<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4852" 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/4852?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T06:49:42+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14780">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/5d078fdf19191a3f56799bfe94142e5f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8aef28984ee693f182d2cde745aa99ce</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="16659">
                  <text>•

(

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

'

Thursday, September 14.2006

Montreal gunman said
·i n blog that he liked
role-playing game about
Columbine shootings, A2

Meigs-Point Pleasant
football preview, Bt
~·

Brad Sherman
Sports Ediwr
R ecord: 26-4
Last Week 9-2
(winnen in .hs.llil)
GaiUa AqdcDJY

Larry

ci~m

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
Beth Sergent

Spo m Write,r

R t•porter

Rel·urd: 2 1-9
Lasr Week: 5-fl

R t'ro rd : 23-7

(winners in hQld)
G:1lh.1 Al"Jdcmy

at C hillicothe

a.l

Chi1licothe

Mnou.c

MoW "

Polnc--PTcasant

PolntPfeasant

So uth Ga llia
at Wahama

South Gallia

at w~hama
Southern
at H:mn;m

L:m Wee k: 9-:!

(w in nt'rs in

~

· Gallia Academy
Jt

Chillirotlw

MoW"

l'omr Pleasam
Somb Gallja
at Wahama

Gallia Academy
Jt Cl ulbwt iH::

Dave Harris

Tim Maloney

Nicole Fields

Pag mator
R t'C()I"d : 24-6
Last Week: 8-3
(win ne rs in ~

Ad . R ep rer;;t'mtive

News Ed1 tor
R ecord: 23-7
Lasr Wt'ek : 10- 1
(wi nn ers in h2ld)

Rt'pOrt('r

R eporter

rteco rd: 23-7

Record : 17- 13
l ast .Wt'ek: ~-3
(wi nn ers in b.21d)

Jeff Lanham
R.i o Grande AD
R ecord: 22-8·
Last Week: 10-1 (winner s in hWd)

Gallia Academy
Jt C hill iro the

Ga!lia Academv
Jt Chi llico the

tvh·i~ .It

M&lt;W ot

R ecq rd: 25-5
l ast Week · 8-3
(wmners in h2ld)

'

G~tllia

Gal!ia Acadrmy
.It

Chilliroth e

Jt

Gallia Academy

Academy

at Chill ico!IH:::

Chll licotlu·

Last Week : ll-2
(wi nners in lrnld)
' Gama Acadl!my
at Chilli c01 hc

.

M&lt;iJ&lt;&gt; M
Po i,i[-PT~·oJ sJ m

South Gal!ia

South GaUia

;Jt w~ h a m .l

at Waho1111a

at

w~ h .mu

.1t U'a han u

'
South Gallia
Jt W;,]unu

SoUthern
at H .u ma n

Southern
at Halllun

Southern
Jt llamtau

Rt vcr Valley

Southern

Southern

at Hamun

Jt H ~n 1 u n

South Gama

South Gama

Pojm PleaSBnl

Point Pleasa nt

South Gal1ja
~t W1hama

South Gallia
Jt Wah ama

Southtrn
at Ham1an

Southern

River Valley
:~t A kx~ ml c r

Riwr Valley
at Alexander

Southern
H Jwtm .

Jt

~~

RiferVaUey
Jt Alcxmdn

River Valley

Ri\·er Vallu

at Aluander

at A1e.".mdc-r

.11

St. Mary's
at Eastern

St. Mary's

St. Mary's

.. Sf. Mary's

St. Mary's

St Mary 's

at Eastern

at

Eastern

ar Easreru

St. Mary\
.H Easte rn

St. Mtry'•

E.1s1crn

at Eastern

at

Jac kson at

J~~:kson &lt;H

Ja ckso n ar

J.t ckmn at

j&lt;1 r kson at

J.wkmn :u

J.u:ksun at

lrop[on

lrooron

j ~fk!i on at
Jrop[OD

Jackson Jl

lwptoo

Ironton

lrtmton

Ironton

lrontog

Ironton

R ock Hill at

R ock Hill at
Portsmouth West

R or k Hill :u
Portsmouth West

Roc k Hill at

Portsmouth Writ

rQrumouth West

Rock H ill at
Porhmoutb Wed

R.of k H ill at
Portsmouth Wtst

Rock
,It
Portsmouth \ Vest

Rock Hm at
Portsmout h Wc:st

Porumoulh West

Logan at
Herbert Hoover

Lgpnat
Herber t Hoove r

Herbert Hooyer

l u ~au at
Herbert Hooyer .

Herbert Hooyer

Zanesville
Pvrtsmo uth

Za nesvilk•
at Portsmputh

Zapet;ville
:u Porn m nmh

St Mary•s
at Eastern

St. Mary's

at Eastern

Jacloon at
lropton

Jt

Jt

Herbert Hooyer

Herbert Ho over

L&amp;&amp;m&gt;&lt;

Logan at
Herbert Hooyer

Zanesville

Z:mesvdle

at Portsmputb

at Purtsmguth

Zane-svill e
at Portsmouth

Zauesv1lle
at Portsmouth

Logan

Logan :u

~t

Jl

Log-.1n

t\l ex:mdcr

ftm

Lu~.1n Jt

01.1

Herbert Hoover
.H

Z.mesv ilk
Portljmguth

.

Portsmouth

SPORTS
• Meigs wins
comfortably over
Belpre. See Page 81

E a~tern

Ro ck Hill u
Loga n at

Zanesville ·
Jt

:;o CI ·. N IS • \ 'ol. ,;(,, "&lt;o . :!!-I

H:mnan

R iwr Valley
Alexander

Rt vcr VJII t'}
at AJenoder

Herbert Hogxcr

Charlie Shepherd

Msti,u at
Poim IJ!l'asa nt

H .mn;~ n

River Valin'
at AJexapdj;.r

River Valley
at AJuapdtr

R ock Hill at

I ""r Week: 9-2
(winnc.: rs in h2ld)

Southern
at

Portsmouth W.U

Chris Rathburn
Ad. R c prc~l· nat ive
R ~:cord : 13-7

Jt

8Y

MARK

WtwAMS.

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

MOUNT VERNON
The University of Rio Grande
volleyball team is still miss.ing some ingredients that will
make them a challenger in the
American
Mideast
Conference South Division
and those missing pieces
were evident on Tuesday
night as they lost an AMC
South Division match to
Mount Vernon Nazarene in
three games, 24-30, 14-30
and 26-30.
· ·
Rio Grande (5-9, 0~2
AMCS) played at full
strength as both Kari and
Jessica Rodgers were back in
the line-up, but it Wasn't

Southern
fromPageBl
anchors the defense at
inside linebacker and has
led the team in tackles.
Other running backs are
Victor Ericson and Joe
Kinnard. Zach Sturgeon is
another capable runner with
a 70-yard kick-off return
against Symmes.
Sophomore Joe Kelly is
the Wildcat quarterback,
who primarily finds main
cog Wes Gue at tailback.
Gue is an extremely athletic
back with lots of speed and
strength. Joining Gue in the
backfield will be senior Joe
Kinnard, with senior Carl
Leep at tight end, junior
Zach Stur,geon at wingback
and sophomore Patrick
Flora at split end. Foreign
exchange student Victor
Ericsson joined the team
late, but has shown much
promise.
Southern and Hannan
stack up ·evenly across the
board with Southern gettmg
a slight edge in the speed
deP.artment
and
the
Wtldcats getting the edge in
overall size. The average
size of the line is in the 250260 range, giving the
Wildcats adequate blocking
offensively. Senior tackles
Bobb'y Klinestiver and Tim
Sadler, both of which stand
at over six feel and weigh in
around 280 pounds anchor
the
line.
Richardson
referred to his line as the
"backbone" of a club that
carries just I7 men in uniform .
In contrast, Southern has

Eastern
froni Page Bl
hang a 49-14 loss on the
Eagles.
In addition to Robinson,
St. Mary's also relys heavi-

Stouffer

that teaching," he said. "Even with his
health failing, he felt the overriding commitment to his teammates, and he didn't
fromPageBI
want to l'et them down." .
The superir~tendent said there only could
been a good reason why Stouffer had
have
back, and was ·a two-year varsity letterman. He also lettered in baseball before been named defensive captain.
"You don't get to that leadership role
switching to track and field last spring.
"Football was his favorite," Keefer said. and get the respect ofyour coac~es with.·
Stouffer had continued to practice and out being committed," Parsons sa1d.
The
superintendent
said
the
school
sysplay with the football team even as he was
getting sick, not yet knowing that he had tem would do ·anything to help the family
. leukemia. Superintendent Dr. Larry and friends of Stouffer deal with their ter·
Parsons said that coaches are always try- rible grief.
Earlier this week, Stouffer had been the
ing to teach their young men the value of.
team play and committing themselves to subject of a prayer ,vigil at Sanders
their teammates.
·
Stadium at which several hundred people
"This young man no doubt exemplified had attended.

enough to defeat the Lady
Cougars.
Jessica and senior outside
hitter Lindsay Urton were the
leading hitters for the
Redwomen with II and eight
kills respectively. Jessica also
led the defense with 23 digs
and was perfect in serving
(12-for-12) and passing (10for-1 0). Sophomore setter
Randi Rodgers also had a
good night attacking the middle of the Lady Cougar
defense, collecting seven
kills. Randi also handed out
26 assists and posted I 4 digs
on the defensive end.
Kari Rodgers, was a bit
rusty, but played well on the
defensive end, tallying I 7

digs.
Freshman libero
Summer Rinehart totaled 20
digs and was 13-for-13 serving. Senior Jessica Veach also
served the ball well for the
Redwomen. going 10-for-10
with an ace.
The struggle for Rio
Grande C3JTle from passing
the ball. The Redwomen
committed six crucial passing
errors on the night and it cost
them dearly.
Mount Vernon Nazarene
(14-4, 1-0 AMCS) was led
Shena Beheler with 18 kills,
seven blocks and four aces.
Rachel Walpole and Kaylin
Austen shared the setting
duties and contributed I 9 and
13 assists respectively.

38 on the roster, a luxury
Coach E&gt;ennis Teaford has
used to his advantage in
keeping fresh legs on ·the
field so that very few players have to play dual offensive-defensive roles.
Pressure is the key to the
Wildcat defense. Helping
apply that pressure will be
linebackers Gue, Kinnard,
Leep and Sturgeon, with
players on the offensive line
also looking to fill roles on
the
defensive
front.
Sophomore Clayton Gue
and freshman Jarrod Cobb
are spending time in a very
inexperienced secondary.
Southern has found success in two quarterbacks Jordan Pierce and Ryan
Chapman. Ch~pman was
the quarterback the second
half of both victories after
Pierce sul'fered .injuries, the
latter being a possible bone
fracture in his foot.
Chapman had come on
strong and was 5-of-7 passing last week until three
desperation passes in the
waning seconds' took a slice
out of his credentials. Wes
Riflle, Butch Marnhout, and
Nick Buck have been primary targets, while Wes
Counts
and
Anthony
Shamblin grabbed a couple
passes last week.
·
Marnhout has had three
straight 100-yard games,
including a potent 200-plus
game against Portsmouth
Notre Dame. Set-up men
include Jesse McKnight,
Counts, Chapman, and endaround blocking from
Riffle. Southern's starting
offense besides those mentioned previously are J.R.
Hupp,
center;· Taylor
Lemley, ,RG; Darin Teaford,

RT; Matt Lehew, LG; Zack
Sigmund, LT; Nick Buck,
TE ; and Wes Riffle, SE.
Southern-s offense · has
been
consistent, , and
marche.d the ball 70-plus
yards under pressure to take
the lead against a defending
play-off team (South Gallia)
last week. SHS took the
lead 16- I 4 only to have an
otherwise highly touted
defense sag late in the
game.
· Although
the
SHS
defense let down this time,
some of the credit goes to a
determined South Gallia
club. Overall, Southern's
defense has been one of the
best . in all of southeastern
Ohio, giving up just an
average of .12 points per
game.
Coach
Teaford
has
praised his club for a job
well done on both sides of
the ball and expects his
defense to be a key to success the rest of the season.
Starting defensively are
Mike Bronw. NG; Weston .
Counts, RT; Nick Buck,
ROE; Teddy Brown, LT;
Ryan Chapman, LDE;
Darin Teaford, MLB; Jesse
McKnight, RLB; Butch
Marnhout, LLB; Wes Riffle,
CB; Ryan Donaldson, CB: .
and RJ . Leach. S.
The main key to the win
says Teaford is "just working hard and trying to stay
focused on what we need to
do. We· need to come out
and play power football.
We are not gonna change
anything. We are just going
to work hard at what we do
best."
Game time is 7:30 p.m.
Friday in Ashton .

ly on Ryan Fickieson and
brusier Logan Bennett. The
Blue Devils are a run-first
type of team, but quarterback Derek Barnhart is also
a capable~pa sser.
Despite the nickname Blu~
Devils, St. Mary 's school
colors are purple and gold.

Kickoff is set for 7:30
p.m. It's the next to last
non-league game of the season for the Green and
White, who go to Belpre
nexl week before playing
host to Trimble in the TriValley Conference Hocking
Division opener.

OBITUARIES
•

Page AS
• Ruth Amold, 90
• Mae Vineyard, 94
• Josephine Smith, 96

INSIDE
• E. coli outbreak
traced to bagged
spinach in 8 states.
See Pa~ .~
• Local Briefs.
See Page5YA3
• Forthe Record.
See Page AS
• Authorities: Boy
admits making up
abduction story.
See Page AS
• Woman paid
thousands to rent
rotary phone.
See Page AS
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
• Like little children:
They are of 'growing
down.' See Page A6
• Judge rules Cobb
commissioners can
pray·to Jesus.
See Page A6

WEATHER

Saturday, August 26
7amto

~

...........

""w.mydail)scnlitwl.t'Om

Commissioners approve transfer for deputy wages
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY -A funds
transfer within the budget of
Meigs County Sheriff
Robert Beegle should allow
him to pay all of his
employees through the end
of the year, Meigs County
Commissioners
said
Thursday.
Bee~le requested, and
commtssioners approved, a
$50,000 transfer from his
housing line item to his
salaries line. The transfer
represents funds set aside at

ZJntwillc
Porumouth

Previous Champions- 2001: Butch Cooper--- 2002: Butch Cooper--- 2003: Brad Sherman--- 2004: Brad Sherman--- 2005: Bryan Walters.

Redwomen fall to Mt. Vernon

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 1;), 2006

the beginning of the year for
housing inmates in facilities
outside the county, specifically the Southeastern Ohio
Regional Jail and the
Washington County Jail ,
which provided hou sing for
Meigs County prisoners at
negotiate? r~tes.
Commtsstoners
said
Beegle was able to save
enough money to make the
transfer throu~h the re-opening of the Metgs County Jail
earlier this year, eliminating
. the need for much of the
housing funding.
"The savings the sheriff

has seen in his housing money in his budget. Last
expenses this year are sig- year, when the county jail
nificant enough that we feel was still closed, commisconfident in approving the sioners made two additional
transfer," Commis sioner appropriations of $20,000
Mick Davenport said. "We in order to meet the expen se
feel the transfer will make it of inmate housing .
possible for (Beegle) to get
Beegle also was forced to
through the rest of the year issue layoffs and operate
with current staffing."
with a "skeleton staff' last
"Re-opening the county year because of insufficcnt
jail .has made a big differ- salary funds.
ence," Commissioner Jim
Commissioners originally
Sheets said.
appropriated $150.000 into
Sheets said Beegle and Beegle's housing line this
his staff of deputies have year, in order to pay the
also been working closely cost of outside housing .
together in o~der to save Beegle said earlier this year

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - Southern Ohio
Coal Company plans to install a
new system designed to remove
water from its abandoned Meigs
County coal mines.
At Thursday's regular meetCounty
ing,
Meigs
Commissioners held a public
hearing and approved SOCCO's
plans to cross Strong ' s Run
Road (C.R. 52) with two 16-inch
dt&lt;)inage pipes, as part of a plan
to transfer standil)g water from
the old Mine 2 to the 31 mine
and beyond.
Luke Brooks of SOCCO met
with commissioners to discuss the
proposal, which commissioners
approved. He said the proposed
crossing of the county road is part
of a larger plan to address the mine
water issue with a hydrated lime
filtration system.
The project is being permitted
through the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Brooks said
yesterday.
SOCCO is owned by Consol
Energy of Pittsburgh, Pa., the
company which purchased AEP's
mining properties shortly before
they were closed in 1999.
Commissioners also:
• Approved employment ofTrisha
Gibson of Syracuse as a part-time,
tem(J!lrary basis, at the Emergency
Medical Services office.
• Approved a resolution allowing resurfacing of Union Avenue,
from the Pomeroy corporallon
line to Ohio 7, as requested by
County
Engineer
Eugene
Triplett. The estimated cost of
the half-mile paving project is
$26,950 .
Please see Mine. A5

Bv

Charlene Hoefllch/ photo

Construction ·of the $7.6 million Rocksprings interchange where U.S. 33 and s·tate Route 7 intersect. is expected
to be completed late this year or early next year.

repair
Expect traffic delays
Bv

CHARLENE HOEFliCH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYS ENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Traffic will move
at a slower pace next ·week in the
Rocksprings area. · northbound
Route 7, as work begins on some
needed repair to the underneath of
the · overhead bridge which was
damaged when struck by a truck
several months ago.
Stephanie Philson, information
officer for District I0, advised
Thursday that there will be traffic
delays as ODOT crews make the
needed repairs. The work will begin
Monday and it is anticipated that it

can be·completed in a week. Philson
noted that U.S. 33 traffic over the
bridge has been reduced to one lane
since the incident occurred.
"Motorists on Ohio 7 northhound
can expect periodic delays of up to
15 minutes while work is underway," she said, emphasizing however, that Route 33 trat'fic over the
bridge will not be affected by the
repatr work at all.
.
ODOT has not designated an
alternate route for vehicl'es to use
during the repair work period to
avoid the delays. However, those
!raveling to Meigs High and
Middle Schools can access County
Road 25 which leads directly there
by taking the ramp from Route 7
onto to 33, and then turning left

to begin
onto tl1e county road.
Meanwhile. work in that same
lJrea on the interchange project near
the junction of Route .1.1 and 7.
desi gned to belter handle the ri se in
traflk volume through a continu ous llow pattern . is ri ght on schedule. according to Phil son. While
rain has created some delay. she
said the work ' remains ahead of
·schedule and the project is· expected 10 he fini shed well before th e
scheduled completion date .
In conjunction with work on that
$7.6 million interchange project.
one lane of nnrthbound Route 7
leading up to the damaged overhead
bridge has been clo sed fur several
months. That work has also slowed
the flow of traffic in the area.

DtANE PoTTORFF
.'

Details on Page A3

INDEX
2 SECI10NS- 16 PAGES

"

'

had :m informal agreement
that funds set aside for outside housing and not used
for that purpose could be
transferred to the salaries
line, if needed.
Beegle is now hou sing
most prisoners in his own jail.
Women. long-term inmates
and inmates who are consid"
ered "high ri sk" are still
housed in facilities outside
the county, while inmates
with shorter sentences and
those awaiting cou1t appearances are rotttinel y housed in
the Meigs jail.

