d
Sisters, Ehzabeth Johnson , Maysel Zirkle and· Sandra
MacKnight:
She is surv.ived by her daughters, Linda Fields of Letan,
N.ancy (Hulmg) Greene of Letan and Karen (Mike)
Fmmcum of Letart; sons, Larr~ (Linda) Fields of
Syr11cuse, Ohio, and Danny (Lisa) Ftelds of Mason ~ daughler-m-law, Conme Ftelds of Hanford; 12 grandchildren ,
Stephanie Roush, .Stacey Miller, Brent (Melissa) Fields ,
Dou~ (Brandy) Ftelds , Robbie (Cathy) Greene, Steven
(Jesstca) Greene, Andy (Arnie) Fields; Kevin (Betsy)
Fields, Joe (Ashley) Finnicum, Jennifer (Lenny) Tennant,
Amber (Joel) Lloyd and Danni .Marie Fields: great-.grandchildren , Kyle and Kendall ~ush, Bryant and Noah
Miller, Connor Fields, Bryce and Parker Fields, Kaitlyn
and 1)!1er Gr.eene, Trevor, Bransen and Chase Fields,
Maycee and Adyson Fields, Carson Finnicum, Allison and
Kaycee T~&lt;nnant and · Hayden Lloyd: sisters, Grace ·
Goodnite of Hanford and Janice (Jimmie) Goodnite of
· New Haven; sisters-in-law, Geraldine Crites of Arcadia,
Fla., Doris (Bill) Grueser of Pomeroy, Ohio, Mona Gibbs
of Gibbstown and Virginia Gibbs of Ravenswood; brothers-in-law, John MacKnight of New Haven , Earl Fields of
Hanford, Gene (Betty) Fields of Letart, Donnie Fields of
Hanford and Wayne Fields of Michigan; and a .special
friend, Louise Hall of Landrum, S.C.
Funeral services will be I p.m . Wednesday, Nov. 26 at ·
Foglesong Tucker Funeral Home in Mason with Pastors
Mike Finnicum and Huling Greene officiating. Burial will
follow in Zerkle Cemetery. Visitation will be 6-9 p.m.
today at the funeral home.
.
Brent Fields, Doug Fields , Robbie Greene , Sleven
Greene, Andy Fields , Kevin Fields, Joe Finnicum and Kyle
Roush will serve as pall bearers.
·
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the
Father's House Church Building Fund, P.O. Box 205,
Hanford, WV 25247.
,
Co11dolences may be e-mailed to foglesongtucker@verizon.l)et.

-

~------ -----~

The Daily Sentinel

~

1

'

•

abortions because such
restri.:tions might "interfere"
with access to this .absolute
right to abonion . This is
respect for women?
As of now, before our abortion president gets his wish,
26 states have informed-consent laws, 36 have parentalin volvement laws and 34
states have restrictions on
funding for abortions,
AIso disposed of will be
the "conscience ri~hts" in
many states . They include,
Johnso n reminds us, "all
laws allowing doctors, nurses or other slate-licensed
professionals . and hospitals
or other · health care
providers. to decline to pro·
vide or pay for abortions.''
What about religiously
base.d hospitals and clinics
that refuse to perform abortions'' At presidential press
conterences, can we depend
on at least some niembers of
the Washington press corps to
ask Obama about that provis'ion or the others I've cited?
Sen. Dianne Feinstein , DCalif., heralded the election
of Obama as "a new birth of
freedom.'' Not, however, for
the early-stage human ,
beings, each with his or her
own distinct DNA , who ,
under this law. could never
become citilcns.
Matt Bowman. an attorney with pro-life Alliance.
Defense. Fund. projects that
if FOCA i&gt; passed into law
(Lifenews.com, Sept. 24).
there wi ll be an increase in
aborti.on "by 125.000 per
)Car.. in the United States
because of the abolition of
law' 111 state' thnt have

'

•

.OEAL

The abortion president

Eastern staff approved

Dorothy Fields

(Alaska). Tim . Pawlenty
(Minn·.), Bobby Jindal (La.),
Haley Barbour (Miss .).
Charlie Crist (Fla.) and others actually have responsibility for implementing health
care_ programs. building
infrastructure , saving energy,
developing ecoryomies and
balancing budgets.
Three governors
Republican Jon Huntsman
Jr. (Utah) and Democrats
Deval Patrick (Mass.) and
John Lynch (N.H.) - have
set up pilot projects partially implementing proposals
of the New Commission on
the Skills of the American
Workforce, is:.ued last year.
Significantly. their initiarives have been blessed by
leaders of the National
Education
Associarion .
though its .rival, the
American Federation · of
Teachers. opposes them. ·
Under the proposal ,.states
would take over schools
from local boards, teachers
would form corporations to
run schools on contract and
hire principal s. salaries
would go up significantly to
attract first-rate teachers
and standards would be set
to international norms.
Most students would
graduate after lOth grade
and go on to upgraded trade
or tech sc hools, while others
stayed and took collegelevel courses. And money
saved would also fund
preschool for needy kids .
If · one governor fully
implemented the proposal,
his or her state could be a
competitiveness juggernaut,
set a model tor the nation and begin solving America's
biggest long-term problem.
Actually solving big jJToblems - not pandering to a
shrinking· demographic base
- is the key to Republican
success. Good luck.
(Morwn Kondracke is
executive editor of Ro/1.
Cull. the newspaper oj
Capitol Hill.) ·

.·

Doris Jean Haynes

MIDDLEPORT - poris Jean Haynes , 75, Middleport,
passed away at her residence on Nov. 21, 2008 after a
brief ilmess .
·
She was born July 12, 1933 in Hamlin, W.Va. She was
the daughter of the late Mary Ann, Kerns and James Albert
Pack . In addition to her parents , she was preceded in death
by several brothers and sist~rs and son Ronald L. Dailey.
She WaS the youngest swvivor of 13 children. She was a
homemaker and o member of the Ash Street Church.
She is survived by her three daughters: Kathy Strickland
and Christy Dailey, both ·of . Middlepon; and Carol A.
Dailey-Hubbard of SouJh Point. She has 14 grandchildren,
·30 great-grandchildren and several· nieces and nephews. ·
He,r $pedal friends include Carol Scarberry, Dottie
Sizemore, and. Sue Holley. Special thanks to Holzer
Hospice and Grant Medical-Center.
.
·
Services will be held at I p.m. today, Nov. 25,2008 at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Middlepon with The
Reverends Walker and Morrow officiating. Interment will
follow in Riverview Cemc;tery in Middlepon. Visitation.
was held from 2-4 p.m. and 6-9 p.m: yesterday; An online
registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com

•

Ladona Stephens.
• Approved the following
substitutes for the remain TUPPERS PLAINS der of the 2008-09 school
The Eastern Local Board of year. as follows : Michelle
Education hired substitute Holsinger, coc;.k and secre:
•teachers and supplemental tary: Michelle · Milliron.
staff at last week regular cook and secretary: Cathy
meeting .
.
Pickens, cook.
· After meeting in execu• Approved Mrs. Mary
tive session, the board:'
Anne Moore to provide
• Approved the following home instruction for a stusubstitute teachers for the dent in the district.
2008-09 school year, pend• Approved the following proper .cenification: ing supplemental contracts
Rose Marie Isgrigg , Jessica for the 2008-09 school
Marcum, Ed·ward Safranek, year as follow s: Brian
Sandra Southern , and Bowen , winter weight
STAFF REPORT

NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

s

room coordinator; Josh
Fogle, cross country
(retroactive to Aug. I);
Mel.i ssa Ijarker, quiz bowl
advtsor; Alys sa Holrer,
assistant varsity girls basketball coach.
.
• Approved Kim Carl as a
secretary on a one year contract effective Nov. 20.
The board al so:
• Approved a requ est for
di sposal of books and
other library or media
assets that have been
deemed un suitable fo r
continued district use as
submitted by Library

Barbra E.

Media Specialist, Chad
Griffith .
• Approved a request from
Griffith to panicipate in a
program surponing the ·
public library s campaign to
provide food and baby
ttemo to local food banks in
exchange for forgiving fines
and fees owed to Eastern
Local for lost or damagejl
library books .
• Ser the next regular
meeting at 6:30 p.m. on
Dec·. IS , in the library conference room for the next
regular meeting of the
Board of Education.

Poaching from Page At
five · ye~rs
probation .
Cundiff must also successfully complete a hunter education course.
• Jason L. Miller, 26 , of
Langsville: Pled no contest
and found guilty on Nov.
13, of hunting without permission, taking a second
antlered deer, failure to
temporary 'tag a deer, failure to permanently tag ·a
deer,' two charges of hunting with a shotgun during
closed season, and hunting
deer with the aid of a motor
vehicle.
Miller was fined $2,100
with $1 ,600 suspended, 90
days of jail time, suspend.ed, 100 hours of community service , five years hunt·
ing privilege revocation ,
two . years probation, and
must successfully complete a hunter education
course.
• Gerald W. McQuin, 66,
of Grove City: Pled guilty
in March, 2007 to charges
of possession of illegal deer
parts , hunting and taking
deer with the aid of a motor
vehicle and providing a
check station with false
information .
He was sentenc " to a
$600 fine plus coutt costs ,
150 days in jail, suspended ,
one year hunting privilege
revocation, two years probation, and must successfully complete a bunter education course.
• Dannie! L. McQuirt, 43,
of Grove City: Pled guilty
in March, 2007 to hunting
without permission, hunting
with the aid of a motor vehicle , transponing ·a loaded
firearm in a motor vehicle;
and pled no contest to the

charge of hunting without a permit, hunting without a
·licel)Se, possess ion of
fur-taker permit.
He was sentenced to a improperly. tagged deer and
$690 fin e plus court costs, providing. fal se information
300 day s in jail, suspended, to a check station .
one year hunting privilege · He was ordered to pay
revo~ati on, two years pro$360 in fines plu s court
bation , and must successful- costs. Further sentencing
ly pass a hunter education included 240 days m jail,
suspended, two years of
course.
• Sharon A. Thomas,61 of hunting license revocation ,
Langsville: Pled guilty in three years probation, 200
February, 2007 to three hours of community serwildlife related charges vice and must successfully
including attaching a tem- complete ~ h~nter safety
porary tag to a deer killed course.
• Mark J. Minshall. 33, of
by another, receiving or
possessing an untagged deer Pomeroy: Pled guilty in
and providing false infor- February, 2007, to eight
wildlife related chaq;es
mation to a check station.
She was sentenced to pay including: two huntmg
a $390 fine plu s court without a license, providing fal se information to a
co~ts, serve 60 days of jail
time, suspended, one year ch6ck station, two counts
hunting privilege revoca- of hunting deer without a
permit , possess
tion, two years probation deer
and must successfully improperly tagged deer,
complete a hunter educa- failure to attach temporary
tion course.
· Jag and failure to perma• Darrell L. Thomas,65 of nently tag a deer.
Minshall was ordered to
Langsville: Pled guilty in
February, 2007 to four pay a $600 fine plus cou11
wildlife related charges costs. Further sentencing
including improperly tag a included 270 days of jail
deer, two deer permit viola- time with 260 days sustions and hunting without a pended, a six year hunting
revocation, three years prolicense.
He was fined $340 plus bation , 50 hours community
court costs, sentenced to 60 service, and must ·Successda:rs of jail time, suspended, fully complete a hunter eduone year hunting license cation course.
• Rex H Briggs, 48 , of
revocation, two years pro-· bation ~ and must successful- Langsville: Pled no contest
ly complete a hunter educa- to 23 charges in July, 7007,
tJon course.
·
_ including five counts of
• Jeffery E. Fowler, 28, of improperly tagging deer,
Pomeroy: . Pled guilty in four counts of taking posFe);truary, 2007 to five sessio~\ of improperly
wildlife related charges tagged deer, five counts of.
including; possession of providing false information
slugs during youth season, to a check station, failure to
hunting deer without a lfeer permanently tag deer, two

Brown rrom tiageAt

The following were invit- Aluminum· and Democratic
considered next month
:when House and Senate . ed to panicipate in the dis- Pany Chairman: _ Horace
leaders again consider a cussion, Brown . said: Joe · Karr, Owner of the Wild
" bailout.''
Bolin, Meigs County Soil Horse Cafe ; Hal Kneen ,
"The needs of Ohio's and Water Conservation OSU Extension Agent;
middle class families must District; Mark Bridenbaugh, Herman Koby, President,
Health
Care; Rio Grande Communitf.
be heard in Washington," Family
said Brown . "This round- Commissioners Jim Sheets College; Troy Ferrel ,
table discussion is a way and Mick Davenpon; Tony President ffiEW Local 972;
Superintendent, Porter; Judge Scott Powell;
that we can work to$ether to Deem ,
~(Stiln
set new
polictes in Southern Local School Paul Reed, President of
MARIEITA ~ Barbra E. (Still) Jimes, 73, Marietta and Washington that reflect the District; MiddlePort Mayor Farmers Bank; Tom Reed,
Mike · Gerlach; Henry Gallia-Meigs· Community
formed~ of Meigs County, died Nov. 22, 2008 at Marietta values of families in Meigs
ij.unter,
retired from Kaiser Action Agency ; Beth
County."
Memonal Hospital, Marietta.
She was born to the late Elmer Still and Addie Mae
QUalls: She was a member of the Forest Run Baptist
Church, a veteran of the US Army, an alumni of the
from Page At
University of Rio Grande, a member of the Forest Run
Choir, a past president missionary Sunday school sect.
She is survived by sons Lawrence (Sherry) Coats, a counterfeit bill , only prob- phones which can be ·used this time of year and be on
the lookout for suspicious
or sold.
Parkersburg, W.Va., Ronald Coats, Orient, Timmy Coats, able cause it might be one.
"No
one
's
stealing
behavior.
Proffitt also said reported .
Pomeroy, Heinz Coats, Pomeroy; ste]lChildren, Carol Petty,
Proffitt also said this time
Bidwell, Greg .and Jamce James, Btdwell, Lon Laffeny, shoplifting incidents are on food ," Proffitt said of
Bidwell; brothers, Raben (Mary) Sttll , Dayton , Davtd Still, the rise as well with four s tolen items that range of year merchants ·will likeColumbus, Lawrence (Maxine) Still, Hopewell , Va., Mike people (two juveniles, two · from batteries to makeup ly have even more checks tp
Still, Middlepon, Mark (Carol) Sti~I. Middleport; six adults) arrested in two dif- and not just at Dollar scrutimze and should call
ferent incidents at Dollar General but at businesses the bank to. check them out
grandchildren ; and eight great grandchtldren. .
if they are suspicious.
addition to her parents, !\lie was prece~ed m death by General on East Main Street all over the village .
Businesses are reminded
Proffitt said employees
last week, Proffi tt said
husband, John James, Jr., grandson , Ronald Coats.
·
to
lock the doors at night
Afuneral service will be held at II a.m. Wednesday, Nov. thieves are trying to make should be even more vigi26. at Ewing Fun~ral Home. wit~· Pastors Arius Hurt and off with items like cell fant than they already are and leave a light on, making
Lonnie Coats offictated. Bunal wtll follow at Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call for visitation from 6-9. p.m.
tonight at the .funeral·.home.

.

parental
involvement,
informed-consent laws and
fu,nding restrictions.
"Even with this mini mum." Bowman adds,
"that's 125,000 children that
were not. killed this year
because we (still) have these
laws, and 125 ,000 (ad&lt;jed to
the ex isting 1.3 million
abonions) who will' be
killed in 2009" and beyond.
On Jan . 22, 2008 - · the
35th anniversary of Roe v.
Wade , Obama said with
pride: ·"Throughoul my
career, I've been a consistent and strong supponer of
reproductive jusuce and
·have consistently had a 100
percent pro-choice rating
with Planned Parenthood
and NARAL Pro-Choice
America ...
"To truly honor (Roe v.
Wade), we need to update the
social contract so that women
can free themselves and their
~hildren from violent relationships."
What, Mr.
President , can be more violent than murder by abortion'!
AI veda King; niece of Dr.
Manin Luther King, ~aid on
Nov. II (lifenews.com) that
"his dream of full equality
remams JUst a dream a\ lung
as unborn children continue
to be treated no better than
property. .. .The e l e~tiun h
are over. The pro-life battle
begins anew."
(Nar Hell/off is a natimwlly renowned a11tlwriry on the
First Amendmell/ and the
Bill of Rights and autlror oj
many books. including "The
War on the Bill of Rights and
tire Gatheri11g Resistance ..
(Seve/J Stories Prel-.&gt;. 2004) .

The Daily Sentinel • Page As ·

www .mydailysentinel.com

Jaiiies

counts of failure to temporarily tag wild · turkey,
three counts of failure to
permanently tag wild
turkey, taki ng more than the
legal bag limit of wild
turkey, and two counts of
taking more than the legal
bag limit of deer.
Briggs was fined $1,000
plu s court cos ts. Further
se ntencing included 690
days in jail, suspended, 10
year hunting privilege
revocation, five years probation , forfeiture of all
equipment used in illegal
taking , revocation
of
wildlife check station operator status , and must successfully complete a hunter
education course .
• Mary E. Nel son , 51,
Langsville: Pled guilty in
August , 2007, to four
counts of providing false
mforrnation to a check station , failure to ·proper! y tag
deer. possess a deer that is
improperly tagged , failure .
to permanently tag a wild
turkey, hunting without a
license and hunting deer
without a deer tag . .
She was fined$3,150 plus
co urt costs, with $2,625
suspended , 30 days of jail
time, suspended, and faces a
six -year hunting license
revocation with five years_
of probation and must successfully complete a hunter
education course.
• Ronald E ~ Hawkins , 49,
of Middleport: Pled no
r.ontest in February, 2007
to two counts of ·improP.er
tagging
of
wild)tfe,
improper record keeping,
and illegal tran spon of
migratory game birds. He
was fined $ 1,240.

'

Shaver, DireCtor Council'on
Aging. ·
Jennifer Sheets, Attorney
and President of Ohio
Board of Education; Mike
Swisher. Trustee, Rio
Grande
Community
College; Perry Vernadoe,
Mei gs County Economic
Development
Director;
Heather Wolf, Teacher and
Director of Curriculum; and
Clifford Young, O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital .

Crime

In

.

.

f()caJ BriefS

Deaths

Anaold Mea itt

CHESHIRE - W. Arnold
Merritt, 83, Cheshire. di~
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Post 128 of the American Sunday, Nov. 23 , 20()8. in the
Legion will not meet on Nov. 26. The next meeting will b:e Holzer Senior Call' Center.
He is swvived by a sister,
held at 7 p.m., Dec. 10. The Executive Committee will
Phyllis (Carnell) Vance,
meet 'at 6 p.m .
The annual Chirstmas Dinner for members and guests Cheshire.
Funeral serVices will be l
will be al 6 p.m., Dec. J7 . In keep~~ with the ann~,
p.m.
Priday, Nov. 28, 2008,
Christmas witll Santa, post members will sack candy, fruit
m the Cremeens Funeral
and nuts after the dinner.
The candy will be distributed by Santa on Christmas Eve Chapel. Pastor Merle Wood
will officiate. Burial will be
at Post 128 headquanersin the Gravel Hill Cemetery,
'
Cheshire. Friends may call
from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday
•
RACINE - Friendship Circle of the Carmel-Sutton at the. fun · 1111 chapel. .
Expressions · of syrnP.athy
United Methodist Church will serve lunch from I I a.m. to
ma~ be sent to the fanuly by
2 p.m., [)ec . 1-6, at·the ~eltowship Hall on Carmel Road:
Soups sandwiches, drin);.s and homemade desserts wtll visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
be served for donations toward local ou~ach projeru.

PET

Feeney-Bennett meetings

f

Comolunity luncheon

'

All Styles included
FREE 7/16" Pad w/purchase of Carpet
FBEE No Obligation Quotes
FREE Removal of Old Carpet
FREE Furniture Moving

it easier for officers to ctO
their n1ghtly business
checks. Residents are also
asked to keep vehicles
locked and any sharping
bags in the trunks o cars
and out of view.
'"We live in a different
society tliese days," Proffitt
said: "There's always been
thieves but they seem to be
doing more and more.''

!

''
'

�'

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

·Tuesday, November 25,

Bev Barker, 57, is
seen at the Battelle
Breast Care Center
near the Madison
County Hospital
Thursday, Nov. 20.
in London. Ohio.
Baker found a lump
in her breast Iast
April. In June, doctors removed·the
breast after determining the tumor
was cancerous.
Madison County in
rural central Ohio
has the second
highest death ra~e
from invasive
breast cancer in
the state. Concerns
, about'the high rate
have touched off a
study by investigators at Wright State
University in·
Dayton.

rate

BY JAMES HANNAH

•

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Alook at the top causes
of death for women

LONDON, · Ohio '
School bus driver Bev ·
· Baker thinks about it every ·
day - why do so many
Top 10 causes of death for women In thfl
women in the area seem to
States and the number of deths In 2004:
United
be dying of breast cancer?
Baker found a lump in her
• Heart disease: 330,509 women
breast ' last April. In June .
• Cerebrovascular disease: 91 ,272
doctors removed the breast
• Lung and brochus cancer: 66;431
after determining the tumor
• Chronic lower respiratory disease: 63,341
was ~;BJ~cerous.
• Alzheimer's disease: 46,991
· .
· l'he 57-year-old woman is
• Breast cancer: 40,954
back on thejob and says she
• Accidents: 39,946
feels fine . But she worries
• Diabetes mellitus: 37.669
. about whether she, · her
•Influenza and pneumonia: 32,60~
teenage daughter and other
• Colorectal cancer: 26,699
residents are still facing a
threat.
(Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) .
tAP)
"I would love for them to
find out what it is and fi~ it
so these women don't have
to go through that," Baker
said. "It's not a pretty sight.
· It's not fun ." .
Madison County in rural
central Ohio has the second
highest death rate from
invasive breast cancer in
the state. Concerns about
the high rate have prompted
, a study by investigators at
Wright State University in
Dayton.
· About 40 people per
100,000 residents die of
breast cancer in Madison
County, compared to the
statewide rate of 27.5,
according to figures compiled
by . the
Ohio
Department of Health for the
years 200 I through 2005.
. The higher monality rate
could be caused by several
factors, ·induding late-stage
diagnosis, said Robert
Indian, chief of the depanmerit's comprehensive cancer program.
· Nationwide,
40,954
women and 362 men died
from breast cancer in 2004,
the most recent year numbers are available. The mortality rate has decreased 2.2
percent per year from 1990
to 2004 among women ,
according to tile Centers for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention.
The -Center for Global
Health
Systems,
Management, and Policy at
Wright State plans to review
the state's breast cancer data
from Madison County. produce a descriptive study and
make a recommendation .
The .effon is expected to
take about six months.
· Sara Paton, an epidemiologist at the center, said
investi~ators will be looking at nsk factors associated
with breast cancer such as
smoking and aJ~ohol consumption. She sa1d they Will
also look ·into age, race , ·
diet, physicaJ · activity,
access to health care and
whether residents live in an
urban or rural pan of the
county.
.
Mona Flax , chief development office for Madison
County Hospital, said the
cou11ty's breast cancer rate
"jumped qut at me" when
she first learned of it.
"As an 18-year breast-cancer survivor I was personally
shocked," Fla~ said . "This is
a stati stic that ·Madison
County just doesn't want to
be known for, and we want
ro do whatever we can to
change these numbers."
Since February 2007, the
foundation has raised more
than $1 million tp add
equipment, staff and expand
hours at the Battelle Breast
Get FREE~
Care Center, the hospiial 's
treatment facility. The foundation also started an
endowment fund that · will
help low-income patients
pay for treatment.
Sue Besinger, a breast. care specialist at the center,
estimates that the number of
people showing up for
breast exams has increased
75 percent in the past year.
"Women come in for
mammograms that have
never had them done
before," she said. "It's phenomenal ."
Besides driving a school
bus, Baker now makes time
on Tuesdays to volunteer at
the .center, bringing food,
drinks ~nd comfort to breast
cancer victims.
"It makes you feel good if
there's someone there talking· to you," she said. "I
went through it."

