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                  <text>Page B6 - The Daily Sentinel
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www.mydailysentinel.com

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Tuesday, August 14, 2007

FUN, GAMES AND ·puzzLES

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show top lambs, A6

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market goat, A7

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• Triple H Rodeo at
the fair. See Page 81

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFUCH@MVOAILVSENTI NEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - On the
recommendation of the
finance committee
the
employment of the village's
income tax administrator was
terminated by Middleport
Village Council Monday
night by a 5 to I vote.
Councilman Steve Houchins
cast the dissenting vote.
Ferman Moore, committee

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LONG BOTTOM - A
two-vehicle crash on Ohio
248 late Monday killed a
passenger in one of the
vehicles, the. Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway
Patrol reported.
Devin R. Riggs, 15, Long
Botiom, was pronounced
dead at the scene of the 9:30
p.m. accident, the patrol
reported.
Troopers said he was a
passenger in a car driven by
Kenneth R. Riggs, 40, Long
Bottom, that was westbound when it was struck
by . jill :-7~~tl)oup9 ]?.i!=.kJl!l
truck dnven~ -.J(enh o·:
Ridenour, 63, Long Bottom.
Ridenour was injured in
the crash and was taken to
Holzer Medical Center,
troopers · said. Kenneth
Riggs was not treated.
The victim was released
to White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home in Coolville for
arrangements.
The accident ·remains
under investigation and
additional details were not
available.

Harness
•
racmg
set for
Saturday

• ·Meigs Fair Scenes.
.SeePage A8
: • 4-H Fair news.
:See Page A3
:• Singer returns
· to perform locally.
See Page A7

IRD

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Council votes tennination of tax administrator

SPORTS
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POMEROY - Harness
racing has been a part of the
Meigs County Fair for over
a century.
Generations of fans have
enjoyed the racing from the
unique wooden grandstand
at the hi storic fairgrounds
located in Rocksprings.
Unfonunately within the
last decade harness racing
has seen a decline in its popularity across the country.
. National harness racing
organizations have pushed
for new ideas in promoting
the once popular sport. But
gain ing fan s in a sportsflooded market isn't easy.
These organizations have
stressed the importance of
always putting-on a good
show and gelling new fans
into the grandstand .
With this new direction the
Meigs County Fairboard
combined the racing prog~am into one big day Saturday, Aug. 18, starting at
noon. The board anticipates
over 70 horse~&gt; will be competing in up to 16 races. This
mav be the largest race card
ever al Meigs County Fair.
Race fans sitting in the
grandstand have the oppor·
tunity to win an assortment
of prizes including:
• Cash prize, provided by

Please see Racing. AS

chairman, explained prior to
his recommendation for ter·
mination that the conunittee
originally planned only a
reduction in hours for the tax
administrator, necessary as a
cost-saving measure for the
financially-strapped village.
But, he said, after review·
ing contents of a "public
notice" which Carol Cantrell,
tax adffiinistrator, had pulilished in The Daily Sentinel,
the committee changed its

recommendation from reduction of hours to termination.
The notice, according to
interpretation by several
council members and the
fiscal officer. contained allegations of fiscal and procedural misconduct by village
officials. It was noted by
Moore that the information
printed was faxed from village equipment to the news'paper clear! y marked at the
top to be from the "Village

of Middleport, Income Tax
Department" and stated that
it was to be published as a
"public notice to bc:..placed
in the Classified Section."
On the basis of allegations in the "public notice," ·
Moore said the finance
committee had changed its
recommendation from a
reduction of hours to immediate termination.
At an ·earlier meeting
Council had voted to out-

source the operation of the
income tax department to the
Regional
Income Tax
Agency (RITA). However,
Susan Baker, fiscal officer,
reported the agency is not
scheduled to assume the village operation until mid2008, although she will now
make contacts to see if that
can be el\pedited. The decision to use RITA was made
Please see Coundl. AS

flower show announced·
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
The
judges for the 2007 Meigs
County Fair flower shows
have no easy task and
Monday's extensive display
of arrangements and specimens created more of a
ch.allen~e than ever to determme wmners.
Going into selecting the
best from the rest involves
judging creativity in design,
skill in arranging, combination of colors, and quality of
the exhibit. Traditionally
there !lfe two flower shows
at the fair and this year is no
exception. Interest is always
high and this year.in the two
shows there were I ,283
entries. The shows are
staged in the spacious
.J:-!!Q!ll.P. son-~oll§.b ,building
and .-. fah'goers will find
atrangel\lents and exhibits
on display all week. ··
In Monday's show the
best of show award in artistic design went to Shelia
Curtis of Long Bottom with
Joy Bentley of Syracuse
taking reserve best of show,
with Melanie Stethem of
Pomeroy winning the creativity award. In the junior
division, Gracie Carpenter
of Syracuse won best of
show with her arrangement,
with . Deanna Sayre of
Racine taking reserve. The
senior horticulture sweep.stakes went to Bentley, and
the junior award . went to
Deanna Sayre.
Artistic arrangements
In the artistic arrangement
classes, the winners, listed
first to third respectively,
were as follows:
Florida
Keys :
Joy
Bentley. Sheila Curtis, and
Me lame Stethem.
Myrtle
Beach:
Joy
Bentley, Judy Bunger of
Pomeroy, and Patricia
Holter of Pomeroy.
Cypress Gardens: Shelia
Curtis, Patricia,, Holter,
Melanie Stethem.
Vermont
Covered
Bridges: Joy Bentley, Karen
Please see Flowers, AS

i

·

Cha~ene

Hoefllchfphotos

Sheila Curtis won the best of show award In artistic arrangements with her exhibit in the
Cypress Gardens class. She llsed a metal container of unique design featuring cypress
wood and orange glads.

Junior exhibitors Breeanna Manuel, left, and Deeanna Sayre, both of Racine were rosette
winners In the junior division. Breeanna was the horticultu re sweepstakes winner, and her
sister, Deeanna. won reserve champion ih the Plymouth Rock class with her rock container filled with hibiscus foliage, spider mums and purple daisies.

Champion poultry showmen and market pens chosen
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS -Corey
Jarvis and Cheyenne Doczi
were named grand and
reserve champion showmen,
respectively, wnile Morgan
Tucker and Jarvis were
named grand and reserve
market pens, respectively, at
the junior fair poultry show.
Showman ship results are
as follows: Senior ( 17 and
over), Corey Jarvis, first
place, Melissa Snowden, sec'
Beth Sergent( photo
ond place, Lindsey Houser
Parker, third place, also par- Morgan Tucker (second from left) and Corey Jarvis (third
ticipating. Alisah Compson, from left) were named grand and· reserve market pens.
Kyle Hoover, Josh Nelson, respectively, at the junior fair poultry show. Also pictured,
Carrie Phelps. Junior (15-16) Tina Drake, fair queen , Breanna Hayman, poultry princess,
Andrew Bissell, first place, Justin Morris. poultry prince.
Cody Ramage, second place.
Intermediate
( 12-14 ), participating Chelsey Amold, Beginner (nine- II ) Carolann
Cheyenne Doczi·, first place, Hannah Arnold, Brady Stewart, first place, Austin
Justin Morris, second place, Bissell, Savannah Moore, Miller, second place. Abigail
Chase Payne, third place, also Ben Tillis , Coty Will. Houser, third place, also par-

ticipating, Jordyn Arnold,
Haley Bi ssell , Ty Bissell,
Jennifer Casto. Jonathan
Casto, Jcrod Cleland, Megan
Cleland, Breanna Hayman,
Kate Moore, Jesse Mortis,
Matthew Pierce, Dominick
Rhodes, Kirkland Rose.
Breanna Smith, Morgan
Tucker. Joyce.Weddle.
Market poult1y pen results
are as follows : Morgan
Tucker, first place, Corey
·Jarvis,
second
place,
Matthew . Rice, third place,
Ben Tillis. fourth place,
Justin Morris. llfth place,
Kyle Hoover, sixth place, Ty
Bi ssell. seventh place,
Dominick Rhodes. eighth
place, Jesse Morris, ninth
place, Andrew Bissell , tenth
place, Carolann Stewart,
eleventh place. Breanna
Smith, twelfth place, Carrie
Phelps. th irteenth place.

Please see Poultry, AS

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The Daily Sentrel

NATION • WORLD

PageA2 ·
Wednesday, August 15, 2007.

The Daily Sentinel

Japan marks war anniversary;
Cabinet avoids war shrine
IJY HIROKO TABUCHI
ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

AP photo

In this photo released by Utah American Energy Inc., unidentified workers clear the mine passageway of the Crandall
Canyon Mine in an effort to reaq/1 six trapped miners, northwest of Huntington, Utah, on Tuesday. Crews were drilling a
third hole Tuesday in their more than weeklong search for siK missing coal miners, hoping the men had headed to the
back of the mine to reach an air pocket.
·

Frustration mounts over slow pace of mine
rescue; experts qu~stion mine's stability
BY PAUL FOY AND
JENNIFER TALHELM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

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HUNTINGTON, Utah As .frustration mounts over
the slow pace of the di$ging
to free stx trapped iruners,
more questions
arose
Tuesday about whether
risky mining methods may
have left parts of the coal
mine dangerously unstable.
Some rnininf. companies
consider the 'retreat mining" methods used at Utah's
Crandall Canyon so danger~
ous, they will leave behind
coal rather than risk the
safetY of their workers.
Video images taken early
Tuesday showed miners
working to cleat a heavily
damaged mine shaft. They
were only a third of the way
to the presumed location of
the trapped miners - eight
days after a thunderous collal'se· blew out the walls of
mme shafts.
A top mining executive
estimate&lt;;! the digging would
take up to another week.
"It's not fast enough for
me," said Bob Murray, chief
of Murray Energy Corp.,
co-owner and operator of
the Crandall Canr,on mine.
"It's very painfuL '
Miners · had advanced
another 50 feet in the rubble-filled tunnel by Tuesday
evening - but they still
have more than I ,200 feet to
go, Murray said.
The slow pace is especial·
ly painful for a mechanic
who usually works with the
trapped miners but was
called away shortly before
the collapse to fix a truck.
"We don't want to lose 15
more going after six ,"
Jameson Ward said in his
first detailed interview since
the Aug. 6 collapse. "But
there has to be a way to go
faster. It's just too slow."

Ward, 24, said he was
about a quarter-mile from
the men when he heard the
thunderous collapse and felt
the moul)tain tumble. It .was
a force he had never experienced before, the bounce
and the force of the rushing
air so strong it nearly
pushed his pickup sideways, he said.
·
"This was like a whistling
air, lots and lots gushing
toward you," he said. "l
wen! nose down and just
heard it howl, thinkmg,
'What the hell was that?"'
When he jumped out of
his ttuck, the dust was so
thick that his headlarnp was
worthless. "I almost turned
right back around to go in
there, but then I figured,
better not go into a bad situation' by myself," he said. ·
He drove toward the mine
entrance. After a rendezvous with three others,
they alert!d mine officials
to . a problem and headed
back inside with rescue
equipment, he said.
The air remained heavy
with dust and the mountain
continued to roar, Ward
said.
"There were lots of
bounces, stuff was falling
from the roof and sloughing
' off the sides," he said. "I
was thinking, 'I've got to
get to my guys,' but you're
also thinking, ' What if it
keeps goingf There's a risk
it could do it again."
The rescue team crawled
deep into the mine before
,finally hitting a wall of
debris. Unable to do more,
they started digging along
the top of the debris pile to
improve ventilation and
keep air going back into the
blocked mine shaft.
"I think I did everything I
could," said Ward, who has
three years of experience. "I
just hope everybody's OK;

honestly, that's all I can do.'' from the be~inning , and
Around the clock, shifts that's the way 11 will eventuof 80 miners are digging ally come out."
Mine-safety experts say
and helping to remove the
rubble. Much of their time that two sections of the
is spent shoring up walls Crandall Canyon Mine that
and ceilings before a 65-ton collapsed in March may
machine can safely resume have been an early Warning
clawing away at the rubble- sign. They questioned
filled mine shaft
whether the company - and
"We're doing the very best the government agency that
we can as fast as we can," oversees its work - shoOid
said Richard Stickler, head of have closed the mine then.
·the fe&lt;;leral Mine Safety and
Instead, operators moved
Health Adptinistration. "You to another section and con·
couldn't get another r,:rson tinued chipping away at the
into that working area. '
coal.
Above ground, crews
drilling another camera hole
were about halfway to
breaking into a rear section
of the mine. where they
believed the men may have
taken refuge in an air pock·
et Murray said it could take
another day for the drilling
to break throu~h.
.
A second 8-mch drill hole
is being used to pump fresh
air into the mine. Ofticials
are taking air samples from
a smaller hole at 2 l/2 inches.
The mine may have been
made more dangerous by
what Murray acknowledged
was decades of digging using
retreat mining, a common
though sometimes dangerous
method in which miners
yank out a mine's pillars,
grabbing the last ofthe coal .
Murray said the retreat
mining took place before he
took over the mine a year
ago. He said no retreat mining was taking place at the
time of the collapse, which
he insists was tnggered by
an earthquake. Government
seismologists say the mine's
collapse registered as an
earthquake.
"There's no connection
between retreat mining and
the natural disaster that
occurred here," Murray said
Tuesday. "I've said that

TOKYO - Veterans, relatives of war dead and lawmakers crowded a controversial Tokyo war, shrine
as
Japan
Wednesday
marked the 62nd anni versary of its World War II
surrender. But with political sensitivities higher than ·
ever, ,Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe and his Cabinet
stayed away.
Chief
Cabinet
spokesman
Yasuhisa
Shiozaki .said none of
·Abe's 16-member Cabinet
planned to visit the shrine..
It would be the first time in
at least 20 years that no
Cabinet member had gone
on the surrender anniversary, although 46 members
of parliament did attend,
down from 62 last year.
"Each minister made the
decision on their own .not to
go," Shiozaki said.
'
Later Wednesday, Abe
was to speak at a ceremony
with Emperor Akibito at the
Budokan arena, which is
near Yasukuni, in honor of
Japan's war dead.
Abe, who carne to power
in September on a strongly
nationalist platform, has
argued it is natural for a "
head ofstate to pay homage
to Japan's faiJen soldiers.
However, reeling from a
huge setback at last month's
parliamentary elections,
Abe has toned down his
hard-line rttetoric.
Yasukuni, a Shinto
shrine established in 1869,
is vilified b,Y critics for its
role in shapmg Japan's war
ideology in the I 930s and
•40s,
and . promoting
Tokyo's imperialist expansion in Asia.
The shrine also deifies
war criminals executed
after World War II, such as
wartime leader Hideki Tojo.
It hosts a museum that

J

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•llabto- JIIICI 1994

WASHINGTON - Rep.
Dennis Hastert of Illinois,
who served as speaker of
the House longer than any
other Republican in history.
intends to retire next year at
the end of his term, party
officials said Tuesday.
A formal announcement
was planned for Friday.
Hastert's planned retirement is likely to set off a lively scramble between the two
political parties for a House
seat that he has held easi ly
since first elected in 1986.
Hasten' s decision has
been expected since the
GOP lost control of the
House last Nove mber. costing him his powerful post.
He had been speaker, second
in the line of presidential
succession behind the vice
president, for eight years.

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I have been
married for eight years and
have three children under 7.
Over the · years, my busband's behavior has become
increasingly bizarre and
alarming. When we first
married, everything seemed
fine . Slowly, he became
more and more verbally
abusive . Over time, this
abuse extended to the kids.
He calls us every name in
the boQk, curses, screams,
thteatens, has tantrums and
more. In the past year, he
has grabbed my older son
around the neck and
squeezed, once leaving a
h,andprint.
A few years ago, my husband was diagnosed with
OCD, and his doctors wanted to speak to him about
bipolar disorder, at which
!¥lint he refused to return
fpr treatment.
• Annie, our lives are so
miserable, and I am afraid to
leave my kids alone with
their father. I would love to
get a divorce and get out, but
I:am terrified that he will,get
p}lrtial custody and hurt
them ~hen no one is there to
stop him. He has threatened
[\le with all sorts of reperc,ussions should I attempt a

The officials who dis· role as elder statesman
cussed his ·plans did so on among Republicans.
condition yf anonymity
He has been a strong supbecause there had been no porter of the war in Iraq.
public announcement.
As
speaker · during
Hastert's d~cision to President Bush's first six
remain in the House after his years in onice, he labored
speakership was unusual'.
successfully to pass the
His immediate predeces- administration's tax cuts as
sor, Republican Newt well as landmark. Medicare
Gingrich of Georgia, was legislation thai provides a
dogged by scandal when he prescription dru$ benefit.
Democrats saad Hasten's
stepped down as speaker
after two term s, then decision will make it more
resigned from Congress a difficult for Republicans to
hold his seat in Illinois' 14th
short while later.
Before
Gingrich. District, located west of
Democratic Rep. Tom Foley Chicago.
"Any Republican running
of Washington was defeate\1
for re-elec tion in 1994. will have to answer for their
Foley ·s
predecessor, party's failure to be nothing
Democratic Rep. Jim Wright more than a rubber stamp for
of Texas, resigned under an George Bu sh's endless war
in Iraq and his irresponsible
ethics cloud in 1989.
Hastert, 65 , declined to fiscal policies,'' said Doug
run for minority leader after Thornell, spokesman tor the
his party's defeat in the Democratic Congressional
2006 elections, taking on a Campaign Committee.

$onslrlne Circle continues projects of giving
·' RACINE - Several con- "Drinking from the Saucer,"
tributions were reported by a reading, "Songs of Joy"
the Sonshine Circle as a part from Psalms, Nehemiah,
of their program of con- Phillipians and James, and
tributing to. the community quotatoins from authors
at' a recent meeting held at ranging frm C.S. Lewis and
Bethany Methodist Church. Mark Twain to Mother
It was reported that $300 Theresa. Prayer coincluded
had been jliven to the Meigs the program.
Officer reports were given
Cooperallve Food Parish
ll!ld that school supplies col- and Edie Hubbard, card corlected by the Bethany respondent read thank you
Ghutch had ~n delivered. notes from - Ed/)~ 1\Qppp, ,
Krubel, Judy
Plans 1&gt;,ere made io donate Colleen
$200 to the Southern Gilmore,and Connie Smith. ,
kindergarten and elemen- A total of 62 cards of
tary school for the "Milk for encouragement and one
Kids" program. Donations sympathy card were signed
a,re still be taken for the par- by members and it was
sonage fund and may be noted that 14 cars had been
done thrugh Kathryn Hart, it sent out during the month.
Survey papers were
was noted.
Hart presided at the meet· passed out to get an idea
ing with Everlyn and Betty from members about what
Proffitt giving the program. they wanted to do in the
There was a poem, corning months - such as

Fnlme thai newspaper

proto Of print ~ on a
"'"9 rx moose pad.

www.mydailysentinel.com

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divorce, and so have memThi s is unbelievable to more interesting and lessbers of his family. I have no me. Such nerve! Should I needy girls - those who
tangible proof of anything tell Diane what is going on don't depend on their looks
except in my journal.
or just let her find out on her alone to be attractive.
I run a small, part-time own?- Friend in Need
Today my son is married
Dear Friend: We're not to a wonderful gal. averagebusiness, and he has tried
many times to destroy it. He sure how you know this looking and slightl y overgoes on massive spending · information. btit we'll take weigh.t, but fiercely loyal,
sprees and makes sure I you at your word. Yes. tell supporti ve and hard-workdon't have access to "his Diane. Say, "You must have ing. They started out as
money." Please don't say he a very close relationship friends, and their friendship
should see a mental health with your neighbors to "caught fire,'· as Ann
professionaL He won't. I allow them to use your Landers used to say. Maybe
already am seeing someone. house for parties and sleep- "Lonely" has overlooked
overs when you're away." women who would enjoy
What else can I do? She'll take it from there.
his company and have much
Scared Mom
Dear Annie: I have a to offer - .if only he would
Dear Scared: Your husat them.
, band may be bipolar, but it's · question for \'Lonely in LOOK
irrelevant, since he refuses Connecticut," the almost-40 Southern Mama
to get help. He is abusive short, bald man with belowDear Southern: We comaverage
looks
who
can't
get
pletely
agree that too man y
and threatening to .you and
the children, and you have a date. Does he zero-in on men who refuse to look past
to get out of that house now. the 5-foot-8 slender, model- the exterior are missing
Call the National Domestic like blonde with the great some fabulou s women.
Violence Hotline (ndvh.org) body? How about giving the Thanks for the testimonial.
Annie's Mailbox is writat 1-800c799-SAFE (1-800- smallish, even pudgy,
799-7233) and ask for help brown-haired gal with a ten by Katl}y Mitchell and
nice smite and quiet ways a Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
. so you can leave safely.
Dear Annie: My friend, look?
tors of the Ann l,a11ders
"Diane," has a second home
When my attractive, per- column. Please e-mail your
iil my city, and many times, sonality-plus charismatic questions to anniesmailshe and her husband go out soti complained that he box@comcast.net, or write
of town. Their neighbor has couldn't find anything . but to: Annie's Mailbox, P. 0.
a key to pick up mail and high-maintenance girls, I Box 118190, Chicago, JL
)"ater the plants. but some- asked if, when he entered a 60611. To find out more
times will entertain in their club, he scanned for the best about Annie's Mailbox,
home while they are gone. lookers there. He answered, · · and read features by other
Occasionally, the neighbor "Of course!" I suggested Creators Sy11dicate writers
even lets her company sleep that he eliminate all those and cartoonists, visit the
in their beds. She does not girls and check out the next Creators Syndicate Web
have,perrnissiol) to do this. 'level and see if he finds page at www.creators.com.

POMEROY ·
·_Two
Meigs County 4-H members were Outslfnding of
the Day winners at the Ohio
'State Fair.
· They
were
Amber
Davidson in "I Spy in the
Kitchen,"
and
garrett
Ritchie in "Ohio Birds."
• Winners in the Meigs .
County junior d;Ury show at
the Meigs County Fair
Monay were as follows:
. Showmanship: Old Pro:
first, Kelsey Holter; second,
Qeorgana Koblentz; third,.
Nathan Cook; fourth,
Benjamin Ayres; fifth, Kara
Osborne; sixth, Audrionna
Pullins; seventh, Hannah
Yost; eighth, Stephen Yost.
Experienced:
first ,
Brenna Holter; second, Kirk
Pullins;
third, . Kiana
Osborne; fourth, Trenton
Cook; fifth, Garrett Ritchie;
sixth, Brianna Ayres; seventh, Jordan Koblentz.
~ovice:
first, Kayla

Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert
leaving Congress after this term
Bv DAVID ESPO

f}et out of that house now

fund raisers and charity
work.
Chairpersons
were
appointed as follows: noodle
committee-Hazel
McKelvey; membership
committee,
Evelyn
Fo,reman; float committe,
Edie Hubbard; bear fund,
Blondina Rainer; fruit baskets, Betty P-roffitt; and
flowers for sick, Proffitt.
4ppQiuted ,to , ~ .im ,, the
executive committee were
Ruth Simpson and Letha
Proffitt.
Proffitt and Evelyn
Foreman had a skit on
"Picking Cotton1' and had a
report all about cotton and
its origin and what it means
to us today. After a prayer
by Foreman refreshments
were served to the following
members; Mattie
Beegle, Martha Lou Beegle,

4-H FAIR NEWS

•

AP SPEtiAL CORRESPONDENT

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

depicts J,apan's conquests
as a crusade agamst
Western colonialism.
Abe's
predecessor,
Junichiro Koizurni. made
repeated visits to the shrine
-including one on the sur-.
render anniversary last year
- and incensed China and
South Korea, triggering :
refusals to hold summits :
with him. Koizumi paid a: .
visit to Yasukuni early ·
Wednesday.
'
Abe regularly prayed a\-,
Yasukuni before he became
prime minister, but has not '
gone si nee.
"
He has pushed througl): ·
legislation aimed at amend&lt;
ing the country's pacifist;
and
has,
constitution,
upgraded the Defense
Agency to a full ministry - :
part of efforts to give the·
Japanese military a largerglobal role. He has als~ .
introduced laws requiring
schools to teach patriotism. "'
Some visitors to the
shrine were disappointed'
Abe wasn't there.

10 l ..mau•ddre•e.
1'1111 Spam ,_i&lt;ln

BYTHEBEND

Tripp; second,
Shana
Guernsey:
Grand
Champion, Kiana Osborne;
Roush
Pee Wee: no order: Reserve Champion, Kara
Jessica Cook, Maddison Osborne.
Jersey: Grand Champion,
Finlaw, Taylor . Parker,
Laura Pullins, Clayton Audrionna Pullins; Reserve
Ritchie, Tiffany Tripp.
Champion, Kirk Pullins.
Grand
Champion
Holstein:
Grand
Showman: Kelsey Holter
Champion: Brenna Holter;
Reserve
Champion Reserve
Champion :
Showman:
Georganna Georganna Koblentz.
Milking Shorthorn: Grand
Koblentz
• Grand Champion,
Ayrshire:
Kelsey Holter;
Champion, Kirk Pullins; Reserve Champion, Kayla
Reserve Champion, Kirk Tripp.
Pullins.
In the 4-H Booth Judging
Brown Swiss: Grand first place went to the Whiz
Champion, Brenna Holter; Kids; second to the Silver
Reserve Champion, Brianna Siprus, and third to The
Ayres , ·
Bashan Bunch .

· Mable Brace.
Julie
Campbell, Evelyn Foreman,
Kathryn Hart,
Avis
Harrison, Lillian Hayman,
Nondus Hendricks, Edie
Hubbard, Hazel McKelvey,
Betty
Proffitt,
Letha
Proffitt, Blondina Rainer,
Ruth Simpson, Holly Stump
and Ann Zirkle.
Next meeting ·will be
Sept 13 at 7 p.m: Women of
the community are invited.

PageA3
\Vedhesday, August15,2007

Community Calendar
Public meetings

SchooL
Thursday, Aug. 16
Wednesday, Aug. 15
RA CINE
- Southern
RACINE - Financial Local School Board, speciru
Pl anning
Supervision meeting. 9 a.m., high school
Commission , regu lar meet- media center, discussion on
ing, 10:30 a.m., high school personnel and other school
media room, Southern High business matters.

Galll~olls rM ~a~~ CoUen.A
. ''Caremdose1o Home" P'

446-4367
1·800-214-0452 ....._._A
1111112741

PROUD TO SUPPORT

THE

MBigg County ~a it

SFS TRUCK SALES,

............
r···--··--•..

(740) t.~

luulacllrlr al Pralnl
llalapiiMia, IIIIIJ lily
tiiCII Pull ud llnicl

�t •

~

~

The Daily Sentrel

NATION • WORLD

PageA2 ·
Wednesday, August 15, 2007.

The Daily Sentinel

Japan marks war anniversary;
Cabinet avoids war shrine
IJY HIROKO TABUCHI
ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

AP photo

In this photo released by Utah American Energy Inc., unidentified workers clear the mine passageway of the Crandall
Canyon Mine in an effort to reaq/1 six trapped miners, northwest of Huntington, Utah, on Tuesday. Crews were drilling a
third hole Tuesday in their more than weeklong search for siK missing coal miners, hoping the men had headed to the
back of the mine to reach an air pocket.
·

Frustration mounts over slow pace of mine
rescue; experts qu~stion mine's stability
BY PAUL FOY AND
JENNIFER TALHELM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

...
''

.
I'
'.'
....

.

I ,

•'.&lt;·

.

.

'

HUNTINGTON, Utah As .frustration mounts over
the slow pace of the di$ging
to free stx trapped iruners,
more questions
arose
Tuesday about whether
risky mining methods may
have left parts of the coal
mine dangerously unstable.
Some rnininf. companies
consider the 'retreat mining" methods used at Utah's
Crandall Canyon so danger~
ous, they will leave behind
coal rather than risk the
safetY of their workers.
Video images taken early
Tuesday showed miners
working to cleat a heavily
damaged mine shaft. They
were only a third of the way
to the presumed location of
the trapped miners - eight
days after a thunderous collal'se· blew out the walls of
mme shafts.
A top mining executive
estimate&lt;;! the digging would
take up to another week.
"It's not fast enough for
me," said Bob Murray, chief
of Murray Energy Corp.,
co-owner and operator of
the Crandall Canr,on mine.
"It's very painfuL '
Miners · had advanced
another 50 feet in the rubble-filled tunnel by Tuesday
evening - but they still
have more than I ,200 feet to
go, Murray said.
The slow pace is especial·
ly painful for a mechanic
who usually works with the
trapped miners but was
called away shortly before
the collapse to fix a truck.
"We don't want to lose 15
more going after six ,"
Jameson Ward said in his
first detailed interview since
the Aug. 6 collapse. "But
there has to be a way to go
faster. It's just too slow."

Ward, 24, said he was
about a quarter-mile from
the men when he heard the
thunderous collapse and felt
the moul)tain tumble. It .was
a force he had never experienced before, the bounce
and the force of the rushing
air so strong it nearly
pushed his pickup sideways, he said.
·
"This was like a whistling
air, lots and lots gushing
toward you," he said. "l
wen! nose down and just
heard it howl, thinkmg,
'What the hell was that?"'
When he jumped out of
his ttuck, the dust was so
thick that his headlarnp was
worthless. "I almost turned
right back around to go in
there, but then I figured,
better not go into a bad situation' by myself," he said. ·
He drove toward the mine
entrance. After a rendezvous with three others,
they alert!d mine officials
to . a problem and headed
back inside with rescue
equipment, he said.
The air remained heavy
with dust and the mountain
continued to roar, Ward
said.
"There were lots of
bounces, stuff was falling
from the roof and sloughing
' off the sides," he said. "I
was thinking, 'I've got to
get to my guys,' but you're
also thinking, ' What if it
keeps goingf There's a risk
it could do it again."
The rescue team crawled
deep into the mine before
,finally hitting a wall of
debris. Unable to do more,
they started digging along
the top of the debris pile to
improve ventilation and
keep air going back into the
blocked mine shaft.
"I think I did everything I
could," said Ward, who has
three years of experience. "I
just hope everybody's OK;

honestly, that's all I can do.'' from the be~inning , and
Around the clock, shifts that's the way 11 will eventuof 80 miners are digging ally come out."
Mine-safety experts say
and helping to remove the
rubble. Much of their time that two sections of the
is spent shoring up walls Crandall Canyon Mine that
and ceilings before a 65-ton collapsed in March may
machine can safely resume have been an early Warning
clawing away at the rubble- sign. They questioned
filled mine shaft
whether the company - and
"We're doing the very best the government agency that
we can as fast as we can," oversees its work - shoOid
said Richard Stickler, head of have closed the mine then.
·the fe&lt;;leral Mine Safety and
Instead, operators moved
Health Adptinistration. "You to another section and con·
couldn't get another r,:rson tinued chipping away at the
into that working area. '
coal.
Above ground, crews
drilling another camera hole
were about halfway to
breaking into a rear section
of the mine. where they
believed the men may have
taken refuge in an air pock·
et Murray said it could take
another day for the drilling
to break throu~h.
.
A second 8-mch drill hole
is being used to pump fresh
air into the mine. Ofticials
are taking air samples from
a smaller hole at 2 l/2 inches.
The mine may have been
made more dangerous by
what Murray acknowledged
was decades of digging using
retreat mining, a common
though sometimes dangerous
method in which miners
yank out a mine's pillars,
grabbing the last ofthe coal .
Murray said the retreat
mining took place before he
took over the mine a year
ago. He said no retreat mining was taking place at the
time of the collapse, which
he insists was tnggered by
an earthquake. Government
seismologists say the mine's
collapse registered as an
earthquake.
"There's no connection
between retreat mining and
the natural disaster that
occurred here," Murray said
Tuesday. "I've said that

TOKYO - Veterans, relatives of war dead and lawmakers crowded a controversial Tokyo war, shrine
as
Japan
Wednesday
marked the 62nd anni versary of its World War II
surrender. But with political sensitivities higher than ·
ever, ,Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe and his Cabinet
stayed away.
Chief
Cabinet
spokesman
Yasuhisa
Shiozaki .said none of
·Abe's 16-member Cabinet
planned to visit the shrine..
It would be the first time in
at least 20 years that no
Cabinet member had gone
on the surrender anniversary, although 46 members
of parliament did attend,
down from 62 last year.
"Each minister made the
decision on their own .not to
go," Shiozaki said.
'
Later Wednesday, Abe
was to speak at a ceremony
with Emperor Akibito at the
Budokan arena, which is
near Yasukuni, in honor of
Japan's war dead.
Abe, who carne to power
in September on a strongly
nationalist platform, has
argued it is natural for a "
head ofstate to pay homage
to Japan's faiJen soldiers.
However, reeling from a
huge setback at last month's
parliamentary elections,
Abe has toned down his
hard-line rttetoric.
Yasukuni, a Shinto
shrine established in 1869,
is vilified b,Y critics for its
role in shapmg Japan's war
ideology in the I 930s and
•40s,
and . promoting
Tokyo's imperialist expansion in Asia.
The shrine also deifies
war criminals executed
after World War II, such as
wartime leader Hideki Tojo.
It hosts a museum that

J

,•.

lrwolco lllllng ...,lloblo ·
•llabto- JIIICI 1994

WASHINGTON - Rep.
Dennis Hastert of Illinois,
who served as speaker of
the House longer than any
other Republican in history.
intends to retire next year at
the end of his term, party
officials said Tuesday.
A formal announcement
was planned for Friday.
Hastert's planned retirement is likely to set off a lively scramble between the two
political parties for a House
seat that he has held easi ly
since first elected in 1986.
Hasten' s decision has
been expected since the
GOP lost control of the
House last Nove mber. costing him his powerful post.
He had been speaker, second
in the line of presidential
succession behind the vice
president, for eight years.

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I have been
married for eight years and
have three children under 7.
Over the · years, my busband's behavior has become
increasingly bizarre and
alarming. When we first
married, everything seemed
fine . Slowly, he became
more and more verbally
abusive . Over time, this
abuse extended to the kids.
He calls us every name in
the boQk, curses, screams,
thteatens, has tantrums and
more. In the past year, he
has grabbed my older son
around the neck and
squeezed, once leaving a
h,andprint.
A few years ago, my husband was diagnosed with
OCD, and his doctors wanted to speak to him about
bipolar disorder, at which
!¥lint he refused to return
fpr treatment.
• Annie, our lives are so
miserable, and I am afraid to
leave my kids alone with
their father. I would love to
get a divorce and get out, but
I:am terrified that he will,get
p}lrtial custody and hurt
them ~hen no one is there to
stop him. He has threatened
[\le with all sorts of reperc,ussions should I attempt a

The officials who dis· role as elder statesman
cussed his ·plans did so on among Republicans.
condition yf anonymity
He has been a strong supbecause there had been no porter of the war in Iraq.
public announcement.
As
speaker · during
Hastert's d~cision to President Bush's first six
remain in the House after his years in onice, he labored
speakership was unusual'.
successfully to pass the
His immediate predeces- administration's tax cuts as
sor, Republican Newt well as landmark. Medicare
Gingrich of Georgia, was legislation thai provides a
dogged by scandal when he prescription dru$ benefit.
Democrats saad Hasten's
stepped down as speaker
after two term s, then decision will make it more
resigned from Congress a difficult for Republicans to
hold his seat in Illinois' 14th
short while later.
Before
Gingrich. District, located west of
Democratic Rep. Tom Foley Chicago.
"Any Republican running
of Washington was defeate\1
for re-elec tion in 1994. will have to answer for their
Foley ·s
predecessor, party's failure to be nothing
Democratic Rep. Jim Wright more than a rubber stamp for
of Texas, resigned under an George Bu sh's endless war
in Iraq and his irresponsible
ethics cloud in 1989.
Hastert, 65 , declined to fiscal policies,'' said Doug
run for minority leader after Thornell, spokesman tor the
his party's defeat in the Democratic Congressional
2006 elections, taking on a Campaign Committee.

$onslrlne Circle continues projects of giving
·' RACINE - Several con- "Drinking from the Saucer,"
tributions were reported by a reading, "Songs of Joy"
the Sonshine Circle as a part from Psalms, Nehemiah,
of their program of con- Phillipians and James, and
tributing to. the community quotatoins from authors
at' a recent meeting held at ranging frm C.S. Lewis and
Bethany Methodist Church. Mark Twain to Mother
It was reported that $300 Theresa. Prayer coincluded
had been jliven to the Meigs the program.
Officer reports were given
Cooperallve Food Parish
ll!ld that school supplies col- and Edie Hubbard, card corlected by the Bethany respondent read thank you
Ghutch had ~n delivered. notes from - Ed/)~ 1\Qppp, ,
Krubel, Judy
Plans 1&gt;,ere made io donate Colleen
$200 to the Southern Gilmore,and Connie Smith. ,
kindergarten and elemen- A total of 62 cards of
tary school for the "Milk for encouragement and one
Kids" program. Donations sympathy card were signed
a,re still be taken for the par- by members and it was
sonage fund and may be noted that 14 cars had been
done thrugh Kathryn Hart, it sent out during the month.
Survey papers were
was noted.
Hart presided at the meet· passed out to get an idea
ing with Everlyn and Betty from members about what
Proffitt giving the program. they wanted to do in the
There was a poem, corning months - such as

Fnlme thai newspaper

proto Of print ~ on a
"'"9 rx moose pad.

www.mydailysentinel.com

,•

•

•

divorce, and so have memThi s is unbelievable to more interesting and lessbers of his family. I have no me. Such nerve! Should I needy girls - those who
tangible proof of anything tell Diane what is going on don't depend on their looks
except in my journal.
or just let her find out on her alone to be attractive.
I run a small, part-time own?- Friend in Need
Today my son is married
Dear Friend: We're not to a wonderful gal. averagebusiness, and he has tried
many times to destroy it. He sure how you know this looking and slightl y overgoes on massive spending · information. btit we'll take weigh.t, but fiercely loyal,
sprees and makes sure I you at your word. Yes. tell supporti ve and hard-workdon't have access to "his Diane. Say, "You must have ing. They started out as
money." Please don't say he a very close relationship friends, and their friendship
should see a mental health with your neighbors to "caught fire,'· as Ann
professionaL He won't. I allow them to use your Landers used to say. Maybe
already am seeing someone. house for parties and sleep- "Lonely" has overlooked
overs when you're away." women who would enjoy
What else can I do? She'll take it from there.
his company and have much
Scared Mom
Dear Annie: I have a to offer - .if only he would
Dear Scared: Your husat them.
, band may be bipolar, but it's · question for \'Lonely in LOOK
irrelevant, since he refuses Connecticut," the almost-40 Southern Mama
to get help. He is abusive short, bald man with belowDear Southern: We comaverage
looks
who
can't
get
pletely
agree that too man y
and threatening to .you and
the children, and you have a date. Does he zero-in on men who refuse to look past
to get out of that house now. the 5-foot-8 slender, model- the exterior are missing
Call the National Domestic like blonde with the great some fabulou s women.
Violence Hotline (ndvh.org) body? How about giving the Thanks for the testimonial.
Annie's Mailbox is writat 1-800c799-SAFE (1-800- smallish, even pudgy,
799-7233) and ask for help brown-haired gal with a ten by Katl}y Mitchell and
nice smite and quiet ways a Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
. so you can leave safely.
Dear Annie: My friend, look?
tors of the Ann l,a11ders
"Diane," has a second home
When my attractive, per- column. Please e-mail your
iil my city, and many times, sonality-plus charismatic questions to anniesmailshe and her husband go out soti complained that he box@comcast.net, or write
of town. Their neighbor has couldn't find anything . but to: Annie's Mailbox, P. 0.
a key to pick up mail and high-maintenance girls, I Box 118190, Chicago, JL
)"ater the plants. but some- asked if, when he entered a 60611. To find out more
times will entertain in their club, he scanned for the best about Annie's Mailbox,
home while they are gone. lookers there. He answered, · · and read features by other
Occasionally, the neighbor "Of course!" I suggested Creators Sy11dicate writers
even lets her company sleep that he eliminate all those and cartoonists, visit the
in their beds. She does not girls and check out the next Creators Syndicate Web
have,perrnissiol) to do this. 'level and see if he finds page at www.creators.com.

POMEROY ·
·_Two
Meigs County 4-H members were Outslfnding of
the Day winners at the Ohio
'State Fair.
· They
were
Amber
Davidson in "I Spy in the
Kitchen,"
and
garrett
Ritchie in "Ohio Birds."
• Winners in the Meigs .
County junior d;Ury show at
the Meigs County Fair
Monay were as follows:
. Showmanship: Old Pro:
first, Kelsey Holter; second,
Qeorgana Koblentz; third,.
Nathan Cook; fourth,
Benjamin Ayres; fifth, Kara
Osborne; sixth, Audrionna
Pullins; seventh, Hannah
Yost; eighth, Stephen Yost.
Experienced:
first ,
Brenna Holter; second, Kirk
Pullins;
third, . Kiana
Osborne; fourth, Trenton
Cook; fifth, Garrett Ritchie;
sixth, Brianna Ayres; seventh, Jordan Koblentz.
~ovice:
first, Kayla

Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert
leaving Congress after this term
Bv DAVID ESPO

f}et out of that house now

fund raisers and charity
work.
Chairpersons
were
appointed as follows: noodle
committee-Hazel
McKelvey; membership
committee,
Evelyn
Fo,reman; float committe,
Edie Hubbard; bear fund,
Blondina Rainer; fruit baskets, Betty P-roffitt; and
flowers for sick, Proffitt.
4ppQiuted ,to , ~ .im ,, the
executive committee were
Ruth Simpson and Letha
Proffitt.
Proffitt and Evelyn
Foreman had a skit on
"Picking Cotton1' and had a
report all about cotton and
its origin and what it means
to us today. After a prayer
by Foreman refreshments
were served to the following
members; Mattie
Beegle, Martha Lou Beegle,

4-H FAIR NEWS

•

AP SPEtiAL CORRESPONDENT

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

depicts J,apan's conquests
as a crusade agamst
Western colonialism.
Abe's
predecessor,
Junichiro Koizurni. made
repeated visits to the shrine
-including one on the sur-.
render anniversary last year
- and incensed China and
South Korea, triggering :
refusals to hold summits :
with him. Koizumi paid a: .
visit to Yasukuni early ·
Wednesday.
'
Abe regularly prayed a\-,
Yasukuni before he became
prime minister, but has not '
gone si nee.
"
He has pushed througl): ·
legislation aimed at amend&lt;
ing the country's pacifist;
and
has,
constitution,
upgraded the Defense
Agency to a full ministry - :
part of efforts to give the·
Japanese military a largerglobal role. He has als~ .
introduced laws requiring
schools to teach patriotism. "'
Some visitors to the
shrine were disappointed'
Abe wasn't there.

10 l ..mau•ddre•e.
1'1111 Spam ,_i&lt;ln

BYTHEBEND

Tripp; second,
Shana
Guernsey:
Grand
Champion, Kiana Osborne;
Roush
Pee Wee: no order: Reserve Champion, Kara
Jessica Cook, Maddison Osborne.
Jersey: Grand Champion,
Finlaw, Taylor . Parker,
Laura Pullins, Clayton Audrionna Pullins; Reserve
Ritchie, Tiffany Tripp.
Champion, Kirk Pullins.
Grand
Champion
Holstein:
Grand
Showman: Kelsey Holter
Champion: Brenna Holter;
Reserve
Champion Reserve
Champion :
Showman:
Georganna Georganna Koblentz.
Milking Shorthorn: Grand
Koblentz
• Grand Champion,
Ayrshire:
Kelsey Holter;
Champion, Kirk Pullins; Reserve Champion, Kayla
Reserve Champion, Kirk Tripp.
Pullins.
In the 4-H Booth Judging
Brown Swiss: Grand first place went to the Whiz
Champion, Brenna Holter; Kids; second to the Silver
Reserve Champion, Brianna Siprus, and third to The
Ayres , ·
Bashan Bunch .