Commissioners
approve SOCCO
request for
mine drainage

DPOTIORFF@MYDAILYR EGISTEA .COM

••

c ommi ~s i o ne rs

Point Pleasant receives grants for two. major projects

~

••

that he and

a.
.........
"""'-.
. '
'

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Buckeye Edition
AB
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
. Editorials
A4
.Faith • Values
A6-7
· Movies
As
NASCAR
BB
Obituaries
AS
Sports
B Section
Weather
A3
© 2006 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POINT · PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Point Pleasant and
Mason County have been
awarded two grants, one for
the River Museum and the
other for the flood.wall
mural, totaling $375,848.
The grants were given out
in a ceremony with Gov. Joe
Manchin
Tuesday
in
Charleston.
" It's wonderful," said
Mayor Jim Wilson. "This is
part of our overall plant to
bring tourism to the city."
· The 'Point Pleasant River
Museum is receiving about
$I 36,000 of that money
which will be used to build
a two-story addition on lhe
back of the museum, Jack
Fowler. director of the
•
Submitted photo
museum, said. The grant . Workers with Amherst Industries use a crane to lift a pilot house off the deck of a barge
plus other funding will be and gently take it to land. The pilot house will be srtting on .top of a new addition that is to
used for the construction be constructed at the Point Pleasant River Museum.
and 2,000-gallon aquarium
that will be installed.
opment of the historical Riverfront Park .
Charles Htunphreys. who is
The other $240.000 will murals on the tloodwall at
Mason County Economic responsihle for the idea for
be going toward the devel- the
Point
Pleasant Development
Director the muraL said the ltltal pro-

,,

ject wiII cost around
$1\00.000, in cluding an
elaborate sl)und system. He
said it raised some eyebrow; at state offices when
he said what it would cost.
"We want this thing to be
first class all the way."
Humphreys said . "That 's
the only way to do it. "
Before any construction
can take place at the River
Museum, an archeological
study has to be tlone since
the nmscum is located in the
middle of what was the battle ground for lhe Battle of
Point Pleasant. Fowler said.
And, .since 1he money is
from the Transportation
Enh&lt;mccmcnt
and
Recreational Trail&gt; Fund. an
adverlisemcnt wi ll have to

be placed for .an architect.
What he would like 10
ha ve is a ba,c mellt cnn stru\:ted under the new
addition which would
h0use u

~ t o ra gc

i.lrea along

with filte rs. rump' and
Please see Grants, AS

'

�•

The Daily Sentinel

NATION ·• WORLD

Mo111r881 uun•n said in blou that he
BY

PHIL COUVRETTE

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MONTREAL - A 25year-old man who mounted
a deadly shooting rampage
at a downtown Montreal
college had posted pictures
of himself on the Internet
with a rifle and said he was
feeling "crazy" and ''postal"
and was drinking whiskey
hours before the attack.
· The man, identi(ied IJ,y
police as Kimveer Gill, also
said on a blog that he liked
to play a role-playing
Internet game about the
Columbine High School
shootings in Colorado and
wanted to die "i n a ,hail of
gunfire."
In the end, Gill - dressed
in a black trench coat like
the Columbine shooters put his own gun to his head
and pulled the trigger during a shootoul with officers
at Dawson College on
Wednesday. police said.
Gill, wielding a rapid-fire
rifle and two other weapons,
had already wounded 20
other people by the time he
took hi s own life. One of his
VICtims, an 18-year-old
woman, later died . Four
others remained in critical
condition Thursday, including tl:rree in extremely critical condition and one in a
deep coma.
The Internet postings and
neighbors' accounts reveal
an angry, solitary young
man who lived . with his
mother in Laval , near
Montreal. He sported a
mohawk, dressed in black
and was filled with hatred
for everyone from jocks to
preppies and everything
from country music to hiphop. He once worked for a
carpet company and more
recently an auto parts business.
"Work sucks ... school
sucks ... life sucks ... what
else can I say? ... Life is u
video game you've got to
die sometime," he wrote in

PageA2
'

Friday, September 15, 2006

'ANNIE'S MAILBOX

roiHiavinu uame aboUt

laziness and that he fears
nothing. Responding to the
question, "How do you
want to die?" Gill replied
·"like Romeo and Juliet or in a hail of gunfire."
'Gill repeatedly said on
his blogs that he ~ved
black trench coat's. He
wore a black trench coat
during the shooting and
opened fire in the cafeteria
just as Columbine students
Dyl an Klebold and Eric
Harri s did in 1999 :
He also maintained an
online blog, similar to
Klebold arid Harris, devoted
to Goth culture, heavy metal
music such as Marilyn
Mimson, guns and journal
entries expressing hatred
aga inst authority figures
and "society."
He said he liked to play ·
Columbine
" Super
Massacre," an Internetbased computer game that
simulates theApril20, 1999,
shootings at the Colorado
high school when Klebold
and Harris killed 13 people
and then themselves.
Giil complained that a
video shooting . game,
AP Photo
"Postal 2," was too childish.
Carla Calandrini writes her name on a poster she put up at a makeshift memorial to the victims at Dawson College in He wanted one that 'i!llowed
Montreal Thursday. A man with a biack trench coat went on a shooting rampage at the Montreal college Wednesday killing him to kill more and go
one person and wounding 19 others.
"'beserk."
·
"I want them to make a
hi s profile for a Web site friends," Louise Leykauf died young . Left
man- people in his life who are game so realistic, that it
called vampirefreaks.com.
said. "He kept to himself. gled corpse."
decent. But he finds the vast looks and feels like it's
Authorities
searched He always wore dark
The last of six journal majority to be worthless, no actually happening," he
Gill's home Wednesday clothing."
entries Wednesday was good, conniving, betraying, wrote in his blog.
.
evening and seized his comAnother
neighbor, posted at 10:41 a.m, about lying, deceptive."
Danny Ledonne, the ere·
puter and other belongings. Marioia Trutschnigg, said two hours before Gill died
This inscription is below ator of "Super Columbine
"I don't know what they she noticed a changed in his at Dawson.
a picture of Gill aiming a Massacre," posted a mesfound in the computer," said appearance
in
recent
He said on the site that he gun at the camera: "I think I sage of sympathy on his
a woman who answered the months when he "started fell "crazy" and was drink- have an obbsetion (sic) with• site.
· " I am, like most, sadphone at Gill's home and wearing' a mohawk and ing whiskey that morning guns ... muahahaha."
said she was his mother. black clothes.".
and described his mood a s · "Anger and hatred sim· dened by the news of the
"They took everything."
mers within me," said recent shooting at Dawson
In postings on vampiref- "postal" the night before.
She described her son as reaks.com, blogs in Gill's
'\Whiskey in the morning, another caption below a pic- College. I e~tend my con·
name show more than 50 mmmmmm, mmmmmmm- ture of Gill grimacing.
"a good man."
dolences to those affected
"Just ask anyl;&gt;ody. Ask photos depicting the young mm, good ll...·) ,"he wroIe.
He wrote.that he is 6-foot- by this painful event,"
the neighbors. He was a man in various poses hold"His name is Trench. you l, was bdrn in Montreal and Ledonne wrote.
good son," the woman told ing u rifle or a knife and will come to know him as is of Indian heritage. It was
A 23-year-old man and a
The Associated Press. She wearing a bluck trench coat the Angel of Death," Gill unclear whether he meant 12-year-old girl accused in a
refused to give her name.
wrote ut another point on east Indian or American triple murder in Medicine
und combat boots.
One photo hus a tomb- his vampirefrenks.com pro- Indian. but Gill is a com- Hut, Alberta, earlier this
A neighbor across the
street said he wus u loner.
stone bearing his name and . tile. "He is ·not a people per· mon name in India .
year also had profiles on
"There were never uny the epitaph: "Lived fast son. He has met u handful of
He said his weakness is vampirefreaks.com.

a

Dear Annie: I need your
advice. My hu sband of
almost four years was married before. That marriage
was nearly a decade ago,
and his ex walked away
from the marriage after only
eight months. : However,
since the divorce, she continues to use my husband's
last name. it didn't really
bother me until I gave birth
to our first child, and also
started a new career in
which the two of us have
crossed paths.
It makes me extremely
uncomfonable to .be at the
same event she is and have
everyone ask if we are rei ated. I am not catty, nor do I
like to focus my attention
on something like this, but
there is no reason for her to
still be using hi s last name.
She does not need it for
career reasons, nor did they
have children together. How
do I ·deal with this? Three's a Crowd
Dear Crowd: There is
really nothing you can do. It
· is perfectly legal for the ex
to keep her previous husband's name. So, you need
to be less bothered. If someone asks if you are related,
simply say "no." Or, if you
wish to elaborate, you can
say, "She was married to my
hu sband for a few months
and became attached to hi s
name." People are curious,
not making judgments, and
it truly has nothing to do
with you. Let's hope the ex
remarries a man ·whose
name she likes better. Soon .
Dear Annie: Could you
please ·give your opinion on

Local Weather

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

E. coli qutbreak

Federal health officials said an
WASHINGTON - An
outbreak
of E. coli traced to
outbreak of E. coli in eight
bagged spinach In eight states
states has left at least one
has killed at least one person
person dead and 50 others
and sickened 50 others.
sick, federal health officials
• At least one death
said Thursday in warning
ll'IJ Confirmed case
consumers nationwide not
to eat bagged fresh spinach.
The death occurred in
Wisconsin, where 20 people
were made ill, state officials
said. The outbreak has sickened others- eight of them
seriously - in Connecticut,
Idaho, Indiana, Michigan ,
New Mexico, Oregon and
SOURCES; Center$ for Oi86868
AP
Utah, according to federal Corm'ol
and Pmv&amp;lltioo
health officials.
In Cillifornia, state health Depm1ment of Community
officials were investigating Health spokesman T.J .
a possible case that could be Bucholz said. "If they feel
. linked to the outbreak and like they have to eat it, wash
warned consumers not to it first iri warm ·water."
eat the produce.
The Idaho Department of
FDA officials · do not Health and Welfare was
know the source of the out- advising people to exercise
break other than it appears caution as it tried to gather
to be linked to bagged fresh more
· information,
spinach. "We're advising spokesmao Ross Mason said.
people not to eat it," said Dr.
The Centers for Disease
David Acheson of the Food Control and Prevention and
and Drug Administration's Wisconsi n health officials
Center for Food Safety and alerted the FDA about the
Applied Nutrition.
outbreak . Wednesday.
The outbreak has affected Preliminary analysis suga mix of ages, but most of the gests the same bug is
cases have involved women, responsible for the outbreak
Acheson told reponers in a in all eight states.
conference call. He had no
The warning appl ied to
funher information on the consumers
nationwide
person who died.
.
becapse of uncertainty over
The five confirmed patients the origin of th~ tai nted
in Oregon were females who spinach and how widely it
ranged in age from 8 to 62, was distributed.
said Dr. Bill Keene, an epiHealth officials do not
demiologist with the Oregon know of any link to a speDepartment of Human cific growing region, growServices. TI1e cases originat- er. brand or supplier,
ed between Aug. 25 and Sept. . Acheson said.
I, he said, and were linked to
He said reports of infecthe spinach but not to a spe- tions have been growi ng.
cific brand.
"It's increasing by the day,"
"People have eitl1er varying Acheson said. "We may be at
or no recollection of the brand the peak, we may not be."
they purchased," Keene said .
Amy Philpott, a spokes·
In Michigan, two adults woman for the United Fresh
and a child were sickened, a Produce Association. said
state health official said. that it's possible the cause of
Connecticut reported one the outbreak won't be known
case.
for some time. even after its
"We' re telling people if source is determined.
they have bagged produce
"Our industry is very con·
and they feel like it \ a risk, cerned," she said. ·•we' re
throw it out, " Michigan taking this very seriously."

E. coli causes diarrhea,
often with bloody stools.
Most healthy adults can
recover completely within a
week, although some people - including the very
young and old- can develop a form of kidney failure
that often lead s to death.
Anyone who has gotten
sick after eating raw packaged spinach should contact
a doctor, officials said.
Other bagged vegetables,
including prepackaged salads, , apparently are not
affected. In ge neral , however, washing all bagged vegetables is recommended.
E. coli lives in the intestines
of cattle and other animals
and typically is linked to contamination by fecal material.
It causes an estimated 73,000
cases of infection, including
61 deaths, each year in the
United States, according to
the federal Centers · for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention.
Sources of the bacterium.
include uncooked produce,
raw milk, unpasteurized juice,
contaminated water anp meat,
especially \llldercooked or
raw hamburger, the agency
say's on its Web site.
In December 2005, an E.
~o li outbreak sickened at
least eight child.ren in
Washington state . Oflicia!s
traced the outbreak to unpasteuri zed milk from a dairy
that had been ordered to stop
distributing mw milk.
Last October, the FDA
warned people not to eat certain Dole prepackaged salads that were connected to
an outbreak of E. coli infections in Minnesota. At least
II people were sickened.
In 1993, a major E. coli
outbreak sickened about
700 people and killed four
who ate undercooked Jack
in the Box · hamburgers in
Washington state. That outbreak led to tighter
Agriculture
Department
safety standards for meat
and pou !try producers.

Forecast lor Friday, Sept. 15

Associcued Pre.u writers
Sven Gustqf:wn in Detroit
and
Kasi&lt;'
Ht~nt
in
Washinl{to/1 cmttribt~ted to
th;s report.

cttyfAeglon
High I Low temps

Toledo•
75' 152"

Mansfield •
73' I 53'

SUPPORTS

~

Youngstown •
71 ° 154°

PA

·

L___')

*Columbus

Dayton•

75' 154'

75' I 52"

Cincinnati
IIDI'tllmouth •

'' 79"155'

~ ·vV'../\

h-.._ Cloudy ~ Thunder-~ Flurnes ~
L___2)
~ storms ~ ~~
Partly

Ooudy

U

''"'"

Sflowera

~
~

' \\ \
Rain

•

•

·····

Snow

Ice

~
• ;••• ~

Weather Underground • AP

Friday••. Panly cloudy in
Sunday and . Sunday
the morning .. .Then clear- night ...Mostly clear. Highs
ing . Patchy dense fog in the in the mid 80s. Lows in the
morning. Highs in the upper upper 50s.
Monday... Partly cloudy
70s. Nonh winds around 5
with a chance of showers
mph.
Friday night... Mostly and thunderstorms. Highs
clear. Lows in the mid 50s. around 80. Chance of rain
Nonheast winds around S 40 percent.
Monday night ... Mostly
mph.
Saturday... Mostly sunny. cloudy with a chance of
.Patchy dense fog. Highs in showers and thunderthe lower 80s. Northeast storms. Lows in the upper
winds around 5 mph.
50s. Chance of rain 50 per·
Saturday night... Mostly cent.
Tuesday... Mostly cloudy
c)ear. Patchy dense fog.
with
a 40 percent chance of
Lows in the upper 50s.
Southeast winds around 5 showers. Cooler with highs
in the upper 60s.
mph .

To see how your ad could appear
in a Gizmos &amp;Gadgets comic contact:
Dave or Brenda
at 992-2155

The Daily Sentinel
,.

•

,

MARIETTA - Natural
Re so urces
Assistan ce
Council will meet at l 0 a.m.
on Sept. 21 at District 4
Depanment · of Natural
Resources offices to recommend projects under Round
4 of the Clean Ohio
Program. Questions may be
directed to Brent Smith at
Buckeye · Hills/Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development District, at
374-9436.

POMEROY
Employees of the former
Veterans
Memorial .
Hospital will have a
reunion from I to S p.m. on
Sunday at the Mei gs
Multipurpose
Senior
Center. Those attending are
asked to brin g photographs
and memorabilia and finger food s for the refreshment tabre.
Anyone affiliated with
the former hospital is
invited to attend.

MASON.
W.Va.
everyone. Fnr more inforBailey family reunion , 4 mation. call 38~-8075.
p.m. Mason City Park. Take
POMEROY · - Marvin
Monday, Sept. 18
.Whiteman will be in conRACINE - Southern · covered di sh.
Sunday,
Sept.
17
cert at the Bradford
Local School District
RACINE
.
Gideon
Church
of
Christ ,
Board of Education, speRoush
reu
nion
will
be
held
Bradb ury Road , Pomeroy,
cial session, 8:30 ·a.m., in
at
I
p.m.
at
Star
Mill
·Park,
7
p.m .
med ia ce nter . of hi.gh
Racine.
Take
a
covered
P.OMEROY
Zion
&gt;chool to discuss personnel dish-.
Church of Christ homec~m­
and other maiLers relative
RA
CIN
E
Oscar
Reeding with program from 10
to the effective operation
Charles
Hy
sell
reunion,
I
to
II a.m. featurin g
of the di strict.
Sunday,
Star
Mill
Park.
p,m
"ForgiveJi
Again Trio," ~
Thesday, Sept. 19
Take
covered
dish
and
Zion's choir and ot her &gt;peRUTLAND - Rutland
dessert.
White
elephant
aucci
al mu sic. Memorabilia
Village Council , regular tion to be held.
d
isp
lay. Potluck mea l at
meeting , 7 p.m.. Rutland
!2: 15p.m .
Civic Center.
POMEROY
Wednesday, Sept. 20
Homecomi
ng at the Haze l
POMEROY Meig s
Commun
it
y
Church. Jerry
Saturday, Sept. 16
Soil
and
Water
POMEROY Meigs Frederick will preach.
Con serva tion
District
Board of Supervisors, regu- · Daisy Scout Troop meeting, There ·will be specJa l
lar session , noon , at distri ct 10:30 to noon organization- si nging at l p.m . For more
office.
al . time at the Pomeroy information call 985-3495 .
Library activity room. Edsel Hart, pastor.
POMEROY
Open to kindergarten girls.
Hom
ecoming at the Mt.
For more information con·
tac t He ather Humphreys Herman Uni ted Breth ren
Church. Wickham Road
992-9 101 .
with
Pas tor
Peter
Friday, Sept. 15
Martindall .
Sunday
MASON, W.Va. - VFW
School,
9:30
a.m.
;
chu rch,
Ladie s Auxiliary of Post
10:30
p.m.;
carry-i
n din9926, Mason, will host a
Friday, Sept. 15
ner. flOOn . Si nge r. Martie
POW/MIA candlelight cereSTIVERS VILLE
Short
I :30 p.m.; kids activmon y at 8:30 p.m. at the Children's video at 6 p.m. at
ities.
For more informaSenior Citizens Building in the Stiversville Community
tion. 985 -4220 .
Mason in observance of Church.
National
POW/MIA
Saturday, Sept. 16
Recognition Day.
MIDDLEPORT - "His
Saturday, Sept. 16
Own'\ of Ashland, Ky. will
SALEM CENTER be singing at 7 p.m. at the
Monday, Sept. 18
Star Grange 11778 and Star Middleport Church of the
POMEROY - Loretta
Junior Grange #87R annu- Nazarene . Refreshments Magee will observe her
al hayride and wiener will follow.
91 st birthday on Sept. 18.
roast, 6:30 p.m., at
Sunday, Sept. 17
Cards may be sent to her at
Grange Hall on County
RACINE
the
Ro cksp rin gs
Road I, three miles north Homecoming for Mount Rehabilitation
Center.
of Salem Center. Grange Moriah Church of God, Pomeroy. She is being
will provide hot dog s and Sunday school service moved there this weekend
buns. Bring snacks. Final .begins at 10 a. m. followed by her daughter, Barbara
plans for the Chicken by regular service, lunch. Rou sh, after havi ng spe nt
. BBQ to he he ld on and special singing; Tiki the . the past fo ur years in a
O&lt;:tober I will be made .
down will be pre sent for Marietta nursing faci lity.
POMEROY - Big Bend children.
1\tesday, Sept. 19
Farm Antique Club, tractor
POMEROY
The
POMEROY - George
pull, I p.m. Rock Springs Miller Family, a bluegrass Horak 'Will observe his 90th
Fairgrounds.
Beginning gospel group, will be in birthday. on Sept. 19. Cards
with 9000 pound class. No concen, 10:30 a.m. Sunday may be sent to him at 198
admission charge. Food morning worship service at Union Terrace, Pomeroy.
available. For more infor- the Laurel Cliff Free Ohio 45769.
mation, call 992-1079 or Methodi st Church. For
Wednesday, Sept. 20
742-3020.
more ihformation, call 304HEATH - Ja ke Gaul
POMEROY - Return 773-5559.
will observe his 85 th birth Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
VINTON - Special ser- day Sept. 20. Cards may
DAR, noon luncheon. vices, 7 p.m. at the Spring be se nt to him at 716
Wildhorse Cafe.
Baptist Church. Southern Windsor Lane , Heath ,
Sunday, Sept. 17
gospel singers, Rev. Gary' Ohio, 43056. The Gauls
POMEROY
Griffith preaching. Pastor are former residents of
Alcoholics Anonymous. Clyde Ferrell 'wel comes Meigs·Co unty.
12-step study. 7 p.m. ,
Sacred Hean Church.
Thesday, Sept. 19
CHESTER
Past
Councilors Club, Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America. 7:30 p.m., at the
· Masonic hall. Membership
due payable.
POMEROY - American
Legion Post 39, Pomeroy
will met at 7 p.m. for a
meeting and dinner.

Youth events

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

1

Birthdays

Reunions
Saturday, Sept. 16
RACINE - Fink family
reunion, dinner at l p.m. at
Star Mill Park, Racine.
POMEROY - Reunion
of Veterans Memori al
Hospital employees. l to 5
p.m., Meigs Senior Center.
Bring finger foods. photos
and memorabilia. Anyone
associated with hospital
invited to attend.

Off Entire Stock
SOME EXCLUSIONS:
Special Orth!rs, Handcrafted 7in Lighting,

Heirloom
Coverlets &amp; Runners. Mamma Dolls
. '

• ·-... . ' ~ '

.

(QRNWELL CENTER
for Cardiovascular and Diabetes
Community Open House
Sunday, September I7 from I:00 to 4:00 p.m.

Ltd.- 27.22

NSC- 43.113
Oak Hill Rnanclal - 24.75
OVB- 25.15
BBT -43.42
Peoples - 29.20
Pepsico- 64.55
Premier - 14.95
Rockwell - 57.08
Rocky Boots - 11. 08
Sears - 159.12
Wai-Mart- 48.37
Wendy's - 63.B4
Worthington - 18.42
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors
of Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.

15, 2006

Public meetings

Celebrating the opening qf the progressive new Cornwell Center

Local Stocks
ACI- 27.56
AEP -36.22
Akzo- 59.20
BIG- 20.54
Bob Evans- 29.78
BorgWamer - 56.87
CENX- 32.62
Champion - 6.96
Char111Ing Shops - :1,4.07
City Holding - 39.75
Col- 53.51
DG -14.10
DuPont - 41.63
Federal Mogul -;- .37
USB- 33
Gannett- 54.97
General Electric - 34.78
GKNLY- 5.55
Harley Davidson - 60.88
JPM- 46.50
Kroger- 23.12

Council
meets

Hospital
reunion

• 78" 155"

v~·

Often the perpetmtor and
the victim (as well as the
parents) are not aware of the
definition of sexual harassment. When the harasser
believes it is just teasing,
educati ng both students
about the potential seriousness of the behavior will
stop the problem. If education does not help. then, of
course, other actions would
need to be taken.
I rea lize that both are
youn g, but now is the time
to help them learn what is
and is not acceptable
and/or legal. l further realize that some people will
think my comments are an
overreaction. but they are
not. Times ha ve changed a
great deal since I was in
· school. What was cons iderect "teasing" then is totally un acceptabl e now. Retired School Counselor
Dear Counselor: You are
right, of course . It makes us
sad that the eq ui valent of
dipping- pi gtai ls-in- th einkwell has become so controversial , but we agree that
grade-school stLidents are
not too young to understand
.the nega tive impa~t of such
actions. Thanks for writing.
Annie'~ Mailbox i~ written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions ro anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out mote
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creator~ Syndicate Web
page at www.creatars.com.

Local Briefs

Joday's Forecast

E. coli outbreak traced to
bagged spinach in 8 states
BY ANDREW BRIDGES

whether a small home is
easier to clean than a large
one? I need a lot of space.
My husband is a minimalist.
The less space, the better.
I vote for a beautifully
decorated home with some
pieces of interest for conversational reasons and
because it provides a ·much
homier atmosphere. I think
a larger home is easier to
clean because fewer items
have to be moved in order to
dust, and clutter would be
less of a problem due to
more available space.
My husband look s at this
differently. He believes if
there is less space, there is
less to clean regardless of
what the decor is. What do
you say?- Florida ·
Dear Florida: Two
rooms are more upkeep
than one room, even if both
rooms are empty, but no
one keep s two empty
room s. People tend to
expand into their available
square footage. If you have
extra space, you will eventually accumulate spare
knick-knacks and auxili ary
kitchen gadgets . Your
argument boil s down to
clutter. A clutter-free home
is easier to clean and main tain regardless of the size
of the house or the number
of rooms.
Dear Annie: This is in
response to "Confused in
Illinoi s," the 12-year-old
girl whose classmate,
"Benny," teases her about
her flat chest. I hope you
will let her know that what
Benny is doing is a form of
sexual harassment. It needs
· to stop now and should be
reported to her school coun· selor or principal.

Friday, September

Community C~lendar

Shes got the same name? Take it in stride
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

PageA:3 ·

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Enjoy tours, free· health screenings, entertainment by
~ The Bob Stewart Band and refreshments.

