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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesay, Septe~ber II,

'

OHIO VALLEY

•
Sixth annwersary
of 9/U brings first
•
ceremomes
away
from ground zero, A2

..,.
'

·BANK.

.

lnalde Foodland

446-2168

441-3575
700W. MoinSt. - - -- .992-2357

lnaldeWlllmart
Pomeroy

23eSeomdAve. -

2145E8111emAve. -

www.ovbc.com

.....

$1

SPORTS
:• Meigs falls to Lady
:.• Spartans.,See Pl(je
. B1

1•.________________

HOLZER CLINIC

learning' oppOrtunities for
low perfonning students.
The emphasis will be on
POMEROY
The helping sl)ldents, ~y of
Southern and Meigs Local whom ·come from disadvanSchool Districts have been taged families, meet state
awarded $1 million dollars and local standards in core
each in 21st Century Grants academic subjects, such as
by the .Ohio Department of reading and math. Students
Education to be used for will be offered a broad array
academic enrichment ·pro- of enrichment activities that
grams for low achievers in can complement their reguelementary schools.
lar academic programs, as
The grants provide fund- well as provide other·educaing for a five year period at tional services to the families
$200,000 per year to each of participating children. ·
district to serve 75 children
At Southern where Scott
in after school programs.
Wolfe is. the program direc· According to William tor and a facilitator in securBuckley, superintendent of ing funding for the 'afterMeigs Local and Tony school programs, Kim
Deem; superintendent of Roush has been named
Southern Local, the funds director. AI Meigs Becky
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

HOER.ICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
1

~

2.___________________

We,re Everywhere You Are!

.

3.,____________________

Congr t"SSIIIaR
Gillmor mourned
at Statehouse, A6

·. Pharmacy
·
Open m~.F 9om.,..7p,n
~:sm~lom
ca
.s.-riaey
(740) 992..... 1536
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www.f'oodf'elnnk.com

4.~------------------5.·--.-----------~-6. __________________

7.·------------~----

-

director of the program
which will be held at the
Meigs Elementary School.
"It is an after-school pro-'
gram, but we don't like to
call it tutoring," said Roush,
"Our program involves a
block of time for homework, a block. for intervention especially in math and •
reading, and activity and
snack times."
"We try to meet each student's needs," she added.
"We teach lessons that are
standards-based and give
intense intervention in the
areas where students are
weak. The activity time is a
leamin~ experienc..: that
often mvolves someone
from the outside presenting
a talent or craft. Sometimes

St~rlllVheelers

8.·--------------~--

experiment that is fun and
hands-on. Sometimes ·the
kids don't realize that it is in
itself a learning _time.''
It is this type of embedded
assessment type activity
tlfat is making this program
such a success, said Wolfe.
"Two more hours of school
sometimes is not what a
child finds appealing, But
research shows that hands- ·
on activities are often more
effective than other classroom strategies. We want
the kids to enjoy learning,
and we want them to enjoy
the program, but we also
have a structured work time
as well. They still have to
do their homework."
Wolfe said that at Southern
physical education activities,

arriving

9.~-----------------10.·------~-----------

0BITUARIFS

11 •.___________________

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13. ___________________

BY BETH SERGENT

~. 1 , _ ._.,

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INSIDE

14. __________________

•~ Food program
· ,offered to seniors.
•See Page A3
. • Auxiliary members
hear girl state report
: See Page A3
· • MCCI plans events
,for breast cancer m&lt;inth.
See Page A3 .
: • Tuppers Plains ·

NAME:._______________

~ ~MWmeet. ·

. See Page A3
:. Hunter education class
· slated. See. Page A3
• Local Briefs.
See Page A5
• For the Record.
See Page A6

ADDRESS:, _________

PHONE:. _____________

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
•-. --··--'WV•l!IM._,...,_
31··~
n. F.f
• .'1 ,htl

:a.

Each Thesday through Dec. 11, a numbered game wUI
appear In each participating merchant's ad.
Indicate your pick of winners and write it beside the
corresponding number.
Entries must be dropped olr at thi,,
Gallipolis Daily Tribune or mailed to:
Football Smackdown
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune
8lS 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Entries moat be postmarked by Thursday to qualify
for that week'• contest. The prize wiD be awarded
·weekly on the bul1 of m01t wlnnen seleeted correetiy
and In cue of ties, winner wiD be determined by blind
draw. You must be 16 years of ap or older to enter.
Only one entry per person per week.

OXYGEN
INC.

Specialists In:
OXYGEN &amp; RESPIRATORY
EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES
• Locally Owned and Operated
~ 24hr. Emergency Service
• Free Delivery

• Stop By Our Showroom
• Many More Items

. 70 Pine Street • Gallipolis, OH

740- 446-0007

Charlene Hoefllcb/photo

While the Sternwheel Rlverfest doesn't get underway until Thursday evening, by noon Tuesday 13 sternwheelers had
already docked at the Pomeroy levee along with a number of pleasure boats. Several more sternwheelers are expected
in, according to John Musser, Rlverfest chairman.

Chamber hears Council considers revitalization hearing
ments, what they are Association, will apply forJ.
discussion on
expected to cost and how $400,000 in Community
they will be paid for.
Development Block Grant
pandemic flu
MIDDLEPORT
·- I f
The project
outline downtown revitalization
BY BRIAN

Bv

iletatls on Poce AI

Ron's Trophies
414&amp;11CST
WI
untoo, OH·(740)38431158

800-538-7674
'We C. 0. rllectiOi llif T• r Ort•l..,...

INDEX
2 SECI'IONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Annie's Mailbox

Comics

•

Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

Bs
A4
As
B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio V.Uey Publlshin&amp; Co.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WEATHER

Pomeroy
to apply
for Issue
2money
BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

·Page AS
:• Pearl Cushner; ·8'1 · i'
• Doris Eastman
84___,...,_'
•. .
. ~ Henry F. Kiesling, 81
•~ Ronald Shields, 44

12..____________.....:,;.•. .___

segments of the arts are integrated into the lessons. The
grant reaches children of elementary and middle school
age K-8 with a grade 4-8
HOTS program (Higher
Order Thinking Skills) targeted for these grades. Hours
are 3 to 5:30 p.m. Snacks
will be provided free of
charge by the Appalachian
Nutrition Network.
"Character education,
drug and alcohol awareness, ·
life skills, and critical thinking skills are components of
the after-school program,"
said Wolfe.
At Meigs Elementary
Buckley said that for several years the district applied
for a gmnt but this is the

POMEROY -Pandemic
flu and its possibilities were
front and center at the
recent business-minded June
cheon at the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce.
Frank Gorscak, Meigs
County emergency response
coordinator and employee of
the Meigs County Health
Department spoke about the
history, prevention and tactics to deal with a pandemic
flu outbreak. Gorscak said
although there is no way to
say for sure when or where a
pandemic flu might hit, there
are ways to be prepared,
basic
Gorscak
said
hygiene is important and
often why bird flu begins in
Asia where hygiene habits
are different from here in
the United States. Frequent
hand washing, discarding
nasal tissue and the use of
handkerchiefs,
staying
home from work or school
when ill, getting a flu shot
and seeing a doctor when
sick are all simple ways to
help combat a pandemic.
Gorscak said the health
department has tentative
plans to hold flu shot clinics
Plasse see Chamber, AS

funded, Middleport's proposed downtown revitalization project will invest over
$1 million into fa~ade
improvements, new side.
walks and street lighting in
the business district.
Melissa
Zoeller
of
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
Valley
. Regional
Development District conducted a final public hearing on the village 's second
application for Tier II
downtown revitalization at
Monday evening's regular.
meeting of Middleport
Village C-ouncil. She outlined planned improve-

includes fa~ade' · improve- funds,
$391,549
in
ments for 15 participnting Appalachian
Regional
building owners, 2,27- feet Commission · funds, and
of riew sidewalks and curb- $28,000 in CDBG formula
ing from Rutland Street to funds through the Meigs
the "T," and .27 new street- ·County Commissioners, The
1i1lhts in the shopping dis- project budget also includes
tnct. Other cosmetic ele- $2,000 from the village's
ments, such as benches and tree fund, which council
decorative iron work, are approved Monday night,
included in the master . and $31,000 in private donastreetscape plan prepare&lt;!. by tions pledged toward the.
the design firm DLZ. but project through a fundraisare not included in the cost ing effon of the Middleport
estimates for the project.
Development Group.
No villa~e funds have
The application will be
been commttted to the pro- filed early next month, and
ject. The village, through the
Middleport
Community
Please see CoundL AS

Merchants discuss upcoming duck derby
Farmers Bank. He said that
sales are "moving along"
and that adoption certifiPOMEROY- For those cates will remain on sale at
who have not yet "adopted" many downtown businesses
a duck to put into the derby through noon on Saturday.
which will be held at 4 p.m. They will also be available
on
Saturday at
the at the souvenir booth on the
Stemwheel Festival, it's not parking lot all three days of
too late, says George Wright, the Stem wheel Festival.
chairman of the .Pomeroy
The grand prize to go to
Merchants Association's the owner of the duck which
fund raising project.
crosses the finish line first
VVright reponed on duck will be $1 ,000 in Chamber
sales
at
Tuesday's Bucks to be spent at the
Merchants meeting held at business of any Meigs
Bv CHARlENE HOEFUCH

HOEFUCHOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

·'

County
Chamber
of
Commerce member. Other
prizes will be three savings
bonds from banks - · $250
e'ach from Farmers Bank
and the Ohio Valley Bank,
and $100 from Peoples
Bank, along with dozens of
other prizes including tickets to Cedar Point, free rides
on the Hocking Vall ey
Railway, and many merchandise gifts donated by
local business owners.
Please see Derby, AS

POMEROY - Pomeroy
has finished a proposal to
apply for Issue 2 money to
pave several streets in the
village' including all of
Beech Grove Cemeterr,
including · the cemetery s
previously unpaved roads,
Pomeroy Vi11age Council
recently approved the proposal presented by Mayor
JQhn Musser which includes
paving Peacock Street from ·
Butternut Avenue, Butternut
Avenue to High Street on
Lincoln Hill, Ohio to
Riverview Streets,' Lincoln
Drive to the Vaughan residence, from the Vaughan 's
to Lasley Street, portions of
Martin Street. Pleasant ·
Ridge, Spring Avenue to
Rock Street, Chester Road
from the Beacon lo the corporation limit. A ponion of
Lincoln Hill IS being
repaved due to the installation of a new water line.
The total cost of the pro·
ject is $180,000 which
makes the match $49,914.
. Musser estimates $20,873 of
that match will come from
the cemetery fund, $11,389
from the water department
and around $14,000 from
the general fund .•
If Pomeroy receives the
highly competitive grant,
paving could possibly begin
next 'fall.
Also discussed at the
recent council meeting was
the state of high grass and
weeds · in the village.
Councilman Jim Sisson said
he "hated to sound like a
broken record" but something needed to be done
about getting the grass and
weeds cut on village property. He and Councilwoman
Mary McAngus mentioned
spots along Ohio 7A, US
33, the dip in the parkwg
lot, etc. Mu sser said he
agreed and would work on
getting-it taken care of.
Musser said Jeffers
Excavating should start
tearing down condemned
houses in around two weeks
with distress grant money.
Chief Mark E. Proffitt
said his department is
receiving "numerous" com·
plaints about no reduction
in speed sign coming from
Ohio 7 into Union Avenue.
Proffitt also said ·a reduced
speed sign should be plticed
on the Flood Road due to
excessive speeding.
Councilman
George
Stewart
presented
an
Please see Issue 1, AS

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AcROSS THE NATiON w..n-..~~:!!

BYTHEBEND

1Jbe Daily Sentinel

:CommunitY calendar
,r"' ,

BY AMY WESTFELDT
AND SARA KUGLER
ASSOCIATED PflESS WRITER S

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NEW YORK - Victims'
families huddled under
umbrellas Tuesday in a park
to mark the sixth anniver:sary of the Sept. II attacks
in the· first remembrance
ceremony not held at
ground zero, an event that
failed to evoke the same
emotions as the hallowed
·ground ?f the World Trade
Center Site.
"I guess they mean well.
but I really wasn't happy,"
said Sal Romagnolo, whose
son, Joseph Romagnolo,
worked in the trade center's
north tower. "I never got my
son back. That's the only
place we have."
"I get nothing out of this
park."

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Around the country,
Americans went through
familiar mourning rituals as
they looked back on the day
·when terrorists hijacked
·four jetliners and killed
nearly 3,000 people.
President Bush attended
ceremonies at .the White
House and the Pentagon, and
the 40 passengers and crew
·members who died when a
flight , crashed into a
Pennsylvania field were honored as "citizen soldiers."
The Manhattan ceremonies were held largely in
a public pari&lt;: because of
rebuilding at ground zero.
First responders, volunteers
and firefighters who helped
rescue New Yorkers from
the collapsing twin towers
read the names of the city's
2,750 victims - a list that
grew by one with the addition of a woman who died
of lung disease in 2002.. ·
Several first responders
referred to the illnesses and
deaths of their · colleagues
that they blame on exposure
to toxic dust.
"I want to acknowledge
those lost post,9/ll as a

p.m. All Master Masons
mvited. Refreshments;
MIDDLEPORT
Wednesday, Sept. 12 ·
Eleanor
Circle IU nited
REEDSVILLE - Olive Methodist Women
of Heath
Township Trustees meet in
Church,
will
meet
at
7 p.m.
regular session, 7:30 p.m., at the church. Devotions
by
·Olive Township Garage.
by
Nancy
Cale,
program
, POMEROY Meigs
Mary Byer-Hill and Susan
County Board of Health, 5 Eason,
hostesses , Cale,
p.m., health department, Mary Price,
and Billie J o
reading of proposed Meigs
KraWSCZYJl.
C()unty General Health
RACINE - Sonshine
t&gt;istrict Sewage Treatment
Circle,
7 p.m., Bethany
System Rules, public com- United Methodist
Church
~ent accepted.
fellowship hall.
1
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POMEROY- Alpha Iota
~ Church
Chapter will meet at II :30
'a.m. at Pomeroy United
:
Friday, Sept. 14
Methodist Church.
· ~ LONG · BOTIOM
,
TUPPERS PLAINS .Gospel sing at the Faith'Full VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m.
Gospel church, State Route Meal served at 6:30 p.m. ·
124, Long Bottom will be
SYRACUSE
beld at 7 p.m. Special guests Wildwood Garden Club,
will be Jim Blair and the 6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Pospel Aires.
Community
Center.
'
Saturday, Sept. 15
Membeq; to take dish for
: DEXTER -· Old Dexter potluck and pay dues.
Church
Homecoming, ·Programs for coming year
imon, potluck dinner fol- will be finalized.
lowed by fellowship,
RACINE - Ohio River
linging• at I :30 p.m. with Producers (Southern FFA
group Mercy.
alumni), regular meeting, 7
'
Swiday, Sept. 16
p.m., Southern Vo-Ag room.
,
TUPP~RS
PLAINS
Satu~ay,Sept.15
. j
.)
,Blessing of the Children,
POMEROY - Big Bend
'
}0 a.m., St. Paul United · Farm Antiques Club antique
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~ethodist Church. Youth tractor pull, I p.m., Me1gs
'fl'ill conduct a program with County Fairgrounds. Free
,
Pastor Jim Corbitt offering admission for spectators.
blessing over all children in Food provided by Scipio
.
attendance. VISual presenta- Volunteer F1re Department.
tion honoring children of For· more information call
the church and the sum- · 742-3020.
1
JDer's
Vacation Bible
SALEM CENTER . l'
School program.
Star Grange #778 and Star
MIDDLEPORT - Ash Junior Grange #878 will
Street Church, 7 p.m., Jerry · host their annual hay ride
Frederick to preach.
and wiener roast at 6:30
MIDDLEPORT
p.m. at the Grange· Hall.
Revival services at the Public invited.
Middleport First Baptist
Monday Sept.17
Church, 7 p.m. each
ATHENS - Southeast
evening Sept. 17-22. Rev. Ohio Woodland Interest
Randy Parsons to preach Group,: 7 p.mcat the Athens
l7th, 18th and 19th; Rev. County Extension office.
1ason Simpkins to preach, Speaker, Dr. Kim Brown,
20th, 21st a11d 22nd. Environmental and Plant
Spej:ial singing every night. Biology Department, Ohio
Public in"ited.
University. Public invited,
. POMEROY -Dr. Hoyt no charge.
.
.w. Allen, Jr., executive
Thursday, Sept. 20
:~tor KYOWVA preachRACINE
- Regular
·lirtg at 10:30 a.m., Pomeroy meeting of Pomeroy/Racine
·Church o£ Christ, present- Lodge #164, 7:30pm.
:ing KYOWVA program Officers anticipate discus:during Bible School at 9:30 sion on dues costs for the
;a.m.
upcoming year. All mem·. PORTLAND - Hazel bers are encouraged to
Church attend. Those with examina:community
:Homecoming,
located tions that need to be
. ;between Portland and Long returned in any degree may
·l3ottom, 9:30 a.m., Sunday do so at this meeting.
:school, I p.m., covered dish Anyone with questions con:dinner, speaker Leonard tact lodge officer.
;Kesscll, singer Shirley Kay.

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BY JOHN RABY
AND

TOM BREEN

ASSOCIATED PflESS WRITERS

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BIG CREEK, W.Va. - In
· a forlorn part of Logan
County, where the sca\{ered
homes are marked by "No
Trespa~sing" signs, an old
shed is connected to a mobile
home by an extension cord.
For more than a week,
police said this shed became
a hellish prison for 20-yearold Megan Williams, who
·was held 'captive, beaten,
stabbed, humiliated and
sexually assaulted.
The Charleston woman
was forced to eat rat and
dog feces and drink from
the toilet. She was doused
with hot water, choked with
a cable cord, stabbed in the
leg, her hair cut and pulled.
At one point, one of her
captors. cut her ankle with a
knife and used the N-word
in telling the woman she
was victimized because she
is black.
"I don't understand a
human being doing another
human being the way they
diJ my daughter," her mother, Carmen Williams, said
Tuesday from her daughter's room at Charleston
Area Medical Center
General Hospital. "I didn't
know there were people like
that out here."
The Associated Press generally does not identify suspected victims of sexual
assault, but Williams and
her mother agreed to release
her name.
Her
ordeal
epded
. Saturday when she.managed
: to limp toward the front
door of the trailer where
Logan County Sheriff's
deputies had gone to investigate an anonymous tip.
With her arms stretched
out in front of her, Williams
asked deputies, "Help me."
Tuesday night, she was
recovering in a hospital bed,
her right arm in a cast.
· . Logan County Chief
: Deputy V. K. Dingess said
Williams' ·captors kept her
inside the shed during part
of her captivity.
Six people, all white,
including a mother and son
and a mother and daughter,
were arrested in connection
: with the alleged abduction

lP photo ·

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Carmen Williams saitl
of the woman, who is black.
An FBI spokesman in doctors told her daughter
Pittsburgh, Bill Crowley, she may be well enough to
confirmed that the agency is leave the hospital within a
looking into possible civil few days. although a nurse
said the young woman's
rights violations.
Authorities said Tuesday condition was listed as
they are investigating the "under evaluation."
"I just want my daughter
possibility that she was
. lured by a man she met on to be well .and recover,"
the Internet, but Carmen Carmen Williams said. "I
Williams insisted that was- know the Lord can do anyn't the case. "This wasn't · thing."
Frankie Brewster, 49,
from the Internet," she said.
Authorities were still who owns the mobile home,
looking for two people they is charged with kidnapping,
suspect drove the woman to sexual assault, malicious
the house where she was . wounding and jliving false
abused, Dingess said.
information dunng a felony
The crime has stunned peo- investigation.
ple in the southern coalfields.
She was released from
"This is awful," said prison in September 2000
Cabin Whilt, who has raised after serving five years for
five thildren in Big Creek voluntary manslaughter artd
and was trimming his lawn wanton endangerment in the
on Tuesday. "You don't death of 84-year-old Polly
expect to hear anything like Ferrell, according to court
that."
records.
Her son , Bobby R.
Kara Robinette, who
works at a local gas station, Brewster, 24, also of Big
regularly saw the six people Creek, is charged with kidwho were arrested.
napping, sexual assault,
"I knew some of them mahcious wounding and
have a reputation, but 1 assault during the commisnever thought they were sion of a felony.
Karen Burton, 46, of
capable of that," she said. "1
didn't believe it. I was Chapmanville, is charged
creeped out because I see with malicious wounding,
battery and assault during
those people every day."
The case is "something that the commission of a felony.
Her daughter, Alisha
would have come out of a
h~rror
movie," Logan Burton, 23, of Chapmanville,
County Sheriff W.E. Hunter and George!&gt;,.. Messer, 27, of
said. "I've been in law Chapmanville, are charged
enforcement for 30 years and with assault during the comI've never encountered any- mission of a felony and batthing like this before. Never." tery.

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Special advertising page found only in
the

l

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

i

~aiHpolis latlp Utribune

~otnt ~leasant l\egtster
This is a special page which will be published September
28th. Do you know how many phone calls the Area
Chamber ·of Commerce, as well
as the newspapers and
•
other businesses receive asking for the name of a
plumber, contractor, carpet cleaner, car repair shop, etc.
This special section will be easier to use than a regular
directory and cards will be arranged by category.
We will be glad to use the information on your business
card or ·we can create one for you.
Think how long it would take you to hand out 14,000
business cards. We can do it in just ONE DAY. All you
need to do is call740-992-2155
Ask for Dave or Brenda.
Deadline will be July 18th

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Thursday, Sept. 13
ALBANY- Freda Smith
:will celebrate her 83rd
:birthday Sept. 13. Card may
:be sent to her at 42919
·School Lot Road, Albany,
:ohio 45710.
1\Jesday, Sept: 18
. POMEROY -· Loretta
:Magee will observe her
:92nd birthday on Tuesday,
:Sept. 18. Cards may be sent
·to her at the Rock Springs
:Rehabilitation
Center,
:Pomeroy.
.'

Clubs and
organizations
.
Thursday, Sept. 13
· CHESTER- Shade River
.Lodge 453 will meet at 7:30

'

POMEROY Meigs local distribution site. Foods
County and• nine other provided may include cereal,
Southeastern Ohio counties pasta, rice, evaporated/nonover (iO years of age can fat dry milk, cheese, canned
now apply for food products meat or poultry, peanut butthrough the Commodiiy ter, canned fruit, canned veg·
Supplemental Food pro- etables, fruit juice and dry
gram of the Hockint, beans.
Athens, Perry Community
Applicants must be 60
years of age or older (with an
Action Agency.
This is a federal USDA mcome at or below BO perfood and nutrition program cent of the federal income
serving nutritionally at-risk, guidelines. A household of
income-eligible senior citi- one can earn up to $1,107
zens. Once a month, partici- per month, while a two-perp;mts receive their food at a son household can earn up to

POMEROY - Kaylee
She noted that she was a
Kennedy of Meigs High resident of Hayes City and
School reported on her was appointed to the
week at Buckeye Girls State office of city auditor. She
during a recent meeting of told the group how interthe Ladies Auxiliary of esting it was to see how
city government works.
Drew Webster Post 39.

Reunions

Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kothy MilcheU arul
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast. net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190; Chieago, JL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox, "'
arul reallfeatures by other
Creators Syrulieote writln
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page aJ www.cnators.com.

$1,484 per month. For each
additional family member,
add $377. Afplicants must
provide proo of age, proof
of income and proof of residence.
Proof of income is estab.lished by recent pay stubs,
W-2 forms, copies of Social
Security award letters,
checks, or bank statements
in the case of direct deposit.
Proof of residence is established by recent utility bills,
driver's license, state LD,
card or other proof that

shows the applicant's current address.
Applicants must be an
Ohio resident and reside in
one of the counties this
agency currently serves.
Counbes served are Athens,
Gallia, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, ·Meigs, Morgan,
Perry,
·Vinton,
and
Washington.
For more infomwtion or
an application, contact
Carla Saum a/ 1-800-3856813 Ext. 241 or e-mail carlasaum@seorfc.com.

15
RACINE - 40th Samuel
Allen
Eblin
Family
Reunion, 4 p.m., Star Mill
Park, meat provided, bring ·
covered dish, beverage and
table service, also bring
items for auction.
POMEROY - Veterans
Memorial Hospital employees reunion, ·1 to 5 p.m. at
the Senior Citizens Center.
Sandwiches and beverages
provided. Take finger food
along with photos , and
momentos from the days of
employment.
Sunday,Sept.16
RACINE - The Oscar
Reed I Charles Hysell
Reunion, I p.m., Star Mill
Park, bring covered dish
and dessert, a white elephant auction will be held.

She was in the Buckeye
Girls State choir.
She thanked the Auxiliary
for the opportunity to go to
Girls State. The other students selected to attend
were unable to attend the

meeting to report on their
activities. .
Refreshments
were
served to the Auxiliary
members and guests, Janet
Williamson and Sue
Tubbs.

MCCI plans events for breast cancer month

Satu~ay, Sept.

POMEROY - In honor
of Breast Cancer Awareness
month the Meigs County
Cancer Initiative (MCCI) is
planning a fun day Oct. 20
from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
It will be called "Every
Woman Counts" and will be
held at the Mark Porter OM
Supercenter in Pomeroy. It
is free for all Meigs County
women and the only criteria
to meet is that they are residents of Meigs County.
Meigs County girls 12 and
over if accompanied by a
parent may also be tested.
Free health screenings
will be conducted by Holzer
'Medical Center's Wellness
Department, .which includes
blood pressure, bone densi•

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respond to "A Friend," who
said "Irma" had a filthy
kitchen and bathroom.
It was only when I visited
my mother's home and
found the same thing that I
realized Mom's vision was
worse than we realized. She
could not see the details of
what needed to be cleaned.
We got a cleaning lady and
took Mom to the ophthalmologist.
Subsequent
cataract surgery corrected
the vision problem, but
Mom loved the . cleaning
lady and kept her! - G•. .
Dear G.: You may be nght
about Irma's vision, and we
hope her friend is willing to
find out if this could be the
cause of the problem.

Auxiliary members hear girl state report

d
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e1ucatlon
1 d
C ass S ate

: TUPPERS PLAINS and Connie Rankin, comPledges to missions and the munications.
United
Methodist
A conference to be held at
Children's Home were The
Plains
United
given at a recent meetin~ of Methodist Church
as
the Tuppers Plains Umted announced for Sept. 22, as
Methodist Church held at was the Sept. 23- Blessing of
the church.
the Children Sunday at the
· Joanna Weaver, president, · churcli to be directed by
gave a prayer and conduct· Pastor Jim Corbett. A birthed the meeting which daY. card was signed for
opened with ·a program W~ll Dent of Camon whose
"Who is my Neighbor?" by · name was selected from the
Anna Rice. Also read was prayer calendar book.
.an article on civil and politThe group voted on who
ical· ri'ghts from Response is to receive the 2007 appremagazme
by
Kim ciation pin. The meeting
was closed with prayer and
Householder.
New officers elected were the group enjoyed refreshWeaver, president; Barb ments. Attending were
Roush, vice president; Joanna Weaver,
Barb
Sharon Louks, secretary; Roush, Teresa Lemons,
'Betty Chevalier, treasurer; Terri Soulsby, Connie and
:Judy Kennedy, nomina- Mary
Rankin,
Kim
·lions; Anna Rice, program Householder, Barb Roush,
:resources; Terri Soulsby, ' Anna Rice, Betty Chevilier,
spiritual gcowth ; Teresa Judy Kennedy, and two new
Lemons, social action; Kim members, Kas Seckman and
Householder, education; Lynda Fryar.
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for 40 years to a man most
people think is a saint.• He
IS gooP, to me, prov1des
well, helps around the
house, and is kind and considerate: His children and
grandchildren love him.
So what is my problem?
He looks at porn on the computer on a regular basis. I
suspect he is gratifying himself watching these computer
sluts. This ties my stomach in
a knot. 1 can't eat. I can't
sleep. I cry myself to sleep. If
I bnng it up, he will deny it
and just be more devious.
Is it adultery when a man
watches porn 1 I feel like he
is cheating on me. Am 1
overreacting?- Depressed
Dear Depressed: A little.
Like it or not, most men
look at porn. It has nothing
to do with you. It is cheating
if he is contacting these
women or engaging in
cyber sex. It's a problem if
it becomes an addiction or
porn replaces intimacy with
you. Some women actually
watch porn with their husbands and find it stimulat·
ing. Only you can decide
how much of a problem this
is, and after 40 years, how
tolerant you are going to be.
Dear Annie: 1'd like to

Food program offered to seniors

POMEROY - An Ohio
Hunter Education Class will
be held Oct. 1-3,6-9 p.m.
and Oct. 6, 9 a.m. to noon at
the Pomeroy Gun Club on
Pomeroy Pike.
The
Ohio
·Hunter
Education course includes
10 hours of instruction in
hunter ethics and responsibility. frrearms, archery, first
aid and wildlife management and biology. Students
must attend all sessions and·
pass a 100-q'uestion examination. Classes are free and
all materials and manuals
are provided at no cost.
Pre-registration
• is
required and class size is
limited to· 40 students. To
register contact the Meigs
Soil and Water Const~~Vation
District at (740) 992-4282.
• #

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. but he accuses me of picking on his kids, saying I
don't love them. I really like
his kids, but I won't consider moving .in permanently,
knowing this would be · a
source of conLention.
Scott wants' me to cook
and clean, but I have no say
in how the house is run.
When his teenage son brings
his ~irlfriends over,! have to
go mto another room. I feel
like a total outsider. I understand his children are accustomed to having the entire
house to themselves, but I
don't want to live this way.,
Any suggestions? - Not
Sure.in the Midwest
Dear Not Sure: Issues
with stepchildren ·c3J1 be difficult and, without Scott's
cooperation, can wreck the
relationship. Scott must
understand tllat a lack of dis·
cipline is a disservice to his
children, and the two of you
must present a united front,
with Scott taking the lead. If
he won't do this, you can try
family counseling or you
can wait until the children
are out of the house before
you marry. Or, of course,
you can just walk away.
Dear Annie: My heart is
aching. I have been married

· Thppers Plains UMW meet Hunter

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•

Dear Annie: I am dating
"s'cott," a wonderful man.
We are both divorced and
have children from our previous marriages. Scott's two
adolescent children live
with him. My only child is
on her own. Scott and I
want to marry, and his two
children approve . But I
sometimes spend weekends
at his place and have
become concerned. He
seems to have no rules.
Scott's bedroom is next to
the family room, and his kids
stay there way past 11 p.m.
most nights. Scott penodically tells them they ought to
go to bed. but they ignore
him, keep the TV blaring
and trash the area with food
and paper cups. Scott also
leaves the door ' to his room
open until they decide to go
to bed. M3J!y times, we have
to get up early for work, yet
he says nothing to them
about the noise. By the time
they go to sleep. I'm too
exhausted for intllnacy.
This entire arrangement
makes me angry. 1 have told
Scott if we marry, there will
have to be some changes,

events .·

Birthdays

. t· card''
Pictured on Tuesday is the mobile home, lett, and tool shed
at Big Creek, W.Va., where authorities say 20.year-old
Charleston, W.Va., resident Megan Williams, a black woman,
was allegedly abducted, held captive for at least a week and
tortured by six white individuals from Logan County, W.Va.

KATMY Mm:HBL
AND M.uteY 5ucwl

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A vision of horror in W.Va. torture case

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Stepchildren issue clouds relationship

Public meetings

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Wednesday, September 12, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

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the , time, but today was, 1 Bloombetg, who has
guess,: worse knowing presided over each of the
events,
we' re not going to be back anni verstiry
described Sept. 11 , 2001 , as
down tliere.
Gabler said he touched "the day that tore across our
the ground, which he fears history and our hearts. We
will not be available to come together again as
him next year as construe· New Yorkers and as
lion goes on. "So today I Americans to share a loss
kissed my hand and I that can~ t be measured."
As in years' past, ·people
kissed the ground - I'm
clutched framed photos of
still kissing him."
Charlene Morgen, whose their lost loved ones, raising
cousin, Debora Maldonado, them toward ~ sky, or held
worked at the Marsh &amp; multicolored. bunches· of
McLennan financial ser- flowers against their chests.
vices firm, said the ceremo- . Similar scenes played out
, ny was different at the park at other anniversary ceremonies.
instead of the site.
"As American citizens
''The crowd was smaller,
we're
all looking at our
it rained for the first tjmeheroes,"'
said Kay Roy,
it was almost like sayin~
goodbye. This is the end, ' whose sister Colleen Fraser,
over
died · the
Morgen said.
Former Mayor Rudy
Giuliani returned to ground
zero . Tuesday, despite
objections by several viclPpiiGto tims' families and fireVirginia Fraser, lett, walks with · husband Bruce Fraser, and sister-in-law Kay Roy, of fighters who said he should
Cleveland, as family and friends ot the passengers and crew of United Flight 93 visit the not speak at the remem·
crash site after a memorial service at the nearby . Flight 93 Natlo,nal Memorial In brance because he is ruhShanksviUe, Pa. on Tuesday, the sixth anniversary of the terrorist attacks.
ning
'for
president.
Democratic presidential
result of answering the call, hour and fewer · than 60 threatened to boycott the ~opeful Hillary Rodham
including police officer remained at the end. The ceremony and hold their Cbnton attend~Jd th!l .cereNYPD James Zadroga," city estimated 3,500 .family own remembrance if they mony, but &lt;;lid not speak.
But Giuliani was greeted
said volunteer ambulance members and mourners were .n&lt;it granted access. The
with
a smattering of
turned
ou·
t
,
down
from
city
and
the
Port
Authority
of
worker- Reggie Cervantesapplause
after his brief
Miller. Zadroga, 34, died 4,700 attendees at the fifth New. York and New Jersey
remarks,
which
. followed
more than a year ago of res- anniversary. Some might - which owns the trade
the
third
,
o
f
the
traditional
piratory illness after spend- have been kept away by center site - allowed rela·
mg hundreds of hours work- rain, a sharp (!Ontrast fro111 tives to descend a ramp to· four . moments of 'silence:.
ing to clean up ground zero. the picture-perfect weather lay flowers inside a reflect- one ' each to IJUII'k the times
ing pool with two 6-foot out· when the two planes hit the .
Victims' spouses, chil- six years ago.
Ground zero "was more lines of the towers insidj:, buildings, and two more for
dren, siblings and parents
had read names before, sacred and sad," said and touch the .ground where when each tower fell.
Gililiani later descended
often breaking down with Clarence White, whose the trade center' once stood.
·to
tlle 'trade center site, and
. Howard : Gabler, · who
heartrending messages to ;brother was killed at the
man yelled "Scum!
one
their loved ones and blow- trade center. At the park, he worked on' the 47th floor of
ing kisses to the sky. At said, "the meaning wasn't the trade center's north Scum!" at him. Another
tower and escaped on the woman from the family line
Zuccotti Park, where . the as close."
day
of the attack; came to said she biam!ld Gi ulia)li
The city moved the C!lfesounds of trucks and buses
sometimes drown out mony this year because of mourn his son, Fredric, who for speeding up the search
speakers, fewer tears were progressing construction at worked on the I 04th floor for victims' remains.
shed and most readers did · the site, where several idle · of the same tower. He has "Because of Giuliani, we
never .had closure," said
not speak at length - even cranes overlooked a partial- no remains of 1\is son.
"This is where he died Sabrina Rivera. Giuliani
when mentioning siblings ly built transit hub, 1,776or children who were killed. foot office tower and Sept. and we have nothing else," left the 11fea without speak· ·
G!lbler · said. "It's very ing to reporters:.
Hundreds streamed out of II memorial.
Mayor
Michael
But family members had painful, it's very painful all
the ceremony after about an

PageA3

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ty, non-fasting blood sugar
and cholesterol testing. Free
private clinical breast exams
will be offered by the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care.
There will be education on
breast health, smoking cessation, skin care, relaxation,
and nutrition. There will be
a special basket drawing for
those getting clinical breast
exams, a Chamber Bucks
drawing held for breast cancer survivors in attendance
and door prizes will be

given awar, every half hour. are asked to have a window
WMPO will be doing a live · display i.n October related to
broadcast and for every Breast C,ancer Awareness.
vehicle sold that day. Mark These displays will be
Porter will donate $25 to the · judged and the winners will
Meigs County Cancer be announced on "Every
Initiative.
Woman Counts Day."
Screenings will be a first
Donations of door prizes
come first serve basis so no are welcome. MCCI is a not
appointments are needed for profit. 50lc3 organizaand every lady attending tion and monies donated
will receive a gift. All stay in Meigs County. Those
attending are encouraged to with questions can contact
wear pink.
Carol Adams, 992-2311 or
Me1gs County Businesses Courtney Sim 992-6626.

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·The Daily Sentinel

AcROSS THE NATiON w..n-..~~:!!

BYTHEBEND

1Jbe Daily Sentinel

:CommunitY calendar
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BY AMY WESTFELDT
AND SARA KUGLER
ASSOCIATED PflESS WRITER S

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NEW YORK - Victims'
families huddled under
umbrellas Tuesday in a park
to mark the sixth anniver:sary of the Sept. II attacks
in the· first remembrance
ceremony not held at
ground zero, an event that
failed to evoke the same
emotions as the hallowed
·ground ?f the World Trade
Center Site.
"I guess they mean well.
but I really wasn't happy,"
said Sal Romagnolo, whose
son, Joseph Romagnolo,
worked in the trade center's
north tower. "I never got my
son back. That's the only
place we have."
"I get nothing out of this
park."

