<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4833" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/4833?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:03:35+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14761">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/c166cd9972722fa80abd186365ebb89f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>497896fe2a1feef0cc2d5e271720a99a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="16602">
                  <text>•
Augu~t

www.mydailysentinel.com

31 , 2006

Lockheed Martin wins
contract to send astronauts
back to the moon, A2

Dollar General
customers donate
to God's NET, A3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.'iOl'ENTS o Vol. ;,6, No. tH

FIHI&gt;l1Y , SEIYJ'EMHEK

"'"'"·nt)dail~'l'lllirlo'l .&lt;·om

1 , :!llllb

Commissioners approve dog ·pound fee hikes.

SPORTS
• Eastern rolls past
Meigs. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
-Meigs
County
Commissioners
approved increases in adoption fees, registration, and
other dog pound- fees at
Thursday's regular meeting.
The fee increases were
requested by Dog Warden
Tom Proffitt, and are
designed to help offset the
increases in operating costs

at the pound, located adja·
cent to the Rocksprings
Fairgrounds. Proffitt · cited
the 'increase in fuel costs
and
other
operating
expenses in recommending
the fee hikes.
Commissioners approved
the following inc'reases:
registration (dog tags). from
$4 to $8, adoption fee, $10
to $15, reclaim fee, $15 to
$20, boarding, $4/day to $6,
late tags, $8 to $12, and

kennel license, $20 to $25.
The fee i1.1creases will go
into effect immedimely.
Commissioners
commended Proffitt for seeing
to a number of improvements at the pound, inducting the installation of new
restroom facilities for visitors, new fencing and the
construction of an outdoor
exercise area for dogs
housed in the pound.
Proffitt said five dogs

were adopted in a three- hour
period during " recent open
house. event at the pound.
Commissioners

abo ~

Approved appropriations ad.JU&gt;tments for the
board of elections. totaling $3.380.
o Approved
a request
from the Department of Job
and Family Services for
purchase of laptop computer from Superior Office
Service, at $2,500, to be

•

o

reimbursed through the
Public A,sistance Fund.
o Appro1·eu a contract
bet ween DJ FS anLI COAD
Child Care · Resource
Netwurk for CPR and first
aid training for Type . B
daycare providers. at a
cost of $6,54Y for nine
training sessions.
Presem
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Koker
hired as
Southern
treasurer
BY BETH SERGENT · '
BS ERG ENT@ MY DA.I LYSENTINEL. COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS·
• Maxin-e M..Evans
• Roger Jefferies Glass

·INSIDE
• Scientists tum
immune cells into
tumor fighters to
treat melanoma.
See Page A2
• Soaked Carolinas
under hurricane watch,
Va, readies for Emesto.
See Page AS
• How good it is ... or
can be. See Page A6
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
• Local Church Briefs.
See Page A6

WEATHER

RACINE - Richard A.
Koker, interim treasurer for
the Southern Local School
District
was
recently
offered the position on a full
time basis, an offer which
he accepted.
The Southern Local
S9hoo1 . Board approved a
two-year contract with
Koker commencing Jan. I,
· 2007 until the organization"
al meeting of January, 2009
at a salary of $50,000 per
calendar year.
Koker has been working
as interim treasurer since
July upon the resignation of
Dennie Hill. Koker, who
resides in Syracuse, recently
resigned his full time position as treasurer for
Alexander Local Schools to
work closer to home. Koker
will continue to work at
Alexander until his position
there is filled.
The board also accepted
the resignation of Southern
Elementary School teacher
Scott Wickline.

Both Sorgenl/photo

Local band Swamp Jeuce, otherwise known as (from lett) Dust1n and David Mullins and Robbie Cundiff earned a spot on
the X-Fest.concert stage at 3 p.m .. Sept. 16 at Harris Riverfront Park in Huntington , W.Va.

Jeuce's
BY BETH SERGENT

Please see Treasurer, AS

Mason
Bob Evans
restaurant
going
smoke-free
0

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RUTLAND - . How does Swamp
Jeuce, a working-class rock band
based partially in Rutland, make it to
the annual X-Fest concert in
Huntington, W.Va.? Their families,
fans and their work which is playing
music when and where'i'er they can. ·
Swamp Jeuce was chosen for X-Fest
from a field of 50 bands that were gradually narrowed down via CO's, live

1

loX-Fest

trom

performances and fan panicipation.
What is X-Fest you ask? X-Fest is
an annual concert sponsored by
Huntington's WAMX X-1 06.3 radio
station featuring national hard rock
and .metal bands as well as the best
music the local scene has to offer
which will this year include Swamp
Jeuce. In fact Swamp Jeuce ·is the first
band from Meigs or Galli a counties to
participate in the cbncert in the I0
years since X-Fest started.
Band members David (guitar/lead

vocals! and Dustin Mullins (drums)
are from nearby Morgan Township in
Gallia Coumy where they attended
Kyger Creek High School while
member Robbie CundifF (bassist)
who allended Meigs High School
lives in Rutland.
Even though the band has ties to
both counties. Swamp Jeuce is known
as "Me ig.s County .Boys" though they
are all gmwn up now and feel their

Please see X-Fest. AS

Happy birthday to.you'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MASON, W.Va. - The
Bob
Evans
Restaurant has announced
that it will be designated
non-smoking,
effective
Monday, Sept. 4.
The decision to change
opfrations to non-smoking
is the result of customer
comments, national and
local restaurant industry
trends and the recent U.S.
Surgeon General's report
issued June 27.
The Mason Bob Evans,
located at 20 Mallard Lane,
is one of six in the region
that will go "smoke free"
.within a two- week period,
noted Bob Evans Vice
President Regional Director
Joe LeGros.
The other restaurants to
be designated non-smoking are in Elkins, W.Va.,
and
Rio
· Grande,
Portsmouth
Gallipolis.
and Waverly, Ohio. The
M&lt;tson Restaurant se&lt;tts
~ason

Details on Page A3

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 16 PAUES

Annie's Mailb.ox
A3
A8
Buckeye Edition
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
84-6
Comics
87
Editorials
A4
Faith o Values
A6-7
Movies . ·
As

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC •

NTIAC • B

ICK • C

208 East Main • 1-740-992-6614 or 1-800-837-1094 • Pomeroy, OH
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-6; Sat. 9-4; Sun. 12-4 • www.markportergm.com .
*'Mflth Approved c:redlt throush GMAC • Sale ends July 3'1, :Z006

NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

88

As
8 Section

A3

© 2006 Ohi? VallL")' Publishii1g Co.

Please see Mason, AS

,.'
t

Unions ·throw
support to
Phillips in
house ·race
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAll\'SENTINEl .COM

ATHENS
Representatives of the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees.
American
Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees.
Service .
Employees
International Union. and the
Ohio Federation of Teachers
imnounced their endorsement of Debbie Phillips for
State Representative in the
'!2nd House District.
· Phillips and union repre~cntatiave~

.

.

Beth Sergent/ photo

"Poke

al

Not too many people can s~y they were serenaded by the Me1gs H1gh School Marauder foot
ball team but that's just what happened to Ken McCullough yesterday on h1s 65th birthday.
McCullough, of McCullough and H1ffle Drugs (Swisher and Lohse) heard a ruckus on Mha1n
Street and came rushmg out to fmd the team ready to WISh htm a happy birthday w1t a
chorus of "Happy Birthday to You." McCullough and Riffle Drugs are a team supporter and I
·
McCullough ·himself was a football player back in the Pomeroy High School days.
Please see Phillips, AS

\:

"

a

Wednesday news conference about Ohio economic
trcmls. ami lheir impact in
the '!2nd Hnu'c Distri&lt;:t.
"Ohin 1,." lnst mnre than
one -humlrcLI ,ixty thousand
. manufacturin~ johs in the
. ''"t five ve,;r&lt; and more

•

�,

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

·SciENCE

Friday, September t, 2006

Bv SETH BORENSTEIN
AP SCIENCE WRITER

WASHINGTON
NASA on Thursday gave a
multibillion-dollar contract
to build a manned lunar
spaceship to Lockheed
Martin Corp., the aerospace
leader that usually bui Ids
unmanned rockets.
·The nation's space agency
plans to use the Orion crew
exploration vehicle to replace
the space shuttle fleet, take
astronauts to the moon and
perhaps to Mars. Unlike
Apollo and earlier spacecraft
perched atop rockets, it will
be reusable. NASA estimated
the cost at S7 .5 billion
through 2019 fur likely eight
separate spaceships.
, The last time NASA
awarded a manned spaceship contract to Lockheed
Martin or Bethesda, Md.,
was in 1996 for a spaceplane that was supposed to
replace the space shuttle.
NASA spent $912 million
and the ship, called X-33,
never got built because of
technical problems. ·
Lockheed Martin Vice
President John Karas said his
company will succeed with
Ori6n compared to its failure
with X-33, because "we're
not shooting as far. .. I'd say it ·
(Orion) is within reach."
While Orion won't break
much new technological
ground,
Karas'
said
Lockheed is pleased because
of where Orion is going:
"For me it's about exploring;
it's about adventure. It's
great to be with NASA and ·
go out and explore."
The only other competitor
for the contract was a team
made up of Northrop
Grumman
Corp. ,
the
world's largest shipbuilder
and third-largest military
contractor, and Boeing Co.
"We feel we have an
achievable design," said
Doug Cooke, a deputy associate administrator when
why
Lockheed
asked
Martin was chosen over the
competing team. ''This is a
design that is based on
known capabilities. We

know that this can be built
so there are some differences there. perhaps."
Although all of NASA's
10 centers will provide engineering support on · Orion.
the majority of the work wi II
be at the Johnson Space
Center in Houston and final
assembly will be completed
at 'the Kennedy Space
Cemer in Florida. Lockheed
Martin spokeswoman Joan
Underwood said the Orion
project will create about
2,300 new jobs: some 1,200
in
Houston ; 600 in
Colorado, 300 in Florida
and 200 in Loui siana.
·
In picking
Lockheed
Martin for Orion, described
by NASA's chief as "Apollo
on steroids," NASA bypassed
Apollo throwbacks Nonhrop
Grumman of Los Angeles
and its chief subcontractor
Boeing of Chicago. Nonhrop
Grumman predecessor built
the Apollo lunar lander.
Companies bought by Boeing
built the Apollo, Gemini, a~d
Mercury capsules, Sky lab and
the space shuttle.
"NASA decided to do
something different and go
with a company that has nut
been in · manned space
before, sort of spreading the
wealth an·d making sure
they 've got two contractors
AP Photo
that know the manned space
business," said aerospace NASA Deputy Associate Administrator for the Exploration · System!? Missiori Directorate
industry analyst Paul Nisbet, Doug Cooke, right, accompanied by NASA Associate Administrator for the Exploration
Systems Directorate Scott Horowitz, take part in a news conference at NASA headquarters
president of JSA Research.
Lockheed Martin built sev- in Washington Thursday to announce that Lockheed Martin Corp. was selected as the
eral unmanned probes , prime· contractor for the design, development and construction of Orion, the next generaincluding: 1998's Lunar tion crew pi lot~d spacecraft.
Prospector; 1976 Viking
probes of Mars; Mars ent from what NASA want- capsule-like replaceme.nt billion on shullle follow -up
Reconnaissance
Orbiter. ed. Its first submission . for the 25-year-old space. ships that never were built,
which entered the red planet 's looked more like the since- shuttle fleet that is supposed according to the U.S.
orbit earlier this year; and the . abandoned X-33 spaceplane to retire in four years, after Government Accountability
1999 Mars Climate. Orbiter, . and less like a capsule. completion of the interna- Office, the independent
which crashed because of .a NASA told
Lockheed tional space station.
auditing ann of Congress.
Lockheed ·Martin/NASA Manin it wanu;d an Apollo"Space is no longer going
This time it's different,
mismatching of metric and like capsule, so the compa- to be a destination that we NASA
claims. That 's
visit briefly," NASA associate because after the Columbia
English measurement units.
ny changed its proposal.
Before the announcement
If all goes well, the first administrator Scott Horowitz accident in 2003, President
Lockheed Martin released test flight of Orion will be said Thursday. "We're going Bush proposed a massive
few details about its ~roposal. September 2014 and astra- to learn to live off the land exploration plan. It would
Their plan was heavtly open- nauts could return to the like the pioneers did."
put astronauts on the moon
ended, allowing NASA the moon by late 2019 or 2020,
This is hardly the first for the first time since 1972,
ultimate decision on reusabil- NASA estimates. Karas said; time NASA has made a big with plans for a home base.
ity of Orion and landing sites. if asked, his company could deal over a next-generation The plan also would ultiLockheed Martin's initial make the first flight in 2013. spaceship. Since the 1980s, mately ·send people to Mars.
prpposal was vastly differOrion will be the Apollo NASA has spent about $4.8
Orion is JUSt part of an

exploration program called
Constellation that includes
the Ares I and V rockets that
will power the Orion capsule and a cargo vehicle into
orbit and beyond.
The program will reduce
the risk of a fatal accident to
astronauts from 1-in-200
currently for the shuttle to
· 1-in-2000 for the new
Constellation
program,
Orion project manager Skip
Hatfield said last week.
.
In July, the GAO warned
that NASA was heading
down the wrong path in
choosing an Orion-builder
by late August or early
.September.
·
"This approach increases
the risk that the project will
· encounter significant cost
overruns, schedule delays
and decreased capability,'.'
the GAO warned . .
The 'competition involved
the .three largest aerospace
companies in the United
'
States.
·'It's between tweedledum
and· tweedledee,"
said
American University public
policy professor Howard
McCurdy, author of several
books about the American
space program. "They're
both using the same management systems and the same
technical systems that got us
to the moon the first time."
"None of these companies
know how to cost innovate,"
McCurdy said. 'They're
· basically aerospace divisions that depend on government contracts. Their whole
incentive, based on the
international space station,
is to drive up costs,"
The Orion spaceship will
look familiar to the baqy
boomer set.
NASA told the contrac'
tors to build a capsule that
looks just like Apollo and
can carry four a&amp;tronauts tq
the moon and six to the
international space station
' orbiting Earth. It should
have a service module that
._,
brings it to the moon.
Associated Press Writet
Mike . Schneider In Capt
Canaveral, Fla..
conl
tributed to this report.

AP MEDICAL WRITER

WASHINGTON
Government
scientists
turned regular blood cells
into tumor attackers · that
wiped out all signs of can. cer in two men with
advanced melanoma. The
striking finding. unveiled
Thursday, marks an important step in the quest for
gene therapy for cancer.
But the genetically altered
cells didn't help 15 other
melanoma victims. So scientists are trying to
strengthen the shots.
Still, the National Cancer
Institute called its experiment the first real success in
cancer gene therapy because it fought cancer's
worst stage, when it has
spread through the body,
unlike earlier attempts that
targeted single tumors.
And the government
hopes to soon begin testing
the gene therapy in small
numbers of patie.nts dying
from more common cancers, such as .advanced
breast or colon cancer.
The hope is that one day,
such treatment might provide long-lasting tumor suppression.
"It's not like chemotheraPY or radiation, where as
soon as you're done, you' re
done," said lead researcher
Dr. Steven Rosenberg, the
NCI 's surgery chief. "We're
giving living cells which
continue to grow and func tion· in the body."
The first two successful
patients appear melanomafree alp1ost two years after
infusions of tumor fighters
made from their own blood.
Doctors can't predict · how
the men will fare long-term .
Melanoma, the most aggressive skin cancer and killer of
almost 8,000 · Americans a
year, is notorious for returning years af!CJ' patients think
they've subdued it.
"I'm cu red for now," is
how a grateful Mark Origer,
53, of Watertown, Wis .. put ,
it after a checkup from 1\iCI
doctors this week. "I know

••

how fortunate I am to have
gone through this and
responded to this. Not
everybody's that lucky."
Cancer specialists praised
the
work,
published
Thursday by the journal
Science, but warned that
years of additional research
are needed.
"Clearly this is a first
step," cautioned Dr. Len
Lichtenfeld of the American
Canter Society. "We have to
be very cautious about not
raisi,ng hopes too much."
. But, ,''it is exciting," he
added . "It certainly is a
proof of concept that this
approach will work."
NCI's Rosenberg has long
led a tantalizing research
field: how to harness the
body's immune system to
fight cancer. White blood
cells called T-lymphocytes
hunt down germs and other
foreign tissue. But cancerous cells look a lot like
healthy cells, making it hard
for those T-~·ells to spot a
problem.
By 2002, Rosenberg had
made a breakthrough. He
found small numbers of cancer:fighting T-cells inside
some patients with advanced
melanoma. lie literally
pulled those cells out or their
blood, and grew billions
more of them in laboratory
dishes, enough to have a
chance at overwhelming a
tumor when they're pumpefl
back into patienis. About
half significantly improve
after this so-called "celltransfer therapy."
But
few
melanoma
patients make enough cancer-fighting T-cells naturally
for scientists to spot in their ·
bloodstream, and T-cells that
attack other cancers are virtually impossible to find. So
Rosenberg and colleagues
set out to create those tumor
fi ghters from scratch.
The scientists took normal lymphocytes - ones
that don't recognize cancer
- out of 17 patients with
advanced melanoma who
had exhausted their treatment options. They infected
those cell,s with a virus cltr-

rying genes that create Tcell receptors, essentially
homing devices for, in this
case, melanoma. (Different
genes create receptors for
other cancers.) ·
"We can take a normal
cell from you or me or any
patient . and ·'· convert that
cell into a cell that recogcancer,"
nizes
the

Rosenberg explained.
In 15 of the 17 patients
who tried it, the newly
armed cells took root and
grew at low levels for a few
months. But only two saw
their tumors gradually fade
away - Origer and a 30year-old whQse T-cell 'levels
remained super-high for
over a year.

Why did the genetically
altered cells flourish in only
two people?
"That's the critical question," said Dr. Patrick Hwu,
melanoma ·chairman at the
University of Texas M.D.
Anderson Cancer Center,
who once worked with the
NCl team. ·
Picking the right lympho-

cyte to genetically alter isn '.t
easy- there are many different kinds - or perhaps more
ptecise T-cell receptors wer~
needed, Hwu suggested.
But "these are all solvable
issues," he stressed, calling
the study "one of the first
documented, effective cases
of cancer gene therapy
working."

Don't forget to say "Thanks"

BY KATHY MITCH ELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

quate and very angry. I love that are none of her business.
him so much. I am never too while my NEW boyfriend
tired for him. I just wish sat a few feet away.
Dear Amiie: I have been those feelings were reciproLast week , within five
married for nearly eight cated. - What's the Deal minutes of walking in the
·
months to a man I dated for. in Ohio?
door, Hazel asked where my
seven years. I often wonder
Dear Ohio: There could boyfriend was and if we had
what happened since we be any number of reasons already broken up . Then she
walked down the aisle. We why your husband isn't started harping on me about
love each other very much. interested in you . He may when I'm going to have
We communicate whenever be so involved with the porn children. It took all my
there's a problem. However, that there's no energy left patience not to yell at her.
my husband sees no prob- for you; he rna~ be asex ual:
I don't know how much
lem in what 1 am about to he may be havmg an affair: more of this I can take . My
tell you.
he may be gay; he may have mom doesn't speak to my
He is not interested in me a physical problem . The aunt. My father says · Hazel
physically . I can walk best way to find out is is bitter and mean and to
around stark naked and he through counsel·ing . Instead ignore her. I live six hours
won't make a pass. When I of telling him he has a prob- from Grandma and cannot
try to initiate ~ex, he tells me lem, say your marriage is in stomach another trip like
he's too tired. Of course, he trouble, because it is. Ask this. How do I deal with this
plays softball with his bud- him to go with you for woman? .:... Niece of the
dies two nights a week and counseling because YOU Witch of the West
is never too tired for that.
are unhappy ·and need his
Dear Niece: You · ignore
Early in our marriage, I help . If he still refuses , go her, while remaining polite.
caught him browsing on without him and decide Say hello to Aunt Hazel
pornographic websites, yet what is best for you to do.
when you walk in the door
he tells me all the time how
Dear Annie: I have an and go straight to Grandma.
beautiful I am. I work out aunt who makes my life . Do not respond to any rude
three to five times a week unbearable every time I see or intrusive questions. just
and play sports on the her·. Unfortunately, my smile and change the subweekends. I've been told by grandmother lives with this ject. (She asks, "Did you
strangers and relatives that I aunt, so any time I want to break up . with your
should be a model , so it's see Grandma, I have to see boyfriend?"
and
you
not like I'm unattractive.
"Aunt Hazel."
respond, "Is that a new
I've talked to him about
During one visit , Hazel blouse?") Direct your conhis lack of interest, and he made negative comments versation to Grandma, and
· sees absolutely no problem , about my cousin's weight, when you have had enough ,
so he won't agree to coun- and then she started in on me say goodbye and leave . You
seling. AU of this has left about an ex-boyfriend, are being a gqod grandme feeling resentful, inade- grilling me with 'questions daughter. Don't let Aunt

• Ads must be paid for in

~dvance . .

'

Yoo
2 Col. x 4"

i1 ~.

' .:::''

'
'

1 Col. x 2" -

.
~

..

· 1 Cql:
;,

x3"
,.f: '

Hazel push your buttons .
Dear Annie: This is . in
response to "Jane," who
complained about people .
naming
their
children
" Pretty" and "Cupcake."
They don't do it to make their
·kids different or interesting, it
is· simply a matter of convenience. This way, those girls
won't have to go through· the
pain and hardship of thinking
up a stage name when they
become strippers. - A Girl
in the South
Dear Soutll: We ' re glad
you got that out of your system . There is some truth
that children tend to live up
to their names, and some
parents don't put enough
thought into the impression
those names give. But it's
the raising of the child that
counts most.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann L'anders
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
606ll. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators SyndicaJe writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

.,llf
Borders and Artwork may vary.

,

Manalletd •
69' 157"

....

non-perishable food items for
Grand Master's food bank
program. All Master Masons
invited. Refreshments.
CHESTER
- Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, 7:30 p.m., at
Masonic Hall. Quarterly_
birthdays. Ways and Means
Committee auction . Bring
auction items.
POMEROY - Regular
meeting of Drew Webster
Post, American Legion,
with dinner at 7 p.m. Bring
membership dues.

Public
meetings
Friday, Sept. 1
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport
Village
Ordinance Committee, 4 p.m.
Monday, Sept. 4
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees. 7 p.m.
at Syracuse village hall.

SPONSORtD BY

Younglltown •
72" 158"

~
7;-J;i'

*Columbus

ss· 157•

Ctnclnnau
•69" 161 °

~ Portamouth •
" /

~·

~

70"161"

J

'i-A.

C&gt; 2006

~ ClOudy ~
t......__:)
~

Q

Panty

Thunder·
storms

~
.•

1,1,, ~ ' '

Cloudy

~

Showers

0 '-.
~
~ · ... ..
Flurries

Ram

•

*

Snow

Ice

G

•• • ••

Weather Unclerground • AP

Friday•. .Rain likely with a 50s . Northwest winds
chance of thunderstorms. around 5 mph.
Highs in the upper 60s.
Sunday and Sunday
Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph . night.,,Pm1ly cloudy. Highs
Chance of rain 70 percent.
around 80. Lows in the
.
Friday
night. ..Mostly upper 50s.
cloudy. Rain likely with a
Labor Day and Monday
chance of thunderstorms in uight ...Partly cloudy with a
the evening ...Then scattered chance of showers and
showers after midnight. thunderstorms. Highs in the
Lows in the upper 50s. upper 70s. Lows in the
Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph. upper 50s. Chance of rain
Chance of rain 60 percent.
· 40 percent.
through
Saturday...Mostly cloudy
Tuesday
with isolated showers. Wednesday...Partly cloudy
Highs in the lower 70s. with a chance of showers
North winds 5 to 10 mph. and thunderstorms. Highs in
Chance of rain 20 percent.
the upper 70s. Lows in the
Saturday night .•.Partly upper 50s. Chance of rain
cloudy. Lows in the upper 30 percent.

Local Stocks
ACI- 32.75
AEP -36.48
Akzo- 57.43
BIG-18.35
Bob Evans - 28.34
BorgWarner- 56.71
CENX- 34.71
Champion - 6.50
Charming Shops- 13.16
City Holding - 39.38
Col- 52.43
DG-12.86
DuPont - 39.97
Federal Mogul - .36
USB-32.07
Gannett - 56.85
General Electric -34.06
GKNLY- 5.70
Harley Davidson - 58.51
JPM -45.61;i
Kroger - · 23.81

Ltd. -25.73
NSC -42.73
Oak Hill Ananclal- 25.14
OVB-25.25
BBT- 42.80
Peoples - 30.24
Pepsico - 65.28
Premier- 14.51
Rockwell - 56.38
Rocky Boots ...,... 10.93
Sears - 144.11
Wai-Mart - 44.72
Wendy's- 63.90
Worthington - 19.11
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m, closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Ananclal Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis. ·

THANK YOU

MARY BYER-Hill

LETART fALLS
12:30 p.m. Sunday at the
Letart Township Trustees, 5 Kyger Creek Clubhouse at
p.m., office building.
Cheshire.
Tuesday, Sept. S
W.Va.
. MASON,
RUTLAND - Rutland Johnson Family Reunion , I
Township Trustees, 5 p.m., p.m., Mason City Park,
Rutland Fire Station. ·
potluck dinner, bring item
ALFRED
· -Orange for auCtion.
Township Trustees, 7:30
p.m., home of Clerk Osie
Foil rod.
L

.....

&amp;

...._

..&amp;._

...o

'

Presents a

.0/lioe.t• Bil9 Sl.Yq9e.tw
§&gt;__podu.cb."t:ul
September 2, 7:00P.M.
September 3,
2:00P.M. &amp; 7:00P.M.

Mci~ Elementa,.). Sc.hool, SR 12&lt;!, ~ OH,
www.nvercttyplayersohto.o ·

Reunions

S~~~: e.$J

Miranda McKelvey
Racine Southern FFA

wwucv•

Sunday, Sept. 3
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Commun'ity Church , formerly
the
Syracuse
Presbyterian Church will be
having Sunday school at 10
.. a.m. today under the direction of Dan and Faith
Hayman. .

Sunday, Sept. 3
CHESHIRE - Fife family reunion will be held at

MY 2006 MfiGS COlJNTY
FAIR MARKfT LAMB!

IF BIFarmers Bank

Church events

-

For more information call Brian Howard at 740-992-1044

Songs Incluae: • If I Were ARich Man • Sunrise, sunset
• rraaition • Matchmaker • Ana Morell!
·