· Mable Brace.
Julie
Campbell, Evelyn Foreman,
Kathryn Hart,
Avis
Harrison, Lillian Hayman,
Nondus Hendricks, Edie
Hubbard, Hazel McKelvey,
Betty
Proffitt,
Letha
Proffitt, Blondina Rainer,
Ruth Simpson, Holly Stump
and Ann Zirkle.
Next meeting ·will be
Sept 13 at 7 p.m: Women of
the community are invited.

PageA3
\Vedhesday, August15,2007

Community Calendar
Public meetings

SchooL
Thursday, Aug. 16
Wednesday, Aug. 15
RA CINE
- Southern
RACINE - Financial Local School Board, speciru
Pl anning
Supervision meeting. 9 a.m., high school
Commission , regu lar meet- media center, discussion on
ing, 10:30 a.m., high school personnel and other school
media room, Southern High business matters.

Galll~olls rM ~a~~ CoUen.A
. ''Caremdose1o Home" P'

446-4367
1·800-214-0452 ....._._A
1111112741

PROUD TO SUPPORT

THE

MBigg County ~a it

SFS TRUCK SALES,

............
r···--··--•..

(740) t.~

luulacllrlr al Pralnl
llalapiiMia, IIIIIJ lily
tiiCII Pull ud llnicl

�.. .

••

1
'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

During
a
recent
Democ ratic debate, both
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
Sens. Hillary Clinton and
www.mydallysentlnel.com
Barack Obama indicated
that all fem ale U.S. citize ns
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
should register for the
Selective Service. Neither
candidate was as ridiculous
Dan Goodrl.c h
as former Alaska Sen. Mike
Publisher
Gravel, who said, when it
comes
to men and women
Charlene Hoeflich'
being drafted, "What's the
General Manager-News Editor
difference?" But the radical
and dangerous impl ications
of the front-runners' policie s are not that far from
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Gravel's query.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
the
The
attitude
Democrat
s
have
on
this
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
issue has already caused
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
harm to the military. Elaine
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition Donnelly, president of the
the Government for a redress of grievances.
Center
for
Military
Readiness, has been watch- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution . ing the feminization of military-personnel policy for
decades. In an article for
The Duke Journal of
Gender Law &amp; Policy, she
explains that "gender-integrated . basic training is
based on the unreali sti c
assumption that men and
women are interchangeable
in all military roles. The
concept tries to ·circumvent
or disguise physical differences with gender-normed
training standards that
Dear Editor:
reward equal effort rather
.In response to Meigs Local rehiring Mr. Buckley at his
present salary after retiring. Isn't that' double pay for the
same work? On 55, they take away and cut the amount
received working.
I think if he felt he needed to retire then he shouldn't be
hired back and give someone else a chance to prosper for a
future retirement. ·
As a taxpayer, this is just another step to make the
wealthy more money and the middle and poor class poorer.
This country no longer cares about others and it's not
like living in our country anymore.
D.B. Rowlands
Pomeroy

VIEW

Double·pay?
QJestions school boards·action

Kathryn
Lopez

than equal results."
Yes, there are differences
between ge nders, Mr.
Gravel. According to one
of Donnell y's many examples of the ditferent scoring
of supposed equ als: The
Navy has male trainees do
a minimum of 42 push-ups
for a minimum score;
women must do 17. Men
(ages 20 to 24) must swim
500 yards in 12 mi notes, 15
seconds; women (ages 20
to 24) get 14 minutes to
accomplish the same.
The radicalism of the
Democrats' desire to have
women in the military can
be seen with a look to the
legal system. In 1981 , the
Supreme Court upheld .the
constitutionality of the
male-only requirement for
Selective Service registration, reasoning that the
whole point "was to prepare for a draft of combat
troops."

..

Women· are currently defining to me ," said
banned fro m combat. If we Vaught. Well, it isn' t definneeded to draft Americans, ing to me and fihouldn' t be
would Clinton require to any rational-thinking
women to sign up for the human.
Selecti ve Service in prepaSen. James Webb, D-Va.,
ration for mandatory combat duty? Would you con- would be doing his nation a
script America's daugh- service if he made his ratioters? That's the sad direc- nal view of women's role in
tion we' ve been beading in. the military his pel cause; I
Under the Clinton admin- don ' t agree with Webb on
istration, a Pentagon "risk everything, but the senator
rule" was eliminated, opep- has written at length about
i ng 80 percent of all the fundamental flaws with
American military jobs to
women. "That ri sk rule, the military treating men
prior to its repeal, prevent- and women the same. If he
ed women from being called Donnelly to the
assigned to units that posed Senate and had her suggest
a risk-of attack or capture recommendation s for treat- a ru(e that would have ing men and women differspared the life of supply ently in the interest of the
clerk Lori Piestewa, a 24- safety of our troops, maybe
year-old single mother of we would realize that we
two (now 5 and 6).
Piestewa's brother told a shouldn' t be drafting
reporter that Lori felt that women: We should be
"she wasn't going to be drafting a realistic vision of
anywhere near any type of women's role in the armed
dangerous situation."
forc~s - one acknowledgBut according to Air ing real and natural differForce Brig. Gen. Wilma L. ences.
Vaught, it was some kind of
(Kathryn Lopez is the
feminist victory that she
was . "The~' s been an editor of National Review
acceptance of the fact that Online · (www.nationalrewomen · ... are in harm's view.com). She can be conway and they are being tactei/ ai k/opez@natjonalkilled," she says:: "That is revie.;v,.com.)

ICAN'T SlEEP...
I THINK THE MORTGAGE
MONSTER 15 UNDER

MY BED.

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Highway Patrol

:: TUPPERS PLAINS - A two-vehicle accident with
· · injuries Tuesday on Ohio 7 near Eastern High School
j remained under investigation by the Gallia-Meigs Post .of
i the State Highway Patrol.
·
c Additional details on the I0:29 a.m. crash were unavail. . able before presstime.
Troopers were also investigating a one-car accident with
: ·injury on Ohio 7 south of Story's Run Road at 3:28 p.m.
: Monday. Details on the crash were also unavailable.

•••

,' PORTLAND - Kristina D. Higginbotham, 25, 51090
i ·Township Road 43, Long Bottom, was cited for failure to
( :C&lt;1nttol by the patrol following a one-car accident Sunday
::6ft Ohio 124.
·
!.;.,;J'q)()pers $aid Higginbotham was eastbound in ·Lebanon '
: Township at 12:30 a.m. when she failed to negotiate a left
' curve, went off the right side of the road and traveled into
a building. The driver told troopers she swerved to miss a
deer crossing the road.
:. The car· had disabling damage, troopers said.

Wedn~sday ... P ar t ly

sunny. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the afternoon. Hot with
highs in the lower 90s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph ... Becoming northwest
in the afternoon. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
Wednesday
night ...
Mostly cloudy. A slight
chance of showers and
thunderstorms
in
the
evening .. .Then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
after midnight. Lows in the
mid 60s. Southeast winds
around 5 mph ... Becoming
south
after
midnight.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
T)mrsday...Partly sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Hot
with highs in the lower 90s.
S~uthwe st winds 10 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday night. .. Mostly

' 53.55
'1 07.1o
'214.21

L------1·--------------------------~

Something's cooking at the CL4
I ran into Louise. a friend
I hadn't seen in many years.
While she and I caught up
with each other in the supermarket's produce aisle, I
asked abo'll her son, Jeffrey.
"Didn ' t
you
know?
Jeffrey 's in the CIA."
Of course I didn 't know.
Isn't that s upposed to be a
secret? Should she really be
telling me that? Is he even
allowed to tell his own
mother that he's in the CIA''
That seems very indiscreet.
I've known Louise for
many years. She 's a sweetheart, but I wouldn't tell her
anything I wouldn' t want to
hear on the 5 p.m. news.
She 's a chatterbox . And
Jeffrey, as I remember, was
even worse.
Jeffrey couldn't keep his
mouth shut on a bet. He was
always the life of the party,
spilling the beans on everyone to everyone. If-he's in
the CIA, trust me, we' re all
in trouble. Why bother to
se nd out wedding invita-

Jim
Mullen

lions when you could just
tell Jeffrey the date and it'd
be all over town the next
day?
, They wouldn ' t have · to
torture Je ffrey or hire a
beautiful female spy to pre.tend she was in love with
him to get info out of him .
All they 'd have to do is buy
him a nice meal and few
beers and he'd spill his guts .
"Last week he was in
Pari s," Louise said, "Next
week he' ll be in Milan. He's
says he's going to Spain in
Ocreber."
Note to self: Avoid Paris
and Milan at all cosJs. If the
CIA is sending Jeffrey there ,
you can bet something is up1

"He's working on a topo.
secret deal, that if it goes
through will change the
lives of a lot of people."
An assassination? A coup?
A coordinated, multipronged plan to secretly
change another government's wayward foreign
policy? And why is . he
telling all this to his Mom?
If she knows, I know. How
many people did she tell
before I ran into her? And I
will tell Sue what Louise
told me and then Sue will
tell her friends and on it
goes. Thi s is a huge security
breech.
"Do you really think we
should be talking about this
in public?" I asked her. "In
the middle of a grocery
store? Aren't you scared that
he might be kidnapped and
tortured?"
"Why would anyone torture Jeffrey''"
"To find out his secrets, to
find out everything he
knows."

Louise is backing away
from me. "What is the matter with you? He's just a
chef. He doesn't know any
secrets."

"Just a chef? Oh. When
you told me he was in the.
CIA, I thought you meant he
was a spy. But he just cooks
for the CIA. Still, that must
be dangerous, going to all
the world's trouble spots."
Louise is rolling her eyeballs now. "He doesn't cook
for the CIA, he's at the CIA,
the Culinary Institute of
America. Jeffrey would
make the worst spy · in the
world. Everybody knows he
can't keep a secret.
"Then again, he never will
tell me what he puts in his
creme brulee that makes it
taste so good."
(Jim Mullen is the author of
"It Takes a Village Idiot:
Complicating the Simple
Life" and "Baby 's First
Tattoo. " You can reach him at
jim_mullen@my&gt;".ay.com.)

cloudy with a chance of AEP (NYSE) - 44.93
showers and thunderstorms. Akzo (NASDAQ)- 78.08
Lows in the mid 60s. West Mhland Inc. (NYSE) winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance 58.23
BIC Lots (NYSE)- 23.93
or rain 50 percent.
Bob
Evans (NASDAQ) Friday... Partly sunny.
32.43
Highs in the lower 80s.
Friday
night ...Partly Bor,Wamer (NYSE) cloudy. Lows in the upper 85.71
Century Aluminum (NAS50s.
·
Saturday...Sunny. Highs DAQ)- 45.30
Champion (NASDAQ) - 5.69
in the lower 80s.
Saturday night ...Partly Charm Inc Shops (NASDAQ) ·
cloudy. Lows in the upper -8.88
City HoldlnC (NASDAQ) 50s.
31.50
Sunday... Partly sunny. A Collins (NYSE) - 65.80
chance of showers and DuPont (NYSE) - 4 7.16
thunderstorms in the after- US Bank (NYSE) - 29.55
noon. Highs around 80. Gannett (NYSE) - 46.34
Chance of rain 30 percent.
O-ral Electric (NYSE) Monday and Monday 37.88
night...Mostly cloudy with a Harley-Davidson (NYSE) chance of showers and thun- 54.99
derstorms. Highs in the lower JP Morgan (NYSE)- 43.30
80s. Lows in the mid 60s. Kroger (NYSE) - 25.08
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Umlted Brands (NYSE) Thesday... Mostly sunny. 22.90
· Highs in the upper 80s.
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) -

50.08

•

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)
-29.15

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 25.00
BBT (NYSE)- 37.14
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 24.40
Pepolco ( NYSE) - 67.16
Premier (NASDAQ) - 14.30
Rockwell ( NYSE) - 68.85
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)10.03

Royal Dutch Shell - 73.50
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 137.50

Wai-Matt ( NYSE) - 43.82
Wendy's (NYSE) - 30.99
Worthington (NYSE) 20.92

Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotas of
transactions for Aug. 14,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Pohll Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

Poultry .

Beth Sergontf photo

Cq.rey Jarvis (second fr9m left) and Cheyenne Doczi (third
from left) were named the grand and reserve champion
showmel}. respectively, at the junior fair poultry show. Also
pictured. Tina Drake, fair queen, Breanna Hayman, poultry
princess. Justin Morris, poultry prince .

Flowers
from PageA1

Wef!Y. qf Racine, and
Morgalf
• t'otion,
Middleport.
New York .City: Shelia ·
Curtis, Melanie Stethem;
and Judy Bunger, Pomeroy.
Washington D.C.: Patricia
•••
Holter,
Joy
Bentley,
RUTLAND - Ronald E. Johnson, 47, 30085 Painters Melanie Stethem.
: Ridge Road, Langsville, was cited for failure to control by
Gatlinburg: Peggy Crane
; the patrol following a one-car accident Saturday on County of Middleport, Joy Bentley,
: Road 60 (Loop) .
Patricia Holter.
. Troopers said Johnson was westbound, one mile west of . Junior Division winners
: CR 4 (Bowles), at 1:14 p.m. when he failed to negotiate a were:
:: right curve, causing the car to travel off the left side of the
Plymouth Rock: Deeanna
road and strike a ditch and a tree.
A. Sayre, Wade Allman,
Damage to the·car was functional, ttoopers said.
Breeanna Manuel, and
•••
Morgan Colton.
; ROCKSPRINGS- Kevin W. Powers, 17, Wilmington,
Cedar Point: . Gracie
" N.C., was cited for failure to yield by the patrol following . Carenter,
Morgan Cotton,
a two-vehicle collision earlier Saturday on Ohio 7 at the Deanna A. Sayre and Angie
U.S. 33 exit ramp.
.
Troopers said Powers was eastbound on 33 at 10: 14"a.m. Capenter.
Horticulture Division
when he took the Ohio 7 exit, stopped at the stop sign and
In the specimen exhibits,
attempted to cross 7. His car was struck by a pickup truck
blue ribbon winners
. driven by Richard E. Sayre, 39, 37147 TR 175, Middleport, the
were:
•. that was southbound on 7.
Roses: Patricia Holler,
'· Disabling damage was reported to both vehicles.
Sharon
Dean (2}, Joy
•
Bentley, Sharon Dean,
Shelia .Curtis, Melanie
now about $150,000.
•
Stethem.
••
Other business
Gladiiolia: Peggy Crane.
•
When asked about finances
Dahlia: Lui aS . Toban (3),
next year, Baker said that in Melanie Stethem (2), Judy
from
PageA1
''
2008 estimated revenue for
the general"fund is estimated
.. to decrease the village's at $44S,OOO with estimated
· expenses in collecting taxes. expenditures bout the same.
Meanwhile the tax office will "We 'II be spending everyfunction under the supervi- thing we get," said Baker.
from PageA1
sian of the fiscal officer.
. 1\vo residents attended the
During the meeting Baker meeting to talk about runreported that in the fund for down and unkempt proper- local horsemen, the Eagles
operation of the income tax ties in their neighborhoods Club, and the Fairboard
office, there is only enough and requested some action be
• T-shirts sponsored by
money to make this week 's taken by the buildit]g inspec- the fairboard and the United
payroll. "If she (the tax tor toward improvement. The States Trotting Association
administrator) works beyond mayor noted that II proper- to be tossed into the crowd
. today, we will have to pull ties have been denied rental by winning drivers
. money from other general approval, but they find pea• Umbrellas sponsored by
fund operations to make pie are living in them any- the Home National Bank
payroll for the employee."
way, that one property has
• Coloring books providbeen condemned, and noted ed by the United States
Part-time officer
that several people have been
to be hired
It was voted by Council to brought into court. One of Trolling Association .
hire another part-time the residents suggested
police officer following the "~oing after the landlords"
review of a letter appealing while Councilman Craig
for additional help from Wehrung proposed "bringing
Chief of Police Bruce Swift. them back into court."
The justification for
Council gave unanimous
putting another part-time approval to a motion made
office on, according to the by Councilman Houchins
fiscal officer Baker is that it that the insurance money
will help toward reducing received from the wrecked
time- and-a-half overtime police car be use to pay
pay now for full-time regu- down the balance owed on
lar officers required to pro- another cruiser.
vide 24-hour police cover:
Officials attending the
age. "We have a potential to meeting
were
Mayor
· save money paying le ss lannarelli, fi scal officer
•
overtime," said Baker. · Baker, and Council members
Mayor Sandy lannarelli also Craig Wehrung and Shawn
said it will provide time for Rice, newly appointed, Jean
working on collecting old Craig, Moore. Sandy Brown, ·
fines wbich she said are and Houchins.

'."'

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Local Stocks

Hayman, twenry-ninth place.
Other resultS:
Carolann Stewart, grand
from PageA1
champion broiler; Joyce
Weddle, reserve champion
Cody Ramage, fourteenth broiler.
Abigail Houser, grand
place, Jerod Cleland, fifteenth place, Cheyenne champion pullet; Cheyenne
Doczi, sixteenth place, Doczi, reserve champion
Chase Payne, seventeenth pullet.
Morgan Tucker, grand
place, Brady Bissell, eighteenth place, Hayley Bissell, champion fancy poultry;
nineteenth place, Kate Corey Jarvis, reserve chamMoore, iwentieth place, pion fancy poultry.
Abigail Houser, grand
Savannah Moore, twentyfirst place, Joshua Nelson, champion bantam chickens;
twenty-second
place, Lindsey Houser Parker,
Hannah Arnold, twenty-third reserve champion bantam
place, Corey Arnold, twenty- chickens.
Carolann Stewart, grand
fourth
place,
Chelsea
Arnold, twenty-fifth place, champion bantam ducks.
Corey Jarvis, grand chamAlisha Compson, twentysixth place, Megan Cleland, pion geese.
Corey Jarvis, grand champitwenty-seventh
place,
Jennifer Casto, twenty- on large fowl; Abigail Houser,
eighth place,
Breanna reserve champion large fowl.

.-.
..

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be Jess
than 300 words. A// letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters wi/J be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not per.wnalities. Leiters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not he accepted for publication.

I

LONG BOTTOM
Devin Ray Riggs, 15, of
Long Bottom, passed away
Monday, Aug. 13, 2007 ~ s
the result of an automobile
accident.
He was born Dec. 3 1,
·· 1991 in Cape Coral, Fla.,
· son of Kenneth Ray and
Cristy Ann Newlun Rtggs.
Devm would have been a
sophomore at Eastern High
School where he played
l&gt;aseball and football. He
· also liked to race motorcy· cles, swim, water ski and
· was an avid hunter.
In addition to his parents,
Devin Riggs · .
he is survived by a beloved
brother, Kenneth .Dustin Riggs; maternal grandmother,
Mary Newlun; paternal grandparents, Gene and Judy Riggs;
two special couples, Tom and Sue Hayman and Connie and
- Larry Hill; a paternal uncle, Jay Riggs; maternal aunt and
uncle, Carrie and Brian Long; cousins, Tyson, Brittany and
Ashley; maternal aunt and uncle, Tina and Randy Cowdery;
cousins, Jonathen, Qakoda and Micah; great-aunts and
uncles, Marion Riggs, David Riggs and Rita Mitchell; and a
special friend; Lauren Cununings, who is like a sister.
He was preceded in death by a maternal grandfather, Johnnie
Ray Newlun; and paternal great-grandfather, Ray Riggs.
Services will be held II a.m., friday, Aug. 17, 2007 at
Bethel Worship Center, State Route 7, Reedsville, with
· Rev. Don Seevers and Rob Barber officiating. Burial will
· ' be in the Sandhill Cemetery, Long Bottom.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m., Thursday, at Bethel
Worship Center.
Arrangements are by White-Schwarzel Funeral Home,
Coolville.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.white, schwarzelfuneralhome.com.

•

Today is Wednesday, Aug. 15, the 227th day of 2007.
There are 138 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 15, 1945, Emperor Hirohito announced to his
subjects in a pre-recorded radio address that Japan had
accepted terms of surrender for ending .World WarD.
On this date:
In I057, Macbeth, King of Scots, was killed in battle by
Malcolm, the eldest son of King Duncan, whom Macbeth
had slain.
In 1769, Napoleon Bonaparte was born on the island of
Corsica.
In 1914, the Panama Canal opened to traffic.
In 1935, humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post were
killed when their airplane crashed near Point Barrow, Alaska.
In 1944, during World War II, Allied forces landed in
Southern France in Operation Dragoon.
In 1947,lndia became independent after some 200 years of
British rule. ·
In 1948, the Republic of Korea was proclaimed.
In 1969, the Woodstock Music and Art Fair opened in
upstate New York.
In 1971, President Richard Nixon announced a 90-day
freeze on wages, prices and rents.
Thought for Today: "Life has taught me to think, but thinking has not taught me how ·to live."- Alexander Herzen,
Russian author (1812-1870).

Reader Services

_DeVin Ray Riggs

..•

www .mydailysentinel.com,

Local Weather

~ ----------------------------------------••
•

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

I

Obituaries

:For the Record

TODAY IN HISTORY
.,

lVednesday,Augustt5,2007

There is a difference between military men and women

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

READER'S

\Vednesday, Augustt5,2007

PageA4

Council

Racing

Winner of reserve best of
show was Joy Bentley with
her entry in the Florida
Keys class. Barnacles . iron
weed, wisteria vine, and
purple majesty millet were
included in the plant
material.
Charlene Hoeftlchfphoto

Bunger.
Marigold:
Melanie
Stethemk(3 ).
Celosia: Joyce E. Manuel,
Shelia Curtis.
Salvia: Lula S. Roban.
Sunflower,
Deborah
Mohler, (2).
Caladium: Lula S. Roban,
Melanie Stethem, Joy
Bentley.
Hosta: Joy Bentley (2),
Melanie Stethem.
Thyme: Joy Bentley.
Basil: Shirley J. Hamm,
Racine.
Parsley: Shirley J. Hamm.
Other culinary herbs :
Alice R. Thompson.

Feverfew: Joy Bentley.
Yarrow: Joy Bentley.
Echinacea: Joy Bentley.
Mint: Deborah Mohler.
Pampas grass: Deborah
Mohler.
Purple Majesly Millet :
Joy Bentley.
Other grasses: Sharoin
Dean, Racine.
Perennials:
Deborah
Mohler and Lulu S.. Toban.
In the potted plant category, the blue ribbon winners
were Kath y Dal:on of
Rutland, Joy Bentley (2),
Joyce E. Manuel (5 ).
In the junior division of
the horti culture di splay, ·

Horse owners not only
have the chance of winning
purse money but al so a
blanket trophy provided by
local businesses, Powell 's
Foodfair, Lions Club,
McDonalds, Quality Print
Shop, General Tire Shop,
Farmer's Bank, Eagles
Club, Meigs Motel, The
Daily Sentinel, and Fisher's
Funeral Home.
"Saturday 's races promise
a memorable harness racing
event - another in over a
century for the Meigs
County Fair. Fair time is
harness racing time," com-

mented Steve Swatzel. racing enthusiast and a member of the Meigs County
Fairboard.

Notice of Vacancy

The Eastern Local School District is
providing notice to its certified staff ·
that a vacancy exists in the position
of Business Education Teacher.
Any staff member wish to express
interest in this position should
contact Rick Edwards,
Superintendent immediately.
I

blue ribbon winners were
Bethany Allamn. Pomeroy
(3); Breanna Manuel (3):
and Deeanna Sayre.

'A'"

~~

I\

'&lt;"
"""=
l"oJ

.,:.

. '
.'

i

I

,..
\

d

~

-----·.

;.....
_,

f'l']

&lt;' ...-· . " ... ""

l 'f. IIJOII.\I~t ; ·IHN

t'E\'TN E

The Unsinkable
Molly Brown
stage.musical
August 17 &amp; 18 8 ~m
"Captain Fantastic"
August 25 &amp; 26
Sunny 931 1 Talent Contest
Satu rda~. Sertember I
Ducktona, Sept. 8
"Have You ~~~.ted Your

...

Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.

Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

2007
MEIGS COUNfY FAIR
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Sponsor of the day
Ridenour Gas and Supply

All children 12 and under admiUed unlil noon for
free, hand stamp to ride will cos( $5.00
2:00 p.m. Kid'sGames-Livestock Arena
2:00p.m. Style Revue-Hill S!age
4:00p.m. Kiddie Trador Pull-Small Show Arena
4:00p.m. Junior Fair Dairy Goat Show
Liveslock Arena
7:00p.m. "Foregiven'' Again-Hill Stage
7:30 p.m. Draft Horse Pull-Pull Track
8:00 p.m."Emerson Drive" Grandstand
· II :00 p.m.Gates Close ·

----

�.. .

••

1
'

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

During
a
recent
Democ ratic debate, both
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
Sens. Hillary Clinton and
www.mydallysentlnel.com
Barack Obama indicated
that all fem ale U.S. citize ns
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
should register for the
Selective Service. Neither
candidate was as ridiculous
Dan Goodrl.c h
as former Alaska Sen. Mike
Publisher
Gravel, who said, when it
comes
to men and women
Charlene Hoeflich'
being drafted, "What's the
General Manager-News Editor
difference?" But the radical
and dangerous impl ications
of the front-runners' policie s are not that far from
Congress shall make no law respecting an
Gravel's query.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
the
The
attitude
Democrat
s
have
on
this
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
issue has already caused
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
harm to the military. Elaine
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition Donnelly, president of the
the Government for a redress of grievances.
Center
for
Military
Readiness, has been watch- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution . ing the feminization of military-personnel policy for
decades. In an article for
The Duke Journal of
Gender Law &amp; Policy, she
explains that "gender-integrated . basic training is
based on the unreali sti c
assumption that men and
women are interchangeable
in all military roles. The
concept tries to ·circumvent
or disguise physical differences with gender-normed
training standards that
Dear Editor:
reward equal effort rather
.In response to Meigs Local rehiring Mr. Buckley at his
present salary after retiring. Isn't that' double pay for the
same work? On 55, they take away and cut the amount
received working.
I think if he felt he needed to retire then he shouldn't be
hired back and give someone else a chance to prosper for a
future retirement. ·
As a taxpayer, this is just another step to make the
wealthy more money and the middle and poor class poorer.
This country no longer cares about others and it's not
like living in our country anymore.
D.B. Rowlands
Pomeroy

VIEW

Double·pay?
QJestions school boards·action

Kathryn
Lopez

than equal results."
Yes, there are differences
between ge nders, Mr.
Gravel. According to one
of Donnell y's many examples of the ditferent scoring
of supposed equ als: The
Navy has male trainees do
a minimum of 42 push-ups
for a minimum score;
women must do 17. Men
(ages 20 to 24) must swim
500 yards in 12 mi notes, 15
seconds; women (ages 20
to 24) get 14 minutes to
accomplish the same.
The radicalism of the
Democrats' desire to have
women in the military can
be seen with a look to the
legal system. In 1981 , the
Supreme Court upheld .the
constitutionality of the
male-only requirement for
Selective Service registration, reasoning that the
whole point "was to prepare for a draft of combat
troops."

..

Women· are currently defining to me ," said
banned fro m combat. If we Vaught. Well, it isn' t definneeded to draft Americans, ing to me and fihouldn' t be
would Clinton require to any rational-thinking
women to sign up for the human.
Selecti ve Service in prepaSen. James Webb, D-Va.,
ration for mandatory combat duty? Would you con- would be doing his nation a
script America's daugh- service if he made his ratioters? That's the sad direc- nal view of women's role in
tion we' ve been beading in. the military his pel cause; I
Under the Clinton admin- don ' t agree with Webb on
istration, a Pentagon "risk everything, but the senator
rule" was eliminated, opep- has written at length about
i ng 80 percent of all the fundamental flaws with
American military jobs to
women. "That ri sk rule, the military treating men
prior to its repeal, prevent- and women the same. If he
ed women from being called Donnelly to the
assigned to units that posed Senate and had her suggest
a risk-of attack or capture recommendation s for treat- a ru(e that would have ing men and women differspared the life of supply ently in the interest of the
clerk Lori Piestewa, a 24- safety of our troops, maybe
year-old single mother of we would realize that we
two (now 5 and 6).
Piestewa's brother told a shouldn' t be drafting
reporter that Lori felt that women: We should be
"she wasn't going to be drafting a realistic vision of
anywhere near any type of women's role in the armed
dangerous situation."
forc~s - one acknowledgBut according to Air ing real and natural differForce Brig. Gen. Wilma L. ences.
Vaught, it was some kind of
(Kathryn Lopez is the
feminist victory that she
was . "The~' s been an editor of National Review
acceptance of the fact that Online · (www.nationalrewomen · ... are in harm's view.com). She can be conway and they are being tactei/ ai k/opez@natjonalkilled," she says:: "That is revie.;v,.com.)

ICAN'T SlEEP...
I THINK THE MORTGAGE
MONSTER 15 UNDER

MY BED.

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Highway Patrol

:: TUPPERS PLAINS - A two-vehicle accident with
· · injuries Tuesday on Ohio 7 near Eastern High School
j remained under investigation by the Gallia-Meigs Post .of
i the State Highway Patrol.
·
c Additional details on the I0:29 a.m. crash were unavail. . able before presstime.
Troopers were also investigating a one-car accident with
: ·injury on Ohio 7 south of Story's Run Road at 3:28 p.m.
: Monday. Details on the crash were also unavailable.

•••

,' PORTLAND - Kristina D. Higginbotham, 25, 51090
i ·Township Road 43, Long Bottom, was cited for failure to
( :C&lt;1nttol by the patrol following a one-car accident Sunday
::6ft Ohio 124.
·
!.;.,;J'q)()pers $aid Higginbotham was eastbound in ·Lebanon '
: Township at 12:30 a.m. when she failed to negotiate a left
' curve, went off the right side of the road and traveled into
a building. The driver told troopers she swerved to miss a
deer crossing the road.
:. The car· had disabling damage, troopers said.

Wedn~sday ... P ar t ly

sunny. A slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms
in the afternoon. Hot with
highs in the lower 90s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph ... Becoming northwest
in the afternoon. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
Wednesday
night ...
Mostly cloudy. A slight
chance of showers and
thunderstorms
in
the
evening .. .Then a chance of
showers and thunderstorms
after midnight. Lows in the
mid 60s. Southeast winds
around 5 mph ... Becoming
south
after
midnight.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
T)mrsday...Partly sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Hot
with highs in the lower 90s.
S~uthwe st winds 10 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday night. .. Mostly

' 53.55
'1 07.1o
'214.21

L------1·--------------------------~

Something's cooking at the CL4
I ran into Louise. a friend
I hadn't seen in many years.
While she and I caught up
with each other in the supermarket's produce aisle, I
asked abo'll her son, Jeffrey.
"Didn ' t
you
know?
Jeffrey 's in the CIA."
Of course I didn 't know.
Isn't that s upposed to be a
secret? Should she really be
telling me that? Is he even
allowed to tell his own
mother that he's in the CIA''
That seems very indiscreet.
I've known Louise for
many years. She 's a sweetheart, but I wouldn't tell her
anything I wouldn' t want to
hear on the 5 p.m. news.
She 's a chatterbox . And
Jeffrey, as I remember, was
even worse.
Jeffrey couldn't keep his
mouth shut on a bet. He was
always the life of the party,
spilling the beans on everyone to everyone. If-he's in
the CIA, trust me, we' re all
in trouble. Why bother to
se nd out wedding invita-

Jim
Mullen

lions when you could just
tell Jeffrey the date and it'd
be all over town the next
day?
, They wouldn ' t have · to
torture Je ffrey or hire a
beautiful female spy to pre.tend she was in love with
him to get info out of him .
All they 'd have to do is buy
him a nice meal and few
beers and he'd spill his guts .
"Last week he was in
Pari s," Louise said, "Next
week he' ll be in Milan. He's
says he's going to Spain in
Ocreber."
Note to self: Avoid Paris
and Milan at all cosJs. If the
CIA is sending Jeffrey there ,
you can bet something is up1

"He's working on a topo.
secret deal, that if it goes
through will change the
lives of a lot of people."
An assassination? A coup?
A coordinated, multipronged plan to secretly
change another government's wayward foreign
policy? And why is . he
telling all this to his Mom?
If she knows, I know. How
many people did she tell
before I ran into her? And I
will tell Sue what Louise
told me and then Sue will
tell her friends and on it
goes. Thi s is a huge security
breech.
"Do you really think we
should be talking about this
in public?" I asked her. "In
the middle of a grocery
store? Aren't you scared that
he might be kidnapped and
tortured?"
"Why would anyone torture Jeffrey''"
"To find out his secrets, to
find out everything he
knows."

Louise is backing away
from me. "What is the matter with you? He's just a
chef. He doesn't know any
secrets."

"Just a chef? Oh. When
you told me he was in the.
CIA, I thought you meant he
was a spy. But he just cooks
for the CIA. Still, that must
be dangerous, going to all
the world's trouble spots."
Louise is rolling her eyeballs now. "He doesn't cook
for the CIA, he's at the CIA,
the Culinary Institute of
America. Jeffrey would
make the worst spy · in the
world. Everybody knows he
can't keep a secret.
"Then again, he never will
tell me what he puts in his
creme brulee that makes it
taste so good."
(Jim Mullen is the author of
"It Takes a Village Idiot:
Complicating the Simple
Life" and "Baby 's First
Tattoo. " You can reach him at
jim_mullen@my&gt;".ay.com.)

cloudy with a chance of AEP (NYSE) - 44.93
showers and thunderstorms. Akzo (NASDAQ)- 78.08
Lows in the mid 60s. West Mhland Inc. (NYSE) winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance 58.23
BIC Lots (NYSE)- 23.93
or rain 50 percent.
Bob
Evans (NASDAQ) Friday... Partly sunny.
32.43
Highs in the lower 80s.
Friday
night ...Partly Bor,Wamer (NYSE) cloudy. Lows in the upper 85.71
Century Aluminum (NAS50s.
·
Saturday...Sunny. Highs DAQ)- 45.30
Champion (NASDAQ) - 5.69
in the lower 80s.
Saturday night ...Partly Charm Inc Shops (NASDAQ) ·
cloudy. Lows in the upper -8.88
City HoldlnC (NASDAQ) 50s.
31.50
Sunday... Partly sunny. A Collins (NYSE) - 65.80
chance of showers and DuPont (NYSE) - 4 7.16
thunderstorms in the after- US Bank (NYSE) - 29.55
noon. Highs around 80. Gannett (NYSE) - 46.34
Chance of rain 30 percent.
O-ral Electric (NYSE) Monday and Monday 37.88
night...Mostly cloudy with a Harley-Davidson (NYSE) chance of showers and thun- 54.99
derstorms. Highs in the lower JP Morgan (NYSE)- 43.30
80s. Lows in the mid 60s. Kroger (NYSE) - 25.08
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Umlted Brands (NYSE) Thesday... Mostly sunny. 22.90
· Highs in the upper 80s.
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) -

50.08

•

Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)
-29.15

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 25.00
BBT (NYSE)- 37.14
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 24.40
Pepolco ( NYSE) - 67.16
Premier (NASDAQ) - 14.30
Rockwell ( NYSE) - 68.85
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)10.03

Royal Dutch Shell - 73.50
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 137.50

Wai-Matt ( NYSE) - 43.82
Wendy's (NYSE) - 30.99
Worthington (NYSE) 20.92

Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotas of
transactions for Aug. 14,
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Pohll Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

Poultry .

Beth Sergontf photo

Cq.rey Jarvis (second fr9m left) and Cheyenne Doczi (third
from left) were named the grand and reserve champion
showmel}. respectively, at the junior fair poultry show. Also
pictured. Tina Drake, fair queen, Breanna Hayman, poultry
princess. Justin Morris, poultry prince .

Flowers
from PageA1

Wef!Y. qf Racine, and
Morgalf
• t'otion,
Middleport.
New York .City: Shelia ·
Curtis, Melanie Stethem;
and Judy Bunger, Pomeroy.
Washington D.C.: Patricia
•••
Holter,
Joy
Bentley,
RUTLAND - Ronald E. Johnson, 47, 30085 Painters Melanie Stethem.
: Ridge Road, Langsville, was cited for failure to control by
Gatlinburg: Peggy Crane
; the patrol following a one-car accident Saturday on County of Middleport, Joy Bentley,
: Road 60 (Loop) .
Patricia Holter.
. Troopers said Johnson was westbound, one mile west of . Junior Division winners
: CR 4 (Bowles), at 1:14 p.m. when he failed to negotiate a were:
:: right curve, causing the car to travel off the left side of the
Plymouth Rock: Deeanna
road and strike a ditch and a tree.
A. Sayre, Wade Allman,
Damage to the·car was functional, ttoopers said.
Breeanna Manuel, and
•••
Morgan Colton.
; ROCKSPRINGS- Kevin W. Powers, 17, Wilmington,
Cedar Point: . Gracie
" N.C., was cited for failure to yield by the patrol following . Carenter,
Morgan Cotton,
a two-vehicle collision earlier Saturday on Ohio 7 at the Deanna A. Sayre and Angie
U.S. 33 exit ramp.
.
Troopers said Powers was eastbound on 33 at 10: 14"a.m. Capenter.
Horticulture Division
when he took the Ohio 7 exit, stopped at the stop sign and
In the specimen exhibits,
attempted to cross 7. His car was struck by a pickup truck
blue ribbon winners
. driven by Richard E. Sayre, 39, 37147 TR 175, Middleport, the
were:
•. that was southbound on 7.
Roses: Patricia Holler,
'· Disabling damage was reported to both vehicles.
Sharon
Dean (2}, Joy
•
Bentley, Sharon Dean,
Shelia .Curtis, Melanie
now about $150,000.
•
Stethem.
••
Other business
Gladiiolia: Peggy Crane.
•
When asked about finances
Dahlia: Lui aS . Toban (3),
next year, Baker said that in Melanie Stethem (2), Judy
from
PageA1
''
2008 estimated revenue for
the general"fund is estimated
.. to decrease the village's at $44S,OOO with estimated
· expenses in collecting taxes. expenditures bout the same.
Meanwhile the tax office will "We 'II be spending everyfunction under the supervi- thing we get," said Baker.
from PageA1
sian of the fiscal officer.
. 1\vo residents attended the
During the meeting Baker meeting to talk about runreported that in the fund for down and unkempt proper- local horsemen, the Eagles
operation of the income tax ties in their neighborhoods Club, and the Fairboard
office, there is only enough and requested some action be
• T-shirts sponsored by
money to make this week 's taken by the buildit]g inspec- the fairboard and the United
payroll. "If she (the tax tor toward improvement. The States Trotting Association
administrator) works beyond mayor noted that II proper- to be tossed into the crowd
. today, we will have to pull ties have been denied rental by winning drivers
. money from other general approval, but they find pea• Umbrellas sponsored by
fund operations to make pie are living in them any- the Home National Bank
payroll for the employee."
way, that one property has
• Coloring books providbeen condemned, and noted ed by the United States
Part-time officer
that several people have been
to be hired
It was voted by Council to brought into court. One of Trolling Association .
hire another part-time the residents suggested
police officer following the "~oing after the landlords"
review of a letter appealing while Councilman Craig
for additional help from Wehrung proposed "bringing
Chief of Police Bruce Swift. them back into court."
The justification for
Council gave unanimous
putting another part-time approval to a motion made
office on, according to the by Councilman Houchins
fiscal officer Baker is that it that the insurance money
will help toward reducing received from the wrecked
time- and-a-half overtime police car be use to pay
pay now for full-time regu- down the balance owed on
lar officers required to pro- another cruiser.
vide 24-hour police cover:
Officials attending the
age. "We have a potential to meeting
were
Mayor
· save money paying le ss lannarelli, fi scal officer
•
overtime," said Baker. · Baker, and Council members
Mayor Sandy lannarelli also Craig Wehrung and Shawn
said it will provide time for Rice, newly appointed, Jean
working on collecting old Craig, Moore. Sandy Brown, ·
fines wbich she said are and Houchins.

'."'

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Local Stocks

Hayman, twenry-ninth place.
Other resultS:
Carolann Stewart, grand
from PageA1
champion broiler; Joyce
Weddle, reserve champion
Cody Ramage, fourteenth broiler.
Abigail Houser, grand
place, Jerod Cleland, fifteenth place, Cheyenne champion pullet; Cheyenne
Doczi, sixteenth place, Doczi, reserve champion
Chase Payne, seventeenth pullet.
Morgan Tucker, grand
place, Brady Bissell, eighteenth place, Hayley Bissell, champion fancy poultry;
nineteenth place, Kate Corey Jarvis, reserve chamMoore, iwentieth place, pion fancy poultry.
Abigail Houser, grand
Savannah Moore, twentyfirst place, Joshua Nelson, champion bantam chickens;
twenty-second
place, Lindsey Houser Parker,
Hannah Arnold, twenty-third reserve champion bantam
place, Corey Arnold, twenty- chickens.
Carolann Stewart, grand
fourth
place,
Chelsea
Arnold, twenty-fifth place, champion bantam ducks.
Corey Jarvis, grand chamAlisha Compson, twentysixth place, Megan Cleland, pion geese.
Corey Jarvis, grand champitwenty-seventh
place,
Jennifer Casto, twenty- on large fowl; Abigail Houser,
eighth place,
Breanna reserve champion large fowl.

.-.
..

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be Jess
than 300 words. A// letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters wi/J be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not per.wnalities. Leiters of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not he accepted for publication.

I

LONG BOTTOM
Devin Ray Riggs, 15, of
Long Bottom, passed away
Monday, Aug. 13, 2007 ~ s
the result of an automobile
accident.
He was born Dec. 3 1,
·· 1991 in Cape Coral, Fla.,
· son of Kenneth Ray and
Cristy Ann Newlun Rtggs.
Devm would have been a
sophomore at Eastern High
School where he played
l&gt;aseball and football. He
· also liked to race motorcy· cles, swim, water ski and
· was an avid hunter.
In addition to his parents,
Devin Riggs · .
he is survived by a beloved
brother, Kenneth .Dustin Riggs; maternal grandmother,
Mary Newlun; paternal grandparents, Gene and Judy Riggs;
two special couples, Tom and Sue Hayman and Connie and
- Larry Hill; a paternal uncle, Jay Riggs; maternal aunt and
uncle, Carrie and Brian Long; cousins, Tyson, Brittany and
Ashley; maternal aunt and uncle, Tina and Randy Cowdery;
cousins, Jonathen, Qakoda and Micah; great-aunts and
uncles, Marion Riggs, David Riggs and Rita Mitchell; and a
special friend; Lauren Cununings, who is like a sister.
He was preceded in death by a maternal grandfather, Johnnie
Ray Newlun; and paternal great-grandfather, Ray Riggs.
Services will be held II a.m., friday, Aug. 17, 2007 at
Bethel Worship Center, State Route 7, Reedsville, with
· Rev. Don Seevers and Rob Barber officiating. Burial will
· ' be in the Sandhill Cemetery, Long Bottom.
Friends may call from 5-8 p.m., Thursday, at Bethel
Worship Center.
Arrangements are by White-Schwarzel Funeral Home,
Coolville.
You can sign the online guestbook at www.white, schwarzelfuneralhome.com.

•

Today is Wednesday, Aug. 15, the 227th day of 2007.
There are 138 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 15, 1945, Emperor Hirohito announced to his
subjects in a pre-recorded radio address that Japan had
accepted terms of surrender for ending .World WarD.
On this date:
In I057, Macbeth, King of Scots, was killed in battle by
Malcolm, the eldest son of King Duncan, whom Macbeth
had slain.
In 1769, Napoleon Bonaparte was born on the island of
Corsica.
In 1914, the Panama Canal opened to traffic.
In 1935, humorist Will Rogers and aviator Wiley Post were
killed when their airplane crashed near Point Barrow, Alaska.
In 1944, during World War II, Allied forces landed in
Southern France in Operation Dragoon.
In 1947,lndia became independent after some 200 years of
British rule. ·
In 1948, the Republic of Korea was proclaimed.
In 1969, the Woodstock Music and Art Fair opened in
upstate New York.
In 1971, President Richard Nixon announced a 90-day
freeze on wages, prices and rents.
Thought for Today: "Life has taught me to think, but thinking has not taught me how ·to live."- Alexander Herzen,
Russian author (1812-1870).