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Around the country,
Americans went through
familiar mourning rituals as
they looked back on the day
·when terrorists hijacked
·four jetliners and killed
nearly 3,000 people.
President Bush attended
ceremonies at .the White
House and the Pentagon, and
the 40 passengers and crew
·members who died when a
flight , crashed into a
Pennsylvania field were honored as "citizen soldiers."
The Manhattan ceremonies were held largely in
a public pari&lt;: because of
rebuilding at ground zero.
First responders, volunteers
and firefighters who helped
rescue New Yorkers from
the collapsing twin towers
read the names of the city's
2,750 victims - a list that
grew by one with the addition of a woman who died
of lung disease in 2002.. ·
Several first responders
referred to the illnesses and
deaths of their · colleagues
that they blame on exposure
to toxic dust.
"I want to acknowledge
those lost post,9/ll as a

p.m. All Master Masons
mvited. Refreshments;
MIDDLEPORT
Wednesday, Sept. 12 ·
Eleanor
Circle IU nited
REEDSVILLE - Olive Methodist Women
of Heath
Township Trustees meet in
Church,
will
meet
at
7 p.m.
regular session, 7:30 p.m., at the church. Devotions
by
·Olive Township Garage.
by
Nancy
Cale,
program
, POMEROY Meigs
Mary Byer-Hill and Susan
County Board of Health, 5 Eason,
hostesses , Cale,
p.m., health department, Mary Price,
and Billie J o
reading of proposed Meigs
KraWSCZYJl.
C()unty General Health
RACINE - Sonshine
t&gt;istrict Sewage Treatment
Circle,
7 p.m., Bethany
System Rules, public com- United Methodist
Church
~ent accepted.
fellowship hall.
1
'
POMEROY- Alpha Iota
~ Church
Chapter will meet at II :30
'a.m. at Pomeroy United
:
Friday, Sept. 14
Methodist Church.
· ~ LONG · BOTIOM
,
TUPPERS PLAINS .Gospel sing at the Faith'Full VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m.
Gospel church, State Route Meal served at 6:30 p.m. ·
124, Long Bottom will be
SYRACUSE
beld at 7 p.m. Special guests Wildwood Garden Club,
will be Jim Blair and the 6:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Pospel Aires.
Community
Center.
'
Saturday, Sept. 15
Membeq; to take dish for
: DEXTER -· Old Dexter potluck and pay dues.
Church
Homecoming, ·Programs for coming year
imon, potluck dinner fol- will be finalized.
lowed by fellowship,
RACINE - Ohio River
linging• at I :30 p.m. with Producers (Southern FFA
group Mercy.
alumni), regular meeting, 7
'
Swiday, Sept. 16
p.m., Southern Vo-Ag room.
,
TUPP~RS
PLAINS
Satu~ay,Sept.15
. j
.)
,Blessing of the Children,
POMEROY - Big Bend
'
}0 a.m., St. Paul United · Farm Antiques Club antique
'
1
~ethodist Church. Youth tractor pull, I p.m., Me1gs
'fl'ill conduct a program with County Fairgrounds. Free
,
Pastor Jim Corbitt offering admission for spectators.
blessing over all children in Food provided by Scipio
.
attendance. VISual presenta- Volunteer F1re Department.
tion honoring children of For· more information call
the church and the sum- · 742-3020.
1
JDer's
Vacation Bible
SALEM CENTER . l'
School program.
Star Grange #778 and Star
MIDDLEPORT - Ash Junior Grange #878 will
Street Church, 7 p.m., Jerry · host their annual hay ride
Frederick to preach.
and wiener roast at 6:30
MIDDLEPORT
p.m. at the Grange· Hall.
Revival services at the Public invited.
Middleport First Baptist
Monday Sept.17
Church, 7 p.m. each
ATHENS - Southeast
evening Sept. 17-22. Rev. Ohio Woodland Interest
Randy Parsons to preach Group,: 7 p.mcat the Athens
l7th, 18th and 19th; Rev. County Extension office.
1ason Simpkins to preach, Speaker, Dr. Kim Brown,
20th, 21st a11d 22nd. Environmental and Plant
Spej:ial singing every night. Biology Department, Ohio
Public in"ited.
University. Public invited,
. POMEROY -Dr. Hoyt no charge.
.
.w. Allen, Jr., executive
Thursday, Sept. 20
:~tor KYOWVA preachRACINE
- Regular
·lirtg at 10:30 a.m., Pomeroy meeting of Pomeroy/Racine
·Church o£ Christ, present- Lodge #164, 7:30pm.
:ing KYOWVA program Officers anticipate discus:during Bible School at 9:30 sion on dues costs for the
;a.m.
upcoming year. All mem·. PORTLAND - Hazel bers are encouraged to
Church attend. Those with examina:community
:Homecoming,
located tions that need to be
. ;between Portland and Long returned in any degree may
·l3ottom, 9:30 a.m., Sunday do so at this meeting.
:school, I p.m., covered dish Anyone with questions con:dinner, speaker Leonard tact lodge officer.
;Kesscll, singer Shirley Kay.

.

BY JOHN RABY
AND

TOM BREEN

ASSOCIATED PflESS WRITERS

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BIG CREEK, W.Va. - In
· a forlorn part of Logan
County, where the sca\{ered
homes are marked by "No
Trespa~sing" signs, an old
shed is connected to a mobile
home by an extension cord.
For more than a week,
police said this shed became
a hellish prison for 20-yearold Megan Williams, who
·was held 'captive, beaten,
stabbed, humiliated and
sexually assaulted.
The Charleston woman
was forced to eat rat and
dog feces and drink from
the toilet. She was doused
with hot water, choked with
a cable cord, stabbed in the
leg, her hair cut and pulled.
At one point, one of her
captors. cut her ankle with a
knife and used the N-word
in telling the woman she
was victimized because she
is black.
"I don't understand a
human being doing another
human being the way they
diJ my daughter," her mother, Carmen Williams, said
Tuesday from her daughter's room at Charleston
Area Medical Center
General Hospital. "I didn't
know there were people like
that out here."
The Associated Press generally does not identify suspected victims of sexual
assault, but Williams and
her mother agreed to release
her name.
Her
ordeal
epded
. Saturday when she.managed
: to limp toward the front
door of the trailer where
Logan County Sheriff's
deputies had gone to investigate an anonymous tip.
With her arms stretched
out in front of her, Williams
asked deputies, "Help me."
Tuesday night, she was
recovering in a hospital bed,
her right arm in a cast.
· . Logan County Chief
: Deputy V. K. Dingess said
Williams' ·captors kept her
inside the shed during part
of her captivity.
Six people, all white,
including a mother and son
and a mother and daughter,
were arrested in connection
: with the alleged abduction

lP photo ·

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Carmen Williams saitl
of the woman, who is black.
An FBI spokesman in doctors told her daughter
Pittsburgh, Bill Crowley, she may be well enough to
confirmed that the agency is leave the hospital within a
looking into possible civil few days. although a nurse
said the young woman's
rights violations.
Authorities said Tuesday condition was listed as
they are investigating the "under evaluation."
"I just want my daughter
possibility that she was
. lured by a man she met on to be well .and recover,"
the Internet, but Carmen Carmen Williams said. "I
Williams insisted that was- know the Lord can do anyn't the case. "This wasn't · thing."
Frankie Brewster, 49,
from the Internet," she said.
Authorities were still who owns the mobile home,
looking for two people they is charged with kidnapping,
suspect drove the woman to sexual assault, malicious
the house where she was . wounding and jliving false
abused, Dingess said.
information dunng a felony
The crime has stunned peo- investigation.
ple in the southern coalfields.
She was released from
"This is awful," said prison in September 2000
Cabin Whilt, who has raised after serving five years for
five thildren in Big Creek voluntary manslaughter artd
and was trimming his lawn wanton endangerment in the
on Tuesday. "You don't death of 84-year-old Polly
expect to hear anything like Ferrell, according to court
that."
records.
Her son , Bobby R.
Kara Robinette, who
works at a local gas station, Brewster, 24, also of Big
regularly saw the six people Creek, is charged with kidwho were arrested.
napping, sexual assault,
"I knew some of them mahcious wounding and
have a reputation, but 1 assault during the commisnever thought they were sion of a felony.
Karen Burton, 46, of
capable of that," she said. "1
didn't believe it. I was Chapmanville, is charged
creeped out because I see with malicious wounding,
battery and assault during
those people every day."
The case is "something that the commission of a felony.
Her daughter, Alisha
would have come out of a
h~rror
movie," Logan Burton, 23, of Chapmanville,
County Sheriff W.E. Hunter and George!&gt;,.. Messer, 27, of
said. "I've been in law Chapmanville, are charged
enforcement for 30 years and with assault during the comI've never encountered any- mission of a felony and batthing like this before. Never." tery.

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Special advertising page found only in
the

l

Pomeroy Daily Sentinel

i

~aiHpolis latlp Utribune

~otnt ~leasant l\egtster
This is a special page which will be published September
28th. Do you know how many phone calls the Area
Chamber ·of Commerce, as well
as the newspapers and
•
other businesses receive asking for the name of a
plumber, contractor, carpet cleaner, car repair shop, etc.
This special section will be easier to use than a regular
directory and cards will be arranged by category.
We will be glad to use the information on your business
card or ·we can create one for you.
Think how long it would take you to hand out 14,000
business cards. We can do it in just ONE DAY. All you
need to do is call740-992-2155
Ask for Dave or Brenda.
Deadline will be July 18th

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Thursday, Sept. 13
ALBANY- Freda Smith
:will celebrate her 83rd
:birthday Sept. 13. Card may
:be sent to her at 42919
·School Lot Road, Albany,
:ohio 45710.
1\Jesday, Sept: 18
. POMEROY -· Loretta
:Magee will observe her
:92nd birthday on Tuesday,
:Sept. 18. Cards may be sent
·to her at the Rock Springs
:Rehabilitation
Center,
:Pomeroy.
.'

Clubs and
organizations
.
Thursday, Sept. 13
· CHESTER- Shade River
.Lodge 453 will meet at 7:30

'

POMEROY Meigs local distribution site. Foods
County and• nine other provided may include cereal,
Southeastern Ohio counties pasta, rice, evaporated/nonover (iO years of age can fat dry milk, cheese, canned
now apply for food products meat or poultry, peanut butthrough the Commodiiy ter, canned fruit, canned veg·
Supplemental Food pro- etables, fruit juice and dry
gram of the Hockint, beans.
Athens, Perry Community
Applicants must be 60
years of age or older (with an
Action Agency.
This is a federal USDA mcome at or below BO perfood and nutrition program cent of the federal income
serving nutritionally at-risk, guidelines. A household of
income-eligible senior citi- one can earn up to $1,107
zens. Once a month, partici- per month, while a two-perp;mts receive their food at a son household can earn up to

POMEROY - Kaylee
She noted that she was a
Kennedy of Meigs High resident of Hayes City and
School reported on her was appointed to the
week at Buckeye Girls State office of city auditor. She
during a recent meeting of told the group how interthe Ladies Auxiliary of esting it was to see how
city government works.
Drew Webster Post 39.

Reunions

Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kothy MilcheU arul
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast. net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190; Chieago, JL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox, "'
arul reallfeatures by other
Creators Syrulieote writln
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page aJ www.cnators.com.

$1,484 per month. For each
additional family member,
add $377. Afplicants must
provide proo of age, proof
of income and proof of residence.
Proof of income is estab.lished by recent pay stubs,
W-2 forms, copies of Social
Security award letters,
checks, or bank statements
in the case of direct deposit.
Proof of residence is established by recent utility bills,
driver's license, state LD,
card or other proof that

shows the applicant's current address.
Applicants must be an
Ohio resident and reside in
one of the counties this
agency currently serves.
Counbes served are Athens,
Gallia, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, ·Meigs, Morgan,
Perry,
·Vinton,
and
Washington.
For more infomwtion or
an application, contact
Carla Saum a/ 1-800-3856813 Ext. 241 or e-mail carlasaum@seorfc.com.

15
RACINE - 40th Samuel
Allen
Eblin
Family
Reunion, 4 p.m., Star Mill
Park, meat provided, bring ·
covered dish, beverage and
table service, also bring
items for auction.
POMEROY - Veterans
Memorial Hospital employees reunion, ·1 to 5 p.m. at
the Senior Citizens Center.
Sandwiches and beverages
provided. Take finger food
along with photos , and
momentos from the days of
employment.
Sunday,Sept.16
RACINE - The Oscar
Reed I Charles Hysell
Reunion, I p.m., Star Mill
Park, bring covered dish
and dessert, a white elephant auction will be held.

She was in the Buckeye
Girls State choir.
She thanked the Auxiliary
for the opportunity to go to
Girls State. The other students selected to attend
were unable to attend the

meeting to report on their
activities. .
Refreshments
were
served to the Auxiliary
members and guests, Janet
Williamson and Sue
Tubbs.

MCCI plans events for breast cancer month

Satu~ay, Sept.

POMEROY - In honor
of Breast Cancer Awareness
month the Meigs County
Cancer Initiative (MCCI) is
planning a fun day Oct. 20
from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
It will be called "Every
Woman Counts" and will be
held at the Mark Porter OM
Supercenter in Pomeroy. It
is free for all Meigs County
women and the only criteria
to meet is that they are residents of Meigs County.
Meigs County girls 12 and
over if accompanied by a
parent may also be tested.
Free health screenings
will be conducted by Holzer
'Medical Center's Wellness
Department, .which includes
blood pressure, bone densi•

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respond to "A Friend," who
said "Irma" had a filthy
kitchen and bathroom.
It was only when I visited
my mother's home and
found the same thing that I
realized Mom's vision was
worse than we realized. She
could not see the details of
what needed to be cleaned.
We got a cleaning lady and
took Mom to the ophthalmologist.
Subsequent
cataract surgery corrected
the vision problem, but
Mom loved the . cleaning
lady and kept her! - G•. .
Dear G.: You may be nght
about Irma's vision, and we
hope her friend is willing to
find out if this could be the
cause of the problem.

Auxiliary members hear girl state report

d
.
e1ucatlon
1 d
C ass S ate

: TUPPERS PLAINS and Connie Rankin, comPledges to missions and the munications.
United
Methodist
A conference to be held at
Children's Home were The
Plains
United
given at a recent meetin~ of Methodist Church
as
the Tuppers Plains Umted announced for Sept. 22, as
Methodist Church held at was the Sept. 23- Blessing of
the church.
the Children Sunday at the
· Joanna Weaver, president, · churcli to be directed by
gave a prayer and conduct· Pastor Jim Corbett. A birthed the meeting which daY. card was signed for
opened with ·a program W~ll Dent of Camon whose
"Who is my Neighbor?" by · name was selected from the
Anna Rice. Also read was prayer calendar book.
.an article on civil and politThe group voted on who
ical· ri'ghts from Response is to receive the 2007 appremagazme
by
Kim ciation pin. The meeting
was closed with prayer and
Householder.
New officers elected were the group enjoyed refreshWeaver, president; Barb ments. Attending were
Roush, vice president; Joanna Weaver,
Barb
Sharon Louks, secretary; Roush, Teresa Lemons,
'Betty Chevalier, treasurer; Terri Soulsby, Connie and
:Judy Kennedy, nomina- Mary
Rankin,
Kim
·lions; Anna Rice, program Householder, Barb Roush,
:resources; Terri Soulsby, ' Anna Rice, Betty Chevilier,
spiritual gcowth ; Teresa Judy Kennedy, and two new
Lemons, social action; Kim members, Kas Seckman and
Householder, education; Lynda Fryar.
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for 40 years to a man most
people think is a saint.• He
IS gooP, to me, prov1des
well, helps around the
house, and is kind and considerate: His children and
grandchildren love him.
So what is my problem?
He looks at porn on the computer on a regular basis. I
suspect he is gratifying himself watching these computer
sluts. This ties my stomach in
a knot. 1 can't eat. I can't
sleep. I cry myself to sleep. If
I bnng it up, he will deny it
and just be more devious.
Is it adultery when a man
watches porn 1 I feel like he
is cheating on me. Am 1
overreacting?- Depressed
Dear Depressed: A little.
Like it or not, most men
look at porn. It has nothing
to do with you. It is cheating
if he is contacting these
women or engaging in
cyber sex. It's a problem if
it becomes an addiction or
porn replaces intimacy with
you. Some women actually
watch porn with their husbands and find it stimulat·
ing. Only you can decide
how much of a problem this
is, and after 40 years, how
tolerant you are going to be.
Dear Annie: 1'd like to

Food program offered to seniors

POMEROY - An Ohio
Hunter Education Class will
be held Oct. 1-3,6-9 p.m.
and Oct. 6, 9 a.m. to noon at
the Pomeroy Gun Club on
Pomeroy Pike.
The
Ohio
·Hunter
Education course includes
10 hours of instruction in
hunter ethics and responsibility. frrearms, archery, first
aid and wildlife management and biology. Students
must attend all sessions and·
pass a 100-q'uestion examination. Classes are free and
all materials and manuals
are provided at no cost.
Pre-registration
• is
required and class size is
limited to· 40 students. To
register contact the Meigs
Soil and Water Const~~Vation
District at (740) 992-4282.
• #

•

. but he accuses me of picking on his kids, saying I
don't love them. I really like
his kids, but I won't consider moving .in permanently,
knowing this would be · a
source of conLention.
Scott wants' me to cook
and clean, but I have no say
in how the house is run.
When his teenage son brings
his ~irlfriends over,! have to
go mto another room. I feel
like a total outsider. I understand his children are accustomed to having the entire
house to themselves, but I
don't want to live this way.,
Any suggestions? - Not
Sure.in the Midwest
Dear Not Sure: Issues
with stepchildren ·c3J1 be difficult and, without Scott's
cooperation, can wreck the
relationship. Scott must
understand tllat a lack of dis·
cipline is a disservice to his
children, and the two of you
must present a united front,
with Scott taking the lead. If
he won't do this, you can try
family counseling or you
can wait until the children
are out of the house before
you marry. Or, of course,
you can just walk away.
Dear Annie: My heart is
aching. I have been married

· Thppers Plains UMW meet Hunter

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•

Dear Annie: I am dating
"s'cott," a wonderful man.
We are both divorced and
have children from our previous marriages. Scott's two
adolescent children live
with him. My only child is
on her own. Scott and I
want to marry, and his two
children approve . But I
sometimes spend weekends
at his place and have
become concerned. He
seems to have no rules.
Scott's bedroom is next to
the family room, and his kids
stay there way past 11 p.m.
most nights. Scott penodically tells them they ought to
go to bed. but they ignore
him, keep the TV blaring
and trash the area with food
and paper cups. Scott also
leaves the door ' to his room
open until they decide to go
to bed. M3J!y times, we have
to get up early for work, yet
he says nothing to them
about the noise. By the time
they go to sleep. I'm too
exhausted for intllnacy.
This entire arrangement
makes me angry. 1 have told
Scott if we marry, there will
have to be some changes,

events .·

Birthdays

. t· card''
Pictured on Tuesday is the mobile home, lett, and tool shed
at Big Creek, W.Va., where authorities say 20.year-old
Charleston, W.Va., resident Megan Williams, a black woman,
was allegedly abducted, held captive for at least a week and
tortured by six white individuals from Logan County, W.Va.

KATMY Mm:HBL
AND M.uteY 5ucwl

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A vision of horror in W.Va. torture case

BY

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Stepchildren issue clouds relationship

Public meetings

·

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

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the , time, but today was, 1 Bloombetg, who has
guess,: worse knowing presided over each of the
events,
we' re not going to be back anni verstiry
described Sept. 11 , 2001 , as
down tliere.
Gabler said he touched "the day that tore across our
the ground, which he fears history and our hearts. We
will not be available to come together again as
him next year as construe· New Yorkers and as
lion goes on. "So today I Americans to share a loss
kissed my hand and I that can~ t be measured."
As in years' past, ·people
kissed the ground - I'm
clutched framed photos of
still kissing him."
Charlene Morgen, whose their lost loved ones, raising
cousin, Debora Maldonado, them toward ~ sky, or held
worked at the Marsh &amp; multicolored. bunches· of
McLennan financial ser- flowers against their chests.
vices firm, said the ceremo- . Similar scenes played out
, ny was different at the park at other anniversary ceremonies.
instead of the site.
"As American citizens
''The crowd was smaller,
we're
all looking at our
it rained for the first tjmeheroes,"'
said Kay Roy,
it was almost like sayin~
goodbye. This is the end, ' whose sister Colleen Fraser,
over
died · the
Morgen said.
Former Mayor Rudy
Giuliani returned to ground
zero . Tuesday, despite
objections by several viclPpiiGto tims' families and fireVirginia Fraser, lett, walks with · husband Bruce Fraser, and sister-in-law Kay Roy, of fighters who said he should
Cleveland, as family and friends ot the passengers and crew of United Flight 93 visit the not speak at the remem·
crash site after a memorial service at the nearby . Flight 93 Natlo,nal Memorial In brance because he is ruhShanksviUe, Pa. on Tuesday, the sixth anniversary of the terrorist attacks.
ning
'for
president.
Democratic presidential
result of answering the call, hour and fewer · than 60 threatened to boycott the ~opeful Hillary Rodham
including police officer remained at the end. The ceremony and hold their Cbnton attend~Jd th!l .cereNYPD James Zadroga," city estimated 3,500 .family own remembrance if they mony, but &lt;;lid not speak.
But Giuliani was greeted
said volunteer ambulance members and mourners were .n&lt;it granted access. The
with
a smattering of
turned
ou·
t
,
down
from
city
and
the
Port
Authority
of
worker- Reggie Cervantesapplause
after his brief
Miller. Zadroga, 34, died 4,700 attendees at the fifth New. York and New Jersey
remarks,
which
. followed
more than a year ago of res- anniversary. Some might - which owns the trade
the
third
,
o
f
the
traditional
piratory illness after spend- have been kept away by center site - allowed rela·
mg hundreds of hours work- rain, a sharp (!Ontrast fro111 tives to descend a ramp to· four . moments of 'silence:.
ing to clean up ground zero. the picture-perfect weather lay flowers inside a reflect- one ' each to IJUII'k the times
ing pool with two 6-foot out· when the two planes hit the .
Victims' spouses, chil- six years ago.
Ground zero "was more lines of the towers insidj:, buildings, and two more for
dren, siblings and parents
had read names before, sacred and sad," said and touch the .ground where when each tower fell.
Gililiani later descended
often breaking down with Clarence White, whose the trade center' once stood.
·to
tlle 'trade center site, and
. Howard : Gabler, · who
heartrending messages to ;brother was killed at the
man yelled "Scum!
one
their loved ones and blow- trade center. At the park, he worked on' the 47th floor of
ing kisses to the sky. At said, "the meaning wasn't the trade center's north Scum!" at him. Another
tower and escaped on the woman from the family line
Zuccotti Park, where . the as close."
day
of the attack; came to said she biam!ld Gi ulia)li
The city moved the C!lfesounds of trucks and buses
sometimes drown out mony this year because of mourn his son, Fredric, who for speeding up the search
speakers, fewer tears were progressing construction at worked on the I 04th floor for victims' remains.
shed and most readers did · the site, where several idle · of the same tower. He has "Because of Giuliani, we
never .had closure," said
not speak at length - even cranes overlooked a partial- no remains of 1\is son.
"This is where he died Sabrina Rivera. Giuliani
when mentioning siblings ly built transit hub, 1,776or children who were killed. foot office tower and Sept. and we have nothing else," left the 11fea without speak· ·
G!lbler · said. "It's very ing to reporters:.
Hundreds streamed out of II memorial.
Mayor
Michael
But family members had painful, it's very painful all
the ceremony after about an

PageA3

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ty, non-fasting blood sugar
and cholesterol testing. Free
private clinical breast exams
will be offered by the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care.
There will be education on
breast health, smoking cessation, skin care, relaxation,
and nutrition. There will be
a special basket drawing for
those getting clinical breast
exams, a Chamber Bucks
drawing held for breast cancer survivors in attendance
and door prizes will be

given awar, every half hour. are asked to have a window
WMPO will be doing a live · display i.n October related to
broadcast and for every Breast C,ancer Awareness.
vehicle sold that day. Mark These displays will be
Porter will donate $25 to the · judged and the winners will
Meigs County Cancer be announced on "Every
Initiative.
Woman Counts Day."
Screenings will be a first
Donations of door prizes
come first serve basis so no are welcome. MCCI is a not
appointments are needed for profit. 50lc3 organizaand every lady attending tion and monies donated
will receive a gift. All stay in Meigs County. Those
attending are encouraged to with questions can contact
wear pink.
Carol Adams, 992-2311 or
Me1gs County Businesses Courtney Sim 992-6626.

�/

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 12, 2007
\
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Wednesday, September 12; 2007';.)

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Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel Same-sex rnling spurs awkward GOP debates
Marriage matters as a
political issue, a fact we
were starkly reminded of
when an Iowa judge, recently redefmed marriage.
In his ruling, Polk County
District Court Judge Robert
Hanson wished into law the
right of "individuals to
marry a person of the'ir
choosing," with no genc;Ier
restrictions. He said that
Iowa's extant marriage law
must be nullified, severed
and stricken, arid that all
references to "marriAge" be
"read and applied in a gender neutral manner so as to
permit same-sex couples to
enter into a civil marriage
pursuant to said chapter."
There's nothing like a
judge's bypassing the
democratic process to spur
responses from democratic
,
leadership.
Since· Iowa is a key state
in the presidential election
process. the location of this
Iatestjurlicial overreach naturally encourages candidates' responses. But most
GOP candidates wish the
issue had never come up,
since it's a topchy subject
for a party of wide stances.
As it happens, .only one of
the leadirig Republican candidates -. ·Mitt Romney supports a federal marriage
amendment, which would
constitutioqally • prevent
marriage redefinition in the
states. So Romney was

11 1 Co11rt Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
. Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereofi or abridging the freedom
of speech, or ~the press; or the .right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to pet!tion
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
-The Fln1t Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 12, the 2,55th day of 2007.
There are 110 days left in th~ year. The Jewish holiday
Rosh Hashanah begin:s at sunset.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sq&gt;t. 12, ~609. English explorer Henry Hudson sailed
up the nver that now bears his name.
'
On this date:
,
In 1880, author and journalist H.L. Melicken was born in
Baltimore. ·
.
In 1914, during World War I, the First Battle of the Mame
ended in an Allied victory against Germany.
In 1938, Adolf Hitler demanded the right of self-determination for the Sudeten Germans in Czechoslovakia.
.
In 1943, German paraQ:oopers took Benito Mussolini
from the hotel where he was being held by the Italian government.
In 1944, the Second Quebec Conference opened with
President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston
Churchill in attendance. ·
In 1'?60, Kennedy, then the Democratic pre.sidential candidate, addressed questions about his Roman Catholic
faith, telling a Southern Baptist group in Houston, ".J do not
speak for my church on public matters, aqd the church does
not speak for me." .
In 1974, Emperor Haile Selassie was deposed by
Ethiopia's military, after ruling for 58 years.
In 1977, South African black student leader Steven Biko
died while in police custody, triggering an international
outcry.
In 1992, the space shuttle Endeavour blasted off, carrying
with it Mark Lee and Jan Davis, the first married couple in
space; Mae Jemison, the first black woman in space; and
Mamoru Mohri, the first Japanese citizen to fly on a U.S.
spaceship.
Five. years ago: Raising the specter of war, President
Bush told skeptical, world leaders at the United .Nations to
confront the "grave and gathering danger" of ·Saddam
Hussein's Iraq- or to stand aside as the U.S. acted. Three
former Tyco International executives were .charged with
looting the conglomerate of hundreds of millions of dollars; all three pleaded innocent at their arraignment in New
York. (Former CEO L. Dennis Kozlowski and former CFO
. Mark Swartz were later convicted of grand larceny and
securities fraud. Tyco's former top .lawyer, Mark A.
Belnick, was acquitted.)
One year ago: In a speech in his native Germany, Pope
Benerlict XVI quoted from an obscure medieval text that
cbaracterized some teachings of Islam's founder as "evil
and inhurilan," unleashing a torrent of rage across the
Islamic world (the pontiff later said he regretted that
J11uslims were offended). Syrian guards foiled an attempt
by suspected al-Qaida-Iinked militants to blow up the U.S.
Embassy in Damascus.
•Thought for Today: "Civilization in itself is a long hard
fight . to maintain and advance." - Thornton Wilder,
AJnerican playwright (1897-1975).

Kathryn

Lopez .

q!Jick to denounce the Iowa
ruling as "another example
of ;an activist court and
u~elected judges . trying to
redefine marriage and disregard the will of the people"
- and to declare that this
"once again highlights the
need for a Federal Marriage
Amendment to protect the
traditional definition of
marriage."
Romney flTSt confronted
this issue in Mqssachuse~~&amp;.
He was governor when the
state's highest court execu~;'
ed a similar coup- the frrst
in the nation to do so. Kris
Mineau, president of the
Massachusetts
Family
Institute, calls the Iowa ruting "Massachusetts deja vu"
and says it will have major
repercussion,s: "It certainly
makes the case for a Federal
Marriage Amendment. The
defeat of the current
Massachusetts
marriage
amendment in the· state legislature on June 14 has
emboldened the same-sex
'marriage advocates around
the nation. They will
undoubtedly press this Iowa

He noted that snacks will children," said Buckley.
while having different
be served and buses will proThe grants come at a time guidelines than were used in •
vjpe transportation home. when funding for similar pro- the TANF programs, offers a
«te plan is to integrate the grams in both districts with solid after-school program,
fromPageA1
· Century 21 grant program TANF
(Temporary accorrling to the superinten·
ftrst 21st Century one they wit!J other grant programs AFamiliesssis~)cehas beenfor
Needy. dents of both rlistricts.
have received. He said the taking place at !he .school
decreased.
Deem said that because of
program in Meigs Local after classes are dl!'nussed.
The Athens-Meigs ESC, Southern's school improve- .
will ))e. geared to-elementary . The progr~ w1ll be car- which funded and operated ment status, tutoring must
students . JtiJ!dergiuten ned out four rughts a week, the after-school programs be offered to the children in
through 'fifth ~. and is - . two for primary students, last year, did. receive the district and the grant
expected to get stai:ted by kindergarten, flTSt and sec- · $53,000, Wolfe Sllld. but that makes that possible . .
Christmas. Tl).e .~mphasis ond grad~rs, and two nights was not nearly ~ugh to · Southern's prograrJ). wiU
will ·be 'n· readirig and he for the third to fifth graders. · operate even a poruon of the begin the first week in
said his . · ' is that ,the 75
Buckley said m.~- pfior to programs that we~ in place. October.
sl:liden~ J ' , Uect' · show' st~ing the program the · The. ~ plans .on ~uppleWolfe and coordinators
big gaiol)n
· cores. Me1gs Local. Board of menllilg programs m the from both Southern and
Studclltf · • ' cipate
Education wiD be hiring county schools with the lim- Meigs, Roush and Zurcher,
the ·~' '
be selecl¢ii . teachers and su!Jslitutes to ited remaining TANF dollars. attended a grantee training
on Uie .~is of test
go through some training
The 21st Century grant is worksho_p in Columbus last
an~ . 'fa~hy 1 finances; 4Je and ev:Uuate tesf scores to 'a federillly funded program week. Quarterly meetings .
superil).tendent Bald; ·npting. · . ~~ne· who qualifies to With grant . awards ~ing are required by region to tfuit. the'lqgic· that 'firs* tQ '· partictpate.
,
rli'lde through• the·. Ohio continue traimng and to .
be ' iDcludCd will be" those; · "Our goal is to go beyond Dep~nt' Qf Education. receive guidance in implewho need help imd fall ;with- just the basics of,. tearling. Formula.piS.'ate ~warded menting and sustaining the
fil the f~ly income guide-' · We . intend 19 teach tee&amp;- , to State educatidnill agen- programs. Roush, Zurcher, .
lines. If more students jll'e ',Diques of study habitil ana· · cies,. which in turn J:!lllllll8e . and a social worker from
needed to ~ill th~ 75 quota; ,..~m~ension as well as . statewide competitions and Southern
will . ~tte~d
then selecltoll will be based · work With parents on wh~ awar;d grants. Character Counts trammg m
on ~ll)ic nc:ed ouly.
tlley can . do , to help their
The 21st Century program Chicago next month.

Grants

Pearl Cushner

issue to the fullest, and I Marriage Act, so the need
believe same-se,.; will be a for a national one has not ':
major issue in the 2008 been deeply felt there. This '
election."
may change in the wake of
Tom McClusky of the the court ruling. A. tempo- ·::
Family Research Council rary jurlicial stay has kept a ; .
points out that Florida, too, mass same-se,.;-marriage- ·
has a marriage showdown license line from forming ,
looming just in time for the. - for the time being.
,
presidential campaign - · Stanley Kurtz, a fellow at ,
and he tells me that while the Ethics and Public Policy. ,
the national GOP mig~t be Center
and
longtime
too "clueless or spineless" observer of the politics of~
to take on the issue, it's in gay marriage, suggests whaL
the party's interest to do so: might happen next: "The
Pew Research Center fact that the Iowa legislature ~
polls suggest that at lea:;t has passed some anti-rlishalf of Americans are crimination laws does not in ··
· opposed to . same-sex mar- . any way say, that a marriage _;
riage, but : you wouldn't amendm¢nt will fail. ... it's :.;
know it from listening to the perfectly possible to imagRep!,lblicans. At a debate of ine a legislature that passed ,
presidential candidates in antidiscrimination legisla- .:
New· Hampshire days after tion also voting for a mar- .:
the Iowa judicial usurpa- ri11ge amendment."
;
. tion, a womarr in a diner
told Fox News reporter Carl · Pushing the issue of a ~
Cameron, "We're the state marriage amendment is not ;
of 'Live Free or Die,' and just the civic duty of canrli- :
people should be able to dates. who believe in it, it's a ~;
marry the person they love." fundamental building block ~;
In response· to her state- of society. It's good politics, ,;
ment, just one candidate, which will separate those
Sen. Sam Browilback. R- standing up for the trarli-:;'
Kan., had a retort. His · tional _family (popular with ·'
answer was right on: a heallhy portion of the ·
Marriage "is a foundational country) and those radicals ~
- like Hanson
- who ··,
.
institution."
don't.
Critics of a m'arriage
(Kathryn wpez is the edi- :;
· amendment suggest that the
Romney/Brownback posi- tor of National Review .c
.tion won't fly .in Iowa, but Online (www.nationalrethey may be reading their view.com). She can be con- -'
own biases into the polling. tacted at klope;.@national- ,..
Iowa has a staie Defense of review. com.) .
· "

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydallysentinel.com

.FOMEROY - Pearl Welker Cushner, 87, of Pomeroy,
d1ed Sept. 11, 2007. at the Rocksprings Rehllbilitation
. Center in Pomeroy.
She was born Feb. 24, 1920 in Alfred, to the late Emmen
and Bernice Bentz Hawk. Pearl was a member of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ and later attended the Hemlock
Grove Christian Church.
She created and was the ftrst director nf RSVP (Retired
Senior Volunteer Program) in Pomeroy through the Meigs
Council on Aging. Through Pearl's gutdance, the Pomeroy
RSVP Pro$f3ID was one of the most successful in southeastern Ohio.
Pearl was active in Beta Sigma Phi Sorority and the ·
Couples Club. She was a wonderful homemaker and
enjoyed playing golf.
·
.In Addition to her parents, Pearl was preceded in death by
her ftrst husband, Ralph Welker, iutd one sis~r. Leota Smith.
Pearl is survived by her husband, Robert, and three sons:
Jerry (Kim) Welker and Joe (Sharon) Welker of Fresno,
Cal1f., Jack (Paula) Welker, Pomeroy; two step daughters,
Ellen (Jim) Knickle, Kettering, and Paula Cushner (Steve
Callahan), Weymouth, Mass.
Grandchildren include: Jodi (Peter) Nemeth, Julie (Mark)
Hodge, Jami Welker, Joei (Ben) Dailey; ChristoPher and
Kyler Welker, all of Fresno; and Jena (Chris) "renoglia,
Pomeroy, Jackie (fiance, Jessica) Welker, P9mei'oy.
Step grandchildren include: Donald (Amy) Swatzel,
Reedsville, Philip (Elizabeth) Swatzel, Athens, Steve (Thra)
Swatzel, Pomeroy, Kristen (David) Pologruto, Lafayette,
La., Jqshua (Stephanie) Douglass, Kettering, Brett (Shelley)
Kniclde, Orlando, Aa., Brad (Lauren) Knickle, Miamisburg,
Brian Knickle (Fiance Lisa Mollica) Columbus, and Ellen
and Daniel CaUahan, Weymouth, Mass.
One sister, Mrs. Sara Cullums .. and one brOther, Robert
(Ramona) Hawk, survive, as well as three sisters-in-law:
Mrs. Ruth Peterson, Bristol, conn., Mrs. Marguerite ·
Kondziolka, Bristol, and Ms. Eileen Welker, Pomeroy.
.J;:vening visitation will be held from 6-8 p.m. on
Thursday, Sept. 13, 2007, at the Fisher Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz officiating.
A graveside service will be ·held at 4 p.m. on Oct. 21 at
the Hemlock Grove Cemetery with Minister Larry Brown

m

scores

is

,chamber

important to stock.
County A driving range is currently
The
Meigs
Gorschak says the health Chamber of Commerce's being constructed for a ·,
department provides a Annual Recognition Dinner spring opening. Riverside
Pandemic Flu Planning , will be held at 6 p.m., Nov. also provided the meal for
from PageA1
Checklist for Inrlividilals and 13 at the Middleport Family the luncheon while the
in November but the dates Families which also includes Life Center. Tickets are $25 Pomeroy Library provided :
~
have not been confirmed yet. a Family Emergency Health each with guest speaker the space.
Sam Hatcher, project
Planning for a pandemic Information Sheet where Mike Bartrum. Call 992manager
important
information
can
5005
for
tickets
and
sponfor the coal mine
is . also crucial
with
proposed
by Gatling, Ohio ,l .
be
listed
which
is
vital
for
sorship
opportunities.
Gorscak saying people
·
Brent
Patterson,
a
Meigs
those
that
live
alone.
for
Yellowbush
Road in
should store a two week
Information on local vol- County native, was intro- Racine was introduced to
supply of water and food,
··l
un~eer
groups and what duced as the new director of chamber members.
reminrling those in atten-·
Meigs
County
is
doing
localtbe
Meigs
Rio
Center.
Doug
Schofield,
who
dance most people have 40
Erin Roush of Riverside works in construction WI!S·: .
gallons of water already on ly to prepare for a pandemic
outbreak
can
be
found
at
the
Course announced a also introduced, as was
Golf
hand
with
the
use
of
a
hot
officiatin~ .
special
website
mei~scounty­
ribbon cutting from Melissa Watts and. Mark "
water
tank.
Also
make
sure
Memonal donations may be made to RSVP of Meigs
health.con'l
which
1s
created
6-8
p.m.,
Sept. 20 at the Brightenball from Family .
County Council on Aging, PO Box 722, Pomeroy, Ohio, prescriptions are filled and
golf course for the unveil- Healthcare which will be ''
45769, or Hemlock Grove Christian Church, Attn: Marge have other extra health by Gorschak.
Other chamber announce- ing of two new holes for working' out of the Meigs ' '
supplies on hand. Non perBarr, 39186
Hemlock
Grove
Rd.,
Pomeroy,
OH
'45769.
. I
·.
the "new 18" at Riverside., Medical Clinic.
ishable · foods are also ments:
-----~--------------------~----------------------~ '·

-

Ronald Shields

SUNNY&amp;
WARM.

Council
from PageA1

..

the state is expected to
annoQnce
awards
in
November or December,
Zoeller said.
Other business
Council Member Sandy
Brown said the insurance
committee will consider
requmng an employee
contribution toward the
. cost of health insurance in
order to reduce the cost of

·I·

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'·.1

health insurance to the viilage. Village employees
now pay no premium for
single-plan health insurance coverage.
Cathy Baker discussed
with council a recent water
leak on Garfield Street and
damage she said was caused
to her home because the
public works department
did not respond to her calls
for repairs.
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
said · the . public works
department has received an
increase in returned checks

from
customers.
Customers whose check is
returned ar~ not permitted
to make payment by
checks, ever. Iannarelli
suggested that the ordinance committee consider
an ordinance allowing
stricter enforcement.
Council
defeated
a
· motion to hire a clerk for the
mayor's court, at 32 hours
per week, pending a review
of the position and a determination of how many
hours are needed to complete the work.