t

~t,'4,~.J'.:~~·~Bi
J~~~:':.u~ 1
SANDWICH
r

•~'
:~a·

COMBO
Meatball
Sandwiclr,
16oz fountain Drink
d
B OfL
an a loz . ag
ays
Clrips $2.49
FRESH

~~~

~.

r

I

if~~~~~
$1.49

7" PEPPERONI
$1$

~.·.· ,

I

-

. ~~
.' 1; . t;;:l
1
". .~ ''
.
~
· .•
,: : ~·
. ·,

IJ

11 ,

• ·

.'

,

, •
1

,

~..,36 ~ast ~~in. Stre,e t
'-~ (~ ·-.. ~ ...~--.~ '*"'"l

$2.99/b.

1

.

(

~.
--. POTATO SALAD :~t·

,~~

$2.49/b.

WE DELIVER TO I
T'HE POMEROY .:~
~

LEVY!

£ABOB IMY
' D:
SI'Bt:IJU.S

PIZZA
"

,

\.__..J

Community Calendar
Friday, Sept. 1
SALEM CENTER
Meigs County Pomona
Grange meets at 7: 30 p.m.
at Star Grange Hall located
on County Road I , three
miles north of Salem
Center. Star Grange will
provide refreshments.
Saturday, Sept. 2
SALEM CENTER
Star Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 potluck
supper, 6:30 p.m. fol.lowed
by meeting at 7:30p.m.
HARRISONVILLE
liarrisonville Lodge 411 ,
7:30 p.m. Members to take
nonperishable food itell).
Refreshments, 6:30p.m.
Tuesday, Sept. 5
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge #363
,f&amp;AM monthly business
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Bring

City/Region
High I Low temps

Toledo•
71 " I 60'

Beth Sergentjphoto

Date: Thesday September 5, 2006
Time: 4:30-6:30pm
Location: Pomeroy Walking Path
Description: Meigs County Walks is a program designed to
help people prevent chronic diseases, lose and maintain weight
and develop relationships with new people.
Cost: FREE
.
.
Incentives will be given to the first 100 participants
Contact Andrew Brumfield at 992-6626 for more information.

2 Col. x 2"

Forecast for Friday, Sepl 1

Thanks to the generosity of customers that pur·
chased school
supplies at
Pomeroy's Dollar
General Store,
those supplies
were then donated
to God's NET for
children in Meigs
County. Nancy
Thoene of the
Mulberry
Community Center
and God's ·NET
(right) accepted
the supplies from
Dollar General
employee Brenda
Cunningham (left)
on behalf of the
store's customers.
God's NET still
has limited school
supplies available
thanks to donations.

t:OUN'I'¥WJJ£HS

.

Today's Forecast

Dollar General customers donate to God's NET

Clubs and
organizations ·

SHOW APPRECI.ATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER WITH A
THANK YOU AD IN THE DAILY SENTINEL. ••
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.
See Dave or Brenda at the ...
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH

Local Weather

Husbands disinterest puzzles his wife

Scientists turn immune cells into tumor fighters to treat melanom~
Bv LAURAN NEERGAARD

Friday, September 1, 2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

toth8

to send

PageA3

'·By THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

,

2 w~:epsi

~~
Minimum Purchase
Prices Effective Until Gt

r

$5

September 5th, 2006.

,

.

t

o ?~0-9!2·6~ 21 ~ Pomeroy, Oh!: • t ,
.~ , ~

I c.'· ... . • ) .__

(&amp;0... ''"'":~

-

..

�.j

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

OPINION

Friday, September 1, 2006

1

The Daily Sentinel

5 years cifter terror attacks, American Muslims look within

Shaikh said he feared any they're treated by the gov- gles to define: What constitutes an imminent lhreat?
violence would ultimately ernment.
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
Khan said he has heard of
hurt Islam and Canadian
"We're not on opposite
www.mydallysentlnel.com
After the Sept. II suicide Muslims.
teams ~" al-Marayat1 satd. cases in American mosques
imams
have
hijackings, distraught U.S.
- In England, it's been '"We're all trying to protect where
expressed
extreme
views
in
Muslim leaders feared the widely reported that a tip our country from another
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
sermons
and
worshippers
next casualty would be their from a British Muslim terrorist attack."
religion.
helped lead investigators to
In 2004, his group started have confronted the prayer
Jim Freeland
teaches
peace,
they
uncover
wlmt
they
said
was
the
"National
Anti- leaders about it .
Islam
Publisher
"B ut beyond that what
told anyone who would li s- a plan by homegrown Terrorism Campaign." urgten in news conferences, at "extremists to use liquid ing Mu slims to monitor else can we do?'' Khan said.
Charlene Hoeflich
interfaith services and. most explosives to destroy U.S.- their own communitie s, "Do we need to 'hire a priGeneral Manager-News Editor
famously. standing in a bound planes.
speak out more boldly vate detective to put on this
mosque with President
Cooperation isn't emo- against violence and work guy? ·rr five guys came to
Bush.
tionally easy, as Western with law enforcement. me and said, 'Muqtedar,
But five years later, the governments enact security Hundreds of U.S. mosques let's get together. Let's blow
target audience for their policies that critics say have .have signed on, al-Marayati up this and that,' then I
Congress shall make no law respecting an
would call the police . But
said.
pleas has shifted. Now the criminalized Islam itself.
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
The
Council
on the community does not
faith's American leaders arc
Safiyyah Ally, a graduate
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of starti ng to warn fellow student in political science A m e r i c a n - I s I a m i c understand surveillance."
Imam Muhammad Musri,
speech, or of(he press; or the right of the peo- Muslims about a threat from at the'University of Toronto, Relations, a civi'l rights
within.
wrote recently on altmus- group, ran a TV ad cam- head of the Islamic Society
ple peaceably to assemble, and to_petition the
The 2.005 subway attacks lim.com that Shaikh, the paign and a ·petition-drive of Central Florida, said he
Government for a redress of grievances.
in London that investigators Canadian informer, went called "Not in the Name of has tried to address this
say were committed by
f
I 1 "
h' h
d'
s am, w IC repu Jates problem in the eight
British-born and -raised too ar.
She said , the North terrorism . Hundreds of mosques he oversees in the
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
Muslims, and the relentless American Muslim commu- thousands of people have Orlando area.
Muslim-engineered sectari He regularly invites law
· .1- · nity "is fragile enough as is" endorsed it, according to
an assaults on lraqt. ctvt
enforcement
officials to
ians, are among .the events without members "spying" Ibrahim Hooper, the group's
speak with local Muslims
that have convinced some on each other. Leaders spokesman.
·
U.S. Muslim s to change should counsel Muslims , After the London subway and encourages mosque
focu s.
against violence and report bombings, the Fiqh Council members to come to him
"This sentiment of denial,. suspicious activity to police of North America, which with any suspicions, even if
that sort of came as a fever - but nothing more, she advises Muslims on Islamic they overhear something
to the Muslim community argued.
law, issued a fatwa - or said in jest. Musri says he
"We cannot have commu- edict -· declaring that noth- also speaks regularly with
after 9-11, is fading away,"
said Muqtedar Khan, a nities wherein individuals ing in Islam justifies terror- local FBI and police to
political scientist at the are paranoid of each other ism. The council said establish a relationship in
University of Delaware and and turned against one Muslims were obligated to case a real threat emerges.
"Here ' in Central Florida,
author
of
"American · another," Ally wrote.
help law enforcement proto most people, they
talking
Muslims." "They realize · Yet some leaders say teet civilians from attacks.
Dear Editor:
are
literally
upset by the
"I think everyone now
Hundreds of people turned out this past Saturday for the · that there are Muslims who keeping watch for extremfirst annual Foothills Rhythm and Blues Festival. The over- use terrorism, and the com- ists protecls all Muslims agrees that silence isn' t an actions of" Muslims - or
option," Hooper said. "You so-called Muslims - overwhelming support from local individuals and businesses munity is beginning to stand and their civil rights .
Salam al-Marayati, exec- have to speak out in defense seas in Europe and the
for this festival and others is continued evidence that what up to this."
Muslim leaders point to utive director of Muslim of civil liberties, but you Middle East, because they
Meigs County needs are more events of this type, not fewer
two
stark examples of the Public Affairs Council, all also have to speak out say, 'We wish they would
ones.
new
mind-set:
advocacy grou'p based in against any kintl of extrem- come and see how we' re
Photos from the 2006 Foothills Rhythm &amp; Blues Festival
- A
Canadian-born Los Angeles, says working ism or violence that's car- doirig here,"' Musri said.
will soon be posted . on the foundation Web site,
Muslim
man
worked with closely with authorities · ried out in 'the name of "We know who the . real
www.foothillsmusic.org. The date for the second annual
enemy is - someone who
police
for
months
investi- · underscores that Muslims Islam."
Foothills Rhythm &amp; Blues Festival is Saturday, Aug. 25,
gating a group of Islamic are not outsiders to be . But many Muslims say might come from the out- ·
2007.
men and youths accused in feared. It also gives they're being asked to look side and try to infiltrate us.
Jared Sheets
June
of plotting terrorist Muslims a way to directly out for something that even Everybody is on the look. President,
attacks in Ontario. Mubin air their concerns about how the U.S. government strug- out."
Foothills Music Foundation
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

READER'S

BY RACHEL ZOLL
AP RELIGION WRITER

VIEWS

Needed

More festivals are the ticket

jstahler@dispatoh .com

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Sept. I, the 244th day of 2006. There
are 121 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
. On .Sept. I, 1939, World War II began as Nazi
Germanv invaded Poland.
On th{s date:
In 1905, Alberta an.d Saskatchewan entered
Confederation as the eighth and ninth provinces of
Canada.
In 1923, the Japanese cities of Tokyo and Yokohama
were devastated by an earthquake that clai_med some
150,000 lives.
In 1932, New York City Mayor James J. "Gentleman
Jimmy" Walker resigned following charges of graft and
corruption in his administration.
In 1951, the United States, Australia and New Zealand
signed a mutual defense pact, the ANZUS treaty.
In 1961. the Soviet Union ended a moratorium on
atomic testing with an aboveground nuclear explosion
in central Asia.
In 1972, American Bobby Fischer won the international chess crown in Reykjavik, Iceland, defeating
Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union.
. Thought for Today: "There are no warlike peoples just warlike leaders ." - Ralph J. Bunche, American
diplomat ( 1904-1971 ).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

HAS KATIE

lOST MORE
WEIGHT?

CREDIBILITY.

$f)
EVENIN6

NEWS
W!Tft-

KJITIE.

CO URIC

The trouble with Democrats

The bookstores, journals
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
of
opinion and newspaper
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone .number. No Op Ed pages are chockfull,
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in these days, of books and
good taste, addressing iSsues. not personalities. Letters of articles on the subject of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- "What's Wrong With the
ed for publication.
Democrats?" It isn't that

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing
Co.
Published every afternoon, Monday

Our main concern in all stories is to
through Friday, 111 ·court Street,
be accurate. If you know: of an error Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class

in a sto,Y, call the newsroom at (740)

992-2156.

postage paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the·Ohio New~Jpaper Associaiion.

Our main number Ia
(740) 992-2156.
Departmant extensions are:

News
Editor: Chartene Hoeflich, E)(t. 12

Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, E)(t. 13

Poatma•ter: Send address corrections' to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Cour1
Street. Ftomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month
•t 0.27
1123.24
One yur
Dally
50'
Senior Citizen rates
One month
'9.24
One year
'1 03.90

Advertising .
Subscribers shoukJ remit in adv"""'
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 direct to the Daily sentinel. No sub~
scription by mall perrnlned in areas
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16 where home carrier service is avaii-

CilloJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12

E mall:
4

news@myd~ilysentinel.cami•
Web:
www.nlydailysentinel .com

able.

Mail Subscription
Inside Meigs County
132.26
13 Weeks
26 Weeks
'64.20
52Weeks
'127.11
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks
'53.55
26 Weeks
'107.10
52 Weeks
'214.21

NO•••
JUST SOME

they are believed to be at
death's door. On the contrary, they are widely
regarded as likely to wrest
control of the House of
Repre sentatives from t,he
Republicans this November,
and substantially improve
their situation in the gover•
no~ships ~nd state houses.
But, given the problems
President Bush is facing in
Iraq, the general deterioration of the situation in the
Middle East, the threat
posed by North Korea, the
various incidents of corruptron that have been breaking
out in the executive branch
and (mostly, though not
entirely,
among
Republicans) in Congress,
plus the fact that the .generally healthy economy is
overshadowed in the public's eyes by the continued
high price of gasoline, lhe
wonder
is
that · the
Democrats aren't widely
considered sure'to seize control of both houses of
Congress in November and
throw the Republican rascals oul of the Wh'ite House
in 2008.
Instead, the Democrats
seem totally out of fresh

William
Rusher

ideas for improving matters
either at home or abroad,
and marly confess to fearing
that Hillary Clinton, the
front-runner for their presidential nomination in 2008,
would lose to any one of
several possible Republican
nominees. What is the
explanation for thi s seeming
paralysis? If they can't win
now, when can they?
I think the explanation
may lie, at least in part , in
the structure the two major
parties have assumed in
recent years.
The Democrats have
become, more and more,
largely a coalition of minorities, each with its own spe. cia! agenda. The first of
these was the AfricanAmericans, who regularly
cast aboul 90 percent of
their
votes
for
the
Democrats. Also early on
the s~ene was a large, disaffected segment of the intelligentsia, dominant in the universities and angry at the
failure of the country to recognize its superiority and its

right to rule . Then came the
ultra-feminists, the abortion
supporters, the gay lobby,
the environmental extremists and a newly vocal pack
of secularists, openly hostile
to religion and furious at the
alleged efforts of the "religious right" to impose a
"theocracy" on society.
These are the groups that
dominate
the national
DemocratiC" Party today.
They can and do work
together, but each has its
own individual set of preoccupations, which may not
always be shared by its
allies.
(Many
black
Democrats, for example, are
no friendS\ of the pro-abortion crowd or the gay lobby,
let alone the secularists.) As
a result, the party's policy
initiatives tend to reflect the
interests of its individual
components, rather than any
larger interests that a comfortable .majority of the
nation's voters have ir\ common.
What groups of 'voters,
then, are left to , the
Republicans to appeal to and
identify with? .
Well, the whites, for one.
(The last Democratic candidate to win a majority of the
white vote was Lyndon
Johnson in 1964, nearly half
a century ago.) Men, for
another. (There's a lot of talk
about the "gender gap," but
in recent elections the mar-

gin by which men vote
Republican has exceeded
that by which women vote
Democratic.) And married
people
favor
the
Republicans by a wide margin - especially couples
with children. So, too, do
small businessmen (leaving
George Soros and his ilk as
the champions of the
Democrats).
Do you begin to get the
picture?
Recently,
the
hotter
Democratic activists have
fastened onto a new issue,
which they hope may have
more traction with the average American voter. It is a
demand that America pull
out of Iraq. Sometimes it is ·
presented delicately, as a
proposal to "redeploy" our
forces there to some other,
unstated destination by a
certain date. Sometimes it is
put f(Jrward more baldly, as
the only way to force the
Iraqis to defend. themselves.
Lots of Americans have
their doubts about our presence in Iraq. But I doubt
whether becoming known as
"the bug-out party" is what
the Democrats really need to
add to their current reputation with the American people.
(William Rusher is a
Disting11ished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

Friday, September t,

2006

,Obituaries

www.mydailysentinel.com

Dr.

Robert Jefferies Class

BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY@M YOAILYREGISTER COM

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

141
returned m Charle&gt;ton
against
several
West
Virginia doctors.
The indictment charged
Morgan. 46, with fraudu lently acquiring 'ainples of
hydrocodone from several
pharmaceutical companies
and lying to federal Drug
Enforcement Administration
agents about it.
If convicted on all

in

counts. Morgan could be
sentenced to up to 141
years in prison. The alleged
crimes occurred from 2003
through 2006.
Meanwhile. Dr. Jeffrey K.
Bates,
a
Charleston
osteopath, pleaded guilty in
federal coun to obtaining
hydrocodone by fraud.
Bates admitted to a
scheme in which he pre-

POMEROY -. Robert Jefferies "Jeff' "Siuggo" Glass.
CHARLESTON , W.Va.
. an avtd angler, btker and sports enthusiast, passed away on
Monday, Aug. 28, 2006, at Cabell Huntington ~lospilal as - Poinl Pleasant physician
Dr. Breton Lee Morgan,
the result of an ATV accident.
who
forfeited his license
· He was born on May 3. 1957, in Wyandotte, Mich., son
~f B~.tty Glass Manley of Robson, W.Va., and the late Earl earlier this year amid drug
Btll Glass. He was a 1976 graduate of Meigs Local allegations, now faces up to
Schools and has been a l_ifelong resident of Meigs County. 141 years in prison.
Morgan was included in
He was a JOurneyman tronw\)rker by trade but also held a
close affiliation with all union crafts. He was a member of federal drug indictments
iron worker Local 787 in Parkersburg, W.Va. He was very
mfluenll~l . tn the founding and governing body of I he
Dev1Is Dtctples, Ohio River Chapter. and a prottd member
of the lnternalionill Chapter of Devils Diciples.
He is survived by his wife, Robin Jones Glass, Masou,
W.Va.; a stepson. Michael Robert Jones, Mason , W.Va.; a
very spec'ial friend , Jennifer "Jersey'' Large of Pomeroy;
· hts ~other and step-father, Betty and Milford Manley.
COLUMBUS (AP)- A grand Thursday night at Ohio State
Robmson, W.Va.; a sister, Kim "Kenny" Wilt of Pomeroy ; jury indicted a man Thursday on University Medical Center, a
two meces, Jill Kranyik and Jenna Wilt; an aunt, Frances five counts of felonious assault in nursing supervisor said .
Arnold; uncles, Hap and Harry Arnold, very special broth- the shooting of a teen who had
Davis remained at the Franklin
. ers of the Ohio River Chapter Brothers Worldwide; mem- been sneaki ng around outside his County Jail in lieu of $500,000
bers of the Devils Diciples Nationwide Motorcycle CLub.
house, which she and her friends bond Thursday night. Hi s arraignHe was a lirother and a friend to all who knew him and considered spooky.
. ment was set for Friday morning.
will be sadly missed by all.
·
·
Each count returned by the
In jailhouse interviews, Davis
Services will be held at II a.m. oti Sunday, Sept. 3, 2006, Franklin County grand jury has admitted firing the rifle but
at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeml Homes. against Allen Davis. 40, carries a . said he didn't mean to hurt the
Officiating will be Rev. Steve Combs and burial will be in sentence of lhree to eight years in girls. He said, however, that they
Riverview Cemetery. Friends may call on Saturday. Sept. prison. He is accused of tiring a were juvenile delinquents and
2, 2006, from 5 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.
rifle from the hou se at a carload shouldn 't have been trespassing
In lieu of tlowers, memorial contributions may be 111ade of girls after hearing them outside al the 66-year-old house, which
to the Ohio River Club.
I he night of Aug. 22.
sits across from a cemetery.
· On-line condolences may be se nt to www.fi,herfuneralOne of the girls, Rachel
The girls and other high school
homes.com.
Barezinsky, 17, was ; hot in the . students have gone out to cemeteries
head and critically injured but had to hunt for ghosts before, the girl's
improved to fair condition father, Greg Barezinsky. has said.

scribed
thou,ahd'
of
hydrocodone pilb to a pharmaceutical represemative,
who then obtamed the pills
and gave them to him. Bates
'aid he was addicted to
hydrocodone. the U.S.
Altorney's Office said.
Bates faces up to four
years in prison and a
$250,000 tine when he is
senlenced on Nov. 20.

Man indicted in shooting of Man injured in
girl who was hunting 'ghosts' steel collapse dies
YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - One of two steel
warehouse workers injured when they fell
through a concr~te floor with tons of steel bars
died Thursday, a nursing supervisor said.
Raymond Queen, 39. was hurt Tuesday working at Penn-Ohio Logistics in Austintown
Township.
Lawrence Boatwright. 46, remained in critical condition Thursday night. said Andrea
Padach, nursing 'upervisor/at St. Elizabeth
Health Center in Youngstown.
The site was being investigated by the U.S.
Department of Labor Occupational Safety and
Health Organization.
Investigators were trying to determine
whether too much weight caused the Gollapse or
if a load was dropped improperly from the
crane .

.Deaths

Maxine M. Evans
REEDSVILLE - Maxine M. Evans, 80, of Reedsville
and formerly of Portland died Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2006 al
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Graveside services will be held I0 a.m., Saturday. Sept.
2, 2006 at the Stiversville Cemetery. Slivcrsville. There
will be no visitation . Arrangements are by WhileSchwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville.
·

Mason
from Page A1
155
cus tomers
and
emp loys about 60 area residents.
The Gallipolis and Rio
Grande restaurants wi II . be
smoke-free on Sept. 17.

More than 40 percent of
Bob Evans restaurants are
currently smoke-free, with
additional units expec ted in
the immediate future.
"We recognize thai our
customers and their families
are increasingly interested in
dining at non-smoking
restaurants," said Steve
Davis, chief executive ofticer

X-Fest
from PageA1
music has grown up as well
and is on the verge of breaking out into the next level of
success.
Part of Swamp Jeuce 's
definition of success is the
fans liking the music which
allows them 10 continue
doing what they love which
is playing live.
"This is too good not to
do something with it, we're
not doing it halfway," David
said about the band's struggle to push towards even
more success with the support of family and friends.
"We like doing it, no matter
if we're playing for three or
300 people."
The trio have been together for eight years, initially
meeting while in a country
music band which continues
to influence them though
they like to describe their
music as a·mixture of genres .
including southern rock and
heavy metal. This mixture of
influence s makes Swamp
. Jeuce feel they have something original lo offer audiences that have faithfully followed the band from show to
show, including the show at
Huntington's MonkeyBar
where the band battled for a
spot on the X-Fest stage.
"We couldn't have done it
without the crowd," Cundiff
said of the fans.
Fan support is cropping
up everywhere, like in front
of the Rutland Civic Center
where a large sign congratu-

of Bob Evans Restaurants.
"We hope that this change
will make our restaurants
more welcoming."
Bob
Evans
Farms.
Inc.ow ns and operates 587
full-service, family restaurants in 17 states primarily
located in the Midwest. midAtlantic and Southeast
regions of the United States.

In addition . the company
operates I04 Mimi's Cafe
casual restaurants located in
17 states, primarily in
California and other western
states. Bob Evans Farms
Inc. is also a leading producer and distributor of pork
sau$1lge. and a. variety of
co mplementary homestyle
convenience food items.

Treasurer

Barbara · Lawrence, Meg
. Guinther, Linda Fisher.
Pauy Cook. Alan Crisp,
Don
Dudding
Diane
Dunfee.
The following supplemental contracts. for the
2006-07 'chool year for'
approved:
Kristen
Chevalier. junior high volleyball , seventh and eighth
Chad Dodson,
grade,
marching band, pep band;
Don Dudding. Echo (high .
school newspaper), senior
play, high school student
council, Lori Hill, junior
high student council, elementary
newspaper,
Chelsea Young. volunteer ·
assistant junior high volleyball. Jessica Blaettner,
assistant band, Koste EIDabaja. quiz bowl, Nick
Dettwi ller, · eighth grade
boy's basketball, junior
varsity basebalL
Don
Dudding
was
approved to service the
Soulhern Local website for
a fe~ of $500 -for the 200607 s~ hool year.
·
The board increased
Belinda Arms work day by
one more hour. raising il
from five to six hours
making her · eli gible for
benefits.
The next board meeting is
schedul ed · fllr 8 p.m. on
Monday, Sept. 25 al
Southern High SchooL

from PageA1

photo
Swamp Jeuce's Dustin and David Mullins and Robbie Cundiff after winning the battle of
the bands, earning a space on the X-Fest concert stage this month. Brandon Woolum
(third from left) of radio station X106.3, the concert's sponsor, joined the band at
Huntington 's MonkeyBar.
Submitted

lating them is posted and from a wrttmg standpoint Swamp Jeuce be thinking
Cundiff's home has a large with lyrics that go, "It's not when they do step out in
Swamp Jeuce tapestry lhe srune, I don 't stand in line front of all those people?
attached to it that receives and I won't pray for rain."
Dustin, David and Robbie
several honks along State
The band is detiniteiy not all agreed they'd be thinking
Route 124.
standing in line now and rain of every stage in every bar
Although the band hopes or shine they will be laking they've ever played in while
to tour and record on a larg- the X-Fest stage at 3 p.m. on paying dues but more
er scale someday for now · Sept. 16 at Harris. Riverfront importantly the trio will be
they all have day jobs as, Park in Huntington.
enjoying the moment.
The band has loved rock
"We're going to play as
what else, metal fabricators.
"I like metal at night bet- music since they were kids long as they let us," David
ter than metal in the morn- with favorites like AC/DC's said of the X-Fest perforing," David joked.
''Back in Black,'' Zakk mance.
The band writes their Wylde 's Pride and Glory
Swamp Jeuce ·will be
music together and cyts from trio and Kiss' "Destroyer." opening up for nutional
their' latest CD "The Cundiff said he knew he recording acts Staind, Evans
Peachfork Session" can be was into rock and roll when Blue, Black Stone Cherry
found on' lheir website at he got in trouble for bring- and Three Days Grace.
www.myspace.com/swamp- ing Ki ss' "Love Gun"
Swamp Jeuce is also playing on Sept. 9 at Pomeroy's
jeuce. The bru1d says the song album to school.
"How Low" is getting. a good
Of course being a kid who Court Street Grill and is the
response and David, one of lik~s to listen to Kiss records opening act . for Hank
the main lyricists, feels "My i&gt; a far cry from taking the Williams. Ill on Oct. 9 at the
Gold" stands out for him stage at X- Fest. So what will MonkeyBar in Huntington .

monlh in job creation.
"Meigs County lost 27.3
percent of its jobs between
2000 and 2005, the second
from PageA1
worst performance of any
county 111 Ohio," Phillips said.
than two hundred twenty "Meigs County now ranks
thousand jobs overall. The 88th and dead last in the averTaft administration, and age earnings of a job."
current lawmakers h11ven 't
"The average job in
been doing their job.
Meigs County now pays
According to Phillips. $21.7 13 per year. This is tlw
July was the !25th consec- lowest figi.!r.e among all 8S
utive month for "sub-par Ohio counties. and Meigs
job growth" in Ohio. For County has lost 45.8% of
more. than 10 years, Ohio total paycheck earni ngs."
Bill Sams and Charlie
has been behind the rest of
spoke
for
the nation every single Adkins

Phillips

EAGLES AERIE #2171
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 2nd
9-12 PM

(Phillips) on school funding
AFSCME Council 8.
''In recent vears. there has at the state level. l k11ow she
been an all--out us saull on will work closely .with Ted
working families," Sams to make improvem~nts in
said. "We support Debbie educa1ion, health care. and a
Phillips because we know real commitment to helping
she's a hard worker, and she Ohio's economy recover." ,
has shown her commitmenl
Tim Warren and Tony
to working people."
Vcrnell spoke for OAPSE.
Chris Collins spoke for They both expressed strong
SEIU 1199, e_xpressing support for Phillips, and her
strong support for Ted efforts to fix school funding
Strickland's plan to increase in Ohio. Warren said, "HB
access to health care. and 66 (the budget bill) is like a
the imponance of having hlack cloud hanging over
supporl in the House 10 b~ schools. We're counting on
able to make improvements. Debbie to gel in there and
"I've
worked
wilh work to change it.''

The
board
recently
approved the purchase of a
bus from Marietta Truck
Sales for the price of
$7,500.
The board approved the
following long term substitutes for the 2006-07 school
year: Misty Rossiter, Angie
Smith, Mary Hill, Kim
Roush all for Southern
Elementary.
Also approved were lhe
following substitute teachers list : Patrece Beegle,
Amy Clark, Vicki Griffin,
Alllumn Lisle, Kimberly
Roush, MicheHe · Smith,
Carrie Wolfe, Jannette