Reader Services

_DeVin Ray Riggs

..•

www .mydailysentinel.com,

Local Weather

~ ----------------------------------------••
•

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

I

Obituaries

:For the Record

TODAY IN HISTORY
.,

lVednesday,Augustt5,2007

There is a difference between military men and women

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

READER'S

\Vednesday, Augustt5,2007

PageA4

Council

Racing

Winner of reserve best of
show was Joy Bentley with
her entry in the Florida
Keys class. Barnacles . iron
weed, wisteria vine, and
purple majesty millet were
included in the plant
material.
Charlene Hoeftlchfphoto

Bunger.
Marigold:
Melanie
Stethemk(3 ).
Celosia: Joyce E. Manuel,
Shelia Curtis.
Salvia: Lula S. Roban.
Sunflower,
Deborah
Mohler, (2).
Caladium: Lula S. Roban,
Melanie Stethem, Joy
Bentley.
Hosta: Joy Bentley (2),
Melanie Stethem.
Thyme: Joy Bentley.
Basil: Shirley J. Hamm,
Racine.
Parsley: Shirley J. Hamm.
Other culinary herbs :
Alice R. Thompson.

Feverfew: Joy Bentley.
Yarrow: Joy Bentley.
Echinacea: Joy Bentley.
Mint: Deborah Mohler.
Pampas grass: Deborah
Mohler.
Purple Majesly Millet :
Joy Bentley.
Other grasses: Sharoin
Dean, Racine.
Perennials:
Deborah
Mohler and Lulu S.. Toban.
In the potted plant category, the blue ribbon winners
were Kath y Dal:on of
Rutland, Joy Bentley (2),
Joyce E. Manuel (5 ).
In the junior division of
the horti culture di splay, ·

Horse owners not only
have the chance of winning
purse money but al so a
blanket trophy provided by
local businesses, Powell 's
Foodfair, Lions Club,
McDonalds, Quality Print
Shop, General Tire Shop,
Farmer's Bank, Eagles
Club, Meigs Motel, The
Daily Sentinel, and Fisher's
Funeral Home.
"Saturday 's races promise
a memorable harness racing
event - another in over a
century for the Meigs
County Fair. Fair time is
harness racing time," com-

mented Steve Swatzel. racing enthusiast and a member of the Meigs County
Fairboard.

Notice of Vacancy

The Eastern Local School District is
providing notice to its certified staff ·
that a vacancy exists in the position
of Business Education Teacher.
Any staff member wish to express
interest in this position should
contact Rick Edwards,
Superintendent immediately.
I

blue ribbon winners were
Bethany Allamn. Pomeroy
(3); Breanna Manuel (3):
and Deeanna Sayre.

'A'"

~~

I\

'&lt;"
"""=
l"oJ

.,:.

. '
.'

i

I

,..
\

d

~

-----·.

;.....
_,

f'l']

&lt;' ...-· . " ... ""

l 'f. IIJOII.\I~t ; ·IHN

t'E\'TN E

The Unsinkable
Molly Brown
stage.musical
August 17 &amp; 18 8 ~m
"Captain Fantastic"
August 25 &amp; 26
Sunny 931 1 Talent Contest
Satu rda~. Sertember I
Ducktona, Sept. 8
"Have You ~~~.ted Your

...

Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.

Gallipolis, OH (740) 446-ARTS

2007
MEIGS COUNfY FAIR
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Sponsor of the day
Ridenour Gas and Supply

All children 12 and under admiUed unlil noon for
free, hand stamp to ride will cos( $5.00
2:00 p.m. Kid'sGames-Livestock Arena
2:00p.m. Style Revue-Hill S!age
4:00p.m. Kiddie Trador Pull-Small Show Arena
4:00p.m. Junior Fair Dairy Goat Show
Liveslock Arena
7:00p.m. "Foregiven'' Again-Hill Stage
7:30 p.m. Draft Horse Pull-Pull Track
8:00 p.m."Emerson Drive" Grandstand
· II :00 p.m.Gates Close ·

----

�..

F

PageA6

RE

_Th_e_D_a_i..:ly~S_e_n_t_in_e_l_____.=:.....:~:.f\.:=J==}:.::(.=--====S:...:U=-='=4:.:'1=..:'S=-----.:.w:.:e:::dn:;.e;;.;:s:::d.;.;:ay:..:.,_A...;ugu:;;....s_u..;;s;;..'2_o_o...;.7~

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

Page·A7

Wednesday, August 15,2007

•

••'
Left: Meigs

County Fair
•
Queen Tina
•
Drake showed ;
the reserve
,
champion mar- ··
ket lamb at
,
Monday's Junior ·;
Fair Sheep
Show. Wool
Princess Dawn .,
Bissell is also
pictured.
I'
'

Below: Alyssa

c o~;,.

IU.NI O R

Saker and
Kaylee Milam .
were named
••,.
grand and
.
reserve champi· :
on sheep show- ;
men at Monday :
evening's Junior .:
Fair Sheep
~
Show. Fair
··
Queen Tina
Drake and Wool
Princess Dawn
Bissell are also
pictured.

Bllani.Reed/~oa

Derrick Queen is pictured with the grand champion market goat he showed at Monday
evening's Junior Fair Market Goat Show. Also pictured are Goat Princess and Prince Ashley
Buchanan and Tyler Barber and Fair Queen Tina Drake.
\

Action· Facemyer, pictured with F~ir Queen Tina Drake and Wool Princess Dawn Bissell,
showed the grand champion market lamb at Monday evening's Junior Fair Sheep Show.

TOP

Facemyer, Drake show top lambs
BY BRIAN J. REED

ROCKSPRINGS - Action Facemyef'
and Tina Drake will sell the grand and
reserve champion market lambs Saturday,
following judging at the Junior Fair Sheep
Show on Monday evening.
Alyssa Baker and Kaylee Milam were
named grand and reserve champion showmen by David Caner of Lancaster, who
judged the show.
Judging results, in order, by class were:
Class I, I 00- II 0 pounds: Mallory Hill,
Kay lee Milam, A.J. Roush, Rusty
Carnahan, Cassandra Davis; Class II, 115122 pounds: Suzanne Grueser, Alyssa
Baker, Olivia Davis, Kara Osborne, HaMah
Williams, Trenton Cook, Holly Davis,
Dawn BisselL
Class Ill, 125-130 pounds: Kyle Young, ·
Ryan Amos, Dustin Smeck, Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle, Ryan Beegle, Dax Holman,
Brandon Marcinko, Lilly Yacks; Class IV,

Above: Scout Facemyer
showed the reserve champion market goat at Monday
evening's Junior Fair Goat
Show, and was named
reserve champion show·
man. He Js pictured with
Goat Princess and Prince
Ashley Buchanan and Tyler
Barber .and Fair Queen Tina
Drake.

. QUEEN SHOWS

lllan J. AeH/photoo

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

GOAT

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

131·138 pounds: Action Facemyer, Tina ·
Drake, Morgan Burt, Ciera Marcinko,
Nicole Hill, Eric Perry.
Showmanship: Senior, 17 and· over:
Alyssa Baker, Mallory Hill, Holly Davis;
Junior, 15 and 16: Kaylee Milam, Tina
Drake. Also showing in Junior classes I and
II were Ryan· Beegle, Dawn Bissell, ·
Morgan Burt, Lilly Ann Jacks, Kara
Osborne, Eric Perry, Whitney Wolfe-Riffle,
Rusty Carnahan, Olivia Davis, Action
Facemyer, Suzanne Grueser, Nicole Hill,
Dax Holman, Kaylee Milam, Hannah
Williams.
·
Intermediate, 12-14: Ryan Amos, Kyle
Young, Dustin Smeck, Brandon Marcinko.
Novice, 9-11: Ciera Marcinko, Trenton
Cook, A.J. Roush, Cassandra Davis.
Breeding Sheep. ,SbOWJllanship: . Lilly,.
Jacks, grand champion, Oawn Btssell,
reserve; Grand.champion Suffolk ewe, Lilly
Jacks; Grand chartlpton Suffolk ram, Dawn
Bissell; Grand champion crossbred ewe,
Dawn Bissell.

R6CKSPRINGS- Derrick Queen's SOpound market goat will top the sale bill at
Saturday's livestock sale after being judged
grand chaq~pion at Monday evening s market goat show. .
Scout Facemyer's II 0-pound goat was
named reserve champion. Nicole
Moodispaugh was named grand charnpi~Jn
showman and Scout Facemyer reserve
champion showman. David Carter of
L1111caster was the show judge.
·Judging results, by class and in descending order from first place, were:
· Class I, 60-65 pounds: Shandi Beaver,

David Warner, Alex Amos, Moodispaugh,
Lexie Houdashelt, Dakota Rice, Almee
Watson;. Class II, .70-76 pounds: Melissa ·
Snowden, Kel~ey Burton, Tyler Barber; ·
Class Ill, 80-81 pounds: Queen,"·Daschle
Facemyer, Cara Amos-, Heaven Westfall;
Class IV, 91- 110 pO~Jnds: Facemyer,
Amber Burton.
. . •
Showmanship: Senior, 17-18: Heaven
Westfall, Amber BIUtOn; Intermediate, 15- ·
16: Melissa Snowden; Junior, 12-14: Nicole
Moodispaugh, Scout Facemyer, Kelsey
Bunon,Aimee Watson; Novice, 9-11: David
Warner, .Derrick Queen. Also shoWiJ!S in
Novlce.class: Alex Amos, Cara Amos, l}'ler
Barber, Shandi Beaver, Daschle Facemyer,
Alexandra Houdashelt, Dakota Rice. .

Left: Nicole Moodlspaugh,
'pictured with Goat Princess
··Ashley Buchanan and Fair
Queen Tina Drake, was
named gland champion
showman at Monday
evening's junior Fair Market
Goat Show.

.

Singer returns to perfonil~ locally ·
•NELSONVILLE - Long
Bottom native· Alison , Rose
will perform Saturday at the
Parade of the Hills Festival
in Nelsonville.
Rose is a 2000 graduate
of Eastern High School
and a 2004 graduate of
Ohio University. She is a
former Miss Parade of the
Hills, and now lives in
Nashville, Tenn.
· The show will begin at
8:30 p.m. after the conclusion of the Grande Parade.
Rose made her move to
Nashville two years ago to
pursue a career in country

REACH 3 COUNTIES

music. Since becoming a
resident in Music City, she
has been performing regu·
larly in some of the city's
most popular venues. She
has had the opportunity to
play with some of the finest
musicians in Nashville and
has made several connections that have helped her
live her dream.
·
Rose is the daughter of
Arch and Debbie Rose of
Long Bottom and the
granddaughter of John and
Mary Rose of Long Bottom
and Raymond Smith of
Pomeroy.

Fresh Ground Chuck Beef Boneless English
Roast

$1.99 Lb
Alison Rose

Po

Boneless

Schoois removing ·some playground
equipment to comply with new law

Plac~ Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's

Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Dally Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!
.

'

mribune
www .mydailytribune.com

.{Boint .{Bleasant legister The Daily Sentinel
304•675•1333 -~

c,

~··•....0•992•2155

www.mydailyregi~ter.com www.mydailysentinel.com

...
.&lt;;../

.~E~'t:G
S ED~ i:

- ACe'S '

·;5~~·~

N~ibl
S EDAN

&lt;

-".Jd£(! .

$5,'

LIMA (AP)- Schools are
removing some swings and
merry-go•rounds from playgrounds to comply with a
new law aimed at protecting
students from safety hazards.
The changes are forcing
schools to spend more money,
but few are complaining.
"At first, you look at it
and kind of shrug your
shoulders, but it has made
us a better district," said
Mark Miller, business manager for the Elida school
district. "We are all for it."
The district removed a
merry-go-round at one
school, and sotne climbing
equipment because it was
too close to a slide.
"Our playgrounds look a
lot different than they did
when they kids left in the
spring," Miller said .
The changes are being
made in response to
"Jarod's Law" - named
after a 6-year-old boy killed
at a school when a folding
cafeteria table fell on him .
Schools with older buildings face the most work to
comply, but all schools will
be affected in some way.
Among requ irements, all
are being told to lock up
cleaning materials and
chemicals used in labs.
Elida will spend about
$20,000 out of its general
· fund to do things such as
grinding down sidewalks to
prevent students from tripping on hazards.

· Cha•as
bV
Ohio
school
satatv
law
(AP)- New requirements for schools under Ohio's
school safety law:
• Restrooms must have soap and hot water·at every
sink.
·
• Portable cafeteria tables and other portable furniture
must be kept away from students when not being
used.
·
• School buses must be turned off while students get on
or off buses in front of schools.
• Science classrooms must be locked when not in use.
• RoofS must be ins!lected twiCe a year and after severe
weather.

Schools in Ottawa will
spend about $7,000 at two
buildings.
elementary
Upgrades include adding pea
gravel under playground
equipment to prov1de more
cushion. The district also
bought two water beaters for
one building so that hot water
will be available at all sinks.
"I'm never going to balk
at anything that compromises the safety of our kids,"
said Ottilwa Superintendent
Kevin Brinkman. "If we
have another set of eyes that
come out to our buildings
and say, 'You can be a little
bit safe ,' I'm going to do it."
The Legislature passt:,d
"Jarod' s Law" in 2005.
Jarod Bennett died two
years earlier after a 290pound table being wheeled
by another child tipped over
and frac'lured the boy's skull

in a school gymnasium in
·Lebanon, about 25 miles
north of Cincinnati.
The boy's parents began
· pushin!l for school saf~ty
mspectwns after learmng
that the Consumer Product
Safety Commission warned
of the dangers ~f the destgn
of the cafetena tables a
decade before their son died.
· Local health departments
are supposed to begm
enforcing the law this fall. .
Randy Crossley, supemsor of '{&gt;hull operations for
schools m Lima, said the di strict might need anothe~ fulltime employee to 'keep up
with the law's requirements.
He said the district now
will need to inspect its roofs
after hard rain, lightning or
other bad weather. It normall y mspects the roofs
once or twice a year.

Bacon Ends And
Pieces

.99¢ Lb
Bananas

Pepsi Products
24 packs

¢.39 Lb.
Mister Bee PQtato
Chips

8 Piece Deli Fried
Chicken

2/$4.00

$5.99

Stop by for the freshest selection of meats around. All of our beef, pork, and chicken is cut
fresh at the store. Ground round, chuck, and beef is made fresh several times every day
here at the store. For the best quality shop
Hometown Marlcet. We still do it the old fashion way.

�..

F

PageA6

RE

_Th_e_D_a_i..:ly~S_e_n_t_in_e_l_____.=:.....:~:.f\.:=J==}:.::(.=--====S:...:U=-='=4:.:'1=..:'S=-----.:.w:.:e:::dn:;.e;;.;:s:::d.;.;:ay:..:.,_A...;ugu:;;....s_u..;;s;;..'2_o_o...;.7~

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

Page·A7

Wednesday, August 15,2007

•

••'
Left: Meigs

County Fair
•
Queen Tina
•
Drake showed ;
the reserve
,
champion mar- ··
ket lamb at
,
Monday's Junior ·;
Fair Sheep
Show. Wool
Princess Dawn .,
Bissell is also
pictured.
I'
'

Below: Alyssa

c o~;,.

IU.NI O R

Saker and
Kaylee Milam .
were named
••,.
grand and
.
reserve champi· :
on sheep show- ;
men at Monday :
evening's Junior .:
Fair Sheep
~
Show. Fair
··
Queen Tina
Drake and Wool
Princess Dawn
Bissell are also
pictured.

Bllani.Reed/~oa

Derrick Queen is pictured with the grand champion market goat he showed at Monday
evening's Junior Fair Market Goat Show. Also pictured are Goat Princess and Prince Ashley
Buchanan and Tyler Barber and Fair Queen Tina Drake.
\

Action· Facemyer, pictured with F~ir Queen Tina Drake and Wool Princess Dawn Bissell,
showed the grand champion market lamb at Monday evening's Junior Fair Sheep Show.

TOP

Facemyer, Drake show top lambs
BY BRIAN J. REED

ROCKSPRINGS - Action Facemyef'
and Tina Drake will sell the grand and
reserve champion market lambs Saturday,
following judging at the Junior Fair Sheep
Show on Monday evening.
Alyssa Baker and Kaylee Milam were
named grand and reserve champion showmen by David Caner of Lancaster, who
judged the show.
Judging results, in order, by class were:
Class I, I 00- II 0 pounds: Mallory Hill,
Kay lee Milam, A.J. Roush, Rusty
Carnahan, Cassandra Davis; Class II, 115122 pounds: Suzanne Grueser, Alyssa
Baker, Olivia Davis, Kara Osborne, HaMah
Williams, Trenton Cook, Holly Davis,
Dawn BisselL
Class Ill, 125-130 pounds: Kyle Young, ·
Ryan Amos, Dustin Smeck, Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle, Ryan Beegle, Dax Holman,
Brandon Marcinko, Lilly Yacks; Class IV,

Above: Scout Facemyer
showed the reserve champion market goat at Monday
evening's Junior Fair Goat
Show, and was named
reserve champion show·
man. He Js pictured with
Goat Princess and Prince
Ashley Buchanan and Tyler
Barber .and Fair Queen Tina
Drake.

. QUEEN SHOWS

lllan J. AeH/photoo

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

GOAT

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

131·138 pounds: Action Facemyer, Tina ·
Drake, Morgan Burt, Ciera Marcinko,
Nicole Hill, Eric Perry.
Showmanship: Senior, 17 and· over:
Alyssa Baker, Mallory Hill, Holly Davis;
Junior, 15 and 16: Kaylee Milam, Tina
Drake. Also showing in Junior classes I and
II were Ryan· Beegle, Dawn Bissell, ·
Morgan Burt, Lilly Ann Jacks, Kara
Osborne, Eric Perry, Whitney Wolfe-Riffle,
Rusty Carnahan, Olivia Davis, Action
Facemyer, Suzanne Grueser, Nicole Hill,
Dax Holman, Kaylee Milam, Hannah
Williams.
·
Intermediate, 12-14: Ryan Amos, Kyle
Young, Dustin Smeck, Brandon Marcinko.
Novice, 9-11: Ciera Marcinko, Trenton
Cook, A.J. Roush, Cassandra Davis.
Breeding Sheep. ,SbOWJllanship: . Lilly,.
Jacks, grand champion, Oawn Btssell,
reserve; Grand.champion Suffolk ewe, Lilly
Jacks; Grand chartlpton Suffolk ram, Dawn
Bissell; Grand champion crossbred ewe,
Dawn Bissell.

R6CKSPRINGS- Derrick Queen's SOpound market goat will top the sale bill at
Saturday's livestock sale after being judged
grand chaq~pion at Monday evening s market goat show. .
Scout Facemyer's II 0-pound goat was
named reserve champion. Nicole
Moodispaugh was named grand charnpi~Jn
showman and Scout Facemyer reserve
champion showman. David Carter of
L1111caster was the show judge.
·Judging results, by class and in descending order from first place, were:
· Class I, 60-65 pounds: Shandi Beaver,

David Warner, Alex Amos, Moodispaugh,
Lexie Houdashelt, Dakota Rice, Almee
Watson;. Class II, .70-76 pounds: Melissa ·
Snowden, Kel~ey Burton, Tyler Barber; ·
Class Ill, 80-81 pounds: Queen,"·Daschle
Facemyer, Cara Amos-, Heaven Westfall;
Class IV, 91- 110 pO~Jnds: Facemyer,
Amber Burton.
. . •
Showmanship: Senior, 17-18: Heaven
Westfall, Amber BIUtOn; Intermediate, 15- ·
16: Melissa Snowden; Junior, 12-14: Nicole
Moodispaugh, Scout Facemyer, Kelsey
Bunon,Aimee Watson; Novice, 9-11: David
Warner, .Derrick Queen. Also shoWiJ!S in
Novlce.class: Alex Amos, Cara Amos, l}'ler
Barber, Shandi Beaver, Daschle Facemyer,
Alexandra Houdashelt, Dakota Rice. .

Left: Nicole Moodlspaugh,
'pictured with Goat Princess
··Ashley Buchanan and Fair
Queen Tina Drake, was
named gland champion
showman at Monday
evening's junior Fair Market
Goat Show.

.

Singer returns to perfonil~ locally ·
•NELSONVILLE - Long
Bottom native· Alison , Rose
will perform Saturday at the
Parade of the Hills Festival
in Nelsonville.
Rose is a 2000 graduate
of Eastern High School
and a 2004 graduate of
Ohio University. She is a
former Miss Parade of the
Hills, and now lives in
Nashville, Tenn.
· The show will begin at
8:30 p.m. after the conclusion of the Grande Parade.
Rose made her move to
Nashville two years ago to
pursue a career in country

REACH 3 COUNTIES

music. Since becoming a
resident in Music City, she
has been performing regu·
larly in some of the city's
most popular venues. She
has had the opportunity to
play with some of the finest
musicians in Nashville and
has made several connections that have helped her
live her dream.
·
Rose is the daughter of
Arch and Debbie Rose of
Long Bottom and the
granddaughter of John and
Mary Rose of Long Bottom
and Raymond Smith of
Pomeroy.

Fresh Ground Chuck Beef Boneless English
Roast

$1.99 Lb
Alison Rose

Po

Boneless

Schoois removing ·some playground
equipment to comply with new law

Plac~ Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's

Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Dally Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!
.

'

mribune
www .mydailytribune.com

.{Boint .{Bleasant legister The Daily Sentinel
304•675•1333 -~

c,

~··•....0•992•2155

www.mydailyregi~ter.com www.mydailysentinel.com

...
.&lt;;../

.~E~'t:G
S ED~ i:

- ACe'S '

·;5~~·~

N~ibl
S EDAN

&lt;

-".Jd£(! .

$5,'

LIMA (AP)- Schools are
removing some swings and
merry-go•rounds from playgrounds to comply with a
new law aimed at protecting
students from safety hazards.
The changes are forcing
schools to spend more money,
but few are complaining.
"At first, you look at it
and kind of shrug your
shoulders, but it has made
us a better district," said
Mark Miller, business manager for the Elida school
district. "We are all for it."
The district removed a
merry-go-round at one
school, and sotne climbing
equipment because it was
too close to a slide.
"Our playgrounds look a
lot different than they did
when they kids left in the
spring," Miller said .
The changes are being
made in response to
"Jarod's Law" - named
after a 6-year-old boy killed
at a school when a folding
cafeteria table fell on him .
Schools with older buildings face the most work to
comply, but all schools will
be affected in some way.
Among requ irements, all
are being told to lock up
cleaning materials and
chemicals used in labs.
Elida will spend about
$20,000 out of its general
· fund to do things such as
grinding down sidewalks to
prevent students from tripping on hazards.

· Cha•as
bV
Ohio
school
satatv
law
(AP)- New requirements for schools under Ohio's
school safety law:
• Restrooms must have soap and hot water·at every
sink.
·
• Portable cafeteria tables and other portable furniture
must be kept away from students when not being
used.
·
• School buses must be turned off while students get on
or off buses in front of schools.
• Science classrooms must be locked when not in use.
• RoofS must be ins!lected twiCe a year and after severe
weather.

Schools in Ottawa will
spend about $7,000 at two
buildings.
elementary
Upgrades include adding pea
gravel under playground
equipment to prov1de more
cushion. The district also
bought two water beaters for
one building so that hot water
will be available at all sinks.
"I'm never going to balk
at anything that compromises the safety of our kids,"
said Ottilwa Superintendent
Kevin Brinkman. "If we
have another set of eyes that
come out to our buildings
and say, 'You can be a little
bit safe ,' I'm going to do it."
The Legislature passt:,d
"Jarod' s Law" in 2005.
Jarod Bennett died two
years earlier after a 290pound table being wheeled
by another child tipped over
and frac'lured the boy's skull

in a school gymnasium in
·Lebanon, about 25 miles
north of Cincinnati.
The boy's parents began
· pushin!l for school saf~ty
mspectwns after learmng
that the Consumer Product
Safety Commission warned
of the dangers ~f the destgn
of the cafetena tables a
decade before their son died.
· Local health departments
are supposed to begm
enforcing the law this fall. .
Randy Crossley, supemsor of '{&gt;hull operations for
schools m Lima, said the di strict might need anothe~ fulltime employee to 'keep up
with the law's requirements.
He said the district now
will need to inspect its roofs
after hard rain, lightning or
other bad weather. It normall y mspects the roofs
once or twice a year.

Bacon Ends And
Pieces

.99¢ Lb
Bananas

Pepsi Products
24 packs

¢.39 Lb.
Mister Bee PQtato
Chips

8 Piece Deli Fried
Chicken

2/$4.00

$5.99

Stop by for the freshest selection of meats around. All of our beef, pork, and chicken is cut
fresh at the store. Ground round, chuck, and beef is made fresh several times every day
here at the store. For the best quality shop
Hometown Marlcet. We still do it the old fashion way.

�•

The Daily Sentinel

MEiGs FAIR.SCENES

·Page AS
We~esday,

August 15, 2007

Inside

B-1

The Daily Sentinel

-Reds beat Cubs, Page Bl
'

NFL Notebook, Pllge 83
~to dies at 89, Pm••

84

Wednesday, August 15,2007

lhe.good, the bad and the u

lUff photo

Beth S.rpnt/phalo

Kristen McKay takes a spin in a fire truck on one' of the
fair's kiddie rides . Today is kiddie day where children under
12 are admitted for free until noon though there Is a charge
to ride the rides.

Always popular with falrgoers are scenes like this at Monday night's demo derby at the Meigs fairgrounds . Bill Hendricks
was the winner of the feature event in the demolltiC?n derby at the Meigs County Fair, Taking second in the event was
Michael Conkle. Winners· in the heats to qualify fm.the fl;!llture were Roger Smith and Wesley McKinney, first heat; Justin
Wells and Bill Hendricks, second heat; and Mlchaei .Colnkle In the third heat. In the event for compacts the winners were,
Dolyte McDonald, first; Dale McDonald, second, and Justin Goo(Je, third.
· ·

locAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY - A - I o o&lt; - """""'""'Y"""""' ...... -..--County.
...,high

ToctaV'•..,...
Golf

Eastern al Waltrtord

(Lake~de

G.C.),

9:30a.m.
Dyrtdly'• ptmtl

Triple H Rodeo held Tuesday at
Meigs County Fairgrounds

Golf '
Meigs al Wellston (Falrgreons G.C.),
~:30p.m.

Southern al Eastern (Pine Hills G.C.),

10 a.m.

.

Many participants turned out for the bull riding event at the
Triple H Rodeo held at the Triplett Rodeo Grandstand
Tuesday evening during the. 2007 Meigs County Fair at the
lower fairgrounds In Rock Springs. Some of the bull riders
had success during their eight seGonds of chaos, while
others, well, did not.

'

OVJ» seeking
football stringer

TOP LEFT- Cowboy James Riley showed great skill in
taming 'One Bad Dude' during his ride Tuesday at the
Triple H Rodeo_. Riley lasted the full eight seconds and
received 77 pqints for his successful ride.
TOP RIGHT- An unidentified cowboy gets his hands .
caught in the rope after falling off the bull shortly after
coming out of the chute Tuesday at the Triple H Rodeo.
L~FT -· Cowboy Justin Hayes, right, is dropped on his
head after 'Knothead' got the best of him during their
·short engagement Tuesday at the Triple H Rodeo. Hayes
was fine, dusting himself off afterward and walking back
to safety behind the gates.
Bryan Walters/photos

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio
Valley Publishing is seeking a stringer to help cover
high school football games
this season .
Send letters of interest
and/or small writing samples to Brad Shennan at
bsherman@ mydailytribune.com or drop them off
at our Gallipolis,· Point
Pleasant or Pomeroy offic~\
'

~

'

STAFF REPORT •

OVP Scorellna (5 p.m.-1 o.m.)
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fox- 1·740-446·3008
E-mili - sports Omydailysentinel.com

SIIOllaJIIIll

Bred Sharman, Spans EdHor
•

·

·

-

-

......11/photo

Jennifer Fife, 15, of Middleport gives her horse Summer a
sip of Pepsi to cool off at the fair.

Seolent/photo

Justin Lee may be a kid but he can drive a tri'lctor like a grown up as he competes in his first antique tractor pull.

. (740) 448-2342,

oxl.

33

'

baherman Omydallytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, oxl. 23

tcrumO mydailyreglster.com

Bryan Walters, Spona Writer
(740) 446-2342,

ext

33

bwalters@mydaiiYfribune.com

SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MASON ,
W.Va.
Under S\lnny skies and
pleasant temperatures at the
Riverside Golf Course,
Wahama
edged
Point
Pleasant in a high school
golf match on Tuesday.
The original schedule
called for this to be a threeway match with Huntington
St . Joe being the third
team. However, 3 mix-up
found St. Joe thinking the

match was on Wednesday
so the day became a dual
match between the two
county rivals.
Because of a disqualification during the · match,
the original format of
counting the best four
scores was changed · to
counting the best three
scores. Wahama was led by
Adam Roush who posted a
score of 86 followed by a
90 each by David Greene
and Brandon Johnson for a
total team score of 266. ..

•

~

'

'

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.

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'

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.

'

'

•

y,..

' •

.'

Chris Dangerfield'~ score and should do better in the
of 113 was not included in future. Putting woes kept
the final tally.
McClung's score higher
. Point Pleasant was led than it should have been
by medalist for the day, J .T. considering the way he
Reynolds, who turned in a struck th.e ball throughout
fine 83. Chris Long was the day.
close behind with a 85 and
' Wahama 's effort was its
Brock
McClung
con- best of the season . . Both
tributed a 105 to make the Roush and Greene have
final team score a 273.
been fairly consistent and
Coach Mike Lucas was their scores are expected to
pleased with the consistent improve as they gain more
play of Reynolds. With the~experience. The day's score
exception of a couple of of 90 by Johnson wa s a
holes, Long played well huge improvement and

~·

•· .

.~

.

·

n· ,.

Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation

s••• ~IJ r11istr1tiil

111ii•We
hL 1321
Belft Sergentfphoto

Beth Sergentfphoto

The junior fair poultry show began at 8 a.m. and ·ended after 1 p.m. which can ·be a long
day for not only the chickens but their owners, one of which grabbed a quick yawn.

are now aiUIIV authorized

• Now e&amp;!'J'Ying Red Head Bowa and accaeaorlaa
• We alao offer a full line of Muzzle IOedlng auppllea and gun ammunition

Check • er Bass Pre Products

LL

MoJ:e all checb payable to the
Pleastint Valley Hospital Foundation
Credit carrJs also accepted

..J

Please complete form, detach
and send with payment to:

81 BDIIIIIRI Sllllm•lsldlllltral
,,
ChiCk lllaur Gl-11 Plalll'lllllllld FlshM' PIIIIIRII
·Just II umator thelllr_ Check aut our F1ur Wind
and Palollllna R.V.'sl

e••rs

'

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
COMMUNITY RELATIONS
ANNUAL FALL SCRAMBLE ,
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
POINT PLEASANT, WV 25550
'

•

•

- ----

"

-

more in line with what
coach Bob Blessing ha~
been expecting from the
sophomore
fir~t-year
starter. Dangerfield continues to strike the ball better
and his scores are beginning to show the improvement.
Point will have an opportunity to turn the tables
when the two teams, along
with Huntington St. Joe
and,Buffalo, meet on 9 a.m.
Thursday at the Riverside
course .

osPnAt ANNUAL FALL ScRAMBLE

Kylie Gheen and Lane Cullums were named the Little Miss and Little Mister Meigs County.
Cullums' last name was misspelled in yesterday's edition.

t·'·

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�•

The Daily Sentinel

MEiGs FAIR.SCENES

·Page AS
We~esday,

August 15, 2007

Inside

B-1

The Daily Sentinel

-Reds beat Cubs, Page Bl
'

NFL Notebook, Pllge 83
~to dies at 89, Pm••

84

Wednesday, August 15,2007

lhe.good, the bad and the u

lUff photo

Beth S.rpnt/phalo

Kristen McKay takes a spin in a fire truck on one' of the
fair's kiddie rides . Today is kiddie day where children under
12 are admitted for free until noon though there Is a charge
to ride the rides.

Always popular with falrgoers are scenes like this at Monday night's demo derby at the Meigs fairgrounds . Bill Hendricks
was the winner of the feature event in the demolltiC?n derby at the Meigs County Fair, Taking second in the event was
Michael Conkle. Winners· in the heats to qualify fm.the fl;!llture were Roger Smith and Wesley McKinney, first heat; Justin
Wells and Bill Hendricks, second heat; and Mlchaei .Colnkle In the third heat. In the event for compacts the winners were,
Dolyte McDonald, first; Dale McDonald, second, and Justin Goo(Je, third.
· ·

locAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY - A - I o o&lt; - """""'""'Y"""""' ...... -..--County.
...,high

ToctaV'•..,...
Golf

Eastern al Waltrtord

(Lake~de

G.C.),

9:30a.m.
Dyrtdly'• ptmtl

Triple H Rodeo held Tuesday at
Meigs County Fairgrounds

Golf '
Meigs al Wellston (Falrgreons G.C.),
~:30p.m.

Southern al Eastern (Pine Hills G.C.),

10 a.m.

.

Many participants turned out for the bull riding event at the
Triple H Rodeo held at the Triplett Rodeo Grandstand
Tuesday evening during the. 2007 Meigs County Fair at the
lower fairgrounds In Rock Springs. Some of the bull riders
had success during their eight seGonds of chaos, while
others, well, did not.

'

OVJ» seeking
football stringer

TOP LEFT- Cowboy James Riley showed great skill in
taming 'One Bad Dude' during his ride Tuesday at the
Triple H Rodeo_. Riley lasted the full eight seconds and
received 77 pqints for his successful ride.
TOP RIGHT- An unidentified cowboy gets his hands .
caught in the rope after falling off the bull shortly after
coming out of the chute Tuesday at the Triple H Rodeo.
L~FT -· Cowboy Justin Hayes, right, is dropped on his
head after 'Knothead' got the best of him during their
·short engagement Tuesday at the Triple H Rodeo. Hayes
was fine, dusting himself off afterward and walking back
to safety behind the gates.
Bryan Walters/photos

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio
Valley Publishing is seeking a stringer to help cover
high school football games
this season .
Send letters of interest
and/or small writing samples to Brad Shennan at
bsherman@ mydailytribune.com or drop them off
at our Gallipolis,· Point
Pleasant or Pomeroy offic~\
'

~

'

STAFF REPORT •

OVP Scorellna (5 p.m.-1 o.m.)
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fox- 1·740-446·3008
E-mili - sports Omydailysentinel.com

SIIOllaJIIIll

Bred Sharman, Spans EdHor
•

·

·

-

-

......11/photo

Jennifer Fife, 15, of Middleport gives her horse Summer a
sip of Pepsi to cool off at the fair.

Seolent/photo

Justin Lee may be a kid but he can drive a tri'lctor like a grown up as he competes in his first antique tractor pull.

. (740) 448-2342,

oxl.

33

'

baherman Omydallytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, oxl. 23

tcrumO mydailyreglster.com

Bryan Walters, Spona Writer
(740) 446-2342,

ext

33

bwalters@mydaiiYfribune.com

SPORTSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MASON ,
W.Va.
Under S\lnny skies and
pleasant temperatures at the
Riverside Golf Course,
Wahama
edged
Point
Pleasant in a high school
golf match on Tuesday.
The original schedule
called for this to be a threeway match with Huntington
St . Joe being the third
team. However, 3 mix-up
found St. Joe thinking the

match was on Wednesday
so the day became a dual
match between the two
county rivals.
Because of a disqualification during the · match,
the original format of
counting the best four
scores was changed · to
counting the best three
scores. Wahama was led by
Adam Roush who posted a
score of 86 followed by a
90 each by David Greene
and Brandon Johnson for a
total team score of 266. ..

•

~

'

'

CoNrAcrUs

·:• ··t;

~:.
;·· u· ·. t··~·n.u
·
:~Pte
· a
· s
.· ·a·

~

,' i'

'

.

). '·

'

:~

.

',.,.. •

r.

.

:

l

'

!•

.

'

'

•

y,..

' •

.'

Chris Dangerfield'~ score and should do better in the
of 113 was not included in future. Putting woes kept
the final tally.
McClung's score higher
. Point Pleasant was led than it should have been
by medalist for the day, J .T. considering the way he
Reynolds, who turned in a struck th.e ball throughout
fine 83. Chris Long was the day.
close behind with a 85 and
' Wahama 's effort was its
Brock
McClung
con- best of the season . . Both
tributed a 105 to make the Roush and Greene have
final team score a 273.
been fairly consistent and
Coach Mike Lucas was their scores are expected to
pleased with the consistent improve as they gain more
play of Reynolds. With the~experience. The day's score
exception of a couple of of 90 by Johnson wa s a
holes, Long played well huge improvement and

~·

•· .

.~

.

·

n· ,.

Pleasant Valley Hospital Foundation

s••• ~IJ r11istr1tiil

111ii•We
hL 1321
Belft Sergentfphoto

Beth Sergentfphoto

The junior fair poultry show began at 8 a.m. and ·ended after 1 p.m. which can ·be a long
day for not only the chickens but their owners, one of which grabbed a quick yawn.

are now aiUIIV authorized

• Now e&amp;!'J'Ying Red Head Bowa and accaeaorlaa
• We alao offer a full line of Muzzle IOedlng auppllea and gun ammunition

Check • er Bass Pre Products

LL

MoJ:e all checb payable to the
Pleastint Valley Hospital Foundation
Credit carrJs also accepted

..J

Please complete form, detach
and send with payment to:

81 BDIIIIIRI Sllllm•lsldlllltral
,,
ChiCk lllaur Gl-11 Plalll'lllllllld FlshM' PIIIIIRII
·Just II umator thelllr_ Check aut our F1ur Wind
and Palollllna R.V.'sl

e••rs

'

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
COMMUNITY RELATIONS
ANNUAL FALL SCRAMBLE ,
2520 VALLEY DRIVE
POINT PLEASANT, WV 25550
'

•

•

- ----

"

-

more in line with what
coach Bob Blessing ha~
been expecting from the
sophomore
fir~t-year
starter. Dangerfield continues to strike the ball better
and his scores are beginning to show the improvement.
Point will have an opportunity to turn the tables
when the two teams, along
with Huntington St. Joe
and,Buffalo, meet on 9 a.m.
Thursday at the Riverside
course .

osPnAt ANNUAL FALL ScRAMBLE

Kylie Gheen and Lane Cullums were named the Little Miss and Little Mister Meigs County.
Cullums' last name was misspelled in yesterday's edition.

t·'·

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-----~--------------"'- ~-~-----~· .

'

.

�P-se B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, August IS,

2007

Wednesday, Ausust

www.mydailysentinel.com

IS. 2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

•

Chris Redman moves ahead of DJ. Rutgers player sues
Shockley on Falcons QB depth ~hart Imus and CBS Radio

By JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

KETIERING - As a young
girl. Holley Mangold loved the
contact of football and would eve n
show off her bruises as a badge of
honor.
" I tboughi they were reall y
cool," she said .
That toughness will be tested
th is year when the 17 -year-old
senior prepares for playing time at
Alter High School in thi s Dayton
suburb - helping anchor the
offensive line, fending off girlsshouldn '!-play-football attitudes ,
and trying to emerge . from t!te
shadow of her brother, Nick, center for the New York Jets and a former standout at Ohio State.
"lt's really rough. I'm not going
to lie about that," she said of trying
to make her own way in the jet
wash of her brother's accomplishments.
Holley has the physical tools and
strength.
She weighs 315 pounds, bench
presses 265 pounds and has squatted 5 25 pounds.
How strong is she? She escaped
serious injury in a recent head-on
collision that demolished her truck
by pushing the steering wheel
away from her body as the crash
occurred, leaving the steering
wheel broken and crumpled.
Holley lettered last season, playing over 20 quarters in regular-season and playoff games on a team
that went 14-1 ·and finished the
season with a one-point Joss in the
state Division III finals. And she
had an answer for opponents who
hoped they could easily slip by her
to stuff the run or rush the passer.
"They quickly learned that that
just wasn't going io work," she
said.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Harang, Reds beat Cubs,.6-5
BY RICK GANO

·

AP SPORTS WRITER

,('

CHICAGO
Aaron
Harang seems to feed off
the frenzy that usually
accompanies games at
WrigleY Field. That's why
he's b.een so tough on the
Chicago Cubs.
Harang allowed four hits
three of them solo
homers - and Cincinnati's
bullpen held on Tuesday
night as the Reds sent .
Chicago to its seventh Joss
in nine games, 7-6,
Harang (12-3) outpitched
Cubs' •
ace
Carlos
Zambrano, who failed for a
third straight stan to get his
15th win.
·"Anytime you come here
or St. Louis, any team that's
in first place or right on the
bubble, you always kind of
get up for that a· little bit
APphoto
more," Harang said. " The · Cincinnati Reds shortstop Jeff Keppinger belts a single scoratmosphere around here is
so intense, it's always nice ing Edwin Encarnacion during the fourth inning of their base- .
to come here and get a vic- ball game against the · Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field in
Chicago on Tuesday.
tory."
Harang, wbo has staned
He left two outings ago in his helmet down with it
four games 'this season the sixth inning with heat- bouncing all the way into
against the Cubs, is 7-2 in related cramping and was right field.
13 career starts against driven out by Houston six
"I was upset," Zambrano
Chicago, including 3-0 at days ago after 5 J-3 innings said.
Wrigley Field.
and allowing seven runs .
Lee, in a 5-for-34 slump,
"He 's one of the best
On Tuesday night he hit his 13th homer with two
pitchers in the major allowed 13 hits and six runs outs in the founh for the
leagues
and
everyone in seven innings with two Cubs' first hit. Ramirez,
should know that," said the walks and no strikeouts .
who missed six games with
Reds ' Brandon Phillips,
"It's kind of hard to hit a sore wrist, followed one
who had three hits and was Zambrano. But he left the pitch later with his 17th.
on base four times.
ball up and we just took
The Reds made it 5-2 in
Harang (12-3) gave up advantage of that ," Phillips the fifth when Phillips led
three solo shots in seven- S31'd .
off with a double and
plus innings - back-to" I don 't have any expla- scored on Valentin's twoback homers to Derrek Lee nation for it ," Cubs manag- out single to center. Jones
and Aramis Ramirez in the er Lou Piniella said of cleared the right field
founh and one to Jacque Zambrano's performance.
bleachers with two outs in
Zambrano didn't either, the sixth, just his fourth
Jones in the sixth. '
Harang was charged with or why he hasn'twon in his homer of the season .
five runs and left after a last three starts when the · But Phillips was hit by a
leadoff walk to pinch-hitter Cubs need him the most.
pitch in the seventh and
Mike Fontenot in the
"Sometimes you . don ' t scored on another two-out
eighth. The Cubs then have your best stuff and hit, a single by Scott
pushed across a run to make sometimes you go out there Hatteberg.
it 6-5 on Lee's two-out RBI and try to do too much," he
The Cubs cut it to 6-4 in
single off Jared Burton .
said. "That's part of the the bottom half when
' David Weathers relieved game. Ju st learn from this Harang hit Mark DeRosa
and walked Ramirez before and from the bad games and with a pitch with two outs.
retiring Daryle Ward on a keep your head up ."
A wild pitch moved to secpopup to shallow center.
Ken Griffey Jr.'s two-run ond and he scored on Matt
Weathers provided some double
after
Josh Murton l); single up the middrama in the ninth before Hamilton's single and a dle.
earning his 23rd save.
walk to Jeff Keppinger
Notes: SS Ale x Gonzalez
Jason Kendall walked gave the Reds the lead in was not with the Cubs ,
with two outs before the third. Singles by Javier remaining home to attend to
Fontenot drove a pitch to Valentin
and
Edwin his 10-month-old son, who
the wall in right that Norris Encarnacion started the is ill ... . The Reds are 20-16
Hopper caught as he leaned fourth, Harang sacrificed, under interim manager Pete
into the ivy to end the Hamilton hit . an RBI Mackanin . ... Zambrano is
game.
grounder and Keppinger J -3 against the Red s thi s
" It 's frustrating . I thought added a run -scoring single season and Tuesday ni ght
Fontenot's ball wa s out of for a 4-0 lead .
marked the third time he
the park. But there was no
Encarnacion made a nice faced Harang this season ....
wind ," Ramirez said.
, play at third base to retire Harang had g iven up 13
Zambrano (14-9) didn't Zambrano 10 end the third homers in 160 1-3 innings
look at all like the Cubs ' inning. prompting the emo- entering the game , lhen
ace.
tiona! right-hander -to slam gave up three i~ six innings.