OwtNr:

Gurlri4«

(

�•

•

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pom·eroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

PageA4

OPINION

Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
.
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Sept. 15, the 258th day of 2006. There
arc I 07 days left in the year.
· Today 's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 15, 1789, the U.S. Department of Foreign
Affairs was renamed the Department of State.
On this date:
In 1770, British forces occupied New York City during
the American Revolution.
In 1821, independence from Spain was proclaimed for
Co sta Rica, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and El
Salvador.
In 1857, William Howard Taft, who served as president
of the United States and as U.S. chief justice, was born in
Cincinnati.
In 1935, the Nuremberg Laws deprived German Jews of
their citizenship and made the swastika the official symbol
of Nazi Germany.
In 1940, during the Battle of Britain in World War II, the
tide turned as· the Luftwaffe sustai ned heavy losses inflicted
by the Royal Air Force.
·
In 1950, during the Korean conflict, United Nations
forces landed at Incheon in the south and began their drive
toward Seoul.
In 1959, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev arrived in the
U.S. to begin a 13-day visit.
In 1963, four black girls were killed when a bomb went
off during Sunday services at the Sixteenth Street Baptist
Church in Birmingham, Ala. (Three Ku Klux Klansmen
were eventually convicted for their roles in the blast.) .
In 1982, Iran's former foreign minister, Sadegh
Ghotbzadeh, was executed after he was convicted of plotting against the government.
·
Ten years ago: Defense Secr~tary William Perry was
making the rounds among American allies in the Persian
Gulf region, seeking additional support for the U.S . stance
against Iraq. Bahrain agreed to play host to 26 American F16 jet fighters.
'
·
.
Five years ago: President Bush ordered U.S. troops to get
ready for war and braced Americans for a long, difficult
assault against terrorists to avenge the Sept. ll attacks.
Beleaguered Afghans streamed out of Kabul, fearing a U.S.
military strike against Taliban rulers who were harboring
Osama bin Laden. Fred De Cordova, executive producer of
"The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson," died in
Woodland Hills, Calif., at age 90.
Today's Birthdays: Bluesman Snooky Pryor is 85. Actordirector Jackie Cooper is 84. Actor Forrest Compton is 81.
Comedian Norm Crosby is 79. Actor Henry Darrow is 73.
Baseball Hall-of-Farner Gaylord Perry is 68. Football Hallof-Farner Merlin Olsen is 66. Opera singer Jessye Norman
is 61. Actor Tommy Lee Jones is 60. Movie director Oliver
Stone is 60. Rock .musician Mitch Dorge (Crash Test
Dummies) is 46. Football Hall-of-Farner Dan Marino is 45.
Actor Danny Nucci is 38. Rap DJ Kay Gee is 37. Rock
musician Allen Shellenberger (Lit) is 37. Actor Josh Charles
is 35. Singer Ivette Sosa (Eden's Crush) is 30. Actress Amy
Davidson is 27. Britain's Prince Henry of Wales is 22.
Thought for Today: "My heart is a lonely hunter that
hunts on a lonely hill." - "Fiona MacLeod" (William
Sharp}, Scottish author and poet ( 1855-1905).

linked to death sentences for
three Islamic militants convicted in the 2002 terrorist
JAKARTA, Indonesi&amp; bombings on the tourist
Fabianus Tibo prays each island of Bali .
night that he wi 11 not be . Arianto Sangaji, an ~cade­
dragged from his cell before mic and longtime observer
dawn and shoved in front of of the Sulawesi contlict,
a firing squad. But the ·note'd that some people
Christian militant. on death believe the government , in
row with two others for an wanting to be seen as fair to
attack that killed at least 70 both communities, is instead
Muslims, Pealizes time may "playing lives off against
be running out.
·
each other.''
· Thousands of Muslims
"These cases have to be
have taken to the streets to resolved in a legal context
demand the Christians be and with respect to human
killed, with some of the pro- lite," he argued.
testers threatening holy war
A panel of three judges
if the slayings in the coastal found Tibo, 60, Marianus
town of Poso · are not Riwu, 48, and Dominggus
avenged. The government da Silva, 42. guilty of leadinsists the executions will ing a 'Christian militia that
take place despite pleas for launched a series of attacks
pardons and ·the granting of on Muslims in May 2000one
last-minute delay including a gun and machete
already.
assault that killed at least 70
The case is heightening people who had taken refuge
tensions in the world's most in an Islami c school. Muslim
populous Muslim nation and groups put. the toll at 191.
raising questions about the
The men - poor farm
role of religi~n in deciding laborers and migrants from
punishment for sectarian elsewhere in Indonesia violence that swept through insist they were not the masSulawesi province . from terminds and that their 2001
.1998 to 2002, killing more trial was a sham .
than I,000 people from both
"They are .scapegoats,"
29~year-old
son
communiti~s. A handful of Tibo 's
Muslims also were sen- Robert said following a
tenced for killings, but they recent prison visit. He said
only got jail time.
his father, though he seemed
The sentences also have depressed after spending
sparked debate about capital nearly three weeks in isolapunishment because
tion, still held out hope of
despite government denials escaping execution.
- many in the public see the
"How could a poor, illitertiming of the executions as ate farmer instigate that kind

The Daily Sentinel
.Reader Services
Correction Polley

(USPs 2t3-960l
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to be Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street,

accurate. 11 you know o1 an error in a
Pomeroy, Ohio. Secon d-class postag,
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992~ paid at Pomeroy.
2156 .
Member: The Associ ated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Association.
· Poetmaater: Send address corrections
Our main number is
to The Daily Sentinel. 11 i Court Street,
(740) 992-2156.

Department extensions

are:

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

'

News
Editor; Charlene Hoeflich. Ext. ~ 2
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. i4
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13 ·

Advertising
Outside Sales; Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Outside Sales: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark. E•t. 10

.

General Manager
Ch"Fiene Hoeflich, E)(t. 12
E·mall:

news@ mydailysentinel.com

Web:
www.mydailysentlne!.com

Subscription Rates

By carrier or motor route
One month ...........•1 0.27

One year

. ... ........'123.24
Dally ............. .....50'
· Senior Citizen rates

One month ........... ;'9.24
One year ........... .'103.90

Subscribers should rem~ in adwnca diBct
to the Dally sentinel. No subscription by
mail permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available..

Mall Subscription

lnolde Melga County
13 Weeks ............. '32.26
26 Weeks ............. '64.20
52 Weeks ............'127.1t

Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks ..
. .. '53.55
26 Weeks . .
. '107.10
52 Weeks . . ......... .'214.21

of violence, convince others
to kill"'' Robert Tibo asked.
Though Indonesia's attarney general and the national
police chief insist the
Christian men got a fair trial,
with 28 witnesses providing
testimony, legal experts note
that the country's judiciary is
woefully corrupt and susceptible 1{) outside influence.
"In Tibo's case, there was
pressure from fundamentalists Muslims," said 'Fran s
Winarta, a member of the
National Law Commission,
noting also that the trials
were held in Poso, where
tensions were high and religi&lt;llls clashes ongoing, pos·
sibly intimidating judges,
witnesses, prosecutors and
the defense .
"In such a situation, the
coun is prone to make mistakes," he said, adding that
Muslim mobs also reportedly gathered in front of the
coun ahead of the verdict,
some throwing st~nes.
After a series of challenges to the conviction of
the three Christians, a final
appeal for a presidential pardon was denied
in
November and the execution
. was set for Aug. 12. Butthen
a last-minute stay was granted after Pope Benedict XVI
sent a letter to President
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
- though the government
insists the decision was
made for "technical reasons."
The men didn't learn until
the next morning that their

lives had been spared.
''They woke and wondered
what had happened, why no
one came to g~t them," said
their lawyer, Roy Rennin.
"They looked outside their
cells and saw other inmates
gathering outside, some
weeping for joy."
No new date has been
announced, but authorities
say they expect the execulions to go ahead - despite
a new request for a presidential pardon. Adding to the
momentum, the Sulawesi
police chief who had said the
real masterminds of the
attacks had yet to be caught
was removed from his post.
Meanwhile, Mohammed
Mahendratta, the lawyer for
the three men convicted of
the 2002 Bali bombings,
said the government should
not get sucked into a debate
about the death penalty.
Mahendratta's
clients
admit taking part in the
nightclub attacks that killed
202 people, mostly foreign
tourists. After they won a
delay in their executions last
month, · some people suggested the government did.
not want to risk public anger
by executing the Muslims
before the Christians in a
country whose 220 million
population is 90 percent
Islamic.
"For me it's a simple matter - just follow the death
. row q11eue," Mahendratta
said. "Tibo and his friends
were convicted first, so they
have to be killed first."

Mae Vineyard

I

Josephine Smith

Is it a (war'?

·lions of individuals scattered,
in greater or smaller. numbers, among a wide variety
of nations. And the "war" it
is waging is not so much
against a nation-state or
states as against a cultural
frame of mind : the culture of
"the West," which the militants believe it is their obligation to destroy. Not merely
"defeat,'' yo u understand, but
destroy.
The issue.' in other words,
.cuuld hardly be more funda.mental. In the view of the
Islamic militants, the West is
a suppurating vat of evil.
armed with technologies that
have enabled it to overwhelm the rest of the world
and humiliale Islam. They
consider it their obligation to
eradicate it and replace it. the
world over, with the one true
religion .
This is obviously a tall
order, but o,ama bin Laden
and other creative thinkers in

TUPPERS PLAINS- Mae Vineyard, 94. lifelong resident of Meigs County, went to be with her Lord, Thursday,
POMEROY - A dissolution was granted in Meigs
Sept. 14, 2006.
County Common Pleas Court to Ronda K. King and
She was born March 7, 1912 in Meigs County to Thomas L. King, Jr.
Charles and Mary (Kim) Osborn. She graduated from
A divorce was granted to Kathy L. Dyer from William
Olive-Orange High School in 1930 and married Hobart R. Dyer.
Vineyard in 1935. S.he was a loving wife, mother and
grandmother and worked at Eastern High School for
several years.
.
S!le was a charter member of St. Paul United·Methodist
POMEROY- Sarah L. Perkins was 'sentenced in Meigs
Church in Tuppers Plains, and an actiVe member of the
County
Common Pleas Court to 18 months in prison on
Willing Workers. She also taught Sunday school for
two counts of arson. The sentence was suspended, and she
many years .
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her was placed under community control, and ordered to par1ihusband, Hobart; a son. Keith; and a sister. Vida ciate in the Meigs County Community Corrections program and substance abuse counseling. She was ordered to
(Osborn) Koenig .
·
She is survived by four children: Mary Frances Vineyard seek employment and observe a curfew.
She was also ordered to pay $1,836 in restitution to
of Reedsville, Charles (Christine) Vineyard of Ava, Mo.,
Janet (Ed) Gilliand of Lucas, and Ernest "Bud" (Jean) Rumpke, the victim in the case.
Peggy L. Hall was sentenced to 11 months in prison on a
Vineyard of Athens; 10 grandchildren; 22 great-grandchildren; two great-great grandchildren; sisters-in-law: Lila motion to revoke probation ordered on an origmal charge
·.
Richardson; Dorothy Vineyard and Ellen Louise Vineyard; of grand theft.
and many nieces, nephews, friends and neighbors.
Service will be held 2 p,m .. Sunday, Sept. 17, 2006, at St.
Paul United Methodist Church in Tuppers Plains, with Rev.
Jane Beattie officiating. Burial will be in the Tuppers Plains
MIDDLEPORT - A two-car accident on ·Ohio 7 late
·
Christian Cemetery.
Monday afternoon sent four people to an area hospital for
Friends may call from 5 to 8 p.m. on Saturday at White- treatment of .injuries, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Schwarzel Funeral Home.
Highway Patrol reported.
Memorial contributions may be macle to St. Paul United
Transported to Holzer Medical Center by Meigs County
Methodist Church or Appalachian Community Hospice .
EMS following the 5 p.m. crash were drivers Shawn M.
Traxler, 36, Wheelersburg, and Alfonso J. Johnson, 16, 19
Madison Ave., Gallipolis, along with two passengers in
the car driven by Johnson, Verona L. Johnson, 43, also of
RACINE - Jos~phine Smith, 96, of Racine, passed 19 Madison Ave. , and William N. Pearson, 34, 547 Cox
away at 8:03 a.m. Thursday at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Road, Crown City.
Troopers said Traxler was northbound and improperly
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
·
passing
traffic when his car struck the southbound car driBorn on Jan. 18, 1910 in Lebanon Twp. in Meigs County.
ven
by
Alfonso Johnson. Johnson's car· carne to rest
she was the daughter of the late Joseph and Martha Conelia
against the guardrail.
Aumiller Hoback. .
.
Both cars were severely damaged, troopers said.
She was an assistant cook at the Racine Southern Jr. High
•••
School for five years, a member of the Meigs County
DYES
VILLEBrandy
M.
Hosack, 28341 Darst Road,
Senior Citizens and a member of the Bethany United
Albany, was cited for failure to yield by the patrol followMethodist Church at Dorcus.
Smith is survived by her son, Dan (Donna Jean) Smith ing a two-vehicle accident Monday on County Road I .
of Racine; nine grandchildren: Don (Mary) Smith, (Salem School Lot) at the intersection with Columbia
Bonnie (Bruce) Myers, Faith (Terry) Varney, Tim (Karen) Township Road 12 (Sisson).
Troopers said Hosack was eastbound on Sisson at 8:20
Smith, Tammy (CT) Chapman, Ted (Krista) Smith and
a.m.
, attempted to enter Salem School Lot and collided
Robert Wayne, and Stephanie and Paula who are children
of her late son Robert Roy Smith; and a niece ; Maxine with a pickup truck driven by William K. Howes, 34,
29561 · Nelson Road, Dexter, that was southbound on
"Little sis" Shain.
Iii addition to her parents and son, she was preceded in ·Salem School Lot.
Howes' pickup had severe damage and functional damdeath by her husband Paul F. Smith; a sister, Garnet Ervin;
four brothers. Dennis Hoback, Wayne Hoback, Ross age was reported to Hosack's car.
•••
Hoback and Floyd Hoback.
CHESTER
Walter
B.
Haggy,
18, 38443 Ohio 684,
The funeral will be held at 1 p.m. Monday at the
Cremeens Funeral Home in Racine with Rev. Kenny Baker Pomeroy, was cited for failure to control by the patrol following a one-vehicle accident Monday on CR 26
officiating.
.
Friends may call from 4-7 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home. (Flatwoods).
Troopers
said
Haggy
was eastbound, two-tenths of a mile
Internment will be at the Gilmore Cemetery following
west of CR 82 (Texas) at 7:20a.m. when the pickup truck
the service.
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made in memo- he drove went off the left side of the road, struck an
ry of Josephine Smith to the Meigs County Senior Citizens embankment and overturned.
The pickup had disabling damage, troopers said.
and/or the Bethany United Methodist Church at Dorcus.

Highway Patrol

jstahler@dispatch.com

Rusher

Dissolution, divorce

Sentenced

·,

IT'S our
ON IPOD.

William

Marriage licenses .

Civil actions

WAIT UNTil

the militant ranks have studied the problem carefully and
think they see a way of
bri~ging it about. They cannot possibly overwhelm the
West militarily in the conventional way. But they
'believe that the West - and
above all, its leading nation.
the United States - is effete,
decadent and cqrrupted by its
creature comforts. They note
that for more than 30 years
the United States has fled
every battlefield on which it
was being forced to sustain
seriou&gt; casualties. There is
good reason to believe that
Iraq may be next .
By way of contrast, the
Islamic militants are not in
the least afraid of death. On
the contrary, they have a virtually endless supply of willing suicides, ready to crash
passenger planes into buildings. or simply strap explosives to their bodies and detonate them in the midst of
their enemies. In Israel , Iraq
and . Afghanistan, and other
countries all over the globe,.
they have developed these
techniques
into
what
amounts to a whole new
technology of war.·
In this son of "war," there
is no nation-state against
which the West can stage a
counterattack (though there

Authorities: Boy admits
making up abduction story

POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
POMEROY - Ruth Elizabeth Arnold, 90, of East
Main Street. Coolville, died Wednesday, Sept. 13, 2006, Eounty Common Pleas Court to David Blaine McClure,
at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va., following 21, Pomeroy, and Katie Joann Childs, 20, Middleport;
a. brief illness.
Anthony Allen Mitchell, 20. Letart, W.Va.' and Karen Lee
She was born July 5. 1916, in Fort Howard, Md ., Norvell, 20 , Mason , W.Va.; Gregory Alan Arbaugh, 40,
daughter of the !are Pete and Lulu Rundle Cotton. She Albany, and Laura Ann Piccard, 24, Albany; Randy Joe
was a member of the Pomeroy Church of Chri st and the Lieving, 52, Albany, and Shirlene Creighton, 51, Albany;
Red Hat Society.
and Jonathan Clyde Smith, 24, Racine, and Jamie Nicole
Surviving a~e her daughter and son-in-law. Dorothy Hupp, 24, Racine.
and Wtlham F1sher of Tore ; two so ns and dau ghters-inlaw, Sam, Jr. and Grace Arnold of Belpre and Patrick
and Crystal Arnold of Lillie Hocking; granachildren:
William M. Fisher and Elizabeth E. Fisher, and Andrew
POMEROY - Actions for foreclosure were filed in
P. Arnold and Matthew G. Arnold; and four great Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by ABN Amra
grandchildren.
Mortgage Group, Jacksonville, Fla., against John W.
Besides his parents, she was preceded in death by her
Jr., Middleport, and others, alleging default on a
husband . Sam Arnold. Sr.. a brother, Thurman Comack. Barcus,
mortgage
agreement in the amount of $46,707.15, and
and a sister, Eleanor Conrad,
Home National Bank, Racine , against Karrel David '
Services will be held in II a.m. on Monday, Sept. 18 , Lemley,
Pomeroy, and others, alleging default in the
2006, at Ewing Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Mark amounts of
$8,025.27 and $20,847.72.
Tonkery officiating. Burial will be in Gilmore · A lawsuit alleging personal injury was filed by James M.
· ·
·
Cemetery. ·
Jr., Long Bottom, against R. Stephanie Har1ley,
Friends may call from 2 to.4 p.m. on Sunday at the funer- · Sprouse,
Rutland,
and
o&gt;hers.
·
al~~
.
A suit filed by Lisa G. Froelich against Brett M. Counts,
and others, was dismissed.

LET'S

The other day, when I
made a reference to. "the
war on terrorism;" a
Democratic friend of mine
.objected: "It's not a' war." I
never found out what he
thought it was - the conversation wandered off in
other directions - but the
question keeps nagging
away in the back of my
mind. lf it isn't a "war," what
is it?
I have no particular hangup about calling it a war. Call
it a "fracas," if you prefer, or
a "brouhaha." But it is certainly something, and
deserves a name. And I will
concede that, if it is a war, it
is a most unusual example of
the species.
In an ordinary war, one
nation-state takes up arms
against another. The cause
will presumably be important, but it needn't be earthshaking - a boundary dispute will do. The battles will
be waged between organized
military units, using a wide
variety of technologies. and
sooner or later one side wi 11
win.
The current fracas passes
not a single one of th~se
tests. The aggressor is mili tant Islam, which is nilt a
nation-state, but a religious
conviction on the part of mil-

For the Record

RuthAmold

'

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All leiters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigrze.d letters will be published. Letters should be in good' taste,
addressing issues. not persorwlities. Letters of thanks to orga~
nizarions and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

Obituaries

Christians awaiting death in Indonesia
spark debate abo1:1t judicial system
BY ROBIN McDOWELL

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www. mydailysentinel.com

2006

'

Friday, September 15, 2006

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Friday, September 15,

are, to be sure, rogue nationstates like Iran, ready to aid
the militants). There is no
capital city that can be conquered and occupied. There
is not even a political leadership sufficiently unified and
effective to bring about surrender, assuming it could be
forced to try. The enemy is
everywhere, and therefore, in
effect, nowhere.
Who can say with conlidence that bin Laden is
wrong in his calculations? At
· the moment, he almost cer·
tainly thinks he is winning. If
the Democrats succeed in
forcing a ''redeployment" of
American forces in Iraq to
some less inhospitable area
(probably home), tl)e Middle
East will rapidly fall under
the sway of the militants, the
Muslim influence in Europe
and much of the rest of the
world will grow and become
more malignant, and the
United States will be feft to
confront its fate alone.
So the "war on terrorism"
may not be a war in the conventional sense. But a day
may come, ironically, when
we will wish it were.
(William Rusher is a
· Distinguished Fellow of. the
Claremrmt Institute for the
Swdy of Statesma11ship a11d
Political Philosophy.)

go into both rivers to
shock the fish.
''I hope that we get some
good size ones," he said.
from PageA1
"There are some fish in
the river that are about 4
other equipment necessary feet long ."
for the aquarium, he said .
The aqyarium will not be
It will be their first aquarium of its kind in West the only attraction to be
Virginia, Fowler said. With added.
Fowler said that on the
the success of the Ohio
River
Valley
Water second tloor of the new
Sanitation Commission or addition. another pilot
ORSANCO's
traveling house with equipment that
aquarium, he has always are seen on today's boats
wanted one to display the will also be installed.
It will be an unique additish that swim within the
waters of the Ohio and tion since it will be an interactive pilot hou se where
Kanawha rivers.
"We had about 35,000 visitors will be able to actuvisitors last year," he said. ally steer the tow and barges
"With the high number of down the river, he said.
"Dr. Mike Little with the
people co ming to see it, the
Marshall
University
aquarium will generate
Integrated
Science
revenLi e'.~'
Department
is
designing
the
Once the aquarium is in .
software ,"
place, Fowler said that interactive
experience personnel wzll Fowler said . ''These are

Grants

·'
I

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL
SEPTEMBER SPECfAl
MEN 6 BOYS
HAIRCUTS
$6.00

GEORGE KORN-GWNER
PREVfOUSl Y OF
WEST SHAVE
BARBER SHOP

George's Barber Shop
(Formerly Katherines' Kut &amp; Kurl)
Te11tas Rd ., Pomeroy,'OH
740-591-C\999

on top of the roof of the new
addition and railing will be
museum ."
Also in the plans are an placed around it to ; give it
addition exhibit area. the look of a boat deck.
"It will be 30 feet off the
office . and conference
ground
and will be light
areas, he said.
Once the outside of the up," he. said. "I am excited
building is completed, a and anxious to get this startnew look will be given to ed and hope to be using the
facility by next year.''
the museum.
Both agencies were not
Amherst
Industries ,
the
only ones to receive
owned by Charlie and
Nelson Jones. donated an grants from Charleston.
The Mason County Solid
older pilot house that w,as
Waste
Authority will be
removed from the towboat
Reliance since it was being receiving $19•.992 from the
refitted with more cabin Solid ·Waste Management.
space and a new pilot house, Grants that will assist with
has been donated to the education efforts, equipmuseum, Fowler said. The ment maintenance, fuel and
· pilot house will be placed employee wages.
great attr;lctions for the

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

Dr, Kdy L }eM~
CHIROPRACTOR.
Auto Ac'cidents
Worker's Compensation
' Spun~

InJune~
• MctliLar.:

.• Mo&gt;t ln•urance•
, Same day ~1'1'1.