Norris, Mike Struble, lise
Burris, William Downine,
Mary Hill, Cindy Parker,
Deborah Sayre, Janice
Weber, Deborah Wood.
Roxanne Williams, Teresa
Carr.
Randall
Fulks,
Melissa Holman . Nathan
Robinette , Ryan Sleigh!,
Angela Weeks. Laura Ellis.
Alan Midcap.
The board approved a
supplemental contract with
Jeff Beawr for junior high
football.
The following lisl of
· teachers as mentors were
approved: Patti Struble,

A!!!~!~

l'rench Coloney Chorus
Adelines Concert
Sl!turday. Sept. 9
7:30
Fall classes begin the
week of Sept. 10
Register Now
Ballet, Modem. Jazz,
Ballroom, String, Acting,
Sta~ Makeup, Puppetry,
i'!,.':("en's Acrobies
I 740-IWI-ARTS
The Ariel- Dater Hall
42M Sec. Ave. Galli':'!li5, OH
740-446-A RTS 2787l
S\~eet

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

Dr. Kdy ll 1om Hendricks
CHIROPRAQOR

s. . . ~ ~~'

Auto Accidents
Worker's Compensation
• Sport~ hlJUrll"•
• M&lt;.'di (Ure

• ~hht ln,llmn,.... ,
• ~ ••m.· Ju~ urr •

• ,, cu puno:nJt~

GOOFY GALA OJ AND KARAOKE
KITCHEN OPEN

C'lnn&gt;pr:lc hlr &lt;&gt;I thr ) c·~r
19Yk
\ .P W\ C'h1 rr• rr: 1d1 ~

=304-273-5321

3 t6 Washington St

M l• mP~!

111 \mc·ric·.m

ll•• uU,,, Flln'll•l,;
l'n ,,,., &gt;I&lt;Jn ,,),
:!P' r• &lt;' \ (lerl&lt;' ll l&lt;'
,\ km ~ r 111 \m ~n.·.m
\ c'.l d~nl~

,.,

~j ,•JJ,·al

l.i.'Up llll c"! Ufl'

Ravenswood. WV

�PageA6

FAITH • VALUES
- --- A Hunger For More
How good it is ••• or can be

The Daily Sentinel

l'arl II
Ont"

gray

and

gloomy

mon11n~.

"hen the 'l'mhcr
clouds hung co.pecially hem}
in the sl-y. Ab1gaJI anti Anne
'"'ere roughly 1nu~ed and di~­
patcheJ to a craggy knoll Ill
-...eareh fur berries for
M&lt;)hjac \ brew. Be lore linally Jepalling. th&lt;'Jr lcrrihle
'ib.tvc

mast~·r-. .

s,i\ iJl!ClY

\hoo~

them. holdi ~~ ~ thcn1 ;JI,,fl h}
the chaino. d.unpetl ahou l
lh~tl ned.. ,. Wtth drv and
r:hpy ' oiccs !hey cursed them
.md ww·n,·d them !hal !he\
each had to till !heir haskcis
!hat day lesl !he) be especial!) puntshcd with heatings amJ
other l.'llll'll'Hlllenh.

They were Jropped to the
ground whe-re they lay quietly. their hlue llllted linger'
dutchu1~ at thc1r throats as
they gasped r,),. hrt•o~th Then
lllrmcmors lei I them amJ they
l&lt;~y fnr a lung \.d1tl~ '-l...tnng up
at the uncarinp. clmtds J)asstng o;crhcmJ. Alter a whtk.
Anne slirrcd. re.1ched out and
touched Ab1g,u l reassuring ly.
.md then bcg.m the cltmh up
the pgged rocks to a dump
of scr:.~gg l y bushes. Abigail
took a moment longer to rise,
-trugg lmg With th~ icy li ngers ol despat r th.tt o,eenwd to
~ri p her hc'&lt;ll1. Utterly bevond
even fee li ng bttter. her hopelessn~ss shrouded her llllllU
nnd heart Slowly. her fo~ l ter­
lllg feet amomattcal ly began
the :!'cent up the htl l towarJ,
another bu'h that her now
tearlcss eyes had spted
As. they worked, ptck ing
the foul-smellmg, blooo-colnred berries !~o m th orn v
branc hes. thcv bega n to wl k
about ki nd tie,ses shared
betwee n them in the p.1st. The
bnef, but pleasunt memori es
of those times ted their hungry soul s a few small crumbs
of cornfott But a shadow circled overheat.! ·that d1d not
mO\e wi th the clouds.
Unnouced by !he girls whose
·eyes were focused downward
upon th~ monotony of their
work. a lurge ra'en spi raled
m descent unttl it alighted
onto a tangle of branches.
Hidden ,unongst the shadows
of dead and dcc,tying leaves
that hut.! yet 1cfu sed tn tall to
the ground, the large bird
SJ ie ntly observeu the gi rls
l.t bor, cock ing it&lt; he;\d at
ead1 word that wa., smd.
"Oh." Abi ~~tlmoaned anxIOusly us the day's light began
to Litle "I can't seem lo lind
enough henies and our time is
nearly over " Anne. who had
scarcely more than did
Ab1gm l. sm1led and chee1ily
said, "Not to wo11y There are
lots over here. You can ha ve
some ol mme." Wnh th at,
Anne dipped into her ow n
haskct. carcti.1lly 'ereening 1ts

•

ing the wmth that woul d soon
befall her. And then the slave
masters returned. In a
moment, they assesse(l that
Abigail's basket was satisfacPastor
tory but that Anne's was not.
Thorn
They lay hold of Abiga1l and
Mollohan Anne and returned them to
their shed. They chamed
Abigail to a wall but then, in
Abigail's presence, began to
beat Anne as they had never
contents from Ahigail\ view
and then deposited a larg~ beaten her before. She was
struck so many times with
handful of henies.
their rods that sbe soon could"Tilank you," Abigai I
hre.llhcd gratefull y, as Anne n' t even cry out anymore.
hastily tumcd away &lt;md went They laughed and mocked
her but whether she could
back to the other side of the
bush. Hidden on the other side hear them or not was unclear
of the bush, &gt;he teveri&gt;hly to Abigwl. who, in her terror,
W()rked to make up for her could only try in vain to shut
lack of ben·ies. re&lt;K:hi ng deep out the sight and sound of her
11110 the br&lt;mche&gt; of the bush, friend's torment. But there
the long and cntel !hams of could hardly have been any
pain more biting and severe
l h l~ plant culling into her tles h
than
the strange and unexuntil he1 arm was streaked
pected
feelings of guilt and
with blood. Just as their ti me
condemnation
that came from
was new ly over. the berri es
·
drew level wllh the tops of he• betrayal ·of Anne.
Our
circumstances
in
life
thetl• basket&gt;. nley had done
are
often
"un
fmr"
and
overit! Perhaps they would not be
beaten th.Jt night ' A1me placed whelming. But circumstances
her basket dow n on the do not make our character:
ground and began to sing hap- they reveal it. How do you
pil y. Her face lilied up and she face difficull or adversity?
o,aw o1 small white bloom in What is your typical response
th e rLx:~s above them. barely to trials and tribulations? Do
visihlc 111 the grayness of the moments of pain or fear
W&lt;ming day light. An excla- become rationali zations for
maJ ion or joy burst from her "subtle, little betrayals" and
Iips ancl she sprmtg towards it moments of compromise in
your life'! Are your cl)oices
"' she cm1ld see 1t better.
Ah1gail also began to move simply "reactions" to your
1owmds tl1e sight. hut when ctrcumstances that pull you
she attempted to set her basket deeper into the slavery of vict.lown on the ground as well, timi zation '! Or are they
the basket tipped over on the "responses" that come from a
uneven rocks. Too late did her daily abiding in Christ Jesus,
hand grab the basket, trying in allowing you to freely be
vam to set 1t nght. Her benies whal you were created to be?
hounced and spilled out Only Jesus can give you a
rolling down into the midst of secure sense of hope and a
the rocks &lt;Uld instantly disap- lasting perspective of victory.
peari ng into cracks and Only Jesus, our eternally
crevices Horror gripped rei gning Savior and beloved
Ab1gail and she momentarily Son of God, can free us from
lost her voice. But tl1en she the slavery of merely reactmg
glanced up at Anne and saw to our circumstances and the
that her back was still tumed powerlessness of feeling that
towards her. Without thinking, we just can't help but make
she reached into Anne's bas- the poor choices that we do.
"I consider thai the sufferket. grasped as large a handful
ings
of this present time are
as she could and then placed it
into her own. Again, she not worthy to be compared
slipped her hand into Abigail's with the glory that is to be
basket a11d took &lt;mother hand- revealed to us. For the anxfLil, holdutg,her breath, hopmg ious longing of the creation
that Anne would not seec She waits eagerly for the revealcarefull y tumect Anne's basket ing of the sons of God"
on it~ side. and then scrambled (Romans 8:18-19 NASB).
Tu be conlmued ...
away from 11. The raven still
(Thorn Mollohan and his
clingi ng to its branch wit)l
ebony talons. watched silently family have ministered in
southern Ohio the post II
with an evil glint in !Is eye.
"Anne !" Abigail cried. years. He is the pastor of
"Your basket!'' Anne's head Pathway
Community
v. hirl ed amund and her eyes Church, which meets on
l(&gt;eused on what was left of Sunday mornings at the Ariel
her hard work. As her eyes TheaJre. He may be reached
dran k m the scene before her. for comments or questions by
all color let\ ller face. She e-milil at postortlwm@pathstood frozen in place, know- waygallipolis.com).

" Behold, how good and
how pleasant it is for
brethren (kindred) to dwell
togeth er in uni ty (as one, '"
peace,
in
harmony), ..
(Psalm 13 3. I, NKJV
w/amphlic'atlon)
The old P(Lritan. Matthew
Henry, points out that unity
among the people of God is
a kind of concord marked
by "Je lightm g in each other
with mu tu al endearments,
and promotmg elJch other 's
welfare with mut ual services ... to dwe ll even us
one, having one heart. one
soul, one mtcrest."
A very apt and appropriate description. indeed. vet
also unfortunately vety 1:ire.
The Hebrew people eventuall y divided the Promised
Land into two kmgdoms.
The onl y poin t on whic h the
Saddu cees and Pharisees
seemed to agree was the
need to ge t nd of Jes us. and
eve n Sts Paul and Barn abas
had enough of a qui bble to
part company. '
Read but the First Epistle
to the Connthi ans and you
see a church ri fe wi th controversy and dtvis!On. And
do we eve n rea ll y know
how man y hu nd re&lt;.ls anti
thousand s of Christi ans
have died at the hands of

Friday, September 1, 2006

would have them treat us.
\Ct Matthew 7. 12)
If we do not want to be
slapped in the face. then we
probabl~ should not go
around slapping people. I (
we Jo not want to be cheated. 11len we probably shoul d
not cheat others If we do
nnt care to be insulted by
folk&lt;. then w~ ought to be
careful whnr we say about
I ia111ly. friends and mem- ·
her' of our communuy.
On the other hand, if we
wan! hdp in time of need,
"e should leam to help others. If we wan t frie ndship,
then we ought to be fnendly. If we destre respect, we
need to truly respec t others.
If we wo uld like to live in
uni ty and concord. then we
should sow seeds of harmony rather than acrimony and
sdl!SII1.
We should do to. for and
wuh others as we wo uld
. have them do to, for and
with us. And the n. be hold,
how surprised we might be
to find ourse lves dwelling
111 , 1f not perfect then at least
greater unity. peace and harmony with our kindred in
C hrist and, really, probably
everyone around us.
''Behold. how good and
how pleasa nt .. .'' Amen.

Rev.
Jonathan
Noble
PASTOR.
TRINITY CHURCH

othe1 Christians O\CI' 1hc
pa&lt;t two thousand year'
often m 1he Name or Chri,t'
But do you know that it
really is po-sihle to love
someone wllh wlwm vou
may disilgrce wi lhout idving up what you believe or
smTIIicin~ deeply held convictions? Do vou kmm that
tl re,tl ly "po~sihle to live in
peace and h&lt;Jrmo ny wtth
other people. espcci,il ly fe llow be lievers. withottt neee,...,ari !y compromisi ng your
principle-''
Yc.., _ t hc tL' arl.! times when

disllUte;. a1 1d 'trugglcs are
inn!lahlt
But
for
ChristJans. at lew.t. an awtu l
lot of tho'e contl tch and
controversic' cmtl ci be .11
least min im1zed bv s1mplv
and r.Jithfull y practicino the
Golden Rule - thut is.
ll eating others at all times
and 111 every stl uatJu n as we

Local Church Briefs
Benefit
gospel sing

Concert, car
show planned
MIDDLEPORT
Victory Baptist Church wi ll
have a "SO:s" Concert, I I
a. m. to 4 p.m., on Sept . 9.
The church plan s a bluegrass gospel concert with
"The Blueg rass Gospel
Gentlemen. I to 4, wi th
James l&lt;eesee II as soloist.
Other activities inc lude
an ant iqu e car di spl ay and
a Bake sale, ice c ream
s6cial and hot dogs, sponsored
by
Ladies
Mi ssionary Group.
Those attendin g should
bring a lawn chair, as the
concert will be he1d outside,
weather permitting.

the Fall Harves t Gospel
Si ng 1n Ru tland , Oct. 20
and 21.

HARTFO RD, W. Va. Hart rord Church of Chnst
m Chnsuan Umon Will hold
a benefit gospel sing at 6
p.m. on Sa rurday, with '
Me1cy. He nry and Hester
Ebli n. Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Mc Kenzte. Mall Scott and
Ct1-Pil ot. dnd Brwn and
Family Connections.
The si ng is a benefit for

Harvest
festival set
RACINE - The annual
harvest fest ival of St. John
Lutheran Chu rc h w1l l begin
wi th a wmshtp service at II
a. m. on Sept 10, foll owed
by a potlu ck at noo n. Robert
Gi bson is the pastor.

look .11 thl'lll'-the.., DbJct:tJvd~. and can

lnth1s

HO M I.
W UCH
HON ESTV

v1ew. lhe

health~ pmon docsn'l have 10 '"I" "" :1 101
ol unc'mnlon.tbk tac1s about themselve;.
The vlher sc·hool of 1hought 011 u1is issue.

say:-. th.1t v.e tend to hehe\e onl y those things
tiMt enh.uiCt' ou 1 overal l well -1-x:lng, Llltd lhdt
tlw; help... u~ to hd tt'\t: cel1 aln i i1li~JOns.
Smce llll ~ Udll y makes us IMppy to bel u.!w

r

VIM WWW.mydailysentinei.COm and click lhe blue button

tha1 weare abm·c ,Jictagc .. md more hkely to
havca 'uccessful future. 1he11 this is good

\\\.' ha\\.' to bt' Sllnlt?\dlill ,JLL'll!:tle clhDllt
nur~ehl''&gt; 111 o1Jer to tunLtintl ... month ly in
"Cli.IC'h (iuJ\\hnK.fluV.o,llUI hearh\\OUJd
\~ .\'It lh to bt·IHJll~~l wnilnut..,dws.
~\j'ICL'ii.dJ) \lvhCilliLOillC.s to judgm ~ Olll"

l,tult.., .\nJ. ,)ur believing dnd uuslnH! 111
v.h.t\1:'1 n!:!.llt c.m have Wlmfluence oil our
'l UlCI.:...,., nf t;:u lurt".
.\o.-juit/1 is the as.mrm1ce oj'1hi11gs /loped
lhf'
. L

rom'ictimz of thing.\' 1101 \'Cell.

1/ebrew ~

11.1

Michelle Kennedy

Localt.:d less than 30 m m~llt'"~ from
A t h~ns . Pom~wy or Parkcr...hm!.!

Dtm:to1 nt M.ukt:tmg c~1Hl Admtsstons

1·740·667·31 56

-

"Still small e11ough to care"

SYRACUSE

740-949-2210
"A Home Bank for ·
Hom,e People" fg)j
17401 992-645 I

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.

Both ol these' 1ews ha\t~ a !!nun uf truth
The per..,on wllll 1~ nvcrl) oJjlimbtJC about
Lhc1r pnl..,pt.-ct . . tOt the liJiure m how
well-hked thev arc ll'CI, ~n&lt;Jd about

tllem-.LI\~'- .m-U I" l1kcl\. ln dl ll1 hwher
&lt;md
e
d(• hcttcr .-\11d ~~~ ~·t)UN.:. the tlther !-~Chool
tl! ti11)Ut!.ht j..,Jigltt 111 ~X)]Jlling out that

Coolville. Ohto

Racine, OH
P.O Box 683
Pomero , Ohio 45769·0683

740-949-2217

I

Page Streel
(740) 992-6472
M1ddleoor1 OH Fax (740i .992-7406

333

f\&lt;1 1111 f fJI 'IItJII
AIIIIPiflht'le

Hom s

Homemade [)esserts Made Datly
Ilome

Cr~uAcd .Weal.~

-Church of Christ

Ltberty Assembl} or God
PO Box 467, Duddtng Lane, Ma~on,
\\' Va , Pastor Net I Ten n ~nt, !Iunday
Servtce~- 10·00 a m and 7 p m

Baptist
Pugevlllt Fretwlll Raplisl Church
Pas10r Mtke Harrnnn , Sunda) Sc hool
9 30 to 10 30 am. Worship M!rvtce HI ~0
to 11.00 am. Wed. preachmg 6 pm
Carpt.'nlt r Baptist Church
S1.:huol · 9·JOam Preachmg
Ser~• tce
10 JOam, Evenmg Servtce
HXlpm, Wedne&amp;day Btble Study 7 00 pm.
lnlenrn Preacher · Fl oyd Ros s

Sunda}

Ches hire Haptisl Church
Pastor Steve L1Uie, Sun day SlhOOI 9 30
am, Momtng Worshtp 10 30 am. '
Wednesday IJtble Stud) 6 JOpm, chotr
practu:e 7 30: youth and Otble Dudd1t!S
6 30 p rn Thurs I pm book study
Hopl' Baptist Churth !Southern )
570 Grant St . Mtddlepon. Sunday ~l· h nol
9.30 u m Wors htp I I am. nnd 6 p.m .
Wednesday Serv1ce 7 p 111 Pastor Gary
Elhs
Rutland First Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School - 9 JO a m.. Wor~ln p 10 45 a 111
Pumt!roy Fin t &amp;ptlst
P a~ tor Jon
Brockrm, East Mam St ,
Sunday Sch 9.30 am . Worsh1 p 10 JO am
f&lt;'irst South ~rn Baptist
41 872 Pomeroy P1 k~. P.1stor E Lumar
O"Bryn nt. Sunda)' School • IJ 30 n m
Worsh tp · 8 15 am , q 45 am &amp; 7 00 p m
Wednesduy Serv1ces · 7 00 p m
First Baptist Churrh
Rilly Zu~pa n 6th and Palmer St
Mtd dleport Sunday School . 9 15 am,
Worship
10 I S a.m , 7 00 p m .
Wednesday Service- 7:00 p m
Pa~tor

740-992-77 13

lf ye abide in Me, and My
words abide i11 ymt, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be dmw u11tu you.
Jolm 15:7

Sizes avatlable 5x1 0 to 10 ·x 20

The Hppliance man
740-985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769
1740) ~92 .J27 9
litI Frec 1-877-SSJ. NJJ

Old Bethel Free Will Raptl !il Chureh
28 ti01 St Rl 7. Midd leport, Sundoy
Se rvice. 10 11.m. 600 p.m Tuesda)
Ser v t ~es -6·00

Failh Baptl§t Church
Railroad St , Mason. Su nd ay School . 10
11m Wnrs ht p · I I a.m.. 6 p m,
Wedn esday Servtces. 7 p m
Fmu t Run Baptist- Pomeroy
Rev Joseph Woods, Sunday School .. 10
a m.• Worship · l l:30a.m
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Mam St , Mtddlepurt. Pa~tor
Rev Gilbert Crdtg, Jr, Su nday Sehoul 9 JO u m.. Wur~h1p · 10 45 am

&amp; Oaily~pi!Ciall

Open 7 Joys a week

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
Si Mtddteport, OH
740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues 1-shtrts and mo re

190 N Second

Catholic

Assembly of God

6 .1111 - 8 pm

Yvfi[[ie's 'R,gstaurant

Rulland FrH Will Baptist
Salem St. P~~tor Jam•&lt;" Fo11tt~:r. Sunda)
School • 10 11m, E'enm~ . 7 p m.
Wedne,day Serv1ce~ • 7 p m
S«ond Rapti~t Church
Ra\en.wood. WV. Sunday School Ill dm·
Mommg v.nrsh1p II am Eventng • 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p m

Emmanuel Apostolic Ta~rn ac' le Inc,
Loop Rd off New Ltma Rd Rutland
Sen.tces Sun 1000 am &amp; 730 pm,
Thurs 7.00 p m, Paotor Many R Htmon

Hill5idc Bwptlsl Chun:h
Sr Rt. 143 JUSt ofr Rt . 7. Pustor Rev
James R Acree . Sr, Sunday Untfted
Sem~c Wursh1p · 10.30 a.m , 6 p m ,
Wedm:~day Servtce~ . 7 p.m

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

10 45 am Sunda) E\tn1ng 6.00 p m
P.Jstur Don Wulker

Sacred Heart Ca tholic Churc h
161 Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy. 992 5898.
P11stur Rev Walter E Hemz . Sal. Con
• 4 45-S 15p m; M11ss- 5 30 p.m .. Sun.
Con -B 45-9 15 11. m., Sun M a~~ . 9 ~0
am. Daily Mass. 8 30 am.

VIctory Baptist Independent
525 N 2nd St M1ddl epon, Pa.'ltor· James
E Keesee, Worship · lOam, 7 p m .
Wednesd11y Servtces. 7 p m

~ll!!9!!._, 209 Third St.
~&amp;;;'"- R~cin e, OH

(.,.llfiiO

Rwer Vall ey
Rtver Valley Aposlollc Wouh tP Center.
873 S 3rd
PM, Mtddlepon, Rev
M1chael Brndford. Pastor. Sundar. IU 30
am Tues 6·30 prayer 'Wed 7 pm Btble
Study

Bethlehem Baptllt Church
G r~ at Bend, Route 124, Ractne, OH ,
Pastor Ed Caner, Sunday School . 9 30
a m , Sun day Worshtp · 10 :30 a m ,
WcdnescL1y B1ble Study- 7 00 p m

Smile! Now you can own the prcrure of that unforgettable
moment captured in tt1 e newspaper Photos become llmeless
when framed printed on a mug or mouse pad.

-

'. 1

Church or Je!iu.s Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Wan[ Rd , PU)IOf Jame\
Mtller. Sunday s~hool • 10 30 ~.m.,
Evenmg · 7 :,0 p m

Ml, Uolun Baptlllt
Pa stor Den ms Weaver Sunday School9 4S a. m.. Evenin&amp; · 6.30 p m ,
Wedne5 day Services· 6:30p.m

SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Communi ty Church, formerly
the
Sy racuse
Presbyterian Church wi II be
having Sunday school at I0
a.m . Sunday. under the
direction of Dan and Faith
Hayman.

CAN
V:QU
'
I1
HANd lE?
popul,u \\ 1th certain cogniti"'e psychologists.

rccognlt:t;" l.ht: tr !milts.

Apostolf~

Sliver Run Baptllt
Pastor Jnh n Swanson, Sunday School •
lO a m , Worshtp .. 11a m., 7 00 p m
,Wednesday Sef\lices. 7:00 p m.

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

,u·e \1\'0 schoob or though! within
p~ychnl ,lg) L"Oilt:l.!ming the v.tlue of honesty.
One school. .tliened wnh traditional
P"-~Lhtdtl). "·'!~ l!Mt a hecthhy pcr~on can

Ftllowshio

Rlicine Fln t Bwptlsl
Pastor Joseph Godwm, mtenm pastor ,
Sunday Sc hool - 9: 30 a m , Worsht p .
10 40 a m , 7.00 p m , Wcdnesda)
Servaces. 7.00 p.m.

Sunday School
planned

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

WORSHIP GOD'TJ..ns WEEK~"''~ ..,...,......,

Friday, September 1, 2006

Antiquity Baptist
S un day · S~hoo l - 9 30 Ull,

Wor~ h 1p.

Wes1s1de Church of Ch rist
33226 Children's Home Rd. Pomeroy. OH
Conlact 740-441-1296 Sunday mommg
10.00. Sun murm ng B1bl\! study,
fo llowmg Y..Orsh1p Sun e\e fi 00 pm
Wed b1ble study 7 pm
Ht ml ()(k Grove Chrlstlan Church
~1Lm s t e r · Larry Brown. Wor~ h 1p . 9 1U
am Sunduy School · 10 30 am, Btble
Study 7 p m
Pomeroy Church of &lt;': hrlsr
212 W Mam St Sunday School . 9 30
am . Worshtp 10 JO am, 6 p m
Wed nesday Serv1ces 1 p m
Pomeru} Weslsld e Church of Chrh l
33226 Chtldren's Hume Rd , Sunday
School- I I am. Wurshtp· lOu m .6 p111.
\\-ednesday Sef\111.:e~ · 7 p m.
Middleport Church of l: hrb:t
5th an d Mam. Pas tor AI Hartson
Chlld rcns Dtrector: Sharon S.1yre 'f"cen
Director Dodger Va ughan Sun!I.Ly S~hno l
9JOa.m.'Worsht p·X:15 I O~am 7
p m. Wednesday s~ r v tces - 7 p m
Keno Church uf Christ
· 9 30 am .. Sunday School
10 JO a.m , P.o~stor-Jeffrey Walluu: lsi and
Jrd Su 11da)'
War~h 1 p

Brarwallow R1dge Chun:h or Christ
Pastor Bruce Terry. Sunda) School ·9 30

•m
Wors h!p · 10 30 am. 6 30 pm
Wednesd.1y Servtce~ · 6 ~0 p m
Zion Chu~h of C hri ~l
Pomeroy. Hurnso nvLIIe Rd (Rt 14~).
Pasto r Roger W11110n Sunday School ·
930 u m. WorshtP, - 10 30 a.m. 700
p m.. Wednesday Servlces · 7 p m
Thppen Plain Church of Cbrlst
In strum ental, Worsht p S~rv t ce ~ 9 am ..
Communion · 10 a.m . Sunda} S~ hool .
10.15 a.m, Youth · 5:30pm Sunday, B1 ble
Study Wedllesday 7 pm
Bradbury Church or Chrilt
Mmt8tc r· Tom Run yon , 39558 Bradbury
Road, Mtddlepon , Sunday School . 9 30

am
Worsh1p. 10 30 a m.
Rutland Church of Chrlat
Sunday School · 9 30 a.m .. Worship and
Communion - 10.30 a.m .. Bob J. Wercy,
Mimster
Bradford Churth of Christ
Comer of St Rt. 124 &amp;: Bradbu ry Rd .,
Mmtster Doug Shamblin, Youth Mtmster:
B1ll Amberger Sundll) School . 9 30 a m,
Worsh1p ·R OO i!m, 1030 a m , 7·nn
p m ,Wednesda} Ser. tces · 7 00 p m
Hlck.or} Hill ~ Church orChrl~t
Plo. ms Pastor \i tkc Moore, Btble
class, 9 a m Sundny: wors h1p 10 a m
Sunday: worship 6:30 pm Su nday: Btble
class 7 pm Wed
Tu ppe r~

Retdsvllle Church of Christ
Pastor Philip Stunn . Sunday School. 9.30
am., Worship Sen ice. 10.30 a,m , B1ble
~tudy, Wed11esd~y. 6.30 p.m
Dnler Churth of Christ
Sunday school9:30 am, Sunday 'Wors htp
· 10·30 a m
Th e (: hurch of Christ or Pomeroy
ln te rsectton 7 and 124 W Eva nge list·
Den ms Sarge nt Sunda} Btble Study ·
9 30 a.m , Worsh ip. 10 30 a.m and 6.30
p rn .. Wednesd01y B1ble Study· 7 p.m.

Christian Union
H•rtrord Chun:h of Christ In
Cbrisllan Uhlon
Hartford, W.V~, Pasto r Oa\td Greer,
Sunday School - 9 30 am . Worshtp ·
10 30 am ., 7 OU p m . ' Wedneroay
Serv•ces · 7 UO p m

Church of God
Mt . Moriah Church of God
Mt lc H1ll Rd, RaCine, Pn~t m James
S.n1erftcld Sun d.1y School . I) 45 u m ,
.6

740·594·6333

Products+

Ftnanctal

·
Servtces
AGENC IES Inc

BUSI NESS SERVICES
A11 A.ccou11ti11g &amp;

Financial Sen'ice~ Firm
61~

E Mam Street • Purn~roy
( 7401 Q92 -7270

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
· 9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

9 30

Lon1 Bottom
Sunday School · 9:)0 am . WorihLp •
10 30 8.01
Reedsville
Vforship - 9·30 a,m, Sunday School •
10 3011 m .. Ftrst Sunday of Month ·1:00
p.m ~rvtce

Syr ~tCUSt First Chun:h or God
Apple and Sccood S1s, Pastor. Rev. Da, td
Russc:ll. Sunday S~hoo1 and Wunhtp· 10
a m Evenmg Servtces· () JU p m .
Wedne!&gt;day Serv1ces • 6 30 p m.

Chun:h or God or Prophecy
OJ Whtte Rd o!TSt Rt 160, Pastor- PJ
Chapnwn Sunday School - 10 am
Worship I ! a m , Wednesday Servtces 7

Thppen Plains St . Paul
Jane Bealtte, Sunday School 9
am, Worship· 10 a.m ., Tuesday S~rvtces
• 7 3Up Ill

Congregational

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse) Pastor Bob Robmson.
Sunday School · q 45 a m , Worshtp · J 1
am , Wednesday Servtce~. 7 30 p m

Trlni t) Chun: h
Second &amp; l~nn , Pomeroy, Pastor Re\"
Jonathan Noble, Worsh1p I0 25 a m ,
Sunda) School Y I'i a m

Enterprise
Pas10r Ar!and Kmg. Sunday School .
10 30 am .• Worshtp - 9·30 am. B1ble
Study Wed. 7 30
Flillwoods
Pasror Ke•th Rader, Suntl11y Sl.;hool . 10
am, Worshtp- 11 u n

Episcopal
Grace EptiiCOpl:l l Church
326 E Mam St . P(lmcroy. Sut]day School
and Holy Euclm.nst I1·00 a m Rev
Edwru-d Puyn_e

Holiness

FomtRun
Pastor Bob Robmson. Sunda) School- lO
am ,Wor-ohtp-9am

Community Churth
Pastor: Steve Tomek, Mam StreeL
Rutland, Sunday Wuf!lhlp-- 10 00 am,
Sunday SefY!Ce-7 p m

Heath (Middleporl)
Pastor Bnan Dunham. Sunday School .
9·30 am . Worsh•p 11·00 am

IJanvillr Holiness Church
31057 State Route 325. Langsvll e, Pastor
VKtor Roush. Sunday school . 9 30 a m .
Sunday worship • 10 30 a m &amp; 7 p m ,
Wed nesd~y prayer «&lt;:mce . 7 p m
Ca lury Pil grim Chapel
Hamsonvtlle Rnad. Postnr· Charles
Mc Kenzie. Sunda) School 9.30 u m.
Worsh tp · II a m.. 7 00 p m Wed nesday
Servtce 7 00 p m

~uri

Chapel·
Sunday Sc hool · 9 a m , Wursh1 p · 10 am
Pomeroy
Pastor Br tan Du nh am, Wcrsh!p • 9 30
am Sunday Sc hool- 10 35 am

Rose or Sharon Holiness Church
leadmg Crct:k Rd , Rutland. Pastor Rev
IJe.,.e~ K111g. Su11day S1.: hool· 9.30 a m .
Sunday worship · 7 p m , Wedne sday
prayer meetmg· 7 p m

Rork Spring'
PMtor Ke1t h Rader. Sunday School · 9 15
u m Wo r ~ h1p . lO am , Youth
Fellow~ htp . Sunday 6 p.m

Pine Grove Rtble Holiness Church
l/2 mtle off Rt U5 Pa~tor ReV O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School . 9·30 am ,
Worsht p - 1030 am, 7.30 pm.
Wednesday Servtte 7,10 p.m
W~ sleyul'l Blbl~ llolint!SS Church
75 Pearl St , Mtdd lepot1 Pll~ttlr. R1d:
Bourne, Sunda&gt; Sehoul · 10 am Wun;fup
- 1045 pm .. SunJa) Eve 7 110 pm . .
Wedllt'sday Se rvtce · 7 30 p m

Rutland
Pastor Rtck Bourne, SUnday Sehoul .
9 30 ~ m., Wor~ lup - 10 30 :1 m , Thu rsday
Serv t~es · 1 p.m
Satem &lt;.:enter
P.1stor W1lham K Marshal l, Sunduy
SdlOOI · 10 15 a m. Worship· 9 J5 am,
Btble Study Monday 7 00 pm
Snowvlltt
Sunday School· IDa m . Worship . 9 am
Bfthany
Paswr John Gtlmore. Sunday School . 10
am , Worsh1p . 9 a.m . Wednesda}
Strvtces 10 a.m.

Laurel Clift' Free Methodlsl Church
Pastor Glenn Rowe. Sund ay Schoo l .
9 30 a m : Worilu p - 10 30 am and 6
p m ,Wednesday Scmce. 7:00pm

Carmei-Sulton
Carme l &amp; Bu han Rds. Racine , Ohi o.
Pa~ tor . Joh n Otlmorc, Sunday School •
9. 30 a m , Worship - 10:45 a.m , Btblc
Study Wed. 7 00 p.m

Lutheran

St. John lutheran Chunh
t
Pme Grove, Wurshtp · 9 00 a m , Surn.luy
S~houl - 10.00 a.m Pastor James P
Brad y
Our Saviour l.ulbenm t: hurch
Wa lnut and Henr} Sts, R a~e n swood.
W Va , Pastor Dav1d Russe ll. Sund,,y
Slhool · 10 00 am. Wonh1p · II am
St . Paul Luthera n Ch•trrh
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St P01t1Cro).
Sun School · 9 43 am , WorShip· 11 a.m .

United Methodist
Graham United Mfthodisl
Wor.:;hl p I I :.. 111 Pastor Rtchanl Nease
Bechtel United Mclhodi~ t
N~w Haven. R1chard Nease. Pastor.
Su nda) worship I} 30 a m Tue~ 6 30
praye r and Btble Stu dy
Mt . Oli\ e United Methodist
Off 124 beht nd Wil t e~'·il l e. Pastor Rev
Ralph Spue~. Sunday School · 9 ~0 a rn.
Worsh1p · 10 :m am. 7 p m. Thur!idlly
Serv1ces 7 p m
Meigs Cooperatin Paris h
Northeast Cluner, Alfred P&lt;~~tur Jane
BeattJe Sunday School . 9 30 am ,
Worshtp-11 a.m.630pm
Ches ter
Jane Beatue, Worshtp . \;1 a m .
Su nda)' School · 10 am
ThurM.la~
.Sen"es • 7 p m
Pa~tor.

Other Churches

··l"ftdom Vospel l'-ll!iSion
Bald KnOO on Co Rd 3\. !-'astor Re~
Roger Willford. Sunday School . 9 30
a m Worshtp- 7 p m
White's Chapel Wtdtyan
Coolvtlle Road Pastor. Rev Philltp
Rtdennur, Sunday School . 9 30 a m
Worlihtp 10 30 am, Wednesday Sen tce
-7 pm
Fairview Bible Church
Letan, WVa Rt I. Pastor Bnan Ma) ,
Sunday S\:hool !"I.J 3U am .. Worship. ?:00
p m. Wedne..Uay Btble Stud) · 7 00 p m
fulth Fe llo\1 ~hi p Crusade for Christ
Po~ t ur Re\ Franklin D tckc n ~ Senile
Frtday 7 p m

A New Jk.&amp;inDina
(Full Gospel Chu rth) Hamsonvtlle.
Pustoi~ Bob and Kay Mmha ll
Sunday SL'rY!ce . 2 p m
Amazing Grace Community Chur"h
Pastor. Wayne Dun lap S1a1e Rt 6B 1.
Tuppers Plam~. Sun Worshtp. 10 um &amp;
6 30 pm, Wed Btble Study 7.00 p m

Culvvr) Bibl" Chunh
Pomero} Ptke Co Rd . Pastur. Re\
Blackwood, Sunday Sch\1111 · 9 ..~0 am ,
Worsh!p 10 30 a 111.. 1 JO p.m.
WednesJa} S~f\'ICe · 7 30 p m

Oasis ( hnSiian Fellowshtp
(Non-denominauonal felluwshtpt
Mee tmg m the Metgs Mtddle School
Cafelena Pastm Chns Stewan
I0 00 am · Noon Sunday. Infonnal
Wo~ htp, Chtldren' s mtntsny

Sti wr~\ lll e Com munih

C"mmunlt) of Chri.st
Ponland-Raune Rd, Pastor J1m Proff111.
Sunday S1.:hool · 9.30 am Wur\hLp .
10 30 am , Wed n~sdav Semces . 7 ()()
Betbel "orship Center
39782 S R 7. Reedsvtlle. OH 45772. I I ~
mile nonh of East~rn Slhools on SR 7 A
Full Gospe l Church. Pa&gt;tor Rub 8.1rb~r
Associate Pa~t or Karyn _Davts Youth
Pastor SuLte Fran •ts, Su nd Hy ser \'t'.:es
10 00 am wonhtp , 6 00 pm Famtl~ Ltfe
C l asse~. Wed Hom ~ C~ll Uroup~ .., Oil
p m . Oure r ltm irs Ce ll Group .11 lhl!
church 6 30 pm to 8 30 pm
Asb Slml Church
398 Ash St., M 1d dl~pon- Pastor Jeff Smtth
Sunda) School - 9 30 am, Morntng
Wors hip · IU )0 a m &amp; 7 OU pm
Wednesda)' Serv1ce · 7 00 p m . Youth
Servtre- 7 00 p m
Agape life Cenh'r
"Full -Gospe l Church". Pastors John &amp;
Puny Wade 603 Second &lt;\ve \iasoo 77'
50 !7. Servtce ttme Su nday 10 JU a.m,
Wednesday 7 pm
Abundant Grace R.F.I.
923 S Third St , M1d dlepon. P.1stor T~ re~
Davts, Sunday ~e r vtce. 10 u Ill.
Wednesday serv1ce. "/ p m

Mornlna Star
Pn tor John Gtlmore, Sunday Sc:hool· II
a.m.. Worshtp · 10 a.m
East Letart
Pwstor. B1ll Marshall Sundwy School •
9~ rn., Wonh1p • 10 a.m , 1st Sunday
every month e\·enmg scntce 7.00 p m,
Wednesday · 7 p m
Racine
Pa; tor Kerry Wood Sunday School . 10
am, Wmshlp · l lam
Coolville lnittd Methodist Parish
Pasto r Helen Kl tne. Coolvill e Chu rch
Matn &amp; Ftfth S1. Sun Sc hoo! · 10 a m
Worshtp 9 a m Tues. Servt,es • 7 p.m

Faith Full GO!Ipel Church
Long Bottom , Pastor: Steve Reed, Sunday
School · 9 30 a m, Worshi p - 9 30 am
and 7 p m , Wednesd ay- 7 p m . Fr1day .
fell owship ~1'\itce 7 p m
Harrisonville Community Churth
Pa5tor Tbuon Durham, Sunday . 9.30
a.m. and 7 p m.. Wedne!ida ~ -7 p.m.
Middleport Community Church
575 Pearl St , Mtddlepon , Pas tor Sam
Ande n on, Sunday Sc))ool 10 am.
Evening · 7·30 p m , Wednesday Servtce.
7· 30 p m

Filth Valley Tabermn:le Church
Batley Run Road, Pastor Rev Emmett
Rawson, Sunday Eve n•n g 7 p m ..
Thursday Service . 7 p.m
Syracuse Mission
14 11 Bndgeman St, Syracuse. Sunday
School · 10 am. E~~ m ng . 6 p m.
Wednesday Serv1ce . 7 p m.
Hazel Commumty Church
Off Rt 124. Pa stor Edse l Han Sun day
School - 9 30 am Worship 10·30 n m
7·30 p.m

Betbd Church
Tuwnsh1p Rd , 468C. Sunday S~hool - 9
am , Worship · 10 a m , Wednesday
Semces · I0 a m

Oyes,ille Community Church
Sun day School . 9 30 ~ m . Won hip .
10 30a.m, 7 pm