.

Ordone~, Tige~s tam~ Cleveland,

'

:.
recapture first place.m AL Central ·:
BY TOM

WITHERS

AP SPORTS WRITER

CLEVELAND
The
staggering Getroit Tigers
have the AL Central aU to .
themselves - for at least one
day.
Magglio Ordonez hit a
three-run homer in Detroit's
four-run I Oth inning as
Detroit moved one game
ahead of Cleveland in the upfor-grabs division wiih a 6-2
win over the Indians on·
Tuesday night.
Ordonez's 22nd homer, a
shot to left off Joe Borowski
(2-5) , broke it open for the
Tigers, who were missing
two regulars because of the
flu and had been playing lately as if their wholfl roster had
come down with something.
Cunis Granderson, whose
all-out diving catch in the
eighth kept it tied 2-2 ,
walked to open the lOth and
went to third on Ryan
Raburn's bloop single. Gary
Sheffield's RBI single gave
Detroit a 3-2 lead.
Indians pitching coach
Carl Willis made a quick visit
to settle down Borowski. The
right-hander made a mistake
anyway as Ordonez ripped played on the same day, the
his first pitch over the wafl in clubs have done the same
left to make it 6-2.
thing 18 times.
Fernando Rodney (2-5)
Ordonez drove in Detroit's
struck the side in the ninth first run in the sixth .
after allowing a leadoff douGrady Sizemore hit a twoble, and Todd }ones worked run homer for the Indians,
the lOth.
who went 0-for-10 wiih runFor several weeks , the ners in scoring position .
Tigers have looked nothing Cleveland, which started the
like defending AL champi- season · 33-13 at home, has
ons. Sjnce the All-Star break, lost 13 of its last 17 at Jacobs
they ' re just 14-19. The Field .
Indians, though, have been
The Tigers played perhaps
worse, going 13- 18 with an their biggest game this seaoffense that can' t hit. ·
son wiihout second baseman
The two teams have been Placido Polanco and outawful together. When one fielder Craig Monroe. Both
loses, so does the oiher. And came down with the flu, forcwhen one wins, which hasn't ing manager Jim Leyland to
been often lately, the other rearrange his lineup.
usually follows. On the 28
Indians manager Eric
previous occasions ihat they Wedge also adjusted his bat-

ting order, which could be·
described as sickly of late. .
Kenny Lofton moved into·
the
leadoff spot and··
Sizemore was dropped to .
third. But the change had lit-'
tie effect as the Indians got
just six hits and were held to .
two runs or less for the 12th,
time in 20 games.
Granderson, who wasn't -ill'•
Leyland's original lineup,
saved the Tigers in the
eighth.
,,
With the score 2-2, twoc
runners on and · two outs,
Cleveland's Travis Hafner,
back after missing foul'
games because of a sore~
knee , hit a soft liner toward
the gap in left-center that,
looked like it would drop in.·
for an RBI single.
But Granderson sprinted
over and made a sensational
catch , snatching _the baU
backhanded just above th~,
grass with a head-first dive.,
that prompted reliever Tim:
Brrdak to raise his arms in.'
tnumph like a boxer wh6 had.
just scored a late-round'
knockout.
..
Indians
starter
C.C:
Sabathia allowed two runs"
and seven hits in seven·:
innings.
Sizemore hadn't batted '
anywhere but in the leadoff
spot for the Indians since:
May 14, 2005 . In his first at• .
bat as Cleveland's No. 3 hit~ ·
ter, Sizemore drove a fastball .
from Jeremy Bonderman into;
the right-field bullpen to~
make it 2-0.
Sizemore's 20th homer
made him the
fourth~
Cleveland player to have thai:
many homers and 25 steals in
the same season, joining Joe·
Caner (1986-88), Robertq;
Alomar (1999, 2001 ) and
Bobby Bonds (1979).
The fast start didn't last for
Cleveland's offense against
Sonderman, who gave up
two runs and four hits in•.
seven innings.

Bluffton coach returns to city of bus crash:
ATLANTA
(AP)
Returning to the city where
he was critically inJured in
a bus crash , Bluffton
University's baseball coach
got a chance to heal a little
more Tuesday night.
James Grandey watched
from the owner's box as the
Atlanta Braves faced Barry
Bonds
and
the
San
Francisco Giants.
" It doesn't get any better
than this," said Grandey,
who chatted with Braves
manager Bobby Cox and
got an autograph from
Atlanta
slugger . Mark
Teixeira beforehand . "This
is baseball , a game we all

love."
Five of Grandey's players
were killed when their bus
plunged off a highway
overpass in the early mornin~ hours of March 2. The
dnver and his wife also
were killed .
Grandey was critically
injured with a dislocated
ankle and numerous broken
bones in his face. He spent
two weeks in an Atlanta
hospital before returning
home to Ohio.
•·
" Each day we get a little
stronger," Grandey said.
"The support has been
amazing. That's what kept
us together."

Before coming to Turner
Field, he visited the doctors
and nurses who treated him
at Piedmont Hospital.
"There were a lot of jokes ·
from them, saying they'd.:
never seen me standmg·
up;' said the coach, who·
-attended the game with hi s .
wife, Jessica, and their 8 ~ ·
month-old daughter, Ayla. ·
Grandey said he may visit'
the site of the crash on'
Wednesday.
" To be honest, it's a little
uneasx, a little eerie ," he
said. 'It would probably be ·
good to go by (the bridge).'
It may he lp c lose some·
things off."
'j

With all the uncertainty
surrounding Michael Vick,
movement on ihe Falcons'
depti) chart at quarterback
isn't surprising. This time,
it's at the bottom.
Based on his erratic play
in Atlanta's preseason opener last week, DJ. Shockley
has dropped to third.
, Shockley is trying to beat
out Chris Redman for the
No. 2 job behind starter
Joey Harrington, but he had
a·mediocre debut agjlinst ihe
New York Jets.
).
" I think mostiy he just
wasn 't in a comfort zone,
was off-balance a couple of
times ajld moved in the
pocket,'
Falcons coach
Bobby Petrino said Thesdar.
"But he settled down. He s
had som,e good practices
here in the last ~ouple of
days, so hopefully it'll be a
'
different story."
Shockley, a 2006 seventh..
round draft pick from
Georgia, took no snaps as a
rookie behind Vick and Matt
Schaub, but he hoped to
impress a new coaching
staff when the Falcons
began training camp three
weeks ago.
· Instead, with Harrington
entrenched as the starter and
Vick out of the picture
because of federal dogfighting charges in Virginia,
Redman distinguished himself by perfonning better
than Shockley in practice .
Redman also benefited from
knowing Petrino's playbook
·after they spent the 1998
at
season
together
Louisville.
"He's got a reason for
why he calls every play. and
he knt&gt;ws as much as any
coach in the NFL," said
Redman, a third-round draft
pick for Baltimore . in 2000.
"He's very knowledgeable.
He's just got a knack for
calling plays, and he's really
good at it. I've never been
around a better coordinator
my entire career."
Raiders
Coach Lane Kiffin had
more tests and missed
another
practice
while

recovering from a viral left Achilles' tendon.
infection .
Ford was the Titans' sixthKiffm has been in the hos- round draft pick out of
pita! since Monday morning Central Arkansas. He was
for tests and.observation . He working in an individual
is expected to return in time drill Monday when he went
to coach Saturday's exhibi- down . He tried to hop off,
lion ~arne against the San but ihen was carted off the
Francisco 49ers.
field .
Kiffm, 32, is the youngest
Ford is the second rookie
coach in the NFL, making defensive lineman the Titans
his health problems even drafted to have a seasonmore of a surp_rise to his ending
IDJury.
Tackle
players .
Quarterback Antonio Johnson tore up his
Andrew Walter said his knee and already · is on
coach would "have to be injured reserve.
pretty sick not to be out
The Titans picked up
here," and the team would defensive end Jason Hall off
try to go on like nothing had waivers from Carolina. The
changed.
· 6-foot -2 , 253-pound Hall
Offensive · coordinators originally signed as an
Greg Knapp and defensive undrafted free agent with
coordinator Rob Ryan again Buffalo in 2006, was cut and
ran practice, but most of the signed with Carolina in
drills had been planned out January. ·
by Kiffin well in advance.
The Panthers sent him to
NFL Europa where Hall was
Vikings
Jason Glenn gave it every- the defensive MVP while
thing he had trying to get leading the league with 12
ready for a seventh·· Nf1.. sacks.
Bills
season. lfis aching knees
just wouldn't let it happen .
John McCargo hun his
The Minnesota Vikings left ankle and was unable to
linebacker and special teams compiete practice Tuesday.·
standout, one of the most . Coach Dick Jauron said
liked players on the team, the backup defensive tackle
officially retired Tuesday.
was fine , but will have more
Glenn appeared in nine . tests. McCar~o called the
games with the Vikings last injury "nothmg serious,"
season, spent the first five saying he was hurt when he
years of his career with the fell back on his ankle during
New York Jets and also an 11-on-11 drill. He limped
played one season in Miami. off and was immediately
Glenn tore an ACL last attended to by trainers and a
season and was still experi- team doctor.
encing soreness through the
It's potentially the latest
first two weeks of training setback for the second of
camp. He addregsed the Buffalo's two 2006 firstteam on Monday night in round draft picks. He missed
what players called an emo- ihe final II games last seationa! meeting.
son with a broken left foot.
"I was pretty saddened by McCargo missed practice
it," fellow linebacker Ben time earlier this training
Leber said. "He is a great camp with a strained
guy, a great friend and was abdomen and was held out
great in the locker room. of the team's spring miniBut I think retirement camps after he had a second
should be something you operation to repair the brocongratulate the person. He ken foot earlier this year.
played seven years and
The injuries have hurt
played the way the game is McCargo's chances of competing with Kyle Williams
supposed to be played."
Titans
for the starting job alongside
Rookie defensive end Larry Tripplett.
Staning center Melvin
Jacob Ford could have
surgery
as
soon
as Fowler also twisted his left
Wednesday to repair a tom ankle and was unable to fin-

Ohio State to close Big Ten season
at home against Michigan State
· COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State opens defense
of its Big Ten men's basketball title on Jan. 3 at
home, then closes its conference slate with a March
showdown
against
Michigan State,
' The Buckeyes' 2007 Big
schedule
was
Ten
announced Tuesday. The
non-conference
portion
will be released later this
month.
· Big Ten teams will play
1·8 conference games this
year after deciding the regular-season league title
over 16 games each of the
last I 0 seasons. The
Buckeyes play home and

away games with every
member except they do not
play at home against Penn
State or on the road at
Wisconsin.
The games against rival
Michigan are played in the
span of two weeks, Feb. 5
at Value City Arena and
Feb . 17 at Crisler Arena.

The Buckeyes close with
games against Purdue and
Michigan State. The date
for both games is not set
because they are television
wild-card games. The day
and time will be announced
later in the season.
Led by freshmen Greg
Oden and Mike Conley Jr. ,
the Buckeyes captured
their 17th Big Ten title last
spring with a 15-1 record,
then went on to also win
the conference's tournament championship.
They set a school record
for wins while going 35-4,
losing to defending champion Florida in the national
championship game. ·

ish practice.
Chiefs
Larry Johnson is still a
holdout and Priest Holmes
is still a question mark . That
makes Michael Bennett the
Kansas City Chiefs' fi rststring running back for now.
" Michael's had a good
camp,"
coach
Herm
Edwards said as the team
wrapped up train ing camp
on Tuesday. " He came into
camp with the mind-set of
wanting to be a part of the
()ffense thi s year, whether
Larry Johnson was here or
not. And he needs to be a
part of this offense. T hai's
why we brought him in ."
General manager Carl
Peterson on Monday played
down reports that the team
and Johnson were close to
·working out a contract
extension. But eve n if
Johnson does co me back
soon, and even with rookie
Kolby. Smith having an
impressive camp, Bennett
figures to be a significant
part of the offense this season.
Jdhnson set an NFL
record with 416 carries last
year and rushed for I ,789
yards , breaking the team's
single-season record for the
second year in a row.
Edwards would like to lighten that load a bit.
· "Like I said before, the
goal is always to run for
more than 2,000 yards in a
season ," Edwards said. "If
you had. your way and run
the ball for at least 2,000
yards, you're going to run
the
ball
500
times.
Obviously your lead back is
going to get 250 or maybe
300 carries , so that's how
you look at it."
That would leave 200 or more - carries for someone else.
" I'd be excited to do it, to
run behind a ?,reat offensive
line like this , ' the 29-yearold Bennett said. 'They've
blocked for 1 ,000-yard rushers for ' I don't know how
many years in a row now.
It's a great system, a great .
balance on offense, and I' m
going to take advantage of
it."

NE W YORK (AP) - A
mem ber of the Rutgers
women 's basketball team
sued Don Imus and CBS on
Tuesday, claiming the radio
personality 's sexist and
racist comments about 'the
team damaged her reputation .
Ki a Vau~hn filed the lawsuit allegmg slander and
· defamation of character in
state Supreme Coun 'in the
Bronx the same day lmus
settled with CBS Radi e · in a
deal that pre-empts his
threatened $ 120 million
breach-of-contract lawsuit
against CBS . The settlement
all ows him to make a comeback bid at a new station.
Vaughn 's
lawsuit,
belie ved to be the first by a
player i~ the case, says lmtis
and his former co-host
Bernard McGuirk , along
with CBS Corp . and CBS
Radio , are legally responsi ble for damage done to her
character and reputation.
There is no dollar amount
listed in the suit.
Vaughn was humiliated ,
embarras sed and publicly
mocked for the comments,
the lawsuit claims. Her
attorney, Richard Ancowitz,
said: "The full effect of the
damage remains to be seen.''
"This~
is about Kia
Vaughn 's good name,"
Attcowitz sa1d. "She would
do anything to return to her
life as a student and respected basketball player - a
more simple life before;
lmus opened his mouth on
A ril 4."
~mus referred to the basketball ptaxers as "nappyheaded hos ' on his nationally syndiCated radio program
in A]lril, becoming the target of heated protests led by
the Rev. AI Sharpton. He
was fired shortly after.
A telephone message left
for Imus' attorney was not
immediately
returned

DoNIMUS
Tuesday. There was no
phone listing for McGuirk
m the New York area. A
spokeswoman for CBS
Radio declined to comment,
and
CBS
network
spokesman
Dana
McClintock did not immediate! y return a message.
MSNBC said it hadn 't seen
the lawsuit.
Rutgers women's basketball program spokeswoman
Stacie Brann said that the
university had no comment
on the lawsuit and that she
didn't know whether other
players had sued .
Vaughn, who was a center,
had spoken out about Imus
on "The Oprah Winfrey
Show" in April. She said
that the comments overshadowed her team's amazing season, one the coach
has called the most rewardin* of her career.
'Our moment was stolen
from us ," Vaughn said then.
"Instead of us coming here
to enjoy what we accomplished and how far we
came, we had to sit back and
look at media asking questions about what he said."

t:oagralulallast
1'88li8J Be111181t l'flst IBB Fill j
Fullllllit: . . .,., .......

••. ,.., .,. ...,

The Racine Downtown
Athletic Club
"We Bleed Purple"

'huraday~ ·August

23, 2007

• MEIGS • EAS7ERN • 1001'1111

Former NBA referee Tim Donaghy
plans to plead guilty Wednesday
Bv PAT MILTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Former
NBA referee Tim Donaghy
planned to plead guilty in
federdl court on Wednesday
to charges alleging he
wagered on games he officiated, a person familiar with
the betting scandal probe
said.
.
Donaghy was to surrender
at Brooklyn federal coui:t,
the person said on condition
of anonymity
because
Donaghy hadn'tturned himself in yet.
.NBA spokesman Tim
Frank told the AP the league
was informed Tuesday that
Donaghy
would
plead
Wednesday but was given
no funher information .
Donaghy's attorney, John
Lauro, and federal prosecutors declined to comment.
NBA commissioner David
Stem said last month the referee's lawyer told the league
his client was contemplating
,
a plea.

Besides have fired him sooner but
allegedly WaS told it might affect the
placing his investigation .
o w n
Stern blamed a "rogue ,
wagers , isolated criminal" for the
investiga- betting scandal that has devtors al so astated the league and
examined threatened the credibility of
w h e t h e r every referee .
Donaghy
Donaghy was rated in the
provided top tier of officials , Stern
1 n s i d e said , and there was nothing
in form a- suspicious about the fretion
to quency of his foul calls. He
o t he r s , was assigned to work in the
Notebook includin g second round of the play-·
refere es' offs, with hi s last NBA game
schedules. The referee had a coming during the Phoenixgambling problem and was San
Antonio
Western
approached . by low-level Conference semifinal.
mob associates through an
No other NBA officials or
acquaintance, a law enforce- players were expected to be
ment official said .
· in volved in . the scandal ,
The FBI fir st contacted which Stem called the " most
the NBA on June 20 to talk serious situation and worst
abput a referee alleged to be situation that I have ever
gambling on games , and the experienced either as a fan
two sides met on June 2 1. of the NBA , a lawyer for the
Stern said last month . NBA or a commissioner of
Donaghy resigned July 9 the NBA ."
.
after 13 years as a referee ,
Others outside the NBA
though Stem said he would are expected to be charged .

ADVERTISING DEADLINE· Thursday, Auguat 18, 2007

Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155
For More Information

.\!!:be 11Batlp ~enttnel

�P-se B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, August IS,

2007

Wednesday, Ausust

www.mydailysentinel.com

IS. 2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

•

Chris Redman moves ahead of DJ. Rutgers player sues
Shockley on Falcons QB depth ~hart Imus and CBS Radio

By JAMES HANNAH
ASSOCI ATED PRESS WRITER

KETIERING - As a young
girl. Holley Mangold loved the
contact of football and would eve n
show off her bruises as a badge of
honor.
" I tboughi they were reall y
cool," she said .
That toughness will be tested
th is year when the 17 -year-old
senior prepares for playing time at
Alter High School in thi s Dayton
suburb - helping anchor the
offensive line, fending off girlsshouldn '!-play-football attitudes ,
and trying to emerge . from t!te
shadow of her brother, Nick, center for the New York Jets and a former standout at Ohio State.
"lt's really rough. I'm not going
to lie about that," she said of trying
to make her own way in the jet
wash of her brother's accomplishments.
Holley has the physical tools and
strength.
She weighs 315 pounds, bench
presses 265 pounds and has squatted 5 25 pounds.
How strong is she? She escaped
serious injury in a recent head-on
collision that demolished her truck
by pushing the steering wheel
away from her body as the crash
occurred, leaving the steering
wheel broken and crumpled.
Holley lettered last season, playing over 20 quarters in regular-season and playoff games on a team
that went 14-1 ·and finished the
season with a one-point Joss in the
state Division III finals. And she
had an answer for opponents who
hoped they could easily slip by her
to stuff the run or rush the passer.
"They quickly learned that that
just wasn't going io work," she
said.

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Harang, Reds beat Cubs,.6-5
BY RICK GANO

·

AP SPORTS WRITER

,('

CHICAGO
Aaron
Harang seems to feed off
the frenzy that usually
accompanies games at
WrigleY Field. That's why
he's b.een so tough on the
Chicago Cubs.
Harang allowed four hits
three of them solo
homers - and Cincinnati's
bullpen held on Tuesday
night as the Reds sent .
Chicago to its seventh Joss
in nine games, 7-6,
Harang (12-3) outpitched
Cubs' •
ace
Carlos
Zambrano, who failed for a
third straight stan to get his
15th win.
·"Anytime you come here
or St. Louis, any team that's
in first place or right on the
bubble, you always kind of
get up for that a· little bit
APphoto
more," Harang said. " The · Cincinnati Reds shortstop Jeff Keppinger belts a single scoratmosphere around here is
so intense, it's always nice ing Edwin Encarnacion during the fourth inning of their base- .
to come here and get a vic- ball game against the · Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field in
Chicago on Tuesday.
tory."
Harang, wbo has staned
He left two outings ago in his helmet down with it
four games 'this season the sixth inning with heat- bouncing all the way into
against the Cubs, is 7-2 in related cramping and was right field.
13 career starts against driven out by Houston six
"I was upset," Zambrano
Chicago, including 3-0 at days ago after 5 J-3 innings said.
Wrigley Field.
and allowing seven runs .
Lee, in a 5-for-34 slump,
"He 's one of the best
On Tuesday night he hit his 13th homer with two
pitchers in the major allowed 13 hits and six runs outs in the founh for the
leagues
and
everyone in seven innings with two Cubs' first hit. Ramirez,
should know that," said the walks and no strikeouts .
who missed six games with
Reds ' Brandon Phillips,
"It's kind of hard to hit a sore wrist, followed one
who had three hits and was Zambrano. But he left the pitch later with his 17th.
on base four times.
ball up and we just took
The Reds made it 5-2 in
Harang (12-3) gave up advantage of that ," Phillips the fifth when Phillips led
three solo shots in seven- S31'd .
off with a double and
plus innings - back-to" I don 't have any expla- scored on Valentin's twoback homers to Derrek Lee nation for it ," Cubs manag- out single to center. Jones
and Aramis Ramirez in the er Lou Piniella said of cleared the right field
founh and one to Jacque Zambrano's performance.
bleachers with two outs in
Zambrano didn't either, the sixth, just his fourth
Jones in the sixth. '
Harang was charged with or why he hasn'twon in his homer of the season .
five runs and left after a last three starts when the · But Phillips was hit by a
leadoff walk to pinch-hitter Cubs need him the most.
pitch in the seventh and
Mike Fontenot in the
"Sometimes you . don ' t scored on another two-out
eighth. The Cubs then have your best stuff and hit, a single by Scott
pushed across a run to make sometimes you go out there Hatteberg.
it 6-5 on Lee's two-out RBI and try to do too much," he
The Cubs cut it to 6-4 in
single off Jared Burton .
said. "That's part of the the bottom half when
' David Weathers relieved game. Ju st learn from this Harang hit Mark DeRosa
and walked Ramirez before and from the bad games and with a pitch with two outs.
retiring Daryle Ward on a keep your head up ."
A wild pitch moved to secpopup to shallow center.
Ken Griffey Jr.'s two-run ond and he scored on Matt
Weathers provided some double
after
Josh Murton l); single up the middrama in the ninth before Hamilton's single and a dle.
earning his 23rd save.
walk to Jeff Keppinger
Notes: SS Ale x Gonzalez
Jason Kendall walked gave the Reds the lead in was not with the Cubs ,
with two outs before the third. Singles by Javier remaining home to attend to
Fontenot drove a pitch to Valentin
and
Edwin his 10-month-old son, who
the wall in right that Norris Encarnacion started the is ill ... . The Reds are 20-16
Hopper caught as he leaned fourth, Harang sacrificed, under interim manager Pete
into the ivy to end the Hamilton hit . an RBI Mackanin . ... Zambrano is
game.
grounder and Keppinger J -3 against the Red s thi s
" It 's frustrating . I thought added a run -scoring single season and Tuesday ni ght
Fontenot's ball wa s out of for a 4-0 lead .
marked the third time he
the park. But there was no
Encarnacion made a nice faced Harang this season ....
wind ," Ramirez said.
, play at third base to retire Harang had g iven up 13
Zambrano (14-9) didn't Zambrano 10 end the third homers in 160 1-3 innings
look at all like the Cubs ' inning. prompting the emo- entering the game , lhen
ace.
tiona! right-hander -to slam gave up three i~ six innings.

.

Ordone~, Tige~s tam~ Cleveland,

'

:.
recapture first place.m AL Central ·:
BY TOM

WITHERS

AP SPORTS WRITER

CLEVELAND
The
staggering Getroit Tigers
have the AL Central aU to .
themselves - for at least one
day.
Magglio Ordonez hit a
three-run homer in Detroit's
four-run I Oth inning as
Detroit moved one game
ahead of Cleveland in the upfor-grabs division wiih a 6-2
win over the Indians on·
Tuesday night.
Ordonez's 22nd homer, a
shot to left off Joe Borowski
(2-5) , broke it open for the
Tigers, who were missing
two regulars because of the
flu and had been playing lately as if their wholfl roster had
come down with something.
Cunis Granderson, whose
all-out diving catch in the
eighth kept it tied 2-2 ,
walked to open the lOth and
went to third on Ryan
Raburn's bloop single. Gary
Sheffield's RBI single gave
Detroit a 3-2 lead.
Indians pitching coach
Carl Willis made a quick visit
to settle down Borowski. The
right-hander made a mistake
anyway as Ordonez ripped played on the same day, the
his first pitch over the wafl in clubs have done the same
left to make it 6-2.
thing 18 times.
Fernando Rodney (2-5)
Ordonez drove in Detroit's
struck the side in the ninth first run in the sixth .
after allowing a leadoff douGrady Sizemore hit a twoble, and Todd }ones worked run homer for the Indians,
the lOth.
who went 0-for-10 wiih runFor several weeks , the ners in scoring position .
Tigers have looked nothing Cleveland, which started the
like defending AL champi- season · 33-13 at home, has
ons. Sjnce the All-Star break, lost 13 of its last 17 at Jacobs
they ' re just 14-19. The Field .
Indians, though, have been
The Tigers played perhaps
worse, going 13- 18 with an their biggest game this seaoffense that can' t hit. ·
son wiihout second baseman
The two teams have been Placido Polanco and outawful together. When one fielder Craig Monroe. Both
loses, so does the oiher. And came down with the flu, forcwhen one wins, which hasn't ing manager Jim Leyland to
been often lately, the other rearrange his lineup.
usually follows. On the 28
Indians manager Eric
previous occasions ihat they Wedge also adjusted his bat-

ting order, which could be·
described as sickly of late. .
Kenny Lofton moved into·
the
leadoff spot and··
Sizemore was dropped to .
third. But the change had lit-'
tie effect as the Indians got
just six hits and were held to .
two runs or less for the 12th,
time in 20 games.
Granderson, who wasn't -ill'•
Leyland's original lineup,
saved the Tigers in the
eighth.
,,
With the score 2-2, twoc
runners on and · two outs,
Cleveland's Travis Hafner,
back after missing foul'
games because of a sore~
knee , hit a soft liner toward
the gap in left-center that,
looked like it would drop in.·
for an RBI single.
But Granderson sprinted
over and made a sensational
catch , snatching _the baU
backhanded just above th~,
grass with a head-first dive.,
that prompted reliever Tim:
Brrdak to raise his arms in.'
tnumph like a boxer wh6 had.
just scored a late-round'
knockout.
..
Indians
starter
C.C:
Sabathia allowed two runs"
and seven hits in seven·:
innings.
Sizemore hadn't batted '
anywhere but in the leadoff
spot for the Indians since:
May 14, 2005 . In his first at• .
bat as Cleveland's No. 3 hit~ ·
ter, Sizemore drove a fastball .
from Jeremy Bonderman into;
the right-field bullpen to~
make it 2-0.
Sizemore's 20th homer
made him the
fourth~
Cleveland player to have thai:
many homers and 25 steals in
the same season, joining Joe·
Caner (1986-88), Robertq;
Alomar (1999, 2001 ) and
Bobby Bonds (1979).
The fast start didn't last for
Cleveland's offense against
Sonderman, who gave up
two runs and four hits in•.
seven innings.

Bluffton coach returns to city of bus crash:
ATLANTA
(AP)
Returning to the city where
he was critically inJured in
a bus crash , Bluffton
University's baseball coach
got a chance to heal a little
more Tuesday night.
James Grandey watched
from the owner's box as the
Atlanta Braves faced Barry
Bonds
and
the
San
Francisco Giants.
" It doesn't get any better
than this," said Grandey,
who chatted with Braves
manager Bobby Cox and
got an autograph from
Atlanta
slugger . Mark
Teixeira beforehand . "This
is baseball , a game we all

love."
Five of Grandey's players
were killed when their bus
plunged off a highway
overpass in the early mornin~ hours of March 2. The
dnver and his wife also
were killed .
Grandey was critically
injured with a dislocated
ankle and numerous broken
bones in his face. He spent
two weeks in an Atlanta
hospital before returning
home to Ohio.
•·
" Each day we get a little
stronger," Grandey said.
"The support has been
amazing. That's what kept
us together."

Before coming to Turner
Field, he visited the doctors
and nurses who treated him
at Piedmont Hospital.
"There were a lot of jokes ·
from them, saying they'd.:
never seen me standmg·
up;' said the coach, who·
-attended the game with hi s .
wife, Jessica, and their 8 ~ ·
month-old daughter, Ayla. ·
Grandey said he may visit'
the site of the crash on'
Wednesday.
" To be honest, it's a little
uneasx, a little eerie ," he
said. 'It would probably be ·
good to go by (the bridge).'
It may he lp c lose some·
things off."
'j

With all the uncertainty
surrounding Michael Vick,
movement on ihe Falcons'
depti) chart at quarterback
isn't surprising. This time,
it's at the bottom.
Based on his erratic play
in Atlanta's preseason opener last week, DJ. Shockley
has dropped to third.
, Shockley is trying to beat
out Chris Redman for the
No. 2 job behind starter
Joey Harrington, but he had
a·mediocre debut agjlinst ihe
New York Jets.
).
" I think mostiy he just
wasn 't in a comfort zone,
was off-balance a couple of
times ajld moved in the
pocket,'
Falcons coach
Bobby Petrino said Thesdar.
"But he settled down. He s
had som,e good practices
here in the last ~ouple of
days, so hopefully it'll be a
'
different story."
Shockley, a 2006 seventh..
round draft pick from
Georgia, took no snaps as a
rookie behind Vick and Matt
Schaub, but he hoped to
impress a new coaching
staff when the Falcons
began training camp three
weeks ago.
· Instead, with Harrington
entrenched as the starter and
Vick out of the picture
because of federal dogfighting charges in Virginia,
Redman distinguished himself by perfonning better
than Shockley in practice .
Redman also benefited from
knowing Petrino's playbook
·after they spent the 1998
at
season
together
Louisville.
"He's got a reason for
why he calls every play. and
he knt&gt;ws as much as any
coach in the NFL," said
Redman, a third-round draft
pick for Baltimore . in 2000.
"He's very knowledgeable.
He's just got a knack for
calling plays, and he's really
good at it. I've never been
around a better coordinator
my entire career."
Raiders
Coach Lane Kiffin had
more tests and missed
another
practice
while

recovering from a viral left Achilles' tendon.
infection .
Ford was the Titans' sixthKiffm has been in the hos- round draft pick out of
pita! since Monday morning Central Arkansas. He was
for tests and.observation . He working in an individual
is expected to return in time drill Monday when he went
to coach Saturday's exhibi- down . He tried to hop off,
lion ~arne against the San but ihen was carted off the
Francisco 49ers.
field .
Kiffm, 32, is the youngest
Ford is the second rookie
coach in the NFL, making defensive lineman the Titans
his health problems even drafted to have a seasonmore of a surp_rise to his ending
IDJury.
Tackle
players .
Quarterback Antonio Johnson tore up his
Andrew Walter said his knee and already · is on
coach would "have to be injured reserve.
pretty sick not to be out
The Titans picked up
here," and the team would defensive end Jason Hall off
try to go on like nothing had waivers from Carolina. The
changed.
· 6-foot -2 , 253-pound Hall
Offensive · coordinators originally signed as an
Greg Knapp and defensive undrafted free agent with
coordinator Rob Ryan again Buffalo in 2006, was cut and
ran practice, but most of the signed with Carolina in
drills had been planned out January. ·
by Kiffin well in advance.
The Panthers sent him to
NFL Europa where Hall was
Vikings
Jason Glenn gave it every- the defensive MVP while
thing he had trying to get leading the league with 12
ready for a seventh·· Nf1.. sacks.
Bills
season. lfis aching knees
just wouldn't let it happen .
John McCargo hun his
The Minnesota Vikings left ankle and was unable to
linebacker and special teams compiete practice Tuesday.·
standout, one of the most . Coach Dick Jauron said
liked players on the team, the backup defensive tackle
officially retired Tuesday.
was fine , but will have more
Glenn appeared in nine . tests. McCar~o called the
games with the Vikings last injury "nothmg serious,"
season, spent the first five saying he was hurt when he
years of his career with the fell back on his ankle during
New York Jets and also an 11-on-11 drill. He limped
played one season in Miami. off and was immediately
Glenn tore an ACL last attended to by trainers and a
season and was still experi- team doctor.
encing soreness through the
It's potentially the latest
first two weeks of training setback for the second of
camp. He addregsed the Buffalo's two 2006 firstteam on Monday night in round draft picks. He missed
what players called an emo- ihe final II games last seationa! meeting.
son with a broken left foot.
"I was pretty saddened by McCargo missed practice
it," fellow linebacker Ben time earlier this training
Leber said. "He is a great camp with a strained
guy, a great friend and was abdomen and was held out
great in the locker room. of the team's spring miniBut I think retirement camps after he had a second
should be something you operation to repair the brocongratulate the person. He ken foot earlier this year.
played seven years and
The injuries have hurt
played the way the game is McCargo's chances of competing with Kyle Williams
supposed to be played."
Titans
for the starting job alongside
Rookie defensive end Larry Tripplett.
Staning center Melvin
Jacob Ford could have
surgery
as
soon
as Fowler also twisted his left
Wednesday to repair a tom ankle and was unable to fin-

Ohio State to close Big Ten season
at home against Michigan State
· COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio State opens defense
of its Big Ten men's basketball title on Jan. 3 at
home, then closes its conference slate with a March
showdown
against
Michigan State,
' The Buckeyes' 2007 Big
schedule
was
Ten
announced Tuesday. The
non-conference
portion
will be released later this
month.
· Big Ten teams will play
1·8 conference games this
year after deciding the regular-season league title
over 16 games each of the
last I 0 seasons. The
Buckeyes play home and

away games with every
member except they do not
play at home against Penn
State or on the road at
Wisconsin.
The games against rival
Michigan are played in the
span of two weeks, Feb. 5
at Value City Arena and
Feb . 17 at Crisler Arena.

The Buckeyes close with
games against Purdue and
Michigan State. The date
for both games is not set
because they are television
wild-card games. The day
and time will be announced
later in the season.
Led by freshmen Greg
Oden and Mike Conley Jr. ,
the Buckeyes captured
their 17th Big Ten title last
spring with a 15-1 record,
then went on to also win
the conference's tournament championship.
They set a school record
for wins while going 35-4,
losing to defending champion Florida in the national
championship game. ·

ish practice.
Chiefs
Larry Johnson is still a
holdout and Priest Holmes
is still a question mark . That
makes Michael Bennett the
Kansas City Chiefs' fi rststring running back for now.
" Michael's had a good
camp,"
coach
Herm
Edwards said as the team
wrapped up train ing camp
on Tuesday. " He came into
camp with the mind-set of
wanting to be a part of the
()ffense thi s year, whether
Larry Johnson was here or
not. And he needs to be a
part of this offense. T hai's
why we brought him in ."
General manager Carl
Peterson on Monday played
down reports that the team
and Johnson were close to
·working out a contract
extension. But eve n if
Johnson does co me back
soon, and even with rookie
Kolby. Smith having an
impressive camp, Bennett
figures to be a significant
part of the offense this season.
Jdhnson set an NFL
record with 416 carries last
year and rushed for I ,789
yards , breaking the team's
single-season record for the
second year in a row.
Edwards would like to lighten that load a bit.
· "Like I said before, the
goal is always to run for
more than 2,000 yards in a
season ," Edwards said. "If
you had. your way and run
the ball for at least 2,000
yards, you're going to run
the
ball
500
times.
Obviously your lead back is
going to get 250 or maybe
300 carries , so that's how
you look at it."
That would leave 200 or more - carries for someone else.
" I'd be excited to do it, to
run behind a ?,reat offensive
line like this , ' the 29-yearold Bennett said. 'They've
blocked for 1 ,000-yard rushers for ' I don't know how
many years in a row now.
It's a great system, a great .
balance on offense, and I' m
going to take advantage of
it."

NE W YORK (AP) - A
mem ber of the Rutgers
women 's basketball team
sued Don Imus and CBS on
Tuesday, claiming the radio
personality 's sexist and
racist comments about 'the
team damaged her reputation .
Ki a Vau~hn filed the lawsuit allegmg slander and
· defamation of character in
state Supreme Coun 'in the
Bronx the same day lmus
settled with CBS Radi e · in a
deal that pre-empts his
threatened $ 120 million
breach-of-contract lawsuit
against CBS . The settlement
all ows him to make a comeback bid at a new station.
Vaughn 's
lawsuit,
belie ved to be the first by a
player i~ the case, says lmtis
and his former co-host
Bernard McGuirk , along
with CBS Corp . and CBS
Radio , are legally responsi ble for damage done to her
character and reputation.
There is no dollar amount
listed in the suit.
Vaughn was humiliated ,
embarras sed and publicly
mocked for the comments,
the lawsuit claims. Her
attorney, Richard Ancowitz,
said: "The full effect of the
damage remains to be seen.''
"This~
is about Kia
Vaughn 's good name,"
Attcowitz sa1d. "She would
do anything to return to her
life as a student and respected basketball player - a
more simple life before;
lmus opened his mouth on
A ril 4."
~mus referred to the basketball ptaxers as "nappyheaded hos ' on his nationally syndiCated radio program
in A]lril, becoming the target of heated protests led by
the Rev. AI Sharpton. He
was fired shortly after.
A telephone message left
for Imus' attorney was not
immediately
returned

DoNIMUS
Tuesday. There was no
phone listing for McGuirk
m the New York area. A
spokeswoman for CBS
Radio declined to comment,
and
CBS
network
spokesman
Dana
McClintock did not immediate! y return a message.
MSNBC said it hadn 't seen
the lawsuit.
Rutgers women's basketball program spokeswoman
Stacie Brann said that the
university had no comment
on the lawsuit and that she
didn't know whether other
players had sued .
Vaughn, who was a center,
had spoken out about Imus
on "The Oprah Winfrey
Show" in April. She said
that the comments overshadowed her team's amazing season, one the coach
has called the most rewardin* of her career.
'Our moment was stolen
from us ," Vaughn said then.
"Instead of us coming here
to enjoy what we accomplished and how far we
came, we had to sit back and
look at media asking questions about what he said."

t:oagralulallast
1'88li8J Be111181t l'flst IBB Fill j
Fullllllit: . . .,., .......

••. ,.., .,. ...,

The Racine Downtown
Athletic Club
"We Bleed Purple"

'huraday~ ·August

23, 2007

• MEIGS • EAS7ERN • 1001'1111

Former NBA referee Tim Donaghy
plans to plead guilty Wednesday
Bv PAT MILTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK - Former
NBA referee Tim Donaghy
planned to plead guilty in
federdl court on Wednesday
to charges alleging he
wagered on games he officiated, a person familiar with
the betting scandal probe
said.
.
Donaghy was to surrender
at Brooklyn federal coui:t,
the person said on condition
of anonymity
because
Donaghy hadn'tturned himself in yet.
.NBA spokesman Tim
Frank told the AP the league
was informed Tuesday that
Donaghy
would
plead
Wednesday but was given
no funher information .
Donaghy's attorney, John
Lauro, and federal prosecutors declined to comment.
NBA commissioner David
Stem said last month the referee's lawyer told the league
his client was contemplating
,
a plea.

Besides have fired him sooner but
allegedly WaS told it might affect the
placing his investigation .
o w n
Stern blamed a "rogue ,
wagers , isolated criminal" for the
investiga- betting scandal that has devtors al so astated the league and
examined threatened the credibility of
w h e t h e r every referee .
Donaghy
Donaghy was rated in the
provided top tier of officials , Stern
1 n s i d e said , and there was nothing
in form a- suspicious about the fretion
to quency of his foul calls. He
o t he r s , was assigned to work in the
Notebook includin g second round of the play-·
refere es' offs, with hi s last NBA game
schedules. The referee had a coming during the Phoenixgambling problem and was San
Antonio
Western
approached . by low-level Conference semifinal.
mob associates through an
No other NBA officials or
acquaintance, a law enforce- players were expected to be
ment official said .
· in volved in . the scandal ,
The FBI fir st contacted which Stem called the " most
the NBA on June 20 to talk serious situation and worst
abput a referee alleged to be situation that I have ever
gambling on games , and the experienced either as a fan
two sides met on June 2 1. of the NBA , a lawyer for the
Stern said last month . NBA or a commissioner of
Donaghy resigned July 9 the NBA ."
.
after 13 years as a referee ,
Others outside the NBA
though Stem said he would are expected to be charged .

ADVERTISING DEADLINE· Thursday, Auguat 18, 2007

Call Dave or Brenda at 992-2155
For More Information

.\!!:be 11Batlp ~enttnel

�.'

Page B4 •

'

The Daily Sentinel

Phi~ Rizzuto, Yankees' HOF shortstop
i

BY BEN WALKER
~

)

'
'·

I

•

!'