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FREE Hwday cookbook.
. .

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'

•

Bl

The Daily Sentinel .

2008

Thesday, November 25,2008

LeBron coming t~ New
York for his Garden party
BY BRIAN MAHONEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

GREENBURGH, N.Y. Last time LeBron James
played in New York, he exited the floor to · "MVP!"
chants, standing ovation,
and even a fan coming onto
the court to meet him.
If James thought New
Yorkers loved him then , wait
'unti I he sees the reception
he's bound to get this time .
James' first visit to New
York this season arrives just
days after the Knicks boldly
positioned themselves for a
potential riin at the
Cleveland Cavaliers superstar in two summers.
Maybe James comes in
2010. He's definitely coming Tuesday.
·
It doesn'tget much bigger
in the Big Apple.
·.
"It's always kind of a circus when he comes to town ,
whether they're thinking
he.'s going to play for us in
2010 or not,' Knick s forward David -Lee said.
James will be decked out
in a special "Big Apple" ver-

a

AP photo

LAKE BUENA VISTA,
(AP) - Tim Tebow
~et a chance to repeat
wmner of the M~well
given to college
llotb•all's top player.
The Plonda . quanerback
one of three finalists
Monday, along
QBs Graham Harrell
Texas Tech and Colt
t.fc&lt;:oy of Texas.
Maxwell and eight
college football
will be presented
II on ESPN.
HatTell and McCoy allmJ!; with Oklahoma's Sam

AP photo

In this March 5 file photo, Cleveland Cavaliers forward
LeBron James (23) shoots over New York Knicks' Wilson
Chandler (21) during the second half of a basketball game
in New York. James and the Cleveland Cavaliers' first visit
to Madison Square Garden comes days after the Knicks
made two tra(fes that cleared salary cap space for a potential run ai the superstar in two summers.

sion of his Nike Zoom
LeBron VI sneakers for the
occasion, featuring a red
color scheme.
What New Yorkers really
want is to see him in white.
blue and orange - the
Knicks' unifonn colors.
No matter what happens,
it'll be hard to top James'
last game at Madison Square
Garden.
P.e had 50 points, 10
assisis and eight rebounds in
Clevefimd's· 119-105 victory
on March 5. A fan came on
to the floor and walked up
the Cavs' bench after James
checked out in the final
minute, even saying a few
words to his favorite player.
which James said made the
night even more special.
"I've dreamed aboui playing well in this building and
it 's ovenaken (what) I could
ever dream about," James
said after the game. "To gei
a standing ovation in the
greatest basketball arena in
the world, it was a dream.
come true for me . It's one of
the best things that ever happened to me."

It could happen on a nightly basis in a few years.
James can becomCI a free
agent in 2010. headlining a
stellar class that also could
include
fellow
U.S.
Olympians Dwyane Wade
and Chris Bosh. And though
the Ohio native has never
publicly said anything about .
leaving Cleveland, that's
done nothing to quiet speculation that someday he ' d
eventually bolt for a bigger

stage .

New York could already
offer the Garden. with all its
history and a renovation
scheduled for completion in
2011-12, an exciting offensive style . under Mike
D' Antoni, and all the busi t
ness opportunities James
could ever seek.
The only thing the Knicks
cciuldn 't provide was the
money - until Friday,
By
sending
Zach
Randolph to the Los
Angeles Clippers and Jamal
Crawford to Golden State in
separate deals, New York
Please see LeBron, 8:2

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APphoto

Cleveland Browns quarterback Brady Quinn tries to keep
warm on the sidf!))ines in the third quarter of a 16-6 loss to .
ll!e Houston Texans in an NFLfootball game Sunday in
Cleveland.
l

Browns' Crennel
staying confident
ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

lose. If we win, that
improves my chances: lf we
don 't, then tljat hurts my

~BEREA ~ His teal;ll a chances."
~jgantic disappointment and · Ironically,

ii\ · disarray, Cleveland
B'towns coach Romeo
Crennel walked to the front
l&gt;f the 'media room · and
~tepped up on the dais .
·
· He then slid into his cus~maiY, chair.
~.• A seat that's never been
hotter.
One day after another
embarrassing home game.
Crennel ad&lt;h:essed his shaky
rtuture wi.~ the Browns, who
to 4-7 following a 16-6
•to the Houston Texans
Sunday. Amid speculathat he's about to lose
''7_.--' Crennel insisted he's
concerned about keep---~:- team from fracturing
preparing then\ to play
Indianapolis Colts.
· At the end of his news
;on.{erenc:e, Crennel was
direc.tly if he expects
be ftred.
don't WOrn' about it. I
control it/' he said on
nnriAv "The thing I i:an
whether we win or

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with
the
Browns now 1-5 at · home, .
Crennel 's record is 24-35 - .
the identical mark as his pre- .
decessor Butch Davis, who
resi~ned with five games
left m the 2004 season.
Before Crennel spoke,
Cleveland's players came to
their coach's defense. They
respect the 60-year-old
grandfather, who .Jeft the
field on Sunday with sorue
Browns fans chanting for
Bill Cowher, the former
Pittsburgh coach and current
network 'TV analyst who
may return to the sideline
someday.
"The . players have to be
accountable for everythin~,"
defensive end Shaun Smcth
said. "It doesn't have anything to do with the coach.
The fans can say they want
Cowher or whoever 11 is. It
·doesn't matter. At the end of
the day, the players have to
make plays. All a coach can
.

' .

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�'

PageA6

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

·Tuesday, November 25,

Bev Barker, 57, is
seen at the Battelle
Breast Care Center
near the Madison
County Hospital
Thursday, Nov. 20.
in London. Ohio.
Baker found a lump
in her breast Iast
April. In June, doctors removed·the
breast after determining the tumor
was cancerous.
Madison County in
rural central Ohio
has the second
highest death ra~e
from invasive
breast cancer in
the state. Concerns
, about'the high rate
have touched off a
study by investigators at Wright State
University in·
Dayton.

rate

BY JAMES HANNAH

•

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Alook at the top causes
of death for women

LONDON, · Ohio '
School bus driver Bev ·
· Baker thinks about it every ·
day - why do so many
Top 10 causes of death for women In thfl
women in the area seem to
States and the number of deths In 2004:
United
be dying of breast cancer?
Baker found a lump in her
• Heart disease: 330,509 women
breast ' last April. In June .
• Cerebrovascular disease: 91 ,272
doctors removed the breast
• Lung and brochus cancer: 66;431
after determining the tumor
• Chronic lower respiratory disease: 63,341
was ~;BJ~cerous.
• Alzheimer's disease: 46,991
· .
· l'he 57-year-old woman is
• Breast cancer: 40,954
back on thejob and says she
• Accidents: 39,946
feels fine . But she worries
• Diabetes mellitus: 37.669
. about whether she, · her
•Influenza and pneumonia: 32,60~
teenage daughter and other
• Colorectal cancer: 26,699
residents are still facing a
threat.
(Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) .
tAP)
"I would love for them to
find out what it is and fi~ it
so these women don't have
to go through that," Baker
said. "It's not a pretty sight.
· It's not fun ." .
Madison County in rural
central Ohio has the second
highest death rate from
invasive breast cancer in
the state. Concerns about
the high rate have prompted
, a study by investigators at
Wright State University in
Dayton.
· About 40 people per
100,000 residents die of
breast cancer in Madison
County, compared to the
statewide rate of 27.5,
according to figures compiled
by . the
Ohio
Department of Health for the
years 200 I through 2005.
. The higher monality rate
could be caused by several
factors, ·induding late-stage
diagnosis, said Robert
Indian, chief of the depanmerit's comprehensive cancer program.
· Nationwide,
40,954
women and 362 men died
from breast cancer in 2004,
the most recent year numbers are available. The mortality rate has decreased 2.2
percent per year from 1990
to 2004 among women ,
according to tile Centers for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention.
The -Center for Global
Health
Systems,
Management, and Policy at
Wright State plans to review
the state's breast cancer data
from Madison County. produce a descriptive study and
make a recommendation .
The .effon is expected to
take about six months.
· Sara Paton, an epidemiologist at the center, said
investi~ators will be looking at nsk factors associated
with breast cancer such as
smoking and aJ~ohol consumption. She sa1d they Will
also look ·into age, race , ·
diet, physicaJ · activity,
access to health care and
whether residents live in an
urban or rural pan of the
county.
.
Mona Flax , chief development office for Madison
County Hospital, said the
cou11ty's breast cancer rate
"jumped qut at me" when
she first learned of it.
"As an 18-year breast-cancer survivor I was personally
shocked," Fla~ said . "This is
a stati stic that ·Madison
County just doesn't want to
be known for, and we want
ro do whatever we can to
change these numbers."
Since February 2007, the
foundation has raised more
than $1 million tp add
equipment, staff and expand
hours at the Battelle Breast
Get FREE~
Care Center, the hospiial 's
treatment facility. The foundation also started an
endowment fund that · will
help low-income patients
pay for treatment.
Sue Besinger, a breast. care specialist at the center,
estimates that the number of
people showing up for
breast exams has increased
75 percent in the past year.
"Women come in for
mammograms that have
never had them done
before," she said. "It's phenomenal ."
Besides driving a school
bus, Baker now makes time
on Tuesdays to volunteer at
the .center, bringing food,
drinks ~nd comfort to breast
cancer victims.
"It makes you feel good if
there's someone there talking· to you," she said. "I
went through it."

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The Daily Sentinel .

2008

Thesday, November 25,2008

LeBron coming t~ New
York for his Garden party
BY BRIAN MAHONEY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

GREENBURGH, N.Y. Last time LeBron James
played in New York, he exited the floor to · "MVP!"
chants, standing ovation,
and even a fan coming onto
the court to meet him.
If James thought New
Yorkers loved him then , wait
'unti I he sees the reception
he's bound to get this time .
James' first visit to New
York this season arrives just
days after the Knicks boldly
positioned themselves for a
potential riin at the
Cleveland Cavaliers superstar in two summers.
Maybe James comes in
2010. He's definitely coming Tuesday.
·
It doesn'tget much bigger
in the Big Apple.
·.
"It's always kind of a circus when he comes to town ,
whether they're thinking
he.'s going to play for us in
2010 or not,' Knick s forward David -Lee said.
James will be decked out
in a special "Big Apple" ver-

a

AP photo

LAKE BUENA VISTA,
(AP) - Tim Tebow
~et a chance to repeat
wmner of the M~well
given to college
llotb•all's top player.
The Plonda . quanerback
one of three finalists
Monday, along
QBs Graham Harrell
Texas Tech and Colt
t.fc&lt;:oy of Texas.
Maxwell and eight
college football
will be presented
II on ESPN.
HatTell and McCoy allmJ!; with Oklahoma's Sam

AP photo

In this March 5 file photo, Cleveland Cavaliers forward
LeBron James (23) shoots over New York Knicks' Wilson
Chandler (21) during the second half of a basketball game
in New York. James and the Cleveland Cavaliers' first visit
to Madison Square Garden comes days after the Knicks
made two tra(fes that cleared salary cap space for a potential run ai the superstar in two summers.

sion of his Nike Zoom
LeBron VI sneakers for the
occasion, featuring a red
color scheme.
What New Yorkers really
want is to see him in white.
blue and orange - the
Knicks' unifonn colors.
No matter what happens,
it'll be hard to top James'
last game at Madison Square
Garden.
P.e had 50 points, 10
assisis and eight rebounds in
Clevefimd's· 119-105 victory
on March 5. A fan came on
to the floor and walked up
the Cavs' bench after James
checked out in the final
minute, even saying a few
words to his favorite player.
which James said made the
night even more special.
"I've dreamed aboui playing well in this building and
it 's ovenaken (what) I could
ever dream about," James
said after the game. "To gei
a standing ovation in the
greatest basketball arena in
the world, it was a dream.
come true for me . It's one of
the best things that ever happened to me."

It could happen on a nightly basis in a few years.
James can becomCI a free
agent in 2010. headlining a
stellar class that also could
include
fellow
U.S.
Olympians Dwyane Wade
and Chris Bosh. And though
the Ohio native has never
publicly said anything about .
leaving Cleveland, that's
done nothing to quiet speculation that someday he ' d
eventually bolt for a bigger

stage .

New York could already
offer the Garden. with all its
history and a renovation
scheduled for completion in
2011-12, an exciting offensive style . under Mike
D' Antoni, and all the busi t
ness opportunities James
could ever seek.
The only thing the Knicks
cciuldn 't provide was the
money - until Friday,
By
sending
Zach
Randolph to the Los
Angeles Clippers and Jamal
Crawford to Golden State in
separate deals, New York
Please see LeBron, 8:2

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Cleveland Browns quarterback Brady Quinn tries to keep
warm on the sidf!))ines in the third quarter of a 16-6 loss to .
ll!e Houston Texans in an NFLfootball game Sunday in
Cleveland.
l

Browns' Crennel
staying confident
ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

lose. If we win, that
improves my chances: lf we
don 't, then tljat hurts my

~BEREA ~ His teal;ll a chances."
~jgantic disappointment and · Ironically,

ii\ · disarray, Cleveland
B'towns coach Romeo
Crennel walked to the front
l&gt;f the 'media room · and
~tepped up on the dais .
·
· He then slid into his cus~maiY, chair.
~.• A seat that's never been
hotter.
One day after another
embarrassing home game.
Crennel ad&lt;h:essed his shaky
rtuture wi.~ the Browns, who
to 4-7 following a 16-6
•to the Houston Texans
Sunday. Amid speculathat he's about to lose
''7_.--' Crennel insisted he's
concerned about keep---~:- team from fracturing
preparing then\ to play
Indianapolis Colts.
· At the end of his news
;on.{erenc:e, Crennel was
direc.tly if he expects
be ftred.
don't WOrn' about it. I
control it/' he said on
nnriAv "The thing I i:an
whether we win or

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with
the
Browns now 1-5 at · home, .
Crennel 's record is 24-35 - .
the identical mark as his pre- .
decessor Butch Davis, who
resi~ned with five games
left m the 2004 season.
Before Crennel spoke,
Cleveland's players came to
their coach's defense. They
respect the 60-year-old
grandfather, who .Jeft the
field on Sunday with sorue
Browns fans chanting for
Bill Cowher, the former
Pittsburgh coach and current
network 'TV analyst who
may return to the sideline
someday.
"The . players have to be
accountable for everythin~,"
defensive end Shaun Smcth
said. "It doesn't have anything to do with the coach.
The fans can say they want
Cowher or whoever 11 is. It
·doesn't matter. At the end of
the day, the players have to
make plays. All a coach can
.

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Drive orye.

�,.

Page Ba • The Daily Sentinel

Awards
from PageBl
Bradford .- also are u.p for
the Davey O'Brien , awarded to the top quarterback.
Linebackers
Rey
Maualuga of Southern
California and James
Laurinaitis of Ohio State
and defensive end Aaron
Maybin of Penn State are
finalists for the Chuck
Bednarik Award for best
defensive player.
The Outland Trophy for

best interior lineman will
go to Michael, Oher of
Dt1ke
Mississippi,
Robinson of Oklahoma or
· Andre Smith of Alabama.
For the Biletnikoff as
best receiver. the finalists
are
Dez
Bryant of
Oklahoma State. Michael
Crabtree of Texas Tech and
Jeremy
Ma clin
of
Missouri. ·
Safety · Eric Berry of
Tennessee is a finalist for
· the Jim Thorpe Award for
\OP defensive back :. along,
w1th Malcolm knR1ns ol
Ohio State and Taylor
Mays
of
Southern

Califoniia.•
The Doak Walker final ists for best running back
are Shonn Greene of Iowa.
Kr10w shon Moreno of
Geor!lia and Javon Ringer
of M1chicran State.
Louie §akoda of Utah is
a finalist for both kicking
against
awards - he\
Graham Gano o Florida
State and Josh Arauco of
Arkansas State for the Lou
Groza as best kicker. For
the R,ay Guy, given to best
punter. he faces Matt
Fodgc· of .Oklahoma State
and Pat McAfee of West
Virginia.

were coming to the Knicks ,
huh? 2010 is a big summer,
a really big summer. It's two
years away. but time goes
fast. We' ll see. We'll see
what happens. You laugh at
it and you watch what's
going on, we'll see what
happens."
For the record, AI
Harrington , Cuttino Mobley
and Tim Thomas were the
players
the
Knicks
acqu.ired. and all could
make their debuts Tuesday.
But all eyes will be on
James. New Yorkers adore
basketball
royalty
Michael Jordan and Magic
Johnson received standing
ovations when they attended games this season - but
they haven ' t had any of
their own in a long time .

They want King James.
They could get him and
more . If Walsh ~:an move
Eddy Curry. the Knicks
would be in position to
afford two top players.
They'll have a good
recruiter in D'Antoni. who
worked with James. Bosh
and Wade as an ·assistant
coach on the U.S. Olympic
team .
That puts D'Antoni in an
uncomfortable spot now,
asked to discuss relationships with players on other
teams, which could · be
viewed as tampering.
"We're going down a slippery slope there and l' m not
going there." he responded
to one question Monday.
The Knicks insist they
aren't bothered by the talk
about James or the attention
he 's bound to get - even if
he draws more cheers than
anybody on the home team.
"I never quite understand
what's going on," Lee said,
"but we'll keep trying to get
the victory regardless of
whose name they're chanting ."'
.

~eBron
from Page Bl

•

cfeared more than $27 million from its books in the
. summer of 2010. The
Knicks can't legally say
who they would offer the
.mone~ to - team president
Donme Walsh even claimed
to be unaware who would
be ' available - so the fans
and media did the speaking
for them.
Almost all the talk about
.the trades focused on what
they meant for what's being
nicknamed the ·'Summer of
LeBron." James was picJured in · newspaper stories
about the deals Saturday in
New York. and the hmesto-the-Kriicks talk dommat. ed weekend NBA chatter all td the amusement of
·James himself.
"I fig.ured that would happen," he sa id Saturday
before the Cavs hosted
Atlanta. "They didn't even
care . about the guys that

ur

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Tuesday, November 25,2008

www.mydailysentinel.4:om

case most of this season
with Cr.ennel having to
·serve as 'the point man on
issues ranging. from tight
fromPageBl
end Kellen Winslow 's hos·pitalization for a staph
do is get yo u prepared for a infection to the ream's decigame:·
sion to bench quarterback
While Crennel appreciat- Derek Anderson in favor of
ed hi&gt; .players· sentiments. Quinn .
he took blame for the
Crenncl said he and
Browns· -collapse toll owing .Savage speak on a regular
a 10-win 'eason.
basis and that they 're on the
"I'm the head ~&lt;:lach and same page as it pertains to
the buck stops at my desk," the Browns.
he said. "It's my charge. If
"We know where we're at
we don't win games . it 's on and we're 4-7, which is not
me. We 've got coaches who good enough," Crennel
work very hard to try to get said. "Going forward from
a good plan , try to put it out that is we got a game on
there . try to get the guys to . Sunday that we need to try
execute and when the team and win and we got some
doesn't/lay well , it falls on games after that, that we
the hea coach.
need to try and win. That
"Just like when the becomes the main focus,
offense doesn't do well, it and if we can win a .game
falls on the quarterback, on the field then the organirightly or wrongly. But this zation looks better. So
position, the scrutiny goes that's what we're going to
with it."
·
try and do."
With the Brown·s, there's
Crennel also maintains arr
always a lot to examine .
open line of communication
Cleveland 's loss on with Randy Lerner, the
Sunday concluded. another Browns' recl usive owner
turbulent week for the fran- ·who has yet to weigh in on
chise, which .has had more his dub's sorry season.
than its share since 1999,
"I'm telling him that this
On Thursday, general team hasn't lived up to
manager .Phil Savage apolo- expectations,"
Crennel
gized for sending a p(ofane -said. "We're not as consise-mail to a fan following tent as we need to be . We're
the Browns' win at Buffalo working to try to be what'
.a few days earlier. That everybody wants us to be,
news caine on top of quar- · but tt hasn 't happened the
· terback Brady Quinn break- way we expected it to haping the tip of his right index pen. I told him we were
finger while getting hisJirst going to keep fighting and
win as a starter over the we're going to try to win a
Bills.
game."
Savage has not spoken
Crennel's surprising .decipublicly about the incident, sion to bench Quinn late in
leaving Crennel to answer the third quarter against the
question's about his GM's Texans after the secondconduct. That has been the year QB - who also has a