• ,\CU pli OCliJI\'

.. 304-273-5321
316 Washington St

HAMDEN (AP) - A 10- restroom
Monday
at
year-old boy has admitted Hamden Elementary School
that he made up a story when a man in a ski ma&gt;k
about a man abducting him took him to a car, then
from a southeast Ohio released him unharmed
sc hool , authorities satd.
after driving three blocks.
The fourth-grader was
Schools were locked
interviewed by authorities down countywide Tuesday.
again Thursday .and hi s with recess held in the gymstory changed dramatically, na&gt;ium.
Vinton County Sheriff Dave
Hickey said his department
Hickey said.
spent ·a lot of time and money
"He confessed that he had investigating the ca&gt;e. No
made the entire event up." charges will be filed because
Hickey said. "He didn't feel of the boy's age.
well and wanted to go home
''He's remorseful abo ut
(from school)."
it," Hickey said.
The · fourth-grader origiThe boy could face discinally told investigators that pline fro m Vinton County
he was walking to the Local Schools, Hickey said.

Woman paid thousands
to rent rotary phone
CANTON (AP) - A
widow rented a rotary dial
telephone for 42 years, paying what her family calculates as thousands of dollars
for a now outdated phone.
Ester Strogen, 82, of
Canton, first leased two black
rotary phones -· the kind
whose round dial is moved
manually with your finger in the 1960s. Back then, the
technology was new and most
people had to rent telephones
as part of their basic phone
service. It was pre-AT &amp;T
when the telephone business
was monopolized by the company known as "Ma Bell."
Bell was disbanded in 1983
and split into seven smaller
companies and AT&amp;T was
given the right to handle longdistance and telephone leasing
services. From I 985 to 1986,
customers who leased telephones were given the option
to continue leasing, buy them
or opt out of their agreements.
Until two months a~o,
Strogen was still payzng
AT&amp;T to use the phones$29.10 every three months,
the phone company says.
Strogen's granddaughters.
Melissa Howell and Barb
Gordon, ended the arrangement when they discovered
the bills.
· ·
"I'm outraged," Gordon
said. "It made me so mad.
It's ridiCulous. If my own
grandmother was doing it.
how many other people are?"

the necessary tax levies and
certifying them to the county
auditor for fiscal year 2007.
• Referred to the prosecutfrom PageA1
ing attorney and county
a request to close a
• Established a new line engineer
road right of way in Scipio
item for the appropriation of Township.
$26,487 for equipment for
Present
were
the
2006
Homeland Commissioners
Mick
Security grant program.
Davenport and Jim Sheets
• Approved a resolution anp Clerk Gloria Kloes.
accepting amounts and rates
as determined by the budget
Sf'RING VALLEY
commission and authorizing
" ' ..
&lt;1~1) l:_,. 1 '&lt;l)~(K -'ll'~l

Mine

7

h!!~!,4
On Sale Now!
The Jungle Book
SeJ!tember 23 &amp; 24 ·
Scholastic Book Fair
Se~t. 21-24
Ariel Jr. Idol Talent
Competition Begins
Sept. 25
$250 First Prize
Sign Up Now!
The Ariel-Dater Hail
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH ·

740-446-ARTS (2787)

~
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
"Your Areas Leader In
. Home Oxygen &amp; Medical Equipment"
Specializing .In:
cl Horne oxygen
f:9 Ele-cnlc 1-tosp.
t] Portoble Oxyg~n

cJ C·pap/Bipap

P1 th!! year
199!
V.P WV ChlroprllCliC
S11C,iety
Memherof Amcncan
Board (lf Forensic

Chiropra~:ttll'

The number of customers
leasing phones dropped froni
40 million nationwide to
about 750,000 today, said
John Skalko. spokesman for
Murray Hill , N.J.-based
Lucent Technologies, a spinoff of AT&amp;T that mana~es the
residential leasing servtce.
"We will continue to lease
sets as long as there is a
demand for them," Skalko
said.
Benefits
of leasing
include free replacements
and the option of switching
to newer models, he said.
Luc.ent said records show
Strogen paid just under
$2 ,000 to rent the two
phones from 1985 until they
were recently returned.
Before 1985. the rental costs
.were part of basic phone service and not broken out.
Skalko said Thursday.
Strogen's family estimates
her payments topped $14,000
over more than 40 years.
Gordon said she believes
the majority of people leasing
are elderly and may not realize they are paying thousands
of dollars for a telephone.
Skalko said bills are clearly marked, and customer•
can quit their lease any time
by returning their phones.
Strogen says she's not a
big fan of her new push-button ~hone.
"I d like to have my
rotary .back," she said. "I
like that better."

~Nebulizers
cs1 Ventilators

cA Pulse Oximetry
~ Patrol

Feeding

Bed

cs1 Wheel Chairs
CJ1 Pntknl Lifts
~ "Valkers / whet:" Is
~ J:lt•dslde Conunodes
~ Diapers. AdlJII

~ Chux

PUnlpS
.:!0 y~

e~pcncnce

Member of .o\men can
Academy uf Medinl

*

Acupuncture

Ravenswood, WV

"Locally Owned and Operated"

446·0007
stop by our showroom!
Medicare, Medicaid, HWC, Private Ins.,
Visa, Mastercard

�FAITH. VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

- - -A Hunger For More-_____:__(Parr .J of a srorr rhar
illusrmres uur spirirual
bondaf?e "·' well as rhe freedom and lim ling rhar can be·
found in Chrisr.)
Suddenly Abigairs pain
returned and she found ·that
Anne's word&gt; pricked her
conscience like a razor-shiup
barb. Bincr years of fear and
hurt welled up within her
heart. overpowering the last
few scrag;:ly remnants of her
previous willpower. She literally sanJ.; to th~ dirt tloor of
their hut "' though being
crushed under a back-breaKing load . To her ears came
the sound of the harsl) voice
of a crow or raven, remote

but clear. cawing and cackling. Its tune of mockery resonated with her sense of
guilt and lilled her with a
feeling of horror that bowed
her head to her knees.
"Abigail'" her friend
cried, kneeling beside her.
"What\ wmng'' Aren't you
happy'? l;n ' t this good
news&gt;" She 'hook Abigail
weakly. " Don't lose heart!
Don't give up' Don't let
them defeat you, ..
"Oh , Anne." she wept.
"You shouldn't talk to me.
You don't know what I've
done."
"It wi.ll h~ all right! You
and I've he en through
worse! Without a friend like
you, I would have given up
long ago. Without a friend
like you, I would have
died," she said reassuringly
as she hugged AbigaiL
Abigail looked up, tears
streaming from her eyes. Her
gaze glanced upon Anne's,
and then turned away.
"Because of a friend like me,
you were hetrayed and beaten," she L'hoked out . the
words. Anne stared at her,
confusion clouding her
expression. ''Anne,'' Abigail
continued, ··on the day of the
beating, I had spilled many
of my benies. 1 was so afraid
of the beating that they
would give me thar I took
some of yours. I put them in
my basket and made you
believe that yours had spilled
out. I'm the reason that thev
beat you like they did.''
As the words came tumbling out of her mouth, she
could see the look of

· PageA6

Pastor
Thoin
Mollohan

incredulity flooding Anne's
face. Her friend stared at her
speechlessly, her hand
falling limply to her side.
After a moment of silence,
she struggled to her feet and
limped out through the door
and into darkness. Ab1gatl
remained curled up on the
ground as she sobbed into
her clenched fists. After a
long moment of writhing in
her misery, she also stood up
and staggered outside, her
head throbbing and her heart
aching. As he( eyes adjusted
to the comparative brightness of the outside (although
it was night), her eyes spotted a srnall bottle in front of
her on the ground. She
reached down and picked the
bottle up, the chain dangling
from her ·wrist clinking
against its glass. She smelled
its open end and recognized
the strong and sickly scent of
Mohjac's wine. Without
even thinking, her pain being
her only logic, she set the
bottle to her mouth and
began to drink.
As before, she noticed that
the excruciating pain of guilt
and grief that had beset her
only moments before, gave
way to numbness. She
smiled and did not allow herself to consider the long
range ill)plications . of what
she was now doing. She took
another drink and then another. Soon the bottle was empty
and she became deliriously
pleased with herself. She
laughed and sneered at her
friendship with Anne. "So,
she thinks she's too good for
me," she sniffed. She sat
down in the middle of the
path, right in the mud, and
laughed again. But as she sat
and enjoyed the apparent
absence of hurt and sorrow in
her soul, her smile faded.
There was still something
wrong. The pain was still
there ... down deep, under the

cloak of contentment that she
had tried to wrap about herself. She got to her hands and
knees, and crawled back
inside the shack, listening in
vain for Anne's returning
footsteps to her sleeping mat
across the room. Eventually,
she fell asleep, her tears drying silently on her cheeks.
The next morning, she
awoke to find Anne standing
across the small room, gazing out the window. But such
a change! Anne was no
longer dressed in the gray
and tattered rags of Mohjac's
slaves. Nor was she covered
in dirt and bare-footed. She
was wrapped in a simple but
tine looking gown. Her feet
were shod with well-crafted
sandals of handsome leather.
Abigail sat up and gasped,
wondering if she was il) a
dream. Hearing her stir,
Anne turned to face her with
a glow of joy and peace in
her
countenance. . As
Abigail's eyes looked her up
and down, she also noticed
with surprise that Anne's
chains were now missing
and a purple sash circled her
waist. Anne clapped her
hands joyfully and ian to
Abigail, without any sign of
any previous injury. "Oh,
you're
awake!''
she
exclaimed. "I've met him!
I've met the stranger!"
Abigail's throbbing forehead
crinkled up as she tried to
absorb what Anne was rapidly saying to her. Anne
laughed and hugged Abigail
fiercely. "Oh, let me tell you
what he's done for me' After
you had told me about what
you had done, I had run ...
into darkness. I was lost and
so sorry for myself: kept
falling into holes and pits,
my hurts grew and I thought
I would never make it. I had ·
slid into a ditch and could
not lind my way out but then
saw a light growing in the
sky that I thought at ftrst was
..the dawn. But it wasn't. The
stranger found me in the
darkness, in that ditch. I
could see him looking at me
and although I wasn't afraid,
I was ashamed. But he
. reached into the pit and took
hold of me and pulled me
out. He was so strong: my
chains were like feathers to

him! He asked me ir'I wanted to be free . He asked me if
I wanted to be healed and
whole. l could barely look at
him, ashamed of how I
looked with all my uncleanness. But that wasn't all for
which I was ashamed ... his
kindness and beauty made
me so aware of spite and
anger and seltishness in me
that I cringed. I told myself
that I had every right to be
angry ... with you and even
hate those who hold us in
chains. But I· could tell that
he understood my thoughts. I
was then even more
ashamed. And then I remembered Farrin and how. that I
had not helped him in his
need and I knew that I was as'
guilty as anyone."
Anne sighed, but her
smile returned 9uickly. "I
told hiin that I dtd want to
be free and healed . From his
belt, he pulled out the bottle
that I had seen him use with
Farrin. He poured a clear
water from it onto my hurts
and they were healed
instantly' He then stood up
and pulled out his sword.
Swoosh! It came down and
cut through the chains on
my wrists and ankles. He set
me free, Abigail." Anne
looked intently into her
friend's eyes. "And I want
you to be set free, too," she
said. "He can do it. He can
bring you freedom also'"
"When the kindness of
God our Savior and His
love for mankind appeared,
He saved us, not on the
basis of deeds which we
have done in righteousness,
but according to His mercy,
by the washing of regeneration and renewing by the
Holy Spirit, Whom He
poured out- upon us richly
through Jesus Christ our·
Savior" (Titus 3:4-6 NAS).
To be continued...
(Thorn Mollohan and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past 11
years. He is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church which meets on
Sunday mornings at the
Ariel Theatre. He may be
reached for comments or
questions by e-mail at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com).

I

. Friday, September 15,

2006

They are of growing down'
1

"Truly I tell you, unle's
you turn round and
become like children, you
will never enter the kingdom
of
Heaven ...
(Matthew !8.3, REB)
My little Kayla and
Michael , like most boys and
girls I suppose, like to talk
about what they are going to
be when they grow up. But
a couple of years ago
Michael added a new twi't
to this very natural conct&gt;pt
when he suggested the possibility of mommy and
daddy "growing down ...
It happened. as I recall.
shortly after I punished him
for some reason. Without
any anger or mal ice, he said
very matter-of- factly said.
'!Daddy when I grow up and
you grow down. I'm going
to be the daddy and spank
you." After that, for quite
some time, he yuite frequently rd'e rred to his
growing up ~111d my wife
and I '·grov.:i11g down."
And yuirc honestly. this
really captmes well what
Jesus taught when He sa id
we must "become like children" before we can. "enter
the kingdom of Heaven." To
borrow the words of my son
- . we might call it the
Michael Standard Version
-our Lord said, "You've
got to ·grow down' if you
want into Paradise."
Of course, Jesus was
talking about a spiri tual
rebirth and when He said
we have to '·become like
children," He was referring
to our atti tude toward and
perspective in life. as· it
flows out from our .· relationship with God, our
heavenly Father. Intuitively .
we know this but how often
do we really think about
what it means day-to-day?
Well, before w·e can really grow up in the Lord. we
first have to grow down in
our own estimation of ourselves and come to the
· Lord in humility. In other
words, we must be born
again and live guilele ssly
in the presence of God like
infants. resting trustfully in
the arms of the Almighty,
being fed and provided for
solely by Him.

Rev.
Jonathan
Noble
PASTOR,

TRINITY CHURCH

No , the Lord is not
telling us to be disobedient
a~ lin!.: ones often are, nor
to fu" ami fume when we
Jon 't get om way as even
the best of ~hildren sometime; do. Obviously, He is
telling u; to be us instinc(ively trusting and simple,
us open and honest as children are quite naturally.
Jesus is telling us to
"grow down" in ourselves
in order to grow up in Him
in the newness of everlasting lite . The Lord is telling
us to Jay aside the weight of
worry.
the di stracting
images of sinful fantasies,
the deceitful illu sions of
nwterial success in this
tleeting world.
In other words, He invites
us to .. grow down" from the

ugly caricatures of human
heings we have become in
order to grow up into His
perfect image; which He
intends and has always
intended from the very
beginning. (See Genesis
. 1.26-27 and then take a look
at
Romans
8.29; H
Corinthians 3.18)
Over the next few days
think about this and ask,
"Have I really come to God
like a child? Or am I still
living the fanciful life of a
sinful adult, too busy and
distracted with my own
passing conoerns to focus
on what is really important
in life?" After all. the· Lord
says, "U nless you turn
round and become, like
children, you will never
·enter tl1e kingdom ... "

r r r

r

r

r r

tain faiths "were categorically excluded from the list."
The case was filed in
August 2005 by the Georgia
Chapter of the American
Civil Liberties Union on
behalf of seven people, who
argued that the referenceS' to

r

r

r

r

Jesus were an unconstitutional government endorsement of Christianity.
ACLU lawyer Maggie
Garrett said she was
"pleased that Judge Story
reaffirmed that repeated
sectarian prayers can violate

r r

r

' It i' satlly ironic that almost

Frame thBt nowspnper
photo 01 print 11 on a.
mug 01 mou!e pad.

of the major
causes of death today are related to lifestyle crr
behmwr choices. A hundred y.ears ago, most
people died from infections or accidents, and
was lntle that most people could do to prevent ·
deaths. While infection still makes the list of the ·
leading causes of death. the others are all related
to lifeSI}Ie or behavior choices. According to the
American Medical Association. the leading causes of death are related to the
following: tobacco use, poor dietlphysical inactivity, alcohol consumption,
infection. toxic agents. motor vehicle accidents, firearms, sexual behavior,
and illicit use of drugs. (JAM A, March 10, 2004-Vol. 291, No. 10) And
although we certainly can't stave off death indelinitely, we can prolong our
live' hy doing some relatively simple thin gs like not smoking, eating a
balanced diet. exercising regularly, wearing seat belts and not driving too
fast not engaging in risky sexual behaviors, and riot using illicit drugs or
COINnning too much alcohol. This isn't "rocket science,'' and it isn't
"hrca,ing news" either. Many of us too easily rationalize our unhealthy
beh,lll\&gt;r. but the bottom line is really about being grateful to God for the
preci' "" gift of life and choosing a lifestyle that protects and enhances that
gift. ,\re we good stewards of God's gift, or does our lifestyle retlect
ingratil ude Inward God's gift of,life?

r ·r

tor ~hatever

Director ot' Markl.!ting and

AJmis .~ions

Page Slreet
(740) 992·6472
Middleoort OH Fax (740)992-7406

333

H our.~

Hlmn Frinull\·

740-949-221 0
"A Home Bank for
Horre People"
(740) 992-645 l

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

740-949-2217

6 am - !$ pm

t \( II_W.I/}111' l't'

fJI,·{i[fie's 1(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
1/otm: CtJoked .'tleals &amp; IJaily

Spetful.~

Open 7 day ~ a week

740·992-7713

If ye abide in Me, a11d My ·
words abide in you, ye .1hall
ask what ye will, a11d it shall
be done ulllo you.
}olm 15:7

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The Hppliance man
740-985-3561'

992-1550

Second St. Middleport, OH
740-992·6128
Local source for trophies;
oraaues t-shirts and more

190 N

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn
MEIGS FAMil-Y EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

~

(740) 992·3279
~
Tol Free l-877-583-2433

KEHLER
BUSJNESS SERVJCES
All Accormti11g &amp;
FillarJcia/ Services Firm
nIH E Main Street • Put nemy

(740) 992-7270

Rut..nd Free Will Baptist
Salem St.. Pastor: Jamie Fonner. Sunday
School - 10 a.m., Evening • 7 p.m ..
Wedne'iday Services- 7 p.m
Second Batptisl Church
Raven~ wood, WV, Sunday School lO'am, Morning wor.thip II am Evening - 7 pm ,
Wednesday 7 p.m.

Catholic

Emmanuel Apostolic Trabernadt Inc.
Loop Rd off' New Lima Rd . Rutland .
Servi~:es : Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7.30 pm ..
Thurs. 7:00p.m., P&lt;~ stor Man.~· R Hunon .

Assembly of God

Church of Christ

liberty Assembly of Gud
PO .. Bo- 467, Duddmg Lmll:, Mason ,
W.Va .. Pasto r. Netl T~nnant, Sunday
S~rvices- 10:00 am. and 7 p m.

Westside Church of Christ
Children's Home Rd . Pomeroy. OH
Contact 740-44 1-1296 Su nday morning
10:00, Su11 morniug Bi ble ~ \Ud) :
followi"!g worship. Sun. eve 6:01l pm.
Wed b1hlc ~tudy 7 pm .

Baptist
Pagevllle Frtewlll. 8aptist Church
Pastor: Mike Harmnn. Sunday S~hool
9:30 to lll:30 am, Worship service 10::10
to 11:00 am. Wed. preaching 6 pm
Carpenler Bapllsl Church
Sunday School - 9:30am. Preaching
, Ser~ice !0:30am, Evening Service
7:00pm. Wednesday Dible Swdy 7:00pm.
Interim Pr~achcr - Floyd Ross
Che~~hire Baptisl Chun:h
Pastor. Steve Little, Sunduy School. 9.30
am. ~oming Worship: 10.30 am,
Wednesday Dible Study 6:3Upm; chOir
practice 7:30: youth and Bible Buddies
6:30p.m. Thurs. I pm book study

Hope Bapllst ChuMh (S~thern)
570 Grant St., Middleport. Sunday school
-9:30a.m ., Worship - II am. ~nd 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Service - 7 p m. Pastor: Gary
Ellis
Rutland First Baplist Churth
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .• Worship
10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor Jon Br01:kert East M&lt;tin 51..
Sunday Sch . 9:30 am, Worship 10:30 am
Finl Southern Baptist
4187:Z Pomeroy Pike, Pastor: E. Lamar
O'Bryant. Sunday School - 9:30 am.,
Worship. 8: I!I a.m.,9:45 am&amp;. 7:00p.m.,
Wedne!iday ServiceN ·7:00p.m.
Flnt Bapllat Church
Paltl)t': Billy Zu•p11n tuh Mntl P11hner St ..
Mlddlepnn, Sunday Scht'Mll . ~:I! a.m ..
Wnnhip - 10:1! a.m .. 7:011 p.m ..
Wetlnead•y Suvh.:e· 7:{)(1 p.tn,

.,

Bethlebem.Baptlst Church
Greal B(nd, Route 124, Racine. OH.
Pastor : Ed CartH. Sunday School • 9:30
~.m., Sunday Worsh1p · 10 :30 :..m .
';Vednesday B1ble Study· 7:00pm.

Hillside Baptlsl Church
St . Rt. 143 just off Rt. 7. Pastor: Rev.
J~mes R. Acree. Sr.. Sunday Unified
Service, Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m ..
Wednesda)' Sm·ices -7 p.m .

Michelle Kennedy

10:45 a.m , Sunday E\·ening - 6:00 p.m ..
Pastor: Don Walker

Sacred Heart C11thollr C.hurch
161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomero·). 992-jti9R .
Pastor: Re ~. W~ltn E. HeinL, Sat. Con .
4 45-S:!Sp.m.: Ma ss- 5 ~ 30 p.m., Sui}
Con . ·H.45-9: 15 a.m .. Sun. Mass · 9: 30
a m.. O~tly Mass -8:30a. m.

Old Btthel Free Will Bapthl Church
28601 St. Rt. 7. Middleport', Sunday
Semce - 10 a.m., 6·00 p m.. Tuesday
Services -6:00

Alhens, Pomeroy or Parker~ bur}:!

209 Third
Racine, OH

River Valley
River Valley Apostolic Wor~hip Center.
1173 S. Jrd
Ave :. MiddlePon. Re\ ,
~ichBel Bradford, Pastor. Sund8y, 10:30
a.m. Tues. 6:30 prayer. Wed. 7 pm Btble
Study

www.mydailysentinel.com

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

~II

E\itnmg -·7:JO p.m.