llock.tngport Church
Grnnd Street. Sunda) School · 9· 30 a m ,
Wor•htp · 10 30 am )astor Phtlhp Be ll

Morse Chapel Church
Sunda) school · 10 am , Worsh1p .
a m • Wednesday Servtce · 7 p m

Torch Church
Co. Rd . 63. Sunday School . 9 JO am .
Worshtp 10 30 am

Faith Gospd Church
long Bouom. Sunda y Sch(llll 9 \0 a m
Worsbtp - 1045 a m.. 730 pm
Wedn esda} 7 30 p m
Mt. Olive Community Chunh
Pastor Lawrence Bush Sun d a ~ SdHwl .
9 30 a m.. E~e~ mg . 6 :m p m.. Wedneduy
Serv t~c · 7 p.m

Nazarene
Middleport Church of the Nazarene
Pastor Allen M1 dcap, Sunday Sc hool .
930a.m ,Worsht p·1030am ,6 30p.m,
Wednesday s~rVlC~S . 7 p m,.' f'astor
Allen Mtdcap

Aposlolk
Church
Pao;lur Wayne R 11'\\~·11 Sunda&gt; wor•h!p
6 00 p m 'Nelln~ ~Ja\ · h (Ill p m Bthle
SmUy
R ~joi d n ~

ltfe l hurch
\ltJdlcport Pa!&gt;tor
Mt~e ~rJ,Lemau Jl&lt;J,lut l:.mentu~ Lawrenct
hntman \\ot\lllp· 1U (XI .nil
Wednc~d .!} s~r\iLl'' . 7 p Ill

~flU

~11d A1~ .

N.

~
Cllft on Tabt·rnacle L hurch
Chltun 'W v,, Sunda) s~h,Jnl IU u m.
Wtmht['l · 7 p n.l Weoln e~da~ Scr' tee ·..,

pm
Ne" Lifr \'lclory ('c ntl:'r
Roud. Galhpoli~ OH
Pa~tor Btll St.lll'n. Sunda; Semces. 10
,, m &amp; 7 p m Wedne~J.ty 7 p 111 &amp;
Youth 7 p m
~771 George~ Cre~l

•"ull C u~ pel Chur\"h
ul th t l.h in g Suuor

Rt JJ!I.

Anttqutt~

Pa~lm

Jc~~~

\lorn•

Suturdav :! 00 p m

Scr''l~e~

Sall'm Communily Chtm: h
R.td (lf Wc&gt;l lnlumht.L W Va om I tcvtng
Rond, P n~tnr Chmb Rnu&lt;;,h (304) 67522RX Suntlll) .St hno l 9 30 am Sund uv
evcntng ~er\'l~l' 7 0(1 pm Btbly Study
Wednt!sdu~ ~emce 7 00 pm
Huh!ion Chr is tian ...fll o\l ship Chun:b
Her~d1 d Wh1t~. Sunda} School·
10 am , Sunduy Churc h sen 1~e · 6 30 pm
WedneMlay 7 pm

Reedsvill e Fellowship
Church of lhe Nazarene, Pastor , Sunday
School- 9·JO 8 m, Worsht p. 10 45 n m..
7 p m Wedn esday Servtces . 7 p m
Syratuse Church of the Nazartne
Pustor M1ke Adk tns, Sundny S~hool 9 30•
am. Worsh ip - 10·30 a.m 6 p.m .
Wednesday Serv ~res- 7 p m

II

Restor ation Christ ian Fello" sh1p
9365 Hooper Road Athens. Pastor
Lonme Coats. Sunda) Worsh1p 10 00 am.
Wednesday· 7 pm
Lanpvllie Christian Churth
Ful l GospeL Pasto r: Robert Mu sser.
Sunday S ~ hoo l 9 30 am. , Won hip 10 30
am · 7 00 pm , Wed. Servtce 7 00 pm

•

Pentecostal
Penteooslal Assembly ,
St Rt 124, Racme, Tornado Rd Sunda)
School · 10 Bm , E\emng . 7 p m ,
Wednesday Ser.tces 7 p m

Presbyterian
Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
Pastor Raben Cro\\ Worshtp · 9 a m
Middl eport Pres b) terian
Sn)dt:r Sundn} School ](1
n m worsht r ~&lt;:r\'!Ce !I 1111
Pa~t o r

Ja me~

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sc, c nth - Du~·

Mulbcrr}
Ser,· t~e'
Wo r ~l up

Ad\entisl
Rd . Pomero:. S~turdai
S.thh:t!h School
2 pm

H 1~

· J pm

United Brethren
Ml . llr rmon Umted Drethren
tn Chmt Church
Tex.1~ Cnmmunll&gt; JtH I I \\ tckhlun Rd
P~stor Peter M.trtmdHie Sunda~ Schnol.
9 ]0 u m \l.nr~htp . 10 30 a m . 7 on
p m. Wcdn~!&gt; d ll) s~·r\ IU'~ i uo p m'
Youth gro ur m~ettng 2nJ &amp; .J.th Su n d~y~
l pm

Eden Unitrd Brethren in Christ
St.!lc Ruute 124, between Reedsville &amp;
Hud.tngpoLI. SuuJ&lt;t\ Sdmol · 10 am,
Sunda) Wor~h t p. II 00 u m Wednesday
Scnt~e\ · 7 ()() p 111
P.thlur- M Adam
Wil l

f&lt;·ull Gospel L1ah1bouse
33045 Hiland Road Pomt'roy. Pa,tor Rl •)
Hunter. Sundnv School · I0 am hemng
I JO p m , Tu~~da) &amp; Thurs · 7 '0 p m
Soulh Bethel Community Church
Silver R1dge- Pastor Lmdn Damewood
Su nday School · 9 am, Worshtp StnJC~
10 a.m 2nd and 4th Sunday
Carle1on lnterdenomlnallnnal Churc:h

2841111lt IICIIIIIII. •llMitilll.ll
41181

SERVICES~
-

,iffit

Blessed are the pure
i~ heart,· for they
shall see God..
Matthew 5:8

174 1..ayne Stmt • PO Box 270
Ne,.; Hl\ e n~ WV 25165
James II. Anderson, licensed Funual Dim lor
Heidt S. Anderson, Forethought Funeral Plannin1

pm

jisiJtr juneral :J!,Jome

ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
· John 15:7

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

Km~~bur~ R11itJ Pa~tm Ro~r1 Vu1k:e
Sunda} School
I.J ll] "m
\\nr,htp
Sent~e 10 lO J m bcmng Senu:e 6

P:J~tor

Hysell Run Comm~nil y Church
Pastor Rev Larry Lemley, Sunday School
· 9·30 a m , Worsh1p · 1045 am, 7 pm,
Thursday Btble Study and Youth · 7 p m

The Cburcb of JeNI
Cbrlst of Latter-Day SaJnts
St Rt 160 , 446·6247 or 446 -7486.
Sun day School 10 ·20- I 1 Bm , Rehef
Soctety/Prtes thood 11·05-12:00 noon.
Sac rament Serv ice 9~10:15 a m .
Homemaking meering. I it Thurs . 7 p.m

Cl\tttt r Charch or thr Nuartut
Rev He~rt Grate, Sunday School
· 9JO am, w'orsh1p ·II am. 6pm
Wedn~sda) Serv1ces . 7 p m
Rutland Church ot lbt Nazarene
Sunday School . Q 30 am . Worshtp •
I 0:30 a m 6 30 p m Wednesda)
Servtces 7 p m Rev Mtke CiaO:
Pa~tor

pm
Minersville
Pastor Bub Robtnson Sunday Schoo l · 9
a.m Worshtp lOam

'

Latter-Day 'Saints

Pomeroy Cbu~h ol thl' NalJill'l'nl'
Pmor. Jan Lavender. Sunday Sehoul .
9 30 am . Worsh•p 10 30 am and 6
p m.• Wednesday SeiYlc~es · 7 p m

P~slur.

pm

Dllvis-Quickel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
.ANCE
Full line of
INSURANCE
In suran ce words abide ill you, ye shall
"

Joppa
Pastor B11b Rantlolph, Worshtp
11m Sunday Schupl- 10.30 am .

Rutland C hu ~h or God
Pa~;tor Ron Heath, Sunda} Wor~hl.p . 10
illll, 6 p m , Wedne~llil) Servile~- 7
p.m

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your lighl so shin e before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, that they mav see your
TIJe care you deserve, close to home good works and glorify yo fir
748-112-5141
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
llncll Rslitr-llnctlr
Fa/her m heave11 ."
5111A1lllllhiii•,_.,,.QJ81
Pomeroy, OH 45769.
Matth ew 5: 16
740-892-5a4
l-800-451 -9806
740-992-6606

your hght so shine be fLJre l
that they may see
worh and glori fy
IF'ath1e1 in heaven."
499 Richland Avenue. Athens
Matthew 5: I

Bill Quickel

KEBLER

pm

214 E. Main
992-5130

Pomeroy

Meigs

County's Oldesl Flonst

Jf!ll.
W'

352 East Matn

Pomeroy, Oh
'lB1 1.1~ ~DIId

!jOUr

though t~

740-992-2644

""flh ~j)l!et!ll l!ll11''

740-992-6298

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
God so loved the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbeJ?otten son .. .
Prescriptions
John 3:16
992-2955
Pomeroy

Mv !!race is sufficient
for thee: for mv
streneth is made
Perfect in weakness •
II Cor. 12:9

"So I strive alway s to keep
my conscience clear before

Office SetVice &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

God and man."

Acts 24:1

our fanniy fitfp
prottr:f yotlr family'

Suppresston • Exti ngutshen; • Sprmlders

• Sei,;u ntv

172 N. 2nd Ave. Middleport. OH
353-0837 Fax 740)

-

�•

Page AS • The Dail y Sentinel

Friday, September I, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Steelers have winless preseason, Page 82
Browns hibernate against Bears, Page 82
I

Walker's legacy remembered, Page 83

Friday, September 1, 2006

' LocAL SCHEDULE
PO MEROY ~ A SChedule of upcoming col~
and high school varsity spo rting events invoNflg
leams from Gallia, Meigs and Mason counties
Today'e games

Football

.

Sissonville at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 7:30p.m.

An inside look .at this week's game

The Uma News rue photos

Federal Hod&lt;ing at Wahama, 7:30 p.m
River Valley at Nelsonville- York , 7:30

p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 7:30 p.m.

1 Hannan at Symmes Valley. 7:30 p.m.
College Soccer

Generally speaking, Datish a standout
Big Ten
Overall
Teams
W L Pet. W L Pct.
Penn State 7 1 .875 111 .917

Oh1e State
W1$cons1n
Michl@n
N'westem
Iowa
Minnesota
Purdue
Mich. State
Indiana
IllinOis

7 1 .875
5 3 .625
5 3 .625
5 3 .625
53 .625
4 4 .500
3 5 .375
2 6 .250
1 7 .125
0 8 .000.

10 2 .. 833
10 3 .769
7
7
7
7
5
5
4

5
5
5
5
6
6
7

.583
.583
.583
.583

.455
.455

.364

2 9 .182

THIS WEEK'S GAMES
ntURSDAY

Minnesota at ~nt State, 6:30p.m.
N'westem at Miami (Ohio), 6:30p.m.

The captain is a big fan of
the general.
Jim
Center Doug Datish, one
Naveau ·
of four captains of Ohio
State's football team, has a
The Lima News
fascination with World War
Jnavea-u@limanews. com
II general George Patton.
419-993-2087
Datish, a history major, es!
timates he has seen the 1970 coach Woody Hayes, who
movie "Patton," starring
also was a Patton fan, there
George C. Scott, "probably
is a connection.
40 or 50 times."
Whim his dad Mike played
"I love that movie. I like
for Hayes in the mid-1970s,
George C. Scott. I like Pat·
he took a class in military
ton, he's my favorite' milihistory taught by the coach.
tary guy," Datish said. .
Datish has a small collec·
If Datish sounds like a
tion of Patton memorabilia,
throwback to former ostf
including a letter written by

the general. '
He offers this little-known
Patton fact from his reading:
"Patton actually had a high,
squeaky voice. He didn't
sound anything like George .
C. Scott in the movie, "
Datish said.
Datish is a third-year
starter in his third position.
He will replace Nick Man·
gold at center this season.
He started at tackle last year
and was a starter at guard in
2004.
The 6-5, 295-pound senior
from Warren has a self-depre·
eating sense of humor. Ask

his favorite position and he'll
tell you, "starting." Ask how
he became a history major
and the answer is, "I started
out in pharmacy but organic
chemistry intervened.'; 1
. But he clearly is very' good
at what he does. And he is
clearly a leader on the field.
"When I have questions, I
go to him first. He knows
everything front.and back,"
sophomore offensive tackie
Alex Boone said. "He's a
great center, he's a great ·
tackle, he's a great guard."
Datish hasn't been able to
lead his fellow offensive line·

Rio Grande at Auburn -Montgomef)' tour-

ney, TBA

College Volleyball
Rio Grande at Marietta tourney, TBA

Collage Cross Country
Rio Grande at Shawnee State Invite, 5
p.m.

men in the video stores, .
though.
"We kind of mess around
with him about that kind of

Saturday's games

Foolball
Southern at Portsmouth Notre Dame .
7:30p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Logan, 1 p.m.
Cross Country

stuff," Boone said. "He's

into wars and stuff. I'm
down with 'Full Metal
Jacket,' but some of those
other movies, I can't get

River Valley, Gallia Academy. Meigs at
Warren !nvHationa! , 10 a.m.

College SOccer
Rio Grande at Auburn-Montgomery tour·
ney, TBA
Women's College Soccer
Muskinljum at Rio Grande, 1 p.m.

into."

Senior guard T.J. Downing
also takes a pass on the Patton movie festivals. "He'll
drop quotes (from Patton) in
here and.there but we just
kind of laugh at him and tell
him to shut up," Downing
said, with a smile.

Knee injury
endsLB
D'Andrea's
·osu career

SAnJRDAY

Montana at Iowa, 11 a.m.

THIS WEEK'S OPPONENT: NORTHERN ILLINOIS

Vanderbilt at Michigan, noon

Idaho at MICbig;m State. noon
Indiana State at Pwdue, 1 p.m.
Akron at Penn State, 3:30p.m.
Northern Illinois at Ohio State, 3:.30 p.m.
western M1chig;m at Indiana, 6 p.m.
Eastern Illinois at Illinois, 6 p.m.

.... Bowling Green
(at Cleveland). 7 p.m.

Wiscon~n

2005 TEAM LEADERS
Nolttlwestem ..............................600.3

MichiBIIO State .......................... 497.3
Minnesota ..................... ............. 494.8
Iowa ..........................................432.4
Plndue ...................................... 428.5
Rushing Offense

Minnesota .................................. 273.1
Penn State ................................ 212.8
MichiBI!" State .......................... 201.8
Ohio State .......... ........ ................ 196.7
Northwestern ................... " ......... 193.5
Pass Offense
Nolttlwestem ..............................306.8
Michig;.n State ............... ........... 295.5
Iowa ...............................:.......... 257.8
Puidue .. .................................... 241.7
Wiscon~n ..................................228.4
Total Defense
Ohio State ............ .:............ ........281.3
Penn State .......... ...................... 304. 7
Michil'i"' ....................................345.2
Iowa ...... .............. ......................382.7
Michif,1!11 State ......................... .409.5

Rush Defense
Ohio State ....................................73.4
Penn State ................... ............... 93.0

ICiw.l .......................... ................ 126.0
Michi@n .................................... 137.3
Purdue ...................................... 143.5
Pass Defense

Indiana ............. ........... ..............202.5
Mich1gpn ..................... ,.............. 207 .8
Ohio State .................................. 207.9
Penn State ................ .............. .. 211. 7
llinois ............. ........................... 235.3

INDIVIDUAl LEAilHtS
Rushing 'll!lrds

.Bnan Galhoun, Wisconsin ............ 1,535
T~IISUttoo, N'westem .............. 1,474
laureooe Maroney,.Mtnn ......... .... 1,464
Alben '!bung, IDw.l .................. .... 1,334

Antonio Pittman, Ohio State ........ 1,331
Passing'll!lrds
.
'

Brett Basanez, N'westem ........ .... 3,622
Drew Stanton, Mich. State .......... 3,077

John Stooco, Wiscon~n .............. 2,920
Drew Tate, Iowa .................... ...... 2,828
Chad Henne, Michigpn ................ 2.526
Receiving Yards
Brandon Williams, Wisconsin .... .. 1,095
Jason Avant, M&lt;:higpn ................ 1,007
Sentonio Holmes, Ohio. St. ............ 977
Dotien Bryant, Purdue .................... 960
James Hardy, lndrana ,......... .... :.....893 .

The leading receiver for the last two
years,
Santonio Holmes, is gone. He
between preseason No. 1 Ohio State (0scored
a touchdown once f!Very five·
0) and Northern lllinois (0-0) on Saturcatches
last season (11 TDs in 53
day at Ohio Stadium:
catches) and the impact of h1s departure
Quartemacks
migt1t be bigger than most people think.
NIU's top two pass receivers in 2005
Ohio State's Troy Smith (62 percent)·and
Nortl'em IllinOis' Phil Hcxvath (70 percen~ · graduated, leaving Britt Davis (42 caiches,
441 yards, 3 IDs) as the only proven pass
each completed hi~ percentages of their
catcher.
passes last season, but Smith is more of a
. Advantage: Ohio Slate
complete package. Smith rushed for 611
yards and 11 truchdoons as a junior. HorOffensive line
Volth !OJined 21 yards rushing all of last sea!,'uard T.J. IJooMling, tackle Kirk Barton and
son and scored one m.
center
Doug Datish are retuming starter.;.
The quartertlack·questions of last season
Players
like Alex Boone: Stelie'Ri!hring. Tint ·-·
and the yei3f before are long gone for Ohio
Schafer
and Jimmy Cordle make 1his one of
State. Ma)ile the only remaining question for OSU's deepest
lines in recent years. Smith 1s if he can replicate the brilliance of
Ohio State's starting offensive line's avthe second ha~ of 2005 aver an entire sea- erage weignt is 305 pounds and Northern
son. DesetVedly, he's a senous Heisman TroIllinois' defensive line averages only 255
phy candidate en the strength of the last
pounds, which could mean the Buckeyes
seven or eigt1t !OJmes of 2005. But he's still will hand the ball to Pittman and Wells
looking for his first All-Big len ronors.
early and often.
Advanta!ie: Ohio Slate
Northem Illinois tapkle Doug Free {6-7,
Running backs
312 pounds) m1ght be an NFL prospect.
The Huskies lineman with a bulls eye on
Northern lllincis' Garrett Wolfe is one of
his back is center Eddie Adamski a redthose leei-@Od stories where the little guy
shirt
freshman, starting his first !OJme, who
beats the odds, takes on the big gw.; and
will
line
up across from OSU's best defengets to chase his dream.
sive
l~neman Quinn Pitcock.
The 5-7, 177-pound Wolfe !OJined 1,630
Advantage: Ohio Slate
yards last season 1n nine @mes and picl&lt;ed '
up 1,656 yards two years ago. Against Big
Defensivt!Hne
Ten teams last fall, he ran for 245 yards in a
Ohio State's on~ i'etuming defensi\e
38-3 7 loss to North'M3stem and got 148
starters are its tackles, David Pati€!SO!l and
yards in a 33-17 loss to Michigan. Wolfe is
Qu1nn Pitcock.
eluSIVe but can also take on defenders.
The 295-pound Pitcock is a three-year
Junior Antonio Pittman had a breakout
starter. Patterson had four sacks.last seaseason ~th 1,331 yards rushing last .sea- son 1n his first year as a starter. Ohio
son for OSU as a sophomore. The BuckState expects to rotate as many as; e1gt1t
eyes have added freshman Chris Wells, a defensive linemen into the game, includ·
225-pound combination of po~r and
ing Joel Penton, Jay Richardson and a
speed, to Pittman and scphomore Maurice pair of redshirt freshmen , .Lawrence WilWells (199 yards).
son and Todd Denlinger.
Advantage: Ohio State
End lany En!'Jish had a team-higt178
tackles for Northem Illinois laSt seascn.
Receivers
Advantage: Ohio State
Ted Ginn Jr. (51 catyhes, 803 yards. 4
UneiJackers
.
IDs), Antmny Gonla~ (28 catches, 273
yards, 3IDs) and Roy Hall (16 catches) lead
High-potential young linebackers like
a sclid group of Ohio State receivers. T~t
sophomores James laurinartis, Marcus
end ROIY Nic~ is a better recerverthan Mi3f- Freeman, freshman Ross Homan and Tyler
cel Frost, the starter until he was suspended Moeller along ~th transfers Lany Grant
eanier this mooth, then later transferred.
and John Kerr have the JOb of replacing A.J.

Sept.9
Sept 16
Sept 23

3:30p.m.

Cincinnati

Noon
TBA

Jim Naveau's.

Sept 30
Oct. 7
Oct. 14
Del. 21
Del. 28 .
Nov. 4
Nov. 11
Nov. 18

@ Iowa

Bowling Green
Mich. State

TBA
TBA

lnd~ana

TBA

3:30p.m.

Mtnnesota
@ Illinois

@N'westem
MIChigan

TBA
TBA

3:30p.m.

Advantage: Ohio State

Special teams

Defensive backs
Early departures for the NFL by Dante
Whitner and Ashton lbuboty left Brandon Mitchell (eight career
starts) and Malcolm Jenkins (three starts) as 1he
"most experienced
players in this
group for 011io
State. Size
and speed
aren't

oro seascn.

question

rnaMi,

Advantage:
Even

Ohio State
receiver Anthony

Gonzalez

Touchdowns ,

Smith ....... ......... 2,282

QB • Troy Smith

Rushing Ya!ds

Smith ......................11 Patterson .................. 4
Interceptions
Kick returns for 1Ds
Mitchell ................ .... 1 Ginn .......................... :!
Tackles
Aeld goals
Jenkins .............. .. .... 23 N/A .............. ......... .N/A

Pittman .............. 1,331
Receiving Yards

Grnn ................. :.... 803

Say what? .
"That's going to be $19.95
out of my budget."
- Offensive lin eman TJ Downin g,
estima ti ng th e cos t o f bu y ing;.~ hai r clippers
•to maintai n the Mo hawk -s t yle haircut he's

Sacks

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: What college football television analyst
coached this week's
opponent, Northern
Illinois, for one
season rn 1984?
Answet's: 1. Lee Corso;

2: What were the
. last two times
before thts year
Ohio State went
into the season
ranked No. 1?
2. 1998 and 1980;

3: Who was the
last Ohio State
player named
the Big Ten's
Most Valuable
Player?
3. Joe Genmaine

HEVR.OLET
08 East Main • 1-740-992-66 4 or 1

days until kickoff

Pon~eroy,

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-.6 ; Sat. 9-4; Sun. '12-4 • __.'tN.tnarkportergtn.~Onl
""""""'l • .h

\

·

Northern Illinois
kicker Chris Nen·
dick was 9 of 13
on field goals
last season and
punter Andy
Dittbrenner averaged 38.6 yards.

Passing Yards

. goi ng with this s~;;:aso n .

699653

For the first time sinoe 2001, 011io State
goes into its opener unsure who its kicker \\ill
be. Ryan Pretorious was ,;ewoo as the
heir apparent to Josh Huston but
Aaron Pettrey has 'Mln the .
startingjob for the opener.
Punter A.J. Trapasso
(40.4 yards per punt)
~ bad&lt; for his sec-

Retumiog Ohio State Leaders

Bp.m.

@

Hawk, Bobby Carpenter and Anthony
but like the linebackers, the uncertainty is
Schlegel. Laurinaitis (one start) and Freehow the new defensive backs ~II react in
man have the most !OJme experience in an the spotlight on game day.
OSU uniform.
NIU has three retuming starters, includSophomore lim McCarthy had 101 total
ing twins Adriel Hansbro and Alvah Hans·
tackles (64 solos) with 1hree sacks last sea- . bra at cornerback.
son for Northern Illinois.
Advantage: Even

Player of the Week
Troy Smith \\ill be making his first start in an opener
on Saturday a@inst Northern lllinos. Each week
one player W111 be honoree based on perfomnance.

Bp.m.

Ponn State

ASSOCIATED PRESS

i

2006 OSU SCHEDULE
N.ll!lnols
@ T""'s

Bv RusTY MtLLER

es

A look at some of the key matchups

Total otrense

SAnJRDAY

•

opens

·

..4pp...-...-_.... ,.. c;: recal• •hr«»Ufl:h

c.:;""""...-..c:: •

s . - • - o n d • ..... .,.... 3""1,. 2 : 0 0 6

OH

starts 0 vc
on high note

. BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALT£RS@MYDA.tlYTRIBUNE.COM

GaiUa Academy at Vinton County, 7·30

. ~m .

Lady Eagles soar past Meigs in straight games River Valley

COLUMBUS
The
col-lege
once-prom1smg
career of Ohio State linebacker Mike D' Andtea has
ended because of ongoing
~nee problems.
Coach Jim Tressel confirmed
Thursday
that
D'Andrea would no longer
try to play for I he Buckeyes.
D'Andrea, scheduled to
graduate with a degree in
consumer affairs in March,
was not available for comment.
D'Andrea - not future
two-time All-American A.J.
Hawk, who was recruited at
the same time - was considered the pi-ize when he
signed with the Buckeyes in
2002.
"He was big, strong, fast
and explosive," Tressel
said.
·
,
At 6·foot-3 and ' 248
pounds, D'Andrea also had
a mean streak that seemed
to mark him as the next in a
line of great Ohio State linebackers that includes Chris
Spielman, Marcus Marek,
Pepper Johnson, Randy
Gradishar, Rick Middleton,
Bob Brudzinski, Andy
Katzenmoyer,
Bobby
Carpenter and Hawk.
D'Andrea was selected by
numerous 'publications as
ihe nation's. best linebacker
while totaling 140 tackles as .
a senior al Avon Lake High
School outside Cleveland .
He also averaged I5 yards
per catch as a tight end and
won state titles in the discus
as a junior and the shot put
as a junior and a senior.
He worked his .way up to
second team behind Matt
Wilhelm on Ohio State's
2002 national championship
team, playing in 13 games.
totaling seven tackles.
"He was everything we'd
hoped he 'd be," Tressel
said. "A very instinctive
football player. And that's
why you feel so bad.''
D'Andrea's next season ,
he rotated in and out of the
lineup before sepamling a
shoulder against Michigan
State that kept him out of
the final three games. He
had 24 tackles including

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern volleyball continues
to roll along after posting a
convincing 25-6, 25-1 'I ,2 5l 0 victory
over visiting Meigs
Thursday
during
a
Tri· Valley
Conference
non - divi s ional
matchup.
The Lady
Eagles
trailed only
twice in the
contest and
simply
stuck
to
basics en
route
to
their third
consecutive
triumph of
the
2006
season.
Ebersbach
T h e
Green and
White (3-0) finished lhe
evening 72-of-74 from the
service line, had four players
with I0 or more points,
recorded 16 kills and was a
perfect 64-of-64 in sets.
Following that near-flawless effort, EHS coach
Howie
Caldwell
was
impressed with what he saw
from his squad.
•
"I · don't care what sport
you play, if you are good at
the fundamentals you ' re
going to achieve some suecess. I thought we passed
and hit the ball well tonight,
and one positive . about this
team is that they can serve,"
. said Caldwell . "I am pleased

BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

PROCTORVILLE- The
cha se for a fifth slraight
OV C championship got off
and running Thursday night
·
as the River
V a lley
L a d y
Raiders
took a three
~

Bryan Walters/photo
Eastern's Katie Hayman (10) slams a kill past Meigs' blocker Hailey Ebersbach (32) during Thursday's non-league volleybal matchup in Tuppers Plains. The Lady Eagles improved
to 3-0 overall this season with a 25-6, 25-11, 25-10 victory over Meigs .
·
·
'
with the way they played
The Lady Marauders (0-1) viclory.
Brittany. Bissell paced the
tonight. It's the first time all shortly answered the bell in
year that they really came game two, taking brief leads Lady Eagles with 13 points
and two dinks, while Katie
out and played like I thought of 2- l ~nd 4-2.
they would this year."
Eastern quickly respondt:d Hayman and Erin Weber fin The hosts jumped out to a with a 23-7 rim to close out ished the night with II
9-3 lead in the opening game game two with a 14-point points and eight kills apiece.
Weber al so added · nine
and extended that margin to victory.
'
as much as 15 points at 21-6.
The hosts jumped out to a blocks, and Hayman had the
Eastern scored the final four 13-1 lead in the fin ale en
Please see Eagles, Bl
· points to claim game one.
route to the straight-games

a m e

sweep of
Fairland to
u p e n
l e ague
play.
The silCarter
ver
and
black won by scores of 2927. 25-16 and 25-2 1 over
· the Lady Dragons and in
doing so claimed their 30th
consecutive Ohio Valley
Conference victory and win
number 40 of the 4 1 league
games played since River
Valley joined the league i[l
2002.
Not . bad for the little
school from Cheshire.
Kirsten Carter led the
Lady Raiders on the floor
Tilursday evening with 17
po ints, six aces and was 20for-21 serving. She also
added four kills and two
blocks and was 15 - for~21
from the spike line.
Carmen Waugh added l 0
points for River Valley, with
two aces : four kill s. three
blocks and was · 18-for-20
from the spike line. Brooke
Taylor also contributed for

Please see Raiders, Bl

CT Scapning At Its Best!

Brad Sherman/photo
Southern's Whitney Wolfe-Riffle (13) sets up a kill opportunity during Thursday's non-divisional volleyball contest
against South Gallia in Mercerville.

tlf

Southern falls to
South Gallia in four
BY Scan WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

two
and
one each by
M egan
Sheet s and
Nata s ha
Adkins.
So uI h
Gallia used
consistency
and even
s corin g
Cundiff
across the
to
board
secure a win in the . first
game 25 -19. Southern however, regrouped in the sec·
ond game as Whitney
Wolfe-Riftle tallied nihe
Stephanie
points
and
Cundiff notched nine points
as part of her 20 for the fourgame match . Southern
claimed a 25 -22 win.
The rest of the match was
momentum, a variable thm

MERCI;:RVILLE
South Gallia gained the
momentum to win the last
lwo sets and the match to
.Please see D'An!lrea, 83 defeat
the
Southern
Tornadoes (0- 1) in four
games 25-19, 22-25 , 25-21 ,
and 25-18 Thursday night in
CoNTACT US
area high school non-league
volleyball action .
OVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
Niki Fulks had a career1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
high 10 kills and scored nine
Fax- 1-740-446·3008
point s in the victory.
E-mail- sports@mydailysentinel.com
Meanwhile
teammate
Chel sea Canaday led the
,SportS StaH
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor way 'in the assists department and also added four
{740)446·2342, ext. 33
bsherman @mydaitytribune.com
kill s'.
. Glenna Wright led the
·Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
winners with II points fol (740) 446-2342, ext. 23
bwalters@ mydailytribune .com
lowed by Megan Delaney
with I0 and Kel sey· Wells
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
chipped
in eight. Delaney
(7Ml) 446-2342, ext. 33
.also had six kills, Allie West · Please see Southern, Bl
lcro Jm C mydailyregister.com

•

tk lff'ta

•

Pleasant Valley llospital is proud
to introdu~e yet another innovative
first ... the 64-Siice CT Scan.
The scan is painless and enables
our physicians to detect heat1
problems sooner. For our patients.
'
this means shorter exam tirnes1
shorter, ~-holds,, high,:t .quality

'

i,at~, .t~~c~a.:x~r&amp;y~ ~ure:~nd·

a sa~ilnd cost-e1Tective.-8J.teptative . '
!ch~v~ivc diitgi}Ostlc procedures.
,
TOSHIBA
,. .· '
1personal physician can
liialte a refe~ral by, contacting the Pleasant Valley Hospital
._.lofogy Department, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1283.

,cifd'f .

.

' '/;

~

'

'

.

'

'

·~ PLEASANT VALLEY

'1 "'~

u

~\ '.

1

¥

' ~

f!M.&amp;h -eQH; to IJ.

•

HOSPITAL
ll~~ee~ ttal(la~rl
•

''

�•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, September 1.

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, September 1. 2006

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

European ·champ Greece between U.S. and g~ld medal game
INDIANAPOLIS (APJsparingly
Carson Palmer has already
but almost
proven he's a fa·st healer.
anything
Now he wams to ohow the
would be
Cincinnati Bengals how
a
n
mu·ch he can improve.
improveAfter throwing three
. ment over
Notebook last sea'
touchdowns in his preseason debut Monday, Palmer
son's prewas expected to see more season finale when he restaction . Friday night at ed the entire starting offense
indianapoli s. How long , and all but two detens1ve
remains a secret.
starters.
··He'll . play
so me,"'
The result: Cincinnati 38,
.
Bengals coach Marvin Indianapolis 0.
Lew1s said.
"We'll have a plan ,"
When asked to elaborate, Dungy said. "We'll do itby
Lewis responded: "I said how many plays we thmk
they need , not by how long
some."
Again, Palmer finds him- Carson plays."
.
self the headline. attraction
The Colts ( 1-2) put little
in a prc ~eason finale that stock in preseason games.
figures to have most promiThey snapped an eightnent players on the bench game preseason lostng
after one quarter or perhaps streak Saturday against
even earlier.
New Orleans, and have
Palmer anticipates joining been better than .500 in. the
preseason only tw1ce smce
them after two series.
Among those already list- 2000.
ed as out are cornerback
But Indy has t~ree
Deltha O'Neal, linebacker stratght ;\.FC South titles
David Pollack and corner- and opened last season 13-0
back Johnathan Joseph, the after going 0-5 in the preBengals top draft pick.
s.eason.
The Colts' lone goals
The Colts expect to sit
more than a dozen players Friday are to stay healthy
including . cornerbacks and see enough of the play- .
Jason David and Nick ers competing for roster
Harper, safety Mike Doss, spots to make evaluations
defensive tackle Corey before Saturday's mandata- ·
Simon, receiver Brandon ry cutdown to 53.
Stokley, guard Ryan Lilja,
"We know that we probatight end Dallas Clark and bly are coming out after the
ktcker Adam Vinatieri.
first drive no matter what,
Cincinnati (3-0) learned and you'd like to score,"
Monday that · Palmer's left " two-time MVP Peyton
knee was healthy enough to Manning said. "The main