Browns

damaged tendon in his fin . ger - had thrown his second
interception was
viewed by some .as a desperate attempt by the coach
to save hi s job. Crennel was
hoping to get a spark from
Anc.ler,on. but the switch
didn't work and confused
some players. inducting
Quinn, who thought he had
lost hi ' starting gig and
wondered why he was
pulled with a quarter left.
Crcnnel quickly quashed
any notion that" Quinn
would sit against the Colts
thi s week .
"He is the starter;"
Crennel said . ''He is the
quarterback. He is not on a
short leash ..(f he were on a
short lea sh, I would've told
him before the game that if
you throw two interceptions I'm going to take you
out. But I didn't do that
be ca use it was not my
intention . Every . game in
the NFL is a different
game ."
And unless the Browns
win a few more this season, Crenne I could very
well be the third Cleveland
coach fired in the past
decade.
· His players hope it doesn't come to that.
· "For the coach to have to
take the fall for an organization so big. is in my
opinion. wrong,'' return
. specialist Joshua . Cribbs
said . "It 's like someone has
to take a fall for our sea-.
son. People are already
counting Romeo out, but
we can't dwell on that. we
have to be professionals
and play the next game.
''To blame all of that on
coach Romeo IS not the

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Baals/Accoooortes ....................................1015
trlevers first shots &amp; surprised! Check out our
camporJRYo Trllllln ............................. 1020
wormed $250 ready to used
inventory
at
Motarcycles ..................................;........... 1025
1
Pet
Cremations.
Cill
go
11/24108
5
males
'
4
www.CAAEC.com.
Car
Ot- ..........................................................1030
W.nt 1o buy ......................,........................ 10311
740-446-~~3~7=45~~~~ females . ' 740-367-5037 mk:hael
Equipment
or 740·645-8098
,740-4;,.,46;,-2;,4.,12;,~":"""
Automotlva ................................................ 2000
Pralllllanal SeMc:es
Auto. R11nt.r/Loen.,...................,............... 2005
Autoe ..................., ...; .................................. 2010
4 ·kittens 9 months old Hay, Fetd, s..d, Grain
Clanlc:lilnttquea .,.....................................2015 ·
TURNED DOWN ON
go··~·way 10 a good
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
·AouM bales of hay for
Commerblelllnduetrlal .............................. 2020
Pert• a Accoaoa-..................................2025
No Fee lhiless We Wlnl
homo . 446' 1158
sale. 740-256-607t
Sports Utltlty........... ;..................................2030
1-888·582·3345
Jack Russell pups ready
Tructca.........................................................2035
--:-----:-~= 01 Chns1mas 250 Aog.
Utlilty Tnolltnl .........., ................................. 2040
:::
9. 39
V•na ............................................................~
septic pumping Gallla 37 24
Co. OH and Mason eo.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Aut E•tate S.IH ...................................... 3000
Ron Evans Jack· Toy Poodle for sale 3 fe- . fvtl/O'd/CMA/
C.metery Ploto ..........................................3005
son, OH. 800-537-9526
males
· $350.
Wood j Gao
Commarclal.. ...........................,..................3010
740-256-~1 01
or ~':"'~....~~~
Condomlnluma ..........................................3015
~~~~~~= 740-645·1960
SeaSoned
Firewood
Far S.le by Dwner .....;...............................3020
Hardwood. 446-9204
HouMa for S.t. .............................., .......... 3021
To give away, fem&amp;Je ~-~~-""'!:"~
~ (Acraoge).-...................................... 3030 .
AUstralian
Seasoned FireWOOd CAA
Lola .....................................................;......3035'
..,!!!!~!!!!!!!!~"" Shepherd/beagle
mix,7 HEAP
accepted.
Want to buj ................................................3040
M old, has had shots &amp; 645-5946 or 441 -0941
ANI Eotate R-11 .....,.............................3100
1 ~-..a
M-To.....
Apartmanta/Townhouno ......................... 3505
-;;;;;;;;;;;;-..;;··•=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
been
spayed,have
to
Commercla1 ................................................ 351CI
•
giye away due to raloca· --~M;;;i-uan.ou;.;;;;;;;;;~-·;;;;;;
Condomlnluma .......................................... 351&amp;
NOTICE Borrow Smart. rion .Ph . . 992-7689 after .,.
·
Jet Aeration Motors reHouoeolorRent ....................................... 3520
Conlact 1t1e 011io Dlvl- 5:00pm.
d
&amp; ell ill ·
Land (Acraoge) ...............,.......................... 3sllti
slon . of Financial lnstttu- ~---~---.- paire . new
r u tn
Storaa•-• ........................................ :............ 3535
iveawautinu
mala stock. Call Ron Evans,
G
Con
Office
of
1
Want to Rtt\1 .................. :........................... 3540
tiona
sumer
''I
1-800-537-9528.

$10

.PLEASANT
·: vALLEY
HOSPITAL

2520 Valley lkhe • Pnint Pll'nsunt. \'\:V •

~01-bcct

fudlity

304-675-4340

The Family of Professionals

Sulpenslon &amp;

Bodyllfls
FuiServlca
Shop

Cuetom '

Wh8ela

&amp; Ellhllust

JnStalr.tlon

1. ____~-------------~mr.~
• &lt;;;.-

I·
I
1

·=

2•·---~--------

l

..
. '
5.·------------~------

~

Total Points i!J. the·Monday Nite
Football Game!' '
Jacksonville @Houston , · •
' '

216 Upp~r River Rd. G!!llipolis, Ohio
1/2 mile south of the Silver Bridge
Ucense CC 7000F-ooO and 001
License CI750048-000 andOG1

'(

s....r.................;...............................

NAME: _ _ _ __;__ __

Repelr1 ......................................................... 344

•

I

I

Stand and sit with ease in
a Pride Lift Chair - a fine furnishing
that will accent your home while .
enhancing your life.
~-"~

• Single awttch hand control lor easy operation
• Stylish co tor and Iabrie cholclea

quiet and smooth tlllsY81em
• lnt,.grated emergenct battery backup
• P.tented,

•

.

PFt~R~iW OXY GEN

6 MIEDICAL EQUIPMENT

',AU I You RICOGNIII , IUYICI YOU DJIIRVI'

1 Each Thesdily. through Dec. 9, a numbered g!lme will
- appear .in each participating men:hant's ad.
~ Indicate your pick of wil)ners and write it beside the
corresponding number; ,. : ,
Entries must be dropped off at the:
Gallipolis Dally Trll;lune or mailed to:
FiiO!ball Smackdown
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 3rd Avenue
GaWpolis, OR 45631
Entries must be postmitrked by Thursday to qualify

for that week's contest. The prize wiD be awarded
weekly on the bula of mott winnen aelected corre~:tly
an~ In cue of tin, winner will be deterqdned by blind
draw. You muat bel~ yean of a11e or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per week.

fottUon

a

:

s

wv.

"

·, R0oflng................"... ;1.............. ...................... 348
sacurtty .......................................... ! ............. 341
TutAcoountlng ........................................... 350
Travtil/Entertelnment ..................................352
Flnanclal ..............................: ........................400
Financial Servlces .......................................405 ' Mllnulloctured HOUalng ............................. 4000
• Jneurenee ............. :...................................... 410 Late.........:....................................................4001
Money ta Ltond ............................................. 415 Mov........................................................... 4010
Educatton ..................................................... IOO R-to ....................................................... 401S
Bu&amp;IMII a Tnlda 8chool ................:.......... 505 S.IH ...........................................................4020
ln1tructton • T1111nlng ..................................5fG Suppu.......................................................40ZI
Laal0fltl ........................................................ 515 Want to Buy ............ ..........,........................ 4030
Peroonal ....................................................... 520 -Property ..~ ....................................15000
Antmolo ........................................................ IOO ProJ*Iy lor ula ........................... 5025
Animal Suppllta ................:..................., ..... 608 Raeort ProJ*Iy lor ,.nt ............~............ 50110
Horn1 ..................................................._. ...... 510 Employment..........,....................................t5000
LlvHtock......................................................815 Accountln~l111nctal ................................6002
Poto ...............................................................820 Admlnl-lvo/Prol-lonoi ..................... II004
wont to buy... ............................................... 625 CothlariCt.rk.......... :...................:..............eooe
I008
Agrlcultu.............. ....................................... 700 Chllci!Eldorly
Farm Equlp""!nt .......................................... 705 Clorlcal ...............;...., ..................................eo10
. , Gordan a Produ......... ................................ 710 Con•tructlan.............................................. eo12
Hoy Feed, Saod, Grain ............................... 715 Drtvan &amp; O.U,.,y ...............................; ...;.eG14
Hu.;tlng a Land .....................................:..... 720 Educ.tlon .................. ...........,........C- 1. ...... 1018
Wont to bUy ............................................., .... 725 Electrlcot Plumblng ........................- ........ 1018
Merchendl.................................................. loo Emplay••••• Age; tltt ...............:. ... .J.........-=ao
Antlques ......................................................IIOS. ~-- ............................................to22
Appllance ........................... ~·~· .. ···"·"""'""'"81P foodS.. iiC11 ............................................1024
Auctlono ....................................................... V15 Govwnmant a F--1 Jobl .................... eo25
Bargain Ba....,.nt....................................... 920 Help anted- O......l ..., ..................., .......... eo2tl
colloctlblu .................................................. 925 Law En!otcomont ...................................... eo30
Camputanl ................................................... t:JO l l . l l - . . - t l c ............................. 6032
EqulptMnt/SUPptla•.................;, .................l35 Mll~oory ........................ tl034
Flea Mark•t• ... ~ ..........................................7. . .0 Mechenlca.................................................. S031
•
Fuot 011 Caai/Waod!Goo ............................. 945 Madlciii ................... ~ ................................... II038
Furniture ...................................................... 850 Yuelcel ....................................................... l040
Hobby/Hunt Sport .................................... !155 Part-n,.,..T.,npanrleo ............................. 1042
Kld 'l eomar ................................. " ..............IMI0 Res ..uranta .... ........................................... IIO"
Mlecellaneoua ............................. ................. ees S.IH.......................... .+. .............................. I048
1o" Went to ouy...........................,......................870 Tec:hnlcel ,............... - ............................ 1050
:. Yard Bale ..................................................... 1175 Taxtlles/Factory ......................................... ll052

care ..................:..................

HOLZER CLINIC
We're Everywhere You Are!
'

a

••

c

ATVs

Ot Yamaha Aaplor. New
fenders . · grapl1 ics
kit.

Private and Picturesque
SPECTACULAR VIEW
seriou!;
inquires only, ·
please call740-~92·3678

Land (ACBGge)

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;,i.._
~

seat &amp; shock covers . E)(- .345. Acres located on
cellent Cond. $3000 neg. 496 Paxton Rd. Gallipo740-645-3787 after 4:30
\is. Is adequate for ~ mobile home. Has all hookCam~/ RVa &amp;
ups 740·441-5129
•·--

-;;;;~;;;;;;;Trallen_;;;;;;;;;~= ~E,-ce-p"'!:lio"'n-a"'l~200~-ac"""re

Rv

Service at Carmi- canle farm in Gallta Co.
chael
Trailers OH .
60+
ac .t J
_ _
well-drained
oonomktnd
740 446 3825
along Aacc90n Creek,
. 60+ acres pasture, baiance wooded. S10Ck waRV
tar pond, 2 springs, well.
Se!Vice at Carmichael Farm haS carried A0-45
Trailers
cows w/calves. Modem
740·446-3825
.brick ranch style house
w/ finished
walk-out
basemen1. 937·5~
•774
!J\1-v

CLASSIFIED INDEX

L8Qalo ......................................................,.... 100
Announcements ..........................................200
Birthday/Ann1v.raory ..................................205
Happy Ada ....................................................210
Loot a Found ...............................................215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notlcoo ......................................; .................. 225
Peroo11111.: .................................................;.230
Wanted ...................... ;................ :................ 235
Sarvlce1 .......................................................300
Appttance Sarvlce ..... ,...................:.: ........... 302
Automollva ........... :...................................... 304
Building Materlals .............................;......... 308
Buoln- ............,........·.................................308
Catortng ........................................................310
Chtld/Eidarly Ca,. .... ,.................................. 312
Comput......................................................314
Contrlctore ..................................................311
Domeottcs/Jonltartlll ................................... 318
Electrlcal ......................................................320
Flnenclal .......................................................322
HeaHh ................................................., ......... 32tl
Heating a Caottng .......................................3211
Home lmprav.,.,ento 330
Jneurence.....................................................332
Lown
334
Mu41lo1Dif1101/DI'IIrne ............... ,.................... 331
Olhor Sarvtces ..............................................331
Ptumblngll!laclrtcat .....................................340
Prolesalanal Sarvlc................................... 342

4.·----------------~--

1-BSB-446·2684

Extraordinary Property:
Spectacular view of tha
Ohio River
Private drive off l..1nco1n
Hill, · Pomeroy.
Ohio,
woods on three sides
(4+)acres , lo a historical
home. Circa 1900. 5 .
bedrooms, 2 f1replaces. 2
full baths, 2 staircases,
beautiful original wood·
work, ma'ny picture win·dews, mostly new windows, large kitchen and
br8akfast room. be~uti­
fully l~ndscaped with 1n
ground pool. Sit on "the
wrap around pcl(ch and
enjoy · the
spectacular
view ol the Ohio Rive r. 2
car detached garage and
2 out buildings. Would

.--------------,====,..-:===-----------,

3. _~-----------------

446-2404

5

Chikl/

EveryDay

far Salt

,:;P&lt;l:lls:.::44:6::·2=84=2=== make, a wonderful family
=
home or bed &amp; breakfast

Grave Blanketa, WreathS

·J

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Seams. Pipe Aebar
lor
Concrete
Ang le,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Graling lor Drains. Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Man,
Tue,
Wed
&amp;
Fri,
Sam-4:30pm.
Closed
Thurs.
Sat
&amp;
Sun.

Hou101

J

j

'.

'I

AffaiiS BEFORE )'llU reftnance your home or otllain a lOan. BEWARE of
~ for any large
adVance po~IB of
, ,,_,.
tees Of Insurance. .Call
the Oflice of consumer
~fflal1 toll fr$8 at
1-1!68·278-0003 10 loam
If lhe mongage bn*er Of
lander Is properly II·
censed. (This Is 8 .public
Mrvlce
annourlCement
. from lt1e Ot1io Valoy
' Publishing cOmpany)

Beagle/Joe&lt; Russel lerrier
mix
friendly,
304-767-5257
~....-~~-~
Golden
. Rei.
pups
mf$200 f/$250 Chlh
h
' ~ Cod&lt;uaua pup
;
er
pupS
mi$200,
Mini
Schlauzer (parti)
m11
5400;
Bo11er
pups,
black/white m/$600 . All
AKC reg. , 740-~96-1085

Chrlsttnaa
Special,
4
Shih-Tzu
puppies,
3-males $100 ea.
1-te= = = = = : : ! : : = male $t50 304-674-462~

=-~~""'!~":""-

'

--

----

Free kittens 5-6 wks
otd littertrainad

!!""""""""""""'"""'"" 304-273-2698.

5aaoo1

Cllllllpolfo

AcoNdited Member Aocl'ld~­
lnQ CouncM far lndepeudflli1
ColitgM and Schoolli12748

S:,.,.,

Trucb

1BR Apl, WID hookups,

~--~~~~= satellite TV incl. w/rent,
For sate 97 S·10 2
W-0, pwr.steering &amp;
brakes, ale, $2000.00
080304-812-0191 .

Wont To luy
:::"~~--~~~
Want to buy Junk Cars,
call 740-388-()884

=~~'::::"~~~

.WANTED: 69 Camaros -

-

=-,
EKtra na Super A trac·

tor. cultivator &amp; InternatiOnal
sktt
304-743-3248,
304 -544-3248

~ and 2 bedroom apts.,
furnished
Bnd
unfurnished , and hOuses in
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required,
no pelS. 740.992·2218

close 10 hospital. call
740-339-o362
2 bedroom, l~ing room,
&lt;itchen , bath Apanment.
Have Cenlral Air, furmshed
.with
couch,
chairs, .washet. dryer,
stove, microwave, beds,
.dir'l ing table and chairs,
$400 deposit, $450 a
month.
Call
Leave
304•862. 2523
Message and Number it
not at Home.

dep:

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

c...

COtttge
(CorMIO Close To Home)
C&lt;UITadayl 74~367
1.aoo-2to4.Q452
galllpoUscarMrCOieQe.edu

~~~~~":'""~
Pollee Impounds! Gars
from
$5001.
Honda,
ChevyS", Jeeps, Fords, &amp;
morel
tor
listings
B00-620.4676 "' V435

pro1ec1s or restore d ca (s
- any conditiop • finders
lee paid. call Ooug ~;;.;_~;::...":"":',...":":":"
cel l
or 2 br apts. 6 ·mi from Hoi614 .203•1272
614-444-2909 ottice.
zeJ. Some utilities pd or,
·appliances
avail
$400/mo
+
=--~':'!':!~-::"--':
740-4 t8-5266
o•
Free
1,000
Gospel
Track&amp;. 38i-Bn3
"
:::3118:=·603
~9:::-~~-::=
FREE t2X15 fool 4 yr
..:. •-'- ly 0wnor
2BA APT. CIA. (740)
""...,.
44t-Ot94
old piece ol plush carpel. "ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"'!i~~"':" ~---~~-Good
condition. House on SA , 588 tor 3 rooms and bath up388-8678
more
infonnation and stairs. Completely fur·
b
no·shed wn·h . WID. No
Electric Scooter, $300, ~lures go to orv .com
·d
be · b
1
po1s. Ret. R~. 44Hl245
Lt. Green Glide r, Chair '· . num r ts rown ng.
'"'"
with Glider stool $60, ~~~
Apartment available now
Play Station 2 w1th 26
HouMI For Sal• ·
Ri~erbend Apts. New
games $250 Call June
Haven WV. Now accept:::304:;;.,;;
-6;;;12:;;5•15~0~~~:-::;: 3 Bed . 2 Balh! Only ing
appllcalions
lor
For sale used stalrl ift call $15,500
for
listings HUD-subsldiz&amp;d.
one
for info. 1 -606-329· 134-4 ~
800-6204946 eK ROt9
Bedroom Apts. Utilities
MollOhan
Carper
Fall
included. Based on 30%
""""Ill. 20 "' . Commer- -::::-!"~:"':::::::!:"""~ of adjusted income. Call
..,......
"'
304 682
~-1 Carpel ••.95/yard. 3BA 2 Balh S299 monlh.
- -312t . available
Colors . +48-3384
lor Senior and Disabled

740.446·7444 . Quality ar
Low Pricesl

........, &amp; Tracho

02 Honda Accord V6,
loaded, 92,000
miles.
Call740-245-5526

dresser,

j :~;!;~;_r_j
L

til
8

~It
~·· · •

Avoiding foreclosure 14 ~~~;;=:":':"--:-::payments left make one CONVENIENTLY
LOmove in. 446-3093
CATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE I Townhouse apart·
:::--~~-~C
~~
ments.
and/or
small
3br,
2ba,
antral
AirfHeat, newly remod- houses for rent. Call
eled
bathrooms, new 740--4-41-1111 for ' spptihardWOOd &amp; tile 110011 , cauon &amp; inlonnatloo .
Sandhill · Ad
$155,000 ::'2.~3:, ~&amp;:-4:::8:-r~1:-or~re~nt:".
304-675·4880
361-1 762

•

�,.

Page Ba • The Daily Sentinel

Awards
from PageBl
Bradford .- also are u.p for
the Davey O'Brien , awarded to the top quarterback.
Linebackers
Rey
Maualuga of Southern
California and James
Laurinaitis of Ohio State
and defensive end Aaron
Maybin of Penn State are
finalists for the Chuck
Bednarik Award for best
defensive player.
The Outland Trophy for

best interior lineman will
go to Michael, Oher of
Dt1ke
Mississippi,
Robinson of Oklahoma or
· Andre Smith of Alabama.
For the Biletnikoff as
best receiver. the finalists
are
Dez
Bryant of
Oklahoma State. Michael
Crabtree of Texas Tech and
Jeremy
Ma clin
of
Missouri. ·
Safety · Eric Berry of
Tennessee is a finalist for
· the Jim Thorpe Award for
\OP defensive back :. along,
w1th Malcolm knR1ns ol
Ohio State and Taylor
Mays
of
Southern

Califoniia.•
The Doak Walker final ists for best running back
are Shonn Greene of Iowa.
Kr10w shon Moreno of
Geor!lia and Javon Ringer
of M1chicran State.
Louie §akoda of Utah is
a finalist for both kicking
against
awards - he\
Graham Gano o Florida
State and Josh Arauco of
Arkansas State for the Lou
Groza as best kicker. For
the R,ay Guy, given to best
punter. he faces Matt
Fodgc· of .Oklahoma State
and Pat McAfee of West
Virginia.

were coming to the Knicks ,
huh? 2010 is a big summer,
a really big summer. It's two
years away. but time goes
fast. We' ll see. We'll see
what happens. You laugh at
it and you watch what's
going on, we'll see what
happens."
For the record, AI
Harrington , Cuttino Mobley
and Tim Thomas were the
players
the
Knicks
acqu.ired. and all could
make their debuts Tuesday.
But all eyes will be on
James. New Yorkers adore
basketball
royalty
Michael Jordan and Magic
Johnson received standing
ovations when they attended games this season - but
they haven ' t had any of
their own in a long time .

They want King James.
They could get him and
more . If Walsh ~:an move
Eddy Curry. the Knicks
would be in position to
afford two top players.
They'll have a good
recruiter in D'Antoni. who
worked with James. Bosh
and Wade as an ·assistant
coach on the U.S. Olympic
team .
That puts D'Antoni in an
uncomfortable spot now,
asked to discuss relationships with players on other
teams, which could · be
viewed as tampering.
"We're going down a slippery slope there and l' m not
going there." he responded
to one question Monday.
The Knicks insist they
aren't bothered by the talk
about James or the attention
he 's bound to get - even if
he draws more cheers than
anybody on the home team.
"I never quite understand
what's going on," Lee said,
"but we'll keep trying to get
the victory regardless of
whose name they're chanting ."'
.