Council also:
,,.
• Approved supplemental; .~
transfers as requested by ..,
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker,·
in the amounts of $1.000 ''
and $500.
·.
• Approved payment of"
. bills totaling $26,390.08. .
• Approved monthly u
reports from the public
works, refuse, finance and ..
income tax departments. :.
Also present were CoWJcil :~
members Stephen Houc~ •...
Ferman Moore, Shawn Rice
and Craig Wehrung, andr~
·Fiscal Officer Susan Baker. .· ,

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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
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,vA~&gt;-

~

Days .of Chicken a la King dethroned

.

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
·signed, and include address and telephone numbel: No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letter" of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
ed for publication.

Our server at the Ciao
Down Cafe has just placed a
little, shallow rlish of olive
oil and a basket of rlifferent
types of bread on our table.
We're supposed to rlip our
.bread in the olive oil
because if there's one thing
everyone needs right before
dinner, it's some nice oily
bread. We would never eat
oily bread before dinner at
home or tell the kids they
can't eat rlinner until they
finish their oily bread, but
restaurants seem to think we
want it.
The real reason they serve
it is so that you'll have
something to do with your
hands before the real food
arrives~ a good·idea when
you've got a bunch of bored
people sitting around a
knife-festooned table drinkmg the local vino.
The bread is free, of
course, which means it's not
free at all; it means they're
charging you more for
something else. Why not? If
you'll pay $11 for the handmade squash ravioli, rou'll
probably pay $12 w1thout
much squawking. I &lt;;an u~u­
ally tell how expensive a
restaurant is by how many
"free" things they offer:
• A tablecloth: + $3
.
• A papenablecloth: + $5
• A, candle on the table: +
"

white-stoneware plate (add
Forty years ago, the most
$1) with a sprig of r~semary fashionable order in the
over it (add $1). It looked most fashionable place in
like a painting (add $1), a town was a large wedge of '
real work of art. And it was iceberg lettuce dripping
about
as filling as eating a with blue cheese dressing. It
Jim
small Picasso, though I'm screamed sophistication and
Mullen
sure they tasted much better. class. Then it was a starter, ··
I still haven't figured out now it would be the mea!. :,
how trends like dipping
The lettuce wedge would
bread in olive oil start. One be followed by the Surf and
$1
day, no restaurants served Turf, (add $5) or maybe just
• A flower on the table: + · olive oil with bread, the next the Prime Rib. And for
$1
day, it comes with your dessert, she'll have the
• A menu on the table: + grilled cheese. at the lunch Crepe Suzette flambe, and
$2
counter at Walgreen's, and I'll 'ake the Floating Island.
• Lots of children's seats: McDonald's is trying to figThat kind of food (and ,
+ $5
ure out a way to tum it into ordering for the woman) has :·
• Servers wear T-shirts a breakfast sandwich.
with logo: + $1
Who knew food could be gone the way of Nehru jack-.
• Servers wear black so trendy? What happened ets and Princess phones,
pants, white cotton shirts, to all that stuff we used to replaced py California rolls
skinny black ties: + $6 .
eat in the '50s? Chicken a Ia with chipotle and paninis.
• If the restaurant is on a king used to be one of the The lettuce wedge was ·
pier or docked boat: + $3
fanciest things you could replaced by the radicchio
• If that boat plans of mov- eat. Now, you couldn't serve decade , followed by the
ing: + $10
it in prison without being arugula decade and now ··
• Visible kitchen: • $4
accused of cruel and unusu- mixed baby green decade.
• In a tourist city in sea- al punishment. Lobster What's next? Well, I already .,
son: + $8
Newburg, tuna casseroles, know. Iceberg lettuce wedge .,
• If the restaurant is on top ring-mold salads? In one smothered in blue cheese
dressing is making a come- ·,
year and out the other.
of a skyscraper: + $15
• If it's on top of a skyAnd when did we start back . I know because it
everything? came "free" with my three .:
scraper and it revolves: + blackening
$25
When did we stop blacken- raviolis.
(Jim Mullen is the author
So as you can see, I know ing everything? My grocery
my restaurants. I'm just store now has an entire sec- of "It Takes a Village Idiot: .
sorry I didn't eat more oily lion devoted to peppercorns Complicating the Simple
bread before the food and salt. There is mustard Ufe" aizd "Baby's First
arrived. ,I got three raviolis from every country in the Tattoo. " You can reach him
in the center of a gigantic world.
at jim_mullen@myway.com)

-&lt;.
~

.I

·,

'{;

.

1 ··- ....
~ ~
~

Doris Eastman ·
FLORA - Doris Eastman, 84, of Aora rlied Thesctay
afternoon, Sept. 11 , 2007 at her borne. FWJe~ !lfl'lUlgements
will be announced by Jagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home, Athens.

I

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Local Briefs
Application
deadline
POMEROY - Deadline
for applications for the
Meigs County Retired
Teachers
Association's
scholarship is Oct. 5.
Applicants must .be residents of Meigs County, a
junior or senior currently
enrolled in a college, majoting in education or teacher
training with a grade point
average of at least 2.5.
Applications
must
include a current college
transcript, showing the two
previous years of credits
and grades, a resume of
activities, work qr volunteer, and career objectives,
listing at least three references, with one being an
instructor, a current photograph for publicity and the
name and address of the
college.
All applicants will be
evaluated on grade point

·---·

----..· - - ·
I'F.J.fOI.\tNO ARTS CFNI'RF.

average and compliance
with requirements, with
consideration of e,.;tra-curricular activities and career
objectives.
Applications should be .
mailed to the MCRT
Scholarship Committee, c/o
Joan Corder, 297 Wright
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Issue 2
from PageA1
employee safety manual
and asked council to review
it with comments at the next
meeting.
Councilman Pete Barnhart
also brought up
poor
condition of Willis Hill and
how he felt it needed maintenance and auention since

the

it belonged to the village.
Musser announced and
COWJcil approved the Meigs
Cpunty Cancer Initiative
placing pink bows on the vii. Iage's light posts along the
walking path to conunemorate Breast Cancer Awareness
Month which is in October.
Musser also announced
the 'Ohio Valley Bikers
Benefit will be on the parking lot on Sept. 22 to raise
money for God's NET.

Dr. Gregory L. Piersol DC
Cblropractk Pbyslchm
• Insurance
• Auto Accidents

JtiWMnel'

113 W.1n~ St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

• Workers Comp
• Medicaid (WV &amp; OH) .
• Medicare

(740)992·5479
wamerjl@natioowide.com

D

Nationwide'

On Your Side

• Box Oltlce: 428 2nd Ava.
Galllpolll, OH (740) 446-ARTS

740-992-6759
RCP websitewww.riversityplayers.net

Performance Dates:
Friday, Nov. 9 &amp; Sat. Nov. tO
Meigs Elementary School
·
Hometown Market

~------------------------·
·
Overbrook Center Located @ 333 Page St.;

v=c.~
JeffWN hawana!

Gerry Enrico
&amp; The Finders
with special guest
Musician Jan Haddox
9/14
6:30 l!ffi
Robin Hood
Jr. Theater
9/29-9/30

men
7 women singen; will be held on '·
JSalturdl!y, September IS from I :00
6:00pm at the River City PlayersJ ~
building in Middleport, OH..
I Pl&lt;:asc come with a CO/cassette
prinled music. An accompanist
will be provided.
For more infonnation please call

Back &amp; Neck Pain ·
Headaches
Personal &amp; Sports InJury

236 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

740.992·1000

•

z

Middleport, OH is pleased to announce we will
be holding an STNA Class scheduled for
September. Hours will be Sam-4:30pm. If you are
interested in joining our friendly and dedicated
staff, please stop by our front office Mon-Fri
9am-Spm and fill out an application. Full time
and Part time positions available to those
qualified individuals completing the class.
Applicants must be dependable (ATTENDANCE
IS A MUST) team players with positive
attitudes to join us in providing outstanding,
quality care to our residents. If you have any
questions contact Hollie Bumgarner, LPN, stall'
development coordinator @ 740-992-6472.
Overbrook Center is and E.O.E. and a
participant of the drug free workplace program.
0

•

�/

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 12, 2007
\
(

.

Wednesday, September 12; 2007';.)

.

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel Same-sex rnling spurs awkward GOP debates
Marriage matters as a
political issue, a fact we
were starkly reminded of
when an Iowa judge, recently redefmed marriage.
In his ruling, Polk County
District Court Judge Robert
Hanson wished into law the
right of "individuals to
marry a person of the'ir
choosing," with no genc;Ier
restrictions. He said that
Iowa's extant marriage law
must be nullified, severed
and stricken, arid that all
references to "marriAge" be
"read and applied in a gender neutral manner so as to
permit same-sex couples to
enter into a civil marriage
pursuant to said chapter."
There's nothing like a
judge's bypassing the
democratic process to spur
responses from democratic
,
leadership.
Since· Iowa is a key state
in the presidential election
process. the location of this
Iatestjurlicial overreach naturally encourages candidates' responses. But most
GOP candidates wish the
issue had never come up,
since it's a topchy subject
for a party of wide stances.
As it happens, .only one of
the leadirig Republican candidates -. ·Mitt Romney supports a federal marriage
amendment, which would
constitutioqally • prevent
marriage redefinition in the
states. So Romney was

11 1 Co11rt Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
. Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereofi or abridging the freedom
of speech, or ~the press; or the .right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to pet!tion
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
-The Fln1t Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 12, the 2,55th day of 2007.
There are 110 days left in th~ year. The Jewish holiday
Rosh Hashanah begin:s at sunset.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sq&gt;t. 12, ~609. English explorer Henry Hudson sailed
up the nver that now bears his name.
'
On this date:
,
In 1880, author and journalist H.L. Melicken was born in
Baltimore. ·
.
In 1914, during World War I, the First Battle of the Mame
ended in an Allied victory against Germany.
In 1938, Adolf Hitler demanded the right of self-determination for the Sudeten Germans in Czechoslovakia.
.
In 1943, German paraQ:oopers took Benito Mussolini
from the hotel where he was being held by the Italian government.
In 1944, the Second Quebec Conference opened with
President Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston
Churchill in attendance. ·
In 1'?60, Kennedy, then the Democratic pre.sidential candidate, addressed questions about his Roman Catholic
faith, telling a Southern Baptist group in Houston, ".J do not
speak for my church on public matters, aqd the church does
not speak for me." .
In 1974, Emperor Haile Selassie was deposed by
Ethiopia's military, after ruling for 58 years.
In 1977, South African black student leader Steven Biko
died while in police custody, triggering an international
outcry.
In 1992, the space shuttle Endeavour blasted off, carrying
with it Mark Lee and Jan Davis, the first married couple in
space; Mae Jemison, the first black woman in space; and
Mamoru Mohri, the first Japanese citizen to fly on a U.S.
spaceship.
Five. years ago: Raising the specter of war, President
Bush told skeptical, world leaders at the United .Nations to
confront the "grave and gathering danger" of ·Saddam
Hussein's Iraq- or to stand aside as the U.S. acted. Three
former Tyco International executives were .charged with
looting the conglomerate of hundreds of millions of dollars; all three pleaded innocent at their arraignment in New
York. (Former CEO L. Dennis Kozlowski and former CFO
. Mark Swartz were later convicted of grand larceny and
securities fraud. Tyco's former top .lawyer, Mark A.
Belnick, was acquitted.)
One year ago: In a speech in his native Germany, Pope
Benerlict XVI quoted from an obscure medieval text that
cbaracterized some teachings of Islam's founder as "evil
and inhurilan," unleashing a torrent of rage across the
Islamic world (the pontiff later said he regretted that
J11uslims were offended). Syrian guards foiled an attempt
by suspected al-Qaida-Iinked militants to blow up the U.S.
Embassy in Damascus.
•Thought for Today: "Civilization in itself is a long hard
fight . to maintain and advance." - Thornton Wilder,
AJnerican playwright (1897-1975).

Kathryn

Lopez .

q!Jick to denounce the Iowa
ruling as "another example
of ;an activist court and
u~elected judges . trying to
redefine marriage and disregard the will of the people"
- and to declare that this
"once again highlights the
need for a Federal Marriage
Amendment to protect the
traditional definition of
marriage."
Romney flTSt confronted
this issue in Mqssachuse~~&amp;.
He was governor when the
state's highest court execu~;'
ed a similar coup- the frrst
in the nation to do so. Kris
Mineau, president of the
Massachusetts
Family
Institute, calls the Iowa ruting "Massachusetts deja vu"
and says it will have major
repercussion,s: "It certainly
makes the case for a Federal
Marriage Amendment. The
defeat of the current
Massachusetts
marriage
amendment in the· state legislature on June 14 has
emboldened the same-sex
'marriage advocates around
the nation. They will
undoubtedly press this Iowa

He noted that snacks will children," said Buckley.
while having different
be served and buses will proThe grants come at a time guidelines than were used in •
vjpe transportation home. when funding for similar pro- the TANF programs, offers a
«te plan is to integrate the grams in both districts with solid after-school program,
fromPageA1
· Century 21 grant program TANF
(Temporary accorrling to the superinten·
ftrst 21st Century one they wit!J other grant programs AFamiliesssis~)cehas beenfor
Needy. dents of both rlistricts.
have received. He said the taking place at !he .school
decreased.
Deem said that because of
program in Meigs Local after classes are dl!'nussed.
The Athens-Meigs ESC, Southern's school improve- .
will ))e. geared to-elementary . The progr~ w1ll be car- which funded and operated ment status, tutoring must
students . JtiJ!dergiuten ned out four rughts a week, the after-school programs be offered to the children in
through 'fifth ~. and is - . two for primary students, last year, did. receive the district and the grant
expected to get stai:ted by kindergarten, flTSt and sec- · $53,000, Wolfe Sllld. but that makes that possible . .
Christmas. Tl).e .~mphasis ond grad~rs, and two nights was not nearly ~ugh to · Southern's prograrJ). wiU
will ·be 'n· readirig and he for the third to fifth graders. · operate even a poruon of the begin the first week in
said his . · ' is that ,the 75
Buckley said m.~- pfior to programs that we~ in place. October.
sl:liden~ J ' , Uect' · show' st~ing the program the · The. ~ plans .on ~uppleWolfe and coordinators
big gaiol)n
· cores. Me1gs Local. Board of menllilg programs m the from both Southern and
Studclltf · • ' cipate
Education wiD be hiring county schools with the lim- Meigs, Roush and Zurcher,
the ·~' '
be selecl¢ii . teachers and su!Jslitutes to ited remaining TANF dollars. attended a grantee training
on Uie .~is of test
go through some training
The 21st Century grant is worksho_p in Columbus last
an~ . 'fa~hy 1 finances; 4Je and ev:Uuate tesf scores to 'a federillly funded program week. Quarterly meetings .
superil).tendent Bald; ·npting. · . ~~ne· who qualifies to With grant . awards ~ing are required by region to tfuit. the'lqgic· that 'firs* tQ '· partictpate.
,
rli'lde through• the·. Ohio continue traimng and to .
be ' iDcludCd will be" those; · "Our goal is to go beyond Dep~nt' Qf Education. receive guidance in implewho need help imd fall ;with- just the basics of,. tearling. Formula.piS.'ate ~warded menting and sustaining the
fil the f~ly income guide-' · We . intend 19 teach tee&amp;- , to State educatidnill agen- programs. Roush, Zurcher, .
lines. If more students jll'e ',Diques of study habitil ana· · cies,. which in turn J:!lllllll8e . and a social worker from
needed to ~ill th~ 75 quota; ,..~m~ension as well as . statewide competitions and Southern
will . ~tte~d
then selecltoll will be based · work With parents on wh~ awar;d grants. Character Counts trammg m
on ~ll)ic nc:ed ouly.
tlley can . do , to help their
The 21st Century program Chicago next month.

Grants

Pearl Cushner

issue to the fullest, and I Marriage Act, so the need
believe same-se,.; will be a for a national one has not ':
major issue in the 2008 been deeply felt there. This '
election."
may change in the wake of
Tom McClusky of the the court ruling. A. tempo- ·::
Family Research Council rary jurlicial stay has kept a ; .
points out that Florida, too, mass same-se,.;-marriage- ·
has a marriage showdown license line from forming ,
looming just in time for the. - for the time being.
,
presidential campaign - · Stanley Kurtz, a fellow at ,
and he tells me that while the Ethics and Public Policy. ,
the national GOP mig~t be Center
and
longtime
too "clueless or spineless" observer of the politics of~
to take on the issue, it's in gay marriage, suggests whaL
the party's interest to do so: might happen next: "The
Pew Research Center fact that the Iowa legislature ~
polls suggest that at lea:;t has passed some anti-rlishalf of Americans are crimination laws does not in ··
· opposed to . same-sex mar- . any way say, that a marriage _;
riage, but : you wouldn't amendm¢nt will fail. ... it's :.;
know it from listening to the perfectly possible to imagRep!,lblicans. At a debate of ine a legislature that passed ,
presidential candidates in antidiscrimination legisla- .:
New· Hampshire days after tion also voting for a mar- .:
the Iowa judicial usurpa- ri11ge amendment."
;
. tion, a womarr in a diner
told Fox News reporter Carl · Pushing the issue of a ~
Cameron, "We're the state marriage amendment is not ;
of 'Live Free or Die,' and just the civic duty of canrli- :
people should be able to dates. who believe in it, it's a ~;
marry the person they love." fundamental building block ~;
In response· to her state- of society. It's good politics, ,;
ment, just one candidate, which will separate those
Sen. Sam Browilback. R- standing up for the trarli-:;'
Kan., had a retort. His · tional _family (popular with ·'
answer was right on: a heallhy portion of the ·
Marriage "is a foundational country) and those radicals ~
- like Hanson
- who ··,
.
institution."
don't.
Critics of a m'arriage
(Kathryn wpez is the edi- :;
· amendment suggest that the
Romney/Brownback posi- tor of National Review .c
.tion won't fly .in Iowa, but Online (www.nationalrethey may be reading their view.com). She can be con- -'
own biases into the polling. tacted at klope;.@national- ,..
Iowa has a staie Defense of review. com.) .
· "

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydallysentinel.com

.FOMEROY - Pearl Welker Cushner, 87, of Pomeroy,
d1ed Sept. 11, 2007. at the Rocksprings Rehllbilitation
. Center in Pomeroy.
She was born Feb. 24, 1920 in Alfred, to the late Emmen
and Bernice Bentz Hawk. Pearl was a member of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ and later attended the Hemlock
Grove Christian Church.
She created and was the ftrst director nf RSVP (Retired
Senior Volunteer Program) in Pomeroy through the Meigs
Council on Aging. Through Pearl's gutdance, the Pomeroy
RSVP Pro$f3ID was one of the most successful in southeastern Ohio.
Pearl was active in Beta Sigma Phi Sorority and the ·
Couples Club. She was a wonderful homemaker and
enjoyed playing golf.
·
.In Addition to her parents, Pearl was preceded in death by
her ftrst husband, Ralph Welker, iutd one sis~r. Leota Smith.
Pearl is survived by her husband, Robert, and three sons:
Jerry (Kim) Welker and Joe (Sharon) Welker of Fresno,
Cal1f., Jack (Paula) Welker, Pomeroy; two step daughters,
Ellen (Jim) Knickle, Kettering, and Paula Cushner (Steve
Callahan), Weymouth, Mass.
Grandchildren include: Jodi (Peter) Nemeth, Julie (Mark)
Hodge, Jami Welker, Joei (Ben) Dailey; ChristoPher and
Kyler Welker, all of Fresno; and Jena (Chris) "renoglia,
Pomeroy, Jackie (fiance, Jessica) Welker, P9mei'oy.
Step grandchildren include: Donald (Amy) Swatzel,
Reedsville, Philip (Elizabeth) Swatzel, Athens, Steve (Thra)
Swatzel, Pomeroy, Kristen (David) Pologruto, Lafayette,
La., Jqshua (Stephanie) Douglass, Kettering, Brett (Shelley)
Kniclde, Orlando, Aa., Brad (Lauren) Knickle, Miamisburg,
Brian Knickle (Fiance Lisa Mollica) Columbus, and Ellen
and Daniel CaUahan, Weymouth, Mass.
One sister, Mrs. Sara Cullums .. and one brOther, Robert
(Ramona) Hawk, survive, as well as three sisters-in-law:
Mrs. Ruth Peterson, Bristol, conn., Mrs. Marguerite ·
Kondziolka, Bristol, and Ms. Eileen Welker, Pomeroy.
.J;:vening visitation will be held from 6-8 p.m. on
Thursday, Sept. 13, 2007, at the Fisher Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz officiating.
A graveside service will be ·held at 4 p.m. on Oct. 21 at
the Hemlock Grove Cemetery with Minister Larry Brown

m

scores

is

,chamber

important to stock.
County A driving range is currently
The
Meigs
Gorschak says the health Chamber of Commerce's being constructed for a ·,
department provides a Annual Recognition Dinner spring opening. Riverside
Pandemic Flu Planning , will be held at 6 p.m., Nov. also provided the meal for
from PageA1
Checklist for Inrlividilals and 13 at the Middleport Family the luncheon while the
in November but the dates Families which also includes Life Center. Tickets are $25 Pomeroy Library provided :
~
have not been confirmed yet. a Family Emergency Health each with guest speaker the space.
Sam Hatcher, project
Planning for a pandemic Information Sheet where Mike Bartrum. Call 992manager
important
information
can
5005
for
tickets
and
sponfor the coal mine
is . also crucial
with
proposed
by Gatling, Ohio ,l .
be
listed
which
is
vital
for
sorship
opportunities.
Gorscak saying people
·
Brent
Patterson,
a
Meigs
those
that
live
alone.
for
Yellowbush
Road in
should store a two week
Information on local vol- County native, was intro- Racine was introduced to
supply of water and food,
··l
un~eer
groups and what duced as the new director of chamber members.
reminrling those in atten-·
Meigs
County
is
doing
localtbe
Meigs
Rio
Center.
Doug
Schofield,
who
dance most people have 40
Erin Roush of Riverside works in construction WI!S·: .
gallons of water already on ly to prepare for a pandemic
outbreak
can
be
found
at
the
Course announced a also introduced, as was
Golf
hand
with
the
use
of
a
hot
officiatin~ .
special
website
mei~scounty­
ribbon cutting from Melissa Watts and. Mark "
water
tank.
Also
make
sure
Memonal donations may be made to RSVP of Meigs
health.con'l
which
1s
created
6-8
p.m.,
Sept. 20 at the Brightenball from Family .
County Council on Aging, PO Box 722, Pomeroy, Ohio, prescriptions are filled and
golf course for the unveil- Healthcare which will be ''
45769, or Hemlock Grove Christian Church, Attn: Marge have other extra health by Gorschak.
Other chamber announce- ing of two new holes for working' out of the Meigs ' '
supplies on hand. Non perBarr, 39186
Hemlock
Grove
Rd.,
Pomeroy,
OH
'45769.
. I
·.
the "new 18" at Riverside., Medical Clinic.
ishable · foods are also ments:
-----~--------------------~----------------------~ '·

-

Ronald Shields

SUNNY&amp;
WARM.

Council
from PageA1

..

the state is expected to
annoQnce
awards
in
November or December,
Zoeller said.
Other business
Council Member Sandy
Brown said the insurance
committee will consider
requmng an employee
contribution toward the
. cost of health insurance in
order to reduce the cost of

·I·

'

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'·.1

health insurance to the viilage. Village employees
now pay no premium for
single-plan health insurance coverage.
Cathy Baker discussed
with council a recent water
leak on Garfield Street and
damage she said was caused
to her home because the
public works department
did not respond to her calls
for repairs.
Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
said · the . public works
department has received an
increase in returned checks

from
customers.
Customers whose check is
returned ar~ not permitted
to make payment by
checks, ever. Iannarelli
suggested that the ordinance committee consider
an ordinance allowing
stricter enforcement.
Council
defeated
a
· motion to hire a clerk for the
mayor's court, at 32 hours
per week, pending a review
of the position and a determination of how many
hours are needed to complete the work.

Council also:
,,.
• Approved supplemental; .~
transfers as requested by ..,
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker,·
in the amounts of $1.000 ''
and $500.
·.
• Approved payment of"
. bills totaling $26,390.08. .
• Approved monthly u
reports from the public
works, refuse, finance and ..
income tax departments. :.
Also present were CoWJcil :~
members Stephen Houc~ •...
Ferman Moore, Shawn Rice
and Craig Wehrung, andr~
·Fiscal Officer Susan Baker. .· ,

,.

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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
I

'

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPS 213-9®)
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Correction Polley

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In a story, call the newsroom at (740)
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through Friday. 111 Coun Street,
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Second-class
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Poatmester: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Cour1
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,vA~&gt;-

~

Days .of Chicken a la King dethroned

.

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
·signed, and include address and telephone numbel: No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letter" of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
ed for publication.

Our server at the Ciao
Down Cafe has just placed a
little, shallow rlish of olive
oil and a basket of rlifferent
types of bread on our table.
We're supposed to rlip our
.bread in the olive oil
because if there's one thing
everyone needs right before
dinner, it's some nice oily
bread. We would never eat
oily bread before dinner at
home or tell the kids they
can't eat rlinner until they
finish their oily bread, but
restaurants seem to think we
want it.
The real reason they serve
it is so that you'll have
something to do with your
hands before the real food
arrives~ a good·idea when
you've got a bunch of bored
people sitting around a
knife-festooned table drinkmg the local vino.
The bread is free, of
course, which means it's not
free at all; it means they're
charging you more for
something else. Why not? If
you'll pay $11 for the handmade squash ravioli, rou'll
probably pay $12 w1thout
much squawking. I &lt;;an u~u­
ally tell how expensive a
restaurant is by how many
"free" things they offer:
• A tablecloth: + $3
.
• A papenablecloth: + $5
• A, candle on the table: +
"

white-stoneware plate (add
Forty years ago, the most
$1) with a sprig of r~semary fashionable order in the
over it (add $1). It looked most fashionable place in
like a painting (add $1), a town was a large wedge of '
real work of art. And it was iceberg lettuce dripping
about
as filling as eating a with blue cheese dressing. It
Jim
small Picasso, though I'm screamed sophistication and
Mullen
sure they tasted much better. class. Then it was a starter, ··
I still haven't figured out now it would be the mea!. :,
how trends like dipping
The lettuce wedge would
bread in olive oil start. One be followed by the Surf and
$1
day, no restaurants served Turf, (add $5) or maybe just
• A flower on the table: + · olive oil with bread, the next the Prime Rib. And for
$1
day, it comes with your dessert, she'll have the
• A menu on the table: + grilled cheese. at the lunch Crepe Suzette flambe, and
$2
counter at Walgreen's, and I'll 'ake the Floating Island.
• Lots of children's seats: McDonald's is trying to figThat kind of food (and ,
+ $5
ure out a way to tum it into ordering for the woman) has :·
• Servers wear T-shirts a breakfast sandwich.
with logo: + $1
Who knew food could be gone the way of Nehru jack-.
• Servers wear black so trendy? What happened ets and Princess phones,
pants, white cotton shirts, to all that stuff we used to replaced py California rolls
skinny black ties: + $6 .
eat in the '50s? Chicken a Ia with chipotle and paninis.
• If the restaurant is on a king used to be one of the The lettuce wedge was ·
pier or docked boat: + $3
fanciest things you could replaced by the radicchio
• If that boat plans of mov- eat. Now, you couldn't serve decade , followed by the
ing: + $10
it in prison without being arugula decade and now ··
• Visible kitchen: • $4
accused of cruel and unusu- mixed baby green decade.
• In a tourist city in sea- al punishment. Lobster What's next? Well, I already .,
son: + $8
Newburg, tuna casseroles, know. Iceberg lettuce wedge .,
• If the restaurant is on top ring-mold salads? In one smothered in blue cheese
dressing is making a come- ·,
year and out the other.
of a skyscraper: + $15
• If it's on top of a skyAnd when did we start back . I know because it
everything? came "free" with my three .:
scraper and it revolves: + blackening
$25
When did we stop blacken- raviolis.
(Jim Mullen is the author
So as you can see, I know ing everything? My grocery
my restaurants. I'm just store now has an entire sec- of "It Takes a Village Idiot: .
sorry I didn't eat more oily lion devoted to peppercorns Complicating the Simple
bread before the food and salt. There is mustard Ufe" aizd "Baby's First
arrived. ,I got three raviolis from every country in the Tattoo. " You can reach him
in the center of a gigantic world.
at jim_mullen@myway.com)

-&lt;.
~

.I

·,

'{;

.

1 ··- ....
~ ~
~

Doris Eastman ·
FLORA - Doris Eastman, 84, of Aora rlied Thesctay
afternoon, Sept. 11 , 2007 at her borne. FWJe~ !lfl'lUlgements
will be announced by Jagers &amp; Sons Funeral Home, Athens.

I

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lI

Local Briefs
Application
deadline
POMEROY - Deadline
for applications for the
Meigs County Retired
Teachers
Association's
scholarship is Oct. 5.
Applicants must .be residents of Meigs County, a
junior or senior currently
enrolled in a college, majoting in education or teacher
training with a grade point
average of at least 2.5.
Applications
must
include a current college
transcript, showing the two
previous years of credits
and grades, a resume of
activities, work qr volunteer, and career objectives,
listing at least three references, with one being an
instructor, a current photograph for publicity and the
name and address of the
college.
All applicants will be
evaluated on grade point

·---·

----..· - - ·
I'F.J.fOI.\tNO ARTS CFNI'RF.

average and compliance
with requirements, with
consideration of e,.;tra-curricular activities and career
objectives.
Applications should be .
mailed to the MCRT
Scholarship Committee, c/o
Joan Corder, 297 Wright
St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Issue 2
from PageA1
employee safety manual
and asked council to review
it with comments at the next
meeting.
Councilman Pete Barnhart
also brought up
poor
condition of Willis Hill and
how he felt it needed maintenance and auention since

the

it belonged to the village.
Musser announced and
COWJcil approved the Meigs
Cpunty Cancer Initiative
placing pink bows on the vii. Iage's light posts along the
walking path to conunemorate Breast Cancer Awareness
Month which is in October.
Musser also announced
the 'Ohio Valley Bikers
Benefit will be on the parking lot on Sept. 22 to raise
money for God's NET.

Dr. Gregory L. Piersol DC
Cblropractk Pbyslchm
• Insurance
• Auto Accidents

JtiWMnel'

113 W.1n~ St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

• Workers Comp
• Medicaid (WV &amp; OH) .
• Medicare

(740)992·5479
wamerjl@natioowide.com

D

Nationwide'

On Your Side

• Box Oltlce: 428 2nd Ava.
Galllpolll, OH (740) 446-ARTS

740-992-6759
RCP websitewww.riversityplayers.net

Performance Dates:
Friday, Nov. 9 &amp; Sat. Nov. tO
Meigs Elementary School
·
Hometown Market

~------------------------·
·
Overbrook Center Located @ 333 Page St.;

v=c.~
JeffWN hawana!

Gerry Enrico
&amp; The Finders
with special guest
Musician Jan Haddox
9/14
6:30 l!ffi
Robin Hood
Jr. Theater
9/29-9/30

men
7 women singen; will be held on '·
JSalturdl!y, September IS from I :00
6:00pm at the River City PlayersJ ~
building in Middleport, OH..
I Pl&lt;:asc come with a CO/cassette
prinled music. An accompanist
will be provided.
For more infonnation please call

Back &amp; Neck Pain ·
Headaches
Personal &amp; Sports InJury

236 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

740.992·1000

•

z

Middleport, OH is pleased to announce we will
be holding an STNA Class scheduled for
September. Hours will be Sam-4:30pm. If you are
interested in joining our friendly and dedicated
staff, please stop by our front office Mon-Fri
9am-Spm and fill out an application. Full time
and Part time positions available to those
qualified individuals completing the class.
Applicants must be dependable (ATTENDANCE
IS A MUST) team players with positive
attitudes to join us in providing outstanding,
quality care to our residents. If you have any
questions contact Hollie Bumgarner, LPN, stall'
development coordinator @ 740-992-6472.
Overbrook Center is and E.O.E. and a
participant of the drug free workplace program.
0

•

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Page A~

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

lnside

Wednesday, September i 2 , 200~

.

lluckeyes travel to Washington, Paae B2

I

•

For the Record
BY JOHN McCARTHY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMB US U.S.
Rep. P~J.ul Gillmor was
remembered Thesday in ceremonies at the Ohio
Statehouse as a husband,
father, grandfather, colleague
and an upfront legislator who
''understood his adversaries
were not his enemies."
Gillmor,
68,
died
Wednesday in an apparent
fall down stairs at his suburban Washington apartment. The Republican had
represented most of northwest Ohio in Congress for
nearly 20 · years and also
served in the Ohio Senate
from 1967-89.
Hundreds of mourners
gathered in the Statehouse
Atrium to pay fmal respects.
Among them were former
U.S. Sen. Mike De Wine, former Gov. Bob Taft, most of
the Ohio congressional delegation - Democrats and
Republicans - and other ·
colleagues past and present.
"With the pas:;ing of Paul
Gillmor, Oh1o has lost the
service of a great person,"
Gov. Ted Strickland, a
Democrat who was Gillmor's
congressional colleague for
12 years, said in his eulogy.
"He understood his adversaries were not his enemies."
Gillmor 's closed, fla~;
draped casket lay in state m
the Rotunda Thesday morning, then was moved to the
Atrium for the memorial
service. Other speakers
included U.S. Sen. George
Voinovich, U.S . House
Republican Leader John
Boehner of West Chester,
U.S. · Rep. Marcy Kaptur, a
Toledo Democrat, and U.S.
Rep. Ralph Regula, a
Navarre Republican.
: Former state Sen. Stanley
Aronoff, a Cincinnati
Republican who succeeded

Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, right, kisses the hand of Rep. Paul Gillmor's widow, Karen during
Gillmor's funeral, Tuesday, in Columbus .
Gillmor's wife, Karen,
also a former state senator,
spoke briefly and thanked
the hundreds of people whil
turned out. She described
his personal creed as earning your own way, working
hard and paying back what
you receive.
"He might have judged
ideas, but not people," she
said.
Prior to the service,
Gillmor's casket
was
flanked by Ohio National
Guard Honor Guard members in the middle of the
Rotunda as mourners greeted family members.
Gillmor, who was Ohio
Senate president from 1981 ,
83. and 1985-89, was a
"very kind and gentle man,"
said Judy Stalter ,.,of
Columbus, who knew the
congressman when she
served as assistant Senate
clerk in the 1980s.

Gillmor as Senate president
in
1989, remembered
Gillmor as someone who
would help anyone.
"Paul Wl\S the same person in 1961 as he was the
last time I saw him in
Washington this year,"
Aronoff said. "He loved the
job but didn't catch
Potomac fever."
Kaptur, whose Toledoarea district adjoined
Gillmor 's, said the con- ·
gressman was at his best ·
helping constituents by
improving roads, especially
accident-prone U.S. Route
24, and leading the quest for
aid for victims of recent
flooding. She recalled his
manner as he helped her out ·
of a helicopter during a
recent tour the two took of
flooded areas. ·
"He held out his hand.
What a gentleman! What a
gentleman!" Kaptur said.

=.n: C! ~~:ti~~ ·

39.&amp;0
Harley-Davlllson (NYSEJ-

The high court·...said . Strickland's veto was out
Strickland's veto c~fterl' · o - bolliiifS&lt;: · ·voters.;':could
· I'1m11
· laid O!Jt dec1'de. whether t he b'll
a 10-day time
I .
1
in the state Constitution:
should become law by sub'fhe" court iiubseqtftl~~li&gt;'D'!Utint~tionl'' fOr 1ttefruled
tha:t
although erendum.

certify that at least I,000 of
them are ofregistered Ohio.
voters.
If Brunner rules there are
.enough v.alid.signatures, the
group would have until Oct.
30 to collect 243,000 more
signatures· of registered
Ohio voters to place the
issue on the November
2008 ballot.
The high court on Aug. 1
struck down Strickland's
Jan. 8 veto of a bill that
places a $5,000 limit on certain court damages and creates new protections for
companies that once sold
paint containing lead, which
can cause developmental
problems ot even death in
children.

48.99

Hill Financial (NASDAQ)
- 30.07
. Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ) - 25
BBT (NY6EI - 39.92
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 28.18
Pepsico (NYSE) - 89.87
Premier (NASDAQ) -13.42
Rockwell (NYSE)- 89-30
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 9.20
Royal Dutch Shell - 81.05
Sears Ho14lni (NASDAQ) 131.24
Wa~Mart (NYSE) -42.94
Wendy's (NYSE)-.,.- 31.83
Oak

transactlonll fOr Sapt.U,

.

Clncln..U

Cloudy

"='........_ OAum.. ~ ~

ShOWers

1

//

Rain

~"'" Qfrl ..21t6

Ice

•

*

•• •••
Snow

'I;~

• • • ••

9:1J(J.,

Weather Underground • AP

Wednesday".Sunny. Highs
in the lower 70s. Northwest
winds around 5 mph. .
Wednesday nighL.•Mostly
clear. Cold with lows in the
mid 40s. Northwest winds
around 5 mph in the
evening... Becoming light and
variable.
Thursday...Sunny. Highs
around 80. East wil)ds
around 5 mph .
Thursday night ..•Partly
cloudy. Not as cool with
"') lows around 60. South

winds around 5 mph.
Friday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Friday night... A chance
of thunderstorms in the
evening . · Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 50s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Saturday•.•Partly suimy.
Cooler with highs in the
upper 60s.
Saturday night... Partl y
cloudy. Lows in the mid
40s.

5

nblr 14

Poirit. Pleasant rNV) at Meigs

Eootom at van rNV)
Aluander al A'- YaiMf .
Federal Hockin~ at Btllp!il .
crookavll~ al Noleonvllle-York
Vinton County at Waverly
Bishop Roucrans at Miller
Symm.. Valley al Trimble
fort Ftye at Waterfold
ChHilcothe at GaiUa Acadenr(
W8hama (WV) at South Gallo

...... n , rtw 11

. F-1
Akron Manchelter 8f Wtltston

·

c,_ CountYy

.

~uthern, Meigs, Eastern at Logan

Invite, 11 a.m.

Warren
takes titles
at Athens

•
1,
!
•

Bryan Wahers/phDio
Meigs senior Patti Vining comes up with a dig during the third game of Tuesday's TVC Ohio
contest with Alexander at Larry R. MorrisOn Gymnasium iri Rock Springs.