p!ay when he methodically thing is to keep your r~ythm
d1ssected the Green Bay gomg and get your tmung
secondary, scored on each down."
possession, and showed that
So far, the Colts starting
his mechanics were in top offense has scored on its
form.
first possession of all three
The performanc·e prompt- games. and dominated the
ed Lewis to name Palmer Samts 111 the1r longest workthe opening-day starter out last week - one half.
There
are . concerns,
ahead of schedule.
. B~t Palmer, the pcrfec- though . The Colts expect
Rhodes
and
!Iomst, saw a few problems. Domuuc
"Definitely rusty," he said Joseph Addat to share the
in critiquing the Green Bay burden
of
replacmg
ga me. "I need to get a Edge;rin James, the fran,
chance to wear some of that ch1se s career rushmg leader
rust off."
who signed with Arizona
What the Bengals want to a free agent.
'
know how quickly he can
Rhodes, a veteran, and
recover after sliding, taking Addai, the Colts' first-round
hits and pushing off the pick, have combined to rush
knee in which he tore two for 58 yards on 34 carries
ligaments and dislocated a - an average of 1.7 - in
kneecap in January.
three games,
Friday night's game could
The Bengals offense has
erase any lingering doubts. dominated the first three
Whatever the Bengals do, opponents, outscoring them
the Colts won't let Palmer's 111-51 and topped 40 points
plans affect their strategy.
each of the past two weeks
Coach Tony D!fngy again against Washington and
.
plans · to use hts starters Green Bay.
1

Steelers fall tq Carolina, go winless in preseason
PITTSBURGH (AP) John Kasay kicked his fifth
fieli:l goal on the final play
of the game, a 29-yarder
that finished an unbeaten
Carolina preseason and a
winless one .for Super Bowl
champion Pittsburgh as the
Panthers
won
I 5-13
Thursday night.
, Cedric H Limes scored the
game's only touchdown
with less than four minutes
to play to give the Steelers
their only lead on a night
tney rested nearly all of
their regulars . But the
Panthers drove from their
20 in the final two minutes
to win it.
The key play was a
. roughing-the-passer penalty on safety Tyrone Carter.
It kept the decisive drive
alive after Panthers fourthteam quarterback Brett
Basancz had thrown incomplete on fourth-and -14 from
the Carolina 32. Given a
reprieve, Basanez later hit
Justin McCullum for 20
yards to ihe Pittsburgh ll
to give Kasay the chance to
win it
Omar
Jacobs,
the
Steelers' No.4 quarterback,

Southern
fromPageBl
tilted to South Gallia late in
the third game when Niki
Fulks notched three points
to break open a relatively
close 14-11 game. After
Canaday added a point (2013), Southern came back to
20- 18 on II ve key serves
from Rashell Boso. Wright
pounded a couple late
serves to secure the win for

had been
ineffective
befor e
findin g
Walter
Young on
a 46-yard
Notebook completion to set
up the touchdown with 3:4
a
remaining.
Humes,
fourth-team running back
who probably won't make
the roster. scored on the
next play to fini sh a 76yard, four-play drive in a
game that featured little
offense otherwise.
Almost none of the
Steelers' top players got off
the bench as coach Bill
Cowher rested his regulars
with the Sept. 7 season
opener against JYiiami only
a week away. The offensive
line .starters played a few
downs, but quarterback
Ben Rocthlisbergcr and
r11nning back Willie Parker
never left the sideline and
the defense opened the
game with backups at every
position.
Cowher said beforehand
he didn' t think it mattered
if the Super Bowl champi-

on Steelers went winless in series, completed two passthe preseason for. only the es for 6 yards, then was
second time since 1965 , sacked on third down and
which they did. Even some never returned. He gave
of the backups didn 't play way to Stefan LaFors, who
much: Steelers backup QB did nearly as much for the
Charlie Batch was piJ)Jed Steelers' offense as his own
after throwing four passes despite going 6-of-8 for 86
and Shane Boyd, who isn ' t yards . . LaFors fumbled
with
Ri.cardo
likely to make the team. twice,
threw three. Jacobs went' Colclough recovering each
13-of- 19 for 179 yards.
time, but the Steelers conThat didn "t 'mean Cowher verted the turnovers into
took the night off, as he only a field goal.
could be seen screaming at
The Steelers did give
backup lineman Chris
Kemoeatu after he was backup running back Duce
called for a face mask Staley .Jots of carries- 19
penalty while making a for 46 yards in by far · his
tackle on a Carolina fumble most tx~ensive playi~g
recovery.
llme o t e pr~seaso~. e
With so few regulars on , was slill carrying m1dway
the field, the play was slop- through the fourth quarter.
py and uneven, with six Stal~y was e_x pected to
fumbles, an interception, repns~ the retired Jerome
188 yards of penalties and Bettis role as } shortnumeroLJs errors of execu- yaradge and slluauonal
tion . · Only the field goal back, but he did not have a
kickers were perfect; Kasay good trammg camp.
The star receivers for
hit from 54, 40, 38, 35 and
29 yards in ·that order, and both teams n'ever got off the
Pittsburgh's Jeff Reed was bench the entire preseason,
good from 40 and 27 yards Carolina's Steve Smith
in the first half.
(hamstring and ingrown
quarterback toenail) and Pittsburgh' s
. Panthers
Jake Delhomme played one Hines Ward (hamstring).

South Galli a.
Tied at 14-14 in the
finale, South Gallia gleaned
a slight edge whe1i Delaney
laced three straight points
and Wright followed with
three more for a 20-16
SGHS advantage. Southern
was unable to make a late
game run .
The loss spoiled the debut
of new Southern coach
Tonja Hunter who said,
"Our serving really hurt us
tonight, especially whenwe
were trying to come back."

Cundiff had 20 points. Adelle Rice and Kaylyn
Riffle 19. Bosu 17, and Spradling also contributed.
Amber Hill 13. Riffle had Boso and Riftle each h:l'd
six kills, was 13-17 serving, two aces.
18-21 spiking. and had II
In the reserve game
assists. Sara Eddy was 3-9 Southern was led by spirited
serving with a 15-24 spik- 13-point efforts from Katie
ing night: Emma Hunter Woods and Breanna Taylor
was 4-6 serving. 8-10 spik- who
led
the
young
ing, and had 12 assists: and Whirl winds to 25-17 and
Boso was 14-17 &gt;erving, 6- 15-17 victories. Lindsay
Chelsi
and
7 spiking, and had 4 blocks. Shamblin
Cundiff was 15-19 serving Ritchie each had five
and 13-18 spiking. while points. For South Gallia
Amber Hill was I0- II serv- Ad~ins had nine and
ing with three blocks. Johnson had six.

I

Eagles
from Page Bl

Bryan Walters/photo

'Meigs' Cassi Whan, middle, comes up w1th a dig during
Thursday's straight-game loss to Eastern in Tuppers Plains.
!

I

other in the win.
Kelsey Holter had I0
points in the triumph , followed by Jillian Bninnon
with eight points and two
kills. Darcy Winebrenner
and Amanda Eason each
had one point for EHS ,
with Winebrenner adding
eight kills to the cause.
Amber Burton led the
Maroon and Gold with
four hils . whire Lesley
Preece was next with three
kills and a block. Both
Hail ey Ebers bach and
Les ley Preece had two
kilb apiece, Ebersbach led
MHS with six blocks.
while Barr finisl1cd with a
pair of bloc b.

'

· Catie Wolfe also had a
kill for Meigs, which was
playing its opening game
. of the season.
Eastern, on the other
hand . has now outscored
its opponenis 225-76 in
three contests - an average outcome of 25-8 per
game.
Not all was lost for
Mei gs, whi~h posted a 1925, 25-22, 25-23 victory
over the Eagles in the
junior varsit~ contest.
Mei gs moves to 1-0 while
EHS falls to 2- 1 on the
· year.
Eastern returns to action
Tuesday when it hosts
Wellston in a non-co nference .matchup. M.eigs
open&gt; its home season
·wednesday
when
Waterford c:omes to town .
Both even ts will start at 6
p.m.

as

'

Raiders

seven points and Shea Barry
who ,had eight points.
During the junior varsity
contest, River Valley fell to
from Page 81
Fairland two games to one.
The
Lady Raiders won
the Lady Raiders with 24
game
two 25-14, but lost
kills, two blocks and was
the first and third games 2541-for-47 at the line.
Kayla Smith added one 17 and 25-23. lliana Corfias
kill, one block and was a led the JV team with seven
perfect 1.5-for-15 at the points.
River Valley will now
spik~ line and Kari McFann
addeq two kills while going return to action 5:30 p.m.
Tuesday when they travel
ll-for-11 at the line.
Leading Fairland was. to Chesapeake for game
Molly Bumgarder who had two in OVCplay.

Advertise your item
of $1,000 or less
for ONLY $5.00
* One Item Per Ad
* Personal Items - No Businesses
* Must Advertise Price
* Runs for (3 days)
Write your Ad HERE (15 words or less)
•

h SA~:JAkMA, Japan (AP)- Now
t a! tr Now11zk1 IS gone, the
~n~~d States IS headed for a gold
oreAr game showdown wtth Spam
. N gentma.
at exactly. It only seems that
way around here.
For days, U.S. playe:s have been
asked about a potential matchup
With one of th~se two imernational
powerhouses m tbe final game of
the . world
championships.
Meanwhtle, . the other unbeaten
team ,_ wh1ch JUSt happens to be the
reLgmng European champiOn, has
remamed largely anonymous.
f'.nd Gre~ce's players wouldn' t
mmd at a!ltf they stay that way to
th~ Amencans;
.,
I ho~e that s t.~e. For me, 1t s
good hke thLs, Greek guard
Theodoros Papaloukas said. "If the
game goes wrong for them, they'll
be stressed,"
!Jle U.S., and Gree~e meet in
Fnday mght s first semifinal game,
followed by Spam and Argentma

Walker~s

in the nightcap. All four teams are
7-0.
. .
After wmmng .a b~lanced Group
C, Greece has bee~ JUSt as 1mpress1ve m 1ts two wm&gt; here . as the
other three teams. Those v1ctone.s
over Chma and France still haven t
ma~e the Greek players very recogmzable to those outside Europe.
Spain has Pau Gasol. Argentina
has Manu Ginobili. ·
Greece has some big names, too
-though only in length .
"The names are too long,"
Carmela Anthony said. "The
names are very, very long. I'm
going_ to, have to learn them
overn1ght.
The U.S. earned its spot in the
sem1finals. wtth an 85-65 v1ctory
over Nownzkt and Germany on
Wednesday night The Americans
turned up their defensive pressure
to break away in the third quarter,
overeominga horrendous shooting
mght 111 whLch they mtssed 30 of
40 3-pomt attempts agamst- the

Germany zone,
Greece didn't need to see that
spun to realize what the Americans
can do when they can force
turnovers to fuel their transition
game.
"You do not want it in the open
court because if the U.S. runs up
and down the court it gets opportunity to play an ·easy game," Greek
coach Panagiotis Yannakis said.
"We have to play our game with
defense and don't pass the ball to
their hands. If you do this, you're
in the game."
Defensively, Greece wants to
play the same waY. Using their big
guards to key a trapping defense,
the Greeks force 24 turnovers per
game
They could have some success
because none of the primary
American ball handlers: Chris Paul,
Dwyane Wade and Kirk Hinrich, is
big. However, Mike Krzyzewski
could get around that by having
LeBron James bring the ball up

and initiate the offense, as he has
done frequently.
Greece held France to its lowest
point total in the tournament in a
73-56 victory in Wednesday's first
quarterfinaL Now the Greeks can
guarantee themselves a second
straight medal in a top event.
"If it's USA and we have to beat
them to get a medal we just have
to bring down the' lights" said
Greek · forward
Sofokolis
Schortsanitis, who bears a strong ·
resembl;mce to former Florida
player Dametri "Da Meat Hook"
HilL
. A victory would bring recognit10n to a team that has no current
NBA players. Anton is Fotsis
played briefly with the Memphis
Gnzzhes, and guard Vasil is
Spanoulis is headed to the Houston
Rockets. That's about the limit of
Greece's ties to the NBA.
Still, . the Americans have
promised not to take their opponents for granted and assume a

field for the coin flip,
Players from both schools
wore decals with Walker's
jersey number and nickname on the front of their
helmets, just above their
face masks. Northwestern
players also had patches
saying "WALK" sewed
onto the front ·of their uniforms.
Walker was the · only
coach to lead Northwestern
to three bow I games, the
most recent a 50-38 loss to
UCLA in the Sun Bowl.
The Wildcats shared the Big
Ten title in 2000 .and went
to the Alamo Bowl. They
-also played in the Motor
City Bowl in 2003 . .
At Miami, Walker took
over a teaJ,JI coming off a
two-win season and went
59-35-5 during his nineyear run before l!eading to
Northwestern . He was a
tailback from 1973-75 ,
known for his tough-totackle style.
"Class, class person,"
said
Bill Mallory, who
AP pho!o
Northwestern University athletic director Mark Murphy coached him at Miami.
speaks at ceremonies honoring former Northwestern and "Didn't come any better,"
Dick Crum, who hired
Miami, Ohio head football coach ,Randy Walker Thursd~y in
Oxford. Walker is the all-time winningest head · coach in him as an assistant at
Miami; remembered the
Miami football hi.story.
way he would insist on -getThe game in Oxford was with the school's reputation ting things done correctly.
supposed to be a feel -good for developing coaches who
"The last Walkerism is,
homecoming fqr Walker, go on to great things.
'What's the deal ?'' Crum
who remained close to his
Now, Walker will be said. "When something
alma mater. Instead, it remembered as one of them. wasn't right, he'd say that
turned into a tearful tribute.
"Godspeed,
Randy. when he'd walk into the
A temporary stage was set Godspeed," Kurz said. · huddle or the meeting
up on the Cradle of Coaches "Your spot on God's side- room."
Plaza behind the end zone, line has been preserved."
. With a voice choked by
where Walker 's plaque will
There was a moment of emotion, Crum added, "I
be dispjayed. Fans enter the silence before the kickoff. think every one of us can
stadium through a stone- Walker's wife, Tammy, and say . we're better off for
and-brick arch inscribed other relatives were on the knowing him."

.

.

COLUMBUS (AP) After three months of fame
and almost four years of
anonymity, John Kerr cannot wait for Ohio State's
season-opener
against
Northern
Illinois
on
Saturday. .
"Every waking thought is
about it, which ·kind of
makes you tired at times,"
said the 23-year-old, who
will start at linebacker for
the Buckeyes. "It's everything I've worked for for
)'ears."
The Cleveland native
signed a scholarship offer
from Indiana Univer&amp;ity in
early 2002 and became a
star that faiL He led the
Hoosiers in tackles with 114
and was the jeading freshmall tackler in the Big Ten.
One publication selected
him as one of the top freshman players in the country.
But he grew tired of loslng and his relationship with
the coaching staff soured.
Even though he was all but
ignored by Ohio State during his high school career,

he became a
be l a t e d
Buckeye.
That posed
a problem,
because the
Big Ten does
not ·permit athletes who
transfer within the conference to receive a scholarship at their new schooL
Ever.
So since the end of that
fall campaign in 2002, Kerr
· has written checks for his
tuition, room, meals and
books to the Ohio State bursar's office.
The next problem was that
even though he was .•now
where he wanted to be. he
was cemented behind one of
the deepest and most talented linebacking corps in the
nation ,
After Silting out the
NCAA-mandated year for
transferring, he found himself deep on the depth chart
behind standouts such as
A.J.
Hawk,
Bobby
Carpenter 1 and Anthony
Schlegel.

The years passed. He didn't play at all in 2004 and
manal?ed just 31 minutes on
the fteld last year while
Hawk was winning AllAmerican honors for a second time and Carpenter and
Schlegel seldom took a play
off.
"John's a kid who's
worked hard, been good on
special teams, had to sit
there with a bunch of great
linebackers who didn't
hardly let you practice let
alone get in a game," coach
Jim Tressel said. "That's the
way those kids were." .
But with Hawk and
Carpenter going in the first
round of last spring's NFL
draft, and Schlegel in the
third. all of a sudden Kerr is
looking forward to his .first
start since the Indiana lost at
Purdue 34-10 on Nov.. 23 ,
2002.
"It's always tough when
you start out in a very significant role and you go
down to .scout team and
have to work your way up,"
Kerr said. "There's a route

two years while spending
thing. So I'm ready to go."
Defensive . end Simon countless hours going
Fraser
raved
about through rehab and lifting
weights.
D'
Andrea's
skills.
fromPageBl
This season, he was pen"Everyone knows what
ciled
in as a backup, though
are,"
Fraser
his
capabilities
1hree for negative yardage
mflst
felt that .anything he
-accounting for about half said. "He just has to go out
of his career output in one there and perform and hope- was able to contribute
would be a bonus. The
fully stay injury free."
season.
But D'Andrea hurt hi s Buckeyes play Saturday
Coming into the followright
knee Sept. 24, 2004, in against Northern Illinoi s
-ing season, he said he felt
pqctice
. during
the with two sophomores and a
his time had arrived.
."I feel good coming into Buckeyes' bye week. He 11fth-year se.nior who hardly
this year," he said. "I'm was never the same, p_laying played last season starting
really confident and every- in just seven games the past at linebacker.

D'Andrea

Our CLASSIFIEDS will WORK for YOU!!!

•

NEW YORK (AP) Andrew Miller knows how
different the pennant races are
this year.
·
"The Red Sox and the
Yankees, you.hear about them
all the time," the 21-year-old
Detroit reliever said. "You
didn't hear about the Tigers a
year ago."
With a month to go in the
regular season, the Tigers
were on track for their first
playoff appeamnce since 1987
but their AL Central lead wa~
down to 4 1/2 games - less
than half the 10-game bulge
they opened on Aug. 8.
And while the AL playoff
picture had come into focus,
ll of the 16 NL teams began
Thursday within four games
of a division or wild-card
leader.
"I can remember the first
time I talked with Bob
Castellini last winter, the one
thing I said was that if we'd be
around .500 on Sei?t. l, we'd
have. a chance to wm the wild
card," Cincinnati Reds manager Jerry Narron said, recalling a conversation with his
team's chief executive officer.
"Everybody's more bunched
up this year probably than
ever before."
WhY. is virtually the entire
NL sllll in it?
The three division leaders
- Los Anj!eles, New York
and St. LOUIS- are the only
teams more· than three games
over .500.
"There's a lot of parity
throughout the league. It could
be the effects of revenue sharing, in a way," Dodgers general manager Ned Colletti said.
''Teams have an opportunity
to keep · their better young
players for a longer period of
time."
While
San
Diego,
Philadelphia and Cincinnati
are bunched at the top of the
wild-card race, Arizona,
Atlanta, Florida. Houston and
San Francisco all.are in position to make it to the postsea. son if they have good
September runs.
Last year's Padres set the
record for poorest regular-season record of 'a postseason
teaJn at 82-80. While that
mark appears safe, the worst
record for a wild-card winner
is in jeopardy: that mark is 7767 by the Colorado Rockies
during the strike year of 1995.
according to the Elias Sports
Bureau.
And the division leads of

Four years later, Kerr finally gets another chance
.

that has to be taken here to
get to the top and everyone
has to kind of wait their turn
at times. It's been tough,"
Kerr will get the nod at
outside linebacker for the
Buckeyes.
Sophomore
James
Laurinaitis, who will start
alongside him at middle
linebacker, said the 6-footl, 233-pound fifth-year
senior is an inspiration.
"He's been through a lot,"
Laurinaitis said. "Obviously
he's had his setbacks, but
now it's just, ' Let's go on
· the field and play footbalL'
It' ll all come back to him
and he'll have a great year."
Ohio State's other starting
linebacker;
Marcu s
Freeman, is amazed by
Kerr's dedication.
"He didn't have to come
to Ohio State and NOT be
on a schola~·ship," Freeman
said. "That shows you how
much he loves this game it's not the money, it's not
being big on the team. It's
all just playing the game of
footbalL "
I,

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

Ad must be submitted on this coupon and
must be prepaid. OtTer expires 8131106

With month to go, pennant
races have different look

legacy remembered before opener

OXFORD (AP) - While
speakers on a makeshift
stage behind the end zone
told stories about Randy
and
Walker 's playing
coaching career, a kicker's
warm-up try left the field
and landed nearby, punctuating the speechmaking
with a·loud thump.
·
The perfect touch.
The former Miami of
Ohio and Northwestern
coach who died two months
ago
was
remembered
Thursday night before his
two schools opened the season with a game he had set
up. Speakers recalled how
much he loved people and
footbalL
A few hundred fans, some
dressed in white shirts with
"WALK" on the front, gathered on a plaza .behind an
end zone to hear stories
about the passionate coach
who rebuilt both programs.
A plaque with his likeness
also was unveiled.
While a variety of friends
and coaches told vignettes
about his loyalty and dedication, players from both
schools limbered up on the
field a few feet away, on the
other side of a brick-and·
iron fence,
"Randy Walker is looking
down with pride," said
author Bob Kurz, a close
friend. "This is what we've
been waiting for. Let's get
after it."
The schools worked
together on a tribute to
Walker, 52, who played and
later coached at Miami
before moving on to
Northwestern, He died of an
apparent heart attack in
June.

"We were certainly hoping, as much for his sake as
ours," Tressel said. "But we
knew ;that he had some batties to overcome, that he
. had had a long journey and
done everything you could
possibly do. We were hoping when he ended this
summer feeling pretty good
that it might be the ticket."
D'Andrea will undergo
knee surgery within the next
.two weeks ror '"a better
quality of life." Tressel said.

spot in Sunday's game is theirs.
"Our team won't look past
Greece,"
Krzyzewski
said.
"Greece hasn' t lost You just watch
them on tape, and if you're a player, coach who knows an thin
bo b k b ll
·~h g
a ut as et ?.. ' you say,
ose
guys can play..
.
Paphaloukas IS probably Greece s
best, avmg earned MVP h~nors at
the European champ!onshlps and
th: Euroleague Fmal F~ur. last
y~ar. Now he tn~s t~ put hJS_team a
WI,? .away from .'ts bLggest title yet.
I m not stup1d to say I know we
can beat the ~mted States. But I
know that we re gomg to try very
hard and Nive all our en~rgy for
th~~ game, Papaloukas sa~ d.
And you know, by the way, basketball is basketball. USA has the
big advantage, but you never
know. Basketball is like life sometimes. Don't make plans for life
because life has different plans for'
you. That's what 1 say."

I

the Cardinals and Dodgers
aren't all that big. The New
York Mets, with a huge margin in the East, are the only
team whose postseason berth
appears safe.
"The way the West is, every
team is one good week from
being in the running," Giants ·
reliever Mike Stanton said.
In the American League. the
Yankees turned a four-game
deficit on July 4 into an eightgame lead entering Thursday
a~ the Boston Red Sox plummeted due to poor pitching
and health problems with
David Ortiz, Manny Ramirez
and Jason Varitek.
Detroit, baseball's biggest
surprise, won its flrst three
games after the All-Star break
and stood at 62-29. But the
Tigers are 21 -22 since then
and have lost six of eight.
"We have a good team,"
said first-year manager Jim
Leyland, credited for the
transformation. "We're not a
fluke.' ;
St. Louis lost 14 of its fust
22 games in August, allowing
Cincinnati to close within
.0004 on Aug. 24 before the
Cardinals rebuilt the lead back
to 4 112 games. Florida went
the other way. The Marlins
wefe 56-66 before a ninegame winning streak put them
back in contention for the NL
wild card.
Oakland, seeking its fourth
AL West title in seven years
but flrst since 2003, was just
45-43 at the All-Star break,
The A's finished August with
nine straight wins to open a 7
112-game division lead, their
largest since 1992.
"We're a very relaxed clubhouse. Most teams put pressure on themselves in August
and September, Billy Beane
shows up in !lip-flops and
shorts," A's pitcher Barry Zito
said, retemng to Oakland's
general manager.
Los Angeles .sank to 47-55
afterlosing 13 of 14 following
the All-Star break. But the
Dodgers won 17 of their next
18, and at 71-62 lead the NL
West by three games over the
second-place Padres. The
Dodgers went 21-7 August,
their most wins in a month
since leaving Brooklyn. after
the 1957 season.
Greg Maddux is 3-0 with a
2.37 ERA in six starts since
the Dodgers acquired him
from the Cubs on July 31.
Pitching for a contender has
inspired the 330-game winner.

PUBLIC NOTICE

Notice Of Public Hearing #2
The Vi\laglj uf Rutland

intend ~

to apply to the Ohio Department of

Devetopmenl for funding under I he Communily Developmenl Block
Gram (CDBG) Small CiJie' Program, a federally funded program
administered ·by rhe Strrte of Ohio.
'

The Village of Ruiland is eligible for I he lesser of $500,000.00 or 50%
of eligihte project cosJS of Fiscal Year 2006 CDBG funding, providing
the ViJlage meets applicable program requirements. On August 8. 2006

the Village conducted its first public hearing to inforin citizens about the
CDBG program , how it may be used, what activities are eligible and
mher important program requirements .
Based on both citizen input and local official's assessment of the

Village's needs. lhe Village is proposing to unde rtake the following
CDGB activi1y for 1he Fiscal Year 2006. Waier Siorage Tank
Replacement , whi~h will benefil 51% or more low-to-moderate income

pmons in lhe Village of Rultand. The following is lhe anJicipaiCd
projeCI budgc1:

Toial Project CoSis: $55 t,000
CDG B Funds: $250,500
ARC: $200,000 .
OWDA Loan: $t00,500
Asecond public hearing witt be held Seplember t9, 2006 at 7:00p.m .
a11he Village Council Chambers located iu 337 Main Sireet Rulluqd.
Ohio 45775 to give citizens In adequate opportunity to review and

commenl on the Village's proposed CDBG Application lo replace ihe
waler storage lank in the ViUage of Ruiland, Ohio before the Village
submils ils application to tbe Ohio Depanmem of Development
Citizens are e~couraged to aatcnd this meeting on September 19, 2006
at 7:00 p.m. to express their views and comments on the Village's

proposed CDGB Appticalion. Call Jhc Mayor of Rmland. Ohio aJ 740742-2121 or Bob Allen with Ohio Rural Cornmun,ity A:-.sistanc·e
Program at 740-9R9-06JO with any question regarding this notice.

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

-·

�Friday, september 1, 2006

www.mydailysentlnel.~om

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 1, 2006

www.mydallysentinel.com

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e ster

'Cltrtbunt - Sentinel •
L.,ri•O-oilt i ~i t: 'i is~ti ~i i._o' 1.,-M-~-~-~£-S~iiiOMiiii:..EN_.J L,e.O_.,;FO,;oH; ,~,; RI-;,;NT,.; _.,JI eo

10

WANr!D
'foDo
Aockspnngs Rehabilitation
Center provides residents
with outslanding nurs1ng
• care and rehabtl1tation serv" ices helping them retum to a
life of Independence at
home. We currently have
opportunities for AN's and
LPN'S located m Pomeroy,
Ohio.
We offer a COM·
• PETITIVE SALARY SCALE.
,· and excellent benefit package and a supportl\le work
&amp;n\llronment.
Interested
candidates should apply to·
Rocksprmgs. Rehabilitation
Center, 36759 Rocksprings
Road,
Pomeroy, Oh1o
45769. Extendicare Health
services. Inc i' an equal
opportunity employer that
encourages
workplace
diversity MIF ON .

Gallia
County
OH

classified @mydailytribune.com

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

Websjles :
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
WWW.I)lydailyregister.com

To Place
3Regtster
m:rtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad, {740) 446-2342 {740) 992·2156 {304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To 446·3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157

/)eat!!fir~
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Word Ads

Djsolay A"ds

Dally Jn .. Column: 1:00 p .m.

All Dl•play : 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In Next Day•• Paper
Sunday In-Column : 1:00 p.m.

Bu•lne•• Daya Prior To
Publication

For Sunday• Paper

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Pubillhlng roaorveo
tho right lo odll,
reject or cancel any
ad It any time.

Errort Mu1t B
oported on lilo tl
of publication an
he Trlbune-Sintlne
oglater
will
b
11ponaible for n
ore than the cost
he epaca occuple
the error and onl
he first lnaortlon. W
hall not be liable
y losa or expen
hat results from t
ubllcatlon or ami
on or an advtrtl

nt. CorrtcUona wil
made in the f
vallable edition.

&gt;Box number ads
lways confldlntlal.

Current rate car

pplies.

r

\ ~I

\I I \1"'

ANNOUNCEMENTS

rI

Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p.m.
Thur•day for Sunday•

POI.ICI!S: Ohio V.ll•v Publl1hlng rt~PrVM tht right to edit, reject, or ct~l 1ny 1d 1t anw thn.. Error• mu1t be reported on thellrst dl"t or
Trlbune-Sentlnti-ReglltM will be re•ponllble for no more than tht&gt; coat at ttle .,ace occupied bW 1111 error 111d only tt11 flrlllnurtlon. We lhlll
1ny IGI.I or expenu that r11ult1 from lhl pobtlcatiGn or omlll•lon at en edvertllernent. Corrtctlon wHI bl m•d• In the tlrll IYIIIIble edition. • Box
.,. alw•v- conrtctentlat. • Currant rata Cllrd appll••· • All
, advertiMment• •r•
10 tnt Ftder1l Fair Houtii'IQ Act of 1188. • Thlt ••
1ccepll only help Wlntecllld• m•tlng EO! •ttnd1rd1.
II
I I
I
In Yloltllon of th1l1w.

'";•P•i*•l

De«rtption • Include A Price • Avakl Abbre\llatlon•
• Include Phone Number And Addre•• When Needed,
• Ad• Should Run 7 D•v•

\ \ \ ()l

r

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
GIVFAWAY

Perennial Cal

Sne~or

r

GREENHOUSE CLEAR·
ANCE OVERSTOCK Moslly
mums , coral bells, hardy
lobelias, etc. First quality
plants produced and grown
here on our premises.
COUNTRY
GRADENS
GREENHOUSES, one mile
oH Rte.2 in Ashton, Wv. 16
mtles south ol Pt. Pleasant,
20
miles
north
of
Huntington
Fri-Sat·Sun·
Mon, Sept1·4, 10 am· 4 pm
each day or until sold out

"Maggie",
, spayed
and declawed housecat.