~eBron
from Page Bl

•

cfeared more than $27 million from its books in the
. summer of 2010. The
Knicks can't legally say
who they would offer the
.mone~ to - team president
Donme Walsh even claimed
to be unaware who would
be ' available - so the fans
and media did the speaking
for them.
Almost all the talk about
.the trades focused on what
they meant for what's being
nicknamed the ·'Summer of
LeBron." James was picJured in · newspaper stories
about the deals Saturday in
New York. and the hmesto-the-Kriicks talk dommat. ed weekend NBA chatter all td the amusement of
·James himself.
"I fig.ured that would happen," he sa id Saturday
before the Cavs hosted
Atlanta. "They didn't even
care . about the guys that

ur

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Tuesday, November 25,2008

www.mydailysentinel.4:om

case most of this season
with Cr.ennel having to
·serve as 'the point man on
issues ranging. from tight
fromPageBl
end Kellen Winslow 's hos·pitalization for a staph
do is get yo u prepared for a infection to the ream's decigame:·
sion to bench quarterback
While Crennel appreciat- Derek Anderson in favor of
ed hi&gt; .players· sentiments. Quinn .
he took blame for the
Crenncl said he and
Browns· -collapse toll owing .Savage speak on a regular
a 10-win 'eason.
basis and that they 're on the
"I'm the head ~&lt;:lach and same page as it pertains to
the buck stops at my desk," the Browns.
he said. "It's my charge. If
"We know where we're at
we don't win games . it 's on and we're 4-7, which is not
me. We 've got coaches who good enough," Crennel
work very hard to try to get said. "Going forward from
a good plan , try to put it out that is we got a game on
there . try to get the guys to . Sunday that we need to try
execute and when the team and win and we got some
doesn't/lay well , it falls on games after that, that we
the hea coach.
need to try and win. That
"Just like when the becomes the main focus,
offense doesn't do well, it and if we can win a .game
falls on the quarterback, on the field then the organirightly or wrongly. But this zation looks better. So
position, the scrutiny goes that's what we're going to
with it."
·
try and do."
With the Brown·s, there's
Crennel also maintains arr
always a lot to examine .
open line of communication
Cleveland 's loss on with Randy Lerner, the
Sunday concluded. another Browns' recl usive owner
turbulent week for the fran- ·who has yet to weigh in on
chise, which .has had more his dub's sorry season.
than its share since 1999,
"I'm telling him that this
On Thursday, general team hasn't lived up to
manager .Phil Savage apolo- expectations,"
Crennel
gized for sending a p(ofane -said. "We're not as consise-mail to a fan following tent as we need to be . We're
the Browns' win at Buffalo working to try to be what'
.a few days earlier. That everybody wants us to be,
news caine on top of quar- · but tt hasn 't happened the
· terback Brady Quinn break- way we expected it to haping the tip of his right index pen. I told him we were
finger while getting hisJirst going to keep fighting and
win as a starter over the we're going to try to win a
Bills.
game."
Savage has not spoken
Crennel's surprising .decipublicly about the incident, sion to bench Quinn late in
leaving Crennel to answer the third quarter against the
question's about his GM's Texans after the secondconduct. That has been the year QB - who also has a

Browns

damaged tendon in his fin . ger - had thrown his second
interception was
viewed by some .as a desperate attempt by the coach
to save hi s job. Crennel was
hoping to get a spark from
Anc.ler,on. but the switch
didn't work and confused
some players. inducting
Quinn, who thought he had
lost hi ' starting gig and
wondered why he was
pulled with a quarter left.
Crcnnel quickly quashed
any notion that" Quinn
would sit against the Colts
thi s week .
"He is the starter;"
Crennel said . ''He is the
quarterback. He is not on a
short leash ..(f he were on a
short lea sh, I would've told
him before the game that if
you throw two interceptions I'm going to take you
out. But I didn't do that
be ca use it was not my
intention . Every . game in
the NFL is a different
game ."
And unless the Browns
win a few more this season, Crenne I could very
well be the third Cleveland
coach fired in the past
decade.
· His players hope it doesn't come to that.
· "For the coach to have to
take the fall for an organization so big. is in my
opinion. wrong,'' return
. specialist Joshua . Cribbs
said . "It 's like someone has
to take a fall for our sea-.
son. People are already
counting Romeo out, but
we can't dwell on that. we
have to be professionals
and play the next game.
''To blame all of that on
coach Romeo IS not the

www.mydailysenfinel.com

tlrribune - Sentinel - l\egi~ter

'.

CLASSIFIED·
Gallia
County

OH

In One Week With Us
crtJssifled@~~~~:~ribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
~Place

....

. ~ribune

Websijes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinej .com
www.mydailyregister.com

l\egi~ter

Sentinel

ca 1r;~::, (740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) ·675-1333
.

Or Fax To (740) 446·3008

· Or Fax To

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

992·2157

Oeari/Jiru-

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you con hove borCiers and graphics
'-'
oddedtoyourclossifledods
S,~
1m
Borders$3.00/perod
f!!
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Buslne•• Day• Prior To

Monday thru Friday

Publication
Sunday Display: 1 :00

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IO WIIf.E 6fj

SuCcesSU

62

Ads ·
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

.t

Thu,..day for Sundays

• AU ads must be prepaid'

POUCIES: Ohio Valley Publishing re~trv" tht r6ght to d , rt;.cl, or cancel any ad at any tlma. Error• must be reported on the first day of publication and the

Stert Your Adt With A Keyword I Indude complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevl•tlont
• Include Phone Number And Addrell When NHded
• Ads ~ould Run 1

a,. responsible lor .no mor. thlln I~ coat ollhe a.,.c:e occupltd b~ tnt error end only the llflt lnltrtion. We 1hell not be lleble for
any·to.. or expenM that rnulta lrom the publlc1llon or oml11lon of an advertlnment CorlliCtlon will tt. mad1ln Ihi ftrat aVIIIabla .ci!Uon. ·Box number adt
art alwar• cenlldtntlal.' • Currcint rate card applln. • All real •tatt advtl1l1tmtn11 a.rt tubject to tha Fedtrtl F=alr Houllil" Act of 1188. • Thl1 nawtpaper
~~:c.pta only htlp want.d adl mnttng EOE llllndarda. We will not knowingly accept any tdvertttlng In vlolallon Of the law. Will not_bl rttpOntlblt for any
~ror• In tn ad Itkin over the phone.
·
Trlbi.I,...S.nUnei-R~Itt.r will

o..,.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
. Ohio Ylllty
Publlahlng ,_...,
the right to odH,
reject or cancel any
ad atony Hme.
Error• Muat
eporttd on lilt fl
y ol publico

answer."

nd

the

kltncarlyle.comcast.net

Loot &amp; Fovnci
Trac phone/ case on LocuS! St. belween 3rd &amp;

4th Ave on 11/21!08.
Please call 446-238Q

Trllbuno-j I Reward : Lost 3 mon. old

nttnei-Rogtator wit
reajxlnatblt lor
ora than the colt
he apace occupl
the error end onl
ftrat tniiOfllon. W
It not bi Niblt

eek II Winner
:Gary (~:.•) Reese
Jiddle

Miocellaneous '

male brindle Bo)(er, linle
girl heanbroken, .also 3
month old female Fawn
BoKer. Last seen on last
road on Camp Conley
$100 reward for return
both dogs or just · one of
them
please
call
304·59.3·2641.

740-446-7300

Want To Buy
;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;~;i;;;;;;;;;;;;
Absolute Top Dollar - sllver/gold · cotns,
any
10K/14K/18K goiQ jewelry, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency,
proal/mint
Sets,
dia·
monds. MTS Coin Shop.
151 2nd Av~nue, Galli·

0

or

NOTICE OHIO . VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. mc~mends tha"t you do
business with people you
know, and NOT to send
money_ through the mall
until you hBve Investigating the offering.
'

..

=;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;
"

CCI 2008

NEA·, Inc.

www:comlcs.com

&amp;· up, Blankets ~~:;::::~;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;;;;:;:;!
$5-$25,
Sue's
Green~~ ~=~~~
house; 47310 Morning
Sllu
Ad.,
Racine ,
CMd / Eldorly Ccn
farm.Eq.ipiMIII
740-94!1-2t15
= = = = = = = MeliSsa's Day Care has
EBY, •
INTEGRITY,
openings
for
cfllldren
KIEFER BUILT,
\1!(
' •
•'
ages 1 and up, the dayli¥telock
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE'
- · - - - - - - - - care Is located on Bailey
STOCK
TRAILERS,
Thla
newtplpe
Run
Road,
Pomeroy, Miniature Donkeys male LOAD
MAX
EQUIPpis only hel
Elderly Core nights a:nd weekend &amp; female make good MENT
TRAILERS,
nted edl meeti
hours
a11aitable
call Christmas
gifts. CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
74 0·446"1158
OE ltlndardl.
Connie's
Chlklca•e in (740)992-0070
HOMESTEADER
Tuppers ~lalns now has "'~~~,~~""' -..,...~-~~~~ CARGO/CONCESSION
·
We
wUI
opemngs,
coun1y &amp; pr1•
~eers, A.I. Sired TRAILERS.
B+W
Home lmpro¥ements Fair
I d. '
I
nowtngty·- - ' en
vae
pa '{
·accepe
shoe steers: broke to GOOSENECK FLATBED
.....,..
20 ·
•
dvtrtlllfMI'It
1
yrs. expe,,ence,
ca11
Be~~~n~nt
lead, only a few weeks $3999 . VIEW OUR EN~
oftht llw,
for
an·
appointment,
remain ing before weigh TIRE TRAilER INVEN:i;iiiii;iiiii;iiii;ji;iiiiii;;;~ 740-667-6329
Walorproofln" •
in. Priced lor all budgeiS. TORY AT
Unconditionalliletime
guarantee. local referCatl
740-256-1621
or wWw.CARMICHAELonces furnished. Estab740-963-oo22
TAAILERS.COM
llshed 1975. Call24 Hrs.
740-446·3825
Recnurtlonal Vehlclu ............................... 1000
740-446-0070, Rogers
Ptll
Have you priced a John
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Basement Waterproofing.
Blcyclu......................................................1010
AKC Reg. Golden Re - Deere IStely? You'll be
Baals/Accoooortes ....................................1015
trlevers first shots &amp; surprised! Check out our
camporJRYo Trllllln ............................. 1020
wormed $250 ready to used
inventory
at
Motarcycles ..................................;........... 1025
1
Pet
Cremations.
Cill
go
11/24108
5
males
'
4
www.CAAEC.com.
Car
Ot- ..........................................................1030
W.nt 1o buy ......................,........................ 10311
740-446-~~3~7=45~~~~ females . ' 740-367-5037 mk:hael
Equipment
or 740·645-8098
,740-4;,.,46;,-2;,4.,12;,~":"""
Automotlva ................................................ 2000
Pralllllanal SeMc:es
Auto. R11nt.r/Loen.,...................,............... 2005
Autoe ..................., ...; .................................. 2010
4 ·kittens 9 months old Hay, Fetd, s..d, Grain
Clanlc:lilnttquea .,.....................................2015 ·
TURNED DOWN ON
go··~·way 10 a good
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
·AouM bales of hay for
Commerblelllnduetrlal .............................. 2020
Pert• a Accoaoa-..................................2025
No Fee lhiless We Wlnl
homo . 446' 1158
sale. 740-256-607t
Sports Utltlty........... ;..................................2030
1-888·582·3345
Jack Russell pups ready
Tructca.........................................................2035
--:-----:-~= 01 Chns1mas 250 Aog.
Utlilty Tnolltnl .........., ................................. 2040
:::
9. 39
V•na ............................................................~
septic pumping Gallla 37 24
Co. OH and Mason eo.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Aut E•tate S.IH ...................................... 3000
Ron Evans Jack· Toy Poodle for sale 3 fe- . fvtl/O'd/CMA/
C.metery Ploto ..........................................3005
son, OH. 800-537-9526
males
· $350.
Wood j Gao
Commarclal.. ...........................,..................3010
740-256-~1 01
or ~':"'~....~~~
Condomlnluma ..........................................3015
~~~~~~= 740-645·1960
SeaSoned
Firewood
Far S.le by Dwner .....;...............................3020
Hardwood. 446-9204
HouMa for S.t. .............................., .......... 3021
To give away, fem&amp;Je ~-~~-""'!:"~
~ (Acraoge).-...................................... 3030 .
AUstralian
Seasoned FireWOOd CAA
Lola .....................................................;......3035'
..,!!!!~!!!!!!!!~"" Shepherd/beagle
mix,7 HEAP
accepted.
Want to buj ................................................3040
M old, has had shots &amp; 645-5946 or 441 -0941
ANI Eotate R-11 .....,.............................3100
1 ~-..a
M-To.....
Apartmanta/Townhouno ......................... 3505
-;;;;;;;;;;;;-..;;··•=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
been
spayed,have
to
Commercla1 ................................................ 351CI
•
giye away due to raloca· --~M;;;i-uan.ou;.;;;;;;;;;~-·;;;;;;
Condomlnluma .......................................... 351&amp;
NOTICE Borrow Smart. rion .Ph . . 992-7689 after .,.
·
Jet Aeration Motors reHouoeolorRent ....................................... 3520
Conlact 1t1e 011io Dlvl- 5:00pm.
d
&amp; ell ill ·
Land (Acraoge) ...............,.......................... 3sllti
slon . of Financial lnstttu- ~---~---.- paire . new
r u tn
Storaa•-• ........................................ :............ 3535
iveawautinu
mala stock. Call Ron Evans,
G
Con
Office
of
1
Want to Rtt\1 .................. :........................... 3540
tiona
sumer
''I
1-800-537-9528.

$10

.PLEASANT
·: vALLEY
HOSPITAL

2520 Valley lkhe • Pnint Pll'nsunt. \'\:V •

~01-bcct

fudlity

304-675-4340

The Family of Professionals

Sulpenslon &amp;

Bodyllfls
FuiServlca
Shop

Cuetom '

Wh8ela

&amp; Ellhllust

JnStalr.tlon

1. ____~-------------~mr.~
• &lt;;;.-

I·
I
1

·=

2•·---~--------

l

..
. '
5.·------------~------

~

Total Points i!J. the·Monday Nite
Football Game!' '
Jacksonville @Houston , · •
' '

216 Upp~r River Rd. G!!llipolis, Ohio
1/2 mile south of the Silver Bridge
Ucense CC 7000F-ooO and 001
License CI750048-000 andOG1

'(

s....r.................;...............................

NAME: _ _ _ __;__ __

Repelr1 ......................................................... 344

•

I

I

Stand and sit with ease in
a Pride Lift Chair - a fine furnishing
that will accent your home while .
enhancing your life.
~-"~

• Single awttch hand control lor easy operation
• Stylish co tor and Iabrie cholclea

quiet and smooth tlllsY81em
• lnt,.grated emergenct battery backup
• P.tented,

•

.

PFt~R~iW OXY GEN

6 MIEDICAL EQUIPMENT

',AU I You RICOGNIII , IUYICI YOU DJIIRVI'

1 Each Thesdily. through Dec. 9, a numbered g!lme will
- appear .in each participating men:hant's ad.
~ Indicate your pick of wil)ners and write it beside the
corresponding number; ,. : ,
Entries must be dropped off at the:
Gallipolis Dally Trll;lune or mailed to:
FiiO!ball Smackdown
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 3rd Avenue
GaWpolis, OR 45631
Entries must be postmitrked by Thursday to qualify

for that week's contest. The prize wiD be awarded
weekly on the bula of mott winnen aelected corre~:tly
an~ In cue of tin, winner will be deterqdned by blind
draw. You muat bel~ yean of a11e or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per week.

fottUon

a

:

s

wv.

"

·, R0oflng................"... ;1.............. ...................... 348
sacurtty .......................................... ! ............. 341
TutAcoountlng ........................................... 350
Travtil/Entertelnment ..................................352
Flnanclal ..............................: ........................400
Financial Servlces .......................................405 ' Mllnulloctured HOUalng ............................. 4000
• Jneurenee ............. :...................................... 410 Late.........:....................................................4001
Money ta Ltond ............................................. 415 Mov........................................................... 4010
Educatton ..................................................... IOO R-to ....................................................... 401S
Bu&amp;IMII a Tnlda 8chool ................:.......... 505 S.IH ...........................................................4020
ln1tructton • T1111nlng ..................................5fG Suppu.......................................................40ZI
Laal0fltl ........................................................ 515 Want to Buy ............ ..........,........................ 4030
Peroonal ....................................................... 520 -Property ..~ ....................................15000
Antmolo ........................................................ IOO ProJ*Iy lor ula ........................... 5025
Animal Suppllta ................:..................., ..... 608 Raeort ProJ*Iy lor ,.nt ............~............ 50110
Horn1 ..................................................._. ...... 510 Employment..........,....................................t5000
LlvHtock......................................................815 Accountln~l111nctal ................................6002
Poto ...............................................................820 Admlnl-lvo/Prol-lonoi ..................... II004
wont to buy... ............................................... 625 CothlariCt.rk.......... :...................:..............eooe
I008
Agrlcultu.............. ....................................... 700 Chllci!Eldorly
Farm Equlp""!nt .......................................... 705 Clorlcal ...............;...., ..................................eo10
. , Gordan a Produ......... ................................ 710 Con•tructlan.............................................. eo12
Hoy Feed, Saod, Grain ............................... 715 Drtvan &amp; O.U,.,y ...............................; ...;.eG14
Hu.;tlng a Land .....................................:..... 720 Educ.tlon .................. ...........,........C- 1. ...... 1018
Wont to bUy ............................................., .... 725 Electrlcot Plumblng ........................- ........ 1018
Merchendl.................................................. loo Emplay••••• Age; tltt ...............:. ... .J.........-=ao
Antlques ......................................................IIOS. ~-- ............................................to22
Appllance ........................... ~·~· .. ···"·"""'""'"81P foodS.. iiC11 ............................................1024
Auctlono ....................................................... V15 Govwnmant a F--1 Jobl .................... eo25
Bargain Ba....,.nt....................................... 920 Help anted- O......l ..., ..................., .......... eo2tl
colloctlblu .................................................. 925 Law En!otcomont ...................................... eo30
Camputanl ................................................... t:JO l l . l l - . . - t l c ............................. 6032
EqulptMnt/SUPptla•.................;, .................l35 Mll~oory ........................ tl034
Flea Mark•t• ... ~ ..........................................7. . .0 Mechenlca.................................................. S031
•
Fuot 011 Caai/Waod!Goo ............................. 945 Madlciii ................... ~ ................................... II038
Furniture ...................................................... 850 Yuelcel ....................................................... l040
Hobby/Hunt Sport .................................... !155 Part-n,.,..T.,npanrleo ............................. 1042
Kld 'l eomar ................................. " ..............IMI0 Res ..uranta .... ........................................... IIO"
Mlecellaneoua ............................. ................. ees S.IH.......................... .+. .............................. I048
1o" Went to ouy...........................,......................870 Tec:hnlcel ,............... - ............................ 1050
:. Yard Bale ..................................................... 1175 Taxtlles/Factory ......................................... ll052

care ..................:..................

HOLZER CLINIC
We're Everywhere You Are!
'

a

••

c

ATVs

Ot Yamaha Aaplor. New
fenders . · grapl1 ics
kit.

Private and Picturesque
SPECTACULAR VIEW
seriou!;
inquires only, ·
please call740-~92·3678

Land (ACBGge)

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;,i.._
~

seat &amp; shock covers . E)(- .345. Acres located on
cellent Cond. $3000 neg. 496 Paxton Rd. Gallipo740-645-3787 after 4:30
\is. Is adequate for ~ mobile home. Has all hookCam~/ RVa &amp;
ups 740·441-5129
•·--

-;;;;~;;;;;;;Trallen_;;;;;;;;;~= ~E,-ce-p"'!:lio"'n-a"'l~200~-ac"""re

Rv

Service at Carmi- canle farm in Gallta Co.
chael
Trailers OH .
60+
ac .t J
_ _
well-drained
oonomktnd
740 446 3825
along Aacc90n Creek,
. 60+ acres pasture, baiance wooded. S10Ck waRV
tar pond, 2 springs, well.
Se!Vice at Carmichael Farm haS carried A0-45
Trailers
cows w/calves. Modem
740·446-3825
.brick ranch style house
w/ finished
walk-out
basemen1. 937·5~
•774
!J\1-v

CLASSIFIED INDEX

L8Qalo ......................................................,.... 100
Announcements ..........................................200
Birthday/Ann1v.raory ..................................205
Happy Ada ....................................................210
Loot a Found ...............................................215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notlcoo ......................................; .................. 225
Peroo11111.: .................................................;.230
Wanted ...................... ;................ :................ 235
Sarvlce1 .......................................................300
Appttance Sarvlce ..... ,...................:.: ........... 302
Automollva ........... :...................................... 304
Building Materlals .............................;......... 308
Buoln- ............,........·.................................308
Catortng ........................................................310
Chtld/Eidarly Ca,. .... ,.................................. 312
Comput......................................................314
Contrlctore ..................................................311
Domeottcs/Jonltartlll ................................... 318
Electrlcal ......................................................320
Flnenclal .......................................................322
HeaHh ................................................., ......... 32tl
Heating a Caottng .......................................3211
Home lmprav.,.,ento 330
Jneurence.....................................................332
Lown
334
Mu41lo1Dif1101/DI'IIrne ............... ,.................... 331
Olhor Sarvtces ..............................................331
Ptumblngll!laclrtcat .....................................340
Prolesalanal Sarvlc................................... 342

4.·----------------~--

1-BSB-446·2684

Extraordinary Property:
Spectacular view of tha
Ohio River
Private drive off l..1nco1n
Hill, · Pomeroy.
Ohio,
woods on three sides
(4+)acres , lo a historical
home. Circa 1900. 5 .
bedrooms, 2 f1replaces. 2
full baths, 2 staircases,
beautiful original wood·
work, ma'ny picture win·dews, mostly new windows, large kitchen and
br8akfast room. be~uti­
fully l~ndscaped with 1n
ground pool. Sit on "the
wrap around pcl(ch and
enjoy · the
spectacular
view ol the Ohio Rive r. 2
car detached garage and
2 out buildings. Would

.--------------,====,..-:===-----------,

3. _~-----------------

446-2404

5

Chikl/

EveryDay

far Salt

,:;P&lt;l:lls:.::44:6::·2=84=2=== make, a wonderful family
=
home or bed &amp; breakfast

Grave Blanketa, WreathS

·J

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Seams. Pipe Aebar
lor
Concrete
Ang le,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Graling lor Drains. Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Man,
Tue,
Wed
&amp;
Fri,
Sam-4:30pm.
Closed
Thurs.
Sat
&amp;
Sun.

Hou101

J

j

'.

'I

AffaiiS BEFORE )'llU reftnance your home or otllain a lOan. BEWARE of
~ for any large
adVance po~IB of
, ,,_,.
tees Of Insurance. .Call
the Oflice of consumer
~fflal1 toll fr$8 at
1-1!68·278-0003 10 loam
If lhe mongage bn*er Of
lander Is properly II·
censed. (This Is 8 .public
Mrvlce
annourlCement
. from lt1e Ot1io Valoy
' Publishing cOmpany)

Beagle/Joe&lt; Russel lerrier
mix
friendly,
304-767-5257
~....-~~-~
Golden
. Rei.
pups
mf$200 f/$250 Chlh
h
' ~ Cod&lt;uaua pup
;
er
pupS
mi$200,
Mini
Schlauzer (parti)
m11
5400;
Bo11er
pups,
black/white m/$600 . All
AKC reg. , 740-~96-1085

Chrlsttnaa
Special,
4
Shih-Tzu
puppies,
3-males $100 ea.
1-te= = = = = : : ! : : = male $t50 304-674-462~

=-~~""'!~":""-

'

--

----

Free kittens 5-6 wks
otd littertrainad

!!""""""""""""'"""'"" 304-273-2698.

5aaoo1

Cllllllpolfo

AcoNdited Member Aocl'ld~­
lnQ CouncM far lndepeudflli1
ColitgM and Schoolli12748

S:,.,.,

Trucb

1BR Apl, WID hookups,

~--~~~~= satellite TV incl. w/rent,
For sate 97 S·10 2
W-0, pwr.steering &amp;
brakes, ale, $2000.00
080304-812-0191 .

Wont To luy
:::"~~--~~~
Want to buy Junk Cars,
call 740-388-()884

=~~'::::"~~~

.WANTED: 69 Camaros -

-

=-,
EKtra na Super A trac·

tor. cultivator &amp; InternatiOnal
sktt
304-743-3248,
304 -544-3248

~ and 2 bedroom apts.,
furnished
Bnd
unfurnished , and hOuses in
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required,
no pelS. 740.992·2218

close 10 hospital. call
740-339-o362
2 bedroom, l~ing room,
&lt;itchen , bath Apanment.
Have Cenlral Air, furmshed
.with
couch,
chairs, .washet. dryer,
stove, microwave, beds,
.dir'l ing table and chairs,
$400 deposit, $450 a
month.
Call
Leave
304•862. 2523
Message and Number it
not at Home.

dep:

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

c...

COtttge
(CorMIO Close To Home)
C&lt;UITadayl 74~367
1.aoo-2to4.Q452
galllpoUscarMrCOieQe.edu