BASEBALL WRITER

NEW YORK - His speed and
spunk made him a Hall of Farner.
"Holy cow!" made Phil Rizzuto
famous.
Popular as a player and beloved
as a broadcaster, the New York
Yankees shortstop during their
dynasty years of the 1940s and
1950s died Monday night. "The
Scooter" was 89.
Rizzuto had pneumonia and
died in his sleep at a nursing home
in West Orange, NJ ., daughter
Patricia Rizzuto said Thesday. He
had been in declining health for
several years.
"I guess heaven must have needed a shortstop," Yankees own~r
George Steinbrenner said in a
statement. "He epitomized the
Yankee spirit - gritty and hard
charging - and he wore the pinstripes proudly."
Rizzuto was the oldest living
Hall
of
Farner . and
his
Cooperstown plaque noted how he
"overcame diminutive size." At 5foot-6, he played over his head,
winning seven World Series titles
and an AL MVP award and
becoming a five-time All-Star.
"When I first came up to the
Yankees, he was like a big actually, small - brother to me,"
said Hall of Farner Yogi Berra,
who frequently visited Rizzuto in
his later years.
Rizzuto's No. 10 was retired by
baseball's most storied team, and
the club will wear his number on
its left sleeves for the rest of the
season.
The flags at Yankee Stadium
were lowered to half-staff before
Tuesday night's game against
Baltimore and flowers were
placed by Rizzuto's plaque at
Monument Park.
Public address announcer Bob
Sheppard detailed some of
Rizzuto's accomplishments before
the team observed a pregame
moment of silence. His number
was painted Oil the grass in front
of each dugout and marquees outside the stadium said "Phil
Rizzuto 1917-2007"
"Scooter, we will miss you,"
Sheppard said as a video tribute
aired on the scoreboard.
New York also showed ~i~h­
lights from Rizzuto's playmg
career and part of his Hall of Fame
induction speech before the bottom half of the first inning.
Yet it was after he moved into
the broadcast booth that Rizzuto
reached a new level celebrity with

•

Wednellllay, August tS. 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

another generation of Yankees
fans.
Rizzuto delighted TV and radio
listeners for four decades, liis
voice dripping with his native
Brooklyn . He loved his favorite
catch-phrase - eAclaiming "Holy
cow! " when Roger Maris hit his
6lst home run -and often shout-·
ed "What a huckleberry!"
In an age of broadcasters who
spout statistics, Rizzuto was a storyteller. He liked to talk about
things such as his fear of lightning, the style of an umpire 's
shoes or even the prospect of out,fielder Dave Winfield as a candidate for president .
"He didn 't try to act · like an
announcer," Hall of Fame team mate Whitey Ford said . " He just
said what he thought. It added fun
to the game."
Rizzuto liked to acknowledge
birthdays and anniversaries, read
notes from fans , talk about his
favorite place to get a cannoli and
send messages to old cronies.
Once he noticed old teammate
Bobby Brown
then the
American League president - sitting in a box seat and hollered
down, trying to get his attention .
"He would keep getting in trouble with WPIX for announcing
birthdays and anniversaries,"
Patricia Rizzuto recalled.
And if Rizzuto missed a play, he
would scribble "ww" in his scorecard box score. That, he said ,
meant "wasn't watching."
His fans and colleagues never
minded. Because with a simple
shout of "Hey, White!" to longtime broadcasting partner Bill
White, it was time for anot~r tale.
Rizzuto's popularity was suoh
that at a recent auction a Rizzuto
cap embedded with a wad of
chewing gum sold for more .than
$8,000. In the New York area,
Rizzuto's antics became a staple
for TV ads. Nonbaseball fans got
to know him, too , when his voice
appeared on Meat Loaf's rock hit
"Paradise by the Dashboard
Light."
"Phil was a unique figure who
eAemplified the joy of our game to
millions of fans," commissioner
Bud Selig said.
He liked to share that joy. St.
Joseph 's School for the Blind in
Jersey City, was a favorite cause
of Rizzuto's, and his daughter
asked that any donations be directed there.
Edward J. Lucas, a former student at the school, met Rizzuto
soon after losing his sight at age
12 when a line drive struck him

YVedneada~August

Yankees infielder Phil Rizzuto poses m this March, 1950 file photo.
Rizzuto, the Hall of Fame shortstop during the Yankees' dynasty years
and beloved by a generation of fans for exclaiming "Holy cowl" as a
broadcaster, d1ed Tuesday. He was 89.

season and also went 58 games
without an error.
He led all AL shortstops in double plays three times and had a
career batting average of .273 . He
played errorless ball in 21 consecutive World Series games and
DiMaggio said the shortstop "held
the team together."
Long after his playing career,
Rizzuto could often be found talking ball in the Yankees clubhouse. ·
He especially enjoyed his visits
with shortstop Derek Jeter.
"Mr. Rizzuto serves as the ultimate reminder that physical
stature has little bearing on the
size of a person's heart," Jeter
said. "Nothmg was ever given to
Phil , and he used every ounce of
his ability to become one of the
greatest Yankees to ever wear this
uniform."
On Phil Rizzuto Day at Yankee
Stadium in 1985, the team gave
him a fitting present: a cow wearing a halo.
•
The cow knocked Rizzuto over
and, of course, he shouted, "Holy
cow!"
"That thing really hurt," he said.
"That big thing stepped right on
my shoe and pushed me backwards, like a karate move."
Rizzuto was passed over for the
Hall of Fame 15 times by the writers and 11 times by the Veterans
Committee . Finally, a persuasive
speech by Ted Williams pushed
Rizzuto into Cooperstown in
1994.
'
"If we'd had Rizzuto in Boston,
we'd have won all those pennants
instead of New York," Williams
often said .

between the eyes . The accident
happened on Oct. 3, 1951, when
Lucas went outside to play ball
after watching Bobby Thomson
hit the "Shot Heard 'Round the
World" to win the National
League pennant for the New York
Giants.
"He has been a friend every
since," said Lucas, now 68, a
baseball radio reporter. "He's been
here and helped us out tremendously."
Rizzuto also introduced Lucas
to the woman he would eventually
marry. The ceremony was last year
at home plate at Yankee Stadium.
"He may be short in stature ,"
Lucas said. "but his heart was bigger than all of Yankee StadiUm."
Rizzuto was a flashy player who
could always be counted on for a
perfect bunt , a nice slide or a divmg catch in a lineup better known
for its cornerstone sluggers . He
played 13 seasons alongside the

"I never thought I deserved to be
in the Hall of Fame," Rizzuto once
said. "The Hall of Fame is for the
big guys, pitchers with 100 mph
fastballs and hitters who sock
homers and drive in a lot of runs.
That's the way it always has been
and the way it should be."
The flag at Cooperstown was
lowered to half-staff and a laurel
was placed around his plaque, as
is custom when Hall of Famers
die. With Rizzuto's death, execulive Lee MacPhail,89, became the
oldest living Hall member.
Rizzuto is survived by his wife,
Cora, whom he married in 1943;
daughters Cindy Rizzuto, Patricia
Rizzuto and Penny Rizzuto Yetto;
son Phil Rizzuto Jr.; and two
griiJ!ddaughters.
_A private, family funeral·· is
planned. · The family is working
.with the Yankees on a memorial to
be held at Yankee Stadium,
Patricia Rizzuto said.

. AP photo

likes of Joe DiMaggio and Mickey
Mantle in a career interrupted by
Navy service in World War 11.
Often overshadowed by Hall of
Fame teammates, it made sense
that Rizzuto was the frrst "mystery
guest" on the old game show
"What's My Line?" in 1950.
A leadoff man with quick feet
that earned him his nickname,
Rizzuto was a staple on the
Yankees teams that won II pennants and nine World Series
between 1941 and 1956.
"He was a Yankee all the way,"
Indians Hall of Farner Bob Feller
said. "He knew the fundamentals
of the game and he got 100 percent out of his ability. He played it
hard and he played it fair," he
said.
Rizzuto came to the Yankees in
1941 and batted .307 as a rookie.
After the war, he returned m 1946
and became the American League
MVP in 1950. He batted .324 that

I&lt;:.-.CJ._..,

10% down on day ot
Number ule, cash or certllled
06CV099
check, balance due on
Unlt11 State• ol conllrmatlon ol ute.
America Pllllntlff VS
The appralsel did not
J011nna Fervuoon II al Include an Interior
Delendanta
examination ol the
Court ol · Common house.
Please, Mlllga County, Robart E. Beegle,
Ohio
Melga County Sherlll
In pursuance ot an Attorney lor lha
order ol tala to me Plalntllt
directed lrom seld Stephen 0. Miles
coult In then above 18 W. Monument Ave.
entHted action, I will Dayton, Ohio 45402
expose to sele at pub- 937-46 t ·11100
lic auction on the lront (8) 1, 8,15
stepa ol the Meigs
County Court Houoe - - - - - - - on Friday, September
Public Notice
7, 2007 II 10 a.m., ol - - - - - - said day, the following Sheriff Salea
d,.,.crlbecleart eatata; Case Number 07CV024
Situated In the VIRage· Chase Home Finance
ol Middleport, County 1.LC Pllllnttll VS
of Meigs and State ol Jackie P. Cremeens 11
Ohio
al Delenclanta
Parcel One: The Mil Court ol Common
one-ball ol South o,.. Please, Meigs County,
hall {SO leal o1 Lot Ohio
#297) In Horton's In pursuance of an
Addition to what Is order ol sale to me
now the VIllage ol directed from said
Mlddlaport, Ohio, lor- court In the above antimarty lower Pomeroy, tied action, I will
Ohio. Said original 101 ll!posa to sale 11 pubbeing 50 lee! In width lie auction on tho lront
and 140 leal In depth ateps ol the Meigs
and being lurther County Court Houao
deecrlbecl as lollowa: on Friday, September
Beginning 70 r..t Eall 7,2007 at 10 a.m., ol
ol the Southwest cor- aald day, the following
ner ol Lot 1297; Thence described real estate:
North SO leet; Thence SHueted In the State ol
East 70 r..t; Thence Ohio, County ol Malga,
South 50 lee!; Thence and In the VIllage of
West 70 leal to the Middleport:
ploce ol beginning.
Being the Eaat one·
Parcel Two: A rlght-ol· hall ol Lola Numbers
way lor sewer linea as One Hundred Thirty·
currently
existing Seven {137) and One
across West one-hall Hundred Thirty-Eight
ol the South one-halt {138) ol Waterman
ol Lot 1297 connecting Pelmar'a Addition to
Into High Street. Sllellleld,
now
Subject to an ease- Middleport, being 100
ment lor the banellt of ft., more or letla, on the
the West omt·hall ol allay belwHn Fourth
the South one-halt ol and Filth Streata, and
Lot 1297 lor water and Fifty {50) ft . lrontlng on
gee linea connecting Hooker Street.
Into ,the alloy between Currant Owner: Jackie
Broadway and High P. Cremeans et al
Streata.
Properly At:
369
Currant
Owner: Hooker Street
Joanna Ferguaon llal Middleport, Oh 45760
748.High Street
PPI 15-00122.000
Middleport, Ohio
Prior Deed Reference:
PPI 15-01138.000
Volume 80, Page 357
P.rlor Deed Relorence: Appraised
at
Volume 324 Page 543 $55,000.00. Terms ol
Appraised
at sele: Cannot be aold
$32,000.00 Ierma or lor leas than 213rds ol
sale. Cannot be sold tho appraised value.
lor leas than 213rda ol 10% down on day ol
the appralaod value. sale( cash or cartltled

I
(

'

check, balance due oil
conflrmatlon ol aale.
The appraisal did
Include an Interior
examination of the
house.
Robert E. Beagle,
Melga County Sherin
Attorneys lor the
Plaintiff
Lamer Sampson 11o
Rothluae
120 E. 4th St, 8th Roor
Cincinnati, Oh 45202·
4007
S13-24t-3100
(8) 1, 8, 15

Public Notice
SheriHSale
Case Number 07CV003
J P Morgan Chose
Bank Plalntlll VS
Allen R. Jacks at al
Defendants
Court of Common
Plass, Meigs County,
Ohio
In purauance ol an

27 rodt and 6 llnka;
thence
soulh
s
degreeo weal 1 rod;
thence north 81
dagreea 80 rods to the
place ol beginning,
containing 85 ·acres
more or less.
Excepting 60.03t acres
conveyed to Burner
Land Company, Inc., by
deed dated May
30,1998, and recorded
In volume 69, page 393,
ol the Meigs County
official records.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 14, pege 373,
Meigs County Offlctal
Records.
The above described
real

estate

Is

more

dagr88$ 04' 16" east a
distance ol 357.65 leet
to a point In the center·
line ol township road
no. 58 {Whites Hill
Road) passing over the
east line or lractlon 6 at
a distance o1 plus
46.28 leet and passing
through two Iron pin
seta at a distance of
plus 234.65 leal plus
334.65 leet, respectively.
Thence, with the cen·
tarttne ol township

containing 0.237 acras,
more or leaa, or easement.
All Iron pins set ere
t/2" and 30" rebar
capped and labeled
Claus 6456.
The bearings In this
description are lor
angle calculation only
and are based on the
wast line of lractlon 2
and the east line ol
lractlon 6 used as an
assumed bearing ol
north .3 degrees 29'21"

CLASSIFIED
Gallia
County
OH

road. no. 58, south 18 east.

dagrees 33' 15" east a
distance ol 206.10 leet
to a point,
Thence, leaving the
road, south 83 degrees
19' 08" east a distance
ol 157.48 geet to an
Iron pin set, passing
through an iron pin set
at ~ distance of plus
10.561eet.
·
Thence, south 19
dagr"" 06' 36" east a
distance ol121.721eel
to an iron pin set;
Thence, south 75
dagrees 51'15" west a
distance ol311.341eet
to the place ol begin·
nlng, passing through
an Iron p1n set at a dis·
lance of plus 85.38
leet;
Containing
5.172

A plat ol the above
described survey has
bean submitted lor lite
a1 the county englnear's olllce.
The above description
prepared by Roger W.
Claus, raglstered surveyor No. 6456, based
on actual lleld survey
ol May 7, 1998: said
survey being subjecl
to an lacta that maybe
disclosed In a lull and
accurate title search.
The real estate above
described Ia subject to
all leases, easements,
and rights ol wey ol
record.
The preparer ol this
Instrument does not
certlly the accuracy of
the above description.

accurately deacribed
by survey as lotlows;
Sltualed In the state ol
Ohio, county ol Meigs,
Township ol Rutland,
being part or lracllon 2
and part ol lract1on 6,
range 14 west, town·
ship 6 north, ol the
order of sala to me Ohio Company llrst
directed lrom said purchase ol 1787, and
court In the above enti- being bonded and
tled action, I will cleacrlbed aslollows:
expose to sate at pub- Commencing for refer·
lic auction on the Iron! ence at 518" Iron Pin
atopa ol the Meigs lound capped "E.
County Court House Triplett 6766" In the
on Friday, Sapt 7, 2007 west line of fraction 2
at 10 a.m., ol said day, at the southeast corner
the .
lollowlng oltractlon 6 {Note: ref- acres, more or less, of Parcel one: 11.00675
described real estate: erence hearing on the which 2.985 acres are Parcel two: 11-&lt;10676
SKuated ' In the town- west line ol fraction 2 In lracllon 2 and 2.187 Known as: 33565
ship ol Rutland, and the east line ol acres are In fraction 6; Whites Hill Road,
County ol Meigs, and fraction 6 used as an Subjecl to all legal Rutland, Oh10 4Sn5
In the state ol Ohio:
auumed bearing ol rights ol way, ease· Currant Owner: Allen
Beginning at the north 03 degrees 29' menta, restrictions, Jacks
southeaat corner of 21" east.)
reservations, and zon- Property at: 33565
E.K. Taylor's land In Thance, with the west lng regulations ol Whites Hill Rd
Fraction No. 2, town line ol lrectlon 2 and record.
Rutland, Ohio
no. 6, range no. 14,ol the east line ollractlon Subject to the right ol PP# 11-00675.000
the Ohio company's 6, north 03 degrees 29' way to Township road 11-00676.000
purchaeed and In the 21" east a distance or No. 58.
Prior deed Reference:
center of the road; 1414.751eet to a point, Subject to the 100 year Volume 185, Page 485
at
thence north 25 bring the true place ol flood plain restrictions, Appraised
Clagreea west 48 rods beginning . lor this lleppllcable
$95,000.00 terms or
along the road; thence description.
Subject to a 50.00 leet sale: Cannot be sold
north 19 112 dagreea Thencelrom 881d point wide easement being · lor leas than 213rdathe
west 74 rods and 5 ol beginning and leav- reserved unto the appraised value. 10%
links along tho road to Ing the lot line, south Grantor, their hairs, down on day of sale,
A. A. Humphrey's 75 dagreas 51' 15" weal and or assigns, forev- cash or certified
south line; !hence weal a distance of 145.00 er. Said easement check. Balance due on
110 rodo; thence south lee! to an Iron pin set: being lor the purpose conl!rmatlon ol sale.
7 112 degrees east 36 Thence, north 18 ol running utlllllea to The appraisal did
rods and 10 links; degrees 08' 27" east a other parcels ol land Include an Interior
thence west 22 links; distance of 417.84 feet on or near Township examination of the
thence south 12 to an Iron pin set, pass- Road No. 58. Said home.
degrees weet 41 rods Ing through an Iron pin easement runs In a Robert E. Beegle,
and 12 links to a atone sat at a distance ol north-south direction Meigs County Sherlll
across the east end of Attorney lor the
corner; thence east 37 plus 190.00 leet;
rods and 15 links; Thence north 74 the above described Plaintiff
!hence south 28 dagrees 11' 52" east a property with the east Shapero &amp; Felly '
dagrees east 4t rods distance or 280.97 feet line ol said easement t 500 W. Third St. Sulta
being the cenler line ol 400
and 1s links; !hence to an Iron pin set ;
south 51 degrees east Thence nortlj. 85 Jownshlp road no. 58. Cleveland, Oh 44113

Public Notice
Sheriff Sale
Case Number 07CV025
Wells Fargo Bank NA
Plalntlll VS
Melissa D Johnson at
al Defendants
Court ol Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of

sale to me

directed lrom said
court In 11111 above entl·
tied action, I will
expose to sale at public auction on the lront
steps ol lhe Meigs
County Court House
on Friday, September
14, 2007 at 10 a.m., ol
said day, the following
described real estate:
Situated In the State ol
Ohio, County ol Meigs
and In the Township ol
Olive.
Being

2.23 acres, more

'" leas, out ol the
Northwest corner ollot
No. 1t65, section 9,
town 4, range 11 and
bounded described as
follows:
Beginning 8.00 rods
West or the common
corner of lands owned

being a tract ol land
tranaferred to Margaret
Groaanlckle, Et. At. ••
recorded In olllclal
recorda book 2 at page
623, Mlllga County
Recorders
Office,
Meigs County, Ohio,
also being a pert ot 160
acre lot No. 1165,
Townahlp·4·North,
Rango-t1-Woat, Oliva
Township,
Meigs
County, State ol Ohio
end more particularly
described as lotlowo:
Beginning at a 518"1ron
pin set which aasumad
to bear North 86'40'00'
East a distance ol
976.80 lell lrom the
Northwest corner ol
said 160 acre lot No.
1185, Township 4,
Range 1t;
Thence along the north
line olsald lot no. 1165
North 86' 40' 00" East a
distance ol 21 1.20 leal
to a 518" Iron ptn set:
Thence leaving aald
North line South 00'
26' 21" East passing
through a 518" Iron pin
set at a Dlatance or
571.24 leal and going a
total distance ol601.24
leet to a point In the
cent~rttne
ol State
Route I 681;
Thence along said canterllno the lollowlng
three coursas:
1. North 41 ' 20" 00'
West a distance ol
49.50 leet to a point;
2. North 45' 54' 49'
West a distance ol
128.2t r..t to a point;
3. North 50" 05" 37'
Wool e distance of
1t 9.29 leet to a point;
Thence leaving said
centerline North 00'
09' 02' East a distance
ol 386.05 leet to the
prlnclpol point ol
beginning, containing
2,3875 acres, more or
leas, sublact to alllagal
aaaements and rlglltaot-way.
Bearings are eaaumad
and are lor the determination ol angles
only.
The above descrlpllon
was prepared lrom an
actual survey made on
the 28th day ol July,
1994, by C. Thomao
Smith,
Ohio
Proleaalonal Surveyor,

by J. W. Emrick T.
Kibble, Sarah M. Kibble
and
Herbert
Williamson on the
North line ol lot No.
1165 (IIIIa same point
being 72 rods oaat ol
the North Wast corner
ol Lot No. 1165);
Thance South 3" West
a distance ol36.5 rods,
more or leas, along the
West line ol lot owned
by Herbert Williams, to
the cenler ol Slate
Route No. 680; Thence
Norlh approximately
38' Weot 18 rods, mora
or leas, 10 Southeast
corner ol land owned
by Dr Formerly owned
by Ira kibble; Thence
North 21 .6 rods, more
or less, to the north
line ol lot No. 1155;
Thence East along
North line ol Lot No.
1185, a distance of 12.8
rods to the place ol
beginning.
The above described
real estate Is more '8844.
accurately described Auditors Parcel No. ~
by survey as lollows: oosn.ooo

Ralorence
deed
Volume: 135, Page 763,
Molga county Ofllclal
Recards.
Current
Owner;
Mellsaa D. Johnson Et.
AI.

Propeny at: 54210
State Route 881
Reedsville, Ohio
PP109-005n.OOO
Prior Oeed Rolerenco;
Voluma.135, Page 763
Appraloed
at
$25,000.00. Torma ol
sale: cannot be sold
lor ton than 213111• ol
tho appraised value.
10% down on day o1
sale, cash or certllled
check, balance due on
conltrmatlon olaala.
Tho appraloal did
Include an Interior
examination ol the
house.
Robert E. · Beegle,
Meigs County SheriII
Attornay lor tho
Plalntlll
Lerner Sampson llo
Rothlusa
120 E. 4th Street 8th
Floor
Cincinnati, Oh 45202·
4007

.

513·241-3100
(8) 8, 15, 22
------Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report
Form 990 PF lor the
Kibble Foundation,
Bernard V. FuHz,
Trullee Is available lor
public Inspection at
Bernard V. Fullz Law
Office, 111-112 West
Sacond
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
during ragular busl·
noaa hours lor a period
ol 180 days suboaquant to publication ol
this notice.
{8) 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21,
22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29,
30.
f(~;r.;uu.n.;-1
on
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. Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675~1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-3008
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Errors · Muol B
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rio

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An Excellent way to earn
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Call Marilyn 30HS2-2645

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any loll ot
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1

J:lw&gt;WAN'IID

I

ACCEPTING APPliCATIONS FOR PART· TIME
CASHIERS. MUST BE
AVAILABLE TO WORK All
SHIFTS APPLY AT PAR
MAR #38 15289 HUNTINGTON ROAD GALLIPOliS
FERRY

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bualneaa Daya Prior To
Publication
sunday Dlaplay: 1:00

• All ada m.uat be prepaid'

AD. • Start Your Ads With A Keyword a Include Complete

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Now you can have borders and graphics
~
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s,~
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Borders $3.00/per ad
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$ 1.00 for Iorge

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In Next Day•a Paper
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Monday thru Friday
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fkii,;;;:;;iyj';@~;;-;.;;t.;;;t-------------,

~~~

, w~~r;o Yoo!

~

No Fee Unless W e Winl

I-S88·582·3345

~~f 1j~e;: I A~
f~ APcp 1'~.,.­

Forget what you
have heard about
Telemarketing!

I&lt; I \ I I .., I \ II

HoMES

YaJ1D BE:I'ftsR

FOOSALE

~l)l)c.e; ~

0 Down even With less than
perfect cret:lt ls a vailable on
this 3 bedroom , 1 bath
home. Cormtr lot, l1 re~ace,
modern kitchen JBCUZZI ILlb,
Payment aroond $ 550 per
month 740367-7129

lnfoCtSton has JUst
celebrated 25 years or
excellence as an 1ndus1ry
leader tn Ouahty and
Prolesstonallsm

• No Collections
• No Product Sates

104

Must be flexible wrth sched·
uta and experience Is a plus
but will tra1n the proper per·
son td needed. Please drop
oft resume or fill out applica-

tion at Dave's Amencan
Gnll, Wed • Sun aner 4 and
ask for Josh
Build Your Career

This nowspapo
cceplo only hoi
.,ted ada mntln
OEatendftl.
accept any oliver

l..,.nt In vlollll

Field
Professional
Representative wanted for
Po1nt Pleasant Galhpohs &amp;
surround area, no expenence requtred
Excellent
tratmng program. sales
track, potential, and beneftts
for those who qualify
Woodmen ol the World ltfe
Insurance Society, Omaha,
Nebraska Resumes to t2
Players Club Dnve Suite

101, CharlaSion, WV 25331
or calr304-342·5021

ltho raw.

Drivers needed:
COL
Drivers wiling to drtve for
local ready-miK company
One pos111on open at two (2)
\\\t it '\( I \ II \1'plants Expenence ts pre·
tarred but not necessary
Ortver mlJst be Willing to do
pre-marntenanca on trucks
and eqwpment , yard/plant
~ew Ltle LUmeran vnurc
and other miscellaneous
~~ to school, free cloth chores E11penence operat·
ng gNeaway 8/17, 9·6 ~ tng equtpment and elltra
~- 18, 9-1, Loceled ol skillssuchasweldtngaplus ·
ackson Pll&lt;e
Start1ng pay based on expe·
nence and dnvmg record
Benefits including health
GTVFAWAY
!nsurancQ, available after
meetmg
employment
reqUirementS': Call Valley
~ Three pupp1es · Some low
Brook Concrete corporate
life scum dropped thorn off.
office at (304)n3·5519 to
· Have f1rst shots Call 740·
schedule an 1nterv1ew

r

~256~
- 1~~~9~~-----,

r

tF

.

Lorr
F~

L,~-------,.1

Found·
small
male
Schnauzer w/collar, Tuppers
· Platns area, (740)667·0687
.,--...,.--,----,--.. Found Adult ma le coon
hound on White Ad Call
' 446
:-·436
.;.;..7_ _ _ _ _.,
11

r
r..........

YARD SALE
~;::::::;::~

11

~.,.

YARD SALE·
GAUJPOLJS

Echoing
Meadows
Residential Center Is taking
applicatiOns tar Director of
Nurs1ng lndtvldual wtll be
worktng wtlh MRDD mdtvtduais and superv1smg floor
nurses and program aSSIS·
rants Interested 1nd1v1duals
should submit resume and
comple te applicatiOn 1n per·
son at 319 West Ur~on St ,
Athens. Ohto Call (740)594·
3541 1f you have any ques·
Iron Applicants must pass
pre-employment
scree ns
mc ludrng cr1m1nal background checks and d rlJg

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

3 Family Yard Sale. Aug
16th, 17th, 18th, clothes.
kn•ck knad{s, movtes, bed
spreads , etc 46 BurneH Ad

area

1-888-IMC·PAYU
axt.2311

~real

work

116
.1 IIEu&gt;WANJ'FJl

ars

w1th an mdustr
eadert Applicants can bE
18 years of age as long a
hey are a full t1me colleg
tudent Otherwise, yo
rnust meet be at least 21
ears of age With a clea
~nving record and mus
~pply m person at th
E'nterprise Rental Branc
oceted at 371 State Rout
17, Galhpolts, Oht

5631.EOEIMFDV

Help wanted , Darst Adult
Group Home, weekends a
must, (740}992·5023
Hetp wanted·Part time
admintstrative assistant, to
WOfk wtth Off1ce manager,
average I 5·25 hours per
week
Job descriphon to
rnclude but not limtted to.
answermg tne phone, workIng with customers, schedulrng and orgamzmg concrete
and stone orders. dtspatch·
mg trucks operatmg digital
we1ght scales batctnng con·
crete With automated computer batch program and
general cleanmg of off1ce
area
Fam1llanty wtth
Ou1ckBooks (accounlmg,
mv01crng. rnventory, etc ),
Word and E~ecel programs a
bonus Pay based on expenence and skill level
Pnmarv work aSSIQnment at
Robertsburg Plant but must
have fle~1bihty to report to
Millwood or Lakm Plants
reqwred
Contact Valley
Brook Concrete Corporate
Off1ce at Lakin. WV call
(304 )773-5519 to sdleduie
tntervtew
'

MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES

Wv seek career onented
Saturday 8/18 Jr g1rls cloth· IndiVIduals who wtll stnve to
achieve the "Best" m
mg s1zes 0·3, Abercrombie •
AE • Hollister, mov1es , C ustomer Satisfaction and
team work . II you have a
books,
collector
dolls.
des1re to succeed w1th a
Barb1es, small k1t appl , furn1·
ture and more 115 Basllanl, goal drtven. team onented
and growmg company we
Gallipolis
oHer
Health , dental and lite
insurance, prescnpllOn
card, bonus program , patd
vacat1on, management
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Sliver and Gold Cotns , apparel . advancement from
W1thtn
Proofsets, Gold Amgs, PreApply m perso n at the
1935
US
Currency,
Burger Ktng Restaurant
Sohta1re Diamonds· M T S.
65 Upper A1ve r Road or
Cotn Shop , 151 Second
ma11re sume to
Aveflle. Gallipolis, 740·446·
Burger Kmg
2B42
PO Box 24 07
Hunttngton, WV 25725
Wanted Dump Truck Tra1 ler
or fax resume to
6J~ 1 0 or 61112 wtll pay far
740-446·3400 or
prtce or trade 1994 Astra
304·529·0055
Van
Call Ttm 304·882·

't

B216

~~)

EOE

I.

1110

"-------· L-.------.,1
.

fiEu&gt;WANfED

POSTOFFICE NOW
HIRING

Looking lor a
convenient schedule
white your child Ia In
school?
Take Inbound/Customer
SeMc:e calls tor a variety of
Chnst1an ministries Also
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non-profit organlzattons

Part Time Dey Shift
(8am · 130pm)
$7.00 · S7.251hr

Avg Pay $20/hr or
.S57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and OT,Pa•d Tra1nmg,

Vocations-FT/PT
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. USWA

Sales PoaKion
MFG Homes
An outstandtng
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Prefer Sales expelience.
Otter 5 day work week.
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Email resume
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l o schedu le an m1erv1ew
No Walk-Ins Please

You w1ll also earn

• $300 Hiring Bonus
•Weekly Bonus Potent1al
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•Pa1d trammW vacallons/
holidays

il=======dl
StoP by and see
lnfoCision at our

CALLNOWI
1·888-IMC-PAYU
1-88-462-7298
Job ext. 1921

OPEN
INTERVIEWS
Wednesday
August 15th
!O:OOam· 1:00pm

WWW lnfOCISIOn com
McCiures Restaurant (
GahipoliS Only) now h1r1ng
part &amp; full hme · daysh1ft
available Apply between 10
and 11 AM
Monday
Saturday

Meigs County Job and

Family Services
175 Race Street
M1ddleport, OH

www.lnroclslon.com

1310 Carleton Street, PO
Box 307, Syracuse,
45779
150
Salools

1

Oh

L'ISTRUCJ10N

Gallipolis
l ocal Home Health Agency
now htnng PCA's, HHAs,
CNA's and STNA's FleXIble
sched uling Apply m person
or call 740 44 1 1377 2
Comme rce Or Gallipolis,

Career

College

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446-4367,

1·800-214-0452

gatllpoiiSCir&amp;erconege com
Accre!lrled Member Act recli1ri'IQ
WWN

Co.JilC11

lor tndepemienl Colleges

and Schools 1274B

OH

I

-·

.

--------

__ ___
,

.

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
estate which 11 in
•.violation of the law Our
readers are hereb~
Informed that all
dwelling• advertiaad m
thll newapaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

Over
2 000 sq uare foot home for
less than $40iSQ ft Call The
Home Show · Barboursville

r

at 1·88S·736·3332
MOBILE HOMES
mRSALE

2001 Oakwood Free dom
MObil e Home Ia&lt; sal e
Includes washer, dryer all
appliances some turn1shmgs, outl:kJHdmg , lglcovered
deck 14x70, 3br , 2 lull
bath, Central/Air $18 000
ftrm 740-245-0054, 304·
675·2561 ' 304·593·1880

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
18x80 With vinyl /Shingle
Must sell , Only $25,9 95 wtth

del1very CaH (740)385·4367

HUGE
NEW 2008 4 Bed

$49,989
llw201131..

.... $293.
lllltllnt74U2Ul51
mymldwesthome.com

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$2 14 36 per monlh Includes
many upgrades, deltvery &amp;
set·up (740)385-2434
Ntce used 3 bedroom home
v1 nyllshmgle W1tl help w1th
deltvery 74D-385·4367

OWNER FINANCING
NICS 3/2 Slngl ewl deS
From $1 800 down
payment
Gary (740) 828·2750

lao

Trader

I-8S8-928-3426

r

lice nsed {This 1s a publ ic
ser v1ce announ ce ment
from the OhiO Va ll ey
Publ1 shmg Corl}pany)

ou t Sand H1ll A d 10 Durst l ooKtng tor a good pre
Add
Pt
Ple asant owned home?
Many 10
Aeslorahon needs 1nclude choose from a1 The Home
bu t not 11mned 1o deCk , Show · BarboUJs vllle
1
HVAC, ca1pet some drywall 88S736 3332
Most furn ture s tays Brtck
alu mmums1d1ng To~1c mold New home 1n GallipOliS 2br
contam~natIon d•spute M
old 2 balh w/wh1rlpool tubs
d1 sciOSU1e ava 1tatrie liabil ity large LR on 3 acres m/1
wa wer s1gnatu re requrred $87 500 740-446-7029
$45 ·000 as ,s Ser•ous buY· Ral'lCh Style Buck Hom e 2
ers/contractors
304-67 5·
bedrooms 1 bedroom ex 11a
3779lerwe me ssage
large 2 full baths on 2 11:?
M1ddtsport (m town1 bn ck acres 3 m1les !rom Po1n1
ranch. lvr dnr 3 br 2 1/2 Pleas t~ n l 0 \'oner 1elocat1ng
Pholos/deta•ts
baths, kit , utly . ofhce, 2 Must sell
online
at
hre plaoas 2 garages 2 1ots tocated
patto wlawntng fm1sh ed www orvb com (code #71 37)
low er lo~el w f k1t famlly - or call 304-675 423 5 ask1ng
room , firepl ace lots ol stor- 5128 000
age, QIOtmd level access
4 000 sq feet call (740)992·
4
_ 1_9_7_ _ __ __ ~

lms&amp;
ACRMGI:

10 acres tor sale located on
Broad Ru n Roa d. 1n New
Have n
WV
$34 500

1304)773·5S81
5 Acres MIL along O td
Cove red Brtdge Ad Located
1n Ew1ngton V1nton County
OH Cali 606 -353 0990
Tra1ler lot pnvate Approx 2
7 75
m1les
out
SR
$125/month 2000 or newer
model 446 4053

IH\1\IS
~lo

lim 'SI :&gt;;
1'0~

Rl \I

112 V1n1on Cl Gal l•p ohs
3BR t BA Carport Cntrl
Au Wo'O Fnage Stove l ncl
$500/mo S300 dep No OBI S
Ref 'secun ty check req 304
675-2525
2 bedroom e~ecuhve house
new cons tructiOn flJtly fur
nrsh ed new rel r1gerator
stove d1shwa sher washer &amp;
dryer large wrap around
porch, full basemen t 1 car
garage total electric w1 1h
central au very spaCIOlJS
pnvate dnve w1th parking,
S1 100 per month senous
calls only (7401949-2303
2br unturn1shed House 507
112 2nd St New Haven 304-

- - - - - - - - 675-3469
A1ve1 v1ew C11y Schools - - - -- - - 3000 sq n 4 DR. 2 5 ba1h 3 bedroom hOuse m

2FP LR. DR FR large front
House on M ason Street. po1ch tn ground pool t 4
Cl1fton WV Call 740 992· acrr•s
(prl\lale
area )
2090 Mco:lay through Fnday Ser1 JUS
mQutrms
onty 1
for lnlormaiJOn
740 .146 277''

- -------~-

$2 000

Why Pay rent ???
Clayton S1ngi F&gt; W1des",
Sta1!1ng at $225 00
per month W A C
Call todaytll

I

Affmrs BEFORE you rell·
nance your home or
obtain a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance IJpayment! 01
fees or tnsurance fAI!I the
of
Consumet
Olftce
Afla1rs toll free at 1·866
278 0003 to learn if the
mortg age
broker
or
lender
IS
properly

for sa le

(7401992 5S58

·---~·o·Do·--rl

m~

IRS JOBS

All real Htate advertising
In thla newspaper le
aubtecl to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
wh1ch makes It Illegal to
advertise ·any
preteren~;e, tim1tatlon or
d1Scrlminat1on baaed on
race, color, rellglqn. •••
famlllalstatus or national
ongln, or any mtent1on to
make any such
preference, limitation or
diaerlmlnation."

60
XTREME SAVINGS'

we

Schao11Me1gs
lndustnes :o:H~er:":9:;:;:===~
Hours 9am-3pm Must have
current RNJLPN license 1n fZ2D
M
the state of OhiO Prefer 1.
expenence tn public health
nursmg and/or worktng With
children and adults wrth
**NOTI£1lH
developmental diSBbthllfJS
Send resume by Monday,
August 20 2007 10 Metgs Borrow Smart. Contact
County Boar of Mental the Oh10 DIVISIOn of
Retardation
and Frnanctal
Insti tutiOn s
Otf1ce
of
Consumer
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$18 46-$32 6Qihr , now h1r1ng Patd Tra 101ng IS prOVId·
ed For application and free
government JOb mfo, calf
Amertcan Assoc of labor 1913·599·8244, 24!1lrs emp
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3 BR. 1 Bath , Carport, gas
togs, full bMem e nt ~ new ) For Sal e Trade or Rent 2
s1de by s1de 2 story Houses
~~11!15iJI"""-Solools~----,~ Senous '"""'es only'
3 to 5 bedrooms 2 · 2 112
.
IN'imucnON . 740-446 2717
b aths At 62 bes1de Hartford
3 br , 21ull bth, 20x38 great- Commumty Center building
room , cJa blaCktop drwe, lg Call to schedule a tour or
STUDENTS FOR THE NA parking area, all new w1n- make an offer on 1 or both
PROGAAM
Aockspnngs dows/doorslroof &amp; septic, 304-675·2484 or ceil 304·
Nurstng and Aehabihlatton lam 1nated hardwood lloors 593·1481
Center IS located 5 mMes throughout, 24 '
atx.we
from Pomeroy and 20 min· ground pool, adtt 1t1ona! spot For sale/land conlract 3 BR
utes from Athens • and lor mobile home, on 1 acre, house tn Galhpohs WID
Albany, We currently are for o nly $1 15 ooo. near St c onnecti on $1500 down
seeking 1ndw1duals tntereal; Rt .. 143 s,
t
Rt 7. $4001mo or rent $475/mo
ed In attendtng our 75 hour Pomeroy Oh
(7 40)696- Also 1 BR 111 Gall1p0I1S $750
d own $200tmo or rent
NurSing Assistant Program 1227
which w1ll start August 20 - - - - , - ,-:-::--::::--- $250/mo Call Wayne 404·
2007 ThiS class IS free of 4br, 2ba 1900 SP FT lin· 456-3802 for 1nfo
charge and begtns wtth 2 tshed basement Brtck iron!.
Fro sale by owner · parttally
'JOiunteer days that wtll allow attac hed gara g e, hv1ng
remode led 4BR 2 1/2BA
you to see what the Job con· room. dinng room lamtl y
la rge LA Kttchen. DR , new
s1s1s of hrst hand
allow room. ut1IIIV room 16~ 3 2 1n
c entral a1r · New furnace
12 students per class 90 ground pW, cov ered connew
roof/shtngles,
all
they fill up qutckly. Please crete pat1o 6ft pnvacy fe nce,
replaced 2 yea rs ago 1/2
come 1n and complete an gre at ne1[flbo rho od and
acre.
Prtce
1educed
applic ation 1f 1nterested locatton . Mount V()rnon
$47 500 740-388 8376
Pleasant
Aockspnngs Is an equal Avenue Po1nt
opportumly employer
$164.000 (304)593-6469
House for sa le m Rac\ne
a rea Approx 4 aCies. all
5 br . 3 5 ba . ranc h on Cfew
landscaped
WANJID
Ad. $145,000, (74'1416- professionally
Ranch styl e house w1th 4
I
1
4765 pre approved buyers bed rooms. 1tv1ng room. dlnonly.
•ng room k1tchen large famHeaven Scent Cleamng, 502
LeG ran de
Blv d, Il y room central a1r gas heal
House Cleaning ~•ce at 8 Gall1p ol1s OlJ1e t neighbor- and 1 f1replace Add111on of a
reasonable prrcel Call today h ood , 3BR 2 BA Rae large · Flo11da room com
at 740 -446·3861 !eave a Roo m LR Ntth FP. Fl onda pl etely cedar opens onto
message
roo m , fe ncec:l ya rd, 1nground paho &amp; pool area Heated 1n
- - - - - - - - pool. liot tub, 2 storage ground pool enclosed by pn
Hones! &amp; dependable. ~ b!dgs . ail applianc es. low vacy fenc1ng and landyrs of profess,onal clean,ng mte rest 8 ass u mabte loan 'Scapcd Fm•shed 2 ca r
would ltke to clean homes m avai lable Call (7 40)44 6· garage attached to house
the Mlc:ktleport and Mason 44 86 or {740)645·2 355
and f1n1shed &amp; heated 3 ca r
areas, Please ca ll Tracy at
garage
unallach ed
(740)992-1387
Attention!
Exce llent cond1hon ready to
Local col"flpany o ffenng 'NO
move 1n 5255 000 00 Ca ll
:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;~;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;_, DOWN PAYME NT" pro (740)949-2217
~
g ra ms for you t o buy yolJr
•
home Instead of renlmg
In Syracuse
2800sq ft
OrroKm~m
quality bu1lt mlJitl·level buck
"--1iiii.iiiiiiiiiiio-' • 100% 11nanc1ng
• Less lhan per1ect cred1t home m amtenance free
Es1abl1shed trash serviCe lor acce pled
N1ce qwet neighborhood 3
sal&amp;, health reasons Call ' P ayment cou ld be the 4 bedrooms 2 112 bath w1th
740·388-9939
hardwood tr1 m throughout
sam e as rent ·
r
..-""'!'~!'!"!!!!'""-.. M o rtgage
Locators U·sl'1 ape d k1tchen w1th 40' of
cabtne ts Wood burn 1ng f1re
•NOTICE•
17401367-0000
place 2 112 car detached
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
garage N1cely landscaped
lNG CO recommends
' --~
~~&lt; "'ooo sq f1 mil spl1t 60 acres lot Immacu late
that you do buslfless with ~
low u!1h !les
people you know, and level 2 bath 24x25 m/1tam I- con d1t1on
can
NOT to se nd money ly room sept1 c system Selling pnce $2 19
through the mall unlll you 100x130 101 1n ntce Q\Jiet 7 40-441-517 1 Shown by
have mvest1 gated the ne1ghtlo1hood
9110 m11es app l anty

"jib

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w1th experience

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now· hiring servers for our
d1ntng room
Must be
dependable , fnendly and
have llextble avattabtllty.
Apply 1n perso n at the front
desk No phone calls please

10

s

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314 acres above ground
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I'Rflfl.~IONAL
'--.OSiiit:ROiVIiiiCiliEb-.,1
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or

Sell. Stirley Spears, 304·
675-1429

Pa.ab•l.c: .r-olc&gt;tlc:es I.-a :N'e~sp-.pers
~e:ll-v.e.-ed :R.Ight tc&gt; ,._...c&gt;"Utr D•o•~r.

216-621-1530
{8) 1, 8, 15

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

'&lt;!Crtbune - Sentinel - l\nll?•

We will nol knowl

Case

www.mydailysentinel.com

and longtime broadcaster, dies at 89

~...... ..- ~lght a-0

SherHI Sale

15,2007

Pomeroy targe &amp; very clean
1 112 bath ate hardwood
floors . full basement w/2 car
garage small back yard

S635 1740)949-2303

�.'

Page B4 •

'

The Daily Sentinel

Phi~ Rizzuto, Yankees' HOF shortstop
i

BY BEN WALKER
~

)

'
'·

I

•

!'

BASEBALL WRITER

NEW YORK - His speed and
spunk made him a Hall of Farner.
"Holy cow!" made Phil Rizzuto
famous.
Popular as a player and beloved
as a broadcaster, the New York
Yankees shortstop during their
dynasty years of the 1940s and
1950s died Monday night. "The
Scooter" was 89.
Rizzuto had pneumonia and
died in his sleep at a nursing home
in West Orange, NJ ., daughter
Patricia Rizzuto said Thesday. He
had been in declining health for
several years.
"I guess heaven must have needed a shortstop," Yankees own~r
George Steinbrenner said in a
statement. "He epitomized the
Yankee spirit - gritty and hard
charging - and he wore the pinstripes proudly."
Rizzuto was the oldest living
Hall
of
Farner . and
his
Cooperstown plaque noted how he
"overcame diminutive size." At 5foot-6, he played over his head,
winning seven World Series titles
and an AL MVP award and
becoming a five-time All-Star.
"When I first came up to the
Yankees, he was like a big actually, small - brother to me,"
said Hall of Farner Yogi Berra,
who frequently visited Rizzuto in
his later years.
Rizzuto's No. 10 was retired by
baseball's most storied team, and
the club will wear his number on
its left sleeves for the rest of the
season.
The flags at Yankee Stadium
were lowered to half-staff before
Tuesday night's game against
Baltimore and flowers were
placed by Rizzuto's plaque at
Monument Park.
Public address announcer Bob
Sheppard detailed some of
Rizzuto's accomplishments before
the team observed a pregame
moment of silence. His number
was painted Oil the grass in front
of each dugout and marquees outside the stadium said "Phil
Rizzuto 1917-2007"
"Scooter, we will miss you,"
Sheppard said as a video tribute
aired on the scoreboard.
New York also showed ~i~h­
lights from Rizzuto's playmg
career and part of his Hall of Fame
induction speech before the bottom half of the first inning.
Yet it was after he moved into
the broadcast booth that Rizzuto
reached a new level celebrity with

•

Wednellllay, August tS. 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

another generation of Yankees
fans.
Rizzuto delighted TV and radio
listeners for four decades, liis
voice dripping with his native
Brooklyn . He loved his favorite
catch-phrase - eAclaiming "Holy
cow! " when Roger Maris hit his
6lst home run -and often shout-·
ed "What a huckleberry!"
In an age of broadcasters who
spout statistics, Rizzuto was a storyteller. He liked to talk about
things such as his fear of lightning, the style of an umpire 's
shoes or even the prospect of out,fielder Dave Winfield as a candidate for president .
"He didn 't try to act · like an
announcer," Hall of Fame team mate Whitey Ford said . " He just
said what he thought. It added fun
to the game."
Rizzuto liked to acknowledge
birthdays and anniversaries, read
notes from fans , talk about his
favorite place to get a cannoli and
send messages to old cronies.
Once he noticed old teammate
Bobby Brown
then the
American League president - sitting in a box seat and hollered
down, trying to get his attention .
"He would keep getting in trouble with WPIX for announcing
birthdays and anniversaries,"
Patricia Rizzuto recalled.
And if Rizzuto missed a play, he
would scribble "ww" in his scorecard box score. That, he said ,
meant "wasn't watching."
His fans and colleagues never
minded. Because with a simple
shout of "Hey, White!" to longtime broadcasting partner Bill
White, it was time for anot~r tale.
Rizzuto's popularity was suoh
that at a recent auction a Rizzuto
cap embedded with a wad of
chewing gum sold for more .than
$8,000. In the New York area,
Rizzuto's antics became a staple
for TV ads. Nonbaseball fans got
to know him, too , when his voice
appeared on Meat Loaf's rock hit
"Paradise by the Dashboard
Light."
"Phil was a unique figure who
eAemplified the joy of our game to
millions of fans," commissioner
Bud Selig said.
He liked to share that joy. St.
Joseph 's School for the Blind in
Jersey City, was a favorite cause
of Rizzuto's, and his daughter
asked that any donations be directed there.
Edward J. Lucas, a former student at the school, met Rizzuto
soon after losing his sight at age
12 when a line drive struck him

YVedneada~August

Yankees infielder Phil Rizzuto poses m this March, 1950 file photo.
Rizzuto, the Hall of Fame shortstop during the Yankees' dynasty years
and beloved by a generation of fans for exclaiming "Holy cowl" as a
broadcaster, d1ed Tuesday. He was 89.

season and also went 58 games
without an error.
He led all AL shortstops in double plays three times and had a
career batting average of .273 . He
played errorless ball in 21 consecutive World Series games and
DiMaggio said the shortstop "held
the team together."
Long after his playing career,
Rizzuto could often be found talking ball in the Yankees clubhouse. ·
He especially enjoyed his visits
with shortstop Derek Jeter.
"Mr. Rizzuto serves as the ultimate reminder that physical
stature has little bearing on the
size of a person's heart," Jeter
said. "Nothmg was ever given to
Phil , and he used every ounce of
his ability to become one of the
greatest Yankees to ever wear this
uniform."
On Phil Rizzuto Day at Yankee
Stadium in 1985, the team gave
him a fitting present: a cow wearing a halo.
•
The cow knocked Rizzuto over
and, of course, he shouted, "Holy
cow!"
"That thing really hurt," he said.
"That big thing stepped right on
my shoe and pushed me backwards, like a karate move."
Rizzuto was passed over for the
Hall of Fame 15 times by the writers and 11 times by the Veterans
Committee . Finally, a persuasive
speech by Ted Williams pushed
Rizzuto into Cooperstown in
1994.
'
"If we'd had Rizzuto in Boston,
we'd have won all those pennants
instead of New York," Williams
often said .

between the eyes . The accident
happened on Oct. 3, 1951, when
Lucas went outside to play ball
after watching Bobby Thomson
hit the "Shot Heard 'Round the
World" to win the National
League pennant for the New York
Giants.
"He has been a friend every
since," said Lucas, now 68, a
baseball radio reporter. "He's been
here and helped us out tremendously."
Rizzuto also introduced Lucas
to the woman he would eventually
marry. The ceremony was last year
at home plate at Yankee Stadium.
"He may be short in stature ,"
Lucas said. "but his heart was bigger than all of Yankee StadiUm."
Rizzuto was a flashy player who
could always be counted on for a
perfect bunt , a nice slide or a divmg catch in a lineup better known
for its cornerstone sluggers . He
played 13 seasons alongside the

"I never thought I deserved to be
in the Hall of Fame," Rizzuto once
said. "The Hall of Fame is for the
big guys, pitchers with 100 mph
fastballs and hitters who sock
homers and drive in a lot of runs.
That's the way it always has been
and the way it should be."
The flag at Cooperstown was
lowered to half-staff and a laurel
was placed around his plaque, as
is custom when Hall of Famers
die. With Rizzuto's death, execulive Lee MacPhail,89, became the
oldest living Hall member.
Rizzuto is survived by his wife,
Cora, whom he married in 1943;
daughters Cindy Rizzuto, Patricia
Rizzuto and Penny Rizzuto Yetto;
son Phil Rizzuto Jr.; and two
griiJ!ddaughters.
_A private, family funeral·· is
planned. · The family is working
.with the Yankees on a memorial to
be held at Yankee Stadium,
Patricia Rizzuto said.

. AP photo

likes of Joe DiMaggio and Mickey
Mantle in a career interrupted by
Navy service in World War 11.
Often overshadowed by Hall of
Fame teammates, it made sense
that Rizzuto was the frrst "mystery
guest" on the old game show
"What's My Line?" in 1950.
A leadoff man with quick feet
that earned him his nickname,
Rizzuto was a staple on the
Yankees teams that won II pennants and nine World Series
between 1941 and 1956.
"He was a Yankee all the way,"
Indians Hall of Farner Bob Feller
said. "He knew the fundamentals
of the game and he got 100 percent out of his ability. He played it
hard and he played it fair," he
said.
Rizzuto came to the Yankees in
1941 and batted .307 as a rookie.
After the war, he returned m 1946
and became the American League
MVP in 1950. He batted .324 that

I&lt;:.-.CJ._..,

10% down on day ot
Number ule, cash or certllled
06CV099
check, balance due on
Unlt11 State• ol conllrmatlon ol ute.
America Pllllntlff VS
The appralsel did not
J011nna Fervuoon II al Include an Interior
Delendanta
examination ol the
Court ol · Common house.
Please, Mlllga County, Robart E. Beegle,
Ohio
Melga County Sherlll
In pursuance ot an Attorney lor lha
order ol tala to me Plalntllt
directed lrom seld Stephen 0. Miles
coult In then above 18 W. Monument Ave.
entHted action, I will Dayton, Ohio 45402
expose to sele at pub- 937-46 t ·11100
lic auction on the lront (8) 1, 8,15
stepa ol the Meigs
County Court Houoe - - - - - - - on Friday, September
Public Notice
7, 2007 II 10 a.m., ol - - - - - - said day, the following Sheriff Salea
d,.,.crlbecleart eatata; Case Number 07CV024
Situated In the VIRage· Chase Home Finance
ol Middleport, County 1.LC Pllllnttll VS
of Meigs and State ol Jackie P. Cremeens 11
Ohio
al Delenclanta
Parcel One: The Mil Court ol Common
one-ball ol South o,.. Please, Meigs County,
hall {SO leal o1 Lot Ohio
#297) In Horton's In pursuance of an
Addition to what Is order ol sale to me
now the VIllage ol directed from said
Mlddlaport, Ohio, lor- court In the above antimarty lower Pomeroy, tied action, I will
Ohio. Said original 101 ll!posa to sale 11 pubbeing 50 lee! In width lie auction on tho lront
and 140 leal In depth ateps ol the Meigs
and being lurther County Court Houao
deecrlbecl as lollowa: on Friday, September
Beginning 70 r..t Eall 7,2007 at 10 a.m., ol
ol the Southwest cor- aald day, the following
ner ol Lot 1297; Thence described real estate:
North SO leet; Thence SHueted In the State ol
East 70 r..t; Thence Ohio, County ol Malga,
South 50 lee!; Thence and In the VIllage of
West 70 leal to the Middleport:
ploce ol beginning.
Being the Eaat one·
Parcel Two: A rlght-ol· hall ol Lola Numbers
way lor sewer linea as One Hundred Thirty·
currently
existing Seven {137) and One
across West one-hall Hundred Thirty-Eight
ol the South one-halt {138) ol Waterman
ol Lot 1297 connecting Pelmar'a Addition to
Into High Street. Sllellleld,
now
Subject to an ease- Middleport, being 100
ment lor the banellt of ft., more or letla, on the
the West omt·hall ol allay belwHn Fourth
the South one-halt ol and Filth Streata, and
Lot 1297 lor water and Fifty {50) ft . lrontlng on
gee linea connecting Hooker Street.
Into ,the alloy between Currant Owner: Jackie
Broadway and High P. Cremeans et al
Streata.
Properly At:
369
Currant
Owner: Hooker Street
Joanna Ferguaon llal Middleport, Oh 45760
748.High Street
PPI 15-00122.000
Middleport, Ohio
Prior Deed Reference:
PPI 15-01138.000
Volume 80, Page 357
P.rlor Deed Relorence: Appraised
at
Volume 324 Page 543 $55,000.00. Terms ol
Appraised
at sele: Cannot be aold
$32,000.00 Ierma or lor leas than 213rds ol
sale. Cannot be sold tho appraised value.
lor leas than 213rda ol 10% down on day ol
the appralaod value. sale( cash or cartltled

I
(

'

check, balance due oil
conflrmatlon ol aale.
The appraisal did
Include an Interior
examination of the
house.
Robert E. Beagle,
Melga County Sherin
Attorneys lor the
Plaintiff
Lamer Sampson 11o
Rothluae
120 E. 4th St, 8th Roor
Cincinnati, Oh 45202·
4007
S13-24t-3100
(8) 1, 8, 15

Public Notice
SheriHSale
Case Number 07CV003
J P Morgan Chose
Bank Plalntlll VS
Allen R. Jacks at al
Defendants
Court of Common
Plass, Meigs County,
Ohio
In purauance ol an

27 rodt and 6 llnka;
thence
soulh
s
degreeo weal 1 rod;
thence north 81
dagreea 80 rods to the
place ol beginning,
containing 85 ·acres
more or less.
Excepting 60.03t acres
conveyed to Burner
Land Company, Inc., by
deed dated May
30,1998, and recorded
In volume 69, page 393,
ol the Meigs County
official records.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 14, pege 373,
Meigs County Offlctal
Records.
The above described
real

estate

Is

more

dagr88$ 04' 16" east a
distance ol 357.65 leet
to a point In the center·
line ol township road
no. 58 {Whites Hill
Road) passing over the
east line or lractlon 6 at
a distance o1 plus
46.28 leet and passing
through two Iron pin
seta at a distance of
plus 234.65 leal plus
334.65 leet, respectively.
Thence, with the cen·
tarttne ol township

containing 0.237 acras,
more or leaa, or easement.
All Iron pins set ere
t/2" and 30" rebar
capped and labeled
Claus 6456.
The bearings In this
description are lor
angle calculation only
and are based on the
wast line of lractlon 2
and the east line ol
lractlon 6 used as an
assumed bearing ol
north .3 degrees 29'21"

CLASSIFIED
Gallia
County
OH

road. no. 58, south 18 east.

dagrees 33' 15" east a
distance ol 206.10 leet
to a point,
Thence, leaving the
road, south 83 degrees
19' 08" east a distance
ol 157.48 geet to an
Iron pin set, passing
through an iron pin set
at ~ distance of plus
10.561eet.
·
Thence, south 19
dagr"" 06' 36" east a
distance ol121.721eel
to an iron pin set;
Thence, south 75
dagrees 51'15" west a
distance ol311.341eet
to the place ol begin·
nlng, passing through
an Iron p1n set at a dis·
lance of plus 85.38
leet;
Containing
5.172

A plat ol the above
described survey has
bean submitted lor lite
a1 the county englnear's olllce.
The above description
prepared by Roger W.
Claus, raglstered surveyor No. 6456, based
on actual lleld survey
ol May 7, 1998: said
survey being subjecl
to an lacta that maybe
disclosed In a lull and
accurate title search.
The real estate above
described Ia subject to
all leases, easements,
and rights ol wey ol
record.
The preparer ol this
Instrument does not
certlly the accuracy of
the above description.

accurately deacribed
by survey as lotlows;
Sltualed In the state ol
Ohio, county ol Meigs,
Township ol Rutland,
being part or lracllon 2
and part ol lract1on 6,
range 14 west, town·
ship 6 north, ol the
order of sala to me Ohio Company llrst
directed lrom said purchase ol 1787, and
court In the above enti- being bonded and
tled action, I will cleacrlbed aslollows:
expose to sate at pub- Commencing for refer·
lic auction on the Iron! ence at 518" Iron Pin
atopa ol the Meigs lound capped "E.
County Court House Triplett 6766" In the
on Friday, Sapt 7, 2007 west line of fraction 2
at 10 a.m., ol said day, at the southeast corner
the .
lollowlng oltractlon 6 {Note: ref- acres, more or less, of Parcel one: 11.00675
described real estate: erence hearing on the which 2.985 acres are Parcel two: 11-&lt;10676
SKuated ' In the town- west line ol fraction 2 In lracllon 2 and 2.187 Known as: 33565
ship ol Rutland, and the east line ol acres are In fraction 6; Whites Hill Road,
County ol Meigs, and fraction 6 used as an Subjecl to all legal Rutland, Oh10 4Sn5
In the state ol Ohio:
auumed bearing ol rights ol way, ease· Currant Owner: Allen
Beginning at the north 03 degrees 29' menta, restrictions, Jacks
southeaat corner of 21" east.)
reservations, and zon- Property at: 33565
E.K. Taylor's land In Thance, with the west lng regulations ol Whites Hill Rd
Fraction No. 2, town line ol lrectlon 2 and record.
Rutland, Ohio
no. 6, range no. 14,ol the east line ollractlon Subject to the right ol PP# 11-00675.000
the Ohio company's 6, north 03 degrees 29' way to Township road 11-00676.000
purchaeed and In the 21" east a distance or No. 58.
Prior deed Reference:
center of the road; 1414.751eet to a point, Subject to the 100 year Volume 185, Page 485
at
thence north 25 bring the true place ol flood plain restrictions, Appraised
Clagreea west 48 rods beginning . lor this lleppllcable
$95,000.00 terms or
along the road; thence description.
Subject to a 50.00 leet sale: Cannot be sold
north 19 112 dagreea Thencelrom 881d point wide easement being · lor leas than 213rdathe
west 74 rods and 5 ol beginning and leav- reserved unto the appraised value. 10%
links along tho road to Ing the lot line, south Grantor, their hairs, down on day of sale,
A. A. Humphrey's 75 dagreas 51' 15" weal and or assigns, forev- cash or certified
south line; !hence weal a distance of 145.00 er. Said easement check. Balance due on
110 rodo; thence south lee! to an Iron pin set: being lor the purpose conl!rmatlon ol sale.
7 112 degrees east 36 Thence, north 18 ol running utlllllea to The appraisal did
rods and 10 links; degrees 08' 27" east a other parcels ol land Include an Interior
thence west 22 links; distance of 417.84 feet on or near Township examination of the
thence south 12 to an Iron pin set, pass- Road No. 58. Said home.
degrees weet 41 rods Ing through an Iron pin easement runs In a Robert E. Beegle,
and 12 links to a atone sat at a distance ol north-south direction Meigs County Sherlll
across the east end of Attorney lor the
corner; thence east 37 plus 190.00 leet;
rods and 15 links; Thence north 74 the above described Plaintiff
!hence south 28 dagrees 11' 52" east a property with the east Shapero &amp; Felly '
dagrees east 4t rods distance or 280.97 feet line ol said easement t 500 W. Third St. Sulta
being the cenler line ol 400
and 1s links; !hence to an Iron pin set ;
south 51 degrees east Thence nortlj. 85 Jownshlp road no. 58. Cleveland, Oh 44113

Public Notice
Sheriff Sale
Case Number 07CV025
Wells Fargo Bank NA
Plalntlll VS
Melissa D Johnson at
al Defendants
Court ol Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio.
In pursuance of an
order of

sale to me

directed lrom said
court In 11111 above entl·
tied action, I will
expose to sale at public auction on the lront
steps ol lhe Meigs
County Court House
on Friday, September
14, 2007 at 10 a.m., ol
said day, the following
described real estate:
Situated In the State ol
Ohio, County ol Meigs
and In the Township ol
Olive.
Being

2.23 acres, more

'" leas, out ol the
Northwest corner ollot
No. 1t65, section 9,
town 4, range 11 and
bounded described as
follows:
Beginning 8.00 rods
West or the common
corner of lands owned

being a tract ol land
tranaferred to Margaret
Groaanlckle, Et. At. ••
recorded In olllclal
recorda book 2 at page
623, Mlllga County
Recorders
Office,
Meigs County, Ohio,
also being a pert ot 160
acre lot No. 1165,
Townahlp·4·North,
Rango-t1-Woat, Oliva
Township,
Meigs
County, State ol Ohio
end more particularly
described as lotlowo:
Beginning at a 518"1ron
pin set which aasumad
to bear North 86'40'00'
East a distance ol
976.80 lell lrom the
Northwest corner ol
said 160 acre lot No.
1185, Township 4,
Range 1t;
Thence along the north
line olsald lot no. 1165
North 86' 40' 00" East a
distance ol 21 1.20 leal
to a 518" Iron ptn set:
Thence leaving aald
North line South 00'
26' 21" East passing
through a 518" Iron pin
set at a Dlatance or
571.24 leal and going a
total distance ol601.24
leet to a point In the
cent~rttne
ol State
Route I 681;
Thence along said canterllno the lollowlng
three coursas:
1. North 41 ' 20" 00'
West a distance ol
49.50 leet to a point;
2. North 45' 54' 49'
West a distance ol
128.2t r..t to a point;
3. North 50" 05" 37'
Wool e distance of
1t 9.29 leet to a point;
Thence leaving said
centerline North 00'
09' 02' East a distance
ol 386.05 leet to the
prlnclpol point ol
beginning, containing
2,3875 acres, more or
leas, sublact to alllagal
aaaements and rlglltaot-way.
Bearings are eaaumad
and are lor the determination ol angles
only.
The above descrlpllon
was prepared lrom an
actual survey made on
the 28th day ol July,
1994, by C. Thomao
Smith,
Ohio
Proleaalonal Surveyor,

by J. W. Emrick T.
Kibble, Sarah M. Kibble
and
Herbert
Williamson on the
North line ol lot No.
1165 (IIIIa same point
being 72 rods oaat ol
the North Wast corner
ol Lot No. 1165);
Thance South 3" West
a distance ol36.5 rods,
more or leas, along the
West line ol lot owned
by Herbert Williams, to
the cenler ol Slate
Route No. 680; Thence
Norlh approximately
38' Weot 18 rods, mora
or leas, 10 Southeast
corner ol land owned
by Dr Formerly owned
by Ira kibble; Thence
North 21 .6 rods, more
or less, to the north
line ol lot No. 1155;
Thence East along
North line ol Lot No.
1185, a distance of 12.8
rods to the place ol
beginning.
The above described
real estate Is more '8844.
accurately described Auditors Parcel No. ~
by survey as lollows: oosn.ooo

Ralorence
deed
Volume: 135, Page 763,
Molga county Ofllclal
Recards.
Current
Owner;
Mellsaa D. Johnson Et.
AI.

Propeny at: 54210
State Route 881
Reedsville, Ohio
PP109-005n.OOO
Prior Oeed Rolerenco;
Voluma.135, Page 763
Appraloed
at
$25,000.00. Torma ol
sale: cannot be sold
lor ton than 213111• ol
tho appraised value.
10% down on day o1
sale, cash or certllled
check, balance due on
conltrmatlon olaala.
Tho appraloal did
Include an Interior
examination ol the
house.
Robert E. · Beegle,
Meigs County SheriII
Attornay lor tho
Plalntlll
Lerner Sampson llo
Rothlusa
120 E. 4th Street 8th
Floor
Cincinnati, Oh 45202·
4007

.

513·241-3100
(8) 8, 15, 22
------Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report
Form 990 PF lor the
Kibble Foundation,
Bernard V. FuHz,
Trullee Is available lor
public Inspection at
Bernard V. Fullz Law
Office, 111-112 West
Sacond
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
during ragular busl·
noaa hours lor a period
ol 180 days suboaquant to publication ol
this notice.
{8) 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 21,
22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29,
30.
f(~;r.;uu.n.;-1
on
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rio

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An Excellent way to earn
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Call Marilyn 30HS2-2645

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1

J:lw&gt;WAN'IID

I

ACCEPTING APPliCATIONS FOR PART· TIME
CASHIERS. MUST BE
AVAILABLE TO WORK All
SHIFTS APPLY AT PAR
MAR #38 15289 HUNTINGTON ROAD GALLIPOliS
FERRY

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon 2
Bualneaa Daya Prior To
Publication
sunday Dlaplay: 1:00

• All ada m.uat be prepaid'

AD. • Start Your Ads With A Keyword a Include Complete

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~
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s,~
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Borders $3.00/per ad
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$ 1.00 for Iorge

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In Next Day•a Paper
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Monday thru Friday
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fkii,;;;:;;iyj';@~;;-;.;;t.;;;t-------------,