!
1

:
;
'
,

. THE PLAINS - The
'warren boys and girls cross
country teams swept the
varsity races at the annual
Atheus Invitational cross
country
.meet . on
. Saturday.
T
h e
Warriors
, edg~ host
Athens in
'both races .
T h e
Wa. rr en
'b · o ·y s
GoOd• . .. ljlllllSsed ~ .
~~®ints / followed . by
Athen· s
53 and
inib' le
a •. disthird

,
.•

•

/!o'"

120.

Alexander
l 2 2)'
i · v· e ·r
Valley
Swisher
(137),
Southern
(138), Vinton CountY (149),
Wellston (180) and Meigs
(199) rounded out the field.
Vince Weatberstein was
the top River Valley runner in lith place (19:08).
He was followed by teammates David Householder
(19th, 19:43), Sean Sands
(29th, 20:41 ), Tyler Noble
(49th, 22 :44) and Zach
Polcyn (68th, 25:42).
Southern's Kyle Goode
ran a good race and fin ·
ished 12th (19: 11) while
fe II ow Tornadoes Kraig
Kleski (23rd. 20:08) and
Dylan Roush (27th, 20:35)
also had top 30 finishes.
Colby Roseberry (47th,
;22:27) and John Holsinger
(69th, 25:44) rounded out
Hu~ team score.
: Scoring for Meigs .were
Andrew 0' Bryant (38th,
21 :38), Nathan Cook
(42nd, 21 :50), Jacob
Riffle (60th,
24: 19),
)\&gt;forgan Kennedy (62nd,
~4:45) and Jan Bullington
~65th, U :551.
I
: • Ple•se see lnwU.. 81

MASON, W.Va. -Meigs
golf continued is domination of the Tri-Valley
Conference .Ohio Division
on Tuesday, posting a 71-.
stroke victory over visiting
.Nel&amp;onville-York . · at
Riverside Golf Club.
T h e
Marauders
(7-0-1) tallied
an
impressiv e
team score
of · 150
wljile mov- ·
ing to with• ·
in · one win ;
of clinching a share
of the 2007 ·
TVC Ohio. , t.itle. The
Maroon and Gold are also
two-tinie reigning champi- ·
ons.
MHS hlld three jlOlfers ·
post sub-40 scores, mclud-.
mg a !-under par 34 from
senior . Kirk Legar. Legar
was the low round and
medalist in the dual.
Sophomore
J~ey
Blackston and semor
Steven Stewart were close
behind with respective
totals of 36 and 37.
Sophomore
Zack
Whitlatch rounded out the
MHS team score with a
43. Classmates Tyler
Andrews and Bobby King
also· fired respective
rounds of 46 and 48.
Greg Smith led the
Buckeyes, who posted a
. Bryeo Welhlralplloto
team tally of 221, with a 49.
Adam Razz was next with a Meigs senior Kirk Legar unleashes a putt attempt during Tuesday's TVC Ohio dual with
Nelsonville-York at Riversider Golf Club in Mason, W.Va . Legar shot a 1-under par 34 in guiding the Marauders to a 71-stroke victory over the Buckeyes.

BY TOM WITHERS
N' SPORTS WRITER

FIX - 1-740-44&amp;3008
., E-mail - sportsO myda!lysentlnet.co m

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-234 2. ext. 33

bsherman0 mydailytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740)446-234 2, ext . 23

lcrum Omydaityregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sport• Writer
(740) 446-2342 , ext 33
bwaltersO myd ailytribune.com

'

'·

•

to-wire en route to improving to 6-2 overall.
Freshman Shellie Bailey
led the Lady Marauders with
five points, three kills and a
block, while senior Patti
Vining was next with four
points. Seniors Hannah Pratt
and Talisha Beha each
added three points, to the losing cause as well.
MHS managed just seven
kills in the match, with
junior Catie Wolfe followmg Bailey with two. Senior
Amy Barr and sophomore
Please see Melp, 81

BY SCOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Eagles continued their domination of foes
Wednesday
evening by
defeating
arch rival
Southern
(3-4) quite
handily 258, 25-11,
and 25-20
to sweep
the three•g a m e
ma, tch.
Eastern is
now 8-2 on
the season
behind
their 'J?lay
hard, gll'er
done' fundamentally
strong
. __ _ _...J game plan,
Hunter
Eastern
mentor
Howie Caldwell said, "I
thought we did what we had
to do to get the job done. We
piayed better than we have
the last couple games.
That's a positive."
Except for the last game,
tbe match was a sleeper.
Eastern dominated early
throughout the first two sets.
then had to step it up a notch
in the finale, but got the job
done in shut-out style.
Pleilse see Eatem, 81
I

Browns trade QB Frye to Seattle

: · t-74G-446-2342 ext. 33

-5818

Pratt

BWAUERSOMYOAlLYTRIBUNE.COM

~NTAcrUs

CLINIC

Bailey

BRYAN WALTIRI

STAFF REPORT

SPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

.
: OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)

HOI ZER

ROCK SPRINGS - Not
exac tl y the welcome home
party that Meigs was t\opmg for.
·
Mter two weeks of the
regular season and fi ve consecutive road contests,
Meigs volleyball finally
opened its 2007 ' home
schedule Tuesday night at
Larry
R.
Morrison
Gymnasium.
The one problem with that
home opener - it was
against three-time defending
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division
champion
Alexander, and the Lady
Spartans more than spoiled
the opening during a
straight-game 25-12, 25-13,
25-16 victory over the host
Maroon and Gold.
The Lady Marauders (4-2)
fell to 1- 1 in the TVC Ohio,
while
AHS
remai ned
umblemished in league play
with a 2-0 mark. The Red,
White and Black led wire-

Invitational Unbeaten Marauders blast Nelsonville-York Eastern·
Bv
dominates
Southern

:

,.

~

a

Han'*' (WV) at Southern

"

.

-1

fddty.

. JP
Morg&amp;,n (NYSE)- 44.14
Jones ftnllnclal....,.ors tsuc
Kroeer (NYSEJ _ 26 . 73
. Mills In Galllpolla 8t 17401 . , .
Umltad Braf!ds (NYS~I.,-, .. ,.. . . 441-944j, and LoiHIJ ,.....,"' :
"21.82
· · · .. J&lt;...,~.,......~, ·1n Point Pleasant'if'(304) ' "f..
Norfolk Southern (NYSEI -SO . 874-0174.-Memf!er SIPC. . ~ ·

cltynleglon
High I low temps

.,

.

~:,•::nr!::r~:tt •.; ·
. p.m. ET cto.tne qUCitet of

,...,•• ,.~·,_,. .• 2007, provkled by,.Edward .•

p.m.

·

Eastern '(Pine Hilla G.C.),

V/alorford at Southern (RIYVralde G.C.), .
4:30p.m.
.

••'
•

69" 145'

ClouOy .........

4~30

BWALTERSOMYDAI LYTRIBUNE.COM

Golf
at Meigs (Riverside

S&gt;.C.), 4:30p.m.

:m.- at

\
I

~

~ ~ -~

.

N.elsor:~vllle-York

I

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Well81on ol Meigs. B p.m.
Euten! at Miller, B p.m.
Southern at WaterfDfd, 8 p.m.

••

AEP (NYSEI- 46.30
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 76
.
Aehland Inc. (NYSEI - 58.66
Bli Lota (NYSE)- 29.29
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 31.56
Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE) - 83.34
Century lltumlnum (NASDAQ)
- 47-!I!J
Champion (NASDAQ)- 6.97
Charming ShOPs (NASDAQ I 11-!59
City Holdtne (NASDAQ) 38.0!j
Collins (NYSE) - 88.26
D~POnt (NYSE)- 47.57
US Bank (NYSE)- 31.70

13

Votloybllt

,'

*Cofumbua

~

Du. . . Sept

'

Local Stocks

Alexander downs
·Lady Marauders

.

'
'
'

POMEROY - . Arraigned in Meigs County Commo1'
Pleas Court on secret indictments were:
•
• Michael E. Searls, failure to appear after recognizanc~
release, a fourth-degree felony. bond set at $27,000. Triat
set for Nov. 8.
"
• Jared A. Warner, five counts of illegal processin~ o(
drug documents, and five counts of deception to obtam a
dangerous drug, both fifth-degree felomes. Bond set a'
$1 ,000. Trial set for March 27, 2008.
:

"I have the highest
respect for him," said
Stalter, who was joined at
the Statehouse Thesday by
her husband, Charles. "He
will be really missed in .the
political ·scheme of things."
Gillmor joips a select list
of people chosen to lie in
state in the state Capitol.
Only six other people,
including
·· President
Abraham Lincoln, have lain
in state in the Rotunda, the
highest Statehouse honor.
The first was arctic explorer
Elisha Kent Kane in 1857,
while the building was
under construction. The last
was four-tenn Gov. James
A. Rhodes in 200 I.
Calling hollrs for Gillmor
will be held Wednesday in
Tiffin, followed by a memorial service and private burial in his hometown of Old
Fort. Gillmor also is survived by five children.

\'ollerblll

•

••' ~
Meig~

66' 145°

_.,
PIIIUY

.

Meigs,at Gallla Academy, 5:30 p.m.
- . wi le-York at Southern, 6 p.m.

''

Arraigned

Wednesday, September 12, 2007 ·

S'aliooJ.E

.

POMEROY - Keith R. Day was sentenced in
County Common Pleas Court to one year prison, suspend{
ed, on a charge of possession of drugs. He was placed undet
'community control and the standard tenns of the program. :

AP photo

.

. ~OME AO't - A &amp;chedule Of upcoming high
IIChool varllty ~lng tve nt• Involving
t.1m11 from Melge County.

•

Sentenced

-

=====
locAL
,........
·=
·

POMEROY - A foreclosure was issued in Meig'
County Common Pleas Court to PHH Mortgage Corp.l
against Dan, Sue and Franco Romuno, and other~ .
~

Forecast for Wedneaday, Sept 12

~

First 2007 Oblo AP Football Poll, J'a&amp;e B6

•

· Foreclosure

Today's Forecast

65'143'

•

.•

Local Weather

Menlllleld •

;wvtJ heads to Maryland, Page B2

POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigi
County Probate Court to: Christopher Jesse Haye, 22, aiid
Erin Sue Holman, 20, Racine; Timothy Mark Stalnaker~ 451
and Cheryl Ann Miller, 50, Thppers Plams: Robert Miltoit
Scarberry, Jr., 39:''and Chrisie Lynn Gilbert, 34, Racine. :
Jackie Ryan Welker, 40, and Jessica Ann Bober, 311
Pomeroy ; Adam Gregory Lee, 21, and Ginnee Reneo
Hendricks,.27, Racine; Scotty Lynn Oliver, 39, and Chery'
Ann Smith, 45, Pomeroy; and Harold Dallas Cremeans, 56j
and Crystal Leigh Curtis, 43, Pomeroy.
•

Consumer advocates get proposed ballot Ian
.· ·guage approved
COLUMBUS (AP) Attorney Gei\ei'lif Marc
Dann approved the ballot
language Thesday proposed
by a group of "consumer
advocates. who want to
repeal a wide-ranging law
that places limits on consumer fraud lawsuits.
Gov. Ted Strickland had
vetoed the bill in January,
but the action was overturned by .the Ohio Supreme
Court last month.
Dann ·said the ballot language was a "fair and truthful statement" of the referendum's intent.
Consumer , advocates
have also submitted I ,800
signatures to Secretary of
State Jennifer Brunner to

'

•'
'

Marriage licenses

Bl

The Dciily Sentinel

.

AP photo

Quarterback Charlie Frye watches from the sidelines in the
second half of an NFL football game against the Rittsburgh
Steelers Sunday in Cleveland. Frye, benched before halftime
in the season opener, was traded to Seattle Tuesday for an
undisclosed draft pick, a stunningly swift move as Cleveland
clears the way for rookie Brady Quinn.

BEREA - Charlie Frye
went from starter to startin g
over, and ·Brady Quinn
moved up a notch .
In
two day s,
the
Cleveland Browns' compli cated, confusing and crowded quarterback carou sel
took a di zzying spin.
Frye, benched before hal ftime in Sunday's season
opener, was traded to
Seattle for a sixth-round
draft pick Tuesday, a stun ningly swift move that raises Quinn , the Brown s' highprofile rookie QB , to No. 2
on the depth chart.
With Frye no longer in the
picture, the Browns will
start Derek Anderson, who
lost the quarterback competition to Frye during the preseason, at home on Sunday
again st the Ci ncinn ati
Bengals.
Quinn, the heir apparent.
will be Anderson's backup .

"This move obviously
clarifies our quarterback situation," general manager
Phil Savage said with a
straight face. " ... Some people think we're doing some
kind of experiment, but
we're not. We' re tryin~ to
win and unfortunately thmgs
got derailed · Sunday before
it even got started."
Cleveland's trade of Frye
is unprecedented. According
to the .Elias Sports Bureau,
he's the first qu arterbac k
since the NFL/ AFL merger
in 1970 to start hi s team's
season opener and be traded
before Week 2.
The Browns, embarrassed
34-7 by the Pittsburgh
Steelers in their home opener, will go into Week 2 with
three quarterbacks on their
roster and only one of them.
third-stringer Ken Dorsey.
has won an NFL game.
The club signed Dorsey to
a one-year contract Tuesday,
10 days after the Browns cut
him. Dorsey wi II serve as a
·-·--·-..

__ .._-

-~-

mentor to Quinn, who might
have been the Brown s'
opening-week starter if he
hadn' t mi ssed II days of
training camp in · a contract
holdout.
Savage said starting Quinn
has been di scussed, and that
the former Notre Dame star
could soon be under center.
" I think there is a feeling
that he.·s cenainly closer to
being ready to play," Savage
said. "We want to be able to
give him a full gamut of
plays and give him a chance
to have some success . I
don"t know if that happens
in two weeks, fo ur weeks,
six weeks.
"The imp011ant thing in
the big picture is that we
develop Brady Quinn in the
right way. That is the most
important thing that we have
to do thi s year and that's
what we 're trying to do this
year. And, win."
Frye was dealt less than 48
Ple•se see Tr•de, B:l

__ _____ ---··---.:.._

.. -

�•

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.j

••
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•

Page A~

OHIO

The Daily Sentinel

lnside

Wednesday, September i 2 , 200~

.

lluckeyes travel to Washington, Paae B2

I

•

For the Record
BY JOHN McCARTHY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMB US U.S.
Rep. P~J.ul Gillmor was
remembered Thesday in ceremonies at the Ohio
Statehouse as a husband,
father, grandfather, colleague
and an upfront legislator who
''understood his adversaries
were not his enemies."
Gillmor,
68,
died
Wednesday in an apparent
fall down stairs at his suburban Washington apartment. The Republican had
represented most of northwest Ohio in Congress for
nearly 20 · years and also
served in the Ohio Senate
from 1967-89.
Hundreds of mourners
gathered in the Statehouse
Atrium to pay fmal respects.
Among them were former
U.S. Sen. Mike De Wine, former Gov. Bob Taft, most of
the Ohio congressional delegation - Democrats and
Republicans - and other ·
colleagues past and present.
"With the pas:;ing of Paul
Gillmor, Oh1o has lost the
service of a great person,"
Gov. Ted Strickland, a
Democrat who was Gillmor's
congressional colleague for
12 years, said in his eulogy.
"He understood his adversaries were not his enemies."
Gillmor 's closed, fla~;
draped casket lay in state m
the Rotunda Thesday morning, then was moved to the
Atrium for the memorial
service. Other speakers
included U.S. Sen. George
Voinovich, U.S . House
Republican Leader John
Boehner of West Chester,
U.S. · Rep. Marcy Kaptur, a
Toledo Democrat, and U.S.
Rep. Ralph Regula, a
Navarre Republican.
: Former state Sen. Stanley
Aronoff, a Cincinnati
Republican who succeeded

Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland, right, kisses the hand of Rep. Paul Gillmor's widow, Karen during
Gillmor's funeral, Tuesday, in Columbus .
Gillmor's wife, Karen,
also a former state senator,
spoke briefly and thanked
the hundreds of people whil
turned out. She described
his personal creed as earning your own way, working
hard and paying back what
you receive.
"He might have judged
ideas, but not people," she
said.
Prior to the service,
Gillmor's casket
was
flanked by Ohio National
Guard Honor Guard members in the middle of the
Rotunda as mourners greeted family members.
Gillmor, who was Ohio
Senate president from 1981 ,
83. and 1985-89, was a
"very kind and gentle man,"
said Judy Stalter ,.,of
Columbus, who knew the
congressman when she
served as assistant Senate
clerk in the 1980s.

Gillmor as Senate president
in
1989, remembered
Gillmor as someone who
would help anyone.
"Paul Wl\S the same person in 1961 as he was the
last time I saw him in
Washington this year,"
Aronoff said. "He loved the
job but didn't catch
Potomac fever."
Kaptur, whose Toledoarea district adjoined
Gillmor 's, said the con- ·
gressman was at his best ·
helping constituents by
improving roads, especially
accident-prone U.S. Route
24, and leading the quest for
aid for victims of recent
flooding. She recalled his
manner as he helped her out ·
of a helicopter during a
recent tour the two took of
flooded areas. ·
"He held out his hand.
What a gentleman! What a
gentleman!" Kaptur said.

=.n: C! ~~:ti~~ ·

39.&amp;0
Harley-Davlllson (NYSEJ-

The high court·...said . Strickland's veto was out
Strickland's veto c~fterl' · o - bolliiifS&lt;: · ·voters.;':could
· I'1m11
· laid O!Jt dec1'de. whether t he b'll
a 10-day time
I .
1
in the state Constitution:
should become law by sub'fhe" court iiubseqtftl~~li&gt;'D'!Utint~tionl'' fOr 1ttefruled
tha:t
although erendum.

certify that at least I,000 of
them are ofregistered Ohio.
voters.
If Brunner rules there are
.enough v.alid.signatures, the
group would have until Oct.
30 to collect 243,000 more
signatures· of registered
Ohio voters to place the
issue on the November
2008 ballot.
The high court on Aug. 1
struck down Strickland's
Jan. 8 veto of a bill that
places a $5,000 limit on certain court damages and creates new protections for
companies that once sold
paint containing lead, which
can cause developmental
problems ot even death in
children.

48.99

Hill Financial (NASDAQ)
- 30.07
. Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ) - 25
BBT (NY6EI - 39.92
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 28.18
Pepsico (NYSE) - 89.87
Premier (NASDAQ) -13.42
Rockwell (NYSE)- 89-30
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 9.20
Royal Dutch Shell - 81.05
Sears Ho14lni (NASDAQ) 131.24
Wa~Mart (NYSE) -42.94
Wendy's (NYSE)-.,.- 31.83
Oak

transactlonll fOr Sapt.U,

.

Clncln..U

Cloudy

"='........_ OAum.. ~ ~

ShOWers

1

//

Rain

~"'" Qfrl ..21t6

Ice

•

*

•• •••
Snow

'I;~

• • • ••

9:1J(J.,

Weather Underground • AP

Wednesday".Sunny. Highs
in the lower 70s. Northwest
winds around 5 mph. .
Wednesday nighL.•Mostly
clear. Cold with lows in the
mid 40s. Northwest winds
around 5 mph in the
evening... Becoming light and
variable.
Thursday...Sunny. Highs
around 80. East wil)ds
around 5 mph .
Thursday night ..•Partly
cloudy. Not as cool with
"') lows around 60. South

winds around 5 mph.
Friday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Friday night... A chance
of thunderstorms in the
evening . · Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Lows in the mid 50s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.
Saturday•.•Partly suimy.
Cooler with highs in the
upper 60s.
Saturday night... Partl y
cloudy. Lows in the mid
40s.

5

nblr 14

Poirit. Pleasant rNV) at Meigs

Eootom at van rNV)
Aluander al A'- YaiMf .
Federal Hockin~ at Btllp!il .
crookavll~ al Noleonvllle-York
Vinton County at Waverly
Bishop Roucrans at Miller
Symm.. Valley al Trimble
fort Ftye at Waterfold
ChHilcothe at GaiUa Acadenr(
W8hama (WV) at South Gallo

...... n , rtw 11

. F-1
Akron Manchelter 8f Wtltston

·

c,_ CountYy

.

~uthern, Meigs, Eastern at Logan

Invite, 11 a.m.

Warren
takes titles
at Athens

•
1,
!
•

Bryan Wahers/phDio
Meigs senior Patti Vining comes up with a dig during the third game of Tuesday's TVC Ohio
contest with Alexander at Larry R. MorrisOn Gymnasium iri Rock Springs.

!
1

:
;
'
,

. THE PLAINS - The
'warren boys and girls cross
country teams swept the
varsity races at the annual
Atheus Invitational cross
country
.meet . on
. Saturday.
T
h e
Warriors
, edg~ host
Athens in
'both races .
T h e
Wa. rr en
'b · o ·y s
GoOd• . .. ljlllllSsed ~ .
~~®ints / followed . by
Athen· s
53 and
inib' le
a •. disthird

,
.•

•

/!o'"

120.

Alexander
l 2 2)'
i · v· e ·r
Valley
Swisher
(137),
Southern
(138), Vinton CountY (149),
Wellston (180) and Meigs
(199) rounded out the field.
Vince Weatberstein was
the top River Valley runner in lith place (19:08).
He was followed by teammates David Householder
(19th, 19:43), Sean Sands
(29th, 20:41 ), Tyler Noble
(49th, 22 :44) and Zach
Polcyn (68th, 25:42).
Southern's Kyle Goode
ran a good race and fin ·
ished 12th (19: 11) while
fe II ow Tornadoes Kraig
Kleski (23rd. 20:08) and
Dylan Roush (27th, 20:35)
also had top 30 finishes.
Colby Roseberry (47th,
;22:27) and John Holsinger
(69th, 25:44) rounded out
Hu~ team score.
: Scoring for Meigs .were
Andrew 0' Bryant (38th,
21 :38), Nathan Cook
(42nd, 21 :50), Jacob
Riffle (60th,
24: 19),
)\&gt;forgan Kennedy (62nd,
~4:45) and Jan Bullington
~65th, U :551.
I
: • Ple•se see lnwU.. 81

MASON, W.Va. -Meigs
golf continued is domination of the Tri-Valley
Conference .Ohio Division
on Tuesday, posting a 71-.
stroke victory over visiting
.Nel&amp;onville-York . · at
Riverside Golf Club.
T h e
Marauders
(7-0-1) tallied
an
impressiv e
team score
of · 150
wljile mov- ·
ing to with• ·
in · one win ;
of clinching a share
of the 2007 ·
TVC Ohio. , t.itle. The
Maroon and Gold are also
two-tinie reigning champi- ·
ons.
MHS hlld three jlOlfers ·
post sub-40 scores, mclud-.
mg a !-under par 34 from
senior . Kirk Legar. Legar
was the low round and
medalist in the dual.
Sophomore
J~ey
Blackston and semor
Steven Stewart were close
behind with respective
totals of 36 and 37.
Sophomore
Zack
Whitlatch rounded out the
MHS team score with a
43. Classmates Tyler
Andrews and Bobby King
also· fired respective
rounds of 46 and 48.
Greg Smith led the
Buckeyes, who posted a
. Bryeo Welhlralplloto
team tally of 221, with a 49.
Adam Razz was next with a Meigs senior Kirk Legar unleashes a putt attempt during Tuesday's TVC Ohio dual with
Nelsonville-York at Riversider Golf Club in Mason, W.Va . Legar shot a 1-under par 34 in guiding the Marauders to a 71-stroke victory over the Buckeyes.

BY TOM WITHERS
N' SPORTS WRITER

FIX - 1-740-44&amp;3008
., E-mail - sportsO myda!lysentlnet.co m

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-234 2. ext. 33

bsherman0 mydailytrlbune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740)446-234 2, ext . 23

lcrum Omydaityregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sport• Writer
(740) 446-2342 , ext 33
bwaltersO myd ailytribune.com

'

'·

•

to-wire en route to improving to 6-2 overall.
Freshman Shellie Bailey
led the Lady Marauders with
five points, three kills and a
block, while senior Patti
Vining was next with four
points. Seniors Hannah Pratt
and Talisha Beha each
added three points, to the losing cause as well.
MHS managed just seven
kills in the match, with
junior Catie Wolfe followmg Bailey with two. Senior
Amy Barr and sophomore
Please see Melp, 81

BY SCOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Eagles continued their domination of foes
Wednesday
evening by
defeating
arch rival
Southern
(3-4) quite
handily 258, 25-11,
and 25-20
to sweep
the three•g a m e
ma, tch.
Eastern is
now 8-2 on
the season
behind
their 'J?lay
hard, gll'er
done' fundamentally
strong
. __ _ _...J game plan,
Hunter
Eastern
mentor
Howie Caldwell said, "I
thought we did what we had
to do to get the job done. We
piayed better than we have
the last couple games.
That's a positive."
Except for the last game,
tbe match was a sleeper.
Eastern dominated early
throughout the first two sets.
then had to step it up a notch
in the finale, but got the job
done in shut-out style.
Pleilse see Eatem, 81
I

Browns trade QB Frye to Seattle

: · t-74G-446-2342 ext. 33

-5818

Pratt

BWAUERSOMYOAlLYTRIBUNE.COM

~NTAcrUs

CLINIC

Bailey

BRYAN WALTIRI

STAFF REPORT

SPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

.
: OVP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)

HOI ZER

ROCK SPRINGS - Not
exac tl y the welcome home
party that Meigs was t\opmg for.
·
Mter two weeks of the
regular season and fi ve consecutive road contests,
Meigs volleyball finally
opened its 2007 ' home
schedule Tuesday night at
Larry
R.
Morrison
Gymnasium.
The one problem with that
home opener - it was
against three-time defending
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division
champion
Alexander, and the Lady
Spartans more than spoiled
the opening during a
straight-game 25-12, 25-13,
25-16 victory over the host
Maroon and Gold.
The Lady Marauders (4-2)
fell to 1- 1 in the TVC Ohio,
while
AHS
remai ned
umblemished in league play
with a 2-0 mark. The Red,
White and Black led wire-

Invitational Unbeaten Marauders blast Nelsonville-York Eastern·
Bv
dominates
Southern

:

,.

~

a

Han'*' (WV) at Southern

"

.

-1

fddty.

. JP
Morg&amp;,n (NYSE)- 44.14
Jones ftnllnclal....,.ors tsuc
Kroeer (NYSEJ _ 26 . 73
. Mills In Galllpolla 8t 17401 . , .
Umltad Braf!ds (NYS~I.,-, .. ,.. . . 441-944j, and LoiHIJ ,.....,"' :
"21.82
· · · .. J&lt;...,~.,......~, ·1n Point Pleasant'if'(304) ' "f..
Norfolk Southern (NYSEI -SO . 874-0174.-Memf!er SIPC. . ~ ·

cltynleglon
High I low temps

.,

.

~:,•::nr!::r~:tt •.; ·
. p.m. ET cto.tne qUCitet of

,...,•• ,.~·,_,. .• 2007, provkled by,.Edward .•

p.m.

·

Eastern '(Pine Hilla G.C.),

V/alorford at Southern (RIYVralde G.C.), .
4:30p.m.
.

••'
•

69" 145'

ClouOy .........

4~30

BWALTERSOMYDAI LYTRIBUNE.COM

Golf
at Meigs (Riverside

S&gt;.C.), 4:30p.m.

:m.- at

\
I

~

~ ~ -~

.

N.elsor:~vllle-York

I

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Well81on ol Meigs. B p.m.
Euten! at Miller, B p.m.
Southern at WaterfDfd, 8 p.m.

••

AEP (NYSEI- 46.30
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 76
.
Aehland Inc. (NYSEI - 58.66
Bli Lota (NYSE)- 29.29
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 31.56
Bor&amp;Wamer (NYSE) - 83.34
Century lltumlnum (NASDAQ)
- 47-!I!J
Champion (NASDAQ)- 6.97
Charming ShOPs (NASDAQ I 11-!59
City Holdtne (NASDAQ) 38.0!j
Collins (NYSE) - 88.26
D~POnt (NYSE)- 47.57
US Bank (NYSE)- 31.70

13

Votloybllt

,'

*Cofumbua

~

Du. . . Sept

'

Local Stocks

Alexander downs
·Lady Marauders

.

'
'
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POMEROY - . Arraigned in Meigs County Commo1'
Pleas Court on secret indictments were:
•
• Michael E. Searls, failure to appear after recognizanc~
release, a fourth-degree felony. bond set at $27,000. Triat
set for Nov. 8.
"
• Jared A. Warner, five counts of illegal processin~ o(
drug documents, and five counts of deception to obtam a
dangerous drug, both fifth-degree felomes. Bond set a'
$1 ,000. Trial set for March 27, 2008.
:

"I have the highest
respect for him," said
Stalter, who was joined at
the Statehouse Thesday by
her husband, Charles. "He
will be really missed in .the
political ·scheme of things."
Gillmor joips a select list
of people chosen to lie in
state in the state Capitol.
Only six other people,
including
·· President
Abraham Lincoln, have lain
in state in the Rotunda, the
highest Statehouse honor.
The first was arctic explorer
Elisha Kent Kane in 1857,
while the building was
under construction. The last
was four-tenn Gov. James
A. Rhodes in 200 I.
Calling hollrs for Gillmor
will be held Wednesday in
Tiffin, followed by a memorial service and private burial in his hometown of Old
Fort. Gillmor also is survived by five children.

\'ollerblll

•

••' ~
Meig~

66' 145°

_.,
PIIIUY

.

Meigs,at Gallla Academy, 5:30 p.m.
- . wi le-York at Southern, 6 p.m.

''

Arraigned

Wednesday, September 12, 2007 ·

S'aliooJ.E

.

POMEROY - Keith R. Day was sentenced in
County Common Pleas Court to one year prison, suspend{
ed, on a charge of possession of drugs. He was placed undet
'community control and the standard tenns of the program. :

AP photo

.

. ~OME AO't - A &amp;chedule Of upcoming high
IIChool varllty ~lng tve nt• Involving
t.1m11 from Melge County.

•

Sentenced

-

=====
locAL
,........
·=
·

POMEROY - A foreclosure was issued in Meig'
County Common Pleas Court to PHH Mortgage Corp.l
against Dan, Sue and Franco Romuno, and other~ .
~

Forecast for Wedneaday, Sept 12

~

First 2007 Oblo AP Football Poll, J'a&amp;e B6

•

· Foreclosure

Today's Forecast

65'143'

•

.•

Local Weather

Menlllleld •

;wvtJ heads to Maryland, Page B2

POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigi
County Probate Court to: Christopher Jesse Haye, 22, aiid
Erin Sue Holman, 20, Racine; Timothy Mark Stalnaker~ 451
and Cheryl Ann Miller, 50, Thppers Plams: Robert Miltoit
Scarberry, Jr., 39:''and Chrisie Lynn Gilbert, 34, Racine. :
Jackie Ryan Welker, 40, and Jessica Ann Bober, 311
Pomeroy ; Adam Gregory Lee, 21, and Ginnee Reneo
Hendricks,.27, Racine; Scotty Lynn Oliver, 39, and Chery'
Ann Smith, 45, Pomeroy; and Harold Dallas Cremeans, 56j
and Crystal Leigh Curtis, 43, Pomeroy.
•

Consumer advocates get proposed ballot Ian
.· ·guage approved
COLUMBUS (AP) Attorney Gei\ei'lif Marc
Dann approved the ballot
language Thesday proposed
by a group of "consumer
advocates. who want to
repeal a wide-ranging law
that places limits on consumer fraud lawsuits.
Gov. Ted Strickland had
vetoed the bill in January,
but the action was overturned by .the Ohio Supreme
Court last month.
Dann ·said the ballot language was a "fair and truthful statement" of the referendum's intent.
Consumer , advocates
have also submitted I ,800
signatures to Secretary of
State Jennifer Brunner to

'

•'
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Marriage licenses

Bl

The Dciily Sentinel

.

AP photo

Quarterback Charlie Frye watches from the sidelines in the
second half of an NFL football game against the Rittsburgh
Steelers Sunday in Cleveland. Frye, benched before halftime
in the season opener, was traded to Seattle Tuesday for an
undisclosed draft pick, a stunningly swift move as Cleveland
clears the way for rookie Brady Quinn.

BEREA - Charlie Frye
went from starter to startin g
over, and ·Brady Quinn
moved up a notch .
In
two day s,
the
Cleveland Browns' compli cated, confusing and crowded quarterback carou sel
took a di zzying spin.
Frye, benched before hal ftime in Sunday's season
opener, was traded to
Seattle for a sixth-round
draft pick Tuesday, a stun ningly swift move that raises Quinn , the Brown s' highprofile rookie QB , to No. 2
on the depth chart.
With Frye no longer in the
picture, the Browns will
start Derek Anderson, who
lost the quarterback competition to Frye during the preseason, at home on Sunday
again st the Ci ncinn ati
Bengals.
Quinn, the heir apparent.
will be Anderson's backup .

"This move obviously
clarifies our quarterback situation," general manager
Phil Savage said with a
straight face. " ... Some people think we're doing some
kind of experiment, but
we're not. We' re tryin~ to
win and unfortunately thmgs
got derailed · Sunday before
it even got started."
Cleveland's trade of Frye
is unprecedented. According
to the .Elias Sports Bureau,
he's the first qu arterbac k
since the NFL/ AFL merger
in 1970 to start hi s team's
season opener and be traded
before Week 2.
The Browns, embarrassed
34-7 by the Pittsburgh
Steelers in their home opener, will go into Week 2 with
three quarterbacks on their
roster and only one of them.
third-stringer Ken Dorsey.
has won an NFL game.
The club signed Dorsey to
a one-year contract Tuesday,
10 days after the Browns cut
him. Dorsey wi II serve as a
·-·--·-..

__ .._-

-~-

mentor to Quinn, who might
have been the Brown s'
opening-week starter if he
hadn' t mi ssed II days of
training camp in · a contract
holdout.
Savage said starting Quinn
has been di scussed, and that
the former Notre Dame star
could soon be under center.
" I think there is a feeling
that he.·s cenainly closer to
being ready to play," Savage
said. "We want to be able to
give him a full gamut of
plays and give him a chance
to have some success . I
don"t know if that happens
in two weeks, fo ur weeks,
six weeks.
"The imp011ant thing in
the big picture is that we
develop Brady Quinn in the
right way. That is the most
important thing that we have
to do thi s year and that's
what we 're trying to do this
year. And, win."
Frye was dealt less than 48
Ple•se see Tr•de, B:l

__ _____ ---··---.:.._

.. -

�Page 82 • 'l're Daily Sentinel

Wedne8day, September 12,2007

www.mydailyseotinel.eom

www.mydallysentinel.com

Offense a key for Maryland in
c!~B~ ~~e, on H~i~~ matchup against No.4 West Virginia

~rtbune ·- Sentinel

Buckeyes step up.in .

''
t

1·

l

Having fattened their win
T h e
total and stats on Penguins
B u c keyes
and Zips, the Ohio State
also
feel
Buckeyes now get to pick on
s o m e
so111ebody their own size.
respoosibiliThe I Oth-ranked Buckeyes · ty to defend the Big Ten,
travel to Washington on belinled by many national
Saturday,
a
matchup observers in the wake of the
between 2-0 teams that hope lopsided loss to lhe Gators
to use lhe game as a spring- and Michigan's stunning 0-2
board to bigger things.
start this season.
"Everyone in our buildin~
"I think AP voters and
knows that it's time to tum n coaches will look at this
up a notch," coach Jini game and say, 'Is Ibis team
Tressel said Tuesday.
for real?'" Ohio State center
Ohio State hasn't allowed Jim Cordle said of the showa touchdown mi defense and down with Washington. "It's
has overcome slow offensive a statement game for bolh
starts the past two weeks to teams."
show some second-half fueA year ago. Washington
power. Then again, the num- was 4-1 when it took on
bers from those perfor- then-No.
3
Southern
mances may be skewed California and lost 26-20,
because the games were the spark that set off that
against Youngstown State (a lengthy losing skid. Before
member of the Football that, the most recent time
Championship Subdivision, that the Huskies had so
formerly 1-AA) and Akron (a much riding on a game so
Mid-American Conference early on the schedule wts in
team coming off a 5-7 2001 when they were 4-0
record).
and ranked I Oth and got
Moreover, both games blown out by UCLA 35-13.
were played in front of The Buckeyes know -that
105,000 friendly faces at what they've faced up to
Ohio Stadium.
now doesn't compare with
Washington used to be one what's coming up this week.
of the college game's pre- They 'll fly for several hours
mier programs. But the on Thursday, stay in strange
Huskies havt; fallen on hard surroundings and then be
times and have not been a playing before 70,000 fans
national rlayer since win- dressed in and painled purDing II o 12 ~ames and fin- pie.
ishing No. 3 m the polls in
I think our faqs walked
2000.
into the stadi urn knowinr,
A year ago, they won four they had a role to play, '
of their firSt five but lhen Washington
coach Ty
turned around and lost the Willingham said after
next sjx. Beating the Saturday's 24-10 victory
Buckey~s could serve notice over No. 22 Boise State.
thatlhe Huskies are back.
snapfing lhe. ll!l~ion's. l?n~est
''They've got all the things ~;low 'SubdtVISIOD wmruog
in place. You can see that streak at 14 games."
Willingham said he
they 've been "' working
toward this goal," Tressel thought the crowd was worth
said.
six points IQ lhe H4skies.
Even thou$h Ohio State is
The game is Ohio State's
a regular vtsitor to Bowl f~ tuDCUJ" .before opening
Championship Series games Btg ·Ten play next week at
and is firmly entrenched, in home agamst Northwestern.
the rankirigs, the Buckeyes
"Washington's going to be
still are smarting from the a great battle, maybe a little
last time they played in a big bit better lhan the last two
game. In lhe BCS title game teams we've played," Ohio
fast January, lhey were run State defensiye tackle. Do!lg
out oflhe stadium in a 41-14 Worthington said. "So we've
loss to Florida. They'd like got to be focu·sed and more
to replace those dreadful prepared for ~ese guys.
'tmages from the llllDds ·of Gomg mto the B1~ Ten seathose who watched them Ike son.next week, this is going
last time ,they appeared · on to be a great lest."
·

COlLEGE PARK, Md. No. 4 West Vuginia is averag. 55 ints
soored
~
~~bst year
and has two legitimate
Heisman Trophy hopefuls.
lftheTerrapinscoulduse 12
men to stop Mountaineers
quarterback Pat While and
!111\lling back Sreve Slaton
1'llul5da nisJ!t. they probably
Wouldn~need any more tielp.
Since a 1)l1e changt! of that
nature is ,OOJ going to baooen.
it's up to lbe ~llpl offense
to Jll'Ovi,de ~ helpmg hand.
"'f the otfmse cap j~ grind
awayandkaepourdefeoSeolf
tbe field, kl!qi ibem ~any
e~losiveness
of · · (West
v~·s) olfi!Qse is kind of

agafn.t

said.

c -LASSIFIED

defense is 011 the field for a.
long period of time it will get
worn down, too. So we have
10 do sometbiog _oo olfense to
OODirol the clock and kt.ep
them olfthe field"
The Te!]JS doo't npect a
shutout Th~y. and -tbey
know it's quite possible West
Vugi.oia oould score 30. That
won't matter - as 1oog a5 ·
Maryland finishes with ·one .
more pom
' L
··
"Their offense can basically
score at will, so we as an
offense have to make sUre.that
we put a lot of points
board in order to keep •m'•otith
them," wide receiver Darmy '

GalllaCounty

OH
E-mail
classified@ mydallytrlbune.com

Said Friedgen: "They're ·

going to score points, tbcre's ' 1
no doubt about iL Can ,
score niore than them? 'Iliit's
'

'

Maryland's offense has l!lus
far been efficient. but not ve:ty
impressive, in wins over overmatched Villanova and
Florida Inremational. A victory over West Vnginia, bowev~. would lift the program to
another leveL
_ -~ou only have an opponuoily to play a ~10-14:am,
especialfy a top-5 team. once a
year," Crummey said. ..Ibis is
an opponwlity of a lifetime,
the oppo!ttlqjty of a season. to
define ourselves. It's an
'opportunitywecan'tpassup."
·
·

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

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1.:00 p.m.

lnHrtlan

·Monday thru Friday
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HOW I0 WRUE Aftl All
Succ 111fllt Acta
Should lnclud..n- ltenut
To Help Get R...,anae...