~~~~~":'""~
Pollee Impounds! Gars
from
$5001.
Honda,
ChevyS", Jeeps, Fords, &amp;
morel
tor
listings
B00-620.4676 "' V435

pro1ec1s or restore d ca (s
- any conditiop • finders
lee paid. call Ooug ~;;.;_~;::...":"":',...":":":"
cel l
or 2 br apts. 6 ·mi from Hoi614 .203•1272
614-444-2909 ottice.
zeJ. Some utilities pd or,
·appliances
avail
$400/mo
+
=--~':'!':!~-::"--':
740-4 t8-5266
o•
Free
1,000
Gospel
Track&amp;. 38i-Bn3
"
:::3118:=·603
~9:::-~~-::=
FREE t2X15 fool 4 yr
..:. •-'- ly 0wnor
2BA APT. CIA. (740)
""...,.
44t-Ot94
old piece ol plush carpel. "ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"'!i~~"':" ~---~~-Good
condition. House on SA , 588 tor 3 rooms and bath up388-8678
more
infonnation and stairs. Completely fur·
b
no·shed wn·h . WID. No
Electric Scooter, $300, ~lures go to orv .com
·d
be · b
1
po1s. Ret. R~. 44Hl245
Lt. Green Glide r, Chair '· . num r ts rown ng.
'"'"
with Glider stool $60, ~~~
Apartment available now
Play Station 2 w1th 26
HouMI For Sal• ·
Ri~erbend Apts. New
games $250 Call June
Haven WV. Now accept:::304:;;.,;;
-6;;;12:;;5•15~0~~~:-::;: 3 Bed . 2 Balh! Only ing
appllcalions
lor
For sale used stalrl ift call $15,500
for
listings HUD-subsldiz&amp;d.
one
for info. 1 -606-329· 134-4 ~
800-6204946 eK ROt9
Bedroom Apts. Utilities
MollOhan
Carper
Fall
included. Based on 30%
""""Ill. 20 "' . Commer- -::::-!"~:"':::::::!:"""~ of adjusted income. Call
..,......
"'
304 682
~-1 Carpel ••.95/yard. 3BA 2 Balh S299 monlh.
- -312t . available
Colors . +48-3384
lor Senior and Disabled

740.446·7444 . Quality ar
Low Pricesl

........, &amp; Tracho

02 Honda Accord V6,
loaded, 92,000
miles.
Call740-245-5526

dresser,

j :~;!;~;_r_j
L

til
8

~It
~·· · •

Avoiding foreclosure 14 ~~~;;=:":':"--:-::payments left make one CONVENIENTLY
LOmove in. 446-3093
CATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE I Townhouse apart·
:::--~~-~C
~~
ments.
and/or
small
3br,
2ba,
antral
AirfHeat, newly remod- houses for rent. Call
eled
bathrooms, new 740--4-41-1111 for ' spptihardWOOd &amp; tile 110011 , cauon &amp; inlonnatloo .
Sandhill · Ad
$155,000 ::'2.~3:, ~&amp;:-4:::8:-r~1:-or~re~nt:".
304-675·4880
361-1 762

•

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Ptge B4 • The Daily Sentinel
'

Tuesday, ,November 25, 2008
ALLEY OOP

'

Houaoa For Ront

ta :atila nn ·
t'YJI VIIW APTS

Holp Wantwd • General

Saloa

www.mydailysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page B5

'rownhouaoa

2br,, ·Muse in Mason, Bfand new 3be~ 2bath Taklng apptlcalions for Retail positions: Prefer
experi·
Ql'lldoua Living 1 and 2 $325 mon. + $325 dep. , on + -half acre in Pt Independent contractors. someone wlth
ence.
excellent
customer
M38A lfld. up, Cen1ral Bedroom Apts at V1Uage no pets 304-882-3652.
Pleasant
OWNER
Fl- Wate11oo area eam up to

Ml, W,O hookltl), tenanl Manor and
A1v€1Side
.-...... tlect•lc EHO Elm Apt 111
. Middl
t r
~,...
s.
epo•
rom
VItw
Apts $327
to
$592,
($1)4~
Equal
740 _992 _5064
17
Hous•ng Opportunity
'Ntin RMt•s T~r Is ac- ·~~~~:=:::":":-OIPtv\g uPPficalions for
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
••t•lQ ltsl lor HUO sub- Pal a lull secunty dei)OSit
.td•l.ed, 1-BR apartment and get yOu• first months
tor the . eldertyldlsabled,
Rent Free•
~H 67$-6679
At
Valley V1ew Apa•trne111s
BOO State Route 325
~""!"~
~--Ttlunna•r. oti1o 45685
Brand New 2 bedroom
74 o- 24s- 9170
1 - ~ beth duplex $575 on
Bedroom
A.patlmenls
_
12
OH
35. ·
Call
••o
.,.,o 'l'flo
appli8m;es lurr~ished
, ~ ' &lt;;VQ·,•34
email with
---"iol
On site laundry tac11ity.
IOUmuu lv•ngOgmail.c
Call lor d8ta11s or ptek up
om
applicntlon at rental
Furnished
Apa.tment
0"'"
2nd Ave .. upstairs all ulill·
Possibility of ~en!;:~ I
Ues peid 1BR no pets
asS1stance
GaUipoUs. 446·9523
Fq 11 al Housing
3 .._ .........
Qpportunllll
-fl"'• ~. 2 br. $325. 1
'
~ . ,_ p1
100,4195260466
. ~
....... .,..~740-247
us utilities
&amp;
• •
429
~ This 111Siitutto11 is an
""""'"""
·
·
- 2
~
Equal Opportunity
~'
Street,
Middlepod,
beck
Provider and Employer "
:1 ~ ,,
oom fur·
nllhed
'· apanment, utili·
ot-..
11W.'t 'paid, ... no pets. de·
• ' &amp;
P08nv.J\...
references

Three Bd house in Mid·
~
380
dleport
Ohro
&gt;1!
200
Month.
no
pets,$
dep .. 740-59 1·0195
Beautiful 3BR in country,
. i1ew appl. n"'w
"""tpel,
lresh painted,...,..CIA, ,....
was,,
.. ·
room wf WID hookup
Water
pd
$550/mo.
614-595-77731645-5953

Government Funds
AvaHable lor 1st lime
home buyers who own
land Of have land or
have lamlty land Zero
Down Easy Fmancing.
Call to be Pre-Qualified.
740-423·9728
1984 ShUltz, 3 br. M.H.,
plywood,
noms,
new
HP/Fumace. call !of details
$4SOO
· .OBO,
1740)949·3l79
'AA'

~...,.-...,.~~...,.::
Great used ',16XBO three
Bedroom new vinyl sid·
ing. $22.995.00. Will help
wif'1 delivery. Call Nikki
740·385·9621 .

Fumtshed 3 br. in New ~~;;;.;:;;;_~-..,..~
Haven call alw 4:30 2005
14x70
Mobile
Hurne. 2Bedroom, 2baltl,
304 _ 773 _~ 507
Vlll)'l sidrng. shingle roof,
RenVSale 3br. w/lg. ~a'""
!hermapayne
window.
rage,
$500/deposit,
20ft.pou:h 740-664·4356
304·755-8744
or
or 740·797-4356 lo·
304 -675-6113
ca ted
at
Darwin.
At 7 wf Riverview. river :$;;26;;:,;o;;;;.
ooo· ~~-~room. 2BR. 1.5 bathS , 2 :-New 3 Bedroom homes
car gamge, Lr, LA wl lrom $214 .36 per month,
don,01y spa~
laundru
·
....., .
·, includes many upgrades.
(740JWcj165
·
· rm.. $600 + utilities. delivery
&amp;
set·up.
IIHUttful Aptt. It Jack· ...._..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ 703·451·259 1,
740 •385 •2434
apt. Ia- _ _ _ _;,...___
1 eon Eat.-te1 , 52 west· Spacious 3BR
-~ WOOd Or., from $365 10 ca led iii &lt;lall ipolis. $650 Sm 2 be $375 00 8
t $560 .
740.446-2568 _ !l"lOtll ux:tudes water. mon "" $500.00 dep. · no
:equal_ Housing Opportu- hash, sewage. No pets smoking.
no
pels
•nttv. TNs institution IS all 140·59 1·5174
or 304·773·9192atter4pm .
; EQu.al Opportunity . Pro· ·4-4 -' o
_,_,o______
Administrative/
t.vlder and Employe r.
l ao a
town"-use
ProF.uional
•,,,....,,__.....__ _ __..: Apanmeots · 2BR,' ~ 1.5 ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ~~;;;;;;~':";;~'":'!";;;;;;
~
The Board of P&lt;lik Comi:
1ft. Memory
batl1. l;l8ck patio. pool.
(trash. sew- •==•R.:io.:inla~la'-== missionen;
of Distnct
the 00
r, ;;::====:;:;~ plaoground,
,
Mcintyre Park
is
r, .~
&lt;IIJS,
water
pd.)
t
St1 2 S/rer~l.
S42 5Jsec. 2 &amp; 3 bedroom . Call accepting letters of inter740-446·1279
est tmd resumes lrom
dep. Can 740·367·054.7
' '
persons interested in the
·ust res·tl
ol Pa1k Admt·n·
Federal Funds 1
po 1 011
·
IS·
Commercial
•
teased for Lanc1 Owners. ti-ator. The Park Adminis·
No· closing cost and tra tor is responsible lor
· 2 bay seryice st&lt;~.tion
ZERO
OOWNI Will ' do admlnostratlon. planning,
Jackson
Pike.
Lease land
improvements. management and operarequired. Call 4.46·3644 BankruptcY &amp; Bad Credit lions of the coun tywide
tar more Info
OK 7. 3. 4 and 5 bed· Park District. AppliCants
rooms
a11aitable. should posses a miniBusiness space for renl
mum ol a Bachelors De·
423 Second Ave. Ca ll 740·446·3384
EXTRA
NICE
MOBILE
gree, experience in com·
740-446·4383
HOMES
FOR
RENT: munity leade.rship, comOffice building located in 2BA 1 bath; all elect. mumcations, public relaGa! lipoli ~ OH 28 Cedar
446·4234 or 208·766 1
' lions. lund raising. grant
d · 1·
St. Rent $450 mlh. + de· 3BR 2 bath on !arm $750 wnTtng,
a rnrmstra. rve,
1
d 1
posit. 740•256-6661
mth.
utilities included. ~anagemen atl
tnan540·729· 1331
c•al skrlls. Please submit
Houaoa For Rtnl
information to: oo· Mcln·
.
Nice
2BR
2
bath
mobile
yre Park District. Gallia
1
1
'-1 1/ 1) 11111 .i tlt•J. 2 l•alh .
home for rent. $450 per County Courthouse, 18

lf l

=========

'',.';·

: In Loving
Memory
of

Trina
Bachtel

on her 37th
Birthday

We love yuu,
Mom, Dad
&amp;family

NOTICE TO TAXPAY·
ERS
Relerence:
5715.17
Ohio ReviMcl Code
The Meigs County
Board of Revision has
completed 1111 work of
equalization. The lllx
returns for tax year
2008 have been "revised
and the v~luatlons
completed " Bfld are
open for publi~ lnopoc·
lion In the office ol the
Meigs County AudHor,
Second Floor, Court~
house, Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. •
Complaints egalnlt the
valuations, 11 ...ab-o
llshed for ta1 yMt 2008
must be made In iK:cor·
' dance with Section
57 1S. 19 of the Ohio Revised Code. Thele
complaints must be
. filed in the County Au·
dltor.'s Office on or t .
fore the 31 sl day of
March, 2009. All com·
plaints llled with the.
county Auditor will be
heard by the Board of
Revi sion in the manner
provided by Secllon
5715. 19 of the Ohio Revised Code .
Mary T. Byer-Hill
Meigs County Auditor
{11) 18, 19. 20. 21, 23,
24, 25, 26, 27. 28

,,
Public Notice

'

'

Date of Public Notice
11/2512008
Meigs County
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF RECEIPT
OF 40t APPLICATION
Public notice Is hereby
given that the Ohio En·
vironmental Protection
Agency {Oh io EPA) Di·
vision of Surface Water
(DSW) has received an
application for, and has
begun to consider
whether to issue or
deny, a Clean Water Act
Section 40 I water qual·
lty certtrlcation for a
project lo lnst~ll eight
(8) barge mooring
cells. The application
was
submitted by
Meigs Point Dock, LLC.
The project Ia located
at a site to be eon.
strucled along the right
descending bank ol the
Ohio River, at approximate river mile 241 ,
just north of the town

of Antiquity, In Sutlon
. Township,
Malgs
County. The Hunting·
tan District Corps of
En]llneers Public No·
tlce Number for this
. project II 2007·1126·
OHR. The Ohio EPA ID
Number for this is project Ia 083437.

Hank J{,•po! l5'~ Uov.n . 15
:~'ilh. !(' I· AI'RJ fl'r h•lillg~ month
_ •+

Call l ocust Street.
Room
1262. Gallipolis·. Ohio
Scenic location, conven· 45631
2 bedroom at 88 Gar· ient to town and atfo!d·
.... C
cl "''d/Eid
lield. $400 tent $400 de- able. 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms ~~~--='"':~;,;;;;
'
""r aro
posit. WDFS provided. available
call ::
740·645· 1646
(740)992. 5639
Reliable
chlldcare
needed In mY home
(Gallipolis) mostly eve·
ning hours. 446-2908
~1-620--l')..lh o:\

lm:!7

deposit.
_

740 645 6460
.:.;::::;::;:~~;,...___

have' dependable transpor1ation. Must bo avaiiable Monday thrt.sugh Fliday mornings and early
afternoons and SaiUrday
evenings. tt interested
contact David at The
Gallipolis Daity Tribune,
;.
740;;;,·44;,;;;,6·;;
234;;,;;2""'""'""'""

~

Government &amp; Federal
. Joba
"''='!~~~~~~
• POST L JOBS

A

$17.89·$28.27/HR..
now
hiring. For application
and free go11ernmen1 job
info. call American As·
soc
ol
Labor
1-913-599-8226.
:.!4111rs.
em~. serv.
::'!:~-::=:::=:~~~
~OST
OFFICE
NOW
HIRING avg. Pay $20fhr

or
$57K!yr.
includes
Fed.Ben, ' OT. Place by
adSource, not aftiliated
with USPS who hires.
.',;
:: ·8,;66-,.,.40,;3,;·2,;58,;2;,,.,,.,,.
.
· Help Wanted · General '

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

c

r:==c:-c=:-::-:~::"1
WINTER STORAGE
Mci&amp;s Co. Enrgrounds

Oct. 25. cOOS

Satellite 1n1tallers
WANTED
Wor1&lt; year round
Will Train/No exp.
needed
Full Time With
Benefits
Weekends Required
Drive a company truck
Driving/Drug testing r ~q
No Felonies
Look to hiro dedicated
herd woricing individuals
to install and service Dish
Netwofi(Satellite .
sys1ems
Call 80, • 93-1991
V"'
Op18
""""""'""',.;,·""'""'"""'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

CAll US TODAY

Hills Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4577 1
740·949-2217 ,

SlzteS)10'

to ;o·lt3o'

Hours
7:00AM ·8:00PM

.I. l lliT

BISSEU
CUSTIICTIII

Weal

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

• 10 5
t J 9762
• K 10 as

J48..192·1871

K J 9 4

Dealer: East

Vulnerable: East-West

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

South
4•
S•
Pall

· Auctleneer:
Bii!J R. Goble Jr.

West

,..

North . Ea1t

PaM

Pa83

Paaa
PaU:

Pasa
Pau

4 NT
Dbl.

Opening lead: ??

FRANK &amp; EARNE$T

740-41&amp;-11&amp;4

IN

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com
www.Buctlonzlp.com
#5548

tU5

Internet messages
from bridge clubs

GM~ IT'5 /'lOT "F~Ul&gt;AL15M~

IT'5 "FVTILE·ISM"I•

-~n•.,.·

\

BARNEY

Hardiood Cablnevy And furnnure

MIZ PRUNELLY,
I NEED HALP
WIF TH'·
'RITHMATIC
PROSLEM
' !!

·www.tlmbercr-abln,of;ry.oom

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpolls

KEEP Tl&lt;YIN',
JUGHAID
FIGGER
IT OUT !!

Ml Z PRUNELLY

!! YOU'LL

'DOH'T GET IT NEITHER "

_.....,

3V PrHmpt

~J('~ndtr

15 Fr. holy
wom•n
16 Candyotrlj:&gt;er
t7 "Typical
Male"
ainger
18 Term
papero
20 Uncle's kid
22 Runway
light
23 Hoop oite
24 Snert's

40
41 Como
unzipped
42 Hardy
45 Go back
over
49 Web
habitue
50 Garden

tool a

52 Demure
53 La fomnio
54 'Baja Ms.
55 Knock
gently
56 Vended
5.7 Candy
lhlpe
58 No-aeat:a
aign

malter

DOWN

27 Metric

1 Diamond
measures
corner
30 Khayyam or 2 Kitchen
31
32
34
35
•
36

Antwer to Pnvklul Puall

Sharif
G11mbles
Chicago
!Iaine
Luau fare
Orchid·like
11ower
Rip

8 Elevo1or guy 33 Pte. boa1
9 Rajah's
spotJse
I o Kublai 13 Liars·
pracfic11
19 Opened
a crack
21 Mart's
moraela
24 Spring
25 In o fronzy
26 Make head-

way

pests

3 Tint&amp;
4 Kind
of piano

5 Ra1se
6 Family
membtr

7 Sclho111ng

27 Oahu .
welcomel
28 Gamblero
.town
29 Cuff
31 Oxygen
suppliers

35 Currior'o
partner
36 AHor frolh
38 Hardonod
39 Brutua

botroytd

him
41 Ms. G1rbo

42 Regrtbl
43
44
46
47

Fjord clly

Clou onder

Faloo Ironto
Aloe
abrupBy
48 Injection
51 Royal
symbol

E-ntail has beiln a boon to bridge clu'&gt;s.
They can easi~ send anhouncamenls 1o
members and make tne missives more
intetesting by Including deals. Rich
Waugh, manager of the Bridge Ace club
in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., does ltlat.
This deal arose in a dujlHcala. Wnal do
~u 11\ink of lhe auction?
Waugh lhinks lnal South shoold not bid
lour nearts, beoause ne mlgnt miss a
slam. Waugh says !nat South snould
start with a takeout double. There is
something in !hal, but if North insisls on
playing in spades, il might YK&gt;rk oul
badly. Don\ put a solid elghl-oard sun
down in tile dummy.
Aller twO pass~. East reb id lour oolrump 10 show a minor two-suHer wi1J1 .
longer clubs than diamonds. He will usu·
ally be 4-6,i&gt;JI5·6 (or 5-7!) is possible.
Then; when South persevered wilh five
hearts, Waugn's parlner bid s~ clubs,
which was doubled by Soulh and went
down one. Waugh eommenls: "Six dubs
looks like a crazy bid. The doubleton
by Luis campos
heart In Wesl's hand should be a warnCelabllty Clphe1 cr~corarn5art cr&amp;ated !1001 qiJQ\aUoneby!amoutpeopla. past &lt;n1 preserl,
ing nollo continue on lo slam. He probEacn Jener rn me Cl!hlr SlanCalor anOitler
~y ·$hould.double live hearts to warn
TOdBy's clUe: f. equals G
""' me against.continuing. But, on !his day,
partner was c~ like a fmc becaUse five " LGHOAMC LJIG RN UG . &lt;IH
hearts was cold!' (His Italics.) Was five
UHGCCWHG ." • CMGIGR . VHAFLM
hoarts cold?
In lhe rea~ worid, yes, but no! double· · ~ ~ G C M G H X J Z ' C Y G A H X R G C C A C
IINONHHNY ' C HGJCNR VLZ. "
dummy. .The defense can go: spade to
Easl's ace, club lo West's ~ng, spade
L· W, RMGH C. IILNOUCNR
ruff by J'ast. I sympalhize with six clubs
bocause West knows his side has a dou·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"I'm not a role modal .. just becautel dunk a
blelil. Give Ea;t 2-1-4-6, and six clubs
bas~etball doesn1 mean I should raise your kids." - Charlet Barkley
would make.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'"

"""'-- ;::,

lOIII

THE.BORN LOS.ER

Owners:

Jon Van Meter .&amp;
Paul Rowe

I

'[ 'e~Llt.Vt l. S~tlo.LL Ofi.DE~
\HE AAI TU~~,

Racine; Ohio '740·247·2019

M.dical
-======Doctors Office nendiny
part time . X-Ray Tech.,
Call
304_675- 1637 or
come by in person to
3009 Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pleasant between 1·3pm
M-F
.-~------

t A K Q 10
. A J 8742

-

Stop &amp; Comport

DEC. · FEB

• Roollng &amp; GuHIIfl

...