MI. Unlon Baptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School9 45 a.m .. Evening - 6:JO p.m.,
Wednesday Servi~;es - 6:30p .m.

•

1-740-667·3156.
"Still small e11ough to care''

VanZandt and WuU Rd , Pas10r: James
Mill~r. Sunday School - 10.30 a.m..

Sliver Run Baptlat
Pastor: lohn Swanson. Sunday School IOa.m ., Worship -. \la.m., 7:00p.m .
,WedneW.y Services-7:00p.m.

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from

Church or Jn;us Christ t\postollc

Pa•tor: luMph Oodwin, int1rlm pa11or •
Sunday S~hool • fil:JU 11.m., Wor.hl~ •
10 :40 a.m., 7:00 p.m.. Wedne•dMy
SerVIce• ·7:00p.m.

r r r r r r r r ·r

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Mauhew5:8

Fellowship
Apostolfc

R1clne Flnl •pUI&amp;

the Constitution" hut disappointed that the judge didn't
feel Cobb crossed the line.
"We fed in this cao;e, it
did cross the line ," she ;aid.
The ACLU has no( decided whether to file an appeal, .
Garrett said.

www.mydallysantlnel.com

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

·WORSHIPGOD ·THIS WEEK

Like little children: ·

. Judge rules Cobb commissioners can pray to Jesus
ATLANTA (AP) - Cobb cation at the meetings could
County commissioners can "identify the deity to whom
pray in the name of Jesus they direct their prayer." But
Christ at their meetings under Story also took issue with
a n~w federal court ruling.
the way commissioners
U.S . . District
Judge choose the clergy who
Richard Story ruled Sept. 8 appear at the meetings
that clergy whq say an invo- because it was clear that cer-

Friday, September 15, 2006

Victory Baptist lnde~ndent
525 N. 2nd St. Mir.ldlcpurt. Pastur: James
E. Keesee. Worship - IOa.m.. 7 p.m .,
Wednesday Ser.•ict:s -7, p.m .
Fwhh Baptist Church
Railroad St., Mason, Sunday S.:hool- 10
a.m., Worship - II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wer.luesda~· s~rvtc~s- 7 p.m

.

'

• foltit Run Baptist- Pomeroy
Rev . Joseph Woods. Sunday School· 10
a.m.. Worship· 11 :30 a.m .
MI. Moriah Baptist
Founh &amp; Main St.. Middleport. Pastor:
Rev. Gil~n Craig. Jr .. Sunda~· School ·
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:45 a.m.
1\nliquity Baptist
Sunday School - 9 :~0 · a.m .. Wonhip -

your light so shine before
, that they may see your
works and glorify your
Father in heaven.''
Malthew 5: 16

Rutland Ch u~h or God
Pastor. Ron Huth. Sunday Worsh tp • IU
a.m .. 6 p.m., Wednesda} Sel"o'ices • 7

Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 W. Main St .. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m .. Worshi p- 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Serw.:t:s · 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Wn:tstde Chun·h or Christ
33226 Childrt:ll\ Home Rd .. Sunday
School . II a.m ., Worsh1p - IOa.m , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 ~ .m
Middleport Church or Christ
Sth ~nd Ma 1n. Pastor: AI Hanson ,
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayre, Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan. Sunday School
-9:30a.m., Wor!ihip- &amp;:15, 10:30 a.m, 7
p.m .. WcdneY!ay Sel"o'ices - 7 p.m.
Keno.Church. or Christ
Worship - 9:JO a.m.. Sunday School 10:3tl am .. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, lsi and
3rd Sunday
Bearwallow Ridge Chureh Or Chrlsl
Pastor:Bruce Terry, Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
Worship ~ 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p .m.
Wednesday Sel"o'ices- 6:30p.m.

Zion Church of Chriat
Pomerny, Harrl1onv!lle Rd. (Rt.l4.l ).
Putm: R01er Wmtm, Sumiuy ~·honl 9 : ~0 u.m .. Wuuhlp • 10:3(1 a.m, 7:00
p,tn .. Wetlmml11y Sorvh:n· 7 p.m.
1\lppera Plain C.:hurch ofChr\11
ln~lrumcnllti. Wor•tlip Sorvh:o • 9 lUll.,
C:ommup!on. 10 ~a.m .. !iundny s~·hool •
10: I~ a.m .. Youth• ':JU pm Sundl~. Bible
Study WetineNd•y 7 pm
Bradbury Church of Chri11
Min itter: Tom Run)'nn, 39!1~8 Bradbur~
Road. Middleport, Sunday Schoo\ - 9:30
a.m.
Wonhip - I0:30 a.m,
Rutland Chun:h or Chrl1t
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worsh1p and
Commumon - 10;30 a.m., Bob J. Werry.
Mims!er
Bradford Churth of Christ
Comtr of St Rt. 124 &amp; Bradburr Rd ..
Min ister: Doug Shamhlin , Youth Mimstct:
Btl! Amberger, Sunday Schonl - '1:30 n.m.
Wor•hip - 11:00 am ., 10 :30 a.m'". 7:0{)
p.m ..Wedncsday S~rvice s -7: 00p.m
Hickor}' Hills Chun!h of Christ
Tuppers Plains . Pastor Mike ~1oore. Bible
class. 9 am. Sunday: worship 10 a.m .
Sunday: worship 6:30pm Sunday: Bible
class 7 pm Wed .
Reedsville Ch urch of Christ
Pastor: Philip Stuml, Sund&lt;~y School . \UU
a.m ., Wory;hip Service: IOJO a.m .. Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6.30 p.m.
Dexter Church of Christ
Sunday school 9:30 a m.. Sunday worship
· 10:30 a.m.
The Churi'h of Christ of Pomeroy
Inte rsection 7 and 124 W. E\'angclist :
Denn1s Sargent. Sundoy 81hle Study Q:30 ;l.m . Wor~hip: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wcdnesdny Ribl e Study - 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Chul't'h of Christ in
Christian Union
Hartford. W.Va ., Pastor.Da\id Gret:r,
Sun day Sehoul · 9:30 a.m .. Worship ·
10:30 a.m.. 7:00 p m .. Wedne ~day
Sel"o'ices - 7:00 p.m.

Church of God
Mi. Moriah Church of God
Milt H1l l l{d ., l{ac1n e. Pa 'itm: ,lam e~
Satterfield. Sunday SchOol - 9:45 am ..

Syrac:use Flnl Church o,r God
Apple ~nd'Second Su .. Pastor: Rev . Dav1d
Russell , Sunday School ~nd Worship· 10
a.m. Evening Ser"'H'es- 6:30 p m ..
Wednesday Services- 6 _)[)p .m.
Churth of God or prophet)

·o.J. Wh ile Rd. off St. R1. 160 . Pastor: PJ .
Chapman, Sundlly School - 10 a.m..
Wt.Xlihip - II a.m.. Wedne sday Services- 7
p.m .

Congregational
Trinity Church
St:cnnd &amp; l)•nn. Pomeroy. Pasto r: R~v .
Jonathan Noble. Wl)l',hlp t0·25 a.m..
Sun day Schoo19: 15 a.m.

Episcopal
C.111ce EpiSt:opal Churth
.~26 E. Main St .. Pome roy. Sunday School
~nd
Holy Eucharbl 11 :00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Payne

Holiness
Community Chuoch
Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Street.
Rutland . Sunday Worsh ip-10:00 a.m .
Sunday Serv•ce-7 p.m.
DanvUie Holiness Church
31057 State Route 325. Langsvlle'. Pastor:·
Victor Roush, Sunday school - 1):30,a.m.,
Sunday worshir - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wednesduy prayer service- 7 p.m.
Calvar}' Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Roud, Pastor: Charles
McKenz1e. Sunday School 9: 30 a.m ..
Worsh ip · I I a.m . 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Sel"o'ice- 7.00 p.m.
Rost of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutland , Pastor. Rev .
De"ey King, Sunday school- &lt;.1 :30 a.m ..
Sunday worship -7 p m , Wednesday
prayer meeting- 7 p.m
Pine Gmve Rihle HniiM!i.&lt;; Church
1/2 mile off Rt. 325. Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley. Sunday School - 9:30 a m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wednesday Servke- 7:30p .m.
Wesleylll Bible Holinea Chun:h
15 Pearl St., Middleport. PIUtor: Ri'k
Bourne, Sund11y School· 10 a.m. Worship
·10:4~ p.m .. S1.1nd11y Eve. 7:00 p.m ..
Wcdne.:WI~ S~~lce · 7:30p.m.
Hfllll Run Communllf Chunh
flll•tor: Rev. Latrry t..emley: ~unc.J~~oy School
• ~·: ~ll a&amp;.m .. Wlmlhlp - 10:4~ 1.m.. 7 p.m .. ·
Thu~day Bible Study 11nd 't'uuth- ~ p.m,

t.aur.t Ctl~ Fm MOih&lt;llol Churoh
Pucor: Olenn Rowa, S1.1nday School •
9:30 a.m .. \_'Jonhlp • IO:Jil ·a,m. and 6
p.m.,Wcdnud•y Service· 7:00p .m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Churth or Jnua
Chrlll of Lltte..,Day Sainll
St. Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m .. Relief
Societ)' /Priesth ood 11 :05-1 2:00 noon.
Sacrament Se n ·i ce 9-10:15 ll.m .,
Homemaking meeting. lst Thul1i. • 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Pint': Grove, Worsh1p ·9:00a.m .. Sunday
School · 10:00 am. Pastor: James P.
Brady
Our Sal'ionr LullferAn Chui"Ch
Walnut and Henry Sts , Ravenswood.
W Va . Pastor: David Ru'i~ell , Sunday
School- 10:00 ~ .m . Worship · 11 a.m . '
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St . Pomero).
Sun. School-9:45a.m .. Worsh1p - II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham Unittd Methodist
Wursh1p- II a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
Ha:htelllnited .\l~lhodisl
Ne" Hav~tl. Richard N'r!use, Pastor,
Su11day wur~h•p !:1:3\J a.m Tues. 6:30
praye1 and H1ble Study.
MI. Olin United Methodist
124 behmd Wilk emlle, Pastor Re\' .
Ra lph Spi res. Sund ay Srhuol - 1) ·30 u m..
Wor§hip - lll:J O am ,, 7 p m.. Thur.,Juy
Sel"o'ires- 7 p.m.

On

Meigs Cooperaliv~ P~tri5h
Nonheast Cluster. Alfred . Pa~tur: Jane
Hent!l e. Sundu y School - 9:)0 a.m.,
Worship-l lam .. 6..'(lp .m.
Chester
Pastor; Jan~ Be a111~:, Wonh 1p - Y a.m ..
Sunda)' S~hool - Ill a.m . Thu rsJay
Servtces - 7 p m.

Pomeroy Cltllfth ot lht Nuartne
Pastor: Jan Lavender. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Worshtp · 10:30 a.m . and 6
p.m .. Wednesday Sel"o'ices - 7 p.m.

LoOg Bottom
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m .. Worship10:30 am .

Cbeater Church ol tbt Nuanne
Pastor. Rev. Herbert Grate, Sunday School
- !1 :30 a.m., Worship • II a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Serl'ices · 7 p.m.
Rutland Churc:h of tht Naza~ne
Sunday School - 9·30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m., 6 ·30 p.m., Wednesday
Services - 7 p.m-. Re'·. Mike 01U'k

Roedovtl~

Worship - 9:30 a.m , Sunda~ School 10:30 a.m., F1rst Sunda~ of Month - 7:00
p.m. serv ice
Thpper§ Plains St. Paul
Pa•tor: 1ane 8eat11e. Sunday School - 9
~ . m ., Worm ip · 10 a.m, TueY!ay Serv1ces
-7:30p.m
Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse) . Pastor: Bo,b Robinson.
Sunda~· School - 9·45 a.m.. Worship - 11
a.m .. Wednesday Sel"o'ices - 7:30pm.

Amu:in&amp; Grace Community Church

Pastor· Wayne Dunlap, State Rt . 681,
Tuppen Plains, Sun . Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30 pm .. Wed. Bible Sutd~ 7:00p.m .

Heath (Middlrporl)
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Sunday School 9.30a.m ., Worship -1 1:00a.m .

·9

Pomeroy
Brian Dunham, Worship · 9:30
a.m.. Sunda)' School- 10:3~ a.m.
P~uor:

Rock. Springs
Pastor· Keith Rader. Sunday School - 9: I~
a.m .. Worship
10 a.m .. Youth
Fellowship. Sundity- 6 p.m.

Ash Stmt Church
398 Ash St., Middleport-PasTor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Morning
Worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 00 pm,
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p.m.. Youth
Serv ice-7 :00p.m.
Agape Life Center
"Fuii·Gospel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Patly Wade. 603 Second A~e. Muon. 7735017, Service lime:· Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday 7 pm

RuUand
. Pastor: R1ck. Bourne, Sunday School 9:30a.m., Worship -· 10 30 a.m:, Thursday
Sef'o'ices ·1 p.m .
s.Jem CelMer
Pastor: William K. Manhlll, SUI'Ida~
School- 10:15 a.m., Wonh.lp • 9:1S a.m.,
Bible Study: Marub.y 7:00pm

Ab~mdut Gr~e~ R.F. I,
923 S. Third St., Mlddlepon . Pallor Tere11
Dnl1, S11nday urvl~e. 10 a.m..
WedneiClay 11rvln. 7 p.m.

SnoWYW.
10 a.m .. Wonhlp • 9a.m.

ltltllllf
Putor: Jghn Oilmore, Sunc1ay Sc:hocll· lD
M.m. , Wouhlp • 9 a.m., Wednl.clay
Servl~•· 10 a.m.

Follh l'ull Gaopol Ch•r&lt;h

L.ona aonom, Putor. Steve Reed , Sun\lly
School.· 9;30 e.m, Wonhlp • 9:30a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wedneldly • 7 p.m., Pridly •
fellow111tp Mrvloe 7 p.m.

Carmei.Sutton
Carmel .t: B11ban Rd1. Racine, Ohio,
Putor: John Oilmore, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m., Worthip • 10:45 a.m . , llbl1

Hanlooo.W. Comm•lq CI!UJ&lt;h
PaiCor: Theron Durham, S11ndly • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wed.nelday • 7 p.m,

Study Wod. 7:00p.m.
Morala1Star
Pailor: John Gilmore, Sunday School· II
un., Wonhip • 10 un.

MNdleport Commuul\y CbW'Ch
'7!1 Peul. St., Middleport , Putor: Sam
Andenon, Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Evenina. 7:30pm .. Wednesday Service·
7:30p.m.

Eutl.etart
Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School 9a.m., Worship • 10 a.m ., I gt Sunday
every month evening !iervice 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

· Faith V1lley 'hbernacle: Church
Run Road, Pastor: Rev . Emmett
Rawson , Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.
Baile~

lla&lt;lno
Pastor: Kerry ~'ood. Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 11 a.m .Wedn~sday
Services 6 pm: ThiU Bible Study 7 Pm

Syracuae Mission
14 11 Bridgeman St., Syracu~e. Sunday
School - to. a.m. Evening - 6 p.m.,
Wedn~sday Service- 7 p.m.

Coolville Unilec'J ~elhodlsl PKrb:h
Pastur: Hden Kline, Coolville Church,
M~in &amp; Fifth' St., Sun. School • lO .a.m.,
Worship- 9 a.m.,~~- Semces- 7 p.m.

Haul Community Church
Off Rt . 124, Pa stor. Edsd Han . Sunday
School ·9:30a.m .. Wonh1p - 10:30 a.m ,
7:30p.m.

Btthel Churth
Towns'tup Rd ., 468C. Sundlly School - 9
a.m. Worship ,. 10 a.m., Wednesday
Services- 10 am.

Dynville Community Churth
Sunday School - 9·JO am., Wor~hip 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.

HMkingport Chllfth
Grand Street. Sunday School - 9:30a.m . ·
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. Pa:;tor Phillip Bell

Morse Chapel Chun:h
SundB)' school - 10 a.m .. Worsh1p - I 1
a.m .. Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Tordl Cllun:b
Co. Rd. 63, Sundaty School -9:30a.m .,
Worship- 10:30 a.m.

Faith Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom, Sunday School - 9:30 u m..
Worship - 10:45 a.m .. 7.30 p.m..
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olive Community Chul"(h
Pastor Lawrence Bush . Sunday School ·
9 30 a m., E~·en1ng- 6:30p.m.. Wednt:day
Servtce • 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Church of the Nuartne
Pastor. Allen Mid cap, Sunday School •
Y:30 a.m ,Worship · 10:30 a.m.• 6:30p.m ,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m., Pastor:
All~n Midcap

Full Gosptl Lilhlhoust
33045 Hiland Road . Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
Hunter, Sunday School- 10 a.m .. Evemng
7:30p.m .. Tuesday &amp; Thurs .- 7:30p.m.

ReMsvllle Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene. Pastor: . Sunday
School -9:30a.m .. Worship - 10:45 a.m ..
7 p.r;n .. Wednesday SeT'I'ices- 1 p.m.

740-594-6333

1-800-451-9806

Syracuse Chun'h of the Nazarene
Pastor Mike Adkins. Sunday School - 9;30

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men,thar they may see yo"r
The care you dtstne, close to homt good works and glorify your
74HI2-5M1
lniCI L llllllr· . . _
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Far her in heave11."
58111St llllltnll• ,_..," 41111
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Manhew 5:16
740-192·5444
'
740-992-6606

llnl
ANDERSON

FUNERAL HOME
174 t.ayne Slrett• PO Box 170
Ntw Hat~rn, WV 252~
J11mt'! H. Anderson, Ucmsed Funeral Dim:tor
Heidi S.Anderson, ~·olltltought t"u~Wral Planning

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

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARr.'!ACY.
We ·Fm Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

God

so loved the world

he gave his o11ly
IVe'gOI'len SOil ...

Johll3:16
.

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before

'.Ltt our family Mfp

prcttc.t your family'
Suppression • btinguishetl • Spnnldcrs

God and man."

Acts 24:1

Stln·nvil!e Cummunity Apostolk ·
Church
Pa ~1or Wayne R. Je"ell. Sunda) worsh ip
- 6:00pm .. Wedne sda&gt; - fl UO p.m. Uible
St ud)
Rrjoidng Lifr Chul't'h
~!)()

N. :!nd Ave .. Middleport . Pa~tor :

Mike Foremun. Pastor Emeritus Lawrence
Foreman . Wor~ hip- 10:00 urn
Wedn esd~~ Sen-ices- 7 p.m.
Clifton Tabernade Chun:h
Clifton. W Va .. Sund11y School - 10 ~-m ..
Worship - 7 p.m.. Wedne~da) Semce · 7
p.m .
,N~w. Life Victory Center
377 3 Georgt-s Creek. Road. Galltpolls . OH
Pastor: Ehll Staten. Sunduy Serv1ce; · 10
a.m . &amp; 7 p.m Wcdnesdfly - 7 p m. &amp;
Youth 7 p m.
Full Gospel ChuKh
of lhe Living Su\·ior
Rt.338. Antiquity, Pastor. Jes~ Morns,
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m.
Salem Community Church
Back of West Columbia. W Va.om Lievinll
Road , PMtor: Charles Roush 0041 6752288, Sunday School 9:30 am. Sundt~
e\'enlna service 7:00 pm. B1hly Snad~
Wcdnead•y ll!rvlce 7.00 pm
Hohlon Chrlallan F1llow1hlp Church
Paall)l'; Hmch'l Whit~ . Sunday S\·ho11l·
10 lm.lillnd•y rhur\'h ~•T"ii:C' . 6:30 pm
Wednt~MY 7 pm

RHIOr&amp;llon Chrllllan Fellowthlp
\136' Huoper Ro1 d. Athena, Putor:
Lonn ie Cn11•. Sund11y Wor.h tp tr t:&lt;b Mm.
Wtd!'lll•d•y : 7 pm
1
Lanpvllle Chrl1dan Cburth
Full Gospel. Putor: Robert Milner.
Sunda)' School9:30 am .. Worship 10:30
11111 -7,00 pm, Wed. Ser,·ice 7:00pm

Pentecostal
Pentt&lt;:oslal Assemblr
St. Rt . (24. Racine, Tornado Rd. Sunday
School - .10 am .. E'·ening • 7 p.m..
Wednesday Serv1ce~- 7 p.m

Presbyterian
Harrisonl'ille Presbyt~ria.n Church
Pastor. Robl:rt Crow. Wvr~ hip · 9 am .
Middleport Presbyteria.n
Pastor: Jame~ Snyder, Sunday School 10
a.m .. wo.rshlp ~ervice II am .

Seventh-Day Adventist
Sel'tnlh-Day Ad,·enUst
Mulherry Hts _ Rd . Pomeroy. Samrda)
Services · Snhb ath School - .::! p.m ,
Wor;hip- J p m.

United Brethren
Ml. Hermon United 8r'fthren
in Chrbt Church
Tex.as Community J6-l\l Wickham Rd,
Pasl ur. Pt:lt:r Martindale:, Sunday School 9.30 a.m.. Worsh1p - 10.30 am .. 7:00
p.m .. Wedne ~dily Services · 7.00 p.m.
Youth group meet!O)! ::!nd &amp; -'th Su~ays
7 p.m
Eden lnilrd Brtthren in Chri§l
Stale Route 12-4. betwern Rcl·'d~~ ~llc &amp;
Hockingport. Sunday S.:hool - 10 a.m .
SundBy Wor~hip - II :00 a.m. Wednesday
S~nic es - 7 00 p.m.. Pn ~tor- M Adam

eJittendC'AawA

South Bethel Community Church
Silver Ridge- Pnsror Lindn Damewood.
Sunday School - 9 a.m .. Worship Servtce
10 11.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

§isl)tr fumml '1!1omr

499 Richland Avenue, Athens

·

· Community of Christ
Ponland-Racme Rd . Pastor: Jim Proffitt .
Sunday School- 9·30 a.m.. Worshi p 10:30 a.m.. Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Worship Center
39782 S.R. 7, Reedsv!lJe, OH 4517 2. 112
mile north of Eutem Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gospd Church, Pastor Rob Barber,
Associate Pastor Karyn Da,·is. Youth
Pastor Suzie Francis, Sunday ser\'lces
10:00 am worship, 6:00 pm Family Life
Classes, Wed Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m., Outer L1mits Cell Group at the
church 6:30pm to IUO pm

Pearl Chapel
'Sunday SchOOl- 9 a.m.. Worship- 10 a.m.