Child became allergic.
Please give Maggie a home.
Call (740)645·7275.

r

Found m Rodney area, red.dish blown &amp; black mix dog.
Call 1o Identify (740)245·
9359. 1740)339.()492

Lost. Black female Toy·
Poodle, w/white markings in
Park Dr. area. (304)675Freelo good noma 21amale 5479 or 1304 )674-8200
kmons Call (740)446·9632 LOST. Male BasseH Hoond.
or (740)645·6035.
Bud Chattin area, needs
Meds . Roward (304)895·
Full blOOded Rat Terrier, no 3399
papers, Blackffan loves

Huge,first-tlme yard·sa!e
E\lerything and the kitchen
sink. Gallipolis Ferry, direct·
behind Beale Elem Frl
the 1st &amp; Sat the 2nd 8·?

GM;AWAY

r

YARDSALEPr. J'LE.\sANr

;,;,;p...______..,

I

tv

Movmg·Sale Saturday 114
Liberty St, Pt. Pleasant 81?? tops, Jeans, housewares &amp; ect, mise 1tems

r

r

Saturday. Clean up Monday
end of Lewis Lane. Sandy
"(304)675·5392
YGAAUJPORIJ
SAlLIS£YG?.'?
"'4
YARD SALE·
He•ghts Chtna, rugs, 4 pc
Giveaway. Female Beagle
•
~
l'oMERov/MJOOLE sunroom set. pictures. tools,
tamps, books, jewelry, cats
Pup IO\IeS children, playful.
SALE968.
Free to good home. 740- L _ _.;G~AILIPO~::.;,;;US~-,.1 Garage sale, neKt to Hofiday Yard sale 9/t-9,12, 1636 Garage Sale. Aug.31st- meow, lloor mirror, crafts,
742·2607.
~n:~.~ain or sh1ne. Sat. 9/2, Jackson Pi~e. Slamily. Little Sept.4th. 31744 Noble mower, much mora
This
newspape
1480 Add1son Pike- 1 1/2
bit of everything, home into- Summ11, Middleport Mtsc.
ccapla only hoi
miles from SA 7. 8131, 911,
nor, boys/girls clothes
1tems. guns. tools.
anted ads meelln
, 8am-? Hutch, trash Garage sale· rain or sh1ne,
915
OE standards.
compactor, rugs, childrens September 1st &amp; 2nd. Yard sale Sept 3,4,5. Garage Sale. Sal. 2nd.
Cross Creek Auction Buffalo
clothes, toys &amp; lots of house- 7.30am· ?? 271 McCully Rd. Clothes, kn1ck knacks 199 9·00--4·00
32337 Bailey
We will not knowl
hold items.
Glassware, longaberger, Hemlock Rd., out of Run Road. Furniture, tools, Auct1on Saturday 7 pm. thiS
accept any adver
week Dave w1th cakes &amp;
name
brand
clothing, Evergreen
childr9n's olothes, and d1shptes, antiques &amp; collectible
loement in vlolotlo
15 Ann Or1ve, sept, 1, 2, 4, scrubs. \lintage. linoos. potes. Much more.
flholaw.
tery and electronics
8.30am til 5:00pm.
Yard sale Sept. 3,4,5 Knick - - - - - - - - - shop, 2 grandfather clo~s.
knack, dothes, etc Burnett Lg. Garage Sal&amp;, Rain or lots of m1sc antiques &amp; small
1939 Chatham 1st, 2nd, 4th. Garage sate· Sal. Sept 2, 8- Ad., Kanauga
Sh1nel 3202 Formerly Jo's collectibles Bu11ding is full.
Hospital bed, furniture, dish- 4, 438 Debbie Or. G1rls, toys
200 Air
Gift Shop, Syracuse, Ohto. Seating for
es, kids clothes, what nots, &amp; clothes size 6, dishes- Yard sale· Saturday only Thursday, August
31st·· Conditioned Building We
4x4"s For Sale .............................................. 725
elc
some Phaltzgraff.
Sept. 2, from 9·2. Kids cloth- Sept 1st··Sept. 2nd. Back to gladly accept Visa and
Announcement ....•.............•••........•......•....... 030
mg.
banery operated scoot- School Clothing, Baby Master Card ~304)937·21 18
2336 Centenary. Rd. Sept Gigantic 3 tam1ly yard sale
Antlqueo .•..••..•••••••••••.....•..•••.....••.•.••.••••••••.•.• 530
ers.
Bowflex, toys, lots ol clothes, men's and women's or (304)550·1616
2nd
&amp;
4lh
1
0·?
Baby
items,
Apsrtmonta tor Ront ................................... 440
Monday, Sept. 4th. Ra1n or
clothing. toys, home intenor, sh1ne 900 Gage Ad 1n miscellaneous 345 Arnold clothmg, Old Mtlk Churn,
Auction and Flea M•rket.............................
Dnve, Bidwell.
mtcrowa\18, treadmill, lots of
ole
Auto Porta &amp; Acceoaorles •••....•.....•..•.••....•. 760
Patriot. Couch, rec11ner,
toys, purses, coats, and
Auto Repair ...•••.•••.•.......••••........•..••••••••.....•••
3 family yard sale One day washer, 2 dryers, other furni· Yard sate. Electronics. furni- sweaters.
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
only. Sap(. 2nd. Clothing, ture. huge set of apple d•sh· ture, d1shes, linens. mise
Boats &amp; Motoro tor Sate ............................. 750
household items, appli· es, cou ntry decor. Tons ol 913 4th Ave. Thurs-Sat. 8·1 Moving Sale- Fri. Sept. 1, AbsOlute Top Dollar: US.
Building Supplloa •...•••••••••..•••••.••••••••.•••••••••• 550
Sat 2. 9am-? 828 East Main Sll\ler and Gold Coins,
ances, tools, furniture . 6 mise Items, lots of clothes
Buolno11 and Buildlnga .•••••..••....•..•••••...•.•• 340
Yard sale· Sept. 1 &amp; 2, 8642 St., Pomeroy. Floor modal Proofsets, Gold Rings, Pre·
Pine
Street,
9:()0.3
00
Bualnoaa Opportunlty................................. 210
Huge sale 2894 Centerpoint At 7 S. Rain or sh!ne. Truck TV, end tables, bed, banjo, 1935
US
Currency,
Bualness Trslnlng ...•.••...••••.••..•...•••••••••..•.••• 140
4 Family Yard Sale 504 4th Ad at curve 279, 911-9/4 topper, gospel sound tf'acks. clothing, motor home.
SoiltBire Diamonds· M.T.S.
Campera &amp; Motor Homes ••••...••..••••••••.....••• 790
Information household 1tems.
Ave Frt 9·'? Sat 9-1 Couches 9:00·6 00.
Co1n Shop, 151 Second
Camping Equipment ••.•••••••••.......••••••••..•.•••• 780
Shirley Arrowood (740)682Name Brand Baby Boy and A\lenue, Gallipolis, 740-446·
to Clothes
Cards ot Thanka .......................................... 010
Yard/Moving Craft Business Girl's, women's and men's.
7163.
2842.
Child/Elderly Care •••.....••••...•••..••.•••••••••••••••• 190
43 Ann Ortve, Sat. 9/2 10·5, - - . - - - - - . , . - - Sate. Fnday!Saturday, 330 Pomeroy Before last light at - - - - - - - - Elactrlcai/Rotrlgerallon ............................... 840
Sun 9/3 12:5. Toddler Huge Yard Sale Fn, Sat911· Keeler Rd off Bulaville Pike end of town
l will buy J1.J.Di Ca£s. Cali
Equipment tor Rant ..••••••.•••••••••••••..•••..•••••••• 480
clothes, toys, antiques. 912 Sam·4pm, 330 Keeler Chnstmas crafts, Baby, tod(740}3138·9303.
Excavating ................................................... ~30
Rain/shin&amp;
Ad past Shrine Club dler, boy &amp; girl clothes ancj Sat., Sept. 2, 9··3, Dave's ::...:.::.:==:.::._______
Spencer's, 605 Main St., Want to buy Junk Cars
Farm Equlpmant .......................................... 810
much more!
5 family yard sale on SR Baskets, holiday/craft items,
Farms tor Rent•••••••••••••.•••.•.••••••.••••••.•••••••••.• 430
Rac1ne.
Teen clothes 0.6, {304)773·5004
party supplies, lurnilure, ale,
554, 2nd house past railroad
Farm a lor Sale ............................ :•.•.••••..••••.. 330
AE ', AF, Loodies tots of
lrac:M In Cheshire at the cor· grill, baby swing, bassinet,
Wantmg
to
buy
For Laaae ................................., ................... 410
ner of Watson Grove &amp; 554 . clothes for baby, loddler,
mtsc
Chicl«tns/Banties &amp; a wolfe
For Sale ••••..••.•.•.......•••••....•••••••••••.•.•••••••••••.•• 585
8131-912
men, women, maternity,
Saturday 9 4 36545 corner pup or big dog (304)675·
For Sale or Tr- ......................................... 5110
plus.
2 Family Yard Sale. Baby of Rocks~ri~gs-Fialwoods, 5354
Fru~a &amp; Vegetablea ..................................... 560
586 oAnn Onve, Fn-Sat, off - - - - - - - - - - boy and toddler g•rl clothes, Second house on nght,
Furnlahed Rooms ........................................ 450
Raccoon Ad from At. 7. Movmg Sal&amp; Saturday scrubs for ladies, men and desk, gameboy advance, Zuspan Metal Selvage, Now
General Haullng ...••.............................•........ 850
buying junk cars. buses,
Boys, womens, bar stools, 912/06, 8am-tpm. Tara women clothes, baby items lots of mtsc
Glveaway •.........•.••••••..•..•.•••••...•....••...••••••..•.• 040
homecom1ng gowns.
Esates, Baby Furniture, and toys, sh~s. purses, - - - - - - - - - pipe, 1-beem, tin, etc.
Hoppy Ada •...•...••••••.1•••••••••••.....••..•.•..••••.•.••••050
Clothing
(Womens/Baby ,m1sc One day only, Sst., Saturday, September 2, and Mason wv 304-593·1904.
Hay &amp; Graln ..................................................840
902 Vanco Ad. September girls), household items, Sept 2nd···9·00 AM . 500 Monday, September 4,
I \11'111,\ 11 \ I
Help Wanted ...•••.•.•.••••....••••..••.•..••.•.••••••••....• 110
1· 9-3 and September 2- 9· Toys, mise
Grant St, Middleport
2006. s·oo a.m. to 5:00p.m.
Home lmprovements •.•.••••••....•....••...••••••••••• 810
-., 1 I~\ H I -.,
4. Bar stools, costume 1ew· - - - - - - - - - - --~---,-----,-- Located on Seneca Drive··
Homos for Sale ............................................ 310
elry, Galha Academy logo Multi tamlly yard sate Sst 3family yard salE!, Sat. Sept. Pomeroy subdivision beside li~t~ib~;;;;;~,;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Household Gooda ....................................... 510
items, clp1hes and much Sept.
2nd,
9am·5pm. 2nd, 9am·5pm, follow signs the Me 1gs High School
lfnp WAN'TED
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
more
Rodney CommtJnity Building at Tuppers Pla1ns caution
In Memorlam ......•••••............••••..•........•••••.•••• 020
(St At 850 &amp; old At 35)
light.
Sept. 1 and 2. Keith F1tch
lnsurance ............................. !....................... 130
Clean sweep yard sale 3736
Residence-S. A
124,
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Lawn &amp; Gordon Equipment ........................ 8110
Addison Pike, Ca1dweU resi· Multl·family 807 Skidmore 3 FAMILY YARD SALE. Portland Ail proceeds ben·
Assemble crafts,
Llvutock ...•.••...••••••.••....•••••••••...•.•...••••••••••••• 830
c:Mnca. Sept 1·2·4. Sam·?
Ad
Saturday '
8·? Saturday, Sept, 2, ~ m. to eflt Meige Co. Relay for Life.
wood items.
Loot and Found ....•••••••.••••.•••: •••••••..••••••••••••• 080
Fri &amp; Sat. 9/1!06-912106, Toddler/small boys, ladies 5p.m 45061 Baum Addition
To $480/wk
Lots &amp; Acreoge ............................................ 350
pius s1ze clothing, home Road
Top of !he Hill. Sept. 1st-2nd and 4th. 185
Materials
prov1ded. .
Mlscellaneo.u s ..................................... ......... 170
299/319
Roush
Ln, decor. misc.
Clothes all s•zes 2 T to Salem Street, Rutland, OhiO
Free inlormatlon pkg 24Hr
Mlacellaneous Merchandlae .......................540
Cheshire,
8:00·5·00.
9.00 to 6:00
Adult. other misc.
CIOI111n•", household llems, Outreach Center, Sapt 1·5· Large A
Mobile Home Repair .•••...•••.•...••....•.•••.••.••••••880
801·428-4649
s
1
Mobile Homes tor Rent ............................... 420
books, mis&lt;;. items.3
8 Venety ol items, Rain can- rtems atn or hm&amp;
Tremendous Yard Sale,
AcquiSitions now accepting
Mobile Homes for Sale ............................ .... 320
1
Fri-Sat·Mon,' Sam·? 134 eels. Inside summer sale $3 7 Families Plus sizes. kids Sept · 3-9 P m · Sept. 2, 9 resumes lor part-t•me sales.
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
clothes, ScruB Tops, Toys a.m.·3 p.m., 1st house on
Portsmouth Rd Antique, pic- bag.
151 Second Ave, Gallipolis.
Motorcyctu &amp; 4 WhMiero .••••.•••••••••••.•..••••• 740
d Sept,
I
3 right past Nazarene Church No phone calls please ,
tures, Fenton bells, glass· Trash &amp; treasure sale, 111 1 Sep I . 2, Sa.an
M¥11catlnatrumanta ................................... 570
Sun 3rd ST., Racine
between Syracuse and
ware, sewing rocker, oak
Personals .....................................................005
Aac•ne. 4 drawer chest, Administrative
Ohio Ave ne8r GDC, Fri &amp;
Assistant
mantel, household goods,
Pets tor Sal a ......•..••••..•.•...•••••..•.......•••••••••.•. 560
Sat 1st &amp; 2nd. 8·5 Couch 813
Broadway
Street. queen water bed, footon needed for busy oHice setcha1rs. Fostoria. 28ft. exten·
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ......••••••••.........•••••....•••• 820
twin bed complete. clot hing. Middleport. Sept. 1st Fn, bunk bed With mattresses, ling. Ability to comrnumcate
slon ladder.
Proteaolonal Servlces .................................230
fa..: mach1nes, console TV, with public, answer multi-tine
marble. dishes, m1crowa\l&amp;, Sept 2nd Sat
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .............................,.160
flat screen computer moni· phone, and general office
Garage sale 206 3rd Ave 9· something tor everyone.
Real Estate Wented ..................................... 380
Bakers' . Tanner Run. Sepl tOf. golf clubs, Harley cloth· sk1lls requ1rad Responsible
3:00 Fri·Sat. Children's ,
Schoolalnatructlon .......••.............•.•...........• 150
clothes Birlh-10, dresses. Two family yard sale 9· 1 &amp; 9- tst and 2nd 740·949·2723. ing, Chevy truck buckets person that can work lnd&amp;·
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ................ .............. 850
appliances. seats and much more.
edull clothes toys dish set 2 at 10544 State Route 141 Furniture,
pendently. Must ha\le com·
SltuatloJls Wonted ...•.•.••••••.......•...•••••.•••••.••• l20
lots of stuff. '
'
' Two guns, tools, culling Chns!lan books. etc Rain or
puter
s~llls w1th Word and
Space for Rent ............................................. 460
Yard Sale. Sept 1 and 2. 35
torches, 16' car hauler/ wUh Sh1ne.
Excel. No phone calls.
Sporting Goods •••.•......•.••••.•....••...•••••.•..•••••• 520
Rlver\liew
Drive,
Middleport.
Garage Sate Sept. 1st &amp; winch
Apply 1n person only on
SUV's tor Sale .............................................. 720
81g Salel Adult and small
2nd, 8:30·? 6 mMes below
Wednesday,
September 6
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
YARDSl,u:.
children
dothing
and
mise
Yard sale 119 Baslian1 Or·
GallipoliS on St Rt. 7S.
between 9·4pm at 1312
Upholotory .•.....•..............•••••••....•.•..••••••..••..• 870
Pr. I'Lf:.lsANr
city Friday &amp; Sal Sept 1st &amp; 1tems
located at 4·
Von a For Sale .........•.••.•.•....•••.••••••••.••.....•••••• 730
Eastern Ave Geli•polls
Garage sale, 7th hOuse on 2nd.
9·5 . Computers. Seasons Outdoor Power·S\.
wonted to Buy ............................................. oeo
775, Sept. 1st &amp; 2nd, 9:00-? stereo., entertainment cen- Rt. 7, Pomeroy.
Big- Ylird Sale &amp; Craft Sale An Excellent way to earn
Wonted to Buy· Farm SUppilea .•••••••••••..•••• 820
Cratters you don't want to ter, queen s1ze bed frame,
SaMday 62 South &amp; Tribble money. The New A\lon
Wanted To Oo .............................................. 180
miss this onel Supp~es lor teens. mens &amp; womens plus Garag"e Sale
2 Family, Ad at Leon • Marathon
can Marrlyn 304-882·2645
Wonted to Rent •..........••••••.....:.••••••••..•.••.••••• 470
candles, wood, sewing, size clothes &amp; mrsc. 1tems
Michelle Hams and Altsa Station
Yard Sale· Galllpoils .................................... 072
ceram1cs, wreaths, dolls.
~indley Thurs., Friday and
AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
Yard Sai..Pomaroy/Middle ......................... 074
Some toots, clothing, house- Yard sate 3325 Little Bullskln maybe Sat
at Country Yard sale Salurday. Sept . 2. Sell Shirley Spears, 304·
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleaaant ...•••• :........•..•.••.....•••• 078
wares.
Candles 1n M1ners\11lle. Oh1o. 2226 Mt Vernon Ave 8 to ? 675-1429
Ad Sal Sun. Man
&gt;All Real Eatat
dvertlaements ar
ublect to the Fodera
air Housing Act

people call for more Info

~

r

YARD SALE

YARD

I

I

.~~:

=---. .,

CLASSIFIED INDEX

oao
no

e

I

ito

l
.

110
1.

IIELP WANTED

11ELP WANfED

LPN'S, PAN end Casual.
Contact Angie McMillin at
Middleton
Estates.
(740)446-7148 or (740)446·
48t4 or fax resume to
(740)446·0136. An EOE
F/MION

Garage Sale.
Sweeper,
Comforters,
Teen-girl's
clolhes·elc. Too much to
mention Frl.-9 to 1 and Sat
9 to 2
Hartford, W.Va.
Behind School

Forming Rock/Metal Band.
Gall 740-992-9904 or 740416-1090
Local 011 and gas land com·
pany seeking any information regardmg the heirs of
Jessie S. Mossman and/or
Elmore S Mossman. JeSBie
S. Mossman died In the year
of 1956, as a resident of
Mason County l&amp;avtng sur·
vl\ling her, a son, Elmore S.
Mossman.
Elmore S.
Mossman married Thelma
Lois Johnson. ' If you ha\18
any information regardtng
this matter please contact
H.L. Lambert at (304)549·
7349

Now you can have borders and graphics
added lo your classified ads
(.~
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics soc for small
S1.00 for large

• All ads m~sl be prepaid'

AD • ltlrt Your Ad• Wlth A Keyword • Include Complete

••

.I FlED ,

C·LASSIFIED

E-mail

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

• NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
"FULl.·TIME CLASSES
'COL TRAINING
• FINANCING ...VAil.A8lE
'JOe PLACEMENT
' ENROLliNG NOW

Medical Assistant needed
lull time at Doctor's Office,
experience preferred, Must
be willing to wOfk evenings
hours, 401k oflered. Send
Resume to Box TSC 1 c/o
Point Pleasant Register, 200
Main Street, Point Pleasant,
wv 25550

ALLIANCE
TRACTOA·TAAILEA
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE, VA

1·800-334·1203

,---------------Needed, Contract labor for

Clinical Supervisor/OMRfl:
FT, salary with beneftts.
Must be proficient in
Mtcrosofl Word, Excel with
good organizational skills.
Must ha\le a BS in Human
Serviced f1eld wtth a min.·
mum of 2 yrs e~~:perience
With MR/00, two yrs of pro·
gressi118ly responsible man·
agement
expenence.
Working knowledge of
Federal, Slate and local reg·
ulat1ons concerning services
to persons with MR/DD
Mus1 present an openness
to learn, develop skills and
promote positive change.
Responsible for 0\lerall operations of assigned serv~ce
Sites. including staff. budget,
compliance
with
State/Federal Regulations.
Will manage two t -bed
group
homes
m
Chesapeake, OH, assure
act1ve treatment, daily
supervision of consumers
and staff assure adhBI'ence
to reQulations and policies.
Must be able to travel
between serv1ces sties,
slaying o\lernight if necessary Superv1se 4-person
management team and
d•rect care stafl to achieve
serv1ce, clinical and tinanctel
objectives within general
resource and reimbursement models.
Contact Cindy Pinkerman,
HR al 740·867·3051. tax
resume to 740-867·3181 or

e

m

a

1

Co!okerman@ respa!A com
An EOE F/M/ON.
-----------Construction ASSIStant •
excellent math, verbal and
Itt
ti
wr en
commu~tca ons
skills. Excel, Word, and
Power Point. O\lerttme as
required,
$11.00·$13.00
hour. Fax resumes (614)·
716·227~

---'----Cosmetologist needed Call
(740)446-7425
::.....:.:....:..:_:.:._ _ __

local home Improvement
company. SOme experience
would be benefictal. Pay
based upon job and experi·
ence Please call (740)9925094.
0\lerbrook Rehabilitation
Center 1s currently accepting
applications for STNAs All
shifts, part-time. No Phona
Calls, Please Ali interested
applicants should pick up an
application at 333 Page
Street, Middleport. OH For
further information, please
contact Hollie at (740)9926472 . EOE
---------Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center is currently accepting
applications
for
Housekeeping &amp; Laundry .
part-time positiOn All Inter·
ested applicants should pick
up an application at 333
Page Street, Middleport,
OH. For further information ,
please contact Linda at
(740)992·6472. E.O.E.
---------Part·Time Syracuse Mayor's
Court Clerk. Mail Resume
to Syracuse V1!1age, Mayor
Er~c Cunningham, P.O. Box
266, Syracuse, OhiO 45n9
Deadline Sept. 51h.
Progresstve veterrnary
· practice seeking
hardworking, intellectual,
honest, selt·motlvated
team member.
Pnor e)(perience working In
a practice with small animal
and equine patients pre·
larred. However. we are will·
lng to train Individuals with
promise. Duttes will include:
Kennel dulles, office clean·
lng and slacking. cleaning
surgery Instruments, assist·
lng •n exam rooms, helping
restrain animals for examl·
nation and treatment. Must
be available to work week·
ends
and
holidays.
Computer skills a plus
Interested Individuals should
send a resume to· 1520
State Acute 160, Gallipolis,
Ohio 4563t.

George's Portab'e Sawm1ll,
don't haul your Logs to the
M1il just call304-675·1957.

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$1567·S26.191hr.. now hirIng For appl1catlon and lree
governement job into, cell
American Assoc of Labor 1·
91 3·599·8042~ 24/hrs emp.
serv.
HOME HEALTH AIDES
SIGN ON BONUS Home
Health C~re of SE Ohio IS
currently hinng home aides·
competiti\19 wages
Cell
740·662· 1222.

·--

Mag1c Years Day-Care-Pre·
'"'' (&lt;
School Inc Openings a\lail- !
.. .
able , now accepting Fall·
Enrollment. State L1censed 1997 bl·level house 2 car
'· Putting Children Ftrst" garage with 7 acres, 3BR. 2
bath, 40x20 pole barn.
1304)675·5847
12x20 deck pond. heat
pump Me1gs/Ga llla lme
$140,000 Call (740)742·
t154
Care for your loved one
Pnvate room and bath, 3 hot
meals and snacks, crafts.
1740)388·0118.
Jenny's Home Half Carel
For Disabled Shut In's. Call
740·378·6482.

Lori's Daycare, accepting
Children of all ages State
Rocksprings Rehabilitation &amp; pn\lala pay accepted .
Center Is now accepting State Route 124, (740)992·
applications lor a beaut1clan 7676
· to work two days a week at
II \ \ \( 1\ 1
our 1aclbty. Interested candl·
dates should apply to ·
B~
. Roekspnngs Rehabilitation
OJ'roKJl.IN IIY
Genter, 36759 Rocksprings
Road.
Pomeroy
Ohio
45769. Extendicare health For rent or sale 17,600 SQ h
· Serv1ces, Inc IS an equal warehouse on At 2 with 3
' opportunity employer that acres. fenced in &amp; gated
~ encourages
workplace blacktop
parktng
lot
dtverSity MIF ON
(304)937 4127

Technician Wanttd
InstallatiOn and SBflllce
representat i\le needed
Immediately for satellite
T.V. systems, burglar-tire
alarms, CCTV and
access control systems
Ideal candidate would
have some previous
experience in low voltage
wiring and some knowl·
edge of computer sys·
terns andlor industrial
maintenance lndtvtdual
should be self motivated
and capable of working
unsupervised, ability to
work with customers
Income based tJpon adu·
cation and/or expenence.
Company Will pro\l•de
!raining to the rlo;llt indi·
vidual
Respond with resume to.
ConsoUdated Security
Services, Inc
.240 Upper River Road
GallipoliS, OH 45631

2990 Sta1e Route 124.
Syracuse, ow of flood piam
Ohio R1ver view, 6 room, 3
bedroom, 1 112 bath 1 acre
lot. garage. (740)992·7866 ,
(7401992·5776. (7401339·

3363
3 bedroom , 1 story, 1 112
bath .. gas heat. cia. 2 car
garage, m Mlddlepon ,
$72.500. (740)992·6926
4 bedroom, 2 bath, double
garage, pool, 2 acres.
Eastern School 01slrJct
740-992-3465 after 5·00PM
4 rental houses "For Sale"
Good 1ncome producing
properties Great locatiOn•
Price(s) are Negohable.
Motl\lated
Sellerl
ln
Galhpolls. Call Wayne
(404)456·3802.

•NOTICh
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends
that you do busmess with
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the matl until you
have mvest1gated the
offering.

Attention!
Local company olfenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT~ . pro·
MONEY
grams lor you to buy your
,10 LoAN
home Instead of rentmg,
L-•-••iilliiiiliiilio•o'· • 100% l1nanc1ng
• Less than perfect pred1t
accepted
**NOTICE**
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Borrow Smart. Contact Mortgage
Locators
the Ohio Div1s1on of 17401367·0000
Financ•al
InstitutiOn's
Office of Consumer Bank Foreclosures· 912
Affe1rs BEFORE you refi- Vtand St. P01nt Pleasant
nance your home or $27,500, 86 Burdette Adn
obtain a loan. BEWARE $27.900, 4BR Bnck Rancher
of requests for any large SouthSide $85 ,000 , 4BA
ad\lance payments of Lesage S24,500 Many
lees or 1nsurance Call the Others! Mary Vance, Really
Office of Consumer •n the Valley 304·757·1687
Affa irs toll free at 1-866278·0003 to learn 1f the
Bank·Owned 2800 Sq Ft
mortgage
broker or
lender
is
properly Home, 2 car garage plus 3
car detached garage near
licensed. (This •s a public
serv1ce announcement Pomt Pleasant $224 ,900
from the Ohio Valley M1ke Slack Old Colony
GMAC Really (304)542·
Publishing Company)
5888

I

i

Transitions for Youth IS seek·
ing a full lime Ohio certified
LSW lor the purpose ol case
management, recrtJiting and
llcenstng of foster homes
and public relat1ons Work
from home and schedule
your own hours. Please
send resuma to· Transitions
for Youth, 5801 State Route
141. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
Aesumea must be recetved
by September 9.

i

Be~utilul.

3BR horne. wrap
around
porch
downtown
SERVICF.S
,;;~~-_.1 Gallipolis . C11y Schools.
$118,000
Call 740-446TURNED DOWN ON
9961 .
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
Cape Cod home located on
No Fee Unless We Wtn!
2 acre lot. close to PomerO)'
1·888·582·3345
and
Me1gs Jr. High and H1gh
10 \I 1 ._, I\ I I
School
Excellent neighbors
Attached 2-car
HoME'l
garage, central AJC and
FOR SALE
heat.' 2,400 sq feet
3
bdrms, 3 baths . 740-992·
4bd, 2 bath Only $32,900' 2795 New Crew Road
FOAECLOSUREI For l1st·
ings 800-391-5228 elCI F254 Reduced : Mason, 3rd St
2bdrm, 1 ba, corner lot
wlstomge building 8. garage
$62,500. Prudent•al Bunch
Realtors, Bobby Muncy
(740)709·0299.
PRO~ON-\L

L.• •

Truck Ori\·ers

I NEED ONE DRIVER 1
Small Truckmg Compan y
Lookmg for Tractor Trailer
dnvers With flo.lbed expenence,
Paying 30% of gross. Driver
a\'erages S600 00 to $900.00
lake home af\er t11:&lt;e~ . Hume
e\'ery week end and ~ome week
days deli\enng to Oh KY VA
WV IN )30-527-2189.
Wanted· Direct Supervision
Employees to oversee male
youth 1n a staff secure res1·
dentlal environment Must
pass a physical training
reqwrement Paid benellts
Call between 9am-3pm .
Mon-Fri to apply (740)379·

SELL YOUR HOME
WITH ACLASSIFIED

~

AU real estate advertising

1n this nftwspeper Is
aubject to the Federal
fair Hou11ng Act Of 1968
which mtkes it Ulegal to
ad~rtllt "1ny
preference, limitation or
dlscrlmln.tion baaed on
race, color, religion,
familial status or national
origm. or any intention to
make any, such
preference, limitation or
dlserlmlnation "

r

1.75 Acra Lot
Mason Co. WV
AI 2 Box t27,
Leon, WV 25123
Approx. 500'
Road Frontage
Ut1lrties Available
$8.995
13041295·9090 .

•ex

This newspaper w111 not
know ingly aceept
advertisements for real
estate which is In
vlota!IOO of the law. Our
readers are hereby
lnform•d th1t all
dwellings adv•rtlted In
thla newspaper ara •
available on an equal1
opportunity baaea.

LoTS&amp;

ACRFAGJ;:

43 Beautiful acres-Nichols
Road, Rutland. Oil and gas
well. Free gas, lots of deer
and turkeys $65 ,000 oo
74Q.742·2233

4-5 bedroom. 2 bath, 3 000
sq ft. Hardwood floors
throughout the house.
Water/trash pa1d
Cell
(740)446·7425.
4bd HUD home! Buy lor
$20,900! For LIStings 800·
391·5228 x1709
Attenttont
Local company offenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT' p10·
grams tor you to buy your
home instead of rent1ng
• 100% linanclng
' Less than perfect credit
accepted
' Payment could b'e the
same as rent.
Locators
Mortgage
(740)367·0000

Land !or sale. Several 5 to
12 acre lots located 1n Gallia
Co., Morgan Twp and Me1gs
Co Salem Twp. Land con·
tra cts a\lalleble
Some - -'-- - - - ---:c-Home ·For Sale Outside restnctlons. No calls after House lor rent. No Pets
740"992 "5858
Rac1ne, Oh1o Ran ch Style g·oopm (740)669·0t43
2600 sq ft 4 bdr., large
master bdr wlwalk·ln closet, Large Private Mobile Home
2 full baths living roo m, lam· Lot . Water, Sewer. AI 87
lly room. large cedar sun $130/monlh {304)675-4138
room open1ng onto patiO, Mercefllllle building lot lor
dining room, kttche n. uttltty sale. 4 745 acres SA 218
room, part1al basement close to school s Good
Attached large 2 car garage home
stte .
$ 16,000.
w/j:)wll in cabinets : unat(740)256 ·1 553. (740)339·
tached 3 ca1 heated garage. 9236
In ground pool. brick pat1o,
profeSSIOnally tar\dscaped. Mobile Home Lot for rent
Pnce $275.000 .00 Call740- near Vinton Call (740)441·
1111
949·2217.
--------Mobtle Home Lot 1n Johnson
NO OOWN PAYMENT even
Mobile Home Park in
with less than perfect credtl
Gallipolis, OH. Phone
IS a\laitable on th1s 3 bed·
(7401446·2003 or (740)446room 1 bath home 1n
1409
Middleport. Corner lot, v1nyl
s1dmg , firep lace in livmg
RFAL F.'ITATE
room, good carpel, t1le floor
WMTED
in ~itchen. French doors
open to master bedroom.
Need to sell your home?
JacuzZI tub, off street park·
Late on payments, d1vorce.
ing. Payment around $550
10b transfer or a death? I
per month 740-367·7129
can buy your home Ail cash
and qu1ck clos1ng. 740-416·
Very mce 3BR. bath
3130
upsta1rs , furnished 1BR apt.
HI\ I \I ...,
downstatrs lurniture store in
retu Car lot on $Ide All on
1/~ ac lot at 130 Bulav1lle
P1ke,
GallipOliS,
OH
$135.000 1740)446·4782.
MOBILE HoMES
fOR SALE
2003 3 Br. 2 Bath . 28 X 60
Redman double
wide
S1tt1ng on 1 3 acres
Concrete walks and porches, landscaped, shade
lrees. country sethng on S A
143, Me1gs County Asking
$82,500, 740-742·3225
Bank Owned 1411:70 Mobile
Home, w1th half acre land.
near
Point
Pleasant.
$t4,900, M•ke Slack, Old
Colony
GMAC
Realty
(304)512·5888

HOUSES
lliRRmr
2 Bdrm, 1 bath , $350fmonth,
$350/deposit, plus ut•bties
(3041674·4636

2 bedroom hose $350 +sec
dep No pets Call (740)446·
0924
2·3 br hOuse 1n New Haven,
$425/month.
+
$300/depostt, No Pets
(304)882·3652
2BR home- Vinton St $375
mo. + sec dep. You pay ut1l1·
lies Gas heat (740)446·
3644.
3 bedroom m Gallipolis.
Great location! WID conn
$309/month, $100/deposit
No pets.
1 bedroom m Gallipolis
Great location! $179/month,
$1 00/deposit. No pets Call
Wayne (404)456·3802

Clean well ma1nlained 95
Qlayton, 14~~:70, all electnc.
3 br 2 bath . complete w1th
appliances. washer dryer.
curta1ns, new blinds, heat
pump w1lh central. air, 2
porches, new underpmmng 38R home· SA 554, BidWell,
S16 000 OMO (3041593· $575/rno sec. dep. all else
6437 or (304)675·8668
(740)446·3644

Pleasant V811ey Hosp1tai
is currently accepting
resumes tor Full time·
Registered Nurses.
Applicants must have a
current West Virginia
license Fle~~:lble
scheduling. excellenl
salary, holidays, health
Insurance singte/lamtty
plan. dental plan, lite
Insurance. vacation,
long-term disability and
retirement
Send resumes to.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dri\18
Point Pleasant. WV
25550
(3041675-4340

KFC
Is accepting applications lor
Management Compet111ve
Salary &amp; Bonus. Send
resume to:
KFC
AA/EOE
Attention: Tayna Howell
PO Box 1591
At 35 Adult Book Store need
Ashland, KY 41105·1591
Midnight Clerk Full tlma
or call (606)324·5421
(304)937-4900 Orug Test
ext 23

Lift Chair lor sate.
Cond. 740-742·3167

~

Place Y
..·ad~'ID

.

· Paid Classified
's Gallipolis

Polai·

•

•

E..:c

Tn Axle Load ol firewood
$350 A Load. 740·949·
2195.

I