A

8 •2

· ¥AKQ J9649

Room AddiUons &amp;

· Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decka

•

Sou'b

WINTER RATES
Remodeling
· New Garages
• Eltctrtcel &amp; Plumbing

•

•

1 Spailod
4 Advoncod
degrse
7 Pitch,

Itato

t s5 4a
Q' .
E011et.

• Q 10

lnatrumentl

t1 Whicho..r
• 12 Tako on
cargo
14 Woatern

a

• New Homes

37 CuHing

•• hoy

1

1/14/1 mo. pd

FOR REDUCED

Cell: 740-416-5047

rTHE'l' ~~\1€.1&gt; ir TO ME
P~~C.IIC."'-U.'t' !lAW!

email:
)rshadfrm@aol.com

G tAJ
e
ump

WOIO'

THAT DAILY

On

PUULIR

SAVINGS

lAIII

Ofour
~earranga fe"efs of the
scrombled w¢rd&gt; b..
WNneld•y, Nov. 26, :zooa .
By Bernice Stele 0.01
Alltlough VO!J might play a secondary
rote In an Important endeavor In the year
ahead, It will be elrlremely rewarding in

an•n11r11

Shop the
Classlfleds!
L.;._ _ _ _ ___,

SIFIEDS

_, 8aflt»&gt;lil laafll t:iibune .- .
1Jbt 'Dint Jlea!ilint .tt'rgilter
•
The l)aHy sentinel

low 10

lormfour

~mple

word3.

more ways than one. What you gain personal~ will be mora gratifying than tieing
in the spotlight.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- Your
D!~HIT
good deed wl!l be diminished it you do
something nice for another and then
broadcMI It 10 th8 whole world. PeoPle
wHI only remember your bragging.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ~9),- Take .
the time to review Important conditionS
that have an affect upon your happiness.
Chances are vou wKI see ways to bettE!r
You should not believtl all
things wtlh a more progresslvi: or lnven·
!Iva approoctr.
you he"'· spend all yCIUr
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)- Put your
loiERE
priorities in order, and focus on the most
T VB H A P
or sleep ail - -.
Important ones first You might noi get ro
Contplete tho chvoklt q.afod
the .bottOm ot the lis't. but what you do
concentrate on will be the most· mean'--'-·-.1-.J.-.L._.L._.
by filling in tho mllll"'l W«&lt;k
you d"'elop from s1eo No 3 bo1r;,¥ ·
ingful Qne&amp;.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - II may be
3 4
I'
' PRINT NUW~ERf.D LETTEiS 1
· time to b1'04den your horizons," especial·
IN
fHESE
SQUMES
ly If you feel you haven't been gentng
your fair share of opportunities. You are
the only one who can make things hap·
pen; don't walt lor others.
ARIES (March 2t ~Ap rt l 19) - Oon't sit
on making !hose needed chan1J8S In a
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS ll/24/08
sltuallcfl whare you know things can be
al!ered for ~he better. Stop making excus· · Cradle- Piano - Mauve- Unwise ~ ANSWE~
es, ancl do what netds to be done
. "A good lesson 10 learn," gramps l ectured, "is that some
mgardless of the work Involved.
TAURUS (April '20·May 20) - Keep In
tlUCSiions don'l have an ANSWER."
mind that lhe59 are two sides to every
story and.that you shouldn't render aver&amp;
dict until ' you have revieWed both. You
have a 50 peroent . chance of being
1
wrong If you JUmp to a conclusiOn.
oo;
fJEMINI (May 21-June 20)- H's good to
be optimistic about 8 job you think you
can dO, but If you tackle some1hlng the!
turns out to be too complicaied. don't
hetl1ate 10 throw In the towel and call In
an expert.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - GrtJup
pr&amp;SSure might be applied to bring yoU In
line with something the majority wants to
do. Hyau succumb, relax and go with the
flow.
LEO (July 23-~ug . 22) - It mlgh;t not
bother you to leave something Important
undOne; taler on, though, expect to _pay_
your dues, whether that mean&amp; taking a
lip lashing or having to deal with 8 job
·t HAP NO ll'eA
fi-IE:Y WeRe 1"1-!At . that became r;nore Cllfficutt.
. VIRGO (Auu. 23-Scpl. 22) - Sllould you
ORG-ANIZIOP
find yourself more mentally than physl·
catty n~stless, mettt up witti some imagi·
0
Mtlva friends: you can excllange ideas
,Q . 0 0
and soMI the woes of the worid.
0
LI BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
• 0
"o o Ctroumstllf1C9s
m~ erisa frOm which
0
you can derive pettdnat galn, ,but it will ·
lake some patiallCe to wait until the
0
faucet is turned on. It you're Impatient,
you'll lose your Chllhce.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - You'll
~ rtallze l'low Important appearances are
when others judge you by their perception•, with no interest 1!1 learning about
the real you. Don, put on airs; relax and
be yourself. ,

I I I' I

Farm
OUt If Buslnla
lbaHYH

EMPLOYMENT

"'*'"led...

'

stand 101 long periods
and
lift
50#
lrequenlty-1001
occa·
slonalli Familiar with
casll reg~ler, credit card
machine and cabMtor.
Applicant snould have
transportation ' and valid
driver's ttcense. Send re·
surne to Gallipolis Dalty
Tribune CLA BOX 104,
P.O BO" 469. GaHipolis,

Phillip
Alder

9:00a.m.- 11:110a.m.
Rclc11se: Apnl 25.2009
A ICe of S!tr.OO will be
=
.:hurged I(Jr ~arl y orrivnl.
Education
late arrivul. t•:uly removal ,
lme rcmov11l. 11r unytlme
Gallipolis Career College Oh.
nct•c,~ i~ · w:ml\'d tu
is acteplinn~ rcstunes lor r-'1""~~"'-!'!'!!'- fairgmUill.h nthcr thlln
an accountinn., instructor.
Sl&lt;~leU
Jutetl . lluildin!
ncrease our
A minimum ol a Bache•
spal'l" i~ fir~t .:ume fir' t
Earning Potential!
lor's denrl'e in accountSCr\'t'.
.,
Up 10
ln-&lt;idc Stnmge $-l .OOII f
ing is required. Please
·1
1 11
nd
$25,000+/yearl
Open Sp:m· S2fMlllf
emar a cover e er a
ln ~idC Fl."nl·c: Si.UOitf
resume to jdan•cki@galli·
Choose to work with
poliscareercollege.edu or
the world's largest
fax ilto 740·446·4124
nonprolits and tile
L &amp; L Tire B;~rn
::::-~~""::"-~:-::"most influential
Gallipolis Career College
44087 \VIppl• Rd.
consen~ative political
·rs accep1·~ng resumes ror
Pomeroy,OH
groups
a
mathematics
t5 Poims)
instruclor.A m~nimum of
Excellent. Benellta
New
&amp; Used Tires,
a master'S degree in
Weekly
pay
+
bonus
We
buy
used tires.
math6ma1ics is required.
potential
~om puler wheel
Please em8.il a cover lei·
Atl Major Holidays
ter and re sUme to jdanalignments. light
OFF
WI TH PAYI
icki @gaUipoliscareercol·
mcchunil: work.
Medical, Dental,
lege.edu or lax it to
complete ~crvke oil
EAP. 401k
740·446·41 24.
cha ngl.!s. snwll engine
No experience
Necessary • Paid
rcpa1r.
Gallipolis Career College
On-Site Training
is seeking part-lime inWt! servkc and
\\ inh.:rit.e boats and
structors Degree
who posses a
Masters
in subCall NOW I&lt;J learn
RV's·
E 1.
how you can start
Jept areas:
ng rsh.
(740)
992·5344
Math, ecenom~es. and
earning your
Mon-Fri.
sociology. E-m8il resume
potential!
8:00 um · 4:10 pm
1·888·1MO·PAYU
to
jdanlcki ®galllpoliscareercollege.edu or call
Sa1 . 8:00am-12
Ext
2458
or
74 ().. 446 _4367
Appty online:
We appreciate your
800 214 0452
http :l~ oba . tnloclalon.com
bu .dlle~s
;;,;;;;,·;;,;,;
· ;,;,;;;;;,·,;,,.,,.,,.

00000408An
Excellent
way to earn money. The
New AVon. Call Marilyn
304-882·2645 ·
--------Ohio
valley
Home
Health, Inc. hiring Home
Babysitter needed in my Health Aides.
STNA,
home. Musf Have refer· CNA, CHHA, PCA may
ences &amp; reliable lrans- apply al 1460 Jackson
portatlon 304·612·0553
Pike, GallipoliS, Ohio or
Publir 'loli~I.'S mN
. •"',. ~·"'I~m.!;j
·phone 740·44 1-1 393 lor
m'ore info Competitive
Yoor Right to Koo•. O.li,rred Righi to Yoor
wages, mileage reimbtJrsemenl and bene fits
'
including health insur·
anee &amp; muCh more.
As required by the An· DSW. Allenllon: Per·
tldegradallon Ruie, rule mils Processing Unit,
Service Manager. &amp; Serv·
3745·1-05 of the Ohio P.O. Box 1049, Colum·
ice Technician positions
Administrative Code bus, Ohto 43216-1049
available. Health care &amp;
(PAC), three alterna- wl1hln 1hirty days olthe
Retirement plans avail·
tlves have been sub~ date of this public no·
able. Please send remilled for the project. lice.
sume
to
The appllcanl's pro· .(11) 25
LLC@CAREQ.COM
or
posed preferred alterfax to 74()..446·9 104
native. if approved,
would displace approx·
Public Notice
Local Environmental Co.
lmalely 236 cubic yards
seeking Certified asbes·
of river ' bed material. PUBLIC NOTIFICATION
tos abBtem!3nt workers.
74().441·8227
The appllcanl's , pro, OF INTENT TO FILE AN
posed minimal degra· APPLICATION
dation alternative, It The Board of Trustees
approved, would In· tor
the
Syracuse
t!Oive1ransparta11on by Racine Regional Sewer
trucking, rather than Olstrlc1, Meigs County,
river barge. and would Ohio hereby gives no~
not dloplace any river 1ico of Its Intent to file
bed ma1erlal. The appll· an appllcallon for fl.
cants proposed non~ nanc:lal assistance with
d e g r a d a I I o n the U.S. Department of
alternatlve,·tf approved, Agriculture , Rural D•
would have no direct velopment for conImpacts on walers of structlon
of
th' state.
lmprovemen't s to the
Dlschargas from the Syracuse Racine Re·
activity, If approved, glonal Sewer Dls1rlct
would result In degra· was1ewater 1raatment
dati!"' 1o, or lowering plani, 1111 stations, and
of 1he water qualify off man holes In the col·
the Ohio River. Ohio lecllon system. This ~~~~~·!~;~;~;;~ii
EPA will ravlewtht ap- nollct 11 published In 'plication, and decide accordance with Rural
whether to grant or Development regula~
deny the application, In l ions contained In AUS
accordance with OAC Instruction 1780. 19(a).
Chapters 3745·1 and The proposed project
3745-32. In accordance Involves lhe cons1ruc·
with OAC rule 3745· 1·. lion of Improvements
05, an antldegradallon to the Syracuse Racine
review of the appllca· Raglonal Sewer Dlatrlct
tlon will be conducted wastewater treatment
before
deciding pian!, IIH atatlona, and
whelher to allow a low· man hales In the col·
erlng of wa1er quall1y. lectlon system. The
All lhree proposed al· project will aerve the
ternatlves will be con· VIllages of Syracuse
sldered &lt;luring the and Racine.
review procaas: No ex· A copy of the pre-appll·
cl.,.alon's or walverat as cation to USDA Rural
olllllned by OAC rule Development Is avail·
37 45- HIS, apply or able for review at 1he
may be granted. .
following locations:
Starting
1112512008, Syracuse Racine Re~
copies of the appllca- glonal Sewer Dls1rlct
tlon and technical aup- Offices
Main
Street,
port informatlor&gt; may 405
be Inspected ot Ohio Racine, Ohio 45n1
EPA-DSW,
Lazarus MarleHa USDA Dislrlct
Government,Center, 50 Olfice
West Town Street, 21330 SR 676, Sullo A
Suite 700, Columbus, Marietta, Ohio 45750·
Dhlo, by first calling 6799
{614) 644·2001 . Copies Questions regarding
of the application and this application or lo
technical support lntor· review said application
matlon can be made shiJuld be directed to :
available upon request Hilton Wolfe, Jr.
at Ohio EPA District Of. P.O. Box 201
flees by calling the 405 Main Street
same number.
Racine, Ohio 45n1
Persons wishing to t} (740) 949-2416
be on Ohio EPA's Inter· Gordon Parker US·
ested parties mailing DADistrict RD Spoclal·
llsl for this project, 2} lsi, Rural Development ·
request a public heor· Specialist
.'
lng, or 3} oubmlt writ· 21330 SR 67~, SuHe A
ten comment• for Ohio Marietta, Ohio 45750·
EPA' s consideration In 6799
reviewing lhe appllca· (740) 373·7113 Ext. 201
lion should do so In (11) 25
wrHing lo Ohio EPA·

'

ACROSS

$1.:l00 a month deliver· serv~ skills. be able to .
ing The Daily Tnbun e. wort( Independently and
.,..,_.,---~.,-..,. Must be
reliable and creative!','. be able to

NANCE
AVAILABLE
1BR house $375 u!Hities (740) 446-3570
are NOT included Refer -

encas required. Gal~pohs
area 709-1372
2 story country horre in
LartgsvHie
area
3
BdJ1&amp; 1/2baths.$450 per
M
plus
U1ill!ieslon
3acres+.740·742·2628

NEA Croasword Puzzle

BRII)GE

PEANUTS
Quality Seamless
Gutters
Maintenance Plus
Cmumrrdnf &amp; Re.\idential

Vinyl

Sitling/Replacemenl
WintiQws/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740-992·1493 Office
· 740·416-8339 Cell

Free ES!imated

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

•Experienced
References Available!
Cull Gary Slanley @

740-591-8044 .

H&amp;H
Guttering

Joh'§~jU""

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

~·FNt....,._

__

Complete Troo Coni

,
..

740-441-IXJ

-""""

~Dilll:..w

'

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding ·
• Replacement
Wlndowa 1 ·
·Roofing

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

Owner:
JamesK001eell
742·2332'

.'

i

!

'

.

,.,

COW and BOY,
SU1E, WE'LL THIWW
7004lllll()i fJOI.lARS

ARLO

ATOIJ!E~MYTO

6ET IT TO WORJ(, lllT

WHAT'S THE ENVI10N·
MENTAL 'CIIEDIT aaJNCH'

THAT'S GOING
T06ETUSTO '
STOP GLOBAL
WARMING?

-·v
·"'•

GARFIEL.O

Local Contrector

7 40-367·0544
Free Elllmatea

7 40..367-0536

For Remodeling ~nd New House Bulldln1
Call:

0

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• ~oom

Additiops • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Rooting o Pole
Barns o Patio's, Porches and Decks

MilE W. MDC•. IWfiEI
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bollom, OH

740-985-4141
· Cell: 740-4!6-1834

15+.yetJrs e.rperitnct Free Estimates

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month .

I

hl...-6. .,.,. ;. . ,.,...,,__,..,-!
,
0

~oney

I' 1

*Insured

Please leave mess e

·Garages
• P.olo Buildings
• Room Addition•

NO,

*Prompl and Quality
Work
* Reasonable Rates

Pomeroy, Ohio ··

· Decks

•

-

GRIZZWELLS '
eoy,li'~ lliA\.\:1 a1~ ~A'fi.l
~~·

.

'

''

,,

'

f

;,~o

..

SOUPTONUTZ

JANIS

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Ptge B4 • The Daily Sentinel
'

Tuesday, ,November 25, 2008
ALLEY OOP

'

Houaoa For Ront

ta :atila nn ·
t'YJI VIIW APTS

Holp Wantwd • General

Saloa

www.mydailysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page B5

'rownhouaoa

2br,, ·Muse in Mason, Bfand new 3be~ 2bath Taklng apptlcalions for Retail positions: Prefer
experi·
Ql'lldoua Living 1 and 2 $325 mon. + $325 dep. , on + -half acre in Pt Independent contractors. someone wlth
ence.
excellent
customer
M38A lfld. up, Cen1ral Bedroom Apts at V1Uage no pets 304-882-3652.
Pleasant
OWNER
Fl- Wate11oo area eam up to

Ml, W,O hookltl), tenanl Manor and
A1v€1Side
.-...... tlect•lc EHO Elm Apt 111
. Middl
t r
~,...
s.
epo•
rom
VItw
Apts $327
to
$592,
($1)4~
Equal
740 _992 _5064
17
Hous•ng Opportunity
'Ntin RMt•s T~r Is ac- ·~~~~:=:::":":-OIPtv\g uPPficalions for
HOLIDAY SPECIAL
••t•lQ ltsl lor HUO sub- Pal a lull secunty dei)OSit
.td•l.ed, 1-BR apartment and get yOu• first months
tor the . eldertyldlsabled,
Rent Free•
~H 67$-6679
At
Valley V1ew Apa•trne111s
BOO State Route 325
~""!"~
~--Ttlunna•r. oti1o 45685
Brand New 2 bedroom
74 o- 24s- 9170
1 - ~ beth duplex $575 on
Bedroom
A.patlmenls
_
12
OH
35. ·
Call
••o
.,.,o 'l'flo
appli8m;es lurr~ished
, ~ ' &lt;;VQ·,•34
email with
---"iol
On site laundry tac11ity.
IOUmuu lv•ngOgmail.c
Call lor d8ta11s or ptek up
om
applicntlon at rental
Furnished
Apa.tment
0"'"
2nd Ave .. upstairs all ulill·
Possibility of ~en!;:~ I
Ues peid 1BR no pets
asS1stance
GaUipoUs. 446·9523
Fq 11 al Housing
3 .._ .........
Qpportunllll
-fl"'• ~. 2 br. $325. 1
'
~ . ,_ p1
100,4195260466
. ~
....... .,..~740-247
us utilities
&amp;
• •
429
~ This 111Siitutto11 is an
""""'"""
·
·
- 2
~
Equal Opportunity
~'
Street,
Middlepod,
beck
Provider and Employer "
:1 ~ ,,
oom fur·
nllhed
'· apanment, utili·
ot-..
11W.'t 'paid, ... no pets. de·
• ' &amp;
P08nv.J\...
references

Three Bd house in Mid·
~
380
dleport
Ohro
&gt;1!
200
Month.
no
pets,$
dep .. 740-59 1·0195
Beautiful 3BR in country,
. i1ew appl. n"'w
"""tpel,
lresh painted,...,..CIA, ,....
was,,
.. ·
room wf WID hookup
Water
pd
$550/mo.
614-595-77731645-5953

Government Funds
AvaHable lor 1st lime
home buyers who own
land Of have land or
have lamlty land Zero
Down Easy Fmancing.
Call to be Pre-Qualified.
740-423·9728
1984 ShUltz, 3 br. M.H.,
plywood,
noms,
new
HP/Fumace. call !of details
$4SOO
· .OBO,
1740)949·3l79
'AA'

~...,.-...,.~~...,.::
Great used ',16XBO three
Bedroom new vinyl sid·
ing. $22.995.00. Will help
wif'1 delivery. Call Nikki
740·385·9621 .