~~~

, w~~r;o Yoo!

~

No Fee Unless W e Winl

I-S88·582·3345

~~f 1j~e;: I A~
f~ APcp 1'~.,.­

Forget what you
have heard about
Telemarketing!

I&lt; I \ I I .., I \ II

HoMES

YaJ1D BE:I'ftsR

FOOSALE

~l)l)c.e; ~

0 Down even With less than
perfect cret:lt ls a vailable on
this 3 bedroom , 1 bath
home. Cormtr lot, l1 re~ace,
modern kitchen JBCUZZI ILlb,
Payment aroond $ 550 per
month 740367-7129

lnfoCtSton has JUst
celebrated 25 years or
excellence as an 1ndus1ry
leader tn Ouahty and
Prolesstonallsm

• No Collections
• No Product Sates

104

Must be flexible wrth sched·
uta and experience Is a plus
but will tra1n the proper per·
son td needed. Please drop
oft resume or fill out applica-

tion at Dave's Amencan
Gnll, Wed • Sun aner 4 and
ask for Josh
Build Your Career

This nowspapo
cceplo only hoi
.,ted ada mntln
OEatendftl.
accept any oliver

l..,.nt In vlollll

Field
Professional
Representative wanted for
Po1nt Pleasant Galhpohs &amp;
surround area, no expenence requtred
Excellent
tratmng program. sales
track, potential, and beneftts
for those who qualify
Woodmen ol the World ltfe
Insurance Society, Omaha,
Nebraska Resumes to t2
Players Club Dnve Suite

101, CharlaSion, WV 25331
or calr304-342·5021

ltho raw.

Drivers needed:
COL
Drivers wiling to drtve for
local ready-miK company
One pos111on open at two (2)
\\\t it '\( I \ II \1'plants Expenence ts pre·
tarred but not necessary
Ortver mlJst be Willing to do
pre-marntenanca on trucks
and eqwpment , yard/plant
~ew Ltle LUmeran vnurc
and other miscellaneous
~~ to school, free cloth chores E11penence operat·
ng gNeaway 8/17, 9·6 ~ tng equtpment and elltra
~- 18, 9-1, Loceled ol skillssuchasweldtngaplus ·
ackson Pll&lt;e
Start1ng pay based on expe·
nence and dnvmg record
Benefits including health
GTVFAWAY
!nsurancQ, available after
meetmg
employment
reqUirementS': Call Valley
~ Three pupp1es · Some low
Brook Concrete corporate
life scum dropped thorn off.
office at (304)n3·5519 to
· Have f1rst shots Call 740·
schedule an 1nterv1ew

r

~256~
- 1~~~9~~-----,

r

tF

.

Lorr
F~

L,~-------,.1

Found·
small
male
Schnauzer w/collar, Tuppers
· Platns area, (740)667·0687
.,--...,.--,----,--.. Found Adult ma le coon
hound on White Ad Call
' 446
:-·436
.;.;..7_ _ _ _ _.,
11

r
r..........

YARD SALE
~;::::::;::~

11

~.,.

YARD SALE·
GAUJPOLJS

Echoing
Meadows
Residential Center Is taking
applicatiOns tar Director of
Nurs1ng lndtvldual wtll be
worktng wtlh MRDD mdtvtduais and superv1smg floor
nurses and program aSSIS·
rants Interested 1nd1v1duals
should submit resume and
comple te applicatiOn 1n per·
son at 319 West Ur~on St ,
Athens. Ohto Call (740)594·
3541 1f you have any ques·
Iron Applicants must pass
pre-employment
scree ns
mc ludrng cr1m1nal background checks and d rlJg

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

3 Family Yard Sale. Aug
16th, 17th, 18th, clothes.
kn•ck knad{s, movtes, bed
spreads , etc 46 BurneH Ad

area

1-888-IMC·PAYU
axt.2311

~real

work

116
.1 IIEu&gt;WANJ'FJl

ars

w1th an mdustr
eadert Applicants can bE
18 years of age as long a
hey are a full t1me colleg
tudent Otherwise, yo
rnust meet be at least 21
ears of age With a clea
~nving record and mus
~pply m person at th
E'nterprise Rental Branc
oceted at 371 State Rout
17, Galhpolts, Oht

5631.EOEIMFDV

Help wanted , Darst Adult
Group Home, weekends a
must, (740}992·5023
Hetp wanted·Part time
admintstrative assistant, to
WOfk wtth Off1ce manager,
average I 5·25 hours per
week
Job descriphon to
rnclude but not limtted to.
answermg tne phone, workIng with customers, schedulrng and orgamzmg concrete
and stone orders. dtspatch·
mg trucks operatmg digital
we1ght scales batctnng con·
crete With automated computer batch program and
general cleanmg of off1ce
area
Fam1llanty wtth
Ou1ckBooks (accounlmg,
mv01crng. rnventory, etc ),
Word and E~ecel programs a
bonus Pay based on expenence and skill level
Pnmarv work aSSIQnment at
Robertsburg Plant but must
have fle~1bihty to report to
Millwood or Lakm Plants
reqwred
Contact Valley
Brook Concrete Corporate
Off1ce at Lakin. WV call
(304 )773-5519 to sdleduie
tntervtew
'

MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNITIES

Wv seek career onented
Saturday 8/18 Jr g1rls cloth· IndiVIduals who wtll stnve to
achieve the "Best" m
mg s1zes 0·3, Abercrombie •
AE • Hollister, mov1es , C ustomer Satisfaction and
team work . II you have a
books,
collector
dolls.
des1re to succeed w1th a
Barb1es, small k1t appl , furn1·
ture and more 115 Basllanl, goal drtven. team onented
and growmg company we
Gallipolis
oHer
Health , dental and lite
insurance, prescnpllOn
card, bonus program , patd
vacat1on, management
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Sliver and Gold Cotns , apparel . advancement from
W1thtn
Proofsets, Gold Amgs, PreApply m perso n at the
1935
US
Currency,
Burger Ktng Restaurant
Sohta1re Diamonds· M T S.
65 Upper A1ve r Road or
Cotn Shop , 151 Second
ma11re sume to
Aveflle. Gallipolis, 740·446·
Burger Kmg
2B42
PO Box 24 07
Hunttngton, WV 25725
Wanted Dump Truck Tra1 ler
or fax resume to
6J~ 1 0 or 61112 wtll pay far
740-446·3400 or
prtce or trade 1994 Astra
304·529·0055
Van
Call Ttm 304·882·

't

B216

~~)

EOE

I.

1110

"-------· L-.------.,1
.

fiEu&gt;WANfED

POSTOFFICE NOW
HIRING

Looking lor a
convenient schedule
white your child Ia In
school?
Take Inbound/Customer
SeMc:e calls tor a variety of
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non-profit organlzattons

Part Time Dey Shift
(8am · 130pm)
$7.00 · S7.251hr

Avg Pay $20/hr or
.S57K annually
Including Federal Benefits
and OT,Pa•d Tra1nmg,

Vocations-FT/PT
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. USWA

Sales PoaKion
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An outstandtng
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Otter 5 day work week.
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Email resume
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l o schedu le an m1erv1ew
No Walk-Ins Please

You w1ll also earn

• $300 Hiring Bonus
•Weekly Bonus Potent1al
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•Pa1d trammW vacallons/
holidays

il=======dl
StoP by and see
lnfoCision at our

CALLNOWI
1·888-IMC-PAYU
1-88-462-7298
Job ext. 1921

OPEN
INTERVIEWS
Wednesday
August 15th
!O:OOam· 1:00pm

WWW lnfOCISIOn com
McCiures Restaurant (
GahipoliS Only) now h1r1ng
part &amp; full hme · daysh1ft
available Apply between 10
and 11 AM
Monday
Saturday

Meigs County Job and

Family Services
175 Race Street
M1ddleport, OH

www.lnroclslon.com

1310 Carleton Street, PO
Box 307, Syracuse,
45779
150
Salools

1

Oh

L'ISTRUCJ10N

Gallipolis
l ocal Home Health Agency
now htnng PCA's, HHAs,
CNA's and STNA's FleXIble
sched uling Apply m person
or call 740 44 1 1377 2
Comme rce Or Gallipolis,

Career

College

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446-4367,

1·800-214-0452

gatllpoiiSCir&amp;erconege com
Accre!lrled Member Act recli1ri'IQ
WWN

Co.JilC11

lor tndepemienl Colleges

and Schools 1274B

OH

I

-·

.

--------

__ ___
,

.

This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
estate which 11 in
•.violation of the law Our
readers are hereb~
Informed that all
dwelling• advertiaad m
thll newapaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

Over
2 000 sq uare foot home for
less than $40iSQ ft Call The
Home Show · Barboursville

r

at 1·88S·736·3332
MOBILE HOMES
mRSALE

2001 Oakwood Free dom
MObil e Home Ia&lt; sal e
Includes washer, dryer all
appliances some turn1shmgs, outl:kJHdmg , lglcovered
deck 14x70, 3br , 2 lull
bath, Central/Air $18 000
ftrm 740-245-0054, 304·
675·2561 ' 304·593·1880

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
18x80 With vinyl /Shingle
Must sell , Only $25,9 95 wtth

del1very CaH (740)385·4367

HUGE
NEW 2008 4 Bed

$49,989
llw201131..

.... $293.
lllltllnt74U2Ul51
mymldwesthome.com

New 3 Bedroom homes from
$2 14 36 per monlh Includes
many upgrades, deltvery &amp;
set·up (740)385-2434
Ntce used 3 bedroom home
v1 nyllshmgle W1tl help w1th
deltvery 74D-385·4367

OWNER FINANCING
NICS 3/2 Slngl ewl deS
From $1 800 down
payment
Gary (740) 828·2750

lao

Trader

I-8S8-928-3426

r

lice nsed {This 1s a publ ic
ser v1ce announ ce ment
from the OhiO Va ll ey
Publ1 shmg Corl}pany)

ou t Sand H1ll A d 10 Durst l ooKtng tor a good pre
Add
Pt
Ple asant owned home?
Many 10
Aeslorahon needs 1nclude choose from a1 The Home
bu t not 11mned 1o deCk , Show · BarboUJs vllle
1
HVAC, ca1pet some drywall 88S736 3332
Most furn ture s tays Brtck
alu mmums1d1ng To~1c mold New home 1n GallipOliS 2br
contam~natIon d•spute M
old 2 balh w/wh1rlpool tubs
d1 sciOSU1e ava 1tatrie liabil ity large LR on 3 acres m/1
wa wer s1gnatu re requrred $87 500 740-446-7029
$45 ·000 as ,s Ser•ous buY· Ral'lCh Style Buck Hom e 2
ers/contractors
304-67 5·
bedrooms 1 bedroom ex 11a
3779lerwe me ssage
large 2 full baths on 2 11:?
M1ddtsport (m town1 bn ck acres 3 m1les !rom Po1n1
ranch. lvr dnr 3 br 2 1/2 Pleas t~ n l 0 \'oner 1elocat1ng
Pholos/deta•ts
baths, kit , utly . ofhce, 2 Must sell
online
at
hre plaoas 2 garages 2 1ots tocated
patto wlawntng fm1sh ed www orvb com (code #71 37)
low er lo~el w f k1t famlly - or call 304-675 423 5 ask1ng
room , firepl ace lots ol stor- 5128 000
age, QIOtmd level access
4 000 sq feet call (740)992·
4
_ 1_9_7_ _ __ __ ~

lms&amp;
ACRMGI:

10 acres tor sale located on
Broad Ru n Roa d. 1n New
Have n
WV
$34 500

1304)773·5S81
5 Acres MIL along O td
Cove red Brtdge Ad Located
1n Ew1ngton V1nton County
OH Cali 606 -353 0990
Tra1ler lot pnvate Approx 2
7 75
m1les
out
SR
$125/month 2000 or newer
model 446 4053

IH\1\IS
~lo

lim 'SI :&gt;;
1'0~

Rl \I

112 V1n1on Cl Gal l•p ohs
3BR t BA Carport Cntrl
Au Wo'O Fnage Stove l ncl
$500/mo S300 dep No OBI S
Ref 'secun ty check req 304
675-2525
2 bedroom e~ecuhve house
new cons tructiOn flJtly fur
nrsh ed new rel r1gerator
stove d1shwa sher washer &amp;
dryer large wrap around
porch, full basemen t 1 car
garage total electric w1 1h
central au very spaCIOlJS
pnvate dnve w1th parking,
S1 100 per month senous
calls only (7401949-2303
2br unturn1shed House 507
112 2nd St New Haven 304-

- - - - - - - - 675-3469
A1ve1 v1ew C11y Schools - - - -- - - 3000 sq n 4 DR. 2 5 ba1h 3 bedroom hOuse m

2FP LR. DR FR large front
House on M ason Street. po1ch tn ground pool t 4
Cl1fton WV Call 740 992· acrr•s
(prl\lale
area )
2090 Mco:lay through Fnday Ser1 JUS
mQutrms
onty 1
for lnlormaiJOn
740 .146 277''

- -------~-

$2 000

Why Pay rent ???
Clayton S1ngi F&gt; W1des",
Sta1!1ng at $225 00
per month W A C
Call todaytll

I

Affmrs BEFORE you rell·
nance your home or
obtain a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance IJpayment! 01
fees or tnsurance fAI!I the
of
Consumet
Olftce
Afla1rs toll free at 1·866
278 0003 to learn if the
mortg age
broker
or
lender
IS
properly

for sa le

(7401992 5S58

·---~·o·Do·--rl

m~

IRS JOBS

All real Htate advertising
In thla newspaper le
aubtecl to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
wh1ch makes It Illegal to
advertise ·any
preteren~;e, tim1tatlon or
d1Scrlminat1on baaed on
race, color, rellglqn. •••
famlllalstatus or national
ongln, or any mtent1on to
make any such
preference, limitation or
diaerlmlnation."

60
XTREME SAVINGS'

we

Schao11Me1gs
lndustnes :o:H~er:":9:;:;:===~
Hours 9am-3pm Must have
current RNJLPN license 1n fZ2D
M
the state of OhiO Prefer 1.
expenence tn public health
nursmg and/or worktng With
children and adults wrth
**NOTI£1lH
developmental diSBbthllfJS
Send resume by Monday,
August 20 2007 10 Metgs Borrow Smart. Contact
County Boar of Mental the Oh10 DIVISIOn of
Retardation
and Frnanctal
Insti tutiOn s
Otf1ce
of
Consumer
Developmental D1sab1httes ,

$18 46-$32 6Qihr , now h1r1ng Patd Tra 101ng IS prOVId·
ed For application and free
government JOb mfo, calf
Amertcan Assoc of labor 1913·599·8244, 24!1lrs emp
serv

G:t

Save
Th ousands!
Clearance on lot models all
1·888·736·3332 Th e Home
Show Barbour sville, 5898 At

coo

Substitute AN/LPN wanted
tor
the
c arleton

7SS6

t.,--~-UiiiRiiiSiii~LEii'-.,1

10
HOMI:'i
1.,-....iiflJOIRiliSiiiAI-.1:.._.,1

..

$300 Hmng Bonus

1need dlstnbutors tor the TrlCounty Make b1g money
while helptng others tn your
spare t1me Call 740-367·

HOMI1i

3 BR. 1 Bath , Carport, gas
togs, full bMem e nt ~ new ) For Sal e Trade or Rent 2
s1de by s1de 2 story Houses
~~11!15iJI"""-Solools~----,~ Senous '"""'es only'
3 to 5 bedrooms 2 · 2 112
.
IN'imucnON . 740-446 2717
b aths At 62 bes1de Hartford
3 br , 21ull bth, 20x38 great- Commumty Center building
room , cJa blaCktop drwe, lg Call to schedule a tour or
STUDENTS FOR THE NA parking area, all new w1n- make an offer on 1 or both
PROGAAM
Aockspnngs dows/doorslroof &amp; septic, 304-675·2484 or ceil 304·
Nurstng and Aehabihlatton lam 1nated hardwood lloors 593·1481
Center IS located 5 mMes throughout, 24 '
atx.we
from Pomeroy and 20 min· ground pool, adtt 1t1ona! spot For sale/land conlract 3 BR
utes from Athens • and lor mobile home, on 1 acre, house tn Galhpohs WID
Albany, We currently are for o nly $1 15 ooo. near St c onnecti on $1500 down
seeking 1ndw1duals tntereal; Rt .. 143 s,
t
Rt 7. $4001mo or rent $475/mo
ed In attendtng our 75 hour Pomeroy Oh
(7 40)696- Also 1 BR 111 Gall1p0I1S $750
d own $200tmo or rent
NurSing Assistant Program 1227
which w1ll start August 20 - - - - , - ,-:-::--::::--- $250/mo Call Wayne 404·
2007 ThiS class IS free of 4br, 2ba 1900 SP FT lin· 456-3802 for 1nfo
charge and begtns wtth 2 tshed basement Brtck iron!.
Fro sale by owner · parttally
'JOiunteer days that wtll allow attac hed gara g e, hv1ng
remode led 4BR 2 1/2BA
you to see what the Job con· room. dinng room lamtl y
la rge LA Kttchen. DR , new
s1s1s of hrst hand
allow room. ut1IIIV room 16~ 3 2 1n
c entral a1r · New furnace
12 students per class 90 ground pW, cov ered connew
roof/shtngles,
all
they fill up qutckly. Please crete pat1o 6ft pnvacy fe nce,
replaced 2 yea rs ago 1/2
come 1n and complete an gre at ne1[flbo rho od and
acre.
Prtce
1educed
applic ation 1f 1nterested locatton . Mount V()rnon
$47 500 740-388 8376
Pleasant
Aockspnngs Is an equal Avenue Po1nt
opportumly employer
$164.000 (304)593-6469
House for sa le m Rac\ne
a rea Approx 4 aCies. all
5 br . 3 5 ba . ranc h on Cfew
landscaped
WANJID
Ad. $145,000, (74'1416- professionally
Ranch styl e house w1th 4
I
1
4765 pre approved buyers bed rooms. 1tv1ng room. dlnonly.
•ng room k1tchen large famHeaven Scent Cleamng, 502
LeG ran de
Blv d, Il y room central a1r gas heal
House Cleaning ~•ce at 8 Gall1p ol1s OlJ1e t neighbor- and 1 f1replace Add111on of a
reasonable prrcel Call today h ood , 3BR 2 BA Rae large · Flo11da room com
at 740 -446·3861 !eave a Roo m LR Ntth FP. Fl onda pl etely cedar opens onto
message
roo m , fe ncec:l ya rd, 1nground paho &amp; pool area Heated 1n
- - - - - - - - pool. liot tub, 2 storage ground pool enclosed by pn
Hones! &amp; dependable. ~ b!dgs . ail applianc es. low vacy fenc1ng and landyrs of profess,onal clean,ng mte rest 8 ass u mabte loan 'Scapcd Fm•shed 2 ca r
would ltke to clean homes m avai lable Call (7 40)44 6· garage attached to house
the Mlc:ktleport and Mason 44 86 or {740)645·2 355
and f1n1shed &amp; heated 3 ca r
areas, Please ca ll Tracy at
garage
unallach ed
(740)992-1387
Attention!
Exce llent cond1hon ready to
Local col"flpany o ffenng 'NO
move 1n 5255 000 00 Ca ll
:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;~;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;_, DOWN PAYME NT" pro (740)949-2217
~
g ra ms for you t o buy yolJr
•
home Instead of renlmg
In Syracuse
2800sq ft
OrroKm~m
quality bu1lt mlJitl·level buck
"--1iiii.iiiiiiiiiiio-' • 100% 11nanc1ng
• Less lhan per1ect cred1t home m amtenance free
Es1abl1shed trash serviCe lor acce pled
N1ce qwet neighborhood 3
sal&amp;, health reasons Call ' P ayment cou ld be the 4 bedrooms 2 112 bath w1th
740·388-9939
hardwood tr1 m throughout
sam e as rent ·
r
..-""'!'~!'!"!!!!'""-.. M o rtgage
Locators U·sl'1 ape d k1tchen w1th 40' of
cabtne ts Wood burn 1ng f1re
•NOTICE•
17401367-0000
place 2 112 car detached
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
garage N1cely landscaped
lNG CO recommends
' --~
~~&lt; "'ooo sq f1 mil spl1t 60 acres lot Immacu late
that you do buslfless with ~
low u!1h !les
people you know, and level 2 bath 24x25 m/1tam I- con d1t1on
can
NOT to se nd money ly room sept1 c system Selling pnce $2 19
through the mall unlll you 100x130 101 1n ntce Q\Jiet 7 40-441-517 1 Shown by
have mvest1 gated the ne1ghtlo1hood
9110 m11es app l anty

"jib

up to $9.25/hour
w1th experience

Hobday Inn of Gall1pol1s 1s
now· hiring servers for our
d1ntng room
Must be
dependable , fnendly and
have llextble avattabtllty.
Apply 1n perso n at the front
desk No phone calls please

10

s

A&amp;J Truclong Leadmg The
Way R&amp;J Trucking now
Hlftng at our New Haven,
WV Term1nal For Reg~onal
Hauls-Dump Div
1 year
OTA verifiable exp. Call 1600-462·9365 as~ for Kent

Full Time Evening
Shill
(I 45pm · 10 45pml
$8.50111r

~--,-----:­

Saturday 8f t8 9am·3pm,
622 Jay Dnve. antrques.
books , records, p1ctures,
:· water cans glassware, m1sc

304-675·2165

www.comics.com

ellpenenc

~eta111ng and transportiOi;

D, 304·6 7 5-3637 E

2 Story Bnck House 4 Sale 4
bedrooms 2 1 /2 balhs
LA.FA.DR Ktlchen Approx
314 acres above ground
pool
Located Lyon s Add
Mason AsKtng $1 40,000

•Inbound Cullomar
Sarvlce

Call today to fmd out
morel

New

304·882·2334

~onproltts

Hiring Bonus!