Are you tired of wrinkled
dothes? Let me help with
your iromng and laundry
Call (7401446·7525 leave a
message.

~allipolis

1J.Bail!' m:ribune

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

I

2 Bedroom Apt Cenlenary

Road
appliances,
washer1d1yer hookup, no
pets. t740)446·9442 alter
500pm

For rent· Nice 2 bedroom
mob1te home m Country 2 bedroom apt 76 V•ne St .
Homes $325 + depos1t Gallipolts. Oh (740)367·
1 brTra1ler turn.shecl, utiht1es ,17~4~0c;l3:.:8::5_·4~0.:.19:..__ _ ___7_88_6_ _ _ _ _ _ __
patd. 7 miles from Power
Plant In Letart 5350 8 Mobile Home Sites lor up to Clean. very n1ce 1 bedroom
month (304)882 _2858
16x8o m Country Homes lurr.ished Apartment. 4325
(740)385·4019.
+ Depos11 (304)675-2970

The Chester Volunteer
Fire Department
willl have their annual
Labor Day serving
BBQ Chicken, Ribs
and ice cream on
Monday, September 4th
Starting at 11 :30 AM

•

,_.

,..

BROAD RUN GUN CLUB

Sunday, Sept. 3rd
680/Siug Match

Meeting &amp; Nominations

Bingo starts at 7 pm

New Lower Prices on
. limestone at Rodney Stone
(740)245·5316, River Gravel
&amp; Sand also available.

To Do

MOiliLE H&lt;»ns
mR Jb:w

VFW #9053
Friday Nights
Doors Open at 5 pm

Male te nor needed for new
Southern Gospel Trio · Call
740·215·0812 or 740·682·
7429 It no answer lea\le
message.

WANITll

r

Tuppers Plains

For Sale
Wood Burner
Fumace. used very little.
$350.00. Phone 740·992·
4228
Lazy T Royal Chaparral
Family Resort Campground
membership
for
sale,
(304)372·6569

For Rent· N1ce 2 BA 2 Bath
Mob1te Home In Gallipolis,
S450 per month plus
depos1t {740)645·7765

MOBILE HOME'l
FOR RENT

All the Paper Packs you can
· play lor $25.00
Guaranteed $99.00 a game
Guaranteed $500.00
Coverall could be higher
depending on crowd
Early Bird starting at 5 pm

ScHooLS

·Dally

BN NURSES

FOR REN"I

unties

IN&lt;ITRUcnON

lnd Schooll 12748

Totally remodeled New outside s1dtng. 2 bedrooms
bath. kitchen nice neighbor·
hood. Call (740)446·7425

American Legion
. Middleport
September 2 6:30 pm

Warehouse
Pos1st10n .
Loading/unloading trucks.
pullmg orders, deliver to
multiple store locahons.
Must have valid driver's
license, available to wOI"k M·
F Please send resu me to
the Potnt Pleasant Register
CLA Box 200 :lli&lt;29 Main
St., Pt Pleasant, WV 25550

Gelllpolla Career Cot lege
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740·446-4367,
1·800·2 14·0452
wwtrgallipohecaf881'GllH8Q&amp; com
•ccr•dited L!emb•r Accr•d1t1ng
Counct tor lndependerrt Colleg~t

MOilll.£ HOME&lt;;

.Clean . pretty, 3BR house for 2 &amp; 3 Bedroom Trailers, Call Mobile Homes lor Rent ,
(740)367 ·7762 (740)446· Located 1n Galhpol1s Ferry,
rent. Downtown. $695 +
Pomt Pleasant and Mason
UtlhlleS. Call 740-446·9961 4060 Q( (740)36 7-7762
call (3041675·3423
House lor 1ent 2 Br in 2 bedroom. 2 bath. new car·
Middleport $325 per month pet &amp; \l lnyl $375, 3 bed·
APAKIWNI~
pluSdeposit. 740·742·1903 room , 2 bath, garden tub,
fOR RENT
Ut1l1ty room, $475. deposit
House In Middleport for rent reqUired , (740)992-7680
1 and 2 bedroom apartTwo Bedroom
$425 00. Syracuse .
ments, furnished ami unfur740·843·5264
2 bedroom. all electnc AJC. nished, secunly depos1t
Pomeroy Big 4 Bedroom12 porch &amp; awnmg. Very. •tery requaed . no pels. 740-992Full Baths Newly remod nice. no pets In Gell1polls 2218
eled $750 oo 740·843· (740)446·2003 01 (740)446·
5264
1409.
1 bedroom, upstairS unlur- - - - -- - -- - ' - ' - - - - -- -nished apartment . with
Takmg appllcat1ons tor 2BA. 14 K70 · pn\late lot. no range , refr disposal and
remodeled 3 bedroom pels, no smok,ng indoors garage 136 F•rst Ave. rear.
"ouse NO PETS 1375/mo, 5400 plus deposit. refe r· 0 eposn an d re 1ere nee
1'
$300/dep. (740)446·3617.
enoes required. (740)446- (7401446·2561
,
6890 .

t

9083.

EXTRA! EXTRA!
Motor Route Driver
needed in the Leon area
Pay over $1,000fmonth
Must have Reliable
Transportation &amp; aHarnate
car. Qualified appHcants
Contact
sean M. Cullen,
(304)675·1333 ·~- 20

.

Great used 3BR hom&amp; only 3BR house· LeGrande 81\ld .
$9.995. W11t help with deliv· $600 rent &amp; sec. dep. You
ery Call (740)385·7671 .
pay utilities Lease &amp; references required ~740)446 ·
New 2006 Clayton stn· 3644101 application
glew1des starling at S199 84
per month Trade-1ns wei· 4 br House in New Haven.
comes. Call (740)385·2434 . $500/month + $400/deposlt,
No Pets (304)882·3652

fl2il

�•

Friday, September 1, 2006
ALLEY OOP
Pontiac
&amp;
Kennebec
Potatoes $40 for 1001b B-K
Farms (304)882-2567
--------,Sliver Queen sweet corn for
Canon EOS 35mm zoom sale. $2 .00 doz. you phi::
9872 .
New Haven- ::! bedroom fur- tens camera. Smith. Corona $3.00 doz. we pick.
2 bedroom, 1 bath, ' water mshed apartment. no pets, electnc memor)' typewriter (304)675-7491.afl8l' 6pm
pa1d. $350 month, $350 depos1i &amp; prev1ous ren ta l Fisl'1ing lures and tackle.
FOR SALE
secunty
depos1t
Call references, !740)992-0 165 (740)446-963_5
(740)446-3481
Nice 2B A apt lor rent. No Dell Laptop Compu ter,
2BR Apartmenl, Newly pets Available Sept. 1 tnsplron, Windows XP. S320 .
Aparlment Building wltl'1 2
Aenovaled m Histonca (419)359-1768 or (419)308· 1740)446·8241 , (740)709- Apartments, 3 bedroom,
1578
d
Downtown GallipOliS With 9740
upstair s. 2 bedroom owngreat v1ew of Park. Central ::---:- - : - - - JET
stairs, Front lot included.
H/A, Aft Wood Floors. La rge Twm R1vers Tower IS acceptAERATION MOTORS
$60,000 080 1304)57 6·
Bath wl Tub &amp; Shower 1ng appl1cattbns fm waiting
2040
hst
tor
Hud-subsized,
1·
br.
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In - - - - - - - - Includes
Range.
Stock Call Ron Evans, tAefrlgeralor &amp; Dishwasher apartment call 675-6679
_ _
.
Commercial building "For
High ceilmgs la rge windows Equal Hous1ng Opportun1ty 800 537 9528
Sale" 1600 square teet, oft
w1ttl custom shades !hat let
SI)\CE
street parking. Great loca11690
n lots ot hght Call 1740)709- ,__ _
H)R
RL'I\'
_
_T_,.., Kenmore Elite washer &amp; tion! 749 Third Avenue 1n
dryer. wh1te. 5 yrs old. GatlipO"s. Price "Negotiable"
Excel!. coild1tion . $350. New roof! MPtivaled. Seller!
3 bedroom, 1 000 sq 11 apt Commercial building "For (740)446·2350.
Call Wayne (404)456 -3802.
Gallipolis. OH. located u1 At!rt" 1600 square feet, oft
I \ l~\1 -.1 t•t•t II-..
town S60Q,mo , reference slreet parKtng Great loca- NEW AND USED STEEL
,\. 1 1\ I \I IH h.
requ1red No pets (740\441- !lon1 749 Th1rd Avenue 1n Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar
Concrete.
Angle. ;;;;;;;;;;;~~;,;;;;;;;~
01 10 or (740)!392-5174.
Gallipolis Rent "Negotiable" For
FAAA1
Call Wayne (404)456·3802 Channel, Flat Bar, Steel r10
34 1/2 Sm1thers, upstairs.
Gratmg
For
Drains,
EQuiPMENT
2B A. 1 bath , large front Downtown
Commercial Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
p:.llch. S320/mo.. 5200/d ep Aeta1i space tor Rent. $4001
Scrap Metals Open Monday. •KIEFER BUILT •vALLEY
re nter pays all ut1li!tes mor'lth .
Upsta~rs Olhce
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; "BISON "HORSE &amp; LIVE740446·9061.
Suites for Rent $1251 mooth
Fciday, Bam-4 30pm. Closed STOCK TRAILERS 'LOADy0u pay the Utit11ies. Call
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; MAX
"GOOSENECK,
Apt. lor ren1 2 or 3 Br.. No (703 )528 _0617
S unday. (740)446-7300
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
Pets.
\IIIH II \\IHSI
Womens clothir~g for sale. "ALUMA
"ALUMINUM
BEAUTIFUL
APART- ~'1"""':':-'____....., Call after 4pm (740)4 46 · TRAILERS •s&amp;W GOOSE·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET lO
HOI 'SEHOI.Il
NECK
HITCHES.
2028.
PRICES AT JACKSON
GOOLX5
Carmichael
Equipment
2 bedroom clean upstairs
apt Water. trash 1ncluded,
refr19 stove. $325 rent
depoSit
requ1red
Call
1740)446·7620. (740) 441

Above ground pool slide·· B'
high,
pump/filter.
Call
(740)446-8263, leave massage 1f no answer.

Mlddlepo1t N 4th Ave.- 2
bedroom furn1shed or unfurnished apartment. deposit &amp;
prev1ous rental references,
no pets. (740)992-0165

r

ESTATES, 52 Wes twood
Drive from 5349 to $448
Walk ;o shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446·2568
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

·------_.1 r

PETS
(740)446·2412
FOR SALE
4 pc bedroom set. sofa/ ~,_ _ _iiiioiiiiliiiiiit-r
John Deere 10ft No Til Drill
Chair, P10neer around sound
set 1 000 wall. entertain· 2
male
Miniature for
rent.
Carmicl'1ael
ment center. microwava with Dachshund puppies,
1 Equipment (740)446-241 2

Brand new 2 Bedroom stand, new van1ty. (740)245·
Apartments Wast1er/dryer 5078
hookup. stoveltetngerator
included
Also ava1fabte un~~s State
Route 160. Call for details
Appliance
(740)441 -0194 or (740i441,
1184.

shorthair red &amp; 1 longhair John Deere Mini Excavator/
blackJtan. vet checked Tractor l oader Backhoe!
(304)593-38 20
Skid Steers. Carmicl'1ael
p· h
Equipmenll 7401446 _241 2
AKC
Mim
lflSC ers

~:tpP~ehs~ck:.fes ~~~kJ~~~~

CONVENIENTLY LOC AT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
TownhotJse
apartrrenrs.
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441·1111
.
for appl1cation
&amp;1nfomtat1on

schnauzer
Puppies.
Warehouse White/black, sal t/pep per,
black/silver.
$400 each.
m Henderson, wv. Pre· _7_40_._69_6_.1_0_85_·_ _ _ _
owned Appliam:;es starting AKC Pomeranian Pups. 3
at 575 &amp; up all under Male, 3 Female, wormed,
$350 . 17401388_8642 .
Warranty, also have reco n- --------

Ellm View
Apartments

ditloned 81g Screen rv·s AKC
reg.
German
by Ron' s TV (304)675- Shorthaired Pointer Vol
7999
checked. 1st shots. Call
(740)388-9338.
Sale sofa &amp; chair $350. Sofa ::--::--c---c-:--:--:&amp; 1. seat $400. Recliner Full blooded Rat Terrier
S200. Mollo1'1an FJ,trn. Clark pups. 2 males &amp; 2 female.
Chapel Rd . Porter· 0 . $75 eacl'1. Call (740)245(740)388-0173.
Open 9061 .

2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
Start1ng at $3S5 nnd up
Central heat &amp; r;tlr. WID
hook-up, com operated
lalJ[ldry, owner pays water.
sewer &amp; trash

(304)882-3017
Furnished apl. 3 •oorns &amp;
bath . upstaus. Clean, no
pets. Ref/deposit ; equired.
(740)446·1519.
Gracious living 1 and 2 bed room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments 1n Middleport
From $295-$444. Call 740992-5064 . Equal Hous1n·~
Opportunities

Saturday only
Thompsons · Appliance &amp;
Repair-675-7388 For sate,
re-conditioned automatic

I

New ca rpet &amp; cab1nets.
I\1IS01J.A~l-:Ot:S
freshly painted &amp; decora1ed,
MERCHANDJSl-:
W/0 hookup. Beauti ful coun- ...,_oioiiiiiliiiili_ioiit....,
try setting Must see tc Seth Thomas Weight Clock
appl9cia le.
$399/mo. 15,w, 25 .H 175 13041882 _
(614 )595·.]7 73 or 1-800· 2688
798-4686

In Memory

1n 'Mcru ory

of

Truman

"- ''" "'"

~~.~~

But11ot a day goe.1 by we haven't
wept. In our thoughts you will always
be until tile day /hal we meeL
Love,
Your Family

2000 Cl'1rysler Sebring
Converlible Limited. Cloth
lop, leather, Infinity sound
. 'Garage kep1.
sys1em..
30mpg. New tires . $7,500.
(740}446·7484 or (740)44 17411 .
-------2002 Mercur" Moumaineer.
'
Loaded with only 48,000
miles.
2002 Ford Lighting F150
pick up 30,000 miles. Call
{740)256- 1245 evenings
and weekends.

-----"'!""1

11::1::""~....

4l MOTORCYC.U "S'

4 WHL'J;'•
L'HS
~...:.

o

1rt bike! 96 Honda CR250
very good con9 ition. Pro-cirCUlt e111'1aust. Good tires,
d 11 000 00 740
rur1s goo ·
· · ·
·

~7:!42~-2;:6;:0~
7 -~~-BoATS &amp; MOTU~
~--·FOiiRiiiiSAiiiiLiiE--'
-

~~ii:t.r;;;;;:::;;;..--...., Older Model Ranger Bass
TRUCKS

~

L..------_.1
HlHSALE

Boat, 115 Johnson, trolley
motor &amp;fish finder, $3,500
304 75-8859

r

LIVESIOCK

Phillip
Alder

,~INDA'S

PAINTING

"'Take the Jlflin out of
pointing-let us do il
for you ..

Interior Only

740-985-4180
Lt!ave message
b efore

r

rr;:::::::::::~""""""'""'"""",-""'""'""'":;:::::::::4J

LOO'king For
A New Horne?
Try the·
C(aSSI.fl"edS''••

l"lSTRUMLVI'S

sax $250; Clarinet $100.
2 1 0)6
(740 12 45-58 1 . 74 45 23 12·
-C-o-r,n-.-A-II_o_S_a_&lt;_op_h_o-ne-.
Have Beginner Books an~
New Reeds. Good Shape
$400 00 740-949-2453.
For sale· Kohler Campbell
plano. Very good condition.
$ 600. Call (740 )245_5064 .
-------Help Wanted
---'-----

• CPAP

• Helios

• Hospital Beds

• Homefill,

• Wheelchairs

&gt;

Help Wanted

r---------------,
WANTED: Emergency Relief Workers
(Substitutes} needed to work with people
with mental retardation in Gallia and
Meigs Counties .. Hours: evenings,
weekends and overnights as needed or as
scheduled. Must have high school
diploma/GED, valid driver's license,
three years good driving experience and
adequate automobile insurance. $7.25/hr.
Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Setvices,
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640.
Deadline for applicants: 9/8/06.
Pre-employment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.

''

ON THIS PAGE FOR
AS LOW AS

$27 ~00 PER MONTH!
The Daily Sentinel

992-2155
----·-

Streei:,

Pomeroy, OH 45769,
and whose residence
Is unknown, and, will
hereby take nolice that
you have been named
Defendants In a case
that on May 12, 2006,
FCI National Fund II,
L.L.C., Successor In
Interest To Alliance

Funding

filed

its

Complaint in the Meigs
County
Court
of
Common
Pleas,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Casa
Number being 06-CV·
067 In aid Court praylng tor Judgment in the
amount of $33,516.04
together wl"' accrued
Interest In tho sum of
$20,8114.65
through

may 5, 2006, plus Intereat thereafter on the
principal balance at
tho rate of 11 .6% per. cent, per annum unlll
paid and tor tho
Foreclosure Of the
mortgage and any
Interest owned by you
on tho real estate
located at1624 Lincoln
Hill,
Pomeroy,
OH
45769. A copy of tho
legal description Is
anaehed hereto and
marked as Exhibit "A".
Shuated In the VIllage

ol Pomeror, County of
Meigs, and In the State
of Ohio, Being known
and described on a
map
at
LINCOLN
HEIGHTS, made be
Breece
&amp; Carper,
Registered
Civil
Engineers, Huntington,
WV dated October 17,,
1942 a copy of whtch
was flied In the office
ol the Recorder of
Meigs County, Ohio, on
the
17th
day
of
December
1942,
recorded In Plat Book
3, page 43, 44 as Lot
51.
And !Jelng more partieularly described as tal.lows: Beginning at a
point in the westline of
Lincoln Road, at the
corner between Lois
50 and 51 as shown on
soid map, thence with
said Una of Lincoln
Road, S, 27 deg. 36"
east SO teet; thence
with lhe line between
lots SO and 52, S 62

I
--------

West
• Q96 3
•
•

• Nebulizeni
Toll

7"

• s

• A J 7
.AK 96532

+

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
Loc&lt;JIIv owtted. Wf' care about ·ou!

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

K2

,.••

Vulnerable: Both
South West North East

3.

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

6•

"Insu red"

www.tlmbereree.k~ablnetey.com

·

ROBERT
BISSEll

ROGER HYSELL !
GftRftGE :

CONSTRUCTION

Auto &amp; Truck

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Tti~ PlliNC~SS

IS IVSY iliGtiT
NOv/, IVT Ttf~
coot: wOVLl&gt;
Lit:~ TO
S~t YOV!

dog, 24~ west 200 teet;
thence N. 27 dog, 36"
wosl 50 feel ; thence
with the line between
said lots 50 and 51 , N
62 dog. 24" E 200 teet
to the place of beginnlng, P.arcel Number:
16-00515
And that tho deten·
dents be required to
set up any interest that
you have In said premises or be forever
barred; that upon tha

MA !! 1 GOT
WHOLE LIST
DONE AN' IT
AIN'T EVEN
NOON!!

P"'(OV f.l(PEC.i 11\€. TO
jo--..._;,M~E

k'C~

bO,..

problems.

See - ..,.

~ocfcY
~FIJi~
iji.Jpp . ;~

AstroGraph

BIG NATE

&lt;1IJur 'llll'lh&lt;lli(f:

HEH

IMPORTS

"EH HA
HA HI\
HA HO
HI\

HP-H

H"

HEH

HA

Wl-lV
BALLOONS
ARE SO
MUCH FUN

SUNSHINE CLUB

CARPENTER
SERVICE
ftoom Additions &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gutters
IJir~yl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Decks
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
Po meroy, Dhto

25
1,,

Ve~rs

Local

E~pl;'rlencP

spa~e

for
154 per
;month

'i'

!
GARFIELD

" EWGDYR
KLI ' JJ

WAWZK

~

1\\1\1"

CA\-\111\IA~
'?

science
tool
49 Braun
ot rockets
51 Party Iabrie

fights
36 Shelling

·corn

YLFGDYC

PITTWPPBIJ

M HLNMY

BDYR
FL

HWMZ."

HGL

-

NMY,

GMP

VMNWP

PFWHMZF
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Sirange, lleel as if up 1o now I had writlen no
more than a lew notes.·- Ludwig ~an Beethoven, on his deathbed

'::~::~~y S@R~}A-at.tfs·
lli!ol ~7 CLAY l,

0 lour
Q~uono• l•ttor1 elf rho
&gt;eto.,blcd wo•dl be·
low to fOtm four Jii'!lple

WOIO
GAM I

ICIIAN - - - - - -

'1\'Ctdl.

I
,~

Salurday, Sept. 2, 2006
By Bernice Bacia Oaol
Much of your anergies and effor1s in the
year ahead are likely to be devoted to the
growth of your material affairs. Because
you're willing to work hard for whet you
get, your prospects look, particularly
encouraging.
VI AGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - It's to your
advantage to strive for balance between
work and play. Don't view relax ing as frivolous, because it can play an important
part in revitalizing yoor ·ability tq get
things done.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Give priority
it
I
to !he Concerns of person s who are
important to you. If you neglect them if'
were your last," I counseled a
I
lieu of what you cons ider mundane
r--:--:-:-:~-:---,youngstcr. "llried lhat," replied,
duties, you 'll regret it.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Attitude
BURN0 N
I
can be everyth ing, so be optimistic and
positive regard ing yo ur invo'lvem~:tnt s.
Complelt· the ck,cllo qvolcd
Your frame of mind is ltDportant because
•
_ _ • _ _
by flllinp in !h~ nlll.litu~ WOfd$
you 'll be more successful il you act like a
'-..L..-'-J..-1.-L....J 100 d&lt;v•lop lr0111 Uep No, 3-below.
winner.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec: 21) t:\ PRINI NI!MBER!D
AlthOugh your material trends look very
~ l!llUS IN SOVARES
se cure and steady at this time, the fly in
the ointment could be your eldravaganl
UNSCRAMBlE LEJT!RS
splurges you're likely to experience.
FOR ANSWER
Etspeclally If you're not careful
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - II is
SCRAMLETS ANSWERS 8/ll/06
lime lo assert yourself, be cause some. th ing in which you're presently involved
Tille
TlliR1"Y
will not progress any further il it contin·
long
be
gone?"
I
asked
my
sister
who had
ues to be directed by others. Take the
reins now.
four teenage sons. She smiled and answcied, "Oh, about
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It
bel'lboves you to be philosophi cal about
events, whether what occurs is favorable
or not. Nature has a way of balancing the
books, and you'll come out better !han
you think.
WHE.il W~ ut:T Al!tPORT,
PISCES (Feb. 20·Mai\:h 20)- II there Is
wt.'U.
~HAI!t IT W11'H YOIJ.
something important you attempted yesterday but had to postpone fi nishing until
today, don't let down on th is endeavor.
Work oo it until it is comp leted to your
satisfaction .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll t9) - You won:t
deliberately seek confrontation or chal lenges , but you know In you r heart that,
should you have to deal with it. yo u've
got an edge. The odds are tilted slightly
in your favor.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Should
you get ln\IOived in something where you ·
momontarity are unsure of you,r fooling,
don't get rattled. If you remain calm,
you'll adjust your position quite effectlve1 ty.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- tn business
UllriL
\It HAVt. FIL£
H£'1'.' I~ A
negotiations, don't th ink you l)ave to be
''DtV~l.OPIIlfl ;roRY~'
FOOTA6€.
OF
'!filii~&amp; ~AT
the fi rst person to put all your cards on
[VIIllrtl.Y DID HAP!'E.IJ ...
the table. Let the others reveal their
1'1ands so you can adjust yours to come
out much better.
CANCER (June 21..Juty 22) - Under
most conditions, you mig'ht find you do
welt oper'ating as Independently as you
can. But today it could be to your advan- •
!age to be a team player, especially It it
produ ces the greatest benefits.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - ll'e possible
you migl'11 dawdle a bll early In the day
and postpone things until the last minute.
Fortunately, when you fina lly get In gear,

ENOROY
I I II I

l I G() U

1~

"'

"

"You should live every dayas

..-

he

got-----:·

I

Nephew- sadly will you

• Injury-

FRE:E:POM 15 OIIE:RRA1"E:D

I

'IHEJJ,

I

'filiAl~ 'itJUR. ~moN

lioness
3t Flopry
33 Vlny
records
35 All-out

oxen
47 Forensic

ARLO &amp; JANIS

•

GRIZZWELLS

Advertise
in this

11-lf. kiD wm ltb\1
11-l£. %Wf\B 6f£,, .
It

IUIM. .bl-1
lllllflrCirrRIPrlclll

28 Factfudger
29 Adamson

rnmzy meals."

\

C111M~Cti-·Ctlllf

27

Today's clua·· Vequals J

"How

Al••lltwCII1 ·11••• wttllll

24
25
26

by Luis Campos

€)

--~

PAYING TIP PRICES All

21

l''and

TO E~PLAIN

' WHY POE&amp;N'1" YOUR
OWNER I-E1" YOO
RUN FRE'E?

19

Celebity Cidwr Cl'fi1ogrl!'liS are craaled lrom qwtation'O by fa!OOU$ peopla, past and p-esent
Each lette1 in the cipher stands tor anomer

I-"T,.;;;..T~-~r-7~~r-:-TI':;-I 0

IT's 1-1ARD

IS 'M. IA5r S7RIW

38 In the main
39 Matt
Airline to
beverage
Stockholm 41 ER pictures
Scholarly
(hyph .)
org.
42 Ms. Harlow
Tank
43 Camelot
Yow!
lady
Modicum
45 Old barge
Sound from
canal
Babe
46 Tibeton

pt.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

GU F E 0

91

G&amp;£Z, E!UVJY .1HIS

11 Compass

PI J I'

.

PEANUTS

Cornerstone
Construction

YOUNG'S

Fond du -, 44 Enter ageln
Wise.
47 Door ding
8 Corpentry
48 Rural elec.
tool
provlder
12 Sleeping
Shah's
13 Peyehe
kingdom
component 52 Makeshift
14 -181
eoathanger
15 Encircle
53 Plaything
16 Dues payer, 54 Winged
tor short
goddess
17 Ration out 55 Capp otthe
18 Go-ahead
comics
56 Annapolis
(hyph.) ·
20 Crulao port
grad
22 Holm ol
57 Medieval
" Allen"
tate
23 And, tor
DOWN
Woffgano
24 Coat strata
27 Reduced
1 Crone
12 wda.)
2 stork kin
30 Enth1olled
3 Miles of
31 Counl
" Psycho"
calories
4 Swirling
32 Running
around
a fever
5 Pte
34 Trim a dolly
flavor
35 Is victorious 6 Census Into
36 Latch
7 Swiss
37 Upholstery
villages
Iabrie ·
8 Naval torco
39 Faint glows 9 Consider
40 Mork's
10 Rlgotonl
planet
couatn

I I Is

IIIJIIIfltll . .tUIIM

other and further relief

'

HAHA

Bucket TNck

as Is just and oquitable .
The
last
dale of
Publicallon
is
Saptember 1, 2006 . the
Delondant (s) named
above are r equired to
answer twenty-eight
· (28) days alter the last
date of public ation.
By: Reimer, Lorber &amp;
Arnovitz Co., l.P.A.
Peter · L,
Meh ler,
AttOrney at Law
Attorn ey lor PlajnliffPelltioncr
P.O. Box 968
Twinsburg, OH 44087
(330) 425-4201
(7) 28, (B) 4, 11 , 18, 25,
(9) 1

0

HO HA HA

Tree Service

priori ty, and tor such

I 'r1 A
SICK,
S tet&lt;.
SOY.

HAHA

; HAHA

JONES'

. whose the proper order of ils

WA HA HA
HA HA HA
oH l-lo Ho
WA HA HA

\

Hill's Self
Storage

-Manlu•a ~
Recycling

AU pass

sun. Whal should EaS1 pi1Ch1
The bidding was hypermodern and inaccurate. After a two-over-one response , a
jump rebid by the opener should promise a (near) solid suit. North's.four·hearts
was Rom'an Key Card Blackwood in dia·
monds, lhe rep~ showing 0 or 3 key
cards (here, two aces and the trump
king). Five hearts asked again, siK clubs
revealing that king and denying the
spade ~ng , If Norlh had now bid seven
clubs, they would have reached ~ mak·
able grand slam, (After e trump load,
declarer sets up South's diamonds. After
a heart lead, North ruffs lwo spedes in
lhe Soulh hand .) But North lhough1
seven no-trump would be a claimer.
While declarer ran his clu·bs, East threw
three hearts, then - too late - let go of
the diamond queen. Although West
could have pitched his hearts, he was
afraid that that might help declarer to
guess the suit. So, he discarded the
apparently useless diamond four. Now
South had 16 tricksl West was wrong,
but East was more at fau lt. His first two
discards should have bean the queen
. , and jack ol diamonds. He knew those
cards were useless, and those pitches
wou(d have made West's IWe easy.
A(ways try to anticipate your partner's

992-5682

have or claim to have
an interest In the real
estate
described
below:
.
Situated in the Stale ot
Ohio, County at Meigs
and Village of Racine:
Being Lot Number
Si•teen
(16)
and .
I
Seventeen (17) in the
Myers Addition to I he
incorporated Village ol
Racine, Meigs County,
Athens
Ohio; reserving to the,
Stale ol Ohio, however,
failure
of
said all oil, gas, coal and
Defendants to pay or other minerals, with
causa to the paid the the rights of entry for
sale Judgment within the
purpose
of
three days from Its ren- prospecting, developdition , that an Order of ing, producing or oper·
29670 Bashan Road
Sale be Issued' to the ating tor the same and
Racine, Ohio
Sheriff
of
Meigs the r ight of occupancy
45771
County,
Ohio,
to in so lar as is essential
All types of roofing:
740-949·2217
appraise,
advertise to such prospecting,
New or Repair
and sell said real developing, operaling
Seamless Gutter
estate; that the premts- or producing; also
Downspout
as be sold fee and reserving to the state
clear ot all liens, of Ohio the use ot
claims and interests of streams
flowing
any otthe parties here- through said lands or
In; that the proceeds of abutting
upon the
said sale be applied to same and so much of
Plaintiff's Judgment the banks thereof, as
and for such other may be necessary tor
relief to which Plaintiff such enjoying, and the
Is entitled,
protection of such
Resi~nliul • CommerChd • G~neral Contracting
Said Defendants will streams from erosion,
.P;.~illl i ng • D our~ • Window!~- • Dc~,;ks
taka notice that they contamination,
or
• Siding • Rnuling • Ruom AJr..lil ion!&gt; • Remodeling
are required to answer depoSit of sediment.
WI/ 038992
• Pltunlli ng • Elecll'ical 7.C0-367-0s.t4
said Complaint within The Petitioner turlher
OH 38244
• A..:~.·ousti..: C\!iling
7·0-339·3412
'twanty-elght (28) days alleges that by reason
alto~ the date ot last of
datautt ot tho
publication of this Detendant(s) in the
notice which wilt be payment of a promispublished once each sory note, according to
week for six succas- its tenor, the condislve
weeks,
said tlons of a concurrent
answer date being the mortgage deed given
Top· • Removal • Trim
15th dey of September, to secure the payment
2006, or judgment will ·of said note and con·
• Stump Grinding
be rendered accord- veying the premises
l'ngly.
d.escribed, have been
David
W,
Cliffe broken , and the same
(0059537)
has become absolute.
Anorney tor Plalntllt
Tho Petitioner prays
Weltman, Weinberg &amp; that the Detendant(s)
Rels Co. , LPA
named
above
be
30 Vrs. Exp , • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones
525 Vine Street, Su~e required to answer and
Free
BOO
set up their interest in
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 said raal estate or be
(513) 723-2200 , tax : forever balled from
(513) 723-2230
assorting tho same, for
dcllffe@weitman.com foreclosure of said
(8) 11, 18, 25 (9) 1, 8, 15 mortgage, th e marshaling of any liens,
503 MHISI. •111*11811011. H 45181
and the sale of said
l4H92-3894
Public Notice
rea l oatate, and the
WI
lfiiiW llttllllll ltr ll•rs ltllld.WUI'II
proceeds of said sale
... allllllllt'S.
LEGAL NOTICE
applied to the payment
lloAIIIIIHIMifi:RIM:II••
Maritage
Mortgage of Petitioner's Claim In

!E®; Iil

Sln--

1 Honav~ 42

5

Discarding can be difficult. Yes, usually
you throw losers and keep winners, but
sometimes you must show partner .what
to-retai n, This deal occurred during the
World Youth Pa irs Championship in
Piestany, Slovakia , two months ago.
Against seven no-trump, Wesl leads a
club. Declarer takes his Si)( tricks in that

BARNEY

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OH
on State Rt. 124

Stop &amp; Compare

7NT

Pass
Pass

The key discards
can help partner

Repair

140-992-1611

s•

Pas s

Opening lead: • 9

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage•

Hardwood Cablnetrf And Furntcure

Pass
Pass

4 NT

992-3194
or 992-6635

Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293
' Leave a message

Pass
Pass

1 •

10x10x10x20

• New Homes
·Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

Corporation,

J

.KQt 064
• QJ
• 10 8

Soutb

Free 877-61t·D007

2459 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis

last place 01 business
is known as 7965
North High Street Suite
50 1 Columbus,
OH
43235 -8402, but whose
present place ot bustness is unknown will
take , notice that on
April 18, 2006 at 1:54
p.m., HSBCBank USA,
as Trustee tor Merrill
Lynch
Mortgage
Investors,
Inc .
Mortgage Loan AssetBacked Certificates ,
Series 2002-HE1 . flied
Its Complalnl in Case
No. 06CV050 In the
Court
of Common
Pleas Meigs County,
Ohio alleging that the
Defendant(s) Merltage
Morlgage Corporal ion,

•

53 2
10 7 4

Delivering Daily *One Stoo Shop*

740·446·0007

+AQJ 75 3
Eaal

• .9 6 4

740.446.9200

UBLIC
NOTICES

Condor

+e

0

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
FCI NATIONAL FUND
II, L,L,C, SUCCESSOR
IN
INTEREST
TO
ALLIANCE FUNDING
PLAINTIFF
VS
Herelord bull call, born DORIS TAYLOR, el al
311 6/06. Dark ~ed, graa1 4·H DEFENDANTS
steer or herd sire $800. · Case No. 06·CV..Q67
1740)256·1385.
Judge Fred W. Crow,· ill
Notice by Publication
I R \ \'\I'OIH \110\
To Doris Taylor, Fred
Taylor, deceased, John
flO
AUTOS
Doe, Unknown Spouse
LL---IU·R·S···I"'•·- · (If any) ol Doris Taylor,
and
Jane
Doe,
$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS I Unknown Spouse (It
Cars/Trucks from $5001 For any~ ol Fred Taylor,
listings 800-391-5227 M3901 deceased, whose last
known address Is 323

+AK10 5
• 9 8

&amp; MEl.li~.iL EQl11P.\IENT

• Portable Oxygen

D9.01-Q6

Dealer: South
Sl IH I( Is

'87 Ford ~ Lariat" F150,
10
MmunHoMES
Automalic. V-8. 4)(4, Due)
HOME
Tanks_ Good Body and nice
IMPROVEMENTS
~~~~~~2s.Make offer. 740- 2004 29ft. Dutchman Sport.
~'*.;,;;;-~~---, All cables; hoses, and camP~
BASEMENT
ing supplies included.
SUVs
WATERPROOFING
Sleeps 10. Excellent condi·--I'OiiiiiiHiiSiiiALEiii-.r
tion. (740)388-0410 nigl'1t or Unconditional lifetime guar.,
antee Local references fur (740)645-0993 day.
1999 Dodg9 Durango,
nished . Establ ished 1975 ,
Excellent Condition, all 2005 28ft. Dutchmen wlslide Call 24 Hrs (740) 446leattler, DVD entertainment out, bunk and extras. Still 0870, Rogers Basement
center, remote start .. all under warranty. $14,500. Waterproofing
power. (740)446-93 95
(740)367-7755.