Fumtshed 3 br. in New ~~;;;.;:;;;_~-..,..~
Haven call alw 4:30 2005
14x70
Mobile
Hurne. 2Bedroom, 2baltl,
304 _ 773 _~ 507
Vlll)'l sidrng. shingle roof,
RenVSale 3br. w/lg. ~a'""
!hermapayne
window.
rage,
$500/deposit,
20ft.pou:h 740-664·4356
304·755-8744
or
or 740·797-4356 lo·
304 -675-6113
ca ted
at
Darwin.
At 7 wf Riverview. river :$;;26;;:,;o;;;;.
ooo· ~~-~room. 2BR. 1.5 bathS , 2 :-New 3 Bedroom homes
car gamge, Lr, LA wl lrom $214 .36 per month,
don,01y spa~
laundru
·
....., .
·, includes many upgrades.
(740JWcj165
·
· rm.. $600 + utilities. delivery
&amp;
set·up.
IIHUttful Aptt. It Jack· ...._..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ 703·451·259 1,
740 •385 •2434
apt. Ia- _ _ _ _;,...___
1 eon Eat.-te1 , 52 west· Spacious 3BR
-~ WOOd Or., from $365 10 ca led iii &lt;lall ipolis. $650 Sm 2 be $375 00 8
t $560 .
740.446-2568 _ !l"lOtll ux:tudes water. mon "" $500.00 dep. · no
:equal_ Housing Opportu- hash, sewage. No pets smoking.
no
pels
•nttv. TNs institution IS all 140·59 1·5174
or 304·773·9192atter4pm .
; EQu.al Opportunity . Pro· ·4-4 -' o
_,_,o______
Administrative/
t.vlder and Employe r.
l ao a
town"-use
ProF.uional
•,,,....,,__.....__ _ __..: Apanmeots · 2BR,' ~ 1.5 ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ~~;;;;;;~':";;~'":'!";;;;;;
~
The Board of P&lt;lik Comi:
1ft. Memory
batl1. l;l8ck patio. pool.
(trash. sew- •==•R.:io.:inla~la'-== missionen;
of Distnct
the 00
r, ;;::====:;:;~ plaoground,
,
Mcintyre Park
is
r, .~
&lt;IIJS,
water
pd.)
t
St1 2 S/rer~l.
S42 5Jsec. 2 &amp; 3 bedroom . Call accepting letters of inter740-446·1279
est tmd resumes lrom
dep. Can 740·367·054.7
' '
persons interested in the
·ust res·tl
ol Pa1k Admt·n·
Federal Funds 1
po 1 011
·
IS·
Commercial
•
teased for Lanc1 Owners. ti-ator. The Park Adminis·
No· closing cost and tra tor is responsible lor
· 2 bay seryice st&lt;~.tion
ZERO
OOWNI Will ' do admlnostratlon. planning,
Jackson
Pike.
Lease land
improvements. management and operarequired. Call 4.46·3644 BankruptcY &amp; Bad Credit lions of the coun tywide
tar more Info
OK 7. 3. 4 and 5 bed· Park District. AppliCants
rooms
a11aitable. should posses a miniBusiness space for renl
mum ol a Bachelors De·
423 Second Ave. Ca ll 740·446·3384
EXTRA
NICE
MOBILE
gree, experience in com·
740-446·4383
HOMES
FOR
RENT: munity leade.rship, comOffice building located in 2BA 1 bath; all elect. mumcations, public relaGa! lipoli ~ OH 28 Cedar
446·4234 or 208·766 1
' lions. lund raising. grant
d · 1·
St. Rent $450 mlh. + de· 3BR 2 bath on !arm $750 wnTtng,
a rnrmstra. rve,
1
d 1
posit. 740•256-6661
mth.
utilities included. ~anagemen atl
tnan540·729· 1331
c•al skrlls. Please submit
Houaoa For Rtnl
information to: oo· Mcln·
.
Nice
2BR
2
bath
mobile
yre Park District. Gallia
1
1
'-1 1/ 1) 11111 .i tlt•J. 2 l•alh .
home for rent. $450 per County Courthouse, 18

lf l

=========

'',.';·

: In Loving
Memory
of

Trina
Bachtel

on her 37th
Birthday

We love yuu,
Mom, Dad
&amp;family

NOTICE TO TAXPAY·
ERS
Relerence:
5715.17
Ohio ReviMcl Code
The Meigs County
Board of Revision has
completed 1111 work of
equalization. The lllx
returns for tax year
2008 have been "revised
and the v~luatlons
completed " Bfld are
open for publi~ lnopoc·
lion In the office ol the
Meigs County AudHor,
Second Floor, Court~
house, Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. •
Complaints egalnlt the
valuations, 11 ...ab-o
llshed for ta1 yMt 2008
must be made In iK:cor·
' dance with Section
57 1S. 19 of the Ohio Revised Code. Thele
complaints must be
. filed in the County Au·
dltor.'s Office on or t .
fore the 31 sl day of
March, 2009. All com·
plaints llled with the.
county Auditor will be
heard by the Board of
Revi sion in the manner
provided by Secllon
5715. 19 of the Ohio Revised Code .
Mary T. Byer-Hill
Meigs County Auditor
{11) 18, 19. 20. 21, 23,
24, 25, 26, 27. 28

,,
Public Notice

'

'

Date of Public Notice
11/2512008
Meigs County
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF RECEIPT
OF 40t APPLICATION
Public notice Is hereby
given that the Ohio En·
vironmental Protection
Agency {Oh io EPA) Di·
vision of Surface Water
(DSW) has received an
application for, and has
begun to consider
whether to issue or
deny, a Clean Water Act
Section 40 I water qual·
lty certtrlcation for a
project lo lnst~ll eight
(8) barge mooring
cells. The application
was
submitted by
Meigs Point Dock, LLC.
The project Ia located
at a site to be eon.
strucled along the right
descending bank ol the
Ohio River, at approximate river mile 241 ,
just north of the town

of Antiquity, In Sutlon
. Township,
Malgs
County. The Hunting·
tan District Corps of
En]llneers Public No·
tlce Number for this
. project II 2007·1126·
OHR. The Ohio EPA ID
Number for this is project Ia 083437.

Hank J{,•po! l5'~ Uov.n . 15
:~'ilh. !(' I· AI'RJ fl'r h•lillg~ month
_ •+

Call l ocust Street.
Room
1262. Gallipolis·. Ohio
Scenic location, conven· 45631
2 bedroom at 88 Gar· ient to town and atfo!d·
.... C
cl "''d/Eid
lield. $400 tent $400 de- able. 2 &amp; 3 bedrooms ~~~--='"':~;,;;;;
'
""r aro
posit. WDFS provided. available
call ::
740·645· 1646
(740)992. 5639
Reliable
chlldcare
needed In mY home
(Gallipolis) mostly eve·
ning hours. 446-2908
~1-620--l')..lh o:\

lm:!7

deposit.
_

740 645 6460
.:.;::::;::;:~~;,...___

have' dependable transpor1ation. Must bo avaiiable Monday thrt.sugh Fliday mornings and early
afternoons and SaiUrday
evenings. tt interested
contact David at The
Gallipolis Daity Tribune,
;.
740;;;,·44;,;;;,6·;;
234;;,;;2""'""'""'""

~

Government &amp; Federal
. Joba
"''='!~~~~~~
• POST L JOBS

A

$17.89·$28.27/HR..
now
hiring. For application
and free go11ernmen1 job
info. call American As·
soc
ol
Labor
1-913-599-8226.
:.!4111rs.
em~. serv.
::'!:~-::=:::=:~~~
~OST
OFFICE
NOW
HIRING avg. Pay $20fhr

or
$57K!yr.
includes
Fed.Ben, ' OT. Place by
adSource, not aftiliated
with USPS who hires.
.',;
:: ·8,;66-,.,.40,;3,;·2,;58,;2;,,.,,.,,.
.
· Help Wanted · General '

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

c

r:==c:-c=:-::-:~::"1
WINTER STORAGE
Mci&amp;s Co. Enrgrounds

Oct. 25. cOOS

Satellite 1n1tallers
WANTED
Wor1&lt; year round
Will Train/No exp.
needed
Full Time With
Benefits
Weekends Required
Drive a company truck
Driving/Drug testing r ~q
No Felonies
Look to hiro dedicated
herd woricing individuals
to install and service Dish
Netwofi(Satellite .
sys1ems
Call 80, • 93-1991
V"'
Op18
""""""'""',.;,·""'""'"""'

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

CAll US TODAY

Hills Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4577 1
740·949-2217 ,

SlzteS)10'

to ;o·lt3o'

Hours
7:00AM ·8:00PM

.I. l lliT

BISSEU
CUSTIICTIII

Weal

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

• 10 5
t J 9762
• K 10 as

J48..192·1871

K J 9 4

Dealer: East

Vulnerable: East-West

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

South
4•
S•
Pall

· Auctleneer:
Bii!J R. Goble Jr.

West

,..

North . Ea1t

PaM

Pa83

Paaa
PaU:

Pasa
Pau

4 NT
Dbl.

Opening lead: ??

FRANK &amp; EARNE$T

740-41&amp;-11&amp;4

IN

E-mail: captblll65@yahoo.com
www.Buctlonzlp.com
#5548

tU5

Internet messages
from bridge clubs

GM~ IT'5 /'lOT "F~Ul&gt;AL15M~

IT'5 "FVTILE·ISM"I•

-~n•.,.·

\

BARNEY

Hardiood Cablnevy And furnnure

MIZ PRUNELLY,
I NEED HALP
WIF TH'·
'RITHMATIC
PROSLEM
' !!

·www.tlmbercr-abln,of;ry.oom

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpolls

KEEP Tl&lt;YIN',
JUGHAID
FIGGER
IT OUT !!

Ml Z PRUNELLY

!! YOU'LL

'DOH'T GET IT NEITHER "

_.....,

3V PrHmpt

~J('~ndtr

15 Fr. holy
wom•n
16 Candyotrlj:&gt;er
t7 "Typical
Male"
ainger
18 Term
papero
20 Uncle's kid
22 Runway
light
23 Hoop oite
24 Snert's

40
41 Como
unzipped
42 Hardy
45 Go back
over
49 Web
habitue
50 Garden

tool a

52 Demure
53 La fomnio
54 'Baja Ms.
55 Knock
gently
56 Vended
5.7 Candy
lhlpe
58 No-aeat:a
aign

malter

DOWN

27 Metric

1 Diamond
measures
corner
30 Khayyam or 2 Kitchen
31
32
34
35
•
36

Antwer to Pnvklul Puall

Sharif
G11mbles
Chicago
!Iaine
Luau fare
Orchid·like
11ower
Rip

8 Elevo1or guy 33 Pte. boa1
9 Rajah's
spotJse
I o Kublai 13 Liars·
pracfic11
19 Opened
a crack
21 Mart's
moraela
24 Spring
25 In o fronzy
26 Make head-

way

pests

3 Tint&amp;
4 Kind
of piano

5 Ra1se
6 Family
membtr

7 Sclho111ng

27 Oahu .
welcomel
28 Gamblero
.town
29 Cuff
31 Oxygen
suppliers

35 Currior'o
partner
36 AHor frolh
38 Hardonod
39 Brutua

botroytd

him
41 Ms. G1rbo

42 Regrtbl
43
44
46
47

Fjord clly

Clou onder

Faloo Ironto
Aloe
abrupBy
48 Injection
51 Royal
symbol

E-ntail has beiln a boon to bridge clu'&gt;s.
They can easi~ send anhouncamenls 1o
members and make tne missives more
intetesting by Including deals. Rich
Waugh, manager of the Bridge Ace club
in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., does ltlat.
This deal arose in a dujlHcala. Wnal do
~u 11\ink of lhe auction?
Waugh lhinks lnal South shoold not bid
lour nearts, beoause ne mlgnt miss a
slam. Waugh says !nat South snould
start with a takeout double. There is
something in !hal, but if North insisls on
playing in spades, il might YK&gt;rk oul
badly. Don\ put a solid elghl-oard sun
down in tile dummy.
Aller twO pass~. East reb id lour oolrump 10 show a minor two-suHer wi1J1 .
longer clubs than diamonds. He will usu·
ally be 4-6,i&gt;JI5·6 (or 5-7!) is possible.
Then; when South persevered wilh five
hearts, Waugn's parlner bid s~ clubs,
which was doubled by Soulh and went
down one. Waugh eommenls: "Six dubs
looks like a crazy bid. The doubleton
by Luis campos
heart In Wesl's hand should be a warnCelabllty Clphe1 cr~corarn5art cr&amp;ated !1001 qiJQ\aUoneby!amoutpeopla. past &lt;n1 preserl,
ing nollo continue on lo slam. He probEacn Jener rn me Cl!hlr SlanCalor anOitler
~y ·$hould.double live hearts to warn
TOdBy's clUe: f. equals G
""' me against.continuing. But, on !his day,
partner was c~ like a fmc becaUse five " LGHOAMC LJIG RN UG . &lt;IH
hearts was cold!' (His Italics.) Was five
UHGCCWHG ." • CMGIGR . VHAFLM
hoarts cold?
In lhe rea~ worid, yes, but no! double· · ~ ~ G C M G H X J Z ' C Y G A H X R G C C A C
IINONHHNY ' C HGJCNR VLZ. "
dummy. .The defense can go: spade to
Easl's ace, club lo West's ~ng, spade
L· W, RMGH C. IILNOUCNR
ruff by J'ast. I sympalhize with six clubs
bocause West knows his side has a dou·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"I'm not a role modal .. just becautel dunk a
blelil. Give Ea;t 2-1-4-6, and six clubs
bas~etball doesn1 mean I should raise your kids." - Charlet Barkley
would make.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

'"

"""'-- ;::,

lOIII

THE.BORN LOS.ER

Owners:

Jon Van Meter .&amp;
Paul Rowe

I

'[ 'e~Llt.Vt l. S~tlo.LL Ofi.DE~
\HE AAI TU~~,

Racine; Ohio '740·247·2019

M.dical
-======Doctors Office nendiny
part time . X-Ray Tech.,
Call
304_675- 1637 or
come by in person to
3009 Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pleasant between 1·3pm
M-F
.-~------

t A K Q 10
. A J 8742

-

Stop &amp; Comport

DEC. · FEB

• Roollng &amp; GuHIIfl

...

A

8 •2

· ¥AKQ J9649

Room AddiUons &amp;

· Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decka

•

Sou'b

WINTER RATES
Remodeling
· New Garages
• Eltctrtcel &amp; Plumbing

•

•

1 Spailod
4 Advoncod
degrse
7 Pitch,

Itato

t s5 4a
Q' .
E011et.

• Q 10

lnatrumentl

t1 Whicho..r
• 12 Tako on
cargo
14 Woatern

a

• New Homes

37 CuHing

•• hoy

1

1/14/1 mo. pd

FOR REDUCED

Cell: 740-416-5047

rTHE'l' ~~\1€.1&gt; ir TO ME
P~~C.IIC."'-U.'t' !lAW!

email:
)rshadfrm@aol.com

G tAJ
e
ump

WOIO'

THAT DAILY

On

PUULIR

SAVINGS

lAIII

Ofour
~earranga fe"efs of the
scrombled w¢rd&gt; b..
WNneld•y, Nov. 26, :zooa .
By Bernice Stele 0.01
Alltlough VO!J might play a secondary
rote In an Important endeavor In the year
ahead, It will be elrlremely rewarding in

an•n11r11

Shop the
Classlfleds!
L.;._ _ _ _ ___,

SIFIEDS

_, 8aflt»&gt;lil laafll t:iibune .- .
1Jbt 'Dint Jlea!ilint .tt'rgilter
•
The l)aHy sentinel

low 10

lormfour

~mple

word3.

more ways than one. What you gain personal~ will be mora gratifying than tieing
in the spotlight.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- Your
D!~HIT
good deed wl!l be diminished it you do
something nice for another and then
broadcMI It 10 th8 whole world. PeoPle
wHI only remember your bragging.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. ~9),- Take .
the time to review Important conditionS
that have an affect upon your happiness.
Chances are vou wKI see ways to bettE!r
You should not believtl all
things wtlh a more progresslvi: or lnven·
!Iva approoctr.
you he"'· spend all yCIUr
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19)- Put your
loiERE
priorities in order, and focus on the most
T VB H A P
or sleep ail - -.
Important ones first You might noi get ro
Contplete tho chvoklt q.afod
the .bottOm ot the lis't. but what you do
concentrate on will be the most· mean'--'-·-.1-.J.-.L._.L._.
by filling in tho mllll"'l W«&lt;k
you d"'elop from s1eo No 3 bo1r;,¥ ·
ingful Qne&amp;.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - II may be
3 4
I'
' PRINT NUW~ERf.D LETTEiS 1
· time to b1'04den your horizons," especial·
IN
fHESE
SQUMES
ly If you feel you haven't been gentng
your fair share of opportunities. You are
the only one who can make things hap·
pen; don't walt lor others.
ARIES (March 2t ~Ap rt l 19) - Oon't sit
on making !hose needed chan1J8S In a
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS ll/24/08
sltuallcfl whare you know things can be
al!ered for ~he better. Stop making excus· · Cradle- Piano - Mauve- Unwise ~ ANSWE~
es, ancl do what netds to be done
. "A good lesson 10 learn," gramps l ectured, "is that some
mgardless of the work Involved.
TAURUS (April '20·May 20) - Keep In
tlUCSiions don'l have an ANSWER."
mind that lhe59 are two sides to every
story and.that you shouldn't render aver&amp;
dict until ' you have revieWed both. You
have a 50 peroent . chance of being
1
wrong If you JUmp to a conclusiOn.
oo;
fJEMINI (May 21-June 20)- H's good to
be optimistic about 8 job you think you
can dO, but If you tackle some1hlng the!
turns out to be too complicaied. don't
hetl1ate 10 throw In the towel and call In
an expert.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22) - GrtJup
pr&amp;SSure might be applied to bring yoU In
line with something the majority wants to
do. Hyau succumb, relax and go with the
flow.
LEO (July 23-~ug . 22) - It mlgh;t not
bother you to leave something Important
undOne; taler on, though, expect to _pay_
your dues, whether that mean&amp; taking a
lip lashing or having to deal with 8 job
·t HAP NO ll'eA
fi-IE:Y WeRe 1"1-!At . that became r;nore Cllfficutt.
. VIRGO (Auu. 23-Scpl. 22) - Sllould you
ORG-ANIZIOP
find yourself more mentally than physl·
catty n~stless, mettt up witti some imagi·
0
Mtlva friends: you can excllange ideas
,Q . 0 0
and soMI the woes of the worid.
0
LI BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
• 0
"o o Ctroumstllf1C9s
m~ erisa frOm which
0
you can derive pettdnat galn, ,but it will ·
lake some patiallCe to wait until the
0
faucet is turned on. It you're Impatient,
you'll lose your Chllhce.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - You'll
~ rtallze l'low Important appearances are
when others judge you by their perception•, with no interest 1!1 learning about
the real you. Don, put on airs; relax and
be yourself. ,

I I I' I

Farm
OUt If Buslnla
lbaHYH

EMPLOYMENT

"'*'"led...

'

stand 101 long periods
and
lift
50#
lrequenlty-1001
occa·
slonalli Familiar with
casll reg~ler, credit card
machine and cabMtor.
Applicant snould have
transportation ' and valid
driver's ttcense. Send re·
surne to Gallipolis Dalty
Tribune CLA BOX 104,
P.O BO" 469. GaHipolis,

Phillip
Alder

9:00a.m.- 11:110a.m.
Rclc11se: Apnl 25.2009
A ICe of S!tr.OO will be
=
.:hurged I(Jr ~arl y orrivnl.
Education
late arrivul. t•:uly removal ,
lme rcmov11l. 11r unytlme
Gallipolis Career College Oh.
nct•c,~ i~ · w:ml\'d tu
is acteplinn~ rcstunes lor r-'1""~~"'-!'!'!!'- fairgmUill.h nthcr thlln
an accountinn., instructor.
Sl&lt;~leU
Jutetl . lluildin!
ncrease our
A minimum ol a Bache•
spal'l" i~ fir~t .:ume fir' t
Earning Potential!
lor's denrl'e in accountSCr\'t'.
.,
Up 10
ln-&lt;idc Stnmge $-l .OOII f
ing is required. Please
·1
1 11
nd
$25,000+/yearl
Open Sp:m· S2fMlllf
emar a cover e er a
ln ~idC Fl."nl·c: Si.UOitf
resume to jdan•cki@galli·
Choose to work with
poliscareercollege.edu or
the world's largest
fax ilto 740·446·4124
nonprolits and tile
L &amp; L Tire B;~rn
::::-~~""::"-~:-::"most influential
Gallipolis Career College
44087 \VIppl• Rd.
consen~ative political
·rs accep1·~ng resumes ror
Pomeroy,OH
groups
a
mathematics
t5 Poims)
instruclor.A m~nimum of
Excellent. Benellta
New
&amp; Used Tires,
a master'S degree in
Weekly
pay
+
bonus
We
buy
used tires.
math6ma1ics is required.
potential
~om puler wheel
Please em8.il a cover lei·
Atl Major Holidays
ter and re sUme to jdanalignments. light
OFF
WI TH PAYI
icki @gaUipoliscareercol·
mcchunil: work.
Medical, Dental,
lege.edu or lax it to
complete ~crvke oil
EAP. 401k
740·446·41 24.
cha ngl.!s. snwll engine
No experience
Necessary • Paid
rcpa1r.
Gallipolis Career College
On-Site Training
is seeking part-lime inWt! servkc and
\\ inh.:rit.e boats and
structors Degree
who posses a
Masters
in subCall NOW I&lt;J learn
RV's·
E 1.
how you can start
Jept areas:
ng rsh.
(740)
992·5344
Math, ecenom~es. and
earning your
Mon-Fri.
sociology. E-m8il resume
potential!
8:00 um · 4:10 pm
1·888·1MO·PAYU
to
jdanlcki ®galllpoliscareercollege.edu or call
Sa1 . 8:00am-12
Ext
2458
or
74 ().. 446 _4367
Appty online:
We appreciate your
800 214 0452
http :l~ oba . tnloclalon.com
bu .dlle~s
;;,;;;;,·;;,;,;
· ;,;,;;;;;,·,;,,.,,.,,.