Or

lg sunroom, 2 car gar greal

You wilt:
•Renew/Upgrade
NRA Memberships
•Fundraise lor

lnfoCISIOn offers up to
$8.50/hr and a $300

Tatum

Haven WV 3bdl2ba Ranch

Bartender/Server wanted for

even1ngs and weekends

I'Rflfl.~IONAL
'--.OSiiit:ROiVIiiiCiliEb-.,1
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or

Sell. Stirley Spears, 304·
675-1429

Pa.ab•l.c: .r-olc&gt;tlc:es I.-a :N'e~sp-.pers
~e:ll-v.e.-ed :R.Ight tc&gt; ,._...c&gt;"Utr D•o•~r.

216-621-1530
{8) 1, 8, 15

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

'&lt;!Crtbune - Sentinel - l\nll?•

We will nol knowl

Case

www.mydailysentinel.com

and longtime broadcaster, dies at 89

~...... ..- ~lght a-0

SherHI Sale

15,2007

Pomeroy targe &amp; very clean
1 112 bath ate hardwood
floors . full basement w/2 car
garage small back yard

S635 1740)949-2303

�Yfednesda~August15 , 2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www,mydBilysenlinel.cDm

ALLEY COP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

3 Bedroom House In
Syracuse. $500/month +
&lt;lopoolt No Pets. (30o4)6755332 weekends 740-5910265

1 and 2 bedroom apart·

Phillip
Alder

'Dores .£. ~rnoftf

ments, furnished and unfur·
nished, and houses In
Pomeroy and Middleport.
seeurtty deposR required, no
pets, 740-992-2218.
3 br. house In Pomeroy, - - : - - - - - - stove &amp; refrigerator fur- 2 BR in Rodney, WID,
nllhed. (614}49,--4850
lridge,stove,waterfsewerltra
Sh included. No Pets. Dep
4 bedroom, 2 Story house, req. 446·1271 or 709-1657
very spacious &amp; clean, new
carport, large bedroom, eat· 2BR apls, 6 miles from
in khchen with new cabinets, Holzer. $400+dep. Water,
$836 per month, (740)949- '"'w'"· trash paid. 740-9882303
6130 or 74~2-9243

Aug. 15,1917- May 4, 1998
Would have been your 90th
Birthday but you have been gone
over 9 years. Now Mommy has
joined you. Oh bow we miss you
both. Tbe family hasn't been the
same since tbe Lord has called
you both. We all miss you and
Happy Birthday in your
newbome.
Children,
Mary, Patty, Janet, Bobby
and families.

Clifton Lodge #23
will have a special meeting
Sat Aug. 18th at 7:00 PM
with work in the MM degree.

- - - - - 2BR, WiD. hookup, appliA~Nnttonr

Local company offenng "NO ances furnished. near colDOWN PAYMENr pro- lege, also hospital. 441grams for you to buy ~ur 3702 or 288-5789
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
3 br. large apartment, $425
• Less than pertect creon plus deposit &amp; utilities, 3rd
accepiOd
St, Recine, (740)247-4292

River Cities Military
Support Group

• Payment could be tho
same as rent.
Mongage
Locators.
I740_J36_7_-oooo
____
For sale or rent. 3BA, newly
painted. 5 miles from
Centenary. 8 milas lrom Rio
Gnoide. Cop req. 740-379_2540--------

4RM &amp; Bath, slove ,tridge,
utilities paid, upstairs, 46
Olive
st.
No
pets.
$450/monlh. 446- 3945

House for Rent/Sale, 3 BR,
1 BA. 1/2 basement, Spring
Valley Area, $550/mo, HUD
Accept~d. (740)44t -9650 or

$500/mo, 151 mo • $500
Sec.dep. required. Available
7/t6J07. Apply within. 1743 lilr~------., -~~
0 ~ ~---Centenary
Gallipolis. No
APAilt'Mmi"S
HousmoLD
Pnone CallsRd.
Please.
FOR RENT
Gooos

Meeting Wed. Aug. 15
at 7:00 PM
Gallipolis, OH
PLEASE COME OUT AND
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS

...

I F'

North
• Q4
Johnson' s

Tree

__
.-

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

· Service

Complete TIM Core

7.,.,.1....,
. ...,..,_,

tnw&lt;ld•,,..~

"""""

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

CKC Toy Rat Terriers, Choc.
&amp; WMe, tails dOcked, current shots, St95. 740-6456857 or 379-9515.
·

2004 Jeop Uberty, $t2,000
OBO: 200t Covalier, $3400
OBD: 1998 Covatler. $1900
OBO. (740)256-6t69

Miniatu re dachshund pup·
pies tor sale, 4 F, 3 M. Full
blooded, but no papers.
$200. 992-444t evenings.

2007
Dodge
Caliber
$12,500, 20K, red exterior,
brand new, great car, great
gao mIleage 304-675-37 95

MONTY

\\'~st

.1098 73
• 10 5 4
f A K 85

"' 4

• QJ 2
"' K J 9 5
Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
740.446-0007 Toll Free 877 -66!1-0007

Wise Concrete

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

included. 645-6378 ask fof
Kelly
-------River coHage, 2BR, 1 Bath,
W/0, attaclled gar. Nswly
renovatad. Pets welcome.

740-36HI536

River access. Live the good
lite. Ideal tor prof. or retlrad
couple. Ref.req. $700/mo +
dep. 740-965 _3327

iljr~.~•~;;;.~H~--,~

"~~Rli:NTOMI!S

3BR ,28A, Doublewide,No
P1
$4751
$475
a e,
mo,
lorappllcali&lt;!n&amp;lnformation .
deposit.
38R
2BA - - - - - - - $400/month $400/deposit.
Cloae to RVHS. (740)3(;77025.
3BR, 2 full bath, Alfred Rd - •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
Meigs Co. Eastern Sctlool •Central heat &amp; IVC
District. $450 + deposit, will •Washer/dryer hookup
except HUO. References •Tonantpaysoleclr~
needed. 740-992-o663
( 304) 882-3017

Ellm View
Apartments

3BR, 2BA, on Bulavllle
can 740-387-n62

·e··

P~e.

Beautiful Rl¥er View In
Kanau"•· ldeal for 1 or 2
peopfe:r;eterences, No pets, - - - - - - - Loc . 5 mi. from Gavin. Oro&lt;;louo Uvtng 1 and 2
(740)441-0181
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
AI&gt;AKiMENrs
Middleport, from $327 to
·--roRiiiiiiRENTiiiiilitii. ..,l $592. 740-992-5064. E(!Jal
..,
Housing Opportunity.
1 &amp; 2 eed~ A!&gt;ar1ments Immaculate 2 bodroom
lor Rent, MelijB County, In apa rtme' nt New carpet &amp;
town, No Pe1s, Deposit cabinets, freshly painted &amp;
Required, (740)992-5t74 or
decorated, WID hookup.
(740~1-0itO.
Beautiful country setting.
- - - - - - - - Must see to appreciate.
$400/mo. (614)595-7773 or
Help Wanted
t-600-798-4686.

ill'lll"------.,

r

;==::::;;:===~

0

OPERATING

ROOM
TECHNICIAN
Plusaat Valley

---------

Middleport, North 41h Ave., 2
br. furnished apartment,
deposit &amp; references, no
pats, (740)992-0165
New . 2BR apartments.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
Also, units on SR t60. Pols
Welcomel (740)441-Q194.

for a Suraical
Te&lt;bnologlsL Graduate
of IKCredlted siJI'lllcal

New Haven 1 Br. Furnished
Apt, has WID, No Pets, Dep.
&amp; referencef!. 740-992-0165.
_ _ _ _ _;,____ _
Help Wanted

tec:bnoiOR)' PJ'OIII'IIIIIOr

I"

Hoopltal is cu,....ndy
accepting applications

equi"alent experience
required.
CST or CST eligible.
To apply, contact
Pleasant Valley
Hospital,

Human Resources,
ZSlO Valley Dr.
Pl. Pleasant, WV

25550, (304) 675-4340,
fu resume to
(304) 675-li\175
or Apply on-line at
www.pvlllley.o'l!

j

r

I Position
7am-3pm Cook
J Positions
3pm-llpm Cook
· No phone calls
Applications
available at this

location.

AAIEOE

I

ACE GITS'

.HardROd CUlneirJ An~ Flrnltlre

r

St. Rt. 248 Ct\ester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner
\ ddll i&lt;! ll''

' 11

"\, H

I'

....--.,

( .. 11

:::=====:;:::~

rto

L

BARGAINS
GALORE!

NOTICES

,.

o r,-.11 11&lt; I ru n

I lilt tll ll

i

I'

PEts

FOR SALE

FOR SALE
1983 Chevrolet Cavalier 2
door, rad, runs good, $1 ,200
080 304-882-2615
after 4:30pm
-------1995 Buick Roactnaster, all
electric, big engine, good
brakes, almost new tires,
new battery, leather interior.
app)( . 99,000K, never
wrecked or in high water,
body In very good shape,
(740)949-2253

-.1 I{\ J( I -.
_388_-_o3_o_5_ _ _ __
9~ 29' Jamboree motor I'll\"'"--:':~--~
home by Fleetwood, ElCc.
Cond, low n'iiles, sleeps 6-B
Very good cond , PJC, gener·
BASEMENT
ator/much more, · $12500
WATERPROOFING
OBO Can be seen at Mason
Co.Fairgrou nds. 330·234· Unconditional lifelime guarantee. local references furt573
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (7 40) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

LM:f\R'I'I'\0~

l~ t rnHdtl ltl"

W~'&lt;OU!

T()l)l..'(,

lo\1~!&gt; P~!

Residential &amp; Commercial

740-985-4141 Office
740-416-1834

LADY BUGS
BUGGING YOU?
h's that time: of year tor tal
treatment 6Eirvice good tor 90
days. Augusl thru Clctcber
Trealment for ladytlu1J8,
spiders, ants &amp; wasps.

26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free Estimates

McCormick's
Extermination Inc.
Commerr:J.I &amp; Rnldwrtllll
Your Local Tarmlte &amp;

I

I

SHOP

Help Wanted

BIG NATE

• Home Oxygen
• ,Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Hellos System

I THERE.'!&gt;

THE GUN! ••
I'll !&gt;TART OUT SLOW
FOR THE- Flt&lt;:ST
ILE OR TWO ...

A&amp;SOLUm'f~

DO&amp;S PROTECT
'{OU, GIVE 'IOU

COMFORT, LOVE,
JO'f AND
COMPANIONSIIIP..
T~AT'S THEI~

J08 ..

Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Medical
Equipment is currently accepting
resumes for a full-tim e, dayshitl
Respiratory Therapist. Must he a
t~~~~;~ ~of~a~n~ a~p~~proved Respiratory
Must he licensed
the states of

l

1

technician
·~::!~~~~~:~~~:~~
Hospital experience
Resume to:
Pleuanl Valley HO!ipital,
Submit

c/o Human Resourt'es
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV, 25550

fax to 304-675-697'5

or apply online at www.pvalley.org

,.

1

• New Homes
• Garages
Remodeling

140-992-1611
GARFIELD
FRIPA'r' NIISH1"?...'r'OOR
1"REA1"?.~ .1"HA1" SOI.lNPS ISREA1"1

........lfl...... a.-5:111•

......... •12:11••

....................
-.............
PIYIIIG TIP ltiCES Fill

RESPIRATORY THERAPIST
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a part· tlme
Pharmacy Technician. Successful
cumpl~tion of WV Board of Pharmacy
approved te£hnlclan tnllnina program
or-equivalent. Statewreglstratlon or
Nattonal-certiftcatlon certlftcate as a
Pharmacy Technician preferred :
At least 2080 hours as a
technldan trainee. Two

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTBUCDOI
• Complete

0

Subm it Resume lO:

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Resources
2520 Volley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV, 25550
ra. to 304-675-6975
or apply online at www. pvalley.org

GRIZZWELLS

hbiJtlcl
··-···
ICIII l'w fllnlltl'rlclll

61UHTI\~~­

\Iffii&gt;.W11t

NOTICE :
LANDOWNERS IN MEIG S
AND GALLIA COUNTI ES
WPo.,tern L:md

Se t V I COS.

Inc a lc;Jdcr rn Oil

~
,1nd

G&lt;~'&gt; n~nl"r.lftnn

an(J dr&gt;volr;pr11Ct11_ worrkll •k• - tu
···,,t (;&lt;l~ LcoJ-.l' 1&lt;.&gt;
l hu·,e 1.111dUWIICt'-ill'lrl('J,l l 0Wil('J5 Wttht•l fJ 1• 1q &lt;.,
;n•d G;J I Ir;-~ Count•ros. Ovcor 40.UOU 01&lt;:rco; n I'H'" ' '
dtl' il'&gt; h;-JVf' already btoC&gt;n • ca~;ed .Inti iltC
1

1-''~'P;u rng to be developed If you h&lt;JVf' n1'""rd
tilL• chance to be 1nvotved 1n thrs venturr
plt:"ase co ntact the local of frcc &lt;~I no l4! J (•000

Don ! Ill IS&lt;; thrs opportunr t y to P&lt;Hirc •puk rn lf1P

yo ur n;-rtur,1lrcsour~.-cs
tho poten tr al for increas inq your
person al mcomc.
doveloprnent of

&lt;1'&gt;

Bemlce Bede 01101

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22)- Conditions
are trending in your favor in ways whe re
you 'll be able to arti culate your true feelings to ot~rs in a much more personal
manner and, as a result. draw them clos. er to you. ·
LIB RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Attend to all
matt ers at importance personally Instead
ot letting anyone else do so tor you.
You're particularly lucky now an d will be

-

Help Wanted

42 Sharpen.

43 Nolet
45
47

48
49

50

played
together
Coagullle
Toward
aheller
Fablljj bird
Kind of
eyllem
C:O,II

habitat
52 BKOnon
the hoof

53 Day bllore
54 - Plal-

....
':~::.· SCC!~1~-»~s·
IAII

0 f::".:"mb::J'':.J,
low to form iour tlmpit

You are l ike~ to set'larger goals fo r yoursell than you may ever have previously.
This is because y o u insllnclivety feet
lucky. giving you th e necessary confi~
dance to do big things within the realm of

1

PEANUTS

5031HI '\~~~=~ DII45711D
Help Wanted

UfHILL

B~

SUNSHINE CLUB

74G-949-2217

1 I Crayola
choice
13 Mystery
Worthless
and acf.fl
coin
19 Spud a
2 Metal
2\t Kampela 's
nation
lor plating
22 C to C,
3 Chioago
musically
lnllns
4 Spew lava 24 Pinball
5 Trevl
palace
Fountain
25 Czachcopltal
coin a
26 FritZ
6 Bay
27 Bridge
7 ' 'Hud''
support
Oocar-wimer 28 Slant
8 Inhabitant
29 Hot - 9 Uke7
oven
and 11
34 Mlxera
10 Pamplona
36 Crumpled
shout
up
DOWN

erably.

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

45771

35 Hole
puncher
37 Turtdah
potentate
38 Warmth
39 Dye
container
40 Drab color

deal
51 Splil to join
55 Jaguar
cou,in
56 Stem from
51 Where
beaches are
58 Margins

possibility.
LEO [July 23-Aug. 22) - Involvements
you have with some intluentlal friends or
contacts could prove to be exceptionally
rewarding tor you.You may ge t an opportunity to widen your social circle consld·

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio

10

Thursday, Aug. 18, 2007

FHEW! THIS ROAI&gt;
DOEsN'T REALLY LOOt&lt;.
BUT IT SUI{E

~ .~~o"'="•·"'t~e·a!ft:..•

Hil l's Self
Storage

to

qt...,. &lt;lllrthdoiY:

We Deliver To You!

Manley's
Recycling

Help Wanted

All pass

3 NT

AstroGraph

Pnt Control Compan~
(740) 682-6244
740 418-7509

Stop &amp; Compare

CKC Min Pin puppies.
Black/tan, Chocltan, Stag 2000 Dodge Neon, auto,
red. Males $350. Females $1800 OBO. 740-256-1233
$400. 740-388-8788
r---;ro:rr:;o;:lp;---, 2000 Mercury Cougar
$8,000 080, 88,000 miles
CLASSIFIEDS w~le exterior tully loaded
_
_ Runs great 304·675-3795

pWfl.'(,T~I&lt;. 'f'OU, ~IR!

'I'OU'RE. LOOK\~ Rl&gt;.if\E.R

.rt·~'

r

4833

Fourth Straet
tale will ba held.at 211
Racine, Ohio W.
Second
St.,
PPI1~242
Pomeroy, OH., The
Prior Deed Reference: Farmers Bank and
Volume 95, Page 733
Savln,ga Company Ia
Appraised
at selling for caah In
$18,000.00. Torma of hand or certHiad check
sale: Cannot ba sold the following colleterlor loaa than 213rds of al:1988
Oldsmobile
the appraised value. R e g e n c y
10% down on day of 1C3CW51CBJ4320694
aale, cash or carllllad The Farmers Bank and
check, balance due on Savings
Company,
confirmation of aale.
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
The appraisal did reserves lhe right to
Include an Interior bid at this sale, and to
examination of the withdraw the above
houn.
collateral prior to aale.
Robart E. Beegle, Further, The Farmera
Melgo County Sheriff
Bank and Savings
Attorney
lor
lha Company reaarves the
Plaintiff
right to reject any or all
John D. Clunk
blda tubmhtad.
5601 Hudson Drive, The allOvs deacrfbed
Suite ~00
collateral wHI be sold
Hudoon, Oh 44236
"eo Ia · where Ia", with
330-342-8203
no
expressed
or
(B) B, 15, 22
Implied
warranty
given.
For further InformsPublic Notice
tlon, or lor an appointment to Inspect colla!·
PUBLIC NOTICE
eral, prior to salt date
NOTICE: Ia hereby contact Cyndle,
given I hat on Sllurdar, or Ken at 992-2136.
August 18, 2007 at (3) 14, 15, 16, 2007 _
tO:OO a .m., a public
·

I

THE BORN LOSER

\ ! l !l l ..., ulu r~·

llnnu o.,
(

Construction

i

Pass

out

46 LaiHII-48 Used-car

. CELEBRITY CIPHER

ud Ga•ll ,:tntractlag

, J&amp;L

ZERO DOWN!

HAPP'r' !!

Marcum Coaalnctlon

.,,.,iiiii"''i'itit"•,l

866-564-8679 .

SO TODA'I' I'M
MAKIN' US BOTH

CRANI&lt;Y IF

I DON 'T SPEND ENUFF
TIME WIF HIM !!

www.U..bucaeekcaltlweb)IGOaa

CARPENTER
.SERVICE

Ir

r•o

Australian Shepherd puppies, Black &amp; White and Red
&amp; White, $125 each.
(740)245-5984 "' (740)645-

I

BARNEY

r

AKC Reg, Bwk old Shih Tzu
puppies. 3 females, 1 male.
parents on premises, 1sl
shots, $500 neg (740)4460091 or (740)645-6706

Sheriff Sales
Can Number 06CV132
LaSalle Bank National
Anoc. Plaintiff VS
Jerry Copplck et. al.
Defendanlll
Court of Common
Pleas, Melga County,
Ohlo
In purauance ol an
order of tale to me
directed from said
court In the above antitied action, I will
expon to aale at publie auction on the flont
atepa of the Meigs
County Court Houaa
on Friday Slptember
14, 2007 at 10 a.m., of
aald day, tha following
described reel e11181e:
Situated
In ·
the
Township of Sutton,
County of Melga and
Slllte of Ohio:
llllng Lot No. 65 In the
Incorporated VIllage of
Recine.
Said promisee also
known aa 404 41h
- Street, Recine, Ohio
45nt
PPN: 19-00242.000
Current Owner: Jerrr
Copplck
Property At:
404

,.

·I

-=======:; ;-;:...,..,.=...,=,...,
Coolspot#l
Coolville, Ohio
NOW HIRING

~==!====~===~;::!:::~~~

lir'mming
&amp; Removal

I

I NT

14 Pine pi'Oduct
t 5 Haallllnt
t 6 Came
to earth
17 Kind of pal
1B Yale athlete
19 Well-known
Pharaoh
21 Go bed
23 Channelsurf
Z6 Zig's
companion
27 Oelt •
neighbor
Z6 -firma
30 Plato's H
31 Adher~nt
32 Cuzco
founders
33 Stressed

James RusseH Lowell, who died in 1891
and was ~only" a poet, critic, satirist,
writer, diplomat, and abolitionist, wrote,.,
-rhere is no good arguing with the
inevitable. _The only argument available
with·an east wind is to put on your overcoat."
In this deal, many playars would faille
anticipate the East wind. Can you? look
at the North and South hands. How
would you plan the play In three notrump after West leads tha spade 10?
You have si)( top tricks: three spades,
one heart and two clubs. If you can bring
in lhe clubs without loss, you will be
home. But if you lose a dub trick, when
Is your contract in dangBr?
Only when West has lour (or five) diamonds headed by the ace and king silting over your queen and jack, and East
can get in twice to blow diamonds
through you.
What ti-.o entry cards mighl East hold?
The heart king and club queen.
To make sure that East does not get in
twice; win the first trick with dummy's
spade queen (althou!tl doing so is nol
by Luis Campos
Ce:ehtty Ci~er cryplograms 1111!1 Cf&amp;aoled from quotaOOs 17f famous people put arci.IJ"e:ld.
vital, playing the honor lrom the shorter
Eaeh Idler in the Cipher stand$ tor anoll'lel.
side first un~ocks the sun), cash the
TOOBy's dtJB: Bequals P
club ace, and play a club lo your jacl&lt;. ,
Here lhe jack wins and you are playing
" W.KCPC ' TPC HREC CIWCPBPYHCH VI
for overtricks. Suppose, though, that
West can take your jack w~h the queen.
UKVSK T STPCZMG
He cannot hurt you . It he shifts lo a
JYHRPJCPGYICHH YH WKC WPMC
heart, you finesse. If he plays another
spade, you win In your hand and take the
. ECWKRJ," - KCPETI ECGNYGGC
heart finesse. You cannot lose more than
lour lricks.
Note thai if you misplay the
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'There IS no securily on this earth; there is only
clubs so that E21st scores his queen, you
Of)llOIIunity." -Douglas MacArthur
go down if he shifts to a diamond.
'Seize the day.' - Horace

GuHermg
-

Stanley Tree-

Ij

East

It's hard to expect
the unexpected

':=::;;:;:;;:;:;::=::::
r
H&amp;H

Mlnlall!l'e Pincher Pups, 2 96 Eagle Talon , 69000
Seamless Gutters
Couch &amp; Loves•at, paid Black/Tan females, $300 miles. $3700. One owner, Roofing, Siding, Gutters
•.,ooo
asking $500. TannUvt each - Rea dy now. (740)388 • automatic trans, AJC • Cali·
Insured &amp; Banded
~
"'w
sette, Lookssharp. Call 441bed $800. Call 740.379- 8124
740·653-9657
0307
2787
~:;:===:::::==~
- - - - - - - - - Yorkle puppies, champion COOK MOTORS
·
Table w/ 4 chairs $t75.95, bloodlines, Vol recornmand8/S and Matt. $180.00. ed, guaranteed, will be 326 Jackson Pike
Mollo""". 202 Clark c•·-1 approx 41b run grown, $550 Quallly .carsltrucks with warI
.
Ad, ~;::_11 , Ohio 740-,...,..388- (740)44t -95 t 0
ranty. low prices are posted
~"""
on all vehicles. $2500 1o
Ot73
FRurrs &amp;
$7500. Stop or call740-446V~ · 01
03
'Prompt and Quality
"1111"""-~-----.
Work
ANnQUF.8
-"r15
~,_ _ _ _ _ _ _,.~
TRUCKS
· • Reasonable Rates
Canning
tomg,toes
FORS·· ~
~
1
ANTIQUE Berkey&amp;Gay van- picked/pick awn, incredible ·--iliiiiiiiiiii-_.1 ' nsured
l1y w/mirror. $600.00 080 corn·, cucumbers, Rowe 02 Ford F-t50, ext cab, 4x4, *Experienced
J9Z·70t0 or 992-3tB3.
_Fa_rm_s_._l7_4_0l_24_7~·4_2_92_ _ VB, 93,000 mile~ runs &amp; References Available!
~!l!AND5E
Pick your own canning looks good, $8900; 92 Ford Call Gary Stanley @
lni!.K
bell
....., Ranger, E)(t. Cab, good
740-742-2293
tomatoes,
peppers, oNI shape, $1400. (740)245peppers.Tomatoes $3/buekPlease leave rnessa e
ROOmy 2BR
bath, SForOidAutoBattenes 1_ et,Peppers
$5/bucket. ~590
;r9--~~--"'
aHached garage-no pets,
Troyer's Woodcraft, g miles
SUV~
249 3 0008 2
Rodney area. $425.mo. Ref
$ ·
• 50+ $4.ooea. west of Gal'~ls off S.R.
~., .. ~
YOIJNG'S
&amp; OepoSII required. 446- THE BATIERY TERMINAL t4t
'"'"
1.~--··-~iiiii"""""iii-_.1
_t-s_oo-_796_-s_7_97___
•
2eot
18x4 above ground pool.
04 Jeep Liberty, loaded, new
Tara
Townhouse
tires,· exCellent condition.
Apartments. Very Spacious, New liner. A!itl:lng $450. Call
$ 11500 _740•379 _2768
Room Additions &amp;
Rtmocltllng
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 112 3B8..()30 1
F.wt
NtwG1rllgH
Bath, Adun Pool &amp; Baby - - - - - , - - - v~--4X4
Electrical I PIL.tmblng
. .. ·
FoR SAL'•
Pool, Pallo, Start $425/Mo. Bunkbeds w/Bunkle boards L,_ _.,.,...,
~
Rooting &amp; GuHer•
sage Green Love Seat,
-VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
No Pets, Lease Plus Berry Rocker Recliner 4 20 ton equipment lowboy.
Patio and Porch Decks
Security Oeposlt Required, door cupboard 304-675· $2000 OBO. Ca1144,t-75t4 87 Jeep Cherokee 4X4.
. WV038725
(740)446-3481.
Runs good. $600. Great
6943
value for the price. Call 740V.C. YOUN G Ill
"7! •• •
Rl
•
---~---- 3 Farmall H's, 1941 Wide 441 -a 582
rntn vers .owerlsaccept- Craftsman3.75Tiller-$100 Front,looks/runsgood. 1947 r!lr;;;;;;;,.~---_,
%2 h21~
f-'01111'1 •&gt; 1 ( lll 0
ing applications for waiting Craftsman 5HP . $10. Call - runsgood, roughcondition.
VANS
' ' • "• I l
II f ~P"' IH ,,
list for Hud-sui&gt;Sized, I - br, 446-754t
t942 - Good parts tractor. Lw-..;FiiOiiRiitSALE
_ _ _rl
apartment,lor
the
$2200. 387-7787
,
elderly/disabled call 875HUGE SAVINGS ON
- - - - - - - - 91 Dodge 350 Rem wagon,
6679
Equal
Housing
ARCH STEEL
Calorplllar D-5 Dozer '73 t 2 passengers, white,
O,ponunity
BUILDINGS,
wnh Cargo F-50 winch with 9tooo miles, looks and runs
jclll"--~
manual transmission , 2'
3 Aepos Left,
SPACE
25'IC42•X &amp; 35•X40•
angle blade can be seen at
• Vinyl Siding
0 .,...,
1'011 """'
N R
Old Farms, State Route 62
1.--oiiiiiiiliiiiiiio-.,1
o
easonable
•
Replacement
~
Otre R 1 dl
Ohio River Road, Pt.
r
e
use
.
.
.
.
Windows
Commercial building "For
Serious Inquires
Pleasant Serial 94J2038
Rent" 1800 square feet, off ,
Only .
·$25,000304-776-5656
2001 Horley Davison BB3 • Roofing
street parking. Great locaCall 866·352-o469
Sportster, 6200 miles, • Decks
tionl 749 Third Avenue in --'--'-'-::::"'-"'-Wm'ocK
Asking $5000. (740)245- • ·Garages
Gallipolis. Rent $300/mo.
JET
~
5984 or (740)645-4833
, Pole Buildings
Call Wayne (4041456 _3802 ·
AERATION MOTORS
RepairOd, New &amp; Rebuilt In 1t yr old l&gt;ack Walker Mare 2003 -Suzuki GZ250K, 897 • Room Additions
Prime commercial space for Stock. Cal Ron Evans, 1· &amp; 6 yr old Bay Gelding miles, As~ng $2500 OBO.
Owner:'
rent at SpriJVIalley Plaza. 80D-537·9528.
Sound-Gaited horses. Horse Call 304-675-2525
James Keesee 11
CaiiS45-2192 .
lovers interested call 74G- - - - - - - -388-oo38
2005 H.D.Fal Boy custom
742-2332
like New Sears 1aft
maroon
w/embossed
IT.~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Refrigerator $125 304·882·
flames,1 of 200 made,BOO
Mushroom Compost
H&lt;xsotoUl
Black Show Pigs, Sows, miles since
2220
Gooffi
- - - - - -- - ·ams &amp; Boars lor sale. $19,000 080 new,prlce
$3SAScoop
call k&gt;r
· - - - - - - _ . 1 NEW AND USED STEEL (740j44 t- t013
details-740-949-22t 7.
T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
1BA cottage in GaiMpois. No For
Concrete ,
Angle, Miniature donkeys. Male and Original owner wanting to
Wide Variely of
pets. Dep and references Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Female. 2 Babies - 1 male, 1 find 1974 Harley Davidson
Lawn Seed,
required. Call 446-2468
Grating
For
Drains, female. 740·446-1158
· Spor1ster
serial
Fertilizer and
Berber Carpel, $5 .95/yd; Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l Pet Quality Gek:ling Alpacas. #t3A201 09H4, Call Bob
Showmaster Sbow
Vinyl, $4.95/yd, DriVe-a-little Scrap Metals Open Monday, Good Fiber Producers McCully (740)387-00tB
Feeds
Save alot, Mollohan Carpet, Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Various ages 7 prices. 304: ~ BoATS &amp; MmoRS
4
76 Vine St, Gallipolis, OH. Friday. a'am- :JOpm. Closed 882-3345
FOR SAu:
Thursday, Saturday &amp;
1740)446 _7444
Yearling
Young
Angus
Bulls,
Sunday. (740)446--7300
bred heifers. E~~:cellent New 07 16ft Nitro boat wf
Pole Barns 30x50x10
$6,495 Free
Delivery Breeding, Top Performance. cover, troiDng motor, SOhp
(S3?) 718 _1471
Priced
Reasonably. mercury outboard motor, all
www.slaterunangus.com, salety equip., 2 live wells, 2
Taurus Tracker ·44mag~ ~(7'li40;")•2B•6-·5~39~5-~-..., batteries. 1raller wt fold away
Bushnell Trophy redlgreen
HAY &amp;
. $t4,00o OBOI 645Real Estate
0ot Scope 6'in' ported barGRAIN
rei $500 304-675-2558
&amp;
GOT LAND?
Wedding Dress. new wl Straw for sale, $4/bal e,
Owner finacing if tags,
off while, size 20. Paid
you own your
$349.00, ASking $200 .00.
84 Wilderness travel trailer,
Call 740..256-1847, leave a
32ft, needs some work.
land!
message.
nr'l'itoi""'-•A'!"UIOS---.... $2000 FIRM, AS IS. 740-

Apartment lor rani, 1-2 . North 3rd St., Middleport,
Bdrm., remodeled, new car- furnished
apartment•
pet, stove &amp; trig., water,
·
sewer, trash pd . Middleport. deposit &amp; refe rences, no
$425.00. No pets. Ret. pols, (740)992-0165
required. 74Q-B43-5264.
One Bedroom Clarage
Apartment in Pt. Pleisant,
1
·--utHul
Apta' It •
---·- • f · h""
1
nd
Eetatoo. 52 Westwood urniS " " ' very c oan a
Drive, hom $365 to 5560. nice. No Pets Phone 304Equal _67_5_-t_38
_8_ _ _ _ _ _
740•446.2 568 .
H ' .· o
rt lty Thl
ousmg ppo un .
s Roome tor Rent In
institution Is an Equal Middleport, 2 ·wen rur0
t It p ld
d
ppor un Y rov er an nilhed room1 In quiet
E 1
·
mp oyer.
neighborhood, Direct TV,
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- Microwave, Frlqge I
ED I AFFOROABLEI
:O~r ~ ~ral~
~2
Townhouse
apartments, "ehoeearlng I both 740-4teand/or small houses .FOR
RENT. Call (740)44t-tttt

West , North
Opening lead:

740-9112·5929
740-416-1698

Free Esu·m ates

.

South

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-36HI544

· Y K 8 7 2
• 10 9 7
"'Q 3 2

' QG3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Local Contractor

East
• J G2

South
• AK5

rfamihJ ••l:tlM:•

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

08-I5-o7

• AJ 9
• &amp;4 3
+ At087G

37_~-- - - - - - - - - ~,_ _ritliiiiiiiiitr-rl
_17_40_1_70_9-6_3_

Pretty, 3BA, 1 Bath.
- n Galli'pol•·s. Very
Downl,...
cton to Washington Elem.
and
GAHS. $750. No
.
pets/smoking. Utilities not

lhe roof
12 Mining
operation

(2 wds.)

'--tiiroRiii'EtsiiSiii~iittt-~ t.,r.O_ttitFOiiARiii~iiiALEiiiio_.l

Bossard Library

Accepting applications for 2
BR, t BA apt, stove. !ridge,
W/D included. Water &amp;
Garbage paid. No pets, very
nice, clean &amp; attractive.

I Hard metal

6 Under

41 Cui-de- 42 Single no
more
43 Oecent
grade
44 Freud,
, to himself

well

&lt;!S

•
I

WOWI UZ ASKeP ME
001" ON A PA1"EI

IS 1"HA1"
AW.OWEP?

able to gratify your expectations brilliantly.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - There are
fortunate developments stirring behind
the scenes at this time that could have
long-range effects upon se~~e ral areas ot
your life. Two early indicators should
become visible.
SAG IT TARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Personal hopes and expectat ions to
which you presently aspi re have e,.cellent chances of being realized. You could
even lind that events will magically con·
form to your timetable.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Don't
retrBBI from challenging developments
because the odds aren't stacked in your
favor. You'll lind you're tho one whO has
the odge and, if you do your best, tuck
will C.:o the rest.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - An
exciting new friend or assoclale ctrufd
enter your life. It will be someone who
t hinks exactly like you and with whom
you'll be able to articulate and discuss
deep and intimate things.
PI SCES (Feb . 20- March 20) - Far
greater benefits can be acquired tram
joint endeavors you have rather th an
from that which you attempt l o do on
you r own. One endeavor in particular is
apt to be outstanding.
AR IES (March 2 1-Aprif 19) - This is an
e)(cellent day lor establishing agreements between two or more parties
BecauSe the bargaining will be fair.
everyone woll get something back from
what they're willing to give .
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) - Whether
you are !he employer or the employee,.
you 're apt to take extra pride in your work
and , as a result, produce some hidden
benefits you dldffl know ex rs ted until the
job was finished.
GEMINI (May 2t -June 20)- Your enthu·
srasm and gn:tat outlook are contagious
and wi ll have little trouble stirring up
interests in others. Don't be surprised to
see a crowd following you when you turn
around.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) - Because
you are both bold and enterprising , it
ahoufdn I surprise that you could find
yourself doing things in a rather lirama t·

Grmtps Jibd to quote I &amp;mou!
historian who llid, "'&gt;imculty is
r-~----,R~u~r~A~c~E~~ !lie excuse history never--"
6

I I I 1; I e Comtileto ,. c:huddo
vou
lrom
No. 3 btlow.
_

_

quoted
by fillinG In tho mlalng - •

dovtlop

8 PRINT
NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES
t)

llop

1

~~;c:~~~~~ IETTm TO I

III IIII

SCIIAMUTS ANSWDS

e-H-07

Tartly - Threw - Ullii - Fusion -: YOUR HJ!AllT
"To band1e yourself use your head," lhe old gent told me. "To
handle others use YOUR HEART."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

lc fashion and end Up achieving a r11ther
difficr.Jit task

SOUP TO NUTZ
0;11)J' R~Sfr """"" O~Itlj~U oc -~&lt;01'11

toU~hootr(lco•""

�Yfednesda~August15 , 2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www,mydBilysenlinel.cDm

ALLEY COP

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

3 Bedroom House In
Syracuse. $500/month +
&lt;lopoolt No Pets. (30o4)6755332 weekends 740-5910265

1 and 2 bedroom apart·

Phillip
Alder

'Dores .£. ~rnoftf

ments, furnished and unfur·
nished, and houses In
Pomeroy and Middleport.
seeurtty deposR required, no
pets, 740-992-2218.
3 br. house In Pomeroy, - - : - - - - - - stove &amp; refrigerator fur- 2 BR in Rodney, WID,
nllhed. (614}49,--4850
lridge,stove,waterfsewerltra
Sh included. No Pets. Dep
4 bedroom, 2 Story house, req. 446·1271 or 709-1657
very spacious &amp; clean, new
carport, large bedroom, eat· 2BR apls, 6 miles from
in khchen with new cabinets, Holzer. $400+dep. Water,
$836 per month, (740)949- '"'w'"· trash paid. 740-9882303
6130 or 74~2-9243

Aug. 15,1917- May 4, 1998
Would have been your 90th
Birthday but you have been gone
over 9 years. Now Mommy has
joined you. Oh bow we miss you
both. Tbe family hasn't been the
same since tbe Lord has called
you both. We all miss you and
Happy Birthday in your
newbome.
Children,
Mary, Patty, Janet, Bobby
and families.

Clifton Lodge #23
will have a special meeting
Sat Aug. 18th at 7:00 PM
with work in the MM degree.

- - - - - 2BR, WiD. hookup, appliA~Nnttonr

Local company offenng "NO ances furnished. near colDOWN PAYMENr pro- lege, also hospital. 441grams for you to buy ~ur 3702 or 288-5789
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
3 br. large apartment, $425
• Less than pertect creon plus deposit &amp; utilities, 3rd
accepiOd
St, Recine, (740)247-4292

River Cities Military
Support Group

• Payment could be tho
same as rent.
Mongage
Locators.
I740_J36_7_-oooo
____
For sale or rent. 3BA, newly
painted. 5 miles from
Centenary. 8 milas lrom Rio
Gnoide. Cop req. 740-379_2540--------

4RM &amp; Bath, slove ,tridge,
utilities paid, upstairs, 46
Olive
st.
No
pets.
$450/monlh. 446- 3945

House for Rent/Sale, 3 BR,
1 BA. 1/2 basement, Spring
Valley Area, $550/mo, HUD
Accept~d. (740)44t -9650 or

$500/mo, 151 mo • $500
Sec.dep. required. Available
7/t6J07. Apply within. 1743 lilr~------., -~~
0 ~ ~---Centenary
Gallipolis. No
APAilt'Mmi"S
HousmoLD
Pnone CallsRd.
Please.
FOR RENT
Gooos

Meeting Wed. Aug. 15
at 7:00 PM
Gallipolis, OH
PLEASE COME OUT AND
SUPPORT OUR TROOPS

...

I F'

North
• Q4
Johnson' s

Tree

__
.-

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

· Service

Complete TIM Core

7.,.,.1....,
. ...,..,_,

tnw&lt;ld•,,..~

"""""

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

CKC Toy Rat Terriers, Choc.
&amp; WMe, tails dOcked, current shots, St95. 740-6456857 or 379-9515.
·

2004 Jeop Uberty, $t2,000
OBO: 200t Covalier, $3400
OBD: 1998 Covatler. $1900
OBO. (740)256-6t69

Miniatu re dachshund pup·
pies tor sale, 4 F, 3 M. Full
blooded, but no papers.
$200. 992-444t evenings.

2007
Dodge
Caliber
$12,500, 20K, red exterior,
brand new, great car, great
gao mIleage 304-675-37 95

MONTY

\\'~st

.1098 73
• 10 5 4
f A K 85

"' 4

• QJ 2
"' K J 9 5
Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
740.446-0007 Toll Free 877 -66!1-0007

Wise Concrete

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

included. 645-6378 ask fof
Kelly
-------River coHage, 2BR, 1 Bath,
W/0, attaclled gar. Nswly
renovatad. Pets welcome.

740-36HI536

River access. Live the good
lite. Ideal tor prof. or retlrad
couple. Ref.req. $700/mo +
dep. 740-965 _3327

iljr~.~•~;;;.~H~--,~

"~~Rli:NTOMI!S

3BR ,28A, Doublewide,No
P1
$4751
$475
a e,
mo,
lorappllcali&lt;!n&amp;lnformation .
deposit.
38R
2BA - - - - - - - $400/month $400/deposit.
Cloae to RVHS. (740)3(;77025.
3BR, 2 full bath, Alfred Rd - •2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
Meigs Co. Eastern Sctlool •Central heat &amp; IVC
District. $450 + deposit, will •Washer/dryer hookup
except HUO. References •Tonantpaysoleclr~
needed. 740-992-o663
( 304) 882-3017

Ellm View
Apartments

3BR, 2BA, on Bulavllle
can 740-387-n62

·e··

P~e.

Beautiful Rl¥er View In
Kanau"•· ldeal for 1 or 2
peopfe:r;eterences, No pets, - - - - - - - Loc . 5 mi. from Gavin. Oro&lt;;louo Uvtng 1 and 2
(740)441-0181
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
AI&gt;AKiMENrs
Middleport, from $327 to
·--roRiiiiiiRENTiiiiilitii. ..,l $592. 740-992-5064. E(!Jal
..,
Housing Opportunity.
1 &amp; 2 eed~ A!&gt;ar1ments Immaculate 2 bodroom
lor Rent, MelijB County, In apa rtme' nt New carpet &amp;
town, No Pe1s, Deposit cabinets, freshly painted &amp;
Required, (740)992-5t74 or
decorated, WID hookup.
(740~1-0itO.
Beautiful country setting.
- - - - - - - - Must see to appreciate.
$400/mo. (614)595-7773 or
Help Wanted
t-600-798-4686.

ill'lll"------.,

r

;==::::;;:===~

0

OPERATING

ROOM
TECHNICIAN
Plusaat Valley

---------

Middleport, North 41h Ave., 2
br. furnished apartment,
deposit &amp; references, no
pats, (740)992-0165
New . 2BR apartments.
Washer/dryer
hookup,
stove/refrigerator included.
Also, units on SR t60. Pols
Welcomel (740)441-Q194.

for a Suraical
Te&lt;bnologlsL Graduate
of IKCredlted siJI'lllcal

New Haven 1 Br. Furnished
Apt, has WID, No Pets, Dep.
&amp; referencef!. 740-992-0165.
_ _ _ _ _;,____ _
Help Wanted

tec:bnoiOR)' PJ'OIII'IIIIIOr

I"

Hoopltal is cu,....ndy
accepting applications

equi"alent experience
required.
CST or CST eligible.
To apply, contact
Pleasant Valley
Hospital,

Human Resources,
ZSlO Valley Dr.
Pl. Pleasant, WV

25550, (304) 675-4340,
fu resume to
(304) 675-li\175
or Apply on-line at
www.pvlllley.o'l!

j

r

I Position
7am-3pm Cook
J Positions
3pm-llpm Cook
· No phone calls
Applications
available at this

location.

AAIEOE

I

ACE GITS'

.HardROd CUlneirJ An~ Flrnltlre

r

St. Rt. 248 Ct\ester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner
\ ddll i&lt;! ll''

' 11

"\, H

I'

....--.,

( .. 11

:::=====:;:::~

rto

L

BARGAINS
GALORE!