. l~anday S~hool-

Calv11ry Rible Church
Pomeroy Pile . Co. Rlii .. Pastor: Rev.
. Blackwood. Sunday School - 9·30 n.m..
Wors h'1p 10 :]0 am . 7:30 p.m..
Wedn~d ny Serv1ce - 7:30 p.m.

Oasis Christian Fellowship
(Non-denommauonal fellow shlp)
Meeting in the Meigs M1dd\e School
Cafe!ena Pastor: Chn~ Stewart
10:00 am - Noon SL!nday; ln funn&lt;~l
Worship. Children ·s mimstry

Fomt Run
Pastor: Bob Robin!tOn . Sunday School - 10
3.m . Worship - q a.m

S~:hool

Fairview Bible ChuKh
Letan , \'l.Va. Rt. l. Pastor: Brian May,
Sunday S~·hou i- 9:30 a.m .. Wursh1p - 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Bible Study- 7.00 p.m.
Faith fellowship Crusade ror l'hrist
Pastor: Rev. Franklm 1J1ck.en'i. Ser\'i&lt;:t ·
Friday. 7 p m

A New Beeinnin&amp;
(Full Gospd Church) Htmison ville,
Pastors: Bob and Kay Marihall.
Sunday Sen·1ce, 2 p.m.

Entrl'prise
PaMor: Arland King, Sunda~· School 10:30 a.m .. Worsh1p - 9;30 a.m .. Bible
Study Wed. 7:30
Hat woods
Pastor: Ketth Rader, Sunday School . 10
a.m ,Worship - I I a.m.

Minenville
Pastor: Bob Robmson. Sunday
a.m. Worship - 10 a.m

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Coolv11le Road. Pastor: Re v Ph ilhp
Ridenour . Sunday School - 9·31) a.m,
Worship - 10:30 a.m. Wednesday Serv 1c ~
- 7p.m.

Other Churches

IMIIIIIIIICIIJIIII. • 1117 II rlll
411188

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc. If ye abide i11 Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
INSURANCE
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
Products+ ask what ye will, and ir shall
Ftnancial
214 E. Main
be done unto you.
Setvices
992•5130
AGENCIES Inc.
John 15:7
Pomeroy
'
Bill
992-6677

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

1-

Pastor: Bob Randolph. Worshtp - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School- 10:30 am.

p.m.

3~226

Hemlock Grove Christian Church
Mini ster: Larry Rmwn , Wnuhip · q :)O
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 am .. Bible
Study- 7 p.m.

C1rleton Interdenominational Chun!b.
Kingsbury Road. Pastor: Robe rt Vance .
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship
Service 10:30 a.m.. Evening Service 6
p.m.
Freedom Golptl Miqioo
Bald Kno b, on Co. Rd . 31. PastOt . Rev.
Roger Willford, Sunday School · !1:30'
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m .

Wednesday Services- 7 pm.

p.m.

• Secunty

t 72 N. 2nd Ave . Middleport~ OH

:Francis Florist
Meigs Coumy's Oldest Florist

East Main
Pomeroy, Oh
·let I.IC und you1

-

.....

'

with ci'O"Ill1cqte'

740..992·2644 740..992·6298

MY !!Pace is sufficient
for thee: for mY
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

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

. "''

thou&amp;ht~

�•

.

'
Friday, September 15, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
High School Football Standings, Page B4

•

•

•

to lace em

LocAL ScHEDULE

An inside look at this week's game ·

• ~e IJnm News ffie photO!&gt;'

Great No. l's require sOme searching
BlgTen
Overall
W L Ptt. WL Pet.
Ohio State 0 0 .000 2 0 1.000

Teams

Indiana · 0 0 .000
Iowa
o 0 .000
Michigan . 0 0 .000
Mich. State 0 0 .000
Purdue
o o .ooo
Wisconsin 0 0 .000
Illinois
0 0 .000
Minnesota 0 0 .000
N'westem 0 0 .000
Penn State 0 0 .000

2 0 1.000
2 0 l.OOQ
2 0 1.000
2 0 1.000
2 o 1.000
2 0 1.000
1 1 .500
1 1 .500
1 1 .500
1 1 .500

Clndnnatlll Ohio State, noon
· S;mcuse at Illinois, noon
Iowa State at Iowa, noon
Michig.o&gt;n State at Pittsburgh, noon
Temple at Minnesota, 1 p'.m.
Eastern M&lt;higan at Norlhwestem,1 p.m.
Ball State at Purdue, 1 p.m. '
·
San Diego State at Wlsc9nsin: 2:40p.m.
Michigan at Notre Dame, 3:30 p.m.
'!bun~ St. at Penn State, 3:30p.m.
Southern Illinois at Indiana, 4 p.m.

COLUMBUS- Unless
you've been in hibernation,
you know who is No. 1 in college footbalL
The No. 1 designation belongs to Ohio State. Il's theirs
as long as they keep winning
or until the poll voters decide
they didn't beat someone impressively enough.
We know who is No. 1. But
who wears No. 1?
Single digit numbers are
prized commodities for athletes. But the No. 1 jersey
doesn't have quite the storied
history you might expect.

Jim
Naveau
The

~1ma

News

419-993-2087

Maybe some players shy
away from it because of the
expectations that might come
with wearing the lowest available number. Maybe some
coaches are reluctant to designate any one player as _No. 1.
Sophomore linebacker Marcus Freeman has worn it the

last two seasons at Ohio State.
He is the 18th OSU player to
wear a 1 on his jersey.
Probably the most notable
Buckeyes to wear No. 1 in the
past have been Tom Skladany,
Mike Lanese and Gary Berry
from 1996-99
·
The team ~h the most famous No. 1's in college football is Michigan, where it has
been bestowed on a series of
standout receivers- Anthony
Carter, Derrick Alexander,
· David Terrell and Braylon
Edwards.
Among all the All-Ameri-

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: CINCINNATI (1-1)

Alook at some of the key
Receivers
matchups between No. 1 Ohio
The deep throw is a much bigger
State (2-0) and Cincinnati (1-1) part of Ohio State's passing game
on Saturday at Ohio Stadium:
than it is at Cincinnati. The average
Quarterbacks
pass completion for Ohio State this
On tne surface, ~ looks like a
season has gone for 15.8 yards. At
mismatch betv.een the two quarCincinnati, it's 7.0 yards.
terbacks. Go below the surface
Anthony Gonzalez (8 catches,
and it still does.
142 yards, 1 touchdown) and Ted
Ohio State's Troy Smith Ginn Jr. (5 catches, 97 yards, 2
has thrown 21 touchTDs) left Texas' defensive backfield
down passes with only looking dazed and confused. Redfour Interceptions
shirt freshman Brian Robisk~ had
since the start of last three catches for the second conseason. Cincinnati's secutive game.
Dustin Grulla has ·
Cincinnati's 260-pound tight end
thrown 13 touchdown Brent Celek had six catches 1n the
passes and 13 interBearcats' opemng-day win over
ceptions in that same Eastern Kentucky. Wide receiver Dotime spa~·····-- •· minick Goodman had e1ght recepSmith·has com- tions ;n a 33-15 loss to Pittsburgh
pleted 68 percent last week.
of hls~1!':ft)l'" Advantage: Ohio State
five touchdowns · Offensive line ·
and no interceptions this
Some predicted offensive line
season. Grutza depth would be a strength for Ohio
has hit on 60
State and it showeo against Texas.
percent of his When OSU scored its first touchpasses with two down against the Longhorns, the
TDs and two in- second-team offensive linemen
teiceptions.
were on the field the entire series.
Advantage:
Center Doug Datish and tackle i&lt;jrk
Ohio State
Barton have led the starting unit.
Running backs
osu is averaging 418 yards of
Antonio Pittman
total offense per game and has
gained 74 yards in
allowed only three quarterback
last week's 24- 7 win
sacks in two games. Tackle Digger
over Texas. Those 74
Bujnoch, son of former Cincinnati
yards would make him
BeRgal Glen Bujnoch, is a twothe No. 2 rusher for the
year starter and the most experiseason at Cincinnati.
enced Bearcats lineman.
Bradley Glatthaar, a 225Advantage: Ohio State
pound tailback, leads the
Defensive line
Bearcats with 83 yards rushTerrill Byrd, a 285-pound tackle, is
ing. Pittman has gained 185
the best and biggest of Cincinnati's
yards. Much-heralded freshlinemen. He started all season last
man Chris Wells played mostly ·year as a freshman. He ;s the only
in mop-up time last week for
first-team defensive lineman for the
OSU. He could see more time
Bearcats who weighs more than
this week.
260 pounds.
Advantage: Ohio State
OSU got good pressure on Texas

Michigan State ..........................493.0
Purdue ......................................446.0
Ohio State .................................. 418.0
Minnesota .................................. 410.0
lowa/Micllgan .......................... 383.5

Rushing Offense
Michigan .................................... 249.0
Michig.o&gt;n State .......................... 219.5
Minrerota .................................. 215.5
Illinois ........................................ 205.5
Noni1Westem .............................. 190.0

Pass Offense
Ohio State ..................................292. 0
Michigan State ..........................273.5
Purdue ......................................259.5
ln&lt;!iana ......................................239.0
Iowa .......................................... 226.0

Total Defense

Michigan................................... 18 7.5
lowa ....................................... 212.0
Michigan State......................270.0
Wlscooon ........................... 273.5
Northwestem...................... 288.0

Rush Defense
Indiana ...................................... ..
Penn State .................................. 71.5
Michigan State ............................ 77.5

Pass Defense
WISCOO~n ..................... :......... :.. 124.0
. Michigan ........ :...........................158.5
Hlinois ........................................ 166.0
Iowa ..........................................172.0
Ohkl State ..................................173.0

INDIVIDUAL LEADER'S
Rushing Yards
Mike Han, Michigan ...................... 262
Alex Daniels, Minnesota ..................233
PJ. H~l. Wisconsin ..........................231
Javon Ringer, M~higan State ..........200
1&lt;ory Sheets, Purdue ......................188

Ohio
State senior

defensive
tackle David
Patterson

Passing Yards
Troy Smith, Ohio State .................... 588
Drew Stantnn, Michigan State ... :.... 479
CUrtis Painter, Purdue ................... .469
Anthony Morelli, Penn State ............395
Bryan CUpoo, Minne!;Ota ................ 389

quarterback Colt McCoy but the
only sack belonged to defensive
tackle Quinn Pitcock. The concem
is defending the run, not the pass.
Texas rushed for 172 yards a week
after Northern Illinois gained 151
yards on the ground against the ·
Buckeyes.
Advantage: Ohio !!tate

Unebackers
James L.aurinaitis had the first of
what should be many big games ·
with 13 tackles, an Interception and
two forced fumbles.
There were rumors freshman Ross
Homan would start last week, but
Ohio State opened the game w~h
five defensive backs on the field ;nstead. Homan got signiftcant playing
time, though, and ranks eighth on
the team in tackles with seven.
Cincinnati's Corey Smith and
Kevin McCullough are two-year
starters and Smith was seeondteam All-Big East last season.
Advantage: Ohio State

Defensive backs
Redshirt freshman Anderson
Russell started at free safety in
place of Nick Patterson and appears to be 1n the lineup to stay.
Nickel back (fifth defensive back)
Donald Washington returned a
Texas fumble 48 yards .
Cincinnati safety Dominic Ross IS
a three-year starter. Cornerback
John Bowie was the B;g East 100meter dash champibnlast spring.
Advantage: Ohio State

Special teams
Punter A.J. Trapasso averaged
50.8 yards a kick against Texas.
Place-kicker Aaron Pettrey hit his
first field goal of the season, a 31yarder, against the Longhoms. He
and Ryan Pretonus are a combined
1-for 4 on field goals.
UC's Kevin Lovell is 1 of 1 on field
goals this year and was 16 of 25
last season, with a long of 49 yards.
Advantage: Ohio State

ReceMng Yards
~n Bryant.I'\Jrdue ................... 228
Ted Ginn J,, Ohkl State .................. 220
Anthony Gonzales, Ohkl State ........ 195
Matt Trannon, Michigan State ........ 184
Joroan NorMlod, Penn State .......... 152

2006 OSU SCHEDULE:
w35-12

N.lllinois

Sept. 2
Sept. 9

@Te""s

W24·7

Noon
TEA

SAlU~Y

Clnciloootl

Sept 23

Penn Sl;lte

Sept. 30

@Iowa
Bowling Green

8p.m.

@ Mich. State

TEA
TEA

Oct. 7
Oct. 14 '
Oct. 21
Oct. 28
Nov. 4
Nov.11
Nov. 18

Indiana
Minnesota
@ Illinois
@ N'westem
M&lt;:higan

Cot1,1i~t © 2006 Tl-e

Jim Naveau's
Player of the Week
LB • James Laurinaitis
The sophomore linebacker had 13 tacl&lt;les,
. forced two fumbles and intercepted a pass wtlen
No. 1 Ohio State beat then No. 2 Texas 24-7.

TBA

Say what? .

3:30p.m.

TEA .
TEA
3:30p.m.

Urm News. Reproductioo or an or any portion of this matelial
is prollibited withoot express consent"

"He has to lead H."
- Tailback Antonio Pittman talking
abou1 where Troy Smi[h ran ks in
the Hei.'iman Trophy race

Ohio State Leaders
Passing Yards
Troy Smith ............ 566
Rushing Yards
Antonio Pittman .... 185
· Receiving Yards

Ted Ginn Jr........ :.... 220

Tackles
Brandon M~chell ...... 19
Interceptions
Sacks
James L.aurinaitis ........ 1 Vernon Gholston ...... 1.5
Lany Grant ................ 1 Aeld goals
Aaron Pettrey ............1
Touchdowns

Ted Ginn Jr... ... :.......... 3

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: Who is tl;e
last Ohio scliool
to beat Ohio
State in football?

2: How many
first -round NFL
draft choices has
Cincinnati had?

Answers: 1. Obertin in 1921;

3: How many
first -round NFL
draft choices has
Ohio State had?

2. Two;

3.63
.

fr!dty 'a QIIDII

Football
Gallia Academy a! Chillicothe, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Point Pleasant, 7:30·p.m
South Gallia at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Alexander, 7:30p.m.
Soulhern al Hannan, 7:30p.m.
Sl. Mary's a1 Eastern, 7:30 p m.
Volleyball

Teays Valley at OVCS. 5 p.m.
Soccer
Teays Valley at OVCS, 5:30p.m.
College Soccer
Notre Dame at Rio Grande, 5 p.m.
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at Cumberland Invite

Satyrdl!y's a•mu

days until kickoff

.

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va.- Sometimes it takes
a tragedy to help put life into
perspective and to remember
that football is just a game,
after all.
But even though we
remember that it is just a
game, sometimes something

as simple as a football game
can also be a blessing in disguise. During tragic rimes,
that game can bring people
together and work as a coping mechanism, honoring the
young man who loved the
sport so much and helping to
begin the healing process.
And getting the healing
process under way is exactly
what senior football captain

Stouffer

J a r o d
Stouffer,
who lost his
bout with
leukemia
earlier this
w e e k ,
would have
wanted:
"I think
most people
are aware of

the ditlicult situation this has
been for our entire football
family. Our players. co~che·s,
fans and the student body, it
has been a tragic nightmare
that we did not anticipate, it
all happened so fast it kind of
overwhelmed us," said Point
Pleasant football coach Steve
Safford. "We are going to
play a game because that is
what Jarod would have want-

Tuesday, September 19
Volleyball
Rock Hill at South Gallla, 5:30p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Federal HocKing, 6 p.m.
South Point at OVCS, 5:30p.m
CI'1Uiicothe at Gallla Academy. 5:15p.m.
Soccer
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
,Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 7 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 5 p.m.

GoH
TVC Hocking at Fede~ Hocking, 4:30p.m.
Wahama at St. Joe, 4:30p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Punt, pass arid
kick coming
to Pomeroy ·
POMEROY
The
Meigs
High
Athletic
Boosters, along with Pepsi,
will hold their fifth annual
Punt, Pass and Kick competition at Bob Roberts
Field in Pomeroy on
Sunday, Sept. 24 at noon .
The competition is open
to boys and girls ages 8 to
15 and is free of charge.
Age groups are determined
by the age of the contestant
as of December 31 of the
current year.
A copy of your birth certificate is required and no
football cleats are allowed,
contestants must wear tennis shoes. Footballs and
kicking tees are provided.
For more information
contacl Jimmer Soulsby at
992-6728.

Tennis lessons
being offered
GALLIPOLIS - The
0.0.
Mcintyre
Park
District is now accepting
registrations for tennis
lessons to be held at
Raccoon Creek County
Park Saturday mornings
September 16, 23, 30 and
October 7.
There will be a small fee
·
for all four sessions,
Children 13 and under
will be from !'0-11 a.m.
and II a.m. to noon for
14
and
over.
kids
Equipment will be provided.
For more information ,
please
contact
Mark
Danner at 446-4612 ext.
255.

OVP

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

1-740-446-2342 ext. 3;1
F•x- 1·740-446·3008
E~m•ll- sports@mydallysentlnel.com

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC • PON AC • BUICK • GMC
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
·

ed u' to do. he would have
wanted u' to continue on."
Stouffer was the top returning defen&gt;ive player for the
Big Black&gt;. resulting in his
being named defensive captain on this year's team.
Stouffer also spent time at
tailback. getting a touchdown
during whal will be his last
Please see Emotional, Bl

Volleyball
Jackson at River Valley. noon
N·Y. Sciotoville at South Gallia, 11 a.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Marietta, 1 p.m.
Ripley at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m
Girls SoCcer
·
Lincoln County Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy, Meigs at Logan, 10 a.m.
River Valley at Williamstown Invite, 10 a.m.
Golf
·
South Gallia at Adena Invite, 1 p.m.
College Soccer
Embry-Riddle at Rio Grande, 7 p.m.
Women's College Soccer
Rio Grande at Marietta College, 4 p.m.
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at Cumberland Invite, TBA
College Cross Country
Rio Grande at Cedarville Invite, 5 p.m.

ComAcrUs

•With Approved credit through CMA.C • Sale' end• -'uly 31, 2006

BY LARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Point Pleasant team

HI(; II SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL

Eastern
sweeps
Fed Hock

Meigs
stQmps
Belpre

STAFF REPORT

10

Total Offense

teama from Gall~a. Meigs and Mason counties

Mqnday. Saptamber 18 ·
Volleyball
River Valley at Meigs, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Fairland. 5:30p.m.
Fort Frye at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Ha'nnan, OVCS at Soutl'1ern, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy ~ttronton, 5:15p.m.
Golf
Gallia Academy. River Valley at
Wellston , 4 p.m.
TVC Ohio at Fairgreens, 4:30p.m.

•

TfAM lfA.DERS

'

on its roster wearing No. 1.
None of those names are
household
names, except
This season, eight of the 11
maybe in their own houses.
Big Ten teams have a player
wearing No. 1. Only Michigan, LSU takes the prize with
Michigan State and Wisconsin three players- a defensive
didn't designate someone nu- back, a receiver and a kicker
-wearing No.1.
merouno.
No. 1's are a rarity in the
Probably the biggest name
College Football Hall of Fame
among the other' Big Ten
but there are eight players
teams' No. 1's is Penn State
cornerback Justin King, one of who wore it in the Pro Football Hall of Fame, most nothe better freshmen in the
tably Warren Moon, Jim
league last season.
Thorpe and Curly Lambeau,
Every team ranked in The
whose name is on the Green
Associated Press Top 10.this
Bay Packers' stadium.
week has at least one player

cans Notre Dame has had,
only two have worn No. 1.

POMERO'r' -A schedule ol upcaning college
and hig1 school varsrty spor1mg tMIIlls "-'olving

Friday, September 15, 2006

SJ&gt;Oll&gt; Stolt

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446·2342. ext.-33
bsherman@ mydai1ytribune .com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
Ierum@ mydailyregister.oom

SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

STEWART- Eastern had
a little problem in the second
game, but aside from that,
~ederal Hocking was no
problem at all.
The undefeated Lady
Eagles improved to 11 -0
overall and 3-0 in Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division with a sweep of the
Lady Lancers on Thursday.
Eastern won by scores of 2513, 25-22 and 25-10.
Katie Hayman scored 14
points
and
Darcy
Winebrenner added 13 for
the winners. Jillian Brannon .
went for nine, while Kelsey
Holter, ·Erin Weber and
Brittany Bissell chipped in
three each.
Eastern was a very efficient 69-of-71 from the service line.
As well as the Lady Eagles
served the ball, they spiked it
just as well. Weber had nine
kills while Winebrenner and
Brannon added eight and
seven respectively. Hayman
added two and had four
blocks. Weber led the way in
blocks with six.
Bissell handed out 27
assists.
Federal Hocking salvaged
a split on ·the night with a
win in the reserve contest by
scores of 15-25, 25-23 and
25-18.
Eastern begins a · threegam home stand Tuesday
when Fort Frye visits. On
Brad Sherman/photo
Tuesday the Lady Eagles
Meigs'
Patti
Vining
bumps
the
ball
during
the
Lady
Marauders
'
3-0
victory
over visiting
tackle Trimble and on
Belpre on Thursday.
Thursday its Waterford.

BY LARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAIJ_YREGISTER .COM

ROCK SPRINGS - As
each game went along,
Meigs flexed its muscles
and each game got a little
.
easier to win.
In
fact , the
Lady
Marauders (4-2. 2-1) got
better and better as the
evening
went
along
Thursday evening as MeiJ:;S
went on to defeat Belpre m
~truight sets 25-16, 25- ~ 0
and 25-6.
Meigs was led by Amy
Barr who was a perfect 14for-14 serving with four
kills, 17 assists and three
blocks on the evening.
Lesley Preece added four ·
kills. three assists and a
block while going 13-hJr-14
serving.
Patti Vining had six assists
while going 15-for-15 serv ing, Catie Wolfe was 15-for17 serving with 13 kills and
Amber Burton added 12
kills during the win over
Belpre. Tal isha Beha was 4for-4 serv ing. Cassi Whan
was 1-for- 1 serving. Chalsie
Manley was 8-for·9 servi ng.
· Michelle Weaver was !-forI serving and Hailey
'Ebersbach
added
four
blocks on I he night.
On a whole. Meigs was
71-for-75 serving. w;th 33
kills, 26 assists and eight
blocks.
Meigs will return to action
6 p. m ~ Monday when River
Valley travels tn Rock
Springs.