00000408An
Excellent
way to earn money. The
New AVon. Call Marilyn
304-882·2645 ·
--------Ohio
valley
Home
Health, Inc. hiring Home
Babysitter needed in my Health Aides.
STNA,
home. Musf Have refer· CNA, CHHA, PCA may
ences &amp; reliable lrans- apply al 1460 Jackson
portatlon 304·612·0553
Pike, GallipoliS, Ohio or
Publir 'loli~I.'S mN
. •"',. ~·"'I~m.!;j
·phone 740·44 1-1 393 lor
m'ore info Competitive
Yoor Right to Koo•. O.li,rred Righi to Yoor
wages, mileage reimbtJrsemenl and bene fits
'
including health insur·
anee &amp; muCh more.
As required by the An· DSW. Allenllon: Per·
tldegradallon Ruie, rule mils Processing Unit,
Service Manager. &amp; Serv·
3745·1-05 of the Ohio P.O. Box 1049, Colum·
ice Technician positions
Administrative Code bus, Ohto 43216-1049
available. Health care &amp;
(PAC), three alterna- wl1hln 1hirty days olthe
Retirement plans avail·
tlves have been sub~ date of this public no·
able. Please send remilled for the project. lice.
sume
to
The appllcanl's pro· .(11) 25
LLC@CAREQ.COM
or
posed preferred alterfax to 74()..446·9 104
native. if approved,
would displace approx·
Public Notice
Local Environmental Co.
lmalely 236 cubic yards
seeking Certified asbes·
of river ' bed material. PUBLIC NOTIFICATION
tos abBtem!3nt workers.
74().441·8227
The appllcanl's , pro, OF INTENT TO FILE AN
posed minimal degra· APPLICATION
dation alternative, It The Board of Trustees
approved, would In· tor
the
Syracuse
t!Oive1ransparta11on by Racine Regional Sewer
trucking, rather than Olstrlc1, Meigs County,
river barge. and would Ohio hereby gives no~
not dloplace any river 1ico of Its Intent to file
bed ma1erlal. The appll· an appllcallon for fl.
cants proposed non~ nanc:lal assistance with
d e g r a d a I I o n the U.S. Department of
alternatlve,·tf approved, Agriculture , Rural D•
would have no direct velopment for conImpacts on walers of structlon
of
th' state.
lmprovemen't s to the
Dlschargas from the Syracuse Racine Re·
activity, If approved, glonal Sewer Dls1rlct
would result In degra· was1ewater 1raatment
dati!"' 1o, or lowering plani, 1111 stations, and
of 1he water qualify off man holes In the col·
the Ohio River. Ohio lecllon system. This ~~~~~·!~;~;~;;~ii
EPA will ravlewtht ap- nollct 11 published In 'plication, and decide accordance with Rural
whether to grant or Development regula~
deny the application, In l ions contained In AUS
accordance with OAC Instruction 1780. 19(a).
Chapters 3745·1 and The proposed project
3745-32. In accordance Involves lhe cons1ruc·
with OAC rule 3745· 1·. lion of Improvements
05, an antldegradallon to the Syracuse Racine
review of the appllca· Raglonal Sewer Dlatrlct
tlon will be conducted wastewater treatment
before
deciding pian!, IIH atatlona, and
whelher to allow a low· man hales In the col·
erlng of wa1er quall1y. lectlon system. The
All lhree proposed al· project will aerve the
ternatlves will be con· VIllages of Syracuse
sldered &lt;luring the and Racine.
review procaas: No ex· A copy of the pre-appll·
cl.,.alon's or walverat as cation to USDA Rural
olllllned by OAC rule Development Is avail·
37 45- HIS, apply or able for review at 1he
may be granted. .
following locations:
Starting
1112512008, Syracuse Racine Re~
copies of the appllca- glonal Sewer Dls1rlct
tlon and technical aup- Offices
Main
Street,
port informatlor&gt; may 405
be Inspected ot Ohio Racine, Ohio 45n1
EPA-DSW,
Lazarus MarleHa USDA Dislrlct
Government,Center, 50 Olfice
West Town Street, 21330 SR 676, Sullo A
Suite 700, Columbus, Marietta, Ohio 45750·
Dhlo, by first calling 6799
{614) 644·2001 . Copies Questions regarding
of the application and this application or lo
technical support lntor· review said application
matlon can be made shiJuld be directed to :
available upon request Hilton Wolfe, Jr.
at Ohio EPA District Of. P.O. Box 201
flees by calling the 405 Main Street
same number.
Racine, Ohio 45n1
Persons wishing to t} (740) 949-2416
be on Ohio EPA's Inter· Gordon Parker US·
ested parties mailing DADistrict RD Spoclal·
llsl for this project, 2} lsi, Rural Development ·
request a public heor· Specialist
.'
lng, or 3} oubmlt writ· 21330 SR 67~, SuHe A
ten comment• for Ohio Marietta, Ohio 45750·
EPA' s consideration In 6799
reviewing lhe appllca· (740) 373·7113 Ext. 201
lion should do so In (11) 25
wrHing lo Ohio EPA·

'

ACROSS

$1.:l00 a month deliver· serv~ skills. be able to .
ing The Daily Tnbun e. wort( Independently and
.,..,_.,---~.,-..,. Must be
reliable and creative!','. be able to

NANCE
AVAILABLE
1BR house $375 u!Hities (740) 446-3570
are NOT included Refer -

encas required. Gal~pohs
area 709-1372
2 story country horre in
LartgsvHie
area
3
BdJ1&amp; 1/2baths.$450 per
M
plus
U1ill!ieslon
3acres+.740·742·2628

NEA Croasword Puzzle

BRII)GE

PEANUTS
Quality Seamless
Gutters
Maintenance Plus
Cmumrrdnf &amp; Re.\idential

Vinyl

Sitling/Replacemenl
WintiQws/Remodeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740-992·1493 Office
· 740·416-8339 Cell

Free ES!imated

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

•Experienced
References Available!
Cull Gary Slanley @

740-591-8044 .

H&amp;H
Guttering

Joh'§~jU""

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

~·FNt....,._

__

Complete Troo Coni

,
..

740-441-IXJ

-""""

~Dilll:..w

'

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding ·
• Replacement
Wlndowa 1 ·
·Roofing

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

Owner:
JamesK001eell
742·2332'

.'

i

!

'

.

,.,

COW and BOY,
SU1E, WE'LL THIWW
7004lllll()i fJOI.lARS

ARLO

ATOIJ!E~MYTO

6ET IT TO WORJ(, lllT

WHAT'S THE ENVI10N·
MENTAL 'CIIEDIT aaJNCH'

THAT'S GOING
T06ETUSTO '
STOP GLOBAL
WARMING?

-·v
·"'•

GARFIEL.O

Local Contrector

7 40-367·0544
Free Elllmatea

7 40..367-0536

For Remodeling ~nd New House Bulldln1
Call:

0

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• ~oom

Additiops • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Rooting o Pole
Barns o Patio's, Porches and Decks

MilE W. MDC•. IWfiEI
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bollom, OH

740-985-4141
· Cell: 740-4!6-1834

15+.yetJrs e.rperitnct Free Estimates

Advertise
in this space for
$64 per month .

I

hl...-6. .,.,. ;. . ,.,...,,__,..,-!
,
0

~oney

I' 1

*Insured

Please leave mess e

·Garages
• P.olo Buildings
• Room Addition•

NO,

*Prompl and Quality
Work
* Reasonable Rates

Pomeroy, Ohio ··

· Decks

•

-

GRIZZWELLS '
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Ptgc B6 • The Daily Sentinel
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www.mydail ysentinel .com

MfDIA SYNDICATE INC. SPECIAL ADvERTISEMENT FEATURE

AOVERI ISIMENT

.Tul;sday, November 25. 2008
fOR HEAT SURGE, LI,C 3939 EVERHARD RD CANTON OH 44709

hmantle and miracle invention
home heat bills hit rock
om

HMC hosts tea, A7

Mi1'(lele ·
being given away free with orders for real Amish fireplace man'tles to announce the 'invention
that help ~l4sh heat bills, but Amish craftsmen under strain of Christmas.rushforces household limit of2

en

Save money: only uses about 8¢ electric an hour; so turn down your thermostat and never be cold again

-a

PrintedoniOO%
Recycled Newsprint D ...

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

By M.w: Woooo

:;o ( ·I :\ IS • \ u I. ;;X . '\o. •JX

~Jiedlo Syndicote

\\ Ell'\ 1-:sn \\ . :\ 0\'E:\IB 1-:H. 2f&gt;. 2nul:l

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(UMS) Everyone. hates high heat bills. But

we'~ all sick and tired of simply turning down

. the tbermoatat Jlnd then being cold.
. Well now, tiM! popular HEAT SURGE~ mir•acle beaters are actually being given away
· free to the general public for the next 48 hours.
. starting at precisely 8:00 a.m. today. ·
The only thing local readers have to do is
call the National Distribution Hotline before
the 48-hour deadline with their drder for the
handmade Amish Fireplace Mantle. Everyone
who does is instantly being awarded the miracle heater absolutely free.
Thia Ia all happening to announce the HEAT
St)RGB Roll-n-Giow• Fireplace which actually
,rqlla from room-to-room so you can turn down
:Your thermostat and take the heat with you
anywhere. That way, everyone who gets them
first can immediately start saving on their heat
bills.
· ·
·
Just in time for winter weather, portable
Amish encased fireplaces are being;delivered ·
directly to the doors of all those who beat the
deadline.
These remarkable fireplaces are being called
a miracle because they have what's being called
the 'Fireless Flame' patented technology that
gives you the peaceful tUcker of a real fire but
without any flames, fumes, smells, ashes or
mess. Everyone is getting them because they
require no chimney and .no vent. You just plug
them in ..
The Fireless Flame looks so real it amazes
., everybody because it has no real fire. So what's
the catch? Well, soft spoken Amish craftsmen
who take their time hand- building the mantles
have a process that forces a strict household
limit of 2.to keep up with orders.
"We can barely keep up ever since we started giving heaters away free, With winter just
around the corner, everyone's trying to get
them. Amish craftsmen are working their
fingers to the bone to be sure everyone gets
their delivery in time for Christmas," confirms
Timothy Milton,-National Shipping Director.
"These portable Roll-n-Giow Fireplaces are
the latest home decorating sensation. They
actually give you a beautifully redecorated
room while they quickly heat from wall to wall.
winter, sa entire Amish communi·
It's the best way to dress up every room, stay • GENUINE AMISH MANTLES MADE IN THE UsA: Everyone wants to save money on heat bills
ties
are
working
from
the
crack
of
dawn
to
finish.
Thes'
e
fine
real
wood
Amish
made
fireplace
mantles
are
built
to last forever. The oak man~
really.warm and slash your heat bills all at the
tie
is
a
real
steal
at
just
two
hundred
ninety-eight
dollars·
because
all
those
.who
beat
the
order
deadline
by
calling
the National Hotline at
·same time," says Josette Holland, Home Make1·800·235-8052 to order the fireplace mantles are actually getting the imported hi·tech Fireless Flame HEAT SURGE miracle heaters for free.
over Expert.
And here's the best part. Readers who beat are ·surprising the whole family by getting two.
the 48-hour order deadline are getting their So when lines are busy keep trying or log onto
imported hi-tech miracle heaters free when amishfireplaces.com. We promise to get to
encased in the Amish built real wood fireplace every call. Then we can have a delivery truck
· mantles. The mantles are being handmade out to your' door right away ,with your beauti~ ,
in the USA right in the heart·of An\ ish coun- ful Heat Surge Roll-n-Glow Fireplace," Milton
.
try where they are beautifully hand-rubbed, s'aid.
stained and varnished.
"You'll instantly feel bone soothing 'heat in
You just can't find custom made Amish man- any room. You will never have to be cold again,"
tles like this in the national chain stores. That he said.•
makes the oak mantle a real steal for just two On the worldwide well: www.amishf'u-eplaces.com
hundred ninety'eight dollars since the entire
cost of the miracle beater is free.
This free giveaway is the best way to slash
heating bills and stay warm this fall and winter, The HEAT SURGE Roll-n-Glow Fireplace
gives you zone heating and all the beauty and
warmth of a built-in fireplace but rolls from
room-to-room so It can also save you a ton of
money on heating bills.
Even people In Canfornia and Florida are
flocking to get them so they may never have to
turn on their furnace all winter. And since it
uses only about 8 cents of electric an hour on
the standard setting, the potential savings are ·
.
,
, absolutely incredible.
"We are making sure no one gets left out, but
you better burry because entire communities
· of Amish craftsmen are straining to keep up
with demands. For now, we are turning away
all dealers in order to let readers have two per
h&lt;iusehold just as long as they call before the
deadline," confirms Milton.
It's a really smart decision to get two right
now because for only the next 48 hours you get
. . both miracle beaters free. That's like putting
five hundred bucks right in your pocket and
you can save even mo~e money on your month- .
ly heating bills.
"Everyone's calling to get one but those who L_--!:::~~~~~_:~3_~~
.'
are getting their ChristmAs shopping done
1

?LeBron, Cavs easily
New York.
.~feat
J)eePageBl

BY Bm SERGENT .

COL~MBUS

- This
week the Ohio Power Siting
Board (OPSB) authorized
the construction of a 345
kilovolt electric transmission line in Meigs County
associated with the power
plant proposed by American
Municipal Power-Ohio in
~tart Falls.
According to the OPSB,
the five-mile long transmisc
sion line through Letart and

. BY BRIAN

• JQhrl: .8Plullhe1ss, 82

changed precincts after the
voter registration deadline.
Voter turnout for the general election was 67 percent.
Official results were:
President
and
Vice
President: McCaln/Palin,
• Stock market doesn't
6,015,
Obama/Biden,
flinch ~lte economic
4,094, Baldwin/Castle. 34,
Barr/Root,
. 50, .
data, See Page A2
Duncan/Johnson,
12,
• Soldier COIJlPletes ·
McKinney/Clemente, 28,
Moore/Alexander,
10,
.combat training.
Nader/Gonzalez,
Ill,"
See Page A3'
write-in, 53.
•·FDA findS traces of
Ohio Attorney General:
Crites,
4,50.5, Cordray.
· rilelariline ·In infant
4,341; Owens, 633. U.S.
;formula. See
AS'
Representative: Wilson,
ANtaiiee. 4,934, · Stobbs, 4,274,
I
.
Spisak, 441. State Senate:
..~Is for business
Stewart, 6,846, Shriver,
·~!Jupport of breastfeedlng · 2,938, Kettler, 331. ·
State
Representative:
· ~rs, See
A7 ·.
Phillips, 4,133, Thompson,
Tobacco rebQunds
5,898.
.
US. Sf4i Page AS . County · Comirtissioner .
(1/2): · Anderson, 4,162,
Lowery,' 4,016, · Quiekel,
I ,652. &lt;;ounty Commissioner
(113): Bartrum, 6,758,
Sheets, 3,412. Prosecuting
Attorney: WWiams, 7,147.
Clerk of Courts: Lynch,
5,547, Phalin; 4,328. Sheriff:
,Beegle, . 1 ,119.. Recorder:
IDD, 7,666 ..Treasurer: Yost,
1,820. Eng\Jleer: Triplett,
7,459. Coroner: Hunter,·

INSIDE

us

r.
··-:are8stfeeding
"

.1»¥

7978.

· State Board of Education:

CoJJtns, 3,632, Qood, I ,241,
~Ia

..
on Pllge,A2.

'

'

-'16 PAGES

. Aa

87

A4
As
As

.

Obituaries.
h· rts
B Sectt'on

,;po
Weather

A2
·.
faooB Ohio VaDey·PabJiohiD!I eo.
·
,

~

.

·

,

?'. ~~~n

1

u H

I,

•

I'

._!1!111 .·.

Mqore, 2,058. Justice of the
Supreme Court (l/1):
.()'Connor, 5,814, Russo,
2126. Justice of the Supreroe
Court (1/2): · ~ikora, 2,355,
Stratton,· 5,!59; Court of
AJlpeals Judge, Abele.•
Probate/Juvenile
6,501;
Judge,7,799.
State Issue 1 (Filing dead· ·
lines): Yes, · 5,668, No,
3,498. State Issue 2 (Clean
Ohio)1 Yes, 6,035, No,
3,600. State Issue 3
(Property_ . rights): Yes;
7,006, No,' 2,585. State
lsspe 5 (Payday 'loans): Yes·,
6,008, No. 3,930. State
'·fssue 6 . ·(Casino): . Yes,
3,128, No, 1,181 , ·
Pomeroy ~enewal Lc-yr:
Yes,450,No, 166.Columbta
Additional Levy: Yes, 259,
No,
295.
Lebanon
Replacement Levy: Yes, 251,
·No, 1_26. Scipio Replacement
Levy. Yes, 376, No, 145.

~~~~n r~~~~ce~~~ ~9r

Southern Loeal Renewal
Levy: Yes, 1,307,No, 818.

J.

REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BDUARIFS .

•

~

REED

POMEROY - Final outcomes remained unchanged
Tuesday after the Meigs
County Board of Elections
•
conducted its official count
of ballots cast in the Nov. 4
general election.
The board recounted all of
Page AS
the abSentee ballots and those
. • 'Frances Bonecutljjr, 88 billlots ~ast .
. ;;.~~~~'"" ·-~· ·:f~~ctl&lt;aste
. t,2b2y11v1o~te91.!!ilisl&lt;wmho~

B4~6.

• FREE: Get \his '249 miracle hea~i free. It is being
gM!n away free to all.who beat the 48·hour order dead·
Une for yOilr cl&gt;;&gt;ice of the.oak or cherry finish Amish
Mantles. The free heater comes alfe;ldy encased.

J.

,,

Middleport
Council
approves
holiday
bonuses
Bv BRIAN

'A3

• SAFE: The Fireless Flame looks so real it fools
everybody but there is no real fire. That make.s the
flame safe to the touch. It's where the kids will
play and.the cat and dog will sleep.

Following review of the the staff report. The agree- of representatives of the
application , OPSB staff ment, approveo by the Puhlic Utilities Commission
filed a report recommend- Board this· Week, authorizes of Ohio (PUCO). the Ohio
ing that the Board authorize construction of the trans- Environmental Protection
construction of the trans- mission line along the pre- Agency, the state departmission line along the pre- ferred route and includes 26 ments of Development,
ferred route. At a public specific conditions that the Natural
Resources,
hearing held in Racine on company must meet to Agriculture and Health, the
Oct. 22 where nine mem- remediate the environmen· Ohio General Assembly, and
bers of the public testified tal and economic im·pacts the public. The Chairman of
about the proposed line .
presented by the project.
the PUCO ulso chairs the
On Oct 27 AMP-Ohio.
The OPSB revtews appli· OPSB.
OPSB staff and the Office caiions for construction of
Additional information
of the Ohio Attorney large electric and natural gas · regarding this project · is
· General filed an agreement facilities in Ohio. The 11 · ami/able on the OPSB Web
settling concerns raised in member boarq is comprised sire at www.OPSB.ohio.gov.

. BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

:lmrlt 's·Mail)l&lt;IX

par· • SAVES ON. BILLS: Everyone can get low bills
table Roll·n · Giow~ Fireplace that easily rolls and stay warm and cozy. The new Roll·n·Giow
from bedroom to living room to keep you warm. Fireplace saves a ton of money and makes your
No vents, "o chimney and no tools. Just plug it in. · front room look like a million bu~ks.

·

Results
unchanged
after official
ballot count

Rolls anywhere to throw an instant heat wave with no chimney, no vents, no wood and no smoke

• EASILY ROLLS ANYWHERE: This is

Sulton townships will connect the proposed AMPOhio
Great
Bend
Generating Station to the
regional electric grid. AMPOhio plans to begin construction in 2009 and to
have the ' transmission line
and generating station fully
operational in20!4.
AMP-Ohio filed an application for a certificate of
env'ironmental ·compatibility and public need to construct the transmission line
over a year ago.

!!SERGENTOMYOI&lt;ILYSENT!NEL.COM

Charlene Hoefllchlphoto

Ron Vance, Meigs Cooperative Parish director, left, and Don Frymyer, board member ·and
volunteer, rigl:lt, assisted by Robert Smith, unload turkeys donated by Belllslo Foods to be
distributed in Christmas baSkets. ·
·

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Village Council
approved holiday bonuses
for full-time and part-time
employees at Monday 's regular meeting.
·
Council approved $100
bonuses for the village's fulltime employees .and $50 .for
.part-time worker.;. The bontlses were recortunended by the
fmance conunittee, which met
prior to the council meeting.
Building Inspector Randall
Mullins discussed the
progress of the village's
rental inspection program,
He said 45 more units remain
to be inspected between now
and the end of the year, and
that those inspections should
. be completed no later than
Christmas.
·
Now in its second
the
inspection program has operated more smoothly this year
and property ownel'!i .ordered
to make repairs have quickly
complied, Mullins said.
Mullins said rental inspec. lion pennits are now required
for 'i~ction 8 rentals; and that
the agency administering
those Section 8 vouchers
locally is verifying . the
inspection status of all rentals
before they are approved for
occupancy. That, he and
council agreed, is expected to
encourage compli~nce with
the pro~ ram.
Mullms said he has been ·
in contact with Raymond
Andrews. owner of a condemned rental unit on Coal
Street. and said Andrews
intends to repair. the building. Mullins will meet with
Andrews later this week to
· discu ss the building's condition , as well as repairs need·
ed at the Firestone building
downtown and ·a duplex on
South Third Avenue. .
In the J11eantim~ . Village
Administrator
Faymon
Roberts said he has ordered
Andrews to make repairs to
the water meter pit and a
stairway leading to the
meters in the Firestone
building to ensure· safety of
public works employees.
. Council Pre.s1dent Jean
Craig commended Mullins
for .the success of the .
inspection program.
.
"With a cooperative and
supportive council. we are
see uig the results of this
program," Craig said.
Council also:
• Approved payment of bills
in the amount of $7,241 .50.
• Approved payment of
council salaries for 2008, to
be paid at the Dec . 8 meeting.
Present were Craig,
Mayor Michael Gerlach,
Counci 1 Members Sandy
Brown, Rae .Moore , Craig
Wehrung. Shawn Rice and
Julia Houston , and Fiscal
Officer Susan J.Vker.

}t)

to
derful blessing to Meigs · due to the economy so that
County families." She said they can ·put nutritious
the value of this gift from meals on their tables."
· PQMEROY- With hun- Bellisio Foods is about
Rader noted that this year
dreds of Meigs Countians · $2,500.
applications for Christmas
applying for Christmas
"We have heen in partner· food baskets are up abom
food baskets, the donation ship v.ith Bellisio for a 200 meaning that the total
of 112 frozen turkeys frot,n year," said Rader, adding could hit the 800 mark.
Bellisio Foods of Jackson that since January over
The turkeys were picked
was especially welcomed 20,000 individual frozen up Tuesday morning and
by 'the Me1gs County meals . have been donated before noon were being
Cooperative Parish.
and distributed .
unloaded at the God's
Dee Rader, Coordinator of
"We appreciate their car- N.E .T. Youth Center for
ministries for God's N.E.T. ing for our families and storage until time for the
Youth Center, described the offering . these meals to Christmas baskets to be
donated turkeys as "A won, · assist families struggling . delivered.
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Thompson concedes after official count
Bv BI!IAN J.

"There have been many
challenges and obstacles
pver the past several months
and I was never 'left to go
through them alone. I'm
thankful for the many votes
that I received and the trust
that was placed in me to
hold the position llf state
representative."
"The friends I have made
and the lives that have
Please see Count. A5

Re:e:D ·

BR.EEOOM'IDAILYSENTINEL.CQM

·. .ATHENS · - .. Athetts
County
Auditor
Jill
Thompson conceded tt;~ .
Athens City Council woman
Debl)ie Phi11ips after official counts tn the 92nd
Debbie
Jill
House District ended a · Phillips
Thompson
close race in Phillips' favor.
"Today the remaining. short," Thompson said in a
votes were counted and the written statement to news
results show we ~arne up outlets in the dis'trict.

Pomeroy considering employee bonuses
BY BETH

hand out bonuses. Hysell
said she wasn't sure, adding
finding the mone~ to pay
POMEROY - At its most employee health msunmce
recent . meeting, Pomeroy was an immediate concern
Village Council had a dis- but she should know for
cussion about whether or not sure if there are funds _for
it could afford to give bonuses by the next meetmg
employees
Christmas on Dec. 8.
bonuses Ibis year.
"It's going to be close,"
Councilwoman
Mary Hysell satp about the ava1l·
McAngus brought up the ab1hty of fundo for bonuses.
subject, asking Clerk
There are two more pay
Treasurer Kathy Hysell if penods before Chnstmas
~ere were enough funds to and three left until the end of
SERGENT

BSEAGENTOMYDA!LYSENTINELCOM

Jl

the year. Last year full time
employees received $100,
while part-time employe~:s
received $50 bonuses.
In other financial news,
council transferred $13 000
frQ.I!l the general fund t~ the
· street fund with Hysell saying this "might" get the
street department through to
the end of the year. Hysell
also said the police department is now out of its
,. Pluse see Pomeroy, AS
'

..

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