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AP

Bualneu D•v• Prior To

l:OD p.m.
P•per
Thurwd-v for Sund•v•

• All lela muat be prepaid*

• Start Yout Adl Wah a ~ • Include COMplete
DwolptiOI• • Include A Prkll• Awk.l A.blnvlaUonl
etndude ,.._.Number And.,.._ Wilen lliiMded
• Adt "lhould Run 7 P.,.

·1~,:,a:.Hw&gt;;;;W:AND!D;;:If~,.tO_.-.Ho.\mi-sw:_,_.,.~l

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

*POLICIES*

Marshall during the first half of a college football game
Saturday In Huntington, W.Va. West Virginia won 48-23.
·

All Dl•pl•v: 1:1 Noon 2
Publla.tlon
Sund•y DI•PI•y: l:OD

photo

West Virginia'!&gt; Pat White drops back to pass against

r
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CoN 740-14Hl833
7-wk old ktnens, 3F, 2M, '

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WOOOYAADS. 85 Vine
·, Street. Clall!polts. Saturday,
FOUND: 1yr old Sheep ~ 15 et6·39pm
Dog; -Fomate 740-141"1 617
·
W~

10 BuY

FREE Found kitten in road

· - a QB rating of 10.0 - - looking for a backup for• Sunday.
quarterback
Mati
Hasselbeck. Seneca Wallace
filled that role in Sunday's
opener 11gajnst Tampa Bay,
but Seattle would like to use
him as a wide receiver and
punt returner as well as a
backupQB.
Frye is exciled about a
chance to resurrect his
career.
"I am now looking forward to a fresh start and a
new set of challenges," said
Frye, who went 6-13 as
Cleveland's starter. "I know
-the best. of my career is still
ahead of me."
Quinn was Cleveland's
No. 3 quarterback against
. the Steelers, · but he's
already No. I in the 'minds
of Browns fans, who began
chanting "Bra-dy," following anolher bad throw by
Frye in the second quarter

Savage insisted that dealing Frye and shuffling lhe
quarterback deck;cwas not a
knee-jerk reaction.
· .
"We really ha,veri' t
changed our plans. We've
adjusled," he sajd. 'We .had
two tracks. one track .!!ad
Charlie and .Derek oyer
here. and one track had
Brady over here. We've·still •
got one quarterback on that'
track.
"We've got a guy
(Anderson) who has started
some games, whose got a
big arm and who has shown
some potential. We've got a
future, franchise . quarterback (Quinn). We've got lhe
veteran mentor (Dorsey)
and we've got a sixth-round
pick for another guy. I think
we've maximized what we
had on board here at that
position."

•

.lt.to-Hw&gt;--W:•ANrnJ--,I~lt.to-Hw&gt;-•W:•~--...•~~no
Hw&gt;W~
•

build
home
In EB11.
c/o200
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Prefer
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Street,
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acres, high and dry. Call
r.Aerty collect
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want to buy Junk Cena, cell GaNipolio, Eleanor Pome"'l
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Announcement ............................................ 030

Ailtlquee ........:............................................. 530

• A p e - l o r Aenl ................................... 440
· Auction ond FIN Mortcet.............................
Auto Porta l Acc. .oorlee .................:........ 760
Auto Repllr ..................................................

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Autos lor Slle .............................................. 710

. -.a l

Went to buy tml/er on land

/mon. 446-1904

Clary (7401_828-2750

· "''..,... Opportuntly-..............................210
.......... ~lng ....................................... 140

c.mpera l

Motor Homel ........................... 790

I \ I' I

· Clmplng EquiPft*1t ................................._.. 780

CM'dl ot Thlnka ........, ........:........................ 010
Child/Elderly Clre ................ :...................... 1 ao
El1Ctr1Cat/Refrgorotlon...............................B40
Equtprnent tor Rent.....................................460.
Exclvallng ................................................... 830
Form Equlpment.......................................... l10 '
flnnt fOr Rlftl .. ,l ........,,.,_,,._._,•••••.•••••.••.•••430
Flrtnl for S.le ............................................. 330
For ............................................................ 480
For S.le........................................................585
For S.le or l'rlde-......................................580
Fruita 1o ~-.. ................................... 580
Fumlllled Aoorno ....................................".MO
Qenerel Houllng ...........................................ISO
GIVIIW8y .......................................................040

Happy Ado....................................................oso
Hly l Greln ..................................................B40
Help wonted ................................................. t1D
Home tmprovomenta ...................................l1 D

ttotnee tor Sale •••••••.••..•••...•••••••••••••••••••••••••• 31 0
HouNhold Goode ....................................... 51D

lnaurence ..................................................... 130

Lown

1o Genion Equlpment ........................eeo

Llvellock,,,,~•••••••••••• ••••••oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo630

Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots • Ac""11" ............................................350
Mtocollaneouo .............. ..... : ...................:...... 170
Mlocollaneouo Merchondle8 ....................... 540
Mobile Home Ropalr ....................................
Mobile Homeo lor Rent ...............................420
Mobile Homee lor Slle ................................320
Manay to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcrcln &amp; 4 Wheetora ..... ......... ............ 740 ·
M . .lca lnatrumenta ..............................:.... 570
Personats ..................................................... oos
Pela lor S.lo ................................................ 560
Plumbing 1o Hoottng .................................... 620
Prolnotonat Sorvlces ............ ..................... 230
Radio, TV l CB Repair ............................... 160
Real E . - Wanted ..................................... 360
Schooletnotructlon ..................................... 160
- , Pllnt &amp; Ferttllzor .............................. 680
SIIUatiOnt wanted ....................................... t20
Space lor Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goode ........................................... 520
SUV'o lor Slte ............ .. ... ... ........ .................. 720
'lnlcksfor. Sole ...........:................................ 715
Uphotllery ................................................... 670
vans For Slle ...............................................730

eeo

·

:.~:: :~ :::~-F~~;;;·s~ii'j;ii;;::::::::::::::::::::

Wonted To Do .............................................. 160
Wonted to Aont ............................................ 470
Yard S.le- Galttpolla.................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pameroy/Middle ............. .......... .. 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Plallant ................................ 076

....~· ···· - - ·-·----

Great pay, benefits:
100% PAID heeltMife Ins.
Aoglonsl A1.11a, 1 yr.

WE BUY USED
MOBILE HOMES

_ , . l o r Sole ............................. 750

-..j

l

llD

I l ', \

I "\ I

I,'. II I ,

8Fll WANIFD

Job
Opening:
Sllkln
Independent Conlractors,
L....::=:;:,;::~~ Michael and Frlerlds. Booth
Help . wanted , Carat Ad~ rental $125Jweek
,
· Free rent
Group Harne, weeHends a 10 get VOU started. Exc loc.
must, (740)992·5023
Spring Valley Plaza. (Cell}
740-645·5895 or 446-0698

lls=.~':i!~eq.

I

eo~

.... rNI ..... 8dVIftialng
lnthllnn p r Is
IUbJect to thl Federel
F•lr Houlklg Aet
wtilch mokn llllopl to

Fax: 740-ns-7855 EOE No
PhOI'Ie Calis Please. FAMILV
HEALTHCAAE, INC.

SOmeone to cut Grass &amp;
Weed eat, wlbhtde S5 an
hour 304-882·3800

The
Athens-Meigs
Window Local Country-Rock Band in Educational Serv~'!e Center
'
lnltalltr
Needed.
1
k"
HEAD =ART
need of a Guitar Player. Call 5 see IHg a
~ 1'
100 WORKERS NE~ Construction
experience
TEACHER AIDE fo the
A88emble erafts, wood helpful-will train. Apply in 740· 339· 2064
r
Tuppers Plains Cen1er.
ltemi.To $48Wwk Matertal8 p9f80n on Wednesdays, New Haven, 1 br. furnished Minimum of High ~hool
PrO\Ikled Free Information 10·00 Noon •o· Quellly
d
GEO COA nd
. 801-428-4649
. • 37700
. ., . King Hill apt.
pets, dep. &amp; pr&amp;\IIOUS
gra ~ate experience
rx
. 1.n early
a
pkg. 24Hr.
Windows,
ref., has
(740w/d,
)992no
..0165
Road, Pomeroy. No phOne
chndhoOd se1ting preferred.
~~le~ ~ to earn calls please.
OhiO Valley Home Health, This position has Board
""""'r· 8 f!fW von.
appr-·ed bene/"s. Subml1
Inc. hiring STN.A's. CNA's,
..,...
II
8II Marll 304-882 2645
yn
•
HOME HEALTH AIDE$- CHHA's, PCA's. Accepling letter of inlerest, resume,
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or SIGN ON BONUS Home applications lor LPN's. and references to John 0 .
Sen. Stlir1ey Spears, 304· Health Care of SE OhiO is Competitive Wages and Costanzo, Superintendent.
675·1429.
currenlty hiring home health Benefits 'including health Athens·Malgs ESC, P.O.Box
aides-competitive wages. Insurance and mileage. 664, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
CN.A's.
Local, Jackson Call 74()...662·1222 .
Apply at 1480 JackSon Pika, Application
Deadline:
COunty Company Is Now -------~ Gallinnlis or phone toll free September 13 at noon. The
.
I
t
·
Fo
't""...
Conduct 1ng n erv1ews
r lnvnedlate opening for an 1-~1 -1393.
AMESC
Opportunity
,
FuI •Tim. •
Experienced olfice manager. We preIftl an -:-,---c:---- Employer/Prcwider.
CNA Positions. Will Provide experienced office worker Overbrook center is current - ' - - ' - - -- - Training For Motivated with an accounting back· ly accepting
. applications
.
for- The. Village .of Rio
. Grande is
Persons.
Wages ground. You MUST haw a lull time, 7pm-7am LPN, tak~l~ aPfllcal~~s for :he
CompetltiYeiMany Benefits excellent computer skills f II lime 3Jlrr!-3 m and 7am- posl !On a par lme po ICB
Available Make The Aw.t lnclud'1 M' -~ w d &amp; u
'
~ a. .
officer. The applicant must
.
~·..
110 ICfU(KJu Of
7pm STNA pos~10ns. Also be certified in lhe Ohio
For
Your Excel.
Responsibilities avaHable. part 11me STN~ Peace
Officer
Basic
Cholce·Gall
Gonfldentiallnterview Today Include payroll, air, alp. positions Interested apph
~ou,l Be Glad You Oidlll Qu1· • ·•--ks, contra~- end
. .
." Training. Applice!ions can be
U\.UUU
......,
cants can pick up an appl1 273-5893 Or Stop In &amp; See · e" other "-lly office tasks.
.
. picked up at the Rio Grande
n
ua
cat1on or contact HolliS
Us 0 1113 Washington St., Full time M·F 8:00 . 5:00. No
Municipal Building Monday ·
LPN, StaH F .d e·30am nfl1 4·30pm
Wv· bel")efl1s. Mail resumes to Bumgarner,
Ravenswood,
Development Coordinator @ n ~· ."
u
·
References Required.
PO Box 55, Bidwell, OH (740 )992 _6472 ·M·F 9A·SP Apphceh~n~ are du_e ~ck to
45614
a1333 Page St Middeport lhe MuniCipal Building by
Courtslde Bar and GrYI
., . .
' noon
on
Monday,
.
.
,
Oh
EOE &amp; a part1c1pant ol 5 1 be 24 2007
Naw taking applications for
Overbrook
Center
is
now
the
Drug
Free
WorkPlace
ep
em
r
'
·
excepllonal people for bar·
accepting
resumes
for
the
Program.
we
are
now
taking
applies·
temlng , waltstaff/servers
and au kitchen positions. tf position of Dlrec1or of Social - - - - - - - lions for energetic, self drivyou are a motivated people Services. The qualified can· ParMarlt40(Ex~eon)1547 Nye en people 1o service and
person please come fill OU1 didate must be a Ucensed Aw. in Pomeroy,OH and Par install Dish Networl&lt; Sataltite
(Chevron)2264 systems. Training awllable.
an appficatlon or calllo se1 Social Worker and possess Marlf39
strong verbal and written 2,rld StMason YN.Are now FiT wfbenefits, Dri~te Co/
up an Interview.
communication
skills, hiring
experienced truck or get more$ for driv·
308 2nd Avo
Medicaid, Medicare and cashiers.Please apply at ing your truck . Driving,
740-441·9371
MDS knowledge. Long term either location.
felony backg round check
·
Drhttrs WAnted
care experience
preferred
and drug screening will be
~. 1
· ed . auai•'e&lt;l
POST OFFICE N"".,
Must live within a 25 mile ..,.,.
not reqUir
nl
vu
required. Cal l800·893- 1991
candida1es
may
send
HIRING
option 8 M·F 8.5pm.
radius of Hobson, Oh,
Avg. Pay $20/hr rx
Paid by the mite, plus wait· resumes lo Charta Brownlng lime, Vacalion, Holiday
McGuire.
RN ,
LNHA.
$57K annually
Pay, Futl and Part time awil· Adminislrator, 333 Page Including Federal Benelits
and OT.Paid Training,
.
able, Ideal tor SuppJemental Street, Middleport, Oh.
Vacalions-FTIPT
Income for Retired Parsons 45760. OBC Is an E.O.E.
1-866 -542-1531 ·
For More Information Call andapartlclpantoftheDrug
Free Work Place Program.
USWA
L--------'
1-li00-531-41553

andSchool•l2748

------Shotokan Karate Classes,
atsiting Sept 17th at 6:00
pm at Carleton School Gym
at Syracuse more lnio. call
(740)378·6144

c

,..:..,==:--.:-'-,=::-1

fiND A JOB
IN JHE
CLASSIFIEOS

$189/mol
5%dn,
20yf'l08%. Far lllttnp
100-659-4109 xF1"
Mlddleport· Brick

Ranch,

4.000 Sq.Ft.,8 Aooma, 2 112
Blh, 2 Fire Places. 2
Garages,
2
Lots,
PatioW/~wtng, Call 992·
4197.
REDUCED! Brand new
home In Qalllpollt. 2BA,
2BA w/3 acres mil. $82500.
Call740-4-46-7029

2000 Clayton 24XS6, 3 BA,
2BA, 3/4 acre In Green
Township. $79,900. Call
740-645-7113

knowingly....,
advetti...,.,. ror r..a
Hlettwhlc:hlaln
vkllrion o1 tt1e low. Our
,...,..,.....,_

To Do

Informed thM all
dwli1lft811dvartlud In
thlt
IIYallable on •equal

new•r1111•r ..

Jll..siNel;

1

'Thii""'PIPii' wit not

WANIID

~~.2BR,

large
boot&lt; do&lt;:t&lt;. · wooden shed. In Cheshire·
must be moved, Asking
Stq,ooo. (740)44t-lln5

Oreal used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 with vinyl/shingle.
MuBI sell, only $25,995 with
datiYery. Call (74Q)~

~~·::P:P'~'"':•:lly=~-~

Land Contract/Sate 2000
14x70, :lllr, 2ba , $4,500

For 5ale $95,000.00

7911

OPfolrruNny

86 Modular nome w/
• attached 2 cer garage on 1
nice laying aero ground. 3
br. 2 112 bath, kit,
•NOTICE• .
dinlng&amp;utility room, ig. IIYin·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· ~. laminated hardwood
lNG CO. recommends noorlng
··--... in atl rooms, BKcept

down. $427 momh 304-675New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214.36 permonth, lnciudes
many UI&gt;IIOidoB. delivery &amp;
eel-up. (740)385·243&lt;1

Nice used 3 bedroom hOme
Wil help with
bedrooms &amp; master·bath.
triple-pane windows, (loor doiiYOry, 740-385-4367

that you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the meil until you
ha~te investlg~ted lhe

coverings, 10x20" covered
back porch, coleman furnace, hell central airf heat·
pump, less than 5 yrs old
1'nsulaled m
n elal bid. ""'V
"""' · &amp;

otrering.

MONEY

446 -4436

-------HUD HOMESI 3bd only
$13,2501
More 1-4bd
ham•• available! From

14x70 Mobile home, All
2BA, Garn.n
Tub, Stend·up Shower,
Large front porcli w/ tin roof,

;;;;;;::====::::::;I.

j

House lor sakt on Lariat
Drive, subdivision across
from
GaiNa
County
Falrgrotrlds. Ideal location
near Holzer's Ho&amp;p and a .
variety of convenient ·~
ping. Now siding, window&amp;
and basement upgrades.
Large double lot sultsl;e lor
garden and located next to
wooded area. Gas heat and
central air. Selling below
appraised
value
at
$105,000. Call -.6-2847 0&lt;

ll(tyti'IIM "'•ny
prefiNnce,llmltdM or
diiGfkniMtlon t.Md on
..... color, rel~lon....
f•mll ..l atltul or Mtlonel
ortitn, or •nr lni!NIIIon to
n'lllll• any auch
r-•r.r~nce, llmltdon or
dl.:rtmlnMton."

Full-Time PosiUon Available.
For Office Located at 113 Lawn mowing. Rates by the
East
Memorial
Drive, job, not the hour, Free
Pomerov-. Ohio 45769. Estimates. Call Paul o
Com"Petitlve Salary, Greal
Wortdng EnYirornJnt..§ond
- T o: Family Health,
Inc. clo Mellssa Walls, 1049
Western
Avenue,
Chlllcotht, Ohio 45601 .

10
Lf.__FOR.Hor.m;_8.w!
_ __.

of'"' rM~s;~

College

(CareenrCio6e To Home)
Call Todayl740-146·4367,
1-800·214-0452

Ucannd Practlcll NurM
1110
Position AND 1
Front Dellk RocepUonlot •

..__ _ _ _ _ _ Help Wlnted:

----~--

Gatllpolll

, Fuii·Time

contract. Can pay $500

Building' luppllee........................................1160
lull11881 ond Building• ............................. 340

I

Hauls·Durnp Dlv. 1 year
Offi wrlllablo oxp. Call 1·
~-9365 ask for l&lt;ent
--,..----,,..-:::Site Director Full-Time
Position . and Certified
MeciiCII AsiiiiMI or

o

· 4x4'1 For S.le ......................................,....... 725

1,!0 ~ I

R&amp;J Tructlng Leading The
Way R&amp;J Trucking now
-galllpotl8careeroollegl.oom
Hiring at our New Haven, "«:cradll:l!ld Member Accrediting
WV Terminal. For Regional po..-d tor lr :' II . .d COieges

Gdla

·CLASSIFIED INDEX

lll1'f

0 2007 by NEA,lnc.