Somerville continues to lead Riverside Senior League
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MASON, W.Va. - Paul
Somerville
of
Point
Pleasant has amassed a total
of 282 points for the 2006
·season to lead hi s closest
rival , Clark Greene of
Hurricane, with 263.5
points.
In third place with 263
points is Southern High
School ·g olf coach Mick
Winebrenner. The last play-

er with an outside chance of
catching Somerville is Jack Senior Me,.s League Standings · .
Fox of Clifton with 252.5
1. Paul Somerville 2B2; 2. ClarK Greene 263.5; 3. MlcK Winebrenner 263; 4. Ken
points for the season of the Whit~d 252.5: 5. Jack Fox 232; ·s. Jim Capehart 227; 7. Kenny Greene 219.5; B.
Don Waldie 218.5; 9. Pat Williamson 214; 10. (lie) Harley Rice and CtJrtis Grubb
Senior Men's Golf League.
212; 12. Tom Nunnery 210.5; 13. Dick Dugan 208; 14. Russ Holland 203.5; 15.
There are two week s Jack Maloney 202.5; 16. Claude Proffln 200.5: 17. (tie} Gerald Kelly and Bill Yoho
197.5; 19. Wes Peterson 194; 20. Clyde Jarvis 193: 21 . Gary Minton 190: 22. Bob
remaining in the 2066 cam- Oliver
189.5; 23. Ray 011\/er 187.5; 24. Paul Lanllam 185.5: 25. (tie) Bub Stivers
paign which makes a possi- and Ed Wilson 185; 27. Don Fields 184; 28. Bill Pethel183; 29. Earl Johnson 181;
ble 40 points left to be taken 30. George Miller 178.5; 31. Bill Winebrenner 178; 32. Gene Gray 176.5:33. Mike
175.5:34. Jim Gordon 173; 35. Haske! Jones 172:36. (tie) Phil Burton and
by the first place team Bragg
Chet Thomas 171.5; 38. Don Wilson 162; 39. Craig Barnes 159; 40 . Nick Salem
158.5: 4t. Ru,. Wood 156.5; 42. Don Kay t49.5
members.
There were 58 players on
Tuesday to make up 13 allow 15 points to the win- by the team of Mick
teams of four players and ners. The first place score of Winebrenner, Jerry Arnold.
two teams of three meh to 59 at II und~r par WijS shot Haske! Jones and Jim

Cunningham.

There was a tie for second
with scores of 61 between
the teams of Mick Fetty.
Paul Lanham. Nick Salem
a)ld Paul Somerville and
Willis Korb. Kenny Greene
and Ru ss \Vooi.I.
The closest to the pin
winners were Lanham on
No. 14 and Jim Gordon on
No. 7. Two weeks remain ·
before the league finals and
awards
dinner
on
September 26.

Lady Toniadoes drop ·Close· J?evils to face Chillicothe
contest to Miller in five sets . n; ~~~~M~ey as~~:down

Gallia Auademv. one ·of
25-22, but fell in the finale 14-16. Southern
the stronger title contenders.
had tied the score in the final game on Eddy
CHILLICOTHE - It's begins '~ brutal five-game
scores, but after a side out Hillary Bray only the 11rst week of league stretch to kick off the league
delivered the last two points to seal the win play, and Gall ia Academy portion of the schedule - it
for Miller.
versus Chillicothe is being all starts with the surpris ing
Wolfe-Rifflehada21-of-28passingnight called a championship game Chillicothe Ct!valicrs.
with II assists, four kills, two aces, and one by some.
The two South Division
dink ; Emma Hunter had a 13-of-16 passing
Of course, there will like- teams will meet 7:30 p.m.
night, eight assists, two kills and an ace ly be . another "champ i- - Friday at Herrnstein F1eld.
Sarah Eddy was 15-of-26 passing wit~ onship game·• next week ... It 's the much-anticipated
three kills and three dinks; and Stephanie and the next .. and the next. dehut of the new-look
"I wouldn't go so far to SEOAL. which expanded
Cundiff was 15-of-24 with five kills and a
dink. Amber Hill was 9-of-15 passing, and say its going to sett le the from six teams to 10 this
SEOAL
championship.'' school year.
Rashell Boso had a kill and three dinks.
For the Blue Devils. who
commented
Galli a Academy
Soulhern won the reserve game in three
Matt
BokovitL, have won handily over their
sets 25-17, 1.7-25, and 25-19. Breanna coach
Taylor led Southern with II points. Kasey "because there's some really first three opponents. Friday
Turley added nine, and Ashley Walker and good football team.&gt; out also marks the beginning of
there."
one of the toughest stretches
Katie Woods each had seven.
Welcome. to the expanded of games in the program's
Southern hosts Ohio Valley Christian and
Southeastern
Ohio Athletic
Hannan, W.Va. on Monday in a non-league
Pleas;e see Key, Bl
Leag\le,
where
there's never
tri •match.
BSHERMAN@MYDAI'LYTRIBUNE.COM

BY SCOTT WOLFE .
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE - The Miller Falcons defeated
the Southern Lady Tornadoes in five sets
125-17, 22-25. 25-19, 22'25, and 16-14 Thursday
night in girls varsity vol-'
leyball action at Hemlock.
Hillary Bray le&lt;\ the
Falcons with 19 points,
Kancice Kaido had II. and
Katie Searles had 12 for
the winners. Southern was
led by Whitney WolfeRiffle with . 13 points,
Sarah Eddy had . II, and
Wolfe-Riffle Amber Hill had I0.
After going down 1-2,
Southern fought back to tie the score
behind Wolfe-Riffle spikes and serving
from Eddy. Southern won the fourth game

�.

•
www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, September 15. 2006

('age 82 • The Daily Sentinel

o. 9 WVU thumps Maryland
BY

JOHN

•

Key ·
from Page Bl

RABY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

rich history. After Chilli Logan. Portsmouth, .Ironton
MORGANTOWN , W.Va.
and
Jackson await in suc- Steve Slaton ·s speed and
cessive weeks. ·
Maryland's
sloppiness
But
for
now,
it 's
turned West Virginia's first
Chillicothe, a school revitalanticipated test of the seaized by an exit from the
son into a Iaugher.
tough-as-nails Ohio Capital
Slaton rushed for 195
Conference and the influx of
yards and No. 5 West
some new talent.
Virginia
forced
five
"For us. its a super big
turnovers and used a 28-0
game because its our next
first -quart ~ r blitz to beat the
game and they're a pretty
Terrapins 45-24 Thursday
good opponent," Bokovitz
night.
said
Slaton, a sophomore.
"We're not going to worry
scored two · first-quarter
about · anything past Friday
touchdowns in his first
night ri~ht now. All eyes are
on Chillicothe we'll
career
action
against
worry about the next one
Maryland. the school that
when the time comes." '
offered him a scholarship,
And Chillicothe has given
then withdrew it.
many
coaches in the SEOAL
Pat White threw for a TD
something to worry .about.
and ran for another while
The
Cavaliers turned heads
Darius Reynaud scored
by
winning
their first two
twice for the Mountaineers
games
of
the
season. a 14-5
(3-0), including on a 96victory
over
Brookhaven
and
yard kickoff return.
a
3
1-2
1
win
over
North
With scouts from the
Division power Logan.
· Orange and Fiesta bow Is
Chillicothe coach Bill
AP photo
and 15 NFL teams in allenDavidson
and company are
dance,
West
Virginia West Virginia's Steve Slaton, center, celebrates his first touchdown versus Maryland with talking SEOAL t1tle ahd
jumped to a 38-10 halftime Owen Schmitt, right, and teammates Thursday during the first quarter of a college football playoffs, a place they haven't
· lead, its highest first-half game at Milan Puskar Stadium in Morgantown.
been si nee 1999.
output since scoring 35 in a Hollenbach was intercepted set up Reynaud's 5-yard with Hollenbach throwing a
"The significance of this
45-13 win over Connecticut twice and· the Terrapins scoring catch from White, 6-yard TD pass to tight end game is big. It's a home
last season.
fumbled the ball ~way three who also had a !-yard TD Joey Haynos in blown cov- game corning back from a
West
Virginia
beat tirnes,'twice by Josh Wilson run in the third quarter.
erage ..·[t was the first TD loss on the road, it's the first
Maryland (2-1) for the third on kickoffs.
Jay Henry's interception allowed
by
the official SEOAL game ...
straight year, the first time
West
Virginia
has set up West Virginia's Mountaineers in eight ever," Davidson said. "Our
kids set several goals, and
that's happened since 1996- outscored opponents 139- fourth touchdown.
quarters.
one
was to win the SEOAL.
98. The teams have met 37 in three home games and
Slaton ran 52 yards to the . After the teams traded
They
want to get to the state
every year since 1980.
heads on the road for four Maryland 2. He fumbled on field · goals,
Reynaud ·playoffs, so there's a lot on
Maryland, which had of i.ts next five games.
the next play, but tight end picked up his own fumble
wins over Division 1-AA
Slaton has 503 yards Brad Palmer pounced on at the 4-yard lin~ in the the line. If we win, we get
closer to our goal. If we lose,
William &amp; Mary and unher: already this season. He has the rolling ball just before it
of
the
half,
final
minute
the ~oals won't ~o away, but
aided Middle Tennessee. exceeded 100 yards in the went out of the end zone for
took
off
up
the
middle
and
it w11l be harder. '
State,
watched
the first half in all three games. his first career touchdown
The 2-1 start is an encourWest
Virginia's
first
scored
Mountaineers compile more
He had 149 yards in the and a 28-0 lead.
than 300 yards on the first quarter alone .agamst . Maryland had never pre- kickoff return for a touch- a~ing one for a team that hasn 1 had a winning season
ground for the third straight Maryland when
West viously allowed that many down in 31 games.
since
that last playoff season.
Lance Ball's 11-ylud TO
game . .
Virginia scored on all Jour points ·in a quarter under
One
of
the biggest reasons
West Virginia's young possessions.
sixth-year coach Ralph run early in the third. quar- for the turnaround is
ter pulled Maryland within Huntington Ross transfer
Slaton had early TD runs · Friedgen.
defense, pressed to force
more turnovers, also deliv- of 38 and 37 yards. A fum Maryland drove 80 yards 38-17, but the Terrapins Clay Beeler (6-foot- 1, 217
ered. Maryland's Sam ble recovery on a kickoff to start the second quarter got no closer.
pounds), a running back and
linebacker with Division I
talent.
"He's kind of like the missing ingredient for them from
last year," Bokovitz said. "A
big physical presence ."
CINCINNATI (AP) - momentum going into LA. . Philadelphia
and
San
The Padres sent nine batBeeler, who has gained
With another pursuer bumped I'm sure they're going to be Francisco.
ters to the plate in the sev- 192 yards on 36 rushed this
to the roadside, the San Diego ready to . go and everything.
The Reds have no more enth, scoring four times on
Padres packed up their wild- And it's going to be a bi~ games with the Padres or the two hits. San Diego loaded season, leads the power runcard lead and headed for a Friday night matinee in LA.' Central-leading St. Louis the bases on a single, a walk ning game- something that
first-place showdown on the .Before they could think Cardinals, making it difficult and catcher Jason LaRue's has given Gallia Academy
pr6blems in recent years.
West Coast.
about moving up, the Padres to make up ground. The three poor decision - he threw to
"We haven't faced a runThis is going to be some had to take .care of a team games against San Diego third base too late to get a ning back like they have yet,
weekend in Los Angeles.
that's all but out of .it. amounted to a last chance.
forceout on Geoff Blum's in combination with an
sacrifice bunt.
"It's a great way to get on Cameron's two-run single off
And they blew it.
offensive line that can block
an airplane," manager Bruce .Aaron Harang (~:3-11) _could
Cameron, only 3-for-12 for him like they have,"
The Padres ' pitching staff,
Bochy said Thursday, after a go down as the hit that finally among the NL's best, had a against Harang, then worked Bokovitz added. "It's going
4-2 victory over the toppled the Reds, who lost lot to do with it.
the count full before lining a to be a real challenge, pi us
Cincinnati Reds turned the two of three in a pivotal
Clay Hensley (9-11) struck single to left to score two they've got some weapons
Padres' next series into exact- series.
out · a career-high seven and runs. As he rounded first that they can throw to as
ly what they wanted.
Since they moved within a retired 14 in a row over one base, Cameron slapped his well.''
With the NL West-leading percentage point of tirst place stretch. -rhe right-hander gloved hands together so hard
The main receiving threat
Dodgers losing to the Cubs 6- in the NL Central on Aug. 24, gave up two runs in 6 2-3 that' the smack was heard is all-stater Chris Givens (65, the Padres left town only a the Reds have lost 13 of 18. innings, then let one of the throughout the ballpark.
2, 191 ). one of the top athhalf-game out - their small- Cincinnati stands titih in the league's r deepest bull pens
Cameron played despite a letes in the SEOAL. Already
est deficit since Aug. 10.
wild-card race, trailing the take over.
painful left knee he bruised he has caught 13 passes for
Up next: Four games with Padres by 4 I/2 with 16
fouling
off a pitch the previ- · 314 yards.
Trevor Hoffman struck out
tirst place up for grabs.
games !ell.
Containing both will be
two in a perfect ninth for his ous night.
"Oh, man, it's about as big
"We've battled all year and 474th .career save, leaving
Harang, who had never lost necessary if the Blue Devils
as it can get around here,'' showed a lot of heart and him four shy of Lee Smith's to his hometown team, later want to retum to the Old
said Mike Cameron, whose character, but we're not 1n a record. Hotfman has convert- walked Hensley to force in French City victorious.
bases-loaded sinole broke good spot." manager Jerry ed 38 of his 42 chances this another run and end his out- · "You can't just say, 'hey
a
open a scoreless game
in the Narron sm'd . '
season, a big reason why the ing. Dave Roberts' run-scor- we've got to stop this guy
seventh inning. "We've got a
San Diego is 2 112 games Padres arc in playoff con- ing groundout completed the and make that guy beat us,'
we've got to kind of shut
little bit ·of energy and up in the wild-cm·d race over tention.
rally.
·

Reds·ran -further behind 'with loss

Emotional
Sizemore Twins
in select company ~urge past

'~ Indians'

from PageBl

CLEVELAND (AP) Grady Sizemore is proud to
be matching numbers of
. Hall of Fame players even if he claims he never
heard of Earl Averill ,. Chuck
Klein .or Tris Speaker.
Sizemore is in only his
second full season with the
Cleveland Indian s but has
matched all of those all-time
greats in several key offcnsi ve categories.
"It's a nice accomplishment, but not something that
I consciously set out to do,"
Sizemore said Thursday.
With 18 games remaining
before the Indians played
the Minnesota Twins on
Thursday night, Sizemore
had matched Klein as the
only players in Major
League history to pile up 50
doubles. I0 triples, 20
homers and 20 stolen bases
in one season. Klein did it in
1932 - 50 years before the
Indians' precocious center
fielder was born.
Sizemore
leads
the
American League in extrabase hits - · gs entering
· 'thursday,
which
ties
Averill's 1934 season for the

·

Cleveland

N
0
T
E
B
0
0
K
sixth-most in team history.
He's already matched two
of the cl ub's more recent allstars , Joe .Carter and
Roberto Alomar, as only the
third Indians player with
two seasons of 20-plus
homers and stolen bases.
Sizemore watched them
play on television, but said
he's not sure he knows much
about Speaker, baseball's
all-time doubles leader who
holds many of the Indians'
career records.
·. Speaker, Odell Hale
(1934) and Sizemore this
season are the only Indians
to have SO doubles and I0
triples in a season - but
Speaker did it three times, in
1920-21 and 1923.
Sizemore humbly said he
would like to match him.

CLEVELAND (AP) Torii Hunter and Rundell
White homered on consecutive pitches .in the eighth
inning to help the surging
Minnesota Twins beat the
Cleveland Indian s 9-4
Thursday night and pull
within one game of first
place.
The Twins' sixth victory in
seven tries moved them two
games ahead of the Chicago
White Sox in the wild-card
race and one game behind
the faltering Detroit Tigers in
the AL Central. The last time
Minnesota was within one
game of first place was the
second day of the season,
April 5.
Hunter drove in four runs
and finished with three hits,
and White also had three
hits. The win gave the Twins
a lift one day after they
learned that rookie sensation
Francisco Liriano is done for
the season because of an
injury to his pitching arm.
Jesse Crain (4-5) yielded a
tying. three-run homer to
Andy Marte in the sixth, but
worked ' I 1-3 innings for the
win.
j

carry, during the first football game of the year agai nst
Ripley.
He also lettered in baseball
before switching over to the
track and field team last
spring.
His loss has been very
hard on the community as
they try to honor and
remember him while also
remembering that life does
go on. And the support Jarod
had from the community
showed Tuesday night, when
a last minute prayer circle
resulted in hundreds filling
Sanders Stadium to lift his
name in prayer.
"Everybody has to deal
· with grief in their own way.
What we have attempted th1s
week is to keep everybody
as close as poss1ble and keep
their minds occupied and try
to focus on football and not
let their minds wander,"
Safford said. "We are going
to show ur. and attempt to
play, I don t know how well
we are going to play, but we
are going to continue on and
play regardless and put our
best foot forward and try to
honor Jarod the best we
can."
And a tragedy like this not
on ly hits the community

The Daily Sentinel• Page B3

Friday, September 15. 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

hard, but the surrounding
areas as well. During what
was to be the friendly renewal of a longtime rivalry game
between Meigs and Point
Pleasant after a handful of
years of not playing one
another now has the undefeated Marauders looking
·past their !lawless season
and looking toward helping
their neighbors across the
river.
"First and foremost, our
football team and coaches,
@ur hearts and our prayers go
out to the family of the
young man who passed
away, but also to the Point
Pleasant football team and
coaches. It is a terrible
tragedy, it is such a sad thing
when someone, especially a
young person, loses their
life," said Meigs football
coach Mike Chancey. "We
feel for coa10h Safford and
the whole Point Pleasant
football family, we want to
be supportive of them and do
everything we can to help
them get through this tough
time."
Before Friday's game,
some of the seniors will take
the field and hold a moment
of silence, followed by the
release of balloons as the
band plays the fight song a song Jarod never got tired
of hearing.
Meigs enters the game
against Point Pleasant 3-0, as
I

both of them down,"
explained Bokovitz. ·
·
Givens played quarterback
in last year's meeung, a 17-0
win for Galha Academy.
Sophomore Caleb Knights
(6-0. 163) is now at the controls of an offense that is
averaging 17 points and 287
yards per game.
But the advantage in the
battle of quarterbacks goes to
Gallia Academy and junior
signal caller Jeff Golden (60, 185).
Golden enters the game
completing 29-of-47 .passes
for 422 yards and four touchdowns. He has not been
picked off this year. More
mobile · than in previous
years, he displayed that in
last week's 42-13 win over
Point Pleasant by scoring
touchdowns of 14 and II
yards on the ground.
· The Blue Devils, offensively, are putting up 35
points and 338 yards per
game:
.
:
"We do so many things on
offense, I'm just glad we
don't have to defense it,"
admitted Bokovitz.
"We can get match-ups
against them, unless they
really change they way they ·
play defense, by motion and
by alignment and packa~es
that we have on the field.'
Gallia Academy will also
need a b.ig game from allpurpose
back
Jayme
Haggerty (6-1, 190). He'll
likely be matched up with
Givens - making for a
match-up between arguably·
the league's top two athletes.
Davidson, though. thinks
the outcome will come down
to who plays good, fundamental football.
"Everyone is making a big
deal about · Haggerty vs.
Givens," he satd. "That's
good and well, but this is like
any high school, college or
pro football game. It's going
to come down to the offensive and defensive lines, who
can get off the b~ocks and get
on their timing."
The Chillicothe boss is
also aware of the other
weapons in the Blue Devil
arsenal.
"They have a variety of
other kids who can play
(besides Haggerty) . Tpey
have running backs and wide
receivers who are very efficient.
"They'll line up in differ,
ent formations. Sometimes
they'll have three in the backfield, then they won't have
anyone in the backfield."
Austin King (6-0, 200)
·enters the game as the
Gallians' leading rusher with
185 yards on 25 totes with
four scores. Fullback Seth
Haner (5- 11, 185) has added
137 on the ground.
Shawn Thompson (6-4,
190), Chris McCoy (S-9,
170) and Cole Jones (6-2,
200) are all dangerous
receiving targets for Golden.
Eve1y game from here on
is a championship game all are mu st-wins in this
league.
"Its going to be no-holdsbarred for us, its a game that
we think we must have.
We 're just going to play our
guts eut and see what happens," Bokovitz said.
the Big Blacks .sit at 0-2 after
facing two very tough teams
in Ripley ·and Gallia
Academy after a rainout
postponed a week two game
against Sissonville.
"Their record is no indication of what kind of football
learn they have," said
Chancey. ''I think they are a
good football team and I
think they are anxious to
prove they are a better football team then their record
and 1 am sure the kids are
going· to be playing hard for
everything they have been
through . I think .we fll'e going
to have our work cut out for
us."

Meigs will rely on-veteran
quarterback Aaron Story and
running back Cornielus
English, who has lieen blaz•
ing th~ fields all season,
helping keep the Marauders
!lawless on the year.
Brandon Fisher and Brad
Ramsburg have 11iso been
big for Meigs this season.
Point Pleasant will rely on
its new run-pass attack to
help mix things up, as the
new offensive scheme has
helped them move the football · efficiently all season
long.
But first and foremost,
Point Pleasant will be playing for the honor of their
teammate Jarod Stouffer,
who will truly be missed by
all who knew him.
I

I shocking early

WR not sure he's worthy of the attention
BY RusTY

re for

BY Douo

FERGUSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

VIRGINIA
WATER,
England - Unbeatable for
two months, Tiger Woods'
winning streak came to a
·swift and sudden conclusion
Thursday when Shaun
Micheel knocked him out in
the first round of the World
Match Play Championship.
Woods had a 15-foot
birdie putt on the 15th hole
to keep alive his slim hopes,
but he removed his cap and
walked over to shake hands
· with Micheel as the ball was
still rolling left of the cup .
The score was 4 and 3,
matching Woods' worst loss
in match play.
"I don't think you're ever .
excited when you've lost,"
Woods said.
It's been a long time since
he has .
His winning streak began
about four hours away at
Hoylake , where Woods won
the British Open won the
British Open for the first of
five straight victories that
restored some of his !Tiysti~ue. That meant nothing to
M1cheel, who wasrun.ner-up
by live shots to Woods at the
PGA Championship last
month, but was hardly fazed
on a cloudy afternoon outside London.
After falling behind on the
first hole of the 36-hole
maich, Micheel won four
straight holes in the morning
to build a lead_that he never
gave up. Woods won the
tirsl two holes in the afternoon to cut the lead to one
hole, but he missed an 8-foot
birdie putt on the par-5
fourth - a recurring theme
-and failed to win another
hole until ·it was time to
leave.
And he had plenty of com-

'

'
'

:

'
r

.,,
\

•

critical 26-yard catch late in
last year's game against
Michigan where his
father, Eduardo. played that helped the Buckeyes pull
out a come-from·behind 2521 victory.
Then came the big game
against the Longhorns. which
helped open things up for
Ginn. which he Ired make
Smith more effectl\·e, which
gave the Buckeyes some
much ·needed
breathing
room.
.When Santonio Holmes
left a year early for the NFL,
many wondered who would
take his place as Ohio State's
gu-to receiver. With each
passing game, it appears the
answer is Gonzo.
Unlike just about everybody else, Gonzalez isn't
impressed with what he did
against Texas. He said it wasn't his best game.
An ongoing debate in the
locker room revolves around
who is faster - Ginn. whose
time in the 40-yard dash is in
the low 4-second range. or
Gonzalez.
Tressel suid it's almost a
tossup. The players' opinions
are almost split down the
middle. some favoring Ginn,
who can shift into another
gear when he has green space
in front of him. and the
sneaky-fast Gonzalez.
Gonzalez doesn't care.
Each Saturday is JUSt another
chapter in his interesting. offbeat. often curious existence.