2003 Chevrolet Trai lblazer
EXT LT. 4WO. Third row
seal. Garage kept. like r~ew
condition.
$16,500
7401446-7484 or (740 )441 ·
(74
11 .
-------99 CMvrolet Suburban.
loeded with leather interior,
new tires, good con dition.
$4,800. (740)446-6323.

Nort

'OXYGEN¥

.

41 Really big
shirts

so

~- .,.,. :I. •

6 PM

CAMPERS&amp;

i
"---tioi ti oi i i-_.1

ADVERTISE YOUR. '
BUSINESS

'

1994 Honda Civic SSOO .
Pollee Impounds! For listings 800-391-5227 ext.
C548

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Maltese Puppy, AKC male,
beautiful. loving , white with
black points $650 (304)675·
3977

AvnQL'~);
,
Honeysuckle
H1tls
Apartments, Gallipolis. flOW ...,_ _ _ _ _ __ ..• Bundy saMophone ll junior

accept 1ng apphcat1ons for 2
Wan ted- Antique Dealer:
Bedroom Anartm ents. No
1'
RiverBend Antique Mall,
Rental Assistance a11ailable downtown Ravenswood wv
at this time. Rent starts at has spaces for rent. Mall has
S3 15i mo Equal Housing goOd 1raffic from 1-77 And
74 4
4
orportunity ( 0) 46-334
Eat-Wesl At. 33. Open 7
lmmaculale 2 bedroom days a week, for inlorma·
apartment in the country lion, call '304 868-2088

-~-c---c-c-c--:-:-:­

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

BRIDGE

4X4's For Sale. 1998 Dodge
Ram SLT Larlme, hood
scope, crome bed ralls, Am.
racing tires, 2 inch lift. Club
Cab. $8,000 080.
1995
Ford F250 5 speed, regular
cab, with camper topper
$7 ,000. 080. 1981 F250,
5 Speed. $2,500. OBO
740·992-0202

New John Deere Compacts
af!d 5000 series Utility !rae4X4
tors @o% Fl•ed for 36
h
h J h
FoR SALE
mont aCredit.
throug
o n
Deere
Carmichael
Equipment (740)446~2412
2002 Chevy Blazer 4wd 2
door automatic trans. 55.000
Quali ty John Deere Hay miles. AC, power locks.
Equipment for less-round power windows, amtfm
ba 1ers, square . balers &amp; radio, cd player. in great cpnmower co nditioners @4.7%
dition. $10,500. 740-645Fixedtor 48months tl'1rough 3601
John
Deere
Credit.
carmichael
Equipment 89 4WD Silverado $1 .500
(140)446-2412. ·
1304)675·1131

•KIEFER BUILT "VALLEY
•BISON ·HORSE &amp; LIVESTOCK TRAILERS "LOAD·
MAX
•GOOSENECK,
,--,---::---c--:c-c-- OUMPS &amp; UTILITY
washers &amp; dryers. refrigera- Purebred Golden Retriever •ALUMA
•ALUMINUM
tors. gas and electnc puppies. vet checl&lt;ed, fi rSt ' TRAILERS ~B&amp;W GOOSE· ·
ranges . air conditioners, an d shots, parents &amp; previous NECK
HITCHES.
wr1nger washers Will do
pup
on
.premises,
reference
carmichael
Equipment
repairs on major brands in
on previous litters, 1emales (740)446-2412
&lt;;hop or at your 1'1ome.
males
$150,
5200 _
--.,--'--~-- l740)662-0364
2 Horse Trailer, new paint,
Used Furnl\ure Store. 130
great cundi1ion_ No !rade
Bulaville Pike. Electr i~,: . gas
•Chi huahua. registered ,
11.000. (740)709·6205.
ranges, bunk tJeds, chests.
liny apple head.
dinettes .. couches. used
•Tea cup Yorkie, registered .
mattresses. ,
Grave baby -doll face, quality Angus Cattle Auction
Labor Day Monday, Sept.
Monuments. (740)446-4782 babies. (740)446-9428.
4tl'1
. Circle B Farm , LLC. Us
Gallipolis, OH Hrs 11 -5 (MAt 35 Southside, WV
S)
p70
MUSICAL
(304)675.0053

r

1961 Cadillac convertibl e.
Very good condition, leather
interior, clasSIC. (740)24591 42

www.mydailysentlnel.com

(

you 'll be quite an effective producer.

SOUP TO NUTZ
We ONL~ Ha\18 floURs

LeFT To

Mum

S&lt;;&gt;Jeeze our as

Fu&gt;l as we

SEfbl&lt;'e GoiNG Rat' k ~

Wi-laT:. ON
CHanneL Sl&lt;?

�f

Friday, September I, 2006

www .mydai Iysen tinel.com

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

ALoNG THE RIVER

LMNG

•

Everlasting freedom:
Emancipation celebration a
Gallia County tradition, Cl

I

.

Aavors of the Week:
Fish tacos with cabbage slaw, Dl

,

tme

'
... II you have a question
or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/O The Gaston Gazette.
'
.
NIJ - ) ( t f t

• Race: Sony HD 500

~-!!:!:llll:=l.=
.·-~e::--·
•

Hampll1lre 20Q.

--

lfl!l'llllf

'

Zp.m., Sept. 16

t. What would've beer\ consJd.
ered a near.CiassiC at some
.~tO! cam~ oil as pre11y rurH&gt;f·
the-mill lor Bristol. In that at·
mosphere, ~ ~n be tough to
li'lll up to the .llype.

.t The Chaaais almost set.
1&lt;psey llahne could still get in,
but ~ will probably take at least .
one bed bnlak from one or more
.ol the 88\'en drivers~ Mark
. M&amp;rtln, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Tony
Stewart, Jeff BUrton, Denny
Hamlin, Jeff Gortlor! and Kyle
BUsch- grouped ~ghtiyln front
Of him. Busch, In fourth, and
. Martin, In 10th, are separated
· by a total of only48 points.
1&gt; Bristol races aren't' always won
by one driver bumping another
out of the way. Kenseth has won
the niRtlt race twice in a row by .
staying out of trouble, taking his
time and taking care of his car.
.. we don't know the format yet,
but we do know that the Chase
In 2007 will consist of the same

f' Atll OllNt~ liMA

t • ,U&lt;&gt;"-irfl.f'lt....,

numeral for Kenseth, who won his
second race in as many weeks
• Where: California Speedway,
. and his second stra1ght Bristol
Fontana (2.0 miles), 250
night race . "We have the momenlaps/500 miles.
tum. but we could lose it at any
• When: Sunday, Sept. 3
time.~ warned Kenseth : Kyle Busch
• l.a&amp;t year's winner: Kyle Busch
finished second. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
- • Qualifying record: Kyle Busch,
Chevrolet, 188.425 mph, Eeb. 25. third, Scott Riggs fourth and Jeff
Gordon fifth. Jeff Burton faded
2005 .
from first to ninth in the race's
• Race record : Jeff Gordon,
Chevrolet, 155.D12 mph, June 22, fourth quatter, continuing a disquieting trend. He has started the
1997.
• Last week: It doesn't always re- last four·races first. 16th, first and
quire aggressiveness to win at the second. but finished 15th, 11th,
42nd and ninth. As the Chase for
one NASCAR track, Bristol Motor
the
Nextel Cup draws nigh -two
SP.eedway, most identified With
races away now- Kenseth, Kyle
thrills, spins, crashes and various
Busch and Dale Earnhardt Jr.
:... other forms ~f ~ayhem. For the ,
gained points on the ieader. And.
second year 10 a row, the Sharpte
5QO fell to the driver, Matt
, for all practical purposes, only
Kasey Kahne has a shot at joining
Ken seth, most adept at avoiding
what, at Bristol, seems almost un- the party among drivers outsicte
the top 10.
aiJOidable. Two Was the· operative

• Race: Ameriquest 300
• Where: C~lifornia

Speedway. Fontana (2.0
miles). 150 laps/300
miles.

• When: Saturday, Sept.
2

• Race: Sylvania 200

• Where: New Hampshire
International Speedway,

Loudon (1.058 miles).
200 laps/211.6 miles.

lony Stewart. Chevrolet.
185.941 mph, Feb. 26,

Matt Crafton, Chevrolet.

• Race record: Hank ·
Parker Jr., Chevrolet,
~55.957

2001.

mph, April 28,

Rick Crawford
• Qualifying record:

Sprague, Chevrolet, .
109.244 mph, July 21.
2001.

Bristol Motor Speedway,

Motor Speedway. It was
his fourth victory of the
season.

sweep.

• Rio thrashes Mobile.
See Page 81

• Race record: Jack

• Last week: Matt
Kenseth. in a Ford. won

begrnn1ng a weekend

x .s 11_,:;,;
;
C r!:.

GALLIPOLIS - Kathy
McCalla, · director of the
Gallia County Department
of Jobs and Family
Services, informed Gallia
County Commissioners on
. Thursday that the GalliaVinton Educational Service
Center (ESC) was awarded
$140,898 for the 2006-07
TANF Afterschool Program
to expand the Gallia
LEADS (elementary) and
Gallia STEPS (high school)
21st Century Community

.,:s
.. s::s, ,
r ·r'J's
r
J 1 :::.,::,1 _
~

J

v
E

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No.

10 VALVOLINE

DODGE

R

s
u
Gordon

s

• \liddkpm·l • (;allipnli' • S&lt;·pt&lt;•nthl'l' :1. :.!onh

!1;1.50 • \ 'nl. -lO,

Learning Center Programs nized as a National
in the Gallia County Local Promising Practice) at the
junior highs, parent/volunSchool District.
The Gall-ia- Vinton ESC teer .training, family litera·
currently operates eight cy, additional tutoring in
after-school learning cen- core subjects, and support
. lers in Gallia County Local for special needs students. ·
Schools, in which over
According to Gallia
I ,000 ~lementary students County
Local
and 400 high school stu- Superintendent Dr. Charla
dents during the 2005-06 Evans, despite the high
school year participated in marks the school systems
LEADS and STEPS.
recently received, there are
The funding will allow still some students who need
for expanded services, more time, which the afterwhich mclude academic school programs provide.
"We're gelling a lot of
support
coaches,
the
CHOICES program (recog- anention (both statewide

and nationally) for our programs," said Dr. Denise
Shockley, superintendem of
the Galha-Vinton ESC.
The fact that the afierschool program ties into the
student s daytime curriculum is unique, according tQ
Shockley.
The educators forewarned
t~e commission that eventu·
ally monies would dry up
and they will be approaching the commissioners to
help fund the after-school
programs.
"There will be an outcry
to continue this program,"

the Sharpie 500. The two confront·
ed each ·other afterward, with Gor-

don admitting-he had been holding
Riggs up and say1ng Riggs should've
passed him"on the straight." Riggs
said Gordon would've done the
same thing had the roles been re·
versed.

son races do .occur at tracks
where Kasey Kahne seems like-

NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives hla taka: "By the stan-

ly to do well, but, as noted earli·
er, he will need some help to
make up the 90'points that cur·
rently separate him from 10th
place.

BY BETH SERGENT

mild feud. Idoubt either was up.

set five minutes after it ended."

-., No one was surprised when
Bill Davis announced that Jere-

. my Mayfield will drive one of his
two Toyotas neKt year. but some

were surprised that Dave Blaney
was retained to drive the other.
Blaney will continue i~ No. 22.

... After Chevy drivers won seven
consecutive races, Kenseth has
now given Ford consecutive IJic·
tories. In manufacturer points,

Chevy has 180 points, followed
by Foro with 143 and Dodge
w~ 133.
~ Kenseth has five more top.five
finishas {13-8) than points
leader Johnson, but Johnson
has four more tot&gt;10s {1&amp;14).
· Kenseth has finished in the top
10 nine times in his last 10
Bristol races.

Scott Riggs Is currently 19th In the points standings after a. fourth·place
flnlsh at ' Bristol last Saturday.
.
'

-Matt

118nseth has
won .consecutive races
an&lt;! shaved

Jimmie JOhnson's points
lead to seven.... Denny
Hamlin has
flnlshe(.. ln the top 15 in 14 of
the past 15 races.

,.. Who'a IIOt - Mark Mahin
dropPed from fourth to 10th In
; ' the points~ .... Jony
stewart tell f!Om filth to

eWl'h·

'

'

'

launched a series of fold-out

NASCAR books on leading drivers.
titl~s

are devoted to

Tony Stewart, Greg Biffle, Carl Ed·
wards, Mark Martin and Jimmie
Johnson . The 2005 books were on
Kurt Busch, Johnson, Jeff Gordon,
Martin and Dale Earnhardt Jr. The

books leature the photography or
Nigel Kinrade and Brian Czobat.

Each book sells for $14.95 and is

Riggs shows off his short-track prowess at Gordon's expense
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

I&gt; Who'S hoi

• ft.,..!.._;. ] *fj .?~
Fold-out books available
on the top drivers
Reedy Press (St. Louis) has
This year's

BRISTOL, Tenn. - Perhaps it
should come as no surprise Ihal the
best finish of the 2006 season for Scott
Riggs came at a perilous short track
located in Tennessee near the borders
of Virginia ami North Carolina.
Riggs, from Bahama, N.C. (pronounced buh-HAY-muh) , won more
than 60 times driving on the weekly
short tracks of the Carolinas, Virginia
and Tennessee. 1\vice he was the track
champion at Southern National Speedway in Kenly, N.C.
This season, his first at Evernham
Motorsports, has b.een his best. AI·
though he has now competed in 93
Cup races, Riggs has posted half his
.career top-10 finishes this year. While
his fourth-place finish in the Sharpie

"It was tough," said Riggs. "He
SOO was a season best, it wasn't the
(Gordon)
was holding me up a little bit
best finish of his career. Driving for
and
he
knew
it."
MBV Racing in 200S, Riggs finished
Asked
to
describe
his conversation
second on Aug. 21 at Michigan.
·
with
Gordon,
Riggs
said:
"I just tried
For the season, Riggs ranks 19t~ in
the Nextel Cup points standings. He to tell him 'good job, good race,' and
he tried to tell me to pas~ him on the
finished 29th in 2004 and 34th in 2005.
"This team deserves this," he said straightaway.
"I did the same thing he would have
after finishing fourth at Bristol.
"They deserve a lot of these top fives, done. He was holding me up in the
and J'm just proud lobe part of it. If middle of the corner, and when I was
we could get a win, it would boost all away from him, he was driving a
of us, and we'd get a couple more af- whole car length up in the corners.
When I got to him the last IS laps, he
ter that. ·
."We're shooting for a top IS (in was on the bottom. I could have
points) this year.... We've just got to dumped him, but I didn't. I told him
'good hard racing,' and he would have
win a race."
The latest race wasn't without its done the same thing. I thihk it was
controversy. ~iggs passed Jeff Gor- good racing on everybody's part."
don for fourth place on the final lap,
Contact Monte Dutton at
and the two had a somewhat heated
hmduttonSO@aol.com
discussion afterward.

Please see Funding. Al

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

dards of Bristol. this one was a pretty

Gallia LEADS consultant
Fannie Metcalf said.
Commissioner Fred Dee I
com mended both Shockey
and Evans for working
together to benefil the two
counties. ·
Commissioners President
Harold Montgomery also
commended the employees
of the school systems for
pulling in extra time for the
program.
In other action:
• Commissioners signed
the contract with .NeXtel.

'Raiders'
returning
to Meigs
this week

) gmnes go

Riggs, turning i ~ a season~best
finish, bumped his Dodge past Gordon's Chevrolet on the final lap of

remaining regular·sea-

Mayfoeld will drive No. 36.

No.;~:!

Riggs

Jeff Gordon vs.
Scott Riggs

races In the same order.
1&gt; The two

Bv MICHELlE MillER
MMILLER®MYDAILVTRIBUNE .COM

O'Reilly 200 at Bristol

c
Scon RIGGS

l'ollll' I'O~

Funding keeps after-school programs going

SPORTS

128.819 mph. Sept. 17,
2005.

• Last week: Mark Martin , in a Ford, won the

the Food City 250 at

Ohio \ ' all&lt;-~ l'nhli,hin~ ( o .

•

16

• Last year's winner:

2005.

Hl)metown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties · .

• When: Saturday. Sept.

• Last year's winner:
Carl Edwards ·

• Qualifying record:

Auto Club 500
Feb. 26 · ·

•

available at www.reedyseries.com,
www.race-depot.com an~ www.amazon.com.

What will really change If
Toyota joins NASCAR?
I would like to know what all the
fuss is at:lout concerning Toyota coming 1nto NASCAR next season. I keep

hearing they'll be throwing a lot of
money into the sport- like Ford ,

Chevy and Dodge don't?
I read where To~ota will be pushing all the lower-budget teams out of
the field, as there are only 43 spots
in each race . You mean the field ·
fillers? How many of these teams
are actually competitive, anyway?
Besides, with the Car of Tomorrow, Will it even matter if the car is

0BITUARIFS·
Page AS .
• Henry Duke' Bentz, 77
• Joan Bush, 70
• Adrienne Munns, 72
• Dave Sizemore, 60

INSIDE

Brad Sharmanlphoto

• Ham radio classes now
forming. See Page A2
• For the Record.
SeePageA2
• Local Briefs.
SeePageA3
• NATO plane crashes
in southern Afghanistan.
See Page AS
• State unit names
HMC-J's Dailey
top administrator.
See PageA6

made by Toyota, Dodge or Chevy?

Steven lassiter
Cherokee, Iowa

WEATHER

Thanks for sharing your Uloughts.

INDEX
4 SECTIONS - 24 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
As
Around Town
A.3
Celebrations
C4
D Section
Classifieds
insert
Comics

A4
A.3
As
A2
B Section
A6

© aoob Ohio Valley Jlublishing Co.

'

Please see Raiders, Al

Suspect in stabbing
sent to prison
theft, pled guilty to attempted theft of a motor vehicle
and was sentenced to 18
GALLIPOLIS - Donald months community control,
D. Crago. 30, 512 Fifth Ave., evaluation by TASC, must
Gallipolis, pled guilty to register
with
Ohio
attempted felonious assault · Employment
Services
and theft and has been sen- (OES ), obtain his GED, and
tenced in Gallia County pay restitution. probation
Common Pleas Court.
fees and court costs.
. In February, Crago led
• The case against Terry
authorities on a manhunt R. Prall . 20, 520 Sunnyside
near River Valley High Drive , Crown City, who
School; which was immedi- . was indicted on complicity
ately locked down, after to breaking and entering,
Submitted photos stabbing Brandon Locke, was Jismissed.
23. Columbus, three times
• Antonio L. Byrd, 28,
Eddie Baer, berek St. Clair, John Davis, John Moore and Mike Thompson are ·among the in the neck.
Dayton.
indicted on one
Team Jesus volunteers who have made the 1,000-mile trips to Waveland , Miss .. to help In
Crago was sentenced to the count of. drug abuse, pled
the hurricane relief efforts there.
Ohio
Department , of guilty to possession of drugs
Rehabilitation and Correction and was sentenced to 18
for four years m1 the attempt- months community control.
ed felonious assault charge, evaluation by TASC, must
. Bv BRIAN J. REED
18 months for the theft regi ster with OES. must pay
BR EEO@MY DAI LYSENTIN El. COM
•
charge. and 18 month for a probation fees and court
tampering with evidence costs, and operators Iicense
POMEROY - A year
charge in another case, to be s uspend~d for six months,
after making a first, tentative
served consecutively.
effective Jan. 6. 2006.
trip to the hurricane-ravaged
Crago was credi led 14 7
• Ronald L. Phillips Jr., ·
Gut f Coast, a local team of
days of jail time on the 24, 1324 Brushy Fork Road,
volunteer relief workers congrand jury indictment and . Gallipolis. indicted on one
tinues to minister loa church
147 days on the other count of carrying a con...
.
,
family and community in
charge.
cealed weapon, pled guilty
Waveland, Miss.
Other cases resolved by to same charge and was senTeam Jesus, led by Eddie
the court were:
tenced to pay $1,000 fine
Baer of Pomeroy, has spent
• David c. Wright, 45, plus court costs.
$30,000 and 7,000 man
2088 White Hollow Road,
• Brian K. Petrie. 20. 1610
•
hours working to help a
.originally indicted on one Sailor Road , Vimon , indictcommunity restore its
count of felonious assault ed on one count of burglary.
church and homes.
pled guilty to assault. Upon pled guilty to the same
Five men from Meig s
the recommendation of the charge and was senten(ed to
County made the first trip to
victim, Wright was fined two years community conWaveland the week ·after
$1 ,000 plus court costs.
trol, 500 hours community
Hurricane Katrina made its One of three houses built by members of the Pomeroy• Alvin D. Lewis II , 34, service with all hut 80 hours
devastating touchdown on based Team Jesus is now occupied by this man, known to Chesapeake.
originally ·
indicted
on
one
count of
Please see Suspect. Al
the group as "Grandpa.·
Please see Relief, Al
BY MICHELLE MILLER

MMILLER@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Team Jesus marks anniversary of Katrina relief effort

Details on Page A&amp;

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

Altho.ugh many games were postponed because of rain and flooding in neighboring West Virginia, Football Friday night went
on as planned in the Buckeye State. River Valley, pictured above tacklin~ Nelsonville-York full back Bear Lewis, perhaps had
the best playing conditions in the area as they played on the new Reidturf at Nelsonville's Boston Field. The rains stayed
away after kick-off, but most fields were still wet and muddy. Turn to Sports, B section. for all of Friday's gridiron action.

POMEROY- The South
will be rising again this
week with the Union
Cavalry fast on its heels
when M0rgan 's Raid II "On
to the Ford at Buffington
Island" sets up camp at
Chester,
Wilkesville,
Bashan and finally Portland
in an anempllo recreate the
only .Civil War battle in
Ohio's history.
Darrell N. Markijohn, an
attorney in Canton who is
also an organizer for the
raid, said there will be 240
riders. participating from 20
different slates. Markijohn
will once again be portraying the star of the "sho~,"
Confederate Gen. John
Hunt Morgan.
The festivities begin in
Wilkesville from noon to '7

ek
.rap

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="521">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9972">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="16604">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="16603">
              <text>September 1, 2006</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="113">
      <name>evans</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1861">
      <name>glass</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