www.comlcs.com

~~~~~~~~~~§~~~~ p~County.
lo

River Valley runner in 12th
place (23:45). Kelsey Sands
Wl\S 25th (26:27) and Kalhy
Brumfield 42nd (39:57).
Audrianna Pullins was
18th (25:29) for Eastern
while Julie Draehn was 30th
(27: 17). Southern's lone
runner Michelle Ours was
40th (36:28).
Broderick paced the
passing ~arne with 21
assists whtle' also chipping
in nine points to the winning cause.
Hunter was 9- I I serving,
Turley was 7-7· and 3-6
spiking with a pair of
blocks, and Wolfe-Riffle 6
for 7 serving. Wolfe-Riffle
was 16-20 passing. Turley
had three kills, Sarah Eddy
two, and Cundiff one.
Eastern
defeated
Southern in the reserve
game 25-14 and 25-10.
Eastern was led by Casto
with 19, Maxson had 13,
and Cummings had nine.
Soulhern was led by Sarah
Matthews with seven, and
Breanna Taylor with five.
Southern
hosts
Nelsonville
Thursday
while Eastern heads to
Miller. The JV games will
start at 6 p.m.

~

Aatrock WV area. 5end
Paw Paws, black walnuts, iesume per letter of Interest
h-Ies. pte... call flrs1. with Oiperlence, relorenoeB
~~7~40~)e9~8!6080~-,..----,- &amp; wage requirements to BoK

!

Calltodlyl
1-877-18U247
Eltt. 2301

C.~~o~

Coin Shop, 151 Second one or two tlmee per week.
Aveooe, Gallipolis, 740-446- Organization sldll, conllden2642.
llallty end honealy • must.

HOu... tor Aent .......................................... 410
In Memorl..n ................................................020

with three points, while
Hunter, Turley, and Robie
added two each.
In the' finale, Southern
-kept Eastern within two
pomts until the second
round of serving when Burt
hit for two points, and was
backed up by great setting
and good front line play.
Eastern went up 15-9 on
serves by s .watzel, then an
SHS time-out killed the
EHS momentum. Eastern
held leads of 17-10 and 1812 until Soulhern's Hunter
unreeled four points to pull
SHS to within three at 2118. Burt gave EHS a 23-18
lead, then Swatzel served
up the game-winners.
Hayman led the EHS
attack with 16 kills, followed by Wilfong with five
kills and Swatzel wilh four.
Swatzel also led the Lady
Eagles with 17 points.

I

proud of. Start dOing work
that makes a drtterence.
Start your new career
todayl

.,.....

bia&lt;*
ond wMoafter
mala
smelt Absokrte Top Dollar: u.s.. ..,
C8111M9-3408
5:00pl'l.
• .,
Lost: Med. size blad&lt; &amp; 1an Sli'le&lt; and Gold Coins,
dog, wigeon collar P - . Gold Alnga, Pre- Oopondablo and oxperl·
on Al2 aauos from Jericho 1935
U.S.
Currency, .enced dl'jtlme hollae cleanAd Childs
740-446-9371 Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S. 'er lor private home needs&lt;l

.,,

Eastern

Alllftltonl
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENr programs lor yoo to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment coold be the
same as renl.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367 -0000

S!P-rf doing work you can

' '

Robie,
Rashell Boso,
Pape,
Chelsea
and
Samantha Patterson.
In the second game,
from Page 81
Eastern went u_p 2-1 before
Soulhern tied 1t on a sideIn the first match Eastern out
at 2-2. Swatzel added
took a , 1-0 lead before ' six points in lhe next servSouthern tied it at 1-1. ing round for an 8-2 Eagle
That's as close as that set lead, then after a trade-off
played out. Eastern's Tresa on
Bryan Walterliphoto
side-outs
Megan
Meigs senior Amy Barr sets a pass during the third game of Swatzel served six straight Broderick added a pair
Tuesday's TVC Ohio contest with Alexander
Larry R. to give EHS a 7-1 lead, then around a Southern time out,
Morrison Gymnasium in Rock Springs .
Megan Broderick pushed lhen added anolher for an
the Lady Eagles ahead 14-4. 11-3 EHS lead.
assist.
Katie Hayman added three
Southern never pulled
Allie
Sayers
led more and Eastern led 18-5 closer
than five points and
Alexander with 15 points.
en route to a 25-8 win.
Eastern slowly, but steadfrom Page 81
· The Lady Marauders
Other contributors to the fastly bolstered its lead with
travel to Gallipolis today win for Eastern were a steady regiment of bump,
Burt,
Katie set, spike fundamental baiL
Holly Jeffers added a kill for a non-conference Morgan
with
Gallia Wilfong, Ryan Davis, and Burt added five for Eastern
matchup
apiece.
then
host Kelsy Holter. Southern scor- going down the stretch, then
Barr and Jeffers also had Academy,
respective assist numbers Wellston Thursday in a ers were Emma- Hunter, Hayman served up lhe last
Wolfe-Rime, three for the game-winning
of four and two for Meigs, TVC Ohio contest. Both Whitney
matches
start
with
junior
Kasey
Turley,
Sarah Eddy, points.
which had seven overall as
Stephanie Cundiff, Ashley
Wolfe-Riffle led Soulhern
a team . Wolfe had the other varsity games at 6 p.m.

1F2M

+Paid holidays

· Mountameers under control
·wilh a 13-6 halftime lead.
Then West ' Vnginia scored
three touciliowns in the third
quarter and tJulle more 1'08 in
the fmal 15 ininutes. .
"I thou_ght lhey . w&lt;il:e
(Marshall) dOwn. They can do
that if they're on the field a
lot,·: Matyland coach Ralpb
Friedgen said. "ObviouSly
we're going ro have to play
good defense, but ·_if our.

.· and ·was sacked five times
before Crennel yanked him.
Savage was most troubled
fromFageBl
by Frye's inability to get rid
.of
the ball.
.
.
hours after playing horribly
"Sunday,
we
needed
to
and being pulled in the sec- see more ·production,"
ond quarter by coach Savage said, "and probably
Romeo Crennel. A former
third"round pick who grew lhe most revealing lhing of
up rooting for·the Browns in everylhing that happened
Willard. Ohio, Frye beat out Sunday was lhat in his 10
Anderson .during a drawn- attempts (actually 15), -he
out competition that began took five sacks and in
during the offseason and Derek's 28l!ttempts (actualcarried through the presea- ly 29) he took one sack."
Savage praised Frye for
son.
the
way he handled twoLess than two weeks ago,
plus
turbulent seasons wilh
Savage said, "Let's see
the
Browns,
who are just
what Charlie can do with a
40-89 since 1999. ·
full deck" Ibis season.
"He came into a very
It took less than 20 mintough
situation," Savage
utes on Sunday for the club
to decide Frye was no said.
longer in 'lheir future plans. · Frye fills a pressing need
He went 4-of-1 0 for 34 for Seahawks coach Mike
yards wilh an interception Holmgren, who had been

Earn up to $1.5CWhour

t

' Mars'!all !11ought ii !!3d the

Trade

5bd 2ba GALLIP.OLIS
Foreelo•urel Buy for
$M,8001
S'Aodn,
20yl'801%. More local
home~ trom S191fmal For
lac* lilting• CIIIIOC)..559-

+$300 lll~ng Bonuo
+Full benelhs package

.

;

104 Tatum Or. New
Haven.WV 3bCL'2ba. Rench,
lg.eunroom, 2 car gar. great
area. D; 304-675-3637 E;
304-882-2334

kllncarlyleOcomcattnet

moat w/ long hair. Litter LO!ST~:;;;(iiOiC
trained, wormed, 18t vac. Tenier, name 18 Klllle Bug.
441·1100 .
Blk spot on head. U... on
Approx. 1 year otd Sheep WoodlmiN Rd. Pl.... help
oog. Very Friendly &amp; us flnd herl ~167, 645-

Invite

Meigs

How you can have borders and Qraphlcs
~
addedtoyourclassmedads
(.;.\._
'""
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!,ii4l
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

(19:38). South Gallia's fiflh overall m a time of
Jacob Watson also ran well, 22:07 while teammate
finishing 31st (21 :00).
Devan Soulsby was II th
fromPageBl
On the girls side, Warren's (23:29). Also for lhe Lady
score of 35 was I 0 points Marauders, Morgan Lentes
Several -schools did not better than runner-up was 16th (24:39), Jessica
have enough runners to field Athens. Meigs (58) was Holliday 19th (25:57) and
38th
full teams. Eastern's Keilh lhird followed by Trimble Hope . Hajivandi
(32:47).
Aeiker fared well individu- (88).
ally, though, in 17th place
Ashley Fitch was lhe top
Meigs' Kimi Swisher was

at

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

l\egt~ter
To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 .
Today... Or Fax To (740) 446-3008 · .
Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Oquendo said.

neg*d," Taps~Andrew the leSL"

Cromrmy satd .Tuesday.
"Hopefully. the olfensive lirie
will take it upon themselves to
keep the lial1 moving and
grind down the clock."
That was the plan last year,
until the Moulllaineers.soored
28 first-quarter points 011 their
way lb a 45-27 blowouL The
T~ have had to live
wilh the .embarrassment of
th;lt .game for an entire ye3r,
and now they've ~ot a chance
to make amendS m front of a
natiouallelevision audienoe.
Thefirstorderofbusinessis
shutting dowh White and
Slaton, who were virtually
unslo!JP.able in a season-cpening @":24 win over Western
Michigan and a 48-23 rout of
Marshall last Saturday. .
'They're very explosive.
They're the type of ¥UYS you
can stop for'five, SIX plays,
then all of a sudden they break
off. an 80-yardnm," Maryland
linebacll:er Erin Henderson

- l\e

I

ro Lo.
~:::::~:·::;
.o..tllol

~nyl/shlnglo .

OWNER FINANCING
Nice l'2 singklwldes
From $1,800 down
payment
Gary (7401826·2750

L------....1

stove. washer &amp; dryer
&amp;small microwave will
remain. Sm. fenced area in
rear for children or pets, Trailer tor sale, $2,000,
BUnds &amp; curtains will remain (740)992·5858
located 10623 Ripley Ad pt
Pleasant St Rt 2 N. 6- 6112
8l.lslN6
miles call 304-6?5-5590 or
AND ~
304· 532· 3507 ·
-For sale by owner. 3SA 2 story 22x18 garage fof"
Ranch, 1 bath. Family rent In Middleport. $100 per
Room , St&lt;WeiFrldge, W/D _mo_._;·(_;740...:..)99_2.,.-684_9_ _
. 1 d d A k'
$lO 000
·
me
'
· H/sto"c
. leo "'dg, 2nd
C 1u e0 · 9s-alng
" style oil
~
339
al 74 -70
A"e.
Galllpoli·s.
•UJ·rge rooms
•
House tor sale in Racine suitable for C.P.A.· Attorney,
area. Appro1C 4 acres, all Real Estate, lnsuranoo or
professionally landscaped. Optometrist.
basement.
Rand'! style house wilh 4 Seoond floor has 2 apls, currently occupied. New plumbbedrooms, living room , din·
ing roo m, kitchen. large fam· ing. A/C , paint. Call 446ily room, central air, gas heat 2926 fof lurther details.
and 1 fireplace. Addition of a
&amp;
I..A.It~
large Florida room comA~••r•

r

**NOTI(: E**
Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you re11·
nance your home or
obtain a lOan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance paymen1s of
lees or Insurance. Call the
Office of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1·866278.0003 to learn if the
mortgage broker or
lender
Is
properly
licensed. (This Is a public
service announcemen1
from the Ohio VaHey

i

I

•-

L---~-~--.,J

~P=u~bl=
i sh;lng=C=orn=pa=ny:)~ pletely ceda r opens onto ..,

r

I'RommNAL
c.-.·

~VICF.S

I

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCtAL SECURJTY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-868·582·3345

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

11r16

HOMIS

L~--,:;FOR::,S~ALE--.,J

'""
0 down payment. 4 bedrooms. Large yard . Covered
deck. Attached garage. 740367-7t29.

86 Pine, Gallipolis, New
roof , heat pump, electrical, 2
SR. Double Lot, $72,000.
(740)441-0720

patio &amp; pool area. Heated in
ground pool enclosed by pri· 2 Cemetery lots Memorial
'acy fenci ng and land· Gardens. Ca ll 1-740-6865152
seeped . Finished 2 car - - -- - - garage attached to house 7+ acres on Leff FOI1c: Ad
and finished &amp; heated 3 car near Jactlson Pike, priCed 10
garage
unattached. sell. Call 740 _446- 7525
Excellen t condition ready to
move 1n. $255.000.00, Call: Gallipotls· Ferry, WV, Scenic
(7 40)949·22 17
tracts for building, hunting or
:.____.: ::__:_:::____ horse_s . See pies on ian Oak Hiii·Attracti~te 1-story, dandlarm.com. can 304·
2BR, 1.25ba. NEW updates: 533-0547
•
energy et1icient windows,
doors &amp; ki1cheo annliances.
Lo1 for rent In ~iddleport,
""
Hardwood &amp; cera mic floors, sized tor doub[ewide, $125
lull basement (partially fin· per mo., (740)992-6849
1shed), central air, forced MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
gas heat. city water &amp; RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
sewage, off street panting, Rd. 44 t _111 t
large level backyard. A
MUST
SEE!
·Asking Sites available up to 16X80
$80 ,000 . 740·645-1863 or mobile homes $130.00 per
740.352·2645
month. C811740-992·5639

=--'-'--'-'------

�Page 82 • 'l're Daily Sentinel

Wedne8day, September 12,2007

www.mydailyseotinel.eom

www.mydallysentinel.com

Offense a key for Maryland in
c!~B~ ~~e, on H~i~~ matchup against No.4 West Virginia

~rtbune ·- Sentinel

Buckeyes step up.in .

''
t

1·

l

Having fattened their win
T h e
total and stats on Penguins
B u c keyes
and Zips, the Ohio State
also
feel
Buckeyes now get to pick on
s o m e
so111ebody their own size.
respoosibiliThe I Oth-ranked Buckeyes · ty to defend the Big Ten,
travel to Washington on belinled by many national
Saturday,
a
matchup observers in the wake of the
between 2-0 teams that hope lopsided loss to lhe Gators
to use lhe game as a spring- and Michigan's stunning 0-2
board to bigger things.
start this season.
"Everyone in our buildin~
"I think AP voters and
knows that it's time to tum n coaches will look at this
up a notch," coach Jini game and say, 'Is Ibis team
Tressel said Tuesday.
for real?'" Ohio State center
Ohio State hasn't allowed Jim Cordle said of the showa touchdown mi defense and down with Washington. "It's
has overcome slow offensive a statement game for bolh
starts the past two weeks to teams."
show some second-half fueA year ago. Washington
power. Then again, the num- was 4-1 when it took on
bers from those perfor- then-No.
3
Southern
mances may be skewed California and lost 26-20,
because the games were the spark that set off that
against Youngstown State (a lengthy losing skid. Before
member of the Football that, the most recent time
Championship Subdivision, that the Huskies had so
formerly 1-AA) and Akron (a much riding on a game so
Mid-American Conference early on the schedule wts in
team coming off a 5-7 2001 when they were 4-0
record).
and ranked I Oth and got
Moreover, both games blown out by UCLA 35-13.
were played in front of The Buckeyes know -that
105,000 friendly faces at what they've faced up to
Ohio Stadium.
now doesn't compare with
Washington used to be one what's coming up this week.
of the college game's pre- They 'll fly for several hours
mier programs. But the on Thursday, stay in strange
Huskies havt; fallen on hard surroundings and then be
times and have not been a playing before 70,000 fans
national rlayer since win- dressed in and painled purDing II o 12 ~ames and fin- pie.
ishing No. 3 m the polls in
I think our faqs walked
2000.
into the stadi urn knowinr,
A year ago, they won four they had a role to play, '
of their firSt five but lhen Washington
coach Ty
turned around and lost the Willingham said after
next sjx. Beating the Saturday's 24-10 victory
Buckey~s could serve notice over No. 22 Boise State.
thatlhe Huskies are back.
snapfing lhe. ll!l~ion's. l?n~est
''They've got all the things ~;low 'SubdtVISIOD wmruog
in place. You can see that streak at 14 games."
Willingham said he
they 've been "' working
toward this goal," Tressel thought the crowd was worth
said.
six points IQ lhe H4skies.
Even thou$h Ohio State is
The game is Ohio State's
a regular vtsitor to Bowl f~ tuDCUJ" .before opening
Championship Series games Btg ·Ten play next week at
and is firmly entrenched, in home agamst Northwestern.
the rankirigs, the Buckeyes
"Washington's going to be
still are smarting from the a great battle, maybe a little
last time they played in a big bit better lhan the last two
game. In lhe BCS title game teams we've played," Ohio
fast January, lhey were run State defensiye tackle. Do!lg
out oflhe stadium in a 41-14 Worthington said. "So we've
loss to Florida. They'd like got to be focu·sed and more
to replace those dreadful prepared for ~ese guys.
'tmages from the llllDds ·of Gomg mto the B1~ Ten seathose who watched them Ike son.next week, this is going
last time ,they appeared · on to be a great lest."
·

COlLEGE PARK, Md. No. 4 West Vuginia is averag. 55 ints
soored
~
~~bst year
and has two legitimate
Heisman Trophy hopefuls.
lftheTerrapinscoulduse 12
men to stop Mountaineers
quarterback Pat While and
!111\lling back Sreve Slaton
1'llul5da nisJ!t. they probably
Wouldn~need any more tielp.
Since a 1)l1e changt! of that
nature is ,OOJ going to baooen.
it's up to lbe ~llpl offense
to Jll'Ovi,de ~ helpmg hand.
"'f the otfmse cap j~ grind
awayandkaepourdefeoSeolf
tbe field, kl!qi ibem ~any
e~losiveness
of · · (West
v~·s) olfi!Qse is kind of

agafn.t

said.

c -LASSIFIED

defense is 011 the field for a.
long period of time it will get
worn down, too. So we have
10 do sometbiog _oo olfense to
OODirol the clock and kt.ep
them olfthe field"
The Te!]JS doo't npect a
shutout Th~y. and -tbey
know it's quite possible West
Vugi.oia oould score 30. That
won't matter - as 1oog a5 ·
Maryland finishes with ·one .
more pom
' L
··
"Their offense can basically
score at will, so we as an
offense have to make sUre.that
we put a lot of points
board in order to keep •m'•otith
them," wide receiver Darmy '

GalllaCounty

OH
E-mail
classified@ mydallytrlbune.com

Said Friedgen: "They're ·

going to score points, tbcre's ' 1
no doubt about iL Can ,
score niore than them? 'Iliit's
'

'

Maryland's offense has l!lus
far been efficient. but not ve:ty
impressive, in wins over overmatched Villanova and
Florida Inremational. A victory over West Vnginia, bowev~. would lift the program to
another leveL
_ -~ou only have an opponuoily to play a ~10-14:am,
especialfy a top-5 team. once a
year," Crummey said. ..Ibis is
an opponwlity of a lifetime,
the oppo!ttlqjty of a season. to
define ourselves. It's an
'opportunitywecan'tpassup."
·
·

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

Oeacltir~

·

1.:00 p.m.

lnHrtlan

·Monday thru Friday
:00 a.·m . to 5:00 p.m
HOW I0 WRUE Aftl All
Succ 111fllt Acta
Should lnclud..n- ltenut
To Help Get R...,anae...

.
.

-

..

.

AP

Bualneu D•v• Prior To

l:OD p.m.
P•per
Thurwd-v for Sund•v•

• All lela muat be prepaid*

• Start Yout Adl Wah a ~ • Include COMplete
DwolptiOI• • Include A Prkll• Awk.l A.blnvlaUonl
etndude ,.._.Number And.,.._ Wilen lliiMded
• Adt "lhould Run 7 P.,.

·1~,:,a:.Hw&gt;;;;W:AND!D;;:If~,.tO_.-.Ho.\mi-sw:_,_.,.~l

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

*POLICIES*

Marshall during the first half of a college football game
Saturday In Huntington, W.Va. West Virginia won 48-23.
·

All Dl•pl•v: 1:1 Noon 2
Publla.tlon
Sund•y DI•PI•y: l:OD

photo

West Virginia'!&gt; Pat White drops back to pass against

r
2 Free klttans. part Persian.
CoN 740-14Hl833
7-wk old ktnens, 3F, 2M, '

~- Call740-141-1817

Make fundraising calls for
a top Republican candidate and make a difference In
America!

170 W•l-l~ 10 fe~ P!i&lt;Ofi-£
1'11~1' l\~R ft !!.&amp;\'WoRt&gt; WA-S
~N\~DW" ~

4-4111or64&amp;-3093

t

Full and part time
schedules

be

WOOOYAADS. 85 Vine
·, Street. Clall!polts. Saturday,
FOUND: 1yr old Sheep ~ 15 et6·39pm
Dog; -Fomate 740-141"1 617
·
W~

10 BuY

FREE Found kitten in road

· - a QB rating of 10.0 - - looking for a backup for• Sunday.
quarterback
Mati
Hasselbeck. Seneca Wallace
filled that role in Sunday's
opener 11gajnst Tampa Bay,
but Seattle would like to use
him as a wide receiver and
punt returner as well as a
backupQB.
Frye is exciled about a
chance to resurrect his
career.
"I am now looking forward to a fresh start and a
new set of challenges," said
Frye, who went 6-13 as
Cleveland's starter. "I know
-the best. of my career is still
ahead of me."
Quinn was Cleveland's
No. 3 quarterback against
. the Steelers, · but he's
already No. I in the 'minds
of Browns fans, who began
chanting "Bra-dy," following anolher bad throw by
Frye in the second quarter

Savage insisted that dealing Frye and shuffling lhe
quarterback deck;cwas not a
knee-jerk reaction.
· .
"We really ha,veri' t
changed our plans. We've
adjusled," he sajd. 'We .had
two tracks. one track .!!ad
Charlie and .Derek oyer
here. and one track had
Brady over here. We've·still •
got one quarterback on that'
track.
"We've got a guy
(Anderson) who has started
some games, whose got a
big arm and who has shown
some potential. We've got a
future, franchise . quarterback (Quinn). We've got lhe
veteran mentor (Dorsey)
and we've got a sixth-round
pick for another guy. I think
we've maximized what we
had on board here at that
position."

•

.lt.to-Hw&gt;--W:•ANrnJ--,I~lt.to-Hw&gt;-•W:•~--...•~~no
Hw&gt;W~
•

build
home
In EB11.
c/o200
Point
Prefer
li-tO
Register,
MainPleasant
Street,
Pt;nt Pleasant, WV 25550
acres, high and dry. Call
r.Aerty collect
32t-453- - - - - 1351 evenings.
Domino's Pizza Now Hiring
- - - - " - - - - - all locations Pclnt Pleasant,
want to buy Junk Cena, cell GaNipolio, Eleanor Pome"'l
740-368-()8114
apply In PoriOII

Announcement ............................................ 030

Ailtlquee ........:............................................. 530

• A p e - l o r Aenl ................................... 440
· Auction ond FIN Mortcet.............................
Auto Porta l Acc. .oorlee .................:........ 760
Auto Repllr ..................................................

oeo

no

Autos lor Slle .............................................. 710

. -.a l

Went to buy tml/er on land

/mon. 446-1904

Clary (7401_828-2750

· "''..,... Opportuntly-..............................210
.......... ~lng ....................................... 140

c.mpera l

Motor Homel ........................... 790

I \ I' I

· Clmplng EquiPft*1t ................................._.. 780

CM'dl ot Thlnka ........, ........:........................ 010
Child/Elderly Clre ................ :...................... 1 ao
El1Ctr1Cat/Refrgorotlon...............................B40
Equtprnent tor Rent.....................................460.
Exclvallng ................................................... 830
Form Equlpment.......................................... l10 '
flnnt fOr Rlftl .. ,l ........,,.,_,,._._,•••••.•••••.••.•••430
Flrtnl for S.le ............................................. 330
For ............................................................ 480
For S.le........................................................585
For S.le or l'rlde-......................................580
Fruita 1o ~-.. ................................... 580
Fumlllled Aoorno ....................................".MO
Qenerel Houllng ...........................................ISO
GIVIIW8y .......................................................040

Happy Ado....................................................oso
Hly l Greln ..................................................B40
Help wonted ................................................. t1D
Home tmprovomenta ...................................l1 D

ttotnee tor Sale •••••••.••..•••...•••••••••••••••••••••••••• 31 0
HouNhold Goode ....................................... 51D

lnaurence ..................................................... 130

Lown

1o Genion Equlpment ........................eeo

Llvellock,,,,~•••••••••••• ••••••oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo630

Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots • Ac""11" ............................................350
Mtocollaneouo .............. ..... : ...................:...... 170
Mlocollaneouo Merchondle8 ....................... 540
Mobile Home Ropalr ....................................
Mobile Homeo lor Rent ...............................420
Mobile Homee lor Slle ................................320
Manay to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcrcln &amp; 4 Wheetora ..... ......... ............ 740 ·
M . .lca lnatrumenta ..............................:.... 570
Personats ..................................................... oos
Pela lor S.lo ................................................ 560
Plumbing 1o Hoottng .................................... 620
Prolnotonat Sorvlces ............ ..................... 230
Radio, TV l CB Repair ............................... 160
Real E . - Wanted ..................................... 360
Schooletnotructlon ..................................... 160
- , Pllnt &amp; Ferttllzor .............................. 680
SIIUatiOnt wanted ....................................... t20
Space lor Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goode ........................................... 520
SUV'o lor Slte ............ .. ... ... ........ .................. 720
'lnlcksfor. Sole ...........:................................ 715
Uphotllery ................................................... 670
vans For Slle ...............................................730

eeo

·

:.~:: :~ :::~-F~~;;;·s~ii'j;ii;;::::::::::::::::::::

Wonted To Do .............................................. 160
Wonted to Aont ............................................ 470
Yard S.le- Galttpolla.................................... 072
Yard Sale-Pameroy/Middle ............. .......... .. 074
Yard Sale-Pl. Plallant ................................ 076

....~· ···· - - ·-·----

Great pay, benefits:
100% PAID heeltMife Ins.
Aoglonsl A1.11a, 1 yr.

WE BUY USED
MOBILE HOMES

_ , . l o r Sole ............................. 750

-..j

l

llD

I l ', \

I "\ I

I,'. II I ,

8Fll WANIFD

Job
Opening:
Sllkln
Independent Conlractors,
L....::=:;:,;::~~ Michael and Frlerlds. Booth
Help . wanted , Carat Ad~ rental $125Jweek
,
· Free rent
Group Harne, weeHends a 10 get VOU started. Exc loc.
must, (740)992·5023
Spring Valley Plaza. (Cell}
740-645·5895 or 446-0698

lls=.~':i!~eq.

I

eo~

.... rNI ..... 8dVIftialng
lnthllnn p r Is
IUbJect to thl Federel
F•lr Houlklg Aet
wtilch mokn llllopl to

Fax: 740-ns-7855 EOE No
PhOI'Ie Calis Please. FAMILV
HEALTHCAAE, INC.

SOmeone to cut Grass &amp;
Weed eat, wlbhtde S5 an
hour 304-882·3800

The
Athens-Meigs
Window Local Country-Rock Band in Educational Serv~'!e Center
'
lnltalltr
Needed.
1
k"
HEAD =ART
need of a Guitar Player. Call 5 see IHg a
~ 1'
100 WORKERS NE~ Construction
experience
TEACHER AIDE fo the
A88emble erafts, wood helpful-will train. Apply in 740· 339· 2064
r
Tuppers Plains Cen1er.
ltemi.To $48Wwk Matertal8 p9f80n on Wednesdays, New Haven, 1 br. furnished Minimum of High ~hool
PrO\Ikled Free Information 10·00 Noon •o· Quellly
d
GEO COA nd
. 801-428-4649
. • 37700
. ., . King Hill apt.
pets, dep. &amp; pr&amp;\IIOUS
gra ~ate experience
rx
. 1.n early
a
pkg. 24Hr.
Windows,
ref., has
(740w/d,
)992no
..0165
Road, Pomeroy. No phOne
chndhoOd se1ting preferred.
~~le~ ~ to earn calls please.
OhiO Valley Home Health, This position has Board
""""'r· 8 f!fW von.
appr-·ed bene/"s. Subml1
Inc. hiring STN.A's. CNA's,
..,...
II
8II Marll 304-882 2645
yn
•
HOME HEALTH AIDE$- CHHA's, PCA's. Accepling letter of inlerest, resume,
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or SIGN ON BONUS Home applications lor LPN's. and references to John 0 .
Sen. Stlir1ey Spears, 304· Health Care of SE OhiO is Competitive Wages and Costanzo, Superintendent.
675·1429.
currenlty hiring home health Benefits 'including health Athens·Malgs ESC, P.O.Box
aides-competitive wages. Insurance and mileage. 664, Pomeroy, OH 45769.
CN.A's.
Local, Jackson Call 74()...662·1222 .
Apply at 1480 JackSon Pika, Application
Deadline:
COunty Company Is Now -------~ Gallinnlis or phone toll free September 13 at noon. The
.
I
t
·
Fo
't""...
Conduct 1ng n erv1ews
r lnvnedlate opening for an 1-~1 -1393.
AMESC
Opportunity
,
FuI •Tim. •
Experienced olfice manager. We preIftl an -:-,---c:---- Employer/Prcwider.
CNA Positions. Will Provide experienced office worker Overbrook center is current - ' - - ' - - -- - Training For Motivated with an accounting back· ly accepting
. applications
.
for- The. Village .of Rio
. Grande is
Persons.
Wages ground. You MUST haw a lull time, 7pm-7am LPN, tak~l~ aPfllcal~~s for :he
CompetltiYeiMany Benefits excellent computer skills f II lime 3Jlrr!-3 m and 7am- posl !On a par lme po ICB
Available Make The Aw.t lnclud'1 M' -~ w d &amp; u
'
~ a. .
officer. The applicant must
.
~·..
110 ICfU(KJu Of
7pm STNA pos~10ns. Also be certified in lhe Ohio
For
Your Excel.
Responsibilities avaHable. part 11me STN~ Peace
Officer
Basic
Cholce·Gall
Gonfldentiallnterview Today Include payroll, air, alp. positions Interested apph
~ou,l Be Glad You Oidlll Qu1· • ·•--ks, contra~- end
. .
." Training. Applice!ions can be
U\.UUU
......,
cants can pick up an appl1 273-5893 Or Stop In &amp; See · e" other "-lly office tasks.
.
. picked up at the Rio Grande
n
ua
cat1on or contact HolliS
Us 0 1113 Washington St., Full time M·F 8:00 . 5:00. No
Municipal Building Monday ·
LPN, StaH F .d e·30am nfl1 4·30pm
Wv· bel")efl1s. Mail resumes to Bumgarner,
Ravenswood,
Development Coordinator @ n ~· ."
u
·
References Required.
PO Box 55, Bidwell, OH (740 )992 _6472 ·M·F 9A·SP Apphceh~n~ are du_e ~ck to
45614
a1333 Page St Middeport lhe MuniCipal Building by
Courtslde Bar and GrYI
., . .
' noon
on
Monday,
.
.
,
Oh
EOE &amp; a part1c1pant ol 5 1 be 24 2007
Naw taking applications for
Overbrook
Center
is
now
the
Drug
Free
WorkPlace
ep
em
r
'
·
excepllonal people for bar·
accepting
resumes
for
the
Program.
we
are
now
taking
applies·
temlng , waltstaff/servers
and au kitchen positions. tf position of Dlrec1or of Social - - - - - - - lions for energetic, self drivyou are a motivated people Services. The qualified can· ParMarlt40(Ex~eon)1547 Nye en people 1o service and
person please come fill OU1 didate must be a Ucensed Aw. in Pomeroy,OH and Par install Dish Networl&lt; Sataltite
(Chevron)2264 systems. Training awllable.
an appficatlon or calllo se1 Social Worker and possess Marlf39
strong verbal and written 2,rld StMason YN.Are now FiT wfbenefits, Dri~te Co/
up an Interview.
communication
skills, hiring
experienced truck or get more$ for driv·
308 2nd Avo
Medicaid, Medicare and cashiers.Please apply at ing your truck . Driving,
740-441·9371
MDS knowledge. Long term either location.
felony backg round check
·
Drhttrs WAnted
care experience
preferred
and drug screening will be
~. 1
· ed . auai•'e&lt;l
POST OFFICE N"".,
Must live within a 25 mile ..,.,.
not reqUir
nl
vu
required. Cal l800·893- 1991
candida1es
may
send
HIRING
option 8 M·F 8.5pm.
radius of Hobson, Oh,
Avg. Pay $20/hr rx
Paid by the mite, plus wait· resumes lo Charta Brownlng lime, Vacalion, Holiday
McGuire.
RN ,
LNHA.
$57K annually
Pay, Futl and Part time awil· Adminislrator, 333 Page Including Federal Benelits
and OT.Paid Training,
.
able, Ideal tor SuppJemental Street, Middleport, Oh.
Vacalions-FTIPT
Income for Retired Parsons 45760. OBC Is an E.O.E.
1-866 -542-1531 ·
For More Information Call andapartlclpantoftheDrug
Free Work Place Program.
USWA
L--------'
1-li00-531-41553

andSchool•l2748

------Shotokan Karate Classes,
atsiting Sept 17th at 6:00
pm at Carleton School Gym
at Syracuse more lnio. call
(740)378·6144

c

,..:..,==:--.:-'-,=::-1

fiND A JOB
IN JHE
CLASSIFIEOS

$189/mol
5%dn,
20yf'l08%. Far lllttnp
100-659-4109 xF1"
Mlddleport· Brick

Ranch,

4.000 Sq.Ft.,8 Aooma, 2 112
Blh, 2 Fire Places. 2
Garages,
2
Lots,
PatioW/~wtng, Call 992·
4197.
REDUCED! Brand new
home In Qalllpollt. 2BA,
2BA w/3 acres mil. $82500.
Call740-4-46-7029

2000 Clayton 24XS6, 3 BA,
2BA, 3/4 acre In Green
Township. $79,900. Call
740-645-7113

knowingly....,
advetti...,.,. ror r..a
Hlettwhlc:hlaln
vkllrion o1 tt1e low. Our
,...,..,.....,_

To Do

Informed thM all
dwli1lft811dvartlud In
thlt
IIYallable on •equal

new•r1111•r ..

Jll..siNel;

1

'Thii""'PIPii' wit not

WANIID

~~.2BR,

large
boot&lt; do&lt;:t&lt;. · wooden shed. In Cheshire·
must be moved, Asking
Stq,ooo. (740)44t-lln5

Oreal used 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 with vinyl/shingle.
MuBI sell, only $25,995 with
datiYery. Call (74Q)~

~~·::P:P'~'"':•:lly=~-~

Land Contract/Sate 2000
14x70, :lllr, 2ba , $4,500

For 5ale $95,000.00

7911

OPfolrruNny

86 Modular nome w/
• attached 2 cer garage on 1
nice laying aero ground. 3
br. 2 112 bath, kit,
•NOTICE• .
dinlng&amp;utility room, ig. IIYin·
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· ~. laminated hardwood
lNG CO. recommends noorlng
··--... in atl rooms, BKcept

down. $427 momh 304-675New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214.36 permonth, lnciudes
many UI&gt;IIOidoB. delivery &amp;
eel-up. (740)385·243&lt;1

Nice used 3 bedroom hOme
Wil help with
bedrooms &amp; master·bath.
triple-pane windows, (loor doiiYOry, 740-385-4367

that you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the meil until you
ha~te investlg~ted lhe

coverings, 10x20" covered
back porch, coleman furnace, hell central airf heat·
pump, less than 5 yrs old
1'nsulaled m
n elal bid. ""'V
"""' · &amp;

otrering.

MONEY

446 -4436

-------HUD HOMESI 3bd only
$13,2501
More 1-4bd
ham•• available! From

14x70 Mobile home, All
2BA, Garn.n
Tub, Stend·up Shower,
Large front porcli w/ tin roof,

;;;;;;::====::::::;I.

j

House lor sakt on Lariat
Drive, subdivision across
from
GaiNa
County
Falrgrotrlds. Ideal location
near Holzer's Ho&amp;p and a .
variety of convenient ·~
ping. Now siding, window&amp;
and basement upgrades.
Large double lot sultsl;e lor
garden and located next to
wooded area. Gas heat and
central air. Selling below
appraised
value
at
$105,000. Call -.6-2847 0&lt;

ll(tyti'IIM "'•ny
prefiNnce,llmltdM or
diiGfkniMtlon t.Md on
..... color, rel~lon....
f•mll ..l atltul or Mtlonel
ortitn, or •nr lni!NIIIon to
n'lllll• any auch
r-•r.r~nce, llmltdon or
dl.:rtmlnMton."

Full-Time PosiUon Available.
For Office Located at 113 Lawn mowing. Rates by the
East
Memorial
Drive, job, not the hour, Free
Pomerov-. Ohio 45769. Estimates. Call Paul o
Com"Petitlve Salary, Greal
Wortdng EnYirornJnt..§ond
- T o: Family Health,
Inc. clo Mellssa Walls, 1049
Western
Avenue,
Chlllcotht, Ohio 45601 .

10
Lf.__FOR.Hor.m;_8.w!
_ __.

of'"' rM~s;~

College

(CareenrCio6e To Home)
Call Todayl740-146·4367,
1-800·214-0452

Ucannd Practlcll NurM
1110
Position AND 1
Front Dellk RocepUonlot •

..__ _ _ _ _ _ Help Wlnted:

----~--

Gatllpolll

, Fuii·Time

contract. Can pay $500

Building' luppllee........................................1160
lull11881 ond Building• ............................. 340

I

Hauls·Durnp Dlv. 1 year
Offi wrlllablo oxp. Call 1·
~-9365 ask for l&lt;ent
--,..----,,..-:::Site Director Full-Time
Position . and Certified
MeciiCII AsiiiiMI or

o

· 4x4'1 For S.le ......................................,....... 725

1,!0 ~ I

R&amp;J Tructlng Leading The
Way R&amp;J Trucking now
-galllpotl8careeroollegl.oom
Hiring at our New Haven, "«:cradll:l!ld Member Accrediting
WV Terminal. For Regional po..-d tor lr :' II . .d COieges

Gdla

·CLASSIFIED INDEX

lll1'f

0 2007 by NEA,lnc.

www.comlcs.com

~~~~~~~~~~§~~~~ p~County.
lo

River Valley runner in 12th
place (23:45). Kelsey Sands
Wl\S 25th (26:27) and Kalhy
Brumfield 42nd (39:57).
Audrianna Pullins was
18th (25:29) for Eastern
while Julie Draehn was 30th
(27: 17). Southern's lone
runner Michelle Ours was
40th (36:28).
Broderick paced the
passing ~arne with 21
assists whtle' also chipping
in nine points to the winning cause.
Hunter was 9- I I serving,
Turley was 7-7· and 3-6
spiking with a pair of
blocks, and Wolfe-Riffle 6
for 7 serving. Wolfe-Riffle
was 16-20 passing. Turley
had three kills, Sarah Eddy
two, and Cundiff one.
Eastern
defeated
Southern in the reserve
game 25-14 and 25-10.
Eastern was led by Casto
with 19, Maxson had 13,
and Cummings had nine.
Soulhern was led by Sarah
Matthews with seven, and
Breanna Taylor with five.
Southern
hosts
Nelsonville
Thursday
while Eastern heads to
Miller. The JV games will
start at 6 p.m.

~

Aatrock WV area. 5end
Paw Paws, black walnuts, iesume per letter of Interest
h-Ies. pte... call flrs1. with Oiperlence, relorenoeB
~~7~40~)e9~8!6080~-,..----,- &amp; wage requirements to BoK

!

Calltodlyl
1-877-18U247
Eltt. 2301

C.~~o~

Coin Shop, 151 Second one or two tlmee per week.
Aveooe, Gallipolis, 740-446- Organization sldll, conllden2642.
llallty end honealy • must.

HOu... tor Aent .......................................... 410
In Memorl..n ................................................020

with three points, while
Hunter, Turley, and Robie
added two each.
In the' finale, Southern
-kept Eastern within two
pomts until the second
round of serving when Burt
hit for two points, and was
backed up by great setting
and good front line play.
Eastern went up 15-9 on
serves by s .watzel, then an
SHS time-out killed the
EHS momentum. Eastern
held leads of 17-10 and 1812 until Soulhern's Hunter
unreeled four points to pull
SHS to within three at 2118. Burt gave EHS a 23-18
lead, then Swatzel served
up the game-winners.
Hayman led the EHS
attack with 16 kills, followed by Wilfong with five
kills and Swatzel wilh four.
Swatzel also led the Lady
Eagles with 17 points.

I

proud of. Start dOing work
that makes a drtterence.
Start your new career
todayl

.,.....

bia&lt;*
ond wMoafter
mala
smelt Absokrte Top Dollar: u.s.. ..,
C8111M9-3408
5:00pl'l.
• .,
Lost: Med. size blad&lt; &amp; 1an Sli'le&lt; and Gold Coins,
dog, wigeon collar P - . Gold Alnga, Pre- Oopondablo and oxperl·
on Al2 aauos from Jericho 1935
U.S.
Currency, .enced dl'jtlme hollae cleanAd Childs
740-446-9371 Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S. 'er lor private home needs&lt;l

.,,

Eastern

Alllftltonl
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENr programs lor yoo to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment coold be the
same as renl.
Mortgage
Locators.
(740)367 -0000

S!P-rf doing work you can

' '

Robie,
Rashell Boso,
Pape,
Chelsea
and
Samantha Patterson.
In the second game,
from Page 81
Eastern went u_p 2-1 before
Soulhern tied 1t on a sideIn the first match Eastern out
at 2-2. Swatzel added
took a , 1-0 lead before ' six points in lhe next servSouthern tied it at 1-1. ing round for an 8-2 Eagle
That's as close as that set lead, then after a trade-off
played out. Eastern's Tresa on
Bryan Walterliphoto
side-outs
Megan
Meigs senior Amy Barr sets a pass during the third game of Swatzel served six straight Broderick added a pair
Tuesday's TVC Ohio contest with Alexander
Larry R. to give EHS a 7-1 lead, then around a Southern time out,
Morrison Gymnasium in Rock Springs .
Megan Broderick pushed lhen added anolher for an
the Lady Eagles ahead 14-4. 11-3 EHS lead.
assist.
Katie Hayman added three
Southern never pulled
Allie
Sayers
led more and Eastern led 18-5 closer
than five points and
Alexander with 15 points.
en route to a 25-8 win.
Eastern slowly, but steadfrom Page 81
· The Lady Marauders
Other contributors to the fastly bolstered its lead with
travel to Gallipolis today win for Eastern were a steady regiment of bump,
Burt,
Katie set, spike fundamental baiL
Holly Jeffers added a kill for a non-conference Morgan
with
Gallia Wilfong, Ryan Davis, and Burt added five for Eastern
matchup
apiece.
then
host Kelsy Holter. Southern scor- going down the stretch, then
Barr and Jeffers also had Academy,
respective assist numbers Wellston Thursday in a ers were Emma- Hunter, Hayman served up lhe last
Wolfe-Rime, three for the game-winning
of four and two for Meigs, TVC Ohio contest. Both Whitney
matches
start
with
junior
Kasey
Turley,
Sarah Eddy, points.
which had seven overall as
Stephanie Cundiff, Ashley
Wolfe-Riffle led Soulhern
a team . Wolfe had the other varsity games at 6 p.m.

1F2M

+Paid holidays

· Mountameers under control
·wilh a 13-6 halftime lead.
Then West ' Vnginia scored
three touciliowns in the third
quarter and tJulle more 1'08 in
the fmal 15 ininutes. .
"I thou_ght lhey . w&lt;il:e
(Marshall) dOwn. They can do
that if they're on the field a
lot,·: Matyland coach Ralpb
Friedgen said. "ObviouSly
we're going ro have to play
good defense, but ·_if our.

.· and ·was sacked five times
before Crennel yanked him.
Savage was most troubled
fromFageBl
by Frye's inability to get rid
.of
the ball.
.
.
hours after playing horribly
"Sunday,
we
needed
to
and being pulled in the sec- see more ·production,"
ond quarter by coach Savage said, "and probably
Romeo Crennel. A former
third"round pick who grew lhe most revealing lhing of
up rooting for·the Browns in everylhing that happened
Willard. Ohio, Frye beat out Sunday was lhat in his 10
Anderson .during a drawn- attempts (actually 15), -he
out competition that began took five sacks and in
during the offseason and Derek's 28l!ttempts (actualcarried through the presea- ly 29) he took one sack."
Savage praised Frye for
son.
the
way he handled twoLess than two weeks ago,
plus
turbulent seasons wilh
Savage said, "Let's see
the
Browns,
who are just
what Charlie can do with a
40-89 since 1999. ·
full deck" Ibis season.
"He came into a very
It took less than 20 mintough
situation," Savage
utes on Sunday for the club
to decide Frye was no said.
longer in 'lheir future plans. · Frye fills a pressing need
He went 4-of-1 0 for 34 for Seahawks coach Mike
yards wilh an interception Holmgren, who had been

Earn up to $1.5CWhour

t

' Mars'!all !11ought ii !!3d the

Trade

5bd 2ba GALLIP.OLIS
Foreelo•urel Buy for
$M,8001
S'Aodn,
20yl'801%. More local
home~ trom S191fmal For
lac* lilting• CIIIIOC)..559-

+$300 lll~ng Bonuo
+Full benelhs package

.

;

104 Tatum Or. New
Haven.WV 3bCL'2ba. Rench,
lg.eunroom, 2 car gar. great
area. D; 304-675-3637 E;
304-882-2334

kllncarlyleOcomcattnet

moat w/ long hair. Litter LO!ST~:;;;(iiOiC
trained, wormed, 18t vac. Tenier, name 18 Klllle Bug.
441·1100 .
Blk spot on head. U... on
Approx. 1 year otd Sheep WoodlmiN Rd. Pl.... help
oog. Very Friendly &amp; us flnd herl ~167, 645-

Invite

Meigs

How you can have borders and Qraphlcs
~
addedtoyourclassmedads
(.;.\._
'""
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!,ii4l
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

(19:38). South Gallia's fiflh overall m a time of
Jacob Watson also ran well, 22:07 while teammate
finishing 31st (21 :00).
Devan Soulsby was II th
fromPageBl
On the girls side, Warren's (23:29). Also for lhe Lady
score of 35 was I 0 points Marauders, Morgan Lentes
Several -schools did not better than runner-up was 16th (24:39), Jessica
have enough runners to field Athens. Meigs (58) was Holliday 19th (25:57) and
38th
full teams. Eastern's Keilh lhird followed by Trimble Hope . Hajivandi
(32:47).
Aeiker fared well individu- (88).
ally, though, in 17th place
Ashley Fitch was lhe top
Meigs' Kimi Swisher was

at

Websjtes:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

l\egt~ter
To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 .
Today... Or Fax To (740) 446-3008 · .
Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Oquendo said.

neg*d," Taps~Andrew the leSL"

Cromrmy satd .Tuesday.
"Hopefully. the olfensive lirie
will take it upon themselves to
keep the lial1 moving and
grind down the clock."
That was the plan last year,
until the Moulllaineers.soored
28 first-quarter points 011 their
way lb a 45-27 blowouL The
T~ have had to live
wilh the .embarrassment of
th;lt .game for an entire ye3r,
and now they've ~ot a chance
to make amendS m front of a
natiouallelevision audienoe.
Thefirstorderofbusinessis
shutting dowh White and
Slaton, who were virtually
unslo!JP.able in a season-cpening @":24 win over Western
Michigan and a 48-23 rout of
Marshall last Saturday. .
'They're very explosive.
They're the type of ¥UYS you
can stop for'five, SIX plays,
then all of a sudden they break
off. an 80-yardnm," Maryland
linebacll:er Erin Henderson

- l\e

I

ro Lo.
~:::::~:·::;
.o..tllol

~nyl/shlnglo .

OWNER FINANCING
Nice l'2 singklwldes
From $1,800 down
payment
Gary (7401826·2750

L------....1

stove. washer &amp; dryer
&amp;small microwave will
remain. Sm. fenced area in
rear for children or pets, Trailer tor sale, $2,000,
BUnds &amp; curtains will remain (740)992·5858
located 10623 Ripley Ad pt
Pleasant St Rt 2 N. 6- 6112
8l.lslN6
miles call 304-6?5-5590 or
AND ~
304· 532· 3507 ·
-For sale by owner. 3SA 2 story 22x18 garage fof"
Ranch, 1 bath. Family rent In Middleport. $100 per
Room , St&lt;WeiFrldge, W/D _mo_._;·(_;740...:..)99_2.,.-684_9_ _
. 1 d d A k'
$lO 000
·
me
'
· H/sto"c
. leo "'dg, 2nd
C 1u e0 · 9s-alng
" style oil
~
339
al 74 -70
A"e.
Galllpoli·s.
•UJ·rge rooms
•
House tor sale in Racine suitable for C.P.A.· Attorney,
area. Appro1C 4 acres, all Real Estate, lnsuranoo or
professionally landscaped. Optometrist.
basement.
Rand'! style house wilh 4 Seoond floor has 2 apls, currently occupied. New plumbbedrooms, living room , din·
ing roo m, kitchen. large fam· ing. A/C , paint. Call 446ily room, central air, gas heat 2926 fof lurther details.
and 1 fireplace. Addition of a
&amp;
I..A.It~
large Florida room comA~••r•

r

**NOTI(: E**
Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you re11·
nance your home or
obtain a lOan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance paymen1s of
lees or Insurance. Call the
Office of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1·866278.0003 to learn if the
mortgage broker or
lender
Is
properly
licensed. (This Is a public
service announcemen1
from the Ohio VaHey

i

I

•-

L---~-~--.,J

~P=u~bl=
i sh;lng=C=orn=pa=ny:)~ pletely ceda r opens onto ..,

r

I'RommNAL
c.-.·

~VICF.S

I

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCtAL SECURJTY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-868·582·3345

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

11r16

HOMIS

L~--,:;FOR::,S~ALE--.,J

'""
0 down payment. 4 bedrooms. Large yard . Covered
deck. Attached garage. 740367-7t29.

86 Pine, Gallipolis, New
roof , heat pump, electrical, 2
SR. Double Lot, $72,000.
(740)441-0720

patio &amp; pool area. Heated in
ground pool enclosed by pri· 2 Cemetery lots Memorial
'acy fenci ng and land· Gardens. Ca ll 1-740-6865152
seeped . Finished 2 car - - -- - - garage attached to house 7+ acres on Leff FOI1c: Ad
and finished &amp; heated 3 car near Jactlson Pike, priCed 10
garage
unattached. sell. Call 740 _446- 7525
Excellen t condition ready to
move 1n. $255.000.00, Call: Gallipotls· Ferry, WV, Scenic
(7 40)949·22 17
tracts for building, hunting or
:.____.: ::__:_:::____ horse_s . See pies on ian Oak Hiii·Attracti~te 1-story, dandlarm.com. can 304·
2BR, 1.25ba. NEW updates: 533-0547
•
energy et1icient windows,
doors &amp; ki1cheo annliances.
Lo1 for rent In ~iddleport,
""
Hardwood &amp; cera mic floors, sized tor doub[ewide, $125
lull basement (partially fin· per mo., (740)992-6849
1shed), central air, forced MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
gas heat. city water &amp; RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
sewage, off street panting, Rd. 44 t _111 t
large level backyard. A
MUST
SEE!
·Asking Sites available up to 16X80
$80 ,000 . 740·645-1863 or mobile homes $130.00 per
740.352·2645
month. C811740-992·5639

=--'-'--'-'------

�•

.

.

'

'

..... ., .....

-·

.... .. . . ·-

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5 ·

www.mydallysentlne1.com

wednesday, September 12, 2007
.ALLEYOOP

Page 84 • The D~y Sentinel

r•

I

R(JI""

!lOll IbM'

ACROSS
Mobile home tor rtf1t, no Tar•
Townhouse
pot&amp; Apanmenr for rtnt, no. ~~~. Very Spaciooo,
po1s, utilities pald,.(7..0)11112· · 2 IJodroomo, CIA, I 112

t t - l Buy 3bd HUO 5858
•
1 5'1W!n, 20ytwl.,.,
.
For L.JIIIfteiiDO 511 1101 Small 2BA Moblt Home in
11701
Johnsons Mobile Homo
Pari&lt;. 7-2003 or 44&amp;18R houoe localed in 1&lt;109
Golllpj)lis oo 3rd Ave. .:.:.::___ _...,_
__
1
$2711/n\o Ill&lt;! $2Y5/dop. Can Traier ,lor rn, 38R, 2 IIA.
coll740-25&amp;81181
Call 367-n62or448-&lt;1060

r

Bath,'

Adu-

Phillip
Alder

!WI &amp; B1bv

PQol; Plllo; Start ~
No Pets, leaae Plus

Socuflly lloj:looil Required,

"&lt;Ill'
..~~·
" ,...,...,I.

Norilt

1\0iin Fli'l8fS Tower Ia occepl·
ing . . . , - , . fol' wol1lng
list for HucHubslzed, I· br,

,
~ town , No Pets, Deposit
$&lt;4l!lllmo plue dopooil &amp; utili· Requlrad, (740)992-5174 or
tieo. Slovo a fridge, WID (740)-44Hlt10.

j

--·

Ccnpt••• nwc..

............,......._

I

· FOR Jb.Nr

Roofing, Siding,
Sofflr, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
·Eiecrric, Plumbing,

nlshad, and houses in

Pomeroy and Middleport,
security depoeit requlrad, no
pets, 740·992·2218.
18R tri~evel . c1oso to hOspl·
te35. (140)9411-~
tal, 8 mllea to Rio Grande r~\0
3 ' Bedroom House in Ret + Oep reqvired, no pets.
Sy""""'. $500/monlh + 7:..~
:.:...:.:;..:2;:.57::.._
9 _ __
dopOoM No - · (30ol)675- t BR Cabin, al ut~illts fur·

Drywall,

Remodeling, RD&lt;&gt;m I
Additions

t\.lt8fl· c/a,

$350/mo, call (740)256·

gu heat, fire. $350. 863 Third A.ve.

ca:'port, • decl&lt;s, kitchen

r:l~i~;~

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

·~;;~~~~To~U~Free-877-669-0007
Wise Concrete

Soulb

West

l •

3 NT

! •

of co~~
Owner· Rick Wise

All type&lt;

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740416-1698

Reserw Note Flw Hundred..

'.''
•I'

I

'

=943~t:-::-:-=:---=-:- Newly ramodeled, $475/mo. 92 CASE 580 SuporK

BARNEY

69 Garflold • 2BR, t BA utilities pold, depeol! Backhoe, very good cond· ·
$480/monlli + aec. dep. 77 raqulrad (3041675-8635
lion, low houra. $16,000.

ALL THESE YEARS AN'
NAR'r' A COMPLAINT 'BOUT
M'Y COOKIN' !!

Cedar · 3BR, t 112BA 2br. Api. on 5th Street Pt. Cell 740-709·9420
$57l;lmonlh + 880. dep. 'ibu Pleaoent $375 ask lor Don
JET
ol[ utiHtlea. Call «6- (30ol)812-4350
AEAiiTION MOTORS

adjusted

Income. · caN

(304)862·3121 8\1\llabla tur
Senior and Olaablad PoOplo.
• Payment could be the Equal Housing Opportunity
aamo ae rent,
Mortgaga
Locotors. Apl!flmenl for rent, 1·2
(740)367.0000
Bdrm., remOdeled, new carpet, ' stove &amp; trig., water,

For oa1e or rent, 3 badroom, sawsr, trash pd. Middleport.'

I bath, newly remodeled
house In Rodney VIllage II.
Buy for $64,000 IIIIth possl·
ble CIWfllr assist or rent' for
$500 per moolh with aecurlty depos~. No Inside pats.
call (740)845·1383 '

$425.00. No pots. Raf.
raqulred. 740-643-5264.
Buuttful Aptl. lt Jackaon

Elf!llea. 52 Westwood
Drive, from $365 10 S580.
740·«6-2568.
' Equal
=~==-=--- Housing Oppbrtunlty. This
HUD HOMES! 3bd only lnstllullon Is an Equal
$13,2101

More

•r10

1-4bd Opportunity Provldar and Tandem

holl* onlloblol From Employer.
•11111/mol
5%dn,
:royreOI'IIo. For llatinga CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
800 5511109 lift«
ED. AI'FORDABLEI
Townhouse apartmonts,

8

and m:,ro. 446- 727

c=::==:-:--:-:::--=
Off SR 141, 3BR, :iliA.

•2&amp;~ bedroom apartments

•Centralhott&amp;A/C
......._ •--ont 1 car •w··•·rtd~r
·-~up
....,....._, _ , '
-~ .,. ·~
= ( 6 1 = / l u a •Tanantpoyaeleclric

(304)882-3017

Pomerov, 2·3 br. apt. or

. •
houoe, ~al~ fumlshad,
HUD oppioolod., near pori&lt;,
no pels, (140)11112-6886
•
Taking apflllcations tor 38R : : - - - - - - - - houoe. No
· $425/mo. Fum18had Apt, 2nd Ave,
Golllpolts, Upstalro, 1
~ All
Bedroom, No ~~.
utili·
Ilea paid, (740)446-9523
iil::o.-1 Groelouo Uvlng 1 and 2
• ~. "-'
.. - Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
•.,., n•~ .,,,
2 •~· ,· ~~
pordlln GaltpOtls. No pets. 1\AanorandRivoreldeApiain
7ol0-446-2003 or 446-1&lt;109 Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 74().992·5084. t;Qual
2BR on~ k&gt;t, Addlaoo .,.Houslng=
= Oppo=:::rtu::n:::l!y!:.._ _
TWp. $400 Rent &amp; $400 M........., •--~ S 2
Oopool!; 2BR on jllivate k&gt;t, ~"""• ~· t , br.
\1\lry nice, quio!, acsnlc area, fumiahad apt., utilillts pd.,

2003 Honda RX tOOR ike

J&amp;L .
Construction

tirea,oN

new&amp;clean,f'lft

chango&amp;plug.$IOOO.OBO.
740-418-t568,
::-:~~_;,_ _ _...
2006 Honda · Gold Wing
$4,000 In accasaorlts. Paid
$24,000 new-~19,600. Cal

Vtnyi Skiing .