NOTICES

,.

o r,-.11 11&lt; I ru n

I lilt tll ll

i

I'

PEts

FOR SALE

FOR SALE
1983 Chevrolet Cavalier 2
door, rad, runs good, $1 ,200
080 304-882-2615
after 4:30pm
-------1995 Buick Roactnaster, all
electric, big engine, good
brakes, almost new tires,
new battery, leather interior.
app)( . 99,000K, never
wrecked or in high water,
body In very good shape,
(740)949-2253

-.1 I{\ J( I -.
_388_-_o3_o_5_ _ _ __
9~ 29' Jamboree motor I'll\"'"--:':~--~
home by Fleetwood, ElCc.
Cond, low n'iiles, sleeps 6-B
Very good cond , PJC, gener·
BASEMENT
ator/much more, · $12500
WATERPROOFING
OBO Can be seen at Mason
Co.Fairgrou nds. 330·234· Unconditional lifelime guarantee. local references furt573
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (7 40) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

LM:f\R'I'I'\0~

l~ t rnHdtl ltl"

W~'&lt;OU!

T()l)l..'(,

lo\1~!&gt; P~!

Residential &amp; Commercial

740-985-4141 Office
740-416-1834

LADY BUGS
BUGGING YOU?
h's that time: of year tor tal
treatment 6Eirvice good tor 90
days. Augusl thru Clctcber
Trealment for ladytlu1J8,
spiders, ants &amp; wasps.

26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free Estimates

McCormick's
Extermination Inc.
Commerr:J.I &amp; Rnldwrtllll
Your Local Tarmlte &amp;

I

I

SHOP

Help Wanted

BIG NATE

• Home Oxygen
• ,Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Hellos System

I THERE.'!&gt;

THE GUN! ••
I'll !&gt;TART OUT SLOW
FOR THE- Flt&lt;:ST
ILE OR TWO ...

A&amp;SOLUm'f~

DO&amp;S PROTECT
'{OU, GIVE 'IOU

COMFORT, LOVE,
JO'f AND
COMPANIONSIIIP..
T~AT'S THEI~

J08 ..

Pleasant Valley Hospital Home Medical
Equipment is currently accepting
resumes for a full-tim e, dayshitl
Respiratory Therapist. Must he a
t~~~~;~ ~of~a~n~ a~p~~proved Respiratory
Must he licensed
the states of

l

1

technician
·~::!~~~~~:~~~:~~
Hospital experience
Resume to:
Pleuanl Valley HO!ipital,
Submit

c/o Human Resourt'es
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV, 25550

fax to 304-675-697'5

or apply online at www.pvalley.org

,.

1

• New Homes
• Garages
Remodeling

140-992-1611
GARFIELD
FRIPA'r' NIISH1"?...'r'OOR
1"REA1"?.~ .1"HA1" SOI.lNPS ISREA1"1

........lfl...... a.-5:111•

......... •12:11••

....................
-.............
PIYIIIG TIP ltiCES Fill

RESPIRATORY THERAPIST
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting resumes for a part· tlme
Pharmacy Technician. Successful
cumpl~tion of WV Board of Pharmacy
approved te£hnlclan tnllnina program
or-equivalent. Statewreglstratlon or
Nattonal-certiftcatlon certlftcate as a
Pharmacy Technician preferred :
At least 2080 hours as a
technldan trainee. Two

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTBUCDOI
• Complete

0

Subm it Resume lO:

Pleasant Valley Hospital,
c/o Human Resources
2520 Volley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV, 25550
ra. to 304-675-6975
or apply online at www. pvalley.org

GRIZZWELLS

hbiJtlcl
··-···
ICIII l'w fllnlltl'rlclll

61UHTI\~~­

\Iffii&gt;.W11t

NOTICE :
LANDOWNERS IN MEIG S
AND GALLIA COUNTI ES
WPo.,tern L:md

Se t V I COS.

Inc a lc;Jdcr rn Oil

~
,1nd

G&lt;~'&gt; n~nl"r.lftnn

an(J dr&gt;volr;pr11Ct11_ worrkll •k• - tu
···,,t (;&lt;l~ LcoJ-.l' 1&lt;.&gt;
l hu·,e 1.111dUWIICt'-ill'lrl('J,l l 0Wil('J5 Wttht•l fJ 1• 1q &lt;.,
;n•d G;J I Ir;-~ Count•ros. Ovcor 40.UOU 01&lt;:rco; n I'H'" ' '
dtl' il'&gt; h;-JVf' already btoC&gt;n • ca~;ed .Inti iltC
1

1-''~'P;u rng to be developed If you h&lt;JVf' n1'""rd
tilL• chance to be 1nvotved 1n thrs venturr
plt:"ase co ntact the local of frcc &lt;~I no l4! J (•000

Don ! Ill IS&lt;; thrs opportunr t y to P&lt;Hirc •puk rn lf1P

yo ur n;-rtur,1lrcsour~.-cs
tho poten tr al for increas inq your
person al mcomc.
doveloprnent of

&lt;1'&gt;

Bemlce Bede 01101

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22)- Conditions
are trending in your favor in ways whe re
you 'll be able to arti culate your true feelings to ot~rs in a much more personal
manner and, as a result. draw them clos. er to you. ·
LIB RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Attend to all
matt ers at importance personally Instead
ot letting anyone else do so tor you.
You're particularly lucky now an d will be

-

Help Wanted

42 Sharpen.

43 Nolet
45
47

48
49

50

played
together
Coagullle
Toward
aheller
Fablljj bird
Kind of
eyllem
C:O,II

habitat
52 BKOnon
the hoof

53 Day bllore
54 - Plal-

....
':~::.· SCC!~1~-»~s·
IAII

0 f::".:"mb::J'':.J,
low to form iour tlmpit

You are l ike~ to set'larger goals fo r yoursell than you may ever have previously.
This is because y o u insllnclivety feet
lucky. giving you th e necessary confi~
dance to do big things within the realm of

1

PEANUTS

5031HI '\~~~=~ DII45711D
Help Wanted

UfHILL

B~

SUNSHINE CLUB

74G-949-2217

1 I Crayola
choice
13 Mystery
Worthless
and acf.fl
coin
19 Spud a
2 Metal
2\t Kampela 's
nation
lor plating
22 C to C,
3 Chioago
musically
lnllns
4 Spew lava 24 Pinball
5 Trevl
palace
Fountain
25 Czachcopltal
coin a
26 FritZ
6 Bay
27 Bridge
7 ' 'Hud''
support
Oocar-wimer 28 Slant
8 Inhabitant
29 Hot - 9 Uke7
oven
and 11
34 Mlxera
10 Pamplona
36 Crumpled
shout
up
DOWN

erably.

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

45771

35 Hole
puncher
37 Turtdah
potentate
38 Warmth
39 Dye
container
40 Drab color

deal
51 Splil to join
55 Jaguar
cou,in
56 Stem from
51 Where
beaches are
58 Margins

possibility.
LEO [July 23-Aug. 22) - Involvements
you have with some intluentlal friends or
contacts could prove to be exceptionally
rewarding tor you.You may ge t an opportunity to widen your social circle consld·

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

29670 Bashan Road
Racine , Ohio

10

Thursday, Aug. 18, 2007

FHEW! THIS ROAI&gt;
DOEsN'T REALLY LOOt&lt;.
BUT IT SUI{E

~ .~~o"'="•·"'t~e·a!ft:..•

Hil l's Self
Storage

to

qt...,. &lt;lllrthdoiY:

We Deliver To You!

Manley's
Recycling

Help Wanted

All pass

3 NT

AstroGraph

Pnt Control Compan~
(740) 682-6244
740 418-7509

Stop &amp; Compare

CKC Min Pin puppies.
Black/tan, Chocltan, Stag 2000 Dodge Neon, auto,
red. Males $350. Females $1800 OBO. 740-256-1233
$400. 740-388-8788
r---;ro:rr:;o;:lp;---, 2000 Mercury Cougar
$8,000 080, 88,000 miles
CLASSIFIEDS w~le exterior tully loaded
_
_ Runs great 304·675-3795

pWfl.'(,T~I&lt;. 'f'OU, ~IR!

'I'OU'RE. LOOK\~ Rl&gt;.if\E.R

.rt·~'

r

4833

Fourth Straet
tale will ba held.at 211
Racine, Ohio W.
Second
St.,
PPI1~242
Pomeroy, OH., The
Prior Deed Reference: Farmers Bank and
Volume 95, Page 733
Savln,ga Company Ia
Appraised
at selling for caah In
$18,000.00. Torma of hand or certHiad check
sale: Cannot ba sold the following colleterlor loaa than 213rds of al:1988
Oldsmobile
the appraised value. R e g e n c y
10% down on day of 1C3CW51CBJ4320694
aale, cash or carllllad The Farmers Bank and
check, balance due on Savings
Company,
confirmation of aale.
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
The appraisal did reserves lhe right to
Include an Interior bid at this sale, and to
examination of the withdraw the above
houn.
collateral prior to aale.
Robart E. Beegle, Further, The Farmera
Melgo County Sheriff
Bank and Savings
Attorney
lor
lha Company reaarves the
Plaintiff
right to reject any or all
John D. Clunk
blda tubmhtad.
5601 Hudson Drive, The allOvs deacrfbed
Suite ~00
collateral wHI be sold
Hudoon, Oh 44236
"eo Ia · where Ia", with
330-342-8203
no
expressed
or
(B) B, 15, 22
Implied
warranty
given.
For further InformsPublic Notice
tlon, or lor an appointment to Inspect colla!·
PUBLIC NOTICE
eral, prior to salt date
NOTICE: Ia hereby contact Cyndle,
given I hat on Sllurdar, or Ken at 992-2136.
August 18, 2007 at (3) 14, 15, 16, 2007 _
tO:OO a .m., a public
·

I

THE BORN LOSER

\ ! l !l l ..., ulu r~·

llnnu o.,
(

Construction

i

Pass

out

46 LaiHII-48 Used-car

. CELEBRITY CIPHER

ud Ga•ll ,:tntractlag

, J&amp;L

ZERO DOWN!

HAPP'r' !!

Marcum Coaalnctlon

.,,.,iiiii"''i'itit"•,l

866-564-8679 .

SO TODA'I' I'M
MAKIN' US BOTH

CRANI&lt;Y IF

I DON 'T SPEND ENUFF
TIME WIF HIM !!

www.U..bucaeekcaltlweb)IGOaa

CARPENTER
.SERVICE

Ir

r•o

Australian Shepherd puppies, Black &amp; White and Red
&amp; White, $125 each.
(740)245-5984 "' (740)645-

I

BARNEY

r

AKC Reg, Bwk old Shih Tzu
puppies. 3 females, 1 male.
parents on premises, 1sl
shots, $500 neg (740)4460091 or (740)645-6706

Sheriff Sales
Can Number 06CV132
LaSalle Bank National
Anoc. Plaintiff VS
Jerry Copplck et. al.
Defendanlll
Court of Common
Pleas, Melga County,
Ohlo
In purauance ol an
order of tale to me
directed from said
court In the above antitied action, I will
expon to aale at publie auction on the flont
atepa of the Meigs
County Court Houaa
on Friday Slptember
14, 2007 at 10 a.m., of
aald day, tha following
described reel e11181e:
Situated
In ·
the
Township of Sutton,
County of Melga and
Slllte of Ohio:
llllng Lot No. 65 In the
Incorporated VIllage of
Recine.
Said promisee also
known aa 404 41h
- Street, Recine, Ohio
45nt
PPN: 19-00242.000
Current Owner: Jerrr
Copplck
Property At:
404

,.

·I

-=======:; ;-;:...,..,.=...,=,...,
Coolspot#l
Coolville, Ohio
NOW HIRING

~==!====~===~;::!:::~~~

lir'mming
&amp; Removal

I

I NT

14 Pine pi'Oduct
t 5 Haallllnt
t 6 Came
to earth
17 Kind of pal
1B Yale athlete
19 Well-known
Pharaoh
21 Go bed
23 Channelsurf
Z6 Zig's
companion
27 Oelt •
neighbor
Z6 -firma
30 Plato's H
31 Adher~nt
32 Cuzco
founders
33 Stressed

James RusseH Lowell, who died in 1891
and was ~only" a poet, critic, satirist,
writer, diplomat, and abolitionist, wrote,.,
-rhere is no good arguing with the
inevitable. _The only argument available
with·an east wind is to put on your overcoat."
In this deal, many playars would faille
anticipate the East wind. Can you? look
at the North and South hands. How
would you plan the play In three notrump after West leads tha spade 10?
You have si)( top tricks: three spades,
one heart and two clubs. If you can bring
in lhe clubs without loss, you will be
home. But if you lose a dub trick, when
Is your contract in dangBr?
Only when West has lour (or five) diamonds headed by the ace and king silting over your queen and jack, and East
can get in twice to blow diamonds
through you.
What ti-.o entry cards mighl East hold?
The heart king and club queen.
To make sure that East does not get in
twice; win the first trick with dummy's
spade queen (althou!tl doing so is nol
by Luis Campos
Ce:ehtty Ci~er cryplograms 1111!1 Cf&amp;aoled from quotaOOs 17f famous people put arci.IJ"e:ld.
vital, playing the honor lrom the shorter
Eaeh Idler in the Cipher stand$ tor anoll'lel.
side first un~ocks the sun), cash the
TOOBy's dtJB: Bequals P
club ace, and play a club lo your jacl&lt;. ,
Here lhe jack wins and you are playing
" W.KCPC ' TPC HREC CIWCPBPYHCH VI
for overtricks. Suppose, though, that
West can take your jack w~h the queen.
UKVSK T STPCZMG
He cannot hurt you . It he shifts lo a
JYHRPJCPGYICHH YH WKC WPMC
heart, you finesse. If he plays another
spade, you win In your hand and take the
. ECWKRJ," - KCPETI ECGNYGGC
heart finesse. You cannot lose more than
lour lricks.
Note thai if you misplay the
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'There IS no securily on this earth; there is only
clubs so that E21st scores his queen, you
Of)llOIIunity." -Douglas MacArthur
go down if he shifts to a diamond.
'Seize the day.' - Horace

GuHermg
-

Stanley Tree-

Ij

East

It's hard to expect
the unexpected

':=::;;:;:;;:;:;::=::::
r
H&amp;H

Mlnlall!l'e Pincher Pups, 2 96 Eagle Talon , 69000
Seamless Gutters
Couch &amp; Loves•at, paid Black/Tan females, $300 miles. $3700. One owner, Roofing, Siding, Gutters
•.,ooo
asking $500. TannUvt each - Rea dy now. (740)388 • automatic trans, AJC • Cali·
Insured &amp; Banded
~
"'w
sette, Lookssharp. Call 441bed $800. Call 740.379- 8124
740·653-9657
0307
2787
~:;:===:::::==~
- - - - - - - - - Yorkle puppies, champion COOK MOTORS
·
Table w/ 4 chairs $t75.95, bloodlines, Vol recornmand8/S and Matt. $180.00. ed, guaranteed, will be 326 Jackson Pike
Mollo""". 202 Clark c•·-1 approx 41b run grown, $550 Quallly .carsltrucks with warI
.
Ad, ~;::_11 , Ohio 740-,...,..388- (740)44t -95 t 0
ranty. low prices are posted
~"""
on all vehicles. $2500 1o
Ot73
FRurrs &amp;
$7500. Stop or call740-446V~ · 01
03
'Prompt and Quality
"1111"""-~-----.
Work
ANnQUF.8
-"r15
~,_ _ _ _ _ _ _,.~
TRUCKS
· • Reasonable Rates
Canning
tomg,toes
FORS·· ~
~
1
ANTIQUE Berkey&amp;Gay van- picked/pick awn, incredible ·--iliiiiiiiiiii-_.1 ' nsured
l1y w/mirror. $600.00 080 corn·, cucumbers, Rowe 02 Ford F-t50, ext cab, 4x4, *Experienced
J9Z·70t0 or 992-3tB3.
_Fa_rm_s_._l7_4_0l_24_7~·4_2_92_ _ VB, 93,000 mile~ runs &amp; References Available!
~!l!AND5E
Pick your own canning looks good, $8900; 92 Ford Call Gary Stanley @
lni!.K
bell
....., Ranger, E)(t. Cab, good
740-742-2293
tomatoes,
peppers, oNI shape, $1400. (740)245peppers.Tomatoes $3/buekPlease leave rnessa e
ROOmy 2BR
bath, SForOidAutoBattenes 1_ et,Peppers
$5/bucket. ~590
;r9--~~--"'
aHached garage-no pets,
Troyer's Woodcraft, g miles
SUV~
249 3 0008 2
Rodney area. $425.mo. Ref
$ ·
• 50+ $4.ooea. west of Gal'~ls off S.R.
~., .. ~
YOIJNG'S
&amp; OepoSII required. 446- THE BATIERY TERMINAL t4t
'"'"
1.~--··-~iiiii"""""iii-_.1
_t-s_oo-_796_-s_7_97___
•
2eot
18x4 above ground pool.
04 Jeep Liberty, loaded, new
Tara
Townhouse
tires,· exCellent condition.
Apartments. Very Spacious, New liner. A!itl:lng $450. Call
$ 11500 _740•379 _2768
Room Additions &amp;
Rtmocltllng
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 112 3B8..()30 1
F.wt
NtwG1rllgH
Bath, Adun Pool &amp; Baby - - - - - , - - - v~--4X4
Electrical I PIL.tmblng
. .. ·
FoR SAL'•
Pool, Pallo, Start $425/Mo. Bunkbeds w/Bunkle boards L,_ _.,.,...,
~
Rooting &amp; GuHer•
sage Green Love Seat,
-VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
No Pets, Lease Plus Berry Rocker Recliner 4 20 ton equipment lowboy.
Patio and Porch Decks
Security Oeposlt Required, door cupboard 304-675· $2000 OBO. Ca1144,t-75t4 87 Jeep Cherokee 4X4.
. WV038725
(740)446-3481.
Runs good. $600. Great
6943
value for the price. Call 740V.C. YOUN G Ill
"7! •• •
Rl
•
---~---- 3 Farmall H's, 1941 Wide 441 -a 582
rntn vers .owerlsaccept- Craftsman3.75Tiller-$100 Front,looks/runsgood. 1947 r!lr;;;;;;;,.~---_,
%2 h21~
f-'01111'1 •&gt; 1 ( lll 0
ing applications for waiting Craftsman 5HP . $10. Call - runsgood, roughcondition.
VANS
' ' • "• I l
II f ~P"' IH ,,
list for Hud-sui&gt;Sized, I - br, 446-754t
t942 - Good parts tractor. Lw-..;FiiOiiRiitSALE
_ _ _rl
apartment,lor
the
$2200. 387-7787
,
elderly/disabled call 875HUGE SAVINGS ON
- - - - - - - - 91 Dodge 350 Rem wagon,
6679
Equal
Housing
ARCH STEEL
Calorplllar D-5 Dozer '73 t 2 passengers, white,
O,ponunity
BUILDINGS,
wnh Cargo F-50 winch with 9tooo miles, looks and runs
jclll"--~
manual transmission , 2'
3 Aepos Left,
SPACE
25'IC42•X &amp; 35•X40•
angle blade can be seen at
• Vinyl Siding
0 .,...,
1'011 """'
N R
Old Farms, State Route 62
1.--oiiiiiiiliiiiiiio-.,1
o
easonable
•
Replacement
~
Otre R 1 dl
Ohio River Road, Pt.
r
e
use
.
.
.
.
Windows
Commercial building "For
Serious Inquires
Pleasant Serial 94J2038
Rent" 1800 square feet, off ,
Only .
·$25,000304-776-5656
2001 Horley Davison BB3 • Roofing
street parking. Great locaCall 866·352-o469
Sportster, 6200 miles, • Decks
tionl 749 Third Avenue in --'--'-'-::::"'-"'-Wm'ocK
Asking $5000. (740)245- • ·Garages
Gallipolis. Rent $300/mo.
JET
~
5984 or (740)645-4833
, Pole Buildings
Call Wayne (4041456 _3802 ·
AERATION MOTORS
RepairOd, New &amp; Rebuilt In 1t yr old l&gt;ack Walker Mare 2003 -Suzuki GZ250K, 897 • Room Additions
Prime commercial space for Stock. Cal Ron Evans, 1· &amp; 6 yr old Bay Gelding miles, As~ng $2500 OBO.
Owner:'
rent at SpriJVIalley Plaza. 80D-537·9528.
Sound-Gaited horses. Horse Call 304-675-2525
James Keesee 11
CaiiS45-2192 .
lovers interested call 74G- - - - - - - -388-oo38
2005 H.D.Fal Boy custom
742-2332
like New Sears 1aft
maroon
w/embossed
IT.~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Refrigerator $125 304·882·
flames,1 of 200 made,BOO
Mushroom Compost
H&lt;xsotoUl
Black Show Pigs, Sows, miles since
2220
Gooffi
- - - - - -- - ·ams &amp; Boars lor sale. $19,000 080 new,prlce
$3SAScoop
call k&gt;r
· - - - - - - _ . 1 NEW AND USED STEEL (740j44 t- t013
details-740-949-22t 7.
T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
1BA cottage in GaiMpois. No For
Concrete ,
Angle, Miniature donkeys. Male and Original owner wanting to
Wide Variely of
pets. Dep and references Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Female. 2 Babies - 1 male, 1 find 1974 Harley Davidson
Lawn Seed,
required. Call 446-2468
Grating
For
Drains, female. 740·446-1158
· Spor1ster
serial
Fertilizer and
Berber Carpel, $5 .95/yd; Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l Pet Quality Gek:ling Alpacas. #t3A201 09H4, Call Bob
Showmaster Sbow
Vinyl, $4.95/yd, DriVe-a-little Scrap Metals Open Monday, Good Fiber Producers McCully (740)387-00tB
Feeds
Save alot, Mollohan Carpet, Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Various ages 7 prices. 304: ~ BoATS &amp; MmoRS
4
76 Vine St, Gallipolis, OH. Friday. a'am- :JOpm. Closed 882-3345
FOR SAu:
Thursday, Saturday &amp;
1740)446 _7444
Yearling
Young
Angus
Bulls,
Sunday. (740)446--7300
bred heifers. E~~:cellent New 07 16ft Nitro boat wf
Pole Barns 30x50x10
$6,495 Free
Delivery Breeding, Top Performance. cover, troiDng motor, SOhp
(S3?) 718 _1471
Priced
Reasonably. mercury outboard motor, all
www.slaterunangus.com, salety equip., 2 live wells, 2
Taurus Tracker ·44mag~ ~(7'li40;")•2B•6-·5~39~5-~-..., batteries. 1raller wt fold away
Bushnell Trophy redlgreen
HAY &amp;
. $t4,00o OBOI 645Real Estate
0ot Scope 6'in' ported barGRAIN
rei $500 304-675-2558
&amp;
GOT LAND?
Wedding Dress. new wl Straw for sale, $4/bal e,
Owner finacing if tags,
off while, size 20. Paid
you own your
$349.00, ASking $200 .00.
84 Wilderness travel trailer,
Call 740..256-1847, leave a
32ft, needs some work.
land!
message.
nr'l'itoi""'-•A'!"UIOS---.... $2000 FIRM, AS IS. 740-

Apartment lor rani, 1-2 . North 3rd St., Middleport,
Bdrm., remodeled, new car- furnished
apartment•
pet, stove &amp; trig., water,
·
sewer, trash pd . Middleport. deposit &amp; refe rences, no
$425.00. No pets. Ret. pols, (740)992-0165
required. 74Q-B43-5264.
One Bedroom Clarage
Apartment in Pt. Pleisant,
1
·--utHul
Apta' It •
---·- • f · h""
1
nd
Eetatoo. 52 Westwood urniS " " ' very c oan a
Drive, hom $365 to 5560. nice. No Pets Phone 304Equal _67_5_-t_38
_8_ _ _ _ _ _
740•446.2 568 .
H ' .· o
rt lty Thl
ousmg ppo un .
s Roome tor Rent In
institution Is an Equal Middleport, 2 ·wen rur0
t It p ld
d
ppor un Y rov er an nilhed room1 In quiet
E 1
·
mp oyer.
neighborhood, Direct TV,
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- Microwave, Frlqge I
ED I AFFOROABLEI
:O~r ~ ~ral~
~2
Townhouse
apartments, "ehoeearlng I both 740-4teand/or small houses .FOR
RENT. Call (740)44t-tttt

West , North
Opening lead:

740-9112·5929
740-416-1698

Free Esu·m ates

.

South

All types of concrete
Owner- Rick Wise

740-36HI544

· Y K 8 7 2
• 10 9 7
"'Q 3 2

' QG3

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Local Contractor

East
• J G2

South
• AK5

rfamihJ ••l:tlM:•

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

08-I5-o7

• AJ 9
• &amp;4 3
+ At087G

37_~-- - - - - - - - - ~,_ _ritliiiiiiiiitr-rl
_17_40_1_70_9-6_3_

Pretty, 3BA, 1 Bath.
- n Galli'pol•·s. Very
Downl,...
cton to Washington Elem.
and
GAHS. $750. No
.
pets/smoking. Utilities not

lhe roof
12 Mining
operation

(2 wds.)

'--tiiroRiii'EtsiiSiii~iittt-~ t.,r.O_ttitFOiiARiii~iiiALEiiiio_.l

Bossard Library

Accepting applications for 2
BR, t BA apt, stove. !ridge,
W/D included. Water &amp;
Garbage paid. No pets, very
nice, clean &amp; attractive.

I Hard metal

6 Under

41 Cui-de- 42 Single no
more
43 Oecent
grade
44 Freud,
, to himself

well

&lt;!S

•
I

WOWI UZ ASKeP ME
001" ON A PA1"EI

IS 1"HA1"
AW.OWEP?

able to gratify your expectations brilliantly.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - There are
fortunate developments stirring behind
the scenes at this time that could have
long-range effects upon se~~e ral areas ot
your life. Two early indicators should
become visible.
SAG IT TARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) Personal hopes and expectat ions to
which you presently aspi re have e,.cellent chances of being realized. You could
even lind that events will magically con·
form to your timetable.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - Don't
retrBBI from challenging developments
because the odds aren't stacked in your
favor. You'll lind you're tho one whO has
the odge and, if you do your best, tuck
will C.:o the rest.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - An
exciting new friend or assoclale ctrufd
enter your life. It will be someone who
t hinks exactly like you and with whom
you'll be able to articulate and discuss
deep and intimate things.
PI SCES (Feb . 20- March 20) - Far
greater benefits can be acquired tram
joint endeavors you have rather th an
from that which you attempt l o do on
you r own. One endeavor in particular is
apt to be outstanding.
AR IES (March 2 1-Aprif 19) - This is an
e)(cellent day lor establishing agreements between two or more parties
BecauSe the bargaining will be fair.
everyone woll get something back from
what they're willing to give .
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) - Whether
you are !he employer or the employee,.
you 're apt to take extra pride in your work
and , as a result, produce some hidden
benefits you dldffl know ex rs ted until the
job was finished.
GEMINI (May 2t -June 20)- Your enthu·
srasm and gn:tat outlook are contagious
and wi ll have little trouble stirring up
interests in others. Don't be surprised to
see a crowd following you when you turn
around.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) - Because
you are both bold and enterprising , it
ahoufdn I surprise that you could find
yourself doing things in a rather lirama t·

Grmtps Jibd to quote I &amp;mou!
historian who llid, "'&gt;imculty is
r-~----,R~u~r~A~c~E~~ !lie excuse history never--"
6

I I I 1; I e Comtileto ,. c:huddo
vou
lrom
No. 3 btlow.
_

_

quoted
by fillinG In tho mlalng - •

dovtlop

8 PRINT
NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES
t)

llop

1

~~;c:~~~~~ IETTm TO I

III IIII

SCIIAMUTS ANSWDS

e-H-07

Tartly - Threw - Ullii - Fusion -: YOUR HJ!AllT
"To band1e yourself use your head," lhe old gent told me. "To
handle others use YOUR HEART."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

lc fashion and end Up achieving a r11ther
difficr.Jit task

SOUP TO NUTZ
0;11)J' R~Sfr """"" O~Itlj~U oc -~&lt;01'11

toU~hootr(lco•""

�Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, August 15 200'7

www .mydailysentinel.coin

2001

OHIO STATE fOOTBAll PREVIEW

Meigs Fair
Scenes,A3

Buckeyes having trouble letting
go of letdown in their last game

offers variety of
entertainment, B4

•

BY RuSTY MtUER
ASSOCIATED PREss

It

Fair's .H ill Stage

COLUMBUS - h was an
especially long , cold 'winter
for the Ohio State Buckeyes.
A relatively stress-free
2006 ·season for the
Buckeyes, who had been
top-ranked since the dog
days of summer, came down
to a stunning, humiliating
conclusion on Jan. 8 before
rnillions of viewers in the
BCS national cham~ionship
game.
It became an enduring
black eye: Aorida 41 , Ohio
State 14.
Now, while looking ahead
to a season of promise in
2007, the Buckeyes still
must shake off the flashbacks from that final game
of last season.
"I don't think that there's
any question in the ~ack of
everybody's mind I
mean, how does it not?"
defensive coordinator Jim
Heacock said when asked
whether that game affects
this year's squad. "You'd be
crazy to think that it doesn't.
I don't know that there's
many days that something
doesn't come up that you
think about i~."
· The loss of so many wellIrnov:n standouts fro~!~ last
years team - Hetsman
Trophy winning quarterback
Troy Smith, wide-outs
Anthony Gonzalez and Ted
Ginn Jr., tailback Antonio
Ptttman, three defc:nstve
hnemen, two starters m the
secondary - may actually
make tt easter for the
Buckeyes to purge those
dreadful memories. Or, at
least, that's the hope.
"I think they've proba~ly
been beat up enough. We re
ready to move on," Heacock
said of the returning players .
A year ago, the Buckeyes
returned only two starters on
defense but there were
e':lough spare parts and buddt~g stars around to come up
wtth a stellar umt. Thts year
the replaceme.nts are needed
on the other stde of the ball.
"Considering that everyone thinks we are. about to
be the worst team m the Btg
Ten on offense, it seems,
we'll be all right," returning
offensive tackle Kirk Barton
said. "I never get too high or
too low about things. You
know, 'We'll . have to win
every game 6-0 and kick two
field goals and hopefully our
defense throws a shutout.' I
let things play out."
The defense features AllAmerican linebacker James
Laurinaitis·, who had II?
tackles to win the Nagurski
Award .. Marcus Freeman is
also · back at linebacker,
along with cornerback
Malcolm Jenkins and free
safety Anderson Russell,
who missed the second half
of last year with a knee

injury. Vernon Gholston is
an enforcer on the line.
"We wanted to shut out
every team we played last
year," Laurinaitis said. "We
didn'tgo into the games saying, 'Hey, we can relax a httie bit because our offense is
going to score 40-some
points.' So even if you let up
14 .points , we look at that as
hurtful."
There are plenry of quality
candidates to fill any vacancies. Lawrence Wilson at
defensive end, linebacker
Larry Grant (one of the few
seniors on the entire roster),
and strong safety Kurt
Coleman all seem primed
for prime time.
On the other side of the
ball, the line appears to be a
strength, where Barton, fellow tackle Alex Boone,
guard Steve Rehring and
tight end Rory Nichol are
back. But there are lots of
holes everywhere, despite a
number of strong candidates.
That includes at quarterback,
where
Todd
Boeckman,
Robbie
Schoenhoft and Antonio
Henton are vying for the job.
Boeckman was No. 2 last
year and has a slight edge,
but don't be surprised if all
· three get to prove themselves against the Buclteyes'
soft non-conference schedule (1-AA Youngstown
State Akron Washington
and Kent Stat~).
"We have guys that you
really haven't he.ard about
who are waiting in the wings
who are just as talented,"
Boeckman said. "We recruit
guys who are the best players in the country. They're
just going •to wait' for their
chance and hopefully they'll
do a lot of great things for us
this year."
Chris "Beanie" Wells
steps in for Pittman at tailback. He was one of the
mest acclaimed high school
players in the coun~. then
backed it Up by rushmg for
576 yards and seven TDs as
a freshman. At 6-foot-1 and
230 pounds he's able to
punish defenders inside and
has enough acceleration to
pick uP. yardage out w~de .
He'll hkely get lots of work
while the introductions Iare
maae in the huddle.
Wells would have no
problem with Ohio State
turning back the clock to
"three yards and a cloud of
dust."
"It seems OK, but you
have to put it in the perspective of what the game plan is
and what team we're playing and how it fits in with
our scheme," he $ai,:l. Then
he grinned.
Both kickers are also
back, although the loss of
the speedy Ginn is particularly troublesome since he
would have been the perfect

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio·
llll ' I{Sil\, . \l (,\ .SI'th . :!OO-

.I "( I '\IS•\ol. :;-. '\o.th

Jim Tr.,..et
Jim Tr8ssel's Career
Coaehlng Record

11 2
14 0

2001
Tolala

7 5
62 14

HOEFUCHCOMYDAILYSENTIN.EL.COM

POMEROY David
Deem, longtime Meigs
Local
School District.
teacher, has been hired as .
assistant principal at the
Meigs Middle School.
Deem fills the assistant
principal's position vacated
when Steve Ohlinger was
hired as principal of Meigs
High School. Deem came to
the school district in 1993
as a teachet at the Pomeroy
Elementary School and

(BCS champ.)
(Fiesta)

12 1
10 2
8 4

2003
2002

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

• No. 8 not joining
Junior at Hendrick.
SeePageB1

OhioW L Bowl

Year
2006
2005
2004

Meigs Local fills positions 'preparatory to school opening

SPORTS

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(FI081B).
(Rasia)
(Oulback)
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1999
1998
1997
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1994
1993
1992
1991
1990
1989
1988.
1987
1988

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12

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"·-·-----

POMEROY · A Dr.
Seuss character paid a visit
NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
to this month's Meigs ·
County
Chamber
of
TUPPERS PLAINS Commerce business-mindThe Eastern Local Board of
ed luncheon held at the
Education met in special
Meigs Library.
session last week to approve
The
Cat-in-the-Hat,
sllpplemental contracts and
played by Kylen King of the
new faculty additions.
River City Players Theatre,
The board approved the
gave
a
preview
of
following
supplemental
"Seussical T.he.. Musical,"
contracts: Heather Wolfe,
singing a song from the end'
yearboo'k -advisor; ·· Arch•
&lt;Jf Act I. Topped-with 'a'tbwRose; Student Cflullcil adviering red-and-wbite•striped ·
sor; Ryan Dup{ee, assistant
~at, . j(ing . da~ced ~d
varsity football coach; Jamie
moved' around and sang a
Baker, volunteer assistant
reminder to cheer up even
in a situation gone sour.
varsity football coach; Ken
"As bad as things may
Amsbary, volunteer junior
seem, they can always get
high football coach; and
worse," the woman who
Kass Lodwick volunteer
introduced
him said. She
l .jUJ~ior high volleyball coach.
encouraged
people
"to go to
Melissa Conde, Gwen.
the Sept. I or 2 showing.
Hall, Betsy Martindale and
You ' ll see someone you
Sheila Connolly were
Staff photo
approved as educational One of the top country music act's of today, Emerson Drive, performed Wednesday night know," she said.
Also on the program were '
·aides for the 2007-2008 at the Meigs County Fair. The group, with a couple of number one hits off their new release,
three employees of Holzer
school year.
played before an energetic packed grandstand, along with a sold out reserve section and
P I - U. Chamber, A5
full seating on the horse track.
Pluse see Eastern. AS

.

.

OBITUARIES
&lt;

Page AS
~. Evelyn S!~U$5. 94 ·
~:tt~!"mt1'f.I:W~il, 51 ·'
. ~Pal!;! Windland, 83
·&lt;i','·"·
·.&lt;

c,

r

Anderson, Ross top steer sale order

. • Crane wins rosette
· in photography oontest.
::See Page A8 .
::; Ubrary shows
;:inonthly family films.
: See Page A2
; - For the Record.
:$ee Page A5

BY BRIAN

ROCKSPRINGS - It was a good day for Adam
Lavender who took home not only grand champion market
showman but grand champion market hog during the juni or
fair swine show.
J.R. Hupp took home reserve champion market showman
while Katie Durst took home reserve champ1on market hog.
Judge Sarah Evans had"her work cut out for her dealing
with nearly 120 hogs and a hog show that started at 8 a. m.
and went until nearly 2 p.m.
Top showmanship results were as follow s in the categories

Please see Hogs, A6

Please see Steer. A6

Beth Sergent/photo

Adam Lavender was named l&gt;oth grand champion market
showman and grand champion market hog at the junior fair
swine show. Also pictured is Swine Prince Derrick Powell.

2 SI!CTIONS- t6 PAGFS

Annie's Mailbox

A2

Calendars

A2

Classifieds

Bs-6

Comics

B7

Editorials

.A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

B4

Sports
Weather

B Section
AB

© 20.0 7 Ohio Valley Publi!thing Co.
.

---- -~

- ----------------- ------

•

REED

ROCKSPRINGS - Jed
Anderson's 1,355-pound
market steer was judged
grand champion, and Austin
Ross' 1,305 - ~ound steer
was named reserve champion at Tuesday evening's
Junior Fair Steer Show.
Craig Jones was named
grand champion showman,
and Anderson was named
reserve champion showof
man. Jaso n Bihl
Washington
Courthouse
was the judge for the show.
Judging results. by class
and in order were:
Class I, 1.210-1.255
pound s: Ashley Putman,
Sam Collins, Josh Collins;
Class
II ,
I ,270-1.295
pounds: Craig Jones, Ashley
Life, Jacob Parker; Class Ill.
I ,305 -1,355 pounds: Jed
Anderson, Austin Ross.
Showmanship: Junior, 1516: Jones, Life. J. Collins:
Intermediate, 12-14: Parker.
Putman, S. Collins; Beginner.
9-11: Anderson, Ross.
Commercial
Feeder Steers
Class I. 450-495 pounds:
Nathan Cook, Katie Keller,
Austin
life.
·Mallory
Nicodemus,
Clinton
Kennedy; Class II. 500-545 .
poun ds: · Ross Keller, Ben
Buckley, Harley Williams,
Timothy Warner, Samuel
Evans; Class Ill. 550-560
poiu;ds : Aly ssa Newland,
GRAND
CHAMPION ,
Justin Cotterill , RESERVE
CHAMPION, Dylan Milam.
Jordan Wood, Jordan Parker,

Detail• on P-ae A8

INDEX

J.

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL. COM

·' .

--

Melp, A5

INTERN, THE DAILY SENTINEL

.•'

----··-

~

·BY RACHIL MAIITINDALI

BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

•J

Please

Chamber
members learn
of health care
opportunities

BY BRAD SHERMAN

River Valley's Kyle Bryant

hired on a purchased services contract as a personal
assistant to a health handicapped
student,
and
Christine Miceli as a tutor
for a health handicapped
student for the upcoming
school year.
Steven
Wood
was
employed as a special education teacher at the Meigs
Intermediate School, and
Linda Lear as the lead mentor to provide services to
new teachers with her team

STAPF RIPORT .

Nov. 1a Illinois, TBA
Nov. 17 ol Michigan, TBA

•
GALLIPOLIS - None of them turned in
the lowest individual score of the day, but the
balanced Blue Devils came out on top in the
end.
Gallia Academy's three most experienced
players all shet rounds in the 40's - leading
the host squad to victory over River Valley
and South Point in a high school golf tnmatch at Cliffside on Tuesday.
Sophomore Jordan Cornwell led the Devils
with a four-over 40 while Kamal Dayal and
Cory Hamilton finished witb scores of 43
and 44 respectively. Kyle Rhodes rounded
.out the scoring with a 51 .
'
River Valley ace Craig Jagers won medalist honors for the day with a fine two-over
par· 38. Jager's teammates, Todd Simms,
Ma~ Ball and Kyle Bryant all shot 65 to give
the Raiders a team tally of 233.
Visiting South Point was I0 shots back of
Gallia ·Academy in the team scores. Wyatt
Hall had a 42, Zach Taylor a 45 while Wes
Hall and David Vigliamco fired rounds of 47
and 54 respectively.
Also for Gallia Academy, in scores that did
not count toward the final team tally, freshman Warren Patrick had a 58, David Elkins a
59, Zack Miller 68 and Matthew Baird a 71 .
Gallia Academy heads to Portsmouth on
Thursday, then both the Blue Devils and
Raiders return to Cliffside on Monday, when
Chesapeake will join the Gallians for another tri-match.

MetLife through the School
Employee Trust effective
Sept. I to Aug. 31, 2009;
and to approve the OSBA
Workers
Compensation
group rating risk manage· ment program at a cost of
$2,100, as well as to remain
with Gates McDoinald
Health Plus for the district's
managed care organization.
Personnel
The
resignation
of
Carolyn Searls as an aide
for a health-handicapped
student was accepted.
Jacqueline Lawson was

board
approves
personnel

().()

Sep. 1 Youngstown St .. Noon
Sep. 8 Akron, Noon
Sop. 15 ol Wuf11nglon, 3:30p.m.
Sop. 22 ·Norlllwesteni, TBA
Sep. 29 at Mlnnooola. 8 p.m.
Oct. 8 al Purdue, 8 p.m.
Oct. 13 Kent St, TBA
Ocl. 20 Michigan Sl, 3:30 p.m.
Oc1..27 a1 Penn Sl., 8 p.m.
Nov. 3 Wisconsin. TBA

G lia Academv
tri-match
over River lev, South Point

moved to the 'new Meigs new year, and regular classMiddle School when it es begin on Tuesday.
Contracts . were awarded
opened as a math teacher.
To fill that math teaching and other renewed for the
position the Meigs Local services of bakery and
Board of Education at its bread to Heiner's Bakery,
Tuesday's night meeting Inc.; milk and dairy to
Broughton Foods Co.;
hired Mitchell Buckman.
Numerous other positions garbage and trash pickup to
Consolidated
will filled at the meeting in Rumpke
order to bring the district to Companies , and gas and
a place of full employment diesel fuel to Ashland
in preparation for the open- Branded Mar~eting by
ing of school next week. G&amp;M Fuel Co., Inc.
Approval was also giv.en
Teachers are to report on
Monday to completed to renew the basic life and
insurance
to
preparations for starting the AD&amp;D

Eastern

. 2007 Schedule

Ohio State quarterback Todd Boeckman (17) looks to throw during football practice
Satur.day in Columbus.
return weapon with the new
rule pushing kickoffs back 5
yards to the 30. Remember,
he took back the opening
kickoff against Florida oops, there's another shot to
the heart of the Buckeyes before everything turned to
ashes for the guys in scarlet
and gray.
Head coach Jim Tressel
seemed immune to criticism
while rolling to a 62-13
record with a national cham~
pionship in his six seasons
leading up to the BCS final.
But in rhe days immediately
after, he was criticized for
not having his team ready
against the Gators and for
not adapting during the
game as it got out of hand: .
"I would think all of our
people who came up short in
a big opportunity wi)l use
that often," he said. "It's a
great reminder when you
don't do as well as you can."
The Buckeyes need to win
- and soon - to finally rid
of
such
themselves
"'reminders.''

""" tn\ll;o ih"·"l""'l' " " '

lavender takes top
honors at hog show
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

n

IIfton I. R14111/IIIMitM

Reserve Champion Showman Jed Anderson showed the
grand champion market steer at Tuesday night's Junior Fair
Steer Show. He is pictured with Beef Princess Katie Keller
and Fair Queen Tina Drake .

Above: Austin Ross,
first-time showman in
the Junior Fair Steer
Show. showed the
reserve champion steer.
Beef Princess Katie
Keller and Fair Queen
Tina Drake joined him .
left: Craig Jones was

named grand champion
market steer showman
at Tuesday night's
Junior Fair Steer Show.

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