Wlndowt
Rooflng

740-367-7129.

i.r7t~~:Rn;'&amp;)

Decka

I"

FOR !l.uE

740·418·7403

·

AKC Gorman Shepherd
Pupples, Black&amp; Tan, $350males, ••~.females 304.
nU062;..solt . 304-593-

""""

4267

j

Garegea
Pole Building•
Room AddRIOna

Owowr:
Jame1~11

742-2332

'-'

Longhalred min
Dachshunds. 2/F,11M. black
and red. Flrsl ehols, 740AKC

3311-0394leellllm~~~~ge

4dr;

David Lewis
740-992-6971

AKC Reg. Garman Shon Monte Carlo $3200. 93

haired PTR. I t wks, male, Pontiac Sunflre $1500. 97
wMo and liver. $400. cal Chevy Ce\1\ller $2500. 96
740-446-9231
Camaro S2700 · Cell 4488172 or 256-6251
Mattese Pupplae 2 malea
$500/sach,
2 femala 97 Camero RS, wht wlblk
seoOJeach, shots &amp; wormad racing atrlpes/ractng spoiler.
~75·39n
Looks/runs good. Prlcad to
Mlnlalure Pinscher CKC sell $28001 304·634-6523
Reg. Black/rust, I F$300 2
M
$200. tOWks old,
Wormad,aho!s, tall$ docfrad. L--.;_;.,;;..;;:;;::_:.J
740-367-o:!to r no anawar
leave .,........

. ....
FEIII&amp;u:

ril

CAR PENTER
SERVI CE

•

HelpWanled

I ,

e

PHARMACIST
Pleasanl Valley Hospilal is currently
accepting resumes for a Full-Time
Pharmacist. B.S. Pharmacy, Pharm. D.
Pharmacy or Ph. D. Pharmacy from
accredited college or university. WV Sta!e
Pharmaci st Licen sure. Two years
pharmacist experience preferred. Hospital
experience preferred.
· Excellent salary holidays, health·
insurance single/family plan, dental plan,
life ins. vacation, long lerm disability and
retirement
Send resumes to:
Pleaant'Valley Hospital
· C/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. Wlll5550
{:504) 675-4340 ext. 1307
Or fax:
304-675-6975
Or apply online at:
-pvalley.org

AA/EOE

BIG NATE

V.··~

FOR'&amp;u;

35537 St. Rt. 7 North '·

• Ch~•·rTownlCou"""
2001
Van. G;.;.tShape and'i;,;
mileage. CALL 740·96S337011111
'.

''

PEANUTS

Stanley Tree·
Trimming .
&amp;

R~tmoval

______________.,:
'

you'll easily be abte to reap larger gains
than
usual
from
your
efforta .

• 740-742-2'i93

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) -

following
Hom on
Saturday, September
15, 2007, at 10:00 a.m. ·
at the Bank's perking
lot.
1999 Mercury Cougar
1ZWFT81L1Xli&amp;4023e
18i5 CHEVY BLAZER .
1GNDT13W9SK129789
1993
FORD
F150
P I C K U P
1FTDF15YXPLB11488
2000 CHEVY BLAZER
1GNDT13W3V2214183
1996 DODGE CARA·
Y
A
N
1 B46P54RXTB46012~
The Home National
Bank reservaa the
right to reJect any and
all bids. All vehicles
are 1old, aa 11 where
Ia, with no warranties
exproued or Implied.
For an appointment to
see, Call949-2210, A1k
for She: Ia.
(9112• 13, 14

H;ll's Self
Storage

that require ..n,ltlvlty will afford you the
greatest aatlaf&amp;CIIon. When you feel

good, your mentalfacuttle&amp; sharpen con·
slderably.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - ~ng to
vou• genuine eoncem tor others, lrlends
will be wilting to help "NOrM out those dif·
ticutlles that you can't seem to resolve
unaided. It is all a matter of give-andtake .

29670 Bashati Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-94&amp;-2217

ARIES (March 21-Aprtt 19) -

'

'

friends who a r~tsens ltlve and gentle.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - An lmpor·

'\
'

RIIERT
IISSEU

Manley's
Recycling

...

CIISTIUCIIII
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

ARE VOO POING
ANV'THING RIGH'T NOW?

0
0
0
0

. . . . . . . . .12:11 ..

0

,,•

PIYIHTIP PIICf.S M

0

. . . . . . . . . 1•&amp;1111
CIIJIJIICCIII I laS• lit•

Stop &amp;Compare

·'-··-· - -·

....

605V

tant endeavor can be accomplished with·
out much trouble. When working with
Others, you should use tactics that a re In
line with your highest ideals. They'll
respond to noble efforts.
GEMIN I (May 21·June 20) -Your personaHty can be a bit compl ex, but your
more charismatic dimensions are likely
to predominste and attract a great deal
or attention. regardless of what vou do or
whe re you go.
CANCER (June 2hJuly 22) - Even
when working on m undane projects,
your creative and artistic touches will be
m uch in evidence . Others will easily be
able to se e whk:h efforts are yours and
which are another's
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - When dealing
w ith others , your aptitude lor reading

their true lntentioos and purposes will

' IIMIIIIIIInll
" '

give you a leg up In ways they lael&lt;.

N O TI CE:
L AND O WN E R S IN M E IGS
AN D G ALLIA CO UNTI ES
'o'\&lt;1",11'111 I ;.liHI SI'IVICt":. IT'C

I'LL COME
BACK LATER
WHENVOO'RE
NO'T 50

.......llffrM. . . . . . . ...

7U..992,18J1

Advertise
in this
space
for
$60 per
month

GARFIELD

'

Public Nollce
The Ohio
School
Beneflta Cooperative
Annual Meeting will be
held
Monday, .
sapteember 17, 2007,
at noon, at Musklngum
Valley
Educational
S&amp;rvlca Center, 205 N.
7th St., Zanesvlll~ .
Ohio (1) 9-12-07

~ilhough

you usually like being around the more
active, aggreaalve types of people, you 'll
be more comfOrtable hanging out with

.,

GRIZZWELLS

You're In the catbird seat.

~~~tl P.\1.~

SOUP TO NUTZ

~~ts

t.AWI..'I ?

;1 IP.HI"I itt llrl ·"'"

(;;,~, f'l&lt;iJ in!allo!l :1ncl dr•'JPiopr"Pill

...,,,oi ,J •••· '''

Plii'IICI ttw oH&lt;~r ol an 011 o~nd ::;,,.

L••

,,. '"

IIH&gt; ';t• l:uldOI.~Ilf'I..,IIT1111f'l.ll C)Wtlf'l', ,·,··thor• r·:l&lt;••q·

Ovl'r .·IO.fJOU :1&lt;:1•"·
''""·''
have ailf'ild~· hrrr1 lf'.l"'"d '"d ·'"
ptPfl&lt;"HHlq to tw df'VI:'Iopcd II yo,r 11i1vc ,., •.. •·rl
ami (;;1llr.1 CIJUI111&lt;''

,llf' .l'i

lhf'

L hil!'C I"

!0

hf'

ltl'lflivror_l

Ill

1/11&lt;;

V&lt;'ll!IIIP

plf'ilS£' corltact the local of11cr at t•lil· -1 ·\h 11 ft(]()
non't moo.,-. th1..., •:·ppur llmlly to p;JIIWIJLllf' on tlu
rtl'~·r•toprn•·•ll or your nnhual l&lt;'~:·,;rr·,...., ,,.., w('ll
,, .., llw pu!Pnl~&lt;tl fur ncre;Jo..rrlq yo.1r
pt'tSOI1.tlrncOillC

I ,

---··-

hard ael, the sale will beCOme eUler.

Philosophical exc~ngea and enaeavora

(

-

Surprisingly, when you let down on the

. COW al'ld BOY

leave

Tho Homo Nalfonol
Bonk will auction tho

I

4 More
appealing
33 Sma
5 Not pro
35 Rtln atlcklr S Luklwann

7 HouHhold
IIPIIIItnce
6 Witiclerlng
38 Tilt enc11
9 Drink 11owty
38 Night before 10 Author
40 SDUd 11.
Unoberto
41 Kind
oC humor 11 HallY

37 Leave
openmoulhtd

45 Icicle locolo
47 Tavern
br1w1

48 118v'tlol
49 Ptwro't
queet
on 50 DlthladdrNB
52 Rage
25 Mullltu 1 53 SOciety
26 lndullry
column
magnate
-.1
27 PlocH at
54 JII*•Miinetllltl
refuge
28 Blouaa trim
29 Fringe -

dtltc.cy

'
.~

·•
•,

"
'.

'.

34 Seem
36 Docl.-.cl
openly
42 Revelled
43 Pracloe

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
._..o,t._ .......
""' ......... ...... ,....,,_
~-.
~Wier, tt.! cipher pW ~ II'IOther.

Todoy's

."

""''I"1"/s R

"

" Z OSVK DWSRAT GSK BZAX ZHISDD
Z D0ZHY

BWFHW WY

USAGT. "

• PSDYOW

•

HZG HAYZI ZK Z
PSRUVIK

PREVIOUS SOlUTION - 'You cant test courage ca.-iou~y.' • Ann:e Dillard
'Courage is being a~ald but going on anyhow.' · Dan Rathel

WOlD

,)

... .. u... :

Getting out and circulating among
triendt wll help plctc: up your spi'lts and
make you feel better. However, It might
take someterious budging to get you out
of your easy chair.
•
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) Without being a Scrooge or "sharpie,"

Call Gary Stallley @ .

Public Notice

output

t1C8pe
13 Fon:olul
._ .
DOWN
person
27 Glgl'l
19 Worked like
boyfriend
1 . Til&lt;
a dog
26 Autumn
orund on
20 Emerge
fllgn
2 Ode ln.plrer 22 Giving
3() l:lill codt
3 Dovecote
leoa lfc:l
31 PC acronym
BOUnd
24 Come

28 CBef 1

''

'

'

•

'·

.,

.·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21) -

._

Rates

,_..:.;::;;:.:.::;:::;~-

23 Rx giver

loud

58 Foundry

.their needs flrat.

Reg Border Coli tO pups,

NOTICE TO CONTRAC· amount of not taaa
TORS ·
lhlln 10% of the bid
Sealed proposals lor amount In favor altha
the Po
Dl
meroy strell aforesaid
Malgo
Sidewalk Replacement C o u n 1 y
Project, Molg1 County, Commlaslonere. Bid
Ohio 11 per lpeclflca· Bonds shan be accomIlona In bid packlll will panted by Proal of
be received by the Authority altha official
Melga
County or agent sl~nlng thit
Commlulonera
at bond. Blda shall be
thalr office 11 the 18aled and marked ai
Courtholl'18; Pomeroy, Bid
tor
Pomeroy
Ohio 45769 until 1:00 Dlatreaa
Sidewalk
p.m. September 20, Replacement ProJect
2007 and then at 1:15 · and mailed or dallv·
p.m. at aald office erecUo:
opened and read aloud Malgs
· County
for the !allowing:
Commissioners
This Ia a. Prevailing Courthoul8
Wage proJect. See Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Specifications In bid AttenHo~ of bidders Is·
pecl&lt;ctl.
called to ell 01 the
con·
Speclllcattona and bid requlremanta
fonn1 may be -ured talnad In thll bid pock·
at tho office ot Melgl et, particularly 10 the
C o u n t y Federal
Labor
C a m m 1a al o n a re , standard• Provlllona
Courthoul8, Pomeroy, and
Davis-Bacon
Ohio 45769 740·992· Wagaa, various lnsur·
2895. A deposll of 0 ance
requirements,
dollare will be required varlqua equal opporiu·
to( ·each HI or plana nlly provlalona, and
and
specifications, the requirement for a
check made payable payment bond and per·
to. The full amount wtll formance bond for
be retumad wHhln thlr· 100% of the contract
ty (30) days after price. No bidder may
receipt of blda,
wHhdraw hla bid within
Each bid muat be thirty (30) days after
occompoonlad by either the actual data of the
1 bid bond In an opening thereof. The
amount of tOO% of the Meigs
County
bid imount with 1 Commtaslonera
surety aatllloctory to reserve the right to
the aforeaald Meigs reJect any or all bids.
C o u n I y Mlck
Davenport,
Commlllfonera or by President
certified
check, Meigs
County
caahlen check, or let· Commissioners
tar of crec!H upon a ao~ (8)30 (9) 5, 12
vent bank In the

vtrb

of great value.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22\ - 8ecau10
your Intentions ai'e so true and · noble,
your IntuitiOn Ia abte to provide you with
helpful _lnslghi;J that could eully escape
your togic. ¥«1'11 I.M both In your ftnan·
clal deaHnga..
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Qr:t. 231 - Solutions
that could be too dlftieult b' aaoclai:H
to grasp might coma automatlcllfV to you
because you won't COinJlllclta things
with eklboratl ploys IUld aUbte11uge that
others are using.
'
SCORPIO (Oct, 24-Niov. 22) ...:. Charity
should begin at home. So before you
think about providing for outtldere, makt
alire everything 18 provkfed for your tam·
lly'a happlnieaa and contentment Put

,
'

!•Prompt and Quality

57 Sold out

people who are oompa181ontle and 000·
alderate will 1Um out to·be extremely lor·
tunate lor you In the months ahead. Their
·kindneSs could pU1 you onto something

Ponwoy, OH

We Deliver To You I

~.w-:l::iiii:iii--,1

order

21 .Adlhmetlc

Tlturodoy,-. t3, 2G07
Bi' Ban!lce 0.01
Tho8e relatlonehlpa you altabllsh with

Shade River AI. Service

WA=~

···--

tt lloed crew

IAMf

.

14 n. S75.oo

99 Ford Ranger XLT antee. Local ref11rances fur·
Suporcab, 4' 4•Cold A&lt;;. Too nlohad. Eelabllshed 1975.
much new 10 Hal, Tool Box, Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Very Good Cond. $S500. 0870, Rogsrs Basement
080. 17401245-9142
Wate""""Hng.
~ --

Guard on.

12 Roughly
44 ~
14 B""-t'o
lflll"dlllll
Third
46 CIMnlh
11 Kind at pine
aptian
j)lltlllng
46 Got equal
16 Curtain trim
=~
17 llwllch
51
ld pel
lingle ·
55 Clleclc In
.. - - lilly 56 Judlclotl

.• • ~ Astro~
' Graph

,

Unconditional lifetime guar·

nJ

1::.1

badly.

U fl. $US.OO
16 tt $83.00
Why olrlve anywhere elu ·

·

rid

Help Wanlocl

~!

S-UREA ......................$199/ton Bulk. ()aJy
Prlerert Powder Coaled Gates

~

= =::-:=!•::....·-,..- -

apartments.
pels. Cei74Q.387·7025
Waahor/dryor
hookup,
FARM
3llr Mobile Home
all stovolratrlgeraiOr Included. L,-lliii
'EQur.:oo~::;:;::;~.,J
•~u
Also, units on SR 180. Pl!a
.
1urnlshad, Welcome! (740)-441.0194. 815 IH combine, both
""" anoee
Including Waaller &amp; Dryer
:JOol-59\l-4496
RENT¥ UR . hoade, runs good. $2500.
Gra~ly bade $350 • $750.
3BR trailer · Eastern Schoo
MOBILE HOME can740-643-2265
District $450 plua $400
WITH A
depooll, plus eloclric HUD
exceptad. 740-992-0653
CLASSIFIED AD
2BA

!&gt;It&gt; '(Ol) 00 WITI-\
II ~U.1

Triumph IZ% Hone feed .......$5.99i511 lb.

YOUN G'S

Addlaon Twp, $550/rent, dep. &amp; ref., no pets, Imported Bloodlines, 1st
40...)992
$550 Depostt (740)645· :..(7.:.
= -()
.:.1:.:65:__ _ _ slto!s, wormad, wcrklng par·
:J.&lt;I3 or (1&lt;10)845-3592
Mlddeport, North 4th Allll , 2 ontB. Cal740-379-9!10
1\1~'1 ...
1'1'111 ...,
aliA In Rio Grande area, br. fumlahad' apL ' dop. &amp;
\ I I\ I . . I ( II I\
2BR ,.... RVHS. $400/mo raf., no pols, (740)992-()165

and $400/dep. Ref. Aeq. No New

~!WAAT

'

ton. $53.oo ·

gre81 · S2500 080, call446· Mlcrowilve,Sto\1\l,
Good
3139 or 7011-9945
Cond. SSOOO n,U. 740-2568138
94 Ford Expf9rer
· · XLT
·. ' 4X4' '
-..1 I(\ I« I
40R, V-6, auto. c;oldalr, P·~.
W,P,L. CO, tilt Wltoel, Exc , d
··
Cond ln&amp;out, ·now · tlroo.
11oMJ!

r ..

1\U. ""-~1 OLI'&gt; .)U~\(.
CLEI&gt;,I'\t:.\) OOT Of' Til£

.~ Sjlortsmlx Dog Food ll-8.. ....... $9.99/50

In time for deer season, 32ft,

$2800. n o -.256-6956

~~WI-\1&gt;-T- 1 FIWIU.'( (:!;)?

2li Years Experience

·2002 Handa Accord EX,
Explorer, new 97
Vellowatona Travel
leather, power root. 6 disc braios, new .starao, runa Camper. AC, .FA Heat,

CD, 75k. 2001 Pontiac
Grand Prlx GT. 4dr, leather,
po
t I08 d d 67k
· werChevy
roo 'MeJibue4dr
' V-6 •
2001
93k. 1992 Hon~ Adcord
S1a
lion Wagon, 5opd, great
condlllon. «1-8585
94 s-10. v-e. auto. sir
$2200. 93 Ford Eaoo~. ooe
owner, $1500. 99 Chavy

THE BORN LOSER

--====~==!
~
·';

:--,------

93 . Ford

Advertise
in this I ''
space .,.'
. for
$60 per ·'·.
month ''
' I

RilpiiiComent

. 3088

I

Bonom. 2BR, I Bath, RENT. Cell (740)«1·1111
.
AIC, Garage. All new lnterl·
ture Sdlnauzer for &amp;ale. Cell

Ellm VIew
Apart
ta
.
men

I

,.

2005 Deluxe Camper 33 ft.
"""-~~~-.., Cell 446-7834 or 806·34111996 Monte Carlo I owner
SUVs
1920
SHver, loaded runs good
FOR SM.E
· 30o1·773-52«
1,~----fitii-_.1

I'm

Walhar/Dryer/Appllances, for application &amp; Information. 8 week old sip female mi11a·

+

4 \VIII!I'U.;RS .

Actual

Nlc:e oottage ; I In Long and/or smal houses FOR

or. Baoutitullocallon. $500
dop.
U!lltlae
o&gt;ctra.
RaltnoooM roq'd. 740-4184246

r"'r~--....;-~
41
~

Oump 03 Taurus. auto $3900, 04 pk:tup. good condition, runs
llaller tOx5. Call 7~ Suntlro, auto $5200, 91 otdo and drives good, 69,355
$1450 96 Tiburon $2200 miles, $7,000 call (740)9491838

i

approach?
Lefs start by countering weak Jump
overcal~. H !he raaponder bids a new
"'"· nshows at least .. five-bagger and
a decent hand. Hhe bids at lha two-level,
ha might have only a IQ-counl (or a
super nino), bllt a IIClW sun at lite three·
levol Ia game-forOing. H lhe responder
hla a good hand with no flvo-card ,..
and camot or doea not want to bid notrump, he must make a negative double.
This promlsao four cards In the urlbld
major (or, ~ there are two unbid maJora,
four cards in at least one of them) . The
opooer in reply trleo lo do something
lnloligentl
In this deal, &amp;Her North's negallvu dou·
.ble, SOuth jumps to three no-trump. West
leads the heart queen. How ahould
SOulh continuo?
Firat. cwnt the top trlci&lt;l. There ••
eight: three ~ one heart (s;vert
trick one) and tour diamonds. tt looks as ·
though !he extra trick will come from !he
diamor&lt;ls, but SOuth can get a fourth
spade trick Wlite "'tt is splitting 3-3, or
lha spade Jad&lt; Is ~nglaton or doublaton.
And that chance should IH! trled lmmad·
atel~ After winning !he flrst trick (~SOuth
ducl&lt;a, Wost might shift 10 a club(,
dec:larer cashes lite ace and ~ng ol
spades. When tha Jaci&lt; drops; he takes
hla spade 10 and &lt;Iamond ~ng, croaaes
to dummy with a d~, and claims
nina tricks when !he dlamor'&lt;ls braak ao

'"''""" &amp; -

i

''

· "'ft and !he nlll opponent wiUmake a
jump 0\1\lrcall. How should lhalaler our

S&amp;amless Gutters

Ropolrad, Now &amp; Rebul~ In ~~-------. 11'111'"-~-----.
Stock. Col Ron Evans, I·
I
600-537·9528.
'
LIVl!SfOCK
AUJU&gt; ''
FOil SAlE
NEW AND USED SlEEL
Steel Beams, ~po Rebar 'fearllng Young AngUs Bull$, COOK MOTORS 328
For
Concrete,
Angle, ·bred heifers. Excellent Jackson
Pike.
Quality
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Bnle&lt;fing, Top Performanoe, caral!rua.. IIIIth warranty.
G 1
Priced
Reasonably. Our low prices are polled on
rat ng
For
Oralna, www.alaterunangua.com , vehicle. Cohlpire price ' and
Driveways 5 Walkways. L&amp;L
quality to vehicles any·
SCrap Metals Open M.,.Y,
Stop cir caii741H48Tuesday, Wedneldey &amp; "!!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Friday, ~m-4:30pm. Closed
Aums
Thursdey, Saturday &amp;
FOil ~ .. ~
II'I'I~~TR~VCKS---.,
Sunday. (740)446-7300
,
""""
STEEL ARCH BUILDINGS.
FOR Sw;
HUGE SAVINGS
Hyundal
Accent
3 Ot
, , , , Hatchback. 5 speed trans, 02 DOdge Ram 42k. miles,
R..,.lnlng, 20 124 21x311 65,310 miles, good condi· auto, 4x4, $8500. 2000
Flnonclng Avo-. Will lion. needs catalytic convert· Ranger EXP, std, 4x4,
0011 tor baloncld 0· or. Aaklng $3200. Cell 740· $4500, and more. 446·7278
C.n ..,. or dollver 1""""' 709-6339
dlolety 118H62-o4et
•
t 979 Ford ·Ranchero 500

Pas1

...

We 1tava been loo~ng at handling an
opposing pre-empllva opening bid. But
some1irnes oor s!de wll open ooe of a

co.

Aportment evlilable now
RM&gt;rband Apia. Now wv. Nowacceptlngappllca·
tioos tor Hud·Sub~dlzed,
000 Badmom Apia utllme•
incllde&lt;l 8aaOd on 30% a1

Eaat
Pass

and they pre-empt

main floor, hardwood tloor8 sawer, trash paid: 740-9138· 12 Ga. Single Be"el shot·
~m. t950 a month plus 6i 30 or 740-882·9243
guna, real clean. $195. 740dopooil, no pels, (740)334· 2br, Apt. In Pt. Pleaaant. _
533_ 36
.:.70..:..__ _ __

::.;,;_-:-::--:----. A-1
Local oornpany.olterilng'NO
OOWN PAYMENT" programs for you 10 buy your
home lnste&amp;!l al rent&gt;lg.
• 100% financing
' Laoe than portecl crodlt
acceptad

Pass

1 DMerf plllll 43

I Glitter

Anl wlf' to Prevtoul PUDie

mamrt~

We open the bidding

.I R&lt;&gt;Oflr&gt;o. Siding, Guttal)l

=.,

Pass

North
Obi.

42~1

32 Cltll

Opening lead: • Q

740-992-5929

GuHering

Call 1934 5erle&amp;, Unltea States
of
America ,
Federal

==.:.:.: .;____

•K Q531

70 Pin e Street' • Gallipolis ·

dishwasher, 2BA apts, e miles from Dollar Bill, scarce $850; also'
w/d, Befber carpet on the Holzer. $400+dep. Water, h8ve 2. J. SteYenS Arms

appliances,

South
• A K 10
9 K tO 7
t K2

740-387..()538

2 Bedroom, I balh, laundry
room. Rent $350, Dopoait

place, 2 car plus garage &amp; a 740-245--9595

~

.

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

FreeEIUm-

=~~~'------~ :..«:..1·:37:..02~----~­
..
1135 _ _ _ __
.:..:.:.:__

MONTY
:.

~•·G'ldM•

·¥#~

5332 · wtekends 740·591· nished. Call 286·5789 or

No peta. Call446-1162
4 br., 2 bth., loc:aled on a
large r!Wrtront k&gt;t at 871 S.
FrOnt Avo., Mk!dlep o~. tea·

I

'

•MONTHLY
OXYGEN
VISITS.
.
. '

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

~. large &amp; \1\lry dean,
t 112 bath, ole, hardwood
ftoofa, full blaemenl w/2 car
garage. omall back yard,

:lBR 2110ry houaa • Slovo &amp; 2 bedroom apt In Centi!nory,
fridge. tBR fumlahad house. ell utilities pd exoop1 electric.

t

'

600 Square feet office space
hoolcup, No pota. Lease.
448 0332 8am to 5pm Mon- 1 and 2 bedroOm apart- tor rent. Eastern Avenue,
Sal.
monts, furnished and unlur· Galllpolla. 740-4*61 76.

~3~--oom
--ho_u_sa--in

t A QJ 6 I
• 7I
W01t
Eul
• J ~ '
• t .IS I
9 AQJ61S
• 9 8
' • 7·
• 10 9 8 5 3
. ... 10
• J t 86

li(UJJilU

In APAlliMENrS ' I IIPartmenl,for
the
In walking dis:
FOil RfNr
, elderty/lllssblllfl call 675·
lanc:o, no polo, 1300 rnoi.rh, ~
6879
Eq~
Houllng
S300 dopooil 304-662·3652 I &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Opponunlty
·
2 BR Oupio&gt;&lt; • 644 2nd A tor Rant, Meigs Co\Jnty, In
SPAa::

I br -

..,.'rythir'O

·- •RENTALs •
•SERVICE •_FREE]ELIVEJ!Y

ot-U-t7

• Q 13%
.• 5 J

'•

NEA Cross word Puz zle

BRIDGE

SCW\.LETS ANSWERS 9~11-o1
Ritual- Clowd :- Knoll - Harber- AROUND
Aman pulliDc lis OWD fti&amp;ht," tbe J'OOIIIlll8le sighed to his •·
~pal. "omrbuany left to throw AROUND."
.
ARLO&amp;JANIS

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..... ., .....

-·

.... .. . . ·-

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5 ·

www.mydallysentlne1.com

wednesday, September 12, 2007
.ALLEYOOP

Page 84 • The D~y Sentinel

r•

I

R(JI""

!lOll IbM'

ACROSS
Mobile home tor rtf1t, no Tar•
Townhouse
pot&amp; Apanmenr for rtnt, no. ~~~. Very Spaciooo,
po1s, utilities pald,.(7..0)11112· · 2 IJodroomo, CIA, I 112

t t - l Buy 3bd HUO 5858
•
1 5'1W!n, 20ytwl.,.,
.
For L.JIIIfteiiDO 511 1101 Small 2BA Moblt Home in
11701
Johnsons Mobile Homo
Pari&lt;. 7-2003 or 44&amp;18R houoe localed in 1&lt;109
Golllpj)lis oo 3rd Ave. .:.:.::___ _...,_
__
1
$2711/n\o Ill&lt;! $2Y5/dop. Can Traier ,lor rn, 38R, 2 IIA.
coll740-25&amp;81181
Call 367-n62or448-&lt;1060

r

Bath,'

Adu-

Phillip
Alder

!WI &amp; B1bv

PQol; Plllo; Start ~
No Pets, leaae Plus

Socuflly lloj:looil Required,

"&lt;Ill'
..~~·
" ,...,...,I.

Norilt

1\0iin Fli'l8fS Tower Ia occepl·
ing . . . , - , . fol' wol1lng
list for HucHubslzed, I· br,

,
~ town , No Pets, Deposit
$&lt;4l!lllmo plue dopooil &amp; utili· Requlrad, (740)992-5174 or
tieo. Slovo a fridge, WID (740)-44Hlt10.

j

--·

Ccnpt••• nwc..

............,......._

I

· FOR Jb.Nr

Roofing, Siding,
Sofflr, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
·Eiecrric, Plumbing,

nlshad, and houses in

Pomeroy and Middleport,
security depoeit requlrad, no
pets, 740·992·2218.
18R tri~evel . c1oso to hOspl·
te35. (140)9411-~
tal, 8 mllea to Rio Grande r~\0
3 ' Bedroom House in Ret + Oep reqvired, no pets.
Sy""""'. $500/monlh + 7:..~
:.:...:.:;..:2;:.57::.._
9 _ __
dopOoM No - · (30ol)675- t BR Cabin, al ut~illts fur·

Drywall,

Remodeling, RD&lt;&gt;m I
Additions

t\.lt8fl· c/a,

$350/mo, call (740)256·

gu heat, fire. $350. 863 Third A.ve.

ca:'port, • decl&lt;s, kitchen

r:l~i~;~

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither

·~;;~~~~To~U~Free-877-669-0007
Wise Concrete

Soulb

West

l •

3 NT

! •

of co~~
Owner· Rick Wise

All type&lt;

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

740416-1698

Reserw Note Flw Hundred..

'.''
•I'

I

'

=943~t:-::-:-=:---=-:- Newly ramodeled, $475/mo. 92 CASE 580 SuporK

BARNEY

69 Garflold • 2BR, t BA utilities pold, depeol! Backhoe, very good cond· ·
$480/monlli + aec. dep. 77 raqulrad (3041675-8635
lion, low houra. $16,000.

ALL THESE YEARS AN'
NAR'r' A COMPLAINT 'BOUT
M'Y COOKIN' !!

Cedar · 3BR, t 112BA 2br. Api. on 5th Street Pt. Cell 740-709·9420
$57l;lmonlh + 880. dep. 'ibu Pleaoent $375 ask lor Don
JET
ol[ utiHtlea. Call «6- (30ol)812-4350
AEAiiTION MOTORS

adjusted

Income. · caN

(304)862·3121 8\1\llabla tur
Senior and Olaablad PoOplo.
• Payment could be the Equal Housing Opportunity
aamo ae rent,
Mortgaga
Locotors. Apl!flmenl for rent, 1·2
(740)367.0000
Bdrm., remOdeled, new carpet, ' stove &amp; trig., water,

For oa1e or rent, 3 badroom, sawsr, trash pd. Middleport.'

I bath, newly remodeled
house In Rodney VIllage II.
Buy for $64,000 IIIIth possl·
ble CIWfllr assist or rent' for
$500 per moolh with aecurlty depos~. No Inside pats.
call (740)845·1383 '

$425.00. No pots. Raf.
raqulred. 740-643-5264.
Buuttful Aptl. lt Jackaon

Elf!llea. 52 Westwood
Drive, from $365 10 S580.
740·«6-2568.
' Equal
=~==-=--- Housing Oppbrtunlty. This
HUD HOMES! 3bd only lnstllullon Is an Equal
$13,2101

More

•r10

1-4bd Opportunity Provldar and Tandem

holl* onlloblol From Employer.
•11111/mol
5%dn,
:royreOI'IIo. For llatinga CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
800 5511109 lift«
ED. AI'FORDABLEI
Townhouse apartmonts,

8

and m:,ro. 446- 727

c=::==:-:--:-:::--=
Off SR 141, 3BR, :iliA.

•2&amp;~ bedroom apartments

•Centralhott&amp;A/C
......._ •--ont 1 car •w··•·rtd~r
·-~up
....,....._, _ , '
-~ .,. ·~
= ( 6 1 = / l u a •Tanantpoyaeleclric

(304)882-3017

Pomerov, 2·3 br. apt. or

. •
houoe, ~al~ fumlshad,
HUD oppioolod., near pori&lt;,
no pels, (140)11112-6886
•
Taking apflllcations tor 38R : : - - - - - - - - houoe. No
· $425/mo. Fum18had Apt, 2nd Ave,
Golllpolts, Upstalro, 1
~ All
Bedroom, No ~~.
utili·
Ilea paid, (740)446-9523
iil::o.-1 Groelouo Uvlng 1 and 2
• ~. "-'
.. - Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
•.,., n•~ .,,,
2 •~· ,· ~~
pordlln GaltpOtls. No pets. 1\AanorandRivoreldeApiain
7ol0-446-2003 or 446-1&lt;109 Middleport, from $327 to
$592. 74().992·5084. t;Qual
2BR on~ k&gt;t, Addlaoo .,.Houslng=
= Oppo=:::rtu::n:::l!y!:.._ _
TWp. $400 Rent &amp; $400 M........., •--~ S 2
Oopool!; 2BR on jllivate k&gt;t, ~"""• ~· t , br.
\1\lry nice, quio!, acsnlc area, fumiahad apt., utilillts pd.,

2003 Honda RX tOOR ike

J&amp;L .
Construction

tirea,oN

new&amp;clean,f'lft

chango&amp;plug.$IOOO.OBO.
740-418-t568,
::-:~~_;,_ _ _...
2006 Honda · Gold Wing
$4,000 In accasaorlts. Paid
$24,000 new-~19,600. Cal

Vtnyi Skiing .

Wlndowt
Rooflng

740-367-7129.

i.r7t~~:Rn;'&amp;)

Decka

I"

FOR !l.uE

740·418·7403

·

AKC Gorman Shepherd
Pupples, Black&amp; Tan, $350males, ••~.females 304.
nU062;..solt . 304-593-

""""

4267

j

Garegea
Pole Building•
Room AddRIOna

Owowr:
Jame1~11

742-2332

'-'

Longhalred min
Dachshunds. 2/F,11M. black
and red. Flrsl ehols, 740AKC

3311-0394leellllm~~~~ge

4dr;

David Lewis
740-992-6971

AKC Reg. Garman Shon Monte Carlo $3200. 93

haired PTR. I t wks, male, Pontiac Sunflre $1500. 97
wMo and liver. $400. cal Chevy Ce\1\ller $2500. 96
740-446-9231
Camaro S2700 · Cell 4488172 or 256-6251
Mattese Pupplae 2 malea
$500/sach,
2 femala 97 Camero RS, wht wlblk
seoOJeach, shots &amp; wormad racing atrlpes/ractng spoiler.
~75·39n
Looks/runs good. Prlcad to
Mlnlalure Pinscher CKC sell $28001 304·634-6523
Reg. Black/rust, I F$300 2
M
$200. tOWks old,
Wormad,aho!s, tall$ docfrad. L--.;_;.,;;..;;:;;::_:.J
740-367-o:!to r no anawar
leave .,........

. ....
FEIII&amp;u:

ril

CAR PENTER
SERVI CE

•

HelpWanled

I ,

e

PHARMACIST
Pleasanl Valley Hospilal is currently
accepting resumes for a Full-Time
Pharmacist. B.S. Pharmacy, Pharm. D.
Pharmacy or Ph. D. Pharmacy from
accredited college or university. WV Sta!e
Pharmaci st Licen sure. Two years
pharmacist experience preferred. Hospital
experience preferred.
· Excellent salary holidays, health·
insurance single/family plan, dental plan,
life ins. vacation, long lerm disability and
retirement
Send resumes to:
Pleaant'Valley Hospital
· C/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. Wlll5550
{:504) 675-4340 ext. 1307
Or fax:
304-675-6975
Or apply online at:
-pvalley.org

AA/EOE

BIG NATE

V.··~

FOR'&amp;u;

35537 St. Rt. 7 North '·

• Ch~•·rTownlCou"""
2001
Van. G;.;.tShape and'i;,;
mileage. CALL 740·96S337011111
'.

''

PEANUTS

Stanley Tree·
Trimming .
&amp;

R~tmoval

______________.,:
'

you'll easily be abte to reap larger gains
than
usual
from
your
efforta .

• 740-742-2'i93

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) -

following
Hom on
Saturday, September
15, 2007, at 10:00 a.m. ·
at the Bank's perking
lot.
1999 Mercury Cougar
1ZWFT81L1Xli&amp;4023e
18i5 CHEVY BLAZER .
1GNDT13W9SK129789
1993
FORD
F150
P I C K U P
1FTDF15YXPLB11488
2000 CHEVY BLAZER
1GNDT13W3V2214183
1996 DODGE CARA·
Y
A
N
1 B46P54RXTB46012~
The Home National
Bank reservaa the
right to reJect any and
all bids. All vehicles
are 1old, aa 11 where
Ia, with no warranties
exproued or Implied.
For an appointment to
see, Call949-2210, A1k
for She: Ia.
(9112• 13, 14

H;ll's Self
Storage

that require ..n,ltlvlty will afford you the
greatest aatlaf&amp;CIIon. When you feel

good, your mentalfacuttle&amp; sharpen con·
slderably.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - ~ng to
vou• genuine eoncem tor others, lrlends
will be wilting to help "NOrM out those dif·
ticutlles that you can't seem to resolve
unaided. It is all a matter of give-andtake .

29670 Bashati Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-94&amp;-2217

ARIES (March 21-Aprtt 19) -

'

'

friends who a r~tsens ltlve and gentle.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - An lmpor·

'\
'

RIIERT
IISSEU

Manley's
Recycling

...

CIISTIUCIIII
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

ARE VOO POING
ANV'THING RIGH'T NOW?

0
0
0
0

. . . . . . . . .12:11 ..

0

,,•

PIYIHTIP PIICf.S M

0

. . . . . . . . . 1•&amp;1111
CIIJIJIICCIII I laS• lit•

Stop &amp;Compare

·'-··-· - -·

....

605V

tant endeavor can be accomplished with·
out much trouble. When working with
Others, you should use tactics that a re In
line with your highest ideals. They'll
respond to noble efforts.
GEMIN I (May 21·June 20) -Your personaHty can be a bit compl ex, but your
more charismatic dimensions are likely
to predominste and attract a great deal
or attention. regardless of what vou do or
whe re you go.
CANCER (June 2hJuly 22) - Even
when working on m undane projects,
your creative and artistic touches will be
m uch in evidence . Others will easily be
able to se e whk:h efforts are yours and
which are another's
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - When dealing
w ith others , your aptitude lor reading

their true lntentioos and purposes will

' IIMIIIIIIInll
" '

give you a leg up In ways they lael&lt;.

N O TI CE:
L AND O WN E R S IN M E IGS
AN D G ALLIA CO UNTI ES
'o'\&lt;1",11'111 I ;.liHI SI'IVICt":. IT'C

I'LL COME
BACK LATER
WHENVOO'RE
NO'T 50

.......llffrM. . . . . . . ...

7U..992,18J1

Advertise
in this
space
for
$60 per
month

GARFIELD

'

Public Nollce
The Ohio
School
Beneflta Cooperative
Annual Meeting will be
held
Monday, .
sapteember 17, 2007,
at noon, at Musklngum
Valley
Educational
S&amp;rvlca Center, 205 N.
7th St., Zanesvlll~ .
Ohio (1) 9-12-07

~ilhough

you usually like being around the more
active, aggreaalve types of people, you 'll
be more comfOrtable hanging out with

.,

GRIZZWELLS

You're In the catbird seat.

~~~tl P.\1.~

SOUP TO NUTZ

~~ts

t.AWI..'I ?

;1 IP.HI"I itt llrl ·"'"

(;;,~, f'l&lt;iJ in!allo!l :1ncl dr•'JPiopr"Pill

...,,,oi ,J •••· '''

Plii'IICI ttw oH&lt;~r ol an 011 o~nd ::;,,.

L••

,,. '"

IIH&gt; ';t• l:uldOI.~Ilf'I..,IIT1111f'l.ll C)Wtlf'l', ,·,··thor• r·:l&lt;••q·

Ovl'r .·IO.fJOU :1&lt;:1•"·
''""·''
have ailf'ild~· hrrr1 lf'.l"'"d '"d ·'"
ptPfl&lt;"HHlq to tw df'VI:'Iopcd II yo,r 11i1vc ,., •.. •·rl
ami (;;1llr.1 CIJUI111&lt;''

,llf' .l'i

lhf'

L hil!'C I"

!0

hf'

ltl'lflivror_l

Ill

1/11&lt;;

V&lt;'ll!IIIP

plf'ilS£' corltact the local of11cr at t•lil· -1 ·\h 11 ft(]()
non't moo.,-. th1..., •:·ppur llmlly to p;JIIWIJLllf' on tlu
rtl'~·r•toprn•·•ll or your nnhual l&lt;'~:·,;rr·,...., ,,.., w('ll
,, .., llw pu!Pnl~&lt;tl fur ncre;Jo..rrlq yo.1r
pt'tSOI1.tlrncOillC

I ,

---··-

hard ael, the sale will beCOme eUler.

Philosophical exc~ngea and enaeavora

(

-

Surprisingly, when you let down on the

. COW al'ld BOY

leave

Tho Homo Nalfonol
Bonk will auction tho

I

4 More
appealing
33 Sma
5 Not pro
35 Rtln atlcklr S Luklwann

7 HouHhold
IIPIIIItnce
6 Witiclerlng
38 Tilt enc11
9 Drink 11owty
38 Night before 10 Author
40 SDUd 11.
Unoberto
41 Kind
oC humor 11 HallY

37 Leave
openmoulhtd

45 Icicle locolo
47 Tavern
br1w1

48 118v'tlol
49 Ptwro't
queet
on 50 DlthladdrNB
52 Rage
25 Mullltu 1 53 SOciety
26 lndullry
column
magnate
-.1
27 PlocH at
54 JII*•Miinetllltl
refuge
28 Blouaa trim
29 Fringe -

dtltc.cy

'
.~

·•
•,

"
'.

'.

34 Seem
36 Docl.-.cl
openly
42 Revelled
43 Pracloe

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
._..o,t._ .......
""' ......... ...... ,....,,_
~-.
~Wier, tt.! cipher pW ~ II'IOther.

Todoy's

."

""''I"1"/s R

"

" Z OSVK DWSRAT GSK BZAX ZHISDD
Z D0ZHY

BWFHW WY

USAGT. "

• PSDYOW

•

HZG HAYZI ZK Z
PSRUVIK

PREVIOUS SOlUTION - 'You cant test courage ca.-iou~y.' • Ann:e Dillard
'Courage is being a~ald but going on anyhow.' · Dan Rathel

WOlD

,)

... .. u... :

Getting out and circulating among
triendt wll help plctc: up your spi'lts and
make you feel better. However, It might
take someterious budging to get you out
of your easy chair.
•
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19) Without being a Scrooge or "sharpie,"

Call Gary Stallley @ .

Public Notice

output

t1C8pe
13 Fon:olul
._ .
DOWN
person
27 Glgl'l
19 Worked like
boyfriend
1 . Til&lt;
a dog
26 Autumn
orund on
20 Emerge
fllgn
2 Ode ln.plrer 22 Giving
3() l:lill codt
3 Dovecote
leoa lfc:l
31 PC acronym
BOUnd
24 Come

28 CBef 1

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SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec. 21) -

._

Rates

,_..:.;::;;:.:.::;:::;~-

23 Rx giver

loud

58 Foundry

.their needs flrat.

Reg Border Coli tO pups,

NOTICE TO CONTRAC· amount of not taaa
TORS ·
lhlln 10% of the bid
Sealed proposals lor amount In favor altha
the Po
Dl
meroy strell aforesaid
Malgo
Sidewalk Replacement C o u n 1 y
Project, Molg1 County, Commlaslonere. Bid
Ohio 11 per lpeclflca· Bonds shan be accomIlona In bid packlll will panted by Proal of
be received by the Authority altha official
Melga
County or agent sl~nlng thit
Commlulonera
at bond. Blda shall be
thalr office 11 the 18aled and marked ai
Courtholl'18; Pomeroy, Bid
tor
Pomeroy
Ohio 45769 until 1:00 Dlatreaa
Sidewalk
p.m. September 20, Replacement ProJect
2007 and then at 1:15 · and mailed or dallv·
p.m. at aald office erecUo:
opened and read aloud Malgs
· County
for the !allowing:
Commissioners
This Ia a. Prevailing Courthoul8
Wage proJect. See Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Specifications In bid AttenHo~ of bidders Is·
pecl&lt;ctl.
called to ell 01 the
con·
Speclllcattona and bid requlremanta
fonn1 may be -ured talnad In thll bid pock·
at tho office ot Melgl et, particularly 10 the
C o u n t y Federal
Labor
C a m m 1a al o n a re , standard• Provlllona
Courthoul8, Pomeroy, and
Davis-Bacon
Ohio 45769 740·992· Wagaa, various lnsur·
2895. A deposll of 0 ance
requirements,
dollare will be required varlqua equal opporiu·
to( ·each HI or plana nlly provlalona, and
and
specifications, the requirement for a
check made payable payment bond and per·
to. The full amount wtll formance bond for
be retumad wHhln thlr· 100% of the contract
ty (30) days after price. No bidder may
receipt of blda,
wHhdraw hla bid within
Each bid muat be thirty (30) days after
occompoonlad by either the actual data of the
1 bid bond In an opening thereof. The
amount of tOO% of the Meigs
County
bid imount with 1 Commtaslonera
surety aatllloctory to reserve the right to
the aforeaald Meigs reJect any or all bids.
C o u n I y Mlck
Davenport,
Commlllfonera or by President
certified
check, Meigs
County
caahlen check, or let· Commissioners
tar of crec!H upon a ao~ (8)30 (9) 5, 12
vent bank In the

vtrb

of great value.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sapt. 22\ - 8ecau10
your Intentions ai'e so true and · noble,
your IntuitiOn Ia abte to provide you with
helpful _lnslghi;J that could eully escape
your togic. ¥«1'11 I.M both In your ftnan·
clal deaHnga..
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Qr:t. 231 - Solutions
that could be too dlftieult b' aaoclai:H
to grasp might coma automatlcllfV to you
because you won't COinJlllclta things
with eklboratl ploys IUld aUbte11uge that
others are using.
'
SCORPIO (Oct, 24-Niov. 22) ...:. Charity
should begin at home. So before you
think about providing for outtldere, makt
alire everything 18 provkfed for your tam·
lly'a happlnieaa and contentment Put

,
'

!•Prompt and Quality

57 Sold out

people who are oompa181ontle and 000·
alderate will 1Um out to·be extremely lor·
tunate lor you In the months ahead. Their
·kindneSs could pU1 you onto something

Ponwoy, OH

We Deliver To You I

~.w-:l::iiii:iii--,1

order

21 .Adlhmetlc

Tlturodoy,-. t3, 2G07
Bi' Ban!lce 0.01
Tho8e relatlonehlpa you altabllsh with

Shade River AI. Service

WA=~

···--

tt lloed crew

IAMf

.

14 n. S75.oo

99 Ford Ranger XLT antee. Local ref11rances fur·
Suporcab, 4' 4•Cold A&lt;;. Too nlohad. Eelabllshed 1975.
much new 10 Hal, Tool Box, Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Very Good Cond. $S500. 0870, Rogsrs Basement
080. 17401245-9142
Wate""""Hng.
~ --

Guard on.

12 Roughly
44 ~
14 B""-t'o
lflll"dlllll
Third
46 CIMnlh
11 Kind at pine
aptian
j)lltlllng
46 Got equal
16 Curtain trim
=~
17 llwllch
51
ld pel
lingle ·
55 Clleclc In
.. - - lilly 56 Judlclotl

.• • ~ Astro~
' Graph

,

Unconditional lifetime guar·

nJ

1::.1

badly.

U fl. $US.OO
16 tt $83.00
Why olrlve anywhere elu ·

·

rid

Help Wanlocl

~!

S-UREA ......................$199/ton Bulk. ()aJy
Prlerert Powder Coaled Gates

~

= =::-:=!•::....·-,..- -

apartments.
pels. Cei74Q.387·7025
Waahor/dryor
hookup,
FARM
3llr Mobile Home
all stovolratrlgeraiOr Included. L,-lliii
'EQur.:oo~::;:;::;~.,J
•~u
Also, units on SR 180. Pl!a
.
1urnlshad, Welcome! (740)-441.0194. 815 IH combine, both
""" anoee
Including Waaller &amp; Dryer
:JOol-59\l-4496
RENT¥ UR . hoade, runs good. $2500.
Gra~ly bade $350 • $750.
3BR trailer · Eastern Schoo
MOBILE HOME can740-643-2265
District $450 plua $400
WITH A
depooll, plus eloclric HUD
exceptad. 740-992-0653
CLASSIFIED AD
2BA

!&gt;It&gt; '(Ol) 00 WITI-\
II ~U.1

Triumph IZ% Hone feed .......$5.99i511 lb.

YOUN G'S

Addlaon Twp, $550/rent, dep. &amp; ref., no pets, Imported Bloodlines, 1st
40...)992
$550 Depostt (740)645· :..(7.:.
= -()
.:.1:.:65:__ _ _ slto!s, wormad, wcrklng par·
:J.&lt;I3 or (1&lt;10)845-3592
Mlddeport, North 4th Allll , 2 ontB. Cal740-379-9!10
1\1~'1 ...
1'1'111 ...,
aliA In Rio Grande area, br. fumlahad' apL ' dop. &amp;
\ I I\ I . . I ( II I\
2BR ,.... RVHS. $400/mo raf., no pols, (740)992-()165

and $400/dep. Ref. Aeq. No New

~!WAAT

'

ton. $53.oo ·

gre81 · S2500 080, call446· Mlcrowilve,Sto\1\l,
Good
3139 or 7011-9945
Cond. SSOOO n,U. 740-2568138
94 Ford Expf9rer
· · XLT
·. ' 4X4' '
-..1 I(\ I« I
40R, V-6, auto. c;oldalr, P·~.
W,P,L. CO, tilt Wltoel, Exc , d
··
Cond ln&amp;out, ·now · tlroo.
11oMJ!

r ..

1\U. ""-~1 OLI'&gt; .)U~\(.
CLEI&gt;,I'\t:.\) OOT Of' Til£

.~ Sjlortsmlx Dog Food ll-8.. ....... $9.99/50

In time for deer season, 32ft,

$2800. n o -.256-6956

~~WI-\1&gt;-T- 1 FIWIU.'( (:!;)?

2li Years Experience

·2002 Handa Accord EX,
Explorer, new 97
Vellowatona Travel
leather, power root. 6 disc braios, new .starao, runa Camper. AC, .FA Heat,

CD, 75k. 2001 Pontiac
Grand Prlx GT. 4dr, leather,
po
t I08 d d 67k
· werChevy
roo 'MeJibue4dr
' V-6 •
2001
93k. 1992 Hon~ Adcord
S1a
lion Wagon, 5opd, great
condlllon. «1-8585
94 s-10. v-e. auto. sir
$2200. 93 Ford Eaoo~. ooe
owner, $1500. 99 Chavy

THE BORN LOSER

--====~==!
~
·';

:--,------

93 . Ford

Advertise
in this I ''
space .,.'
. for
$60 per ·'·.
month ''
' I

RilpiiiComent

. 3088

I

Bonom. 2BR, I Bath, RENT. Cell (740)«1·1111
.
AIC, Garage. All new lnterl·
ture Sdlnauzer for &amp;ale. Cell

Ellm VIew
Apart
ta
.
men

I

,.

2005 Deluxe Camper 33 ft.
"""-~~~-.., Cell 446-7834 or 806·34111996 Monte Carlo I owner
SUVs
1920
SHver, loaded runs good
FOR SM.E
· 30o1·773-52«
1,~----fitii-_.1

I'm

Walhar/Dryer/Appllances, for application &amp; Information. 8 week old sip female mi11a·

+

4 \VIII!I'U.;RS .

Actual

Nlc:e oottage ; I In Long and/or smal houses FOR

or. Baoutitullocallon. $500
dop.
U!lltlae
o&gt;ctra.
RaltnoooM roq'd. 740-4184246

r"'r~--....;-~
41
~

Oump 03 Taurus. auto $3900, 04 pk:tup. good condition, runs
llaller tOx5. Call 7~ Suntlro, auto $5200, 91 otdo and drives good, 69,355
$1450 96 Tiburon $2200 miles, $7,000 call (740)9491838

i

approach?
Lefs start by countering weak Jump
overcal~. H !he raaponder bids a new
"'"· nshows at least .. five-bagger and
a decent hand. Hhe bids at lha two-level,
ha might have only a IQ-counl (or a
super nino), bllt a IIClW sun at lite three·
levol Ia game-forOing. H lhe responder
hla a good hand with no flvo-card ,..
and camot or doea not want to bid notrump, he must make a negative double.
This promlsao four cards In the urlbld
major (or, ~ there are two unbid maJora,
four cards in at least one of them) . The
opooer in reply trleo lo do something
lnloligentl
In this deal, &amp;Her North's negallvu dou·
.ble, SOuth jumps to three no-trump. West
leads the heart queen. How ahould
SOulh continuo?
Firat. cwnt the top trlci&lt;l. There ••
eight: three ~ one heart (s;vert
trick one) and tour diamonds. tt looks as ·
though !he extra trick will come from !he
diamor&lt;ls, but SOuth can get a fourth
spade trick Wlite "'tt is splitting 3-3, or
lha spade Jad&lt; Is ~nglaton or doublaton.
And that chance should IH! trled lmmad·
atel~ After winning !he flrst trick (~SOuth
ducl&lt;a, Wost might shift 10 a club(,
dec:larer cashes lite ace and ~ng ol
spades. When tha Jaci&lt; drops; he takes
hla spade 10 and &lt;Iamond ~ng, croaaes
to dummy with a d~, and claims
nina tricks when !he dlamor'&lt;ls braak ao

'"''""" &amp; -

i

''

· "'ft and !he nlll opponent wiUmake a
jump 0\1\lrcall. How should lhalaler our

S&amp;amless Gutters

Ropolrad, Now &amp; Rebul~ In ~~-------. 11'111'"-~-----.
Stock. Col Ron Evans, I·
I
600-537·9528.
'
LIVl!SfOCK
AUJU&gt; ''
FOil SAlE
NEW AND USED SlEEL
Steel Beams, ~po Rebar 'fearllng Young AngUs Bull$, COOK MOTORS 328
For
Concrete,
Angle, ·bred heifers. Excellent Jackson
Pike.
Quality
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel Bnle&lt;fing, Top Performanoe, caral!rua.. IIIIth warranty.
G 1
Priced
Reasonably. Our low prices are polled on
rat ng
For
Oralna, www.alaterunangua.com , vehicle. Cohlpire price ' and
Driveways 5 Walkways. L&amp;L
quality to vehicles any·
SCrap Metals Open M.,.Y,
Stop cir caii741H48Tuesday, Wedneldey &amp; "!!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Friday, ~m-4:30pm. Closed
Aums
Thursdey, Saturday &amp;
FOil ~ .. ~
II'I'I~~TR~VCKS---.,
Sunday. (740)446-7300
,
""""
STEEL ARCH BUILDINGS.
FOR Sw;
HUGE SAVINGS
Hyundal
Accent
3 Ot
, , , , Hatchback. 5 speed trans, 02 DOdge Ram 42k. miles,
R..,.lnlng, 20 124 21x311 65,310 miles, good condi· auto, 4x4, $8500. 2000
Flnonclng Avo-. Will lion. needs catalytic convert· Ranger EXP, std, 4x4,
0011 tor baloncld 0· or. Aaklng $3200. Cell 740· $4500, and more. 446·7278
C.n ..,. or dollver 1""""' 709-6339
dlolety 118H62-o4et
•
t 979 Ford ·Ranchero 500

Pas1

...

We 1tava been loo~ng at handling an
opposing pre-empllva opening bid. But
some1irnes oor s!de wll open ooe of a

co.

Aportment evlilable now
RM&gt;rband Apia. Now wv. Nowacceptlngappllca·
tioos tor Hud·Sub~dlzed,
000 Badmom Apia utllme•
incllde&lt;l 8aaOd on 30% a1

Eaat
Pass

and they pre-empt

main floor, hardwood tloor8 sawer, trash paid: 740-9138· 12 Ga. Single Be"el shot·
~m. t950 a month plus 6i 30 or 740-882·9243
guna, real clean. $195. 740dopooil, no pels, (740)334· 2br, Apt. In Pt. Pleaaant. _
533_ 36
.:.70..:..__ _ __

::.;,;_-:-::--:----. A-1
Local oornpany.olterilng'NO
OOWN PAYMENT" programs for you 10 buy your
home lnste&amp;!l al rent&gt;lg.
• 100% financing
' Laoe than portecl crodlt
acceptad

Pass

1 DMerf plllll 43

I Glitter

Anl wlf' to Prevtoul PUDie

mamrt~

We open the bidding

.I R&lt;&gt;Oflr&gt;o. Siding, Guttal)l

=.,

Pass

North
Obi.

42~1

32 Cltll

Opening lead: • Q

740-992-5929

GuHering

Call 1934 5erle&amp;, Unltea States
of
America ,
Federal

==.:.:.: .;____

•K Q531

70 Pin e Street' • Gallipolis ·

dishwasher, 2BA apts, e miles from Dollar Bill, scarce $850; also'
w/d, Befber carpet on the Holzer. $400+dep. Water, h8ve 2. J. SteYenS Arms

appliances,

South
• A K 10
9 K tO 7
t K2

740-387..()538

2 Bedroom, I balh, laundry
room. Rent $350, Dopoait

place, 2 car plus garage &amp; a 740-245--9595

~

.

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

FreeEIUm-

=~~~'------~ :..«:..1·:37:..02~----~­
..
1135 _ _ _ __
.:..:.:.:__

MONTY
:.

~•·G'ldM•

·¥#~

5332 · wtekends 740·591· nished. Call 286·5789 or

No peta. Call446-1162
4 br., 2 bth., loc:aled on a
large r!Wrtront k&gt;t at 871 S.
FrOnt Avo., Mk!dlep o~. tea·

I

'

•MONTHLY
OXYGEN
VISITS.
.
. '

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

~. large &amp; \1\lry dean,
t 112 bath, ole, hardwood
ftoofa, full blaemenl w/2 car
garage. omall back yard,

:lBR 2110ry houaa • Slovo &amp; 2 bedroom apt In Centi!nory,
fridge. tBR fumlahad house. ell utilities pd exoop1 electric.

t

'

600 Square feet office space
hoolcup, No pota. Lease.
448 0332 8am to 5pm Mon- 1 and 2 bedroOm apart- tor rent. Eastern Avenue,
Sal.
monts, furnished and unlur· Galllpolla. 740-4*61 76.

~3~--oom
--ho_u_sa--in

t A QJ 6 I
• 7I
W01t
Eul
• J ~ '
• t .IS I
9 AQJ61S
• 9 8
' • 7·
• 10 9 8 5 3
. ... 10
• J t 86

li(UJJilU

In APAlliMENrS ' I IIPartmenl,for
the
In walking dis:
FOil RfNr
, elderty/lllssblllfl call 675·
lanc:o, no polo, 1300 rnoi.rh, ~
6879
Eq~
Houllng
S300 dopooil 304-662·3652 I &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments Opponunlty
·
2 BR Oupio&gt;&lt; • 644 2nd A tor Rant, Meigs Co\Jnty, In
SPAa::

I br -

..,.'rythir'O

·- •RENTALs •
•SERVICE •_FREE]ELIVEJ!Y

ot-U-t7

• Q 13%
.• 5 J

'•

NEA Cross word Puz zle

BRIDGE

SCW\.LETS ANSWERS 9~11-o1
Ritual- Clowd :- Knoll - Harber- AROUND
Aman pulliDc lis OWD fti&amp;ht," tbe J'OOIIIlll8le sighed to his •·
~pal. "omrbuany left to throw AROUND."
.
ARLO&amp;JANIS

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

'

•

Wednesday, September lit, aooy.

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

;Dunn·hits slam, homers twice in ·Reds' 7-2 win
. BY JoE KAY
-.I' SPORTS WRITER

CINCINNATI - Adam
Dunn hit a grand slam and a
solo homer off Mark Mulder,
and the Cincinnati Reds
extended the St. Louis
Cardinals' losing streak with
Jl 7-2 victory Thesday night.
The defending World
Series champions have
dropped five in a row, matching !heir season high. After
regrouping for an impressive
comeback, the Cardinals have
!&gt;larted unraveling down the
stretch.
They were 10 112 games
out at the end of June, but had
rallied to within a game of
first place in the NL Central
before they hit their current
slump. The loss left them four
games out, their biggest
deficit since Aug. 24.
One of the stars of their
summer charge was a big reason this one slipped away.
Right fielder Rick Ankiel
let a fly ball drop for a double,
then let another de!lect off the
Jteel of his glove for a tworun error during Cincinnati's
six-fUJI third inning: Dunn,
who hit a solo homer in his
fu:st at-bat, hit his seventh
career slam off Mulder (0-2)
during the 10-batter inning.
David Eckstein and Ryan
Ludwick hit solo homers off

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds' Adam Dunn {44) hits a grand slam off St.
Louis Cardin&lt;!IS pitcher Mark Mulder !n the third inning of a
ba,seball game on Tuesday in Cincinnati. .
.
.
.
Matt Behsle (8-8), who part of their recent downturn.
allC!wed six hits in seven
The 30-year:old Mulder
mrungs.
.
hoped to shore 11 up by makThere was more bad news · ing his comeback from shoulfor St. Louis before the game. der surgery last Sept. 12. He
Outfielder Chris Duncan is rejoined the club and gave up
outforatleastlOdays-and six runs in four_inningsofan
possibly for the season - 8-2 loss to Pittsburgh last
because of a sports hem1a that Wednesday.
•
will need surgery at some
He was hit hard in his secpoint. Also, third baseman ond start, lasting only four
Scott Rolen had season-end- innings again. The Reds piled
ing shoulder surgery.
up seven hit.~ and seven runs,
The Cardinals' rotation was atded by Ankiel's misadventhe foundation for their tures.
about-face. It's been a big
Ankiel was· one of base-

Stemwheel Rivenest
edition inside
today's Sen~el

ball's. feel-good stories last
month, when .the failed pitcher made his return to the
majors as a slugging outfielder. He hit a grand slam and
drove in nine .runs during a
three-game sweep of the
Reds from Aug. 31 to Sept. 2.
Since then, he's come
under scrutiny for reports that
he received shipments of
human growth honnone in
2004, before it was banned by
Major League· Baseball. A
few fans chanted "HGH!"
when he 'came to bat and
grounded out in the eighth,
leaving him in an 0-for-17
slump,
Ankiel's defense was the
main problem on Thesday.
He got under Ken Griffey
. Jr.'s fly to the warning trac~
then looked away at the laSt
moment to locate center field· er Jim Edmonds Ankle!
looked back for ~ ball and
couldn't reach it letting it fall
for a double. · '
Mulder then
walked
Brandon Phillips and gave up
Dunn's grand slam, a 471foot shot high off the batter's
eye in center. The two homers
gave Dunn 38 for the Season.
With two runners aboard
and two outs, Belisle hit a fly
to the warning track. Ankiel
ran it down, !ben let it deflect
off the heel of his glove for a
two-run error.

Zion Church of Christ
homecoming, As

··· Middleport • Poeneroy, Ohio
,) 0 (

I '\ I ~ ,. \ 1 d ..-l • • • 'o . ' {h

I Ill I{'-, I ) \ \ , ~I I' f I· \I B I R 1. ; , :.:o t . ...

'' ' ' '' ,

SPORTS

Meigs Local receives grants for elementary programs

• High. $dloolf~l :previews~ SjMi Page B1

grant Clllled the Fresh Fnti~ ·
and Vegetable Program
(FFV), a federal reimPOMEROY -. Federal bursable- grant, in the
grants totaling ·nearly amount of $101,152.
$350,000 , one new and the
Marilyn M~ier, district
other a renewal, were nutrition director, reported
reported at Thesda_y night's that Meigs was one of 25
meeting of the Me1gs Local schools in Ohio selected for
Board of Education.
funding to initiate a new
Funding . fQr the second program at the elementary
year of the federal Carol M. level. She said that a vendWhite physical ·education ing machine containing fro it
program (PEP) Gtant in the is expected to .arrive next
amount .of $240,492 was week. Fruit from the vend~ported; along with a new ing machine, at one. a 'day

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

~OEFL IC HCMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

for each student, is free
when a ·student punches in
his or her pin number.
Purchases can be made by
students who want more
than one .fruit a dlly, as well
as staff members or visitors
at the school.
Meier described the fruit
and vegetable program as a
pilot program and noted that
tt has a nutrition component. Meier also noted that
the cost to buy enough fruit
so that each child can have
one a day is about $2,300.

During the meeting the
Board discussed the issue
of smoking in the bleachers at athletic events and
approved by unanimous
vote a motion to prohibit
smoking in the bleachers
by adding that provision to
an earlier resolution prohibiting smoking in school
buildings. Signs will be
posted at the stadium to
advise ,those attending
games of the new regulation. It was noted that the
new rules do not ban

Huskies defense":ready for straight-ahead Buckeyes
SEATTL£
(AP)
·Enough about this Jake
Lockllr fellow.
· While .
Locker,
Washington's ·
heralded
young quarterback, has
played well in his first two
college games, a big key
behind Washington's 2-0
start is the play of the
Huskies defense.
On
Saturday,
Washington's defense held
Boise State to to points and
none in the second half of the
Huskies 24-10 win. It was
the Broncos' second-lowest
point total in the last eight
years, and came after
Washington (2;0) limited
haples~ Syracuse to just 12
pomts m the season opener.
Now comes a new challenge this Saturday: The
punishing, bullying, hit-youm-the-face style of No. 10
Ohio State.
.
· There won't be any wacky
fonnations or players shifting all over the field right
before the snap, as the
Huskies faced in their first
two games. The Buckeyes
(2-0) will simply bull

straight ahead.
• "I love that. As a line·backer, that's a challenge to
you as to how physical you
are," said Washington hoebacker E.J. Savannah, who
had 13 tackles against Boise
State. "We're going to get
tested this week a lot. It's
going to be fun to see how
we respond to it, because I
think we're goipg to respond
well."
·
The Huskies s'till were reiishing Monday in their 24-10
win over then-No. 22 Boise
State. It was Washington's
first·win over a ranked opponent since . the 2003 Apple
Cup .. victory
against
Washington State and
snapped t)le Broncos' 14f;ame win streak, the longest
m the nation.
Washington's
offense
scored all 24 points in the
first 24 minutes of the game.
It was the H11skies .defense
that took the spotlight in the
second half, bending a number of times, but coming up
with tl)e needed big plays to
keep Boise State off the
scoreboard.

Late in · the third quarter,
Boise State drove instde the
Washington 30. On first
down, Roy . Lewis tackled
Broncos' star running back
Ian Johnson for a 2-yard
loss. After a two incompletions and a penalty on Boise
State, · defensive tackle
Jordan Reffett blocked a 51yard field goal attempt.
Lewis, named Pac-10
defensive player'ofthe week,
came up big again early in
the fourth quarter, intercepting Taylor Tharp's deep
throw at the Washington 14.
He later broke up, Tharp's
pass in the end zone on
fourth down, and freshman
cornerback
VonzeU
McDowell sealed the viCtory
with an interception at the
Washingt&lt;.m 2 with less than
3 minutes remaining.
Lewis is the only senior
starte~ in the secondary, and,
along with junior safety
Jason Wells, has taken the
role of leading youngsters
including McDowell and
freshman
safety
Nate
Williams.
"We've got a lot of young

guys getting vital reps early,"
Lewis said. "It's our role, we
have to accept it,' that's the
way it is, to lead those guys
and get those guys prepared
,I
and ready to play."
The strong perfotmance .bY
a secondary tli'ought to be
Washington's
weakness
entering the season, ·came
after the defensive line dominated in the opener against
CANTON (AP) - The
Syracuse with seven sa_cks.
Pro Football Hall of Fame is
But this week is a new spending $4 million to give
challenge. The Buckeyes one of its ~alleries a facelift.
offense has sputtered to start
Renovattons to the ball's
the season, scoring only 2Q enshrinee
mementos,
points in a 20-2- win ov~r .qpchan~~d for n_early 30
Akron on Satur$y. But Ohio · .years, 111clude. v1deo and
State's offensive · line is ,iludio.ell;pected to help bring
giant, with every player;. the gatrle's greatest players
above 300 pounds.. Running · ani!·molllents to life. &lt;
behind that group is running
.'flle .work of NFL Films
back Chri~, Wells, listed at will figure promim;ntly in
235 pounds. Wells had the allowing enshrinees to talk
ftrst 1()(),yard game of his about their mementos and ·
career against Akron, with their football heroes.
143 yards rushing.
"You can hear Gene
"This will be a huge phys- Upshaw telling you why be
ical football team that we'll thuiks Bronko Nagurski is in
play on both sides of the ball the Hall of Fame,"
and the;t will be aggressive," spokesman Joe Horrigan
Washin~oach Tyrone said.
Willingham said.
The last major update

Football hall .offame·to.
get $4 million renovatio~

~

OBntrARIES
.
. PagiA6
~ Dorts Eastman
84
~
·, "

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atlOl!t
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....,...:""~· fo\..r.

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Bryan
Walters
/photo

i • '.

·"

• Ueracy Center
celebfates 7th.ann~ ·
kickoff. See' Page A2
o notA drapes ·
.charter for member.

$-.Page A3

• For the Record.
Beth s..eont;photoo

.

BY Bmi SERGENT

• 2007 Mothman
Festival Schedule ol

· events. See Page A6

WEA1HER

••cancler iS the most oommon
inAmetm men.
To pertldpate In thlf
.8DII.ia&amp; you must.••
• Have no pro&amp;tate surgery
within one year.
• Be 50 )a'S of age r,r older.
• Net have tad a redJI exam or
PSA wRhln the last year..

.a&amp; 1 yojl(re age 40 or old•

Blast
from PageBl
55, followed by Zach
Bowens with a 57. Derek
Bowens rounded out the

team total with a 60.
Taylor Runyon and Josh
Conley also fired respective
rounds of 63 and 66 in the
setback.
Meigs is currently one
game ahead of Belpre (5-1I) and two games in front of '
wellston (6-2). BHS and

WHS · play Thursday and
also have a make-up date to
finish.
MHS
hosts
Vinton
County
Thursday · at
Riverside and also has a
make-up date ·left with the
Vikings . Tee-time is scheduled for 4:30p.m.
I

with one rl the
fdlowlng rtsk factors:
• Ferl11y ~of postate c:3nce:

• Atrtcan Amerlcf1.
If. filii puMIBtll
......,., tJtJUitl . . .

,.,...life.

c74o&gt;
44&amp;-soss .
Monday through Friday

Detail• 1111 ' " ' " A2

INDEX
2 SECilONS -

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

RegiStration is limited to the fiSt
100 eligii)Je men, $1) caB today/

Classifieds

83-4

Comics

Bs

R 1' I 1111.,_ It ald/111/M«.f:M,_

Editori~ls

A4

Obituaries

As

Places to go

A6

9:00 am - 4:00 pm

For more lnformatlall, call·
Bonnie McFarland at
{740) 446·5679.

Annie's Mailbox

Sports

B Section

Weather

A2

© 2007 Ohio Valley PubUohing Co.
I

REED

~~~~~:

&lt;

scholarships

.'

BSERGENTCMVOAILVSENTINELCOM',

. Call

J,

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport's downtown
revitalization application
includes . funds for the
demolition of the con·
demned building on Nonh
Second Avenue owned hy
Allan Irvin.
At Monday evening's
meeting of Middle~on
Village Council, Mehssa
Zoeller of the
Hills-

.

T~rnfng ~ard sales into

~rusblll: atiD!I'.

Personnel matters handled during the meeting
including accepting the resignation for retirement purposes of Donald R. Karr as
the part-time custodial engineer for Meigs Local
School District Central
Office, accepting the resignation of William Capehart
as a bus driver; and hiring
Pleue see Grants. AS

BY BRIAN

Stai:ey Crouso;· 5; Racine, wasphopplng yesterday with her mom Linda Black and brother Austin at RACO's annual yard
sale which has everything, lnciOCilng the bathroom sink.
.

• Have no perSJMI hlsmry rl

~ections.

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEl..COM

Seep
. age A5
.

Meigs
sophomore
Joey
Blackston
hits a chip
shot during
Tuesday's
Tri-Valley
Conference
Ohio
Division
golf dual
with visiting
NelsonvilleYork at
Riverside
Golf Club in
Mason,
W.Va.
Blackston
fired a 2over par 36
during the
Marauders
71-stroke
victory over
the
Buckeyes.

smoking in the stadium,
but only in the bleacher

Demolition
included. in
revitalization
·proposal

.

came in 2003 when the Hall
of Fame gallery was updateq
with touch-screen kiosks
complimenting the bronze
busts of each enshrinee.. :
The hall also announcecJ
that beginning wit_h. nexl
year's class, the Ullrumunt
and maximum numbers ~of
new enshrinees will be
increased. Each cjass can -~
as large as seven and as few
as ..four.
•:
The hall also has changed
the waiting period fot ·
coaches to be enshrined. Iq
the ~ast, a coach c~uld be .·
considered for enshrinemenl
once he retired. Now, hli
must be retired for five con:
secutive seasons to be con;
sidered, the same rule that
applies to players. .
'

m d .11 l \ ..... nl,, H I • , ,111

RACINE - Twice a year during its
annual yard sales the Racin( Area
Community Organization (RACO)
turns one man's junk/treasure. into
scholarships for graduating seniors at
Southern High School, and this year is
no exception.
RACO yard sales happen in May
and September and today is the last
day of this year's sale which will..benefit the Class of 2008. The sale starts
at 9 a.m. and ends at 2 p.m. a( Star
Mill Park with everything half off. ~nd
clothes just $1 a ba~.
·v~~
The sales began tn 1992 and iij' 15
years the group has raised $57,200 in
scholarship funds completely deriv.ed
from donations of items and money to
its yard sales.
"People in the Racine area are the
most generous people," Kathryn Hart,
president of RACO said. "They donate
1tems and when they purchase items
they tell us .to 'keep the change."'
Hart said the yard sales are orf;anized by volunteer labor includ1Qg
RACO members and students from
Southern High School which helped
unload five trailer loads of "treasures" on Monday for the largest sale
yet. Nearly 34 volunteers have
worked at the yard sale this week,
many being fed by RACO member
Mary Ball.
Despite the rain on Monday, RACO
member Ann Zirkle said the organization raised $2,058 for scholarship
funds in one day with people going
through the goodies in raincoats and
under umbrellas.
After 15 years of yard sales the
RACO volunteers have seen it all
when it comes to donations, including
but not limited to the kitchen sink.
Some more memorable donations
include a 50-pound bag of oats and a
bottle of Viagra which appears to have
accidentally been· donated among a
group of other items. Although the
Viagra couldn't be sold in the sale, it

'!

·\1 '

.
.

ducted a second
ing on the village's application for downtown revitalization funds. Included in the
application to be submitted
in October is an $8,000 line
item for demolition and
clearance of the "threesided" building between
Race Street and the "T."
The funds will come from
the
Community
Development Block Grant
formula program operated
through M~igs County
Commissioners.
The Irvin building was
first condemned nearly two
years ago. Irvin was given
30 days to demolish the
building, at his own
Plane ... Proposal, AS

Wilson travels
as part of Iraq
delegation

·

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

WASHINGTON - U.S.
Rep. Charlie Wilson, DBridgepon, boarded a plane
and headed to Iraq Tuesday,
joining a Congressional delegation including several
Ohio Congressmen.
The trip is led by House
Minority
Leader John
Boehner. RW

RACO volunteers Ann Zirkle, Kathryn Hart and Libby Fisher work the sales
counter at 'RACO's annual yard sale which ends today.
did cause a good laugh amongst to help with college.
RACO workers sorting the merchanHart said the sales do make RACO
dise. Memorable wigs and lingerie members tired at the end of the day
also seem to get a good laugh from but, "It's a good tired."
After today's sale whatever clothing
volunteers doing a sometimes thankless job, though thankless jobs are hasn't sold will be donated to Jill
Holter's clothing pantry and picked up
often the important ones.
Finding a bottle of Viagra in the yard by Sherry Kincaid to he taken to
sale donations is just one of many seniors at Rocksprings Rehabilitation
funny stories that have bonded the center. Books will be picked up by
RACO volunteers through the hard Ruth Smith and taken to a veteran's
work of simply caring about whether hospital and RACO will donate the
or not graduating seniors have money rest to Goodwill of Middlepon.

e

s

t

Chester.
Al so traveling in the
de leg at ion
ure Rep. Pat
· Tiberi. RColumbus,
and Congressmen from
Michigan, New York, Iowa
and California.
. This is Wilson 's first trip
to Iraq. His Sixth Ohio
Congressional
Di strict
includes Meigs County. He
is serving his first tenn in the
U.S. House. succeedmg
Ohio
Governor
Ted
Strickland, who represented
the district for over a decade.
"The American people
deserve an honest assessment of conditions in Iraq
and
the
Bush
Administration' s eft'on to
manipulate the facts is
Please see Wilson, AS

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