WITH ENERGY EFFICIENT

STORM DOORS*·
September 15 - October 31, 2006

~

Jim Furyk, . who rose to
No. 2 in the world ranking
by winning the Canadian
Open on Sunday, got hammered by Robert Karlsson .
of Sweden, 6 and 4, highlighting a first round in
which six of the higher seeds
were beaten.
But the biggest to fall was
Woods.
He was the overwhelming
favorite in the HSBC World
Match Play Championship,
which set a record for
advance ticket sales with the
No. I player in the world
competing for the first time
in eight years. The fans were
packed around every green
and rushed from hole to hole
with
their
umbrellas,
although this isn't what they
came to watch.
Micheel is No. 77 in the
world rankings, and he hasn't won a tournament since
capturing the '03 PGA
Championship at Oak Hill.
But he looked solid from the
start, rarely missing the
green .and holing enough par
putts that Woods couldn't
make up any ground.
"Anybody can beat anybody on any given day out
here,"
·said
Colin
Montgomerie, a 1-up winner
over David Howell. "And
that's what is happening
today."
Even so, Montgomerie
walked into the press center
for his interview in time to
see Micheel make a 10-foot
eagle putt on the 1'2th hole to
go 4 up with six holes to
play, and he watch on just as
stunned as everyone else.
Woods looked bewildered
on the greens, badly missing
putts on the low s1de of the
hole as he struggled to find
the right speed.
"I just had . a hard time
with my pace, and if you
have· a hard time with your
pace, it's hard to read
greens," Woods said. "It got
a little better in the afternoon
on the back nine, but by then
it was already too late."
Woods also lost 4 and 3 to
Darren Clarke in the 36-hole
final of the Accenture Match
Pia~
Championship in
California six years ago.
The winning stre&amp;k had
been the longest of his
career.
Woods won six straight
PGA Tour events at the end
of 1999 and the start of
2000, · but he finished sixth
in the Johnnie Walker
Classic in the middle of that
run. He will try to match that
tour streak in two weeks at

Cincinnati on Saturday.
"We'll see this week," he
said. ~'If you think about the
COLUMBUS - Anthony other weapons on our team, it
Gonzalez has a tirm grasp of would be hard to convince
what he can do on a football me that you should pay more
field . The thing is, he's got attention to me."
more confidence in the talBeing in the background is .
ents of his teammates.
OK with Gonzalez. a cere"If I'm a· defensive coach bra! 6-foot, 195-pound
and I'm thinking about play- junior. The philosophy major
ers to stop on Ohio State's from Cleveland has always
offense, I wouldn't put been overshadowed in Ohio
myself very high on that list," State's 'high-octane offense.
tlie wide receiver for the topIn many ways he doesn't
ranked Buckeyes said. "I tit the mold of your typical
would put Ted (Ginn Jr.), jock at a football factory.
Troy (Smith). Tony Pittman
For instance, Gonzalez
and the running game in gen- sleeps in a hyperbaric chamem! above stopping me."
ber - a clear plastic "lent"
Texas defensive coordina- . around his bed- which simtor Gene Chizik apparently ulates high altitude and helps
agreed with Gonzalez. He the body to produce more red
focused his personnel on blood cells. After a restful
putting the clamps on the night in the zippered enclomercurial Ginn out wide and sure. Gonzalez says he has
on containing quarterback more energy.
Smith and tailback Pittman
Cornerback
Malcolm
out of th~ backtield.
Jenkins, who butts heads
That Was a big mistake.
each day in practice with the
All Gonzalez did was turn player the Buckeyes call
the game around. making a "Gonzo," said he 's not
career-high eight catches for creeped out by the vampire142 yards with a touchdown like aura around Gonzalez.
last Saturday ni~ht in the
Gonzalez, a three-time
Buckeyes' 24-7 VIctory over scholar-athlete of CL1ban
the defending national cham- descent, hopes to attend
pions and then-No. 2 te&lt;ml in Stanford Law School. But
the country.
the way his horizons and
The speedy complement to options are expanding on the
Ginn said he doesn't think field , that might have to wait
he'll be anything more than a a while.
· ·
afterthought,
It was Gonzalez and not
defensive
despite those gaudy numbers, the acclaimed speedster Ginn
when the Buckeyes host who leaped high to make a
MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP~

Tiger Woods watches his 2nd shot on the 12th hole on the
afternoon round during his match agai~st Shaun Micheel of
the United States m the World Match Play champtonshtp at
the Wentworth Golf Course, Virginia Water, England
Thursday.
the American . Express morning . for a 72; only ·
Championship
outside Simon Khan (74) had a
London.
worse score.
Next up is the Ryder Cup
Even so, Woods had two
in Ireland, and Thursday good chances tci get back
was an ominous sign for a into the match. Both times,
U.S. team that has lost four his putter failed him.
of the last live times. Woods
In the morning, he had
and Furyk, the top two putts inside 18 feet on five
Americans and likely part- consecutive holes for the
ners at The K Club, both win, but missed them all.
were beaten badly.
And after winning the first
The U.S. team is to arrive two holes in the afternoon to
in Dublin on Monday, and it cut the deticit to one hole, he
wasn't clear whether Woods chipped weakly to 8. feet on
and Furyk would stick the par-5 fourth and badly
around the British Isles for missed · his birdie putt.
the next four days or go Micheel two-putted for
home.
birdie from 60 feet to go 2
"Good question," Woods up, then restored his lead
said. "Right now I'll proba- with an 8-iron into 3 feet on
bly go work out and get the seventh.
some of this frustration out."
His departure was a big
Furyk didn't have much of surprise, b.ut only the corpoa chance against Karlsson. rate sponsor was shedding
who will be making his tears.
Ryder Cup debut : The
"[t makes our job a lot easSwede tied a tournament ier," Michael Campbell said
record by making four after a 3-and-1 victory over
birdies on the par 3s in the Khan.
morning round, leading by
Campbell, the No. I seed
as many as six holes while as defending champion, and
shooting 64. He cooled Luke Donald (No. 7) were
slightly in the afternoon, but 'the only top seeds to
by then the lead was too advance in the 16-man field
much for Furyk to over- that is chasing the $1.87 milcome.
lion prize, the richest among
Micheel shot 70 i.n the official golf tournament s.
morning and was 3 under Donald went 36 holes before
through 15 holes in the after- beating Tim Clark.
noon _ not the best golf of ·•J think we lose some TV
the first round, but more ratings," Paul Casey said
than enough. Woods needed after
whipping
Retief
to birdie the 18th hole in the Goosen.

ScreenAway"'
EasyVent'M
Rwactable
Screen
Storm Door
Model 346-60
White

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

---

t.
•

. 180378

160121
160148

M""·"~~ 'l¥''~~'"!

MANUFACTURERS

$130.99

$292.99

SUGGESTED RETAIL

YOUR FINAL COST

$15.00
$13.10

$15.00
$29.30

- MoU..Jo • - Sl11inp
-10% Enorgy 1'111 CndH

$102.89 .

$248.&amp;9

LIFESTYLE
Full-View
Storm Door
Model 345-54
White

•

~,,

Screen Away"
Retractable
Screen
Storm Door
Model370-81
White

l

•
l

Wie in trouble again
FARMINGTON; Pa (AP) - The course was too long,
the competition too good. Michelle Wie has an exceptional
golf game for a 16-year-old, except when she's playing
against the men.
. .
.
HeaVy overnight rdin softened up the third-1ongest course
on the PGA Tour and created 1deal scorin~ conditions
Thursday at the 84 Lumber Classic, but not for Wie. Her
sixth attempt to became the first woman in 61 years to make
.a cut in a tour event looks to be unsuccessful, much 'like the
other five . .
. Wie.' playiniJ in her third and last U.S. men's toumament
this year, shot a 5-over 77 on a day when there were 25
,scores in the 60s on the expansive Mystic Rock course. She
has almost no chance to make a cut that was at even par a
year ago.
''I don't feel any extra pressure because I'm a girl out
\!tete," said.Wie, who turns 17 next month.
.
She was.jn a five-player tie for I25th. with the top 70 and
des after the' SC!iOO!ld round advancing to weekend play.
Nicbolas Thompson,·a 2005 qualifying school graduate
who is 181 st on the money list, took advantage o.f an early
statting time on· a course soaked by I 1/2 mches of
overnight min for an 8-1mder 64. It was the tournament's
lowest round since Vijay Singh's opening-ro\)nd 64 in 2004.

VALUE-CORE
Self-Storing
Storm Door
Modei288-SS
White

t

179434
179442

{,'

•

MANUFACTURERS
SUGGESTED RETAIL

17802
17804

$188.99
$15.00
$18.90

- Moll-In R-e Sa1rinp
- 10% EnBftll' Tax CradH

YOUR FINAL COST

$155.09

SALE ENDS
OCT. 31, 2006

$150.59

• Stotm ooorn can save up ro45% energy loss lhJOugh ltie OjiOOing
" $15.00 mait·in 1et1ate from laflOil Wling 1he LaiSOI\ Fall Sate Sept 15 -Ott. 31
... ~I Ll!fSOil stilrm lim now el~ib~ for the erergy tax credh: www.energystar.gov fOr details

&amp; Supply
Co.
.

$15.00
.$1840

Umlt two purellasea per eu&amp;tomer or !ami~. Nolvalld wnh any olhel offe1.

AVAILABLE AT:

Valley

$183.99

555 Park Street
Middleport, OH
992-6611
Mon-Fri 7-5
Sat. 7-3

-- ·---·---- - - - - - -.,-

�Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
North Division
SEOAL
W-L
PF
PA
W-L
Warren
2-1
0·0
0
0
Athens
1-2
0-0
0
0
1-2
0-0
0
Logan
0
ZaneSIIIII&amp;
1-2
o-o o 0
Manetta
0-3
0-0
0
0
SDulh Dlvlalon
SEOAL
W-L
W-L
PF
PA
Gallta Academy
3-0
o-o o 0
Chtlllcothe
2-1
00
0
0
2-1
Ironton
0-0
0
0
Jackson
2·1
0-0
0
0
Portsmouth
0-0
0
0
1-2

ALL
PF
47

PA
68

52
60
35

76
97
71

n

ALL
PF
104
52
65
80.
105

Ohio Valley Conference
W-L
0-0
•0-0
0-0
0-0
0-0
0·0

CoaL Grove
Rock Htll

Chesapeake
Rtver Valley
South Potnt
Fatrland
Friday's games

Valley at Chesapeake
Coal Grove at Mmlord
Fairland at Tols•a
Rwer Valley at Alexander
Rock Htll at Portsmouth West
SOuth Potnt at Greenup County

ovc

.

ALL
PA
PF
W•L
66
32
2·1
123 ~ 4
2-1
0
0
1-2
98 , 116
0
0
1-2
39
95
0
0
f-2
42
70
0
0
34
72
0-3
0
0
Frldty, September 22
Chesapeake at Tolsta
Sctotovllle at Coal Grove
Fatrland at Metgs
Ptke County at Rtver Valley
RocK Hill at Wellston
Northwesl at South Point
PF
0

PA
0

Tri.Yalley Conference
Ohio Division

TVC
W-L
PF
0-0
0
0-0
0
00
0
0-0
0
0·0
0
0-0
0
Hocking Division

Metgs
Nelsonvtlle-York
Alexander
Belpre
Vtnlon Counly
Wellston

W-L
0-0
0-0
0-0
0 0
0-0
0-0

Federal Hocktng
Southern
Tnmble
Water1ord
Eastern
Miller
Friday's games
River Valley at Alexander
Belpre at Federal Hocktng
Metgs at Point Pleasant
Nelsonvtlle-Yo rk at Crooksvtlle
Waverly at VInton County
Wellston at Oak Htll
S! Marys at Eastern
Mtller at Btshop Rosecrans
Southern al Hannan
Trtmble a! Symmes Valley
Water1ord at Fort Frye

ALL
PF
112
125
83
19

44
48

ALL
W-L
PF
PA
2-1
48
0
2-1
54
0
0
2-1
81
0
0
2- 1
50
0
0
0
0
0-3
40
0-3
14
0
0
Friday, September 22
Eastern at Belpre
Fairland at Meigs
Trtmble at Nelson'o'l1le- York
Vtnlon County at Minford
Rock Htll at Wellston
Miller at South Gallta
Wtrl County at Southern
Beallsvtlle at Waterford
Saturday, September 23
Alexander at Federal Hocktng

PA
37
57

96
75
63
101

PA
20
35

54
48
112
70

BEREA - , Charlie Frye
watched the NFL's scariest
videotape and wasn"t fnghl·
ened at all.
The sight of a shdmg
Kansas C1ty quarterback
Trent Green "s head snappmg
back from a vicious - but
legal - hil from Cmcmnati
defensive
end
Robert
Geathers last week. hospitalized Green, horri fled some
around the league and
renewed debate about protecting QBs.
For Frye, the jamng tackle
only d1d one thmg .
"See, that's why I don "t
slide," the Browns quarterback said.
Frye, though, nught want
to reconsider how he fimshes
h1s runs 1f he plans to scramble as much as he did in
Cleveland's season-opening
loss to New Orleans last
week. With no receiver open
enough lo throw lo or h1s
pocket collapsing around
h1m, Frye simply tucked the
ball under h1s arm and rook
off. rushmg for a team-h1gh
44 yards on six attempts
Frye also scored on a !yard nm, but he had to scamper about 20 yards to get lo
the end zone
But nol once d1d Frye
think about baihng out
before contact.
"Unless a linebacker 1s
coming at me at full speed.
I'm not going to hit the dirt,'"
Frye said. "That's kmd of
hke a give-up play. I'm not
saymg Trent Green was giving up, but that's my mental-

PA
30
38
78

Friday, September 22
Miller at South Gallta
Wahama at Hannan

Cardinal Conference
CARD
W-L
PF
PA
35
6
20
13
1·0
1-0
28
21
0-0
0
0

1·0

0·1

6

35

Q-1
(}.1

21

28
20

13

ALL
W-L
3-0
2-0
2·1
0-2
2-1
0-3
12

PF

PA

80

33

54

27

72

61
61

33

70

70
42
32

81
41

Fr1day, September 22
• Herbert Hoover at Clay Co
Chapmanville al Logan
BuHal at Poca
Potnt Pleasant at Winfield
Wayne at StSSOn'o'tlle

Friday's gamea
Logan al Herbert Hoover
Meigs al Point Pleasant
S1ssonvtlle al Clay Co
Wayne at Wtnlteld

On Wednes(lay, the league
absolved Geathers of any
wrongdoing, saying he had
lhe right to h1t Green. who
started "a late slide •• In addillon, Geathers was blocked
in the back by a Kansas City
player and was no longer m
control of his body when he
slammed his nght shoulder
into Green's
The league sent a memo to
all 32 teams, outlining the
rules of sliding for defenders
and quarterbacks
Browns coaches have
urged Frye to slide whenever
possible, but he'd prefer to
slay on his feet
"There are situations for
that (shding),'' he said. "But

Galli a
County
OH
Webs1tes:
In One Week With Us
www.myda1tytribune.com
E-mail
www
myda1lysent1nel.com
classif1ed@mydailytnbune com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www.myda!lyregister com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE .
To Place
Sentinel ·
m:rtbune
'1\egister
c Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
all Today... Or Fax To 446-3008
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Oear//;;,~
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

AP photo

Cleveland Browns quartelback Charl1e Frye runs for a first down aga1nst New Orleans Sa1nts' Bnan
Young (66) 1n the t111rd quarter of an NFL football game 1n th1s Sept 10 file photo 1n Cleveland.
Runmng back Reuben are surrounding him at two,
when there's two yartls to get
to the sucks I'd rather go for Droughns was reminded that he's not gomg to try to bull
It was Frye and not him who his way through for the other
It and get the first down "
eight yards. I think he' s
Frye mana~ed to avoid led the club in rushing.
"Kind of sad, wasn't 1t? smart enough to know to
excessive pumshment on his
dashes, but he other\\ise smd Droughns, who ran for protect himself when he can
took a poundmg as the Saints more than 1,200 yards last and he'll shde when he has
to. He's smart enough."
sacked him five times, season
knocked him to the ground
Frye had no mtent 1on of
Notes: Walt M1chaels, Jim
on several other plays and running wild last week, and Houston, Doug Dieken and
generally roughed him up
the second-year QB has no Earnest Byner are the newest
Following the game. Frye, plans of makmg 11 a habit.
Cleveland Browns Legends,
who has been sacked 27
'" In a perfect world . 1 don 't voted by fan s and a !0-memtimes m s1x career starts, go into the game saymg 1 ber panel. The players will
hobbled awund the locker want to run," he smd "But be honored at the Nov. 26
room l1ke an old man. The sometimes the tempo of the home
game
against
•
Ci ncmnati as part of the
Browns can only hope he
comes out ot Sunday"s game game, if rhmgs aren t gomg Browns' alumm weekend. ..
at Cmcinnati in better shape. very well. you have to do CB Daylon McCutcheon
Besides sendmg Gr(\en to somethmg to spark the team practiced for the second
the hospital with a senous or do whatever II takes to straight day, mcreasmg his
concussion. the Bengals' wm That's the mentality that chances of playing against
Bengals. He has been sidedefense recorded se ven I have"
Coach
Romeo
Crennel
lined
since training camp
sacks, forced three Jumbles
Isn
't
concerned
about
Frye
tollowmg
knee surgery. . S
and limited the Ch1efs" highbemg
mobile
as
long
as
he
Brian
Russell
(elbow) is listpotent attack to JU St 289
doesn' t take any unnecessary ed as quesuonable while WR
yards
chances
- or shots If Joe Jurevicius (ribs), TE
Cleveland's ottcnsc sputthere's
room
to run, Crennel Darnell Dmkms (hamstring)
tered, to say the least, at
wants
Frye
to
take advantage and Nick Eason (ankle) are
home In Week I The
B10wns d1dn 't p1ck up a first of it, but not al the risk of · out. ... DE Jovan Haye was
re-signed to the practice
down until !ale m the first hmb.
"Charlie
is
a
pretty
heady
squad, a day after bemg
half and fim shed with Ii\6
WR Kendnck
total ym~- only 85 com- football player," he said. l'lf waived
he needs 10 yards, and they Mosley was waived.
ing on tlie ground

HQW I0 WRITE AN AD

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publishing raserves
the rlghl to edll,
reject or cancel any

ad at any tlme
Must B
eported on the fir
of publication an
he Trlbuna-Senllnel
Errors

egister

will

b

eaponslbla far n
ore than the cost a

he space occuple
the error and onl
he llrs1 Insertion W
hall not bo liable lo
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omls
ion of an ad'o'ertlse
ent. Correc1ions wil
made in tt'te firs
vallable edition.

Current
pp1!es
All

Real

Eslat
dvertlsements ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

P u b l i c Not:lces In Ne'"'SPUP6!11-s.
Y o u r Ftlght. Ito Kno__. .. J:&gt;eUvc•· e d f.t.JMht. tc::» .,.~our Douor.

Help Wanted

amount ol $33,516.04
together wHh accrued
lnlereal In tho aum ol
$20,884.65
through
may 5. 2006, plus Interest !hereafter on tho
principal balance at
the rate ot 11.6% percent, per annum until
paid end lor
lho
Foreclosure ol tho
mortgage and
any
Interest owned by you
on tho raal estate
localod al1624 Lincoln
Hill,
Pomeroy,
OH
45769. A copy of lhe
legal daecrlptlon 11
attached horolo and
marked a1 Exhibit '"A".
Situated In the VIllage
of Pomeroy, County of
Meigs, and In the State
ol Ohio, Being known
and de1crlbod on a
map
of
LINCOLN
HEIGHTS, made be
Br10c1
&amp; Carper,
Reglatorod
Civil
Engineers, Huntington,
WV dated October 17,
1942 a copy ol which
was !lied In the office
ol the Recorder ol
Meigs County. Ohio, on
tha
17th
day
ol
Decembtr
1942,
recorded Tn Plot Book
3, page 43, 44 11 Lot
51.
And being more partieulorly doacrlbed 11 tot·
Help Wantad

tows: Beginning at a
point In the waolllno ol
Lincoln Rood, 11 lho
corner between Lots
50 and 51 11 shown on
said map, thence wHh
oald line ol Lincoln
Road, S. 27 dog. 36"
eaot 50 feet; thence
wllh lha line between
toto 50 and 52, S 62
deg. 24" wast 200 foal;
lhonce N. 27 deg. 36'"
weet 50 loot; thence
wllh lhe line between
Nld tote 50 and 51. N
62 deg. 24"' E 200 teet
10 tho place of b&amp;gln·
nlng. Parcel Number:
16-00515
And lhal lho dalondenla be re.qulred lo
aot up any lntereal thai
you hove In oold promIeee or be forever
barred; lhot upon tho
failure
of
1ald
Delondonte to poy or
cauoo to 1111 paid tha
oele Judgment within
lhrHdayafromltlrondillon, thai an Order ol
Sill be tuued 10 lha
Shorllf
ot
Melga
County,
Ohio,
lo
oppra!te, ·,advertlee
and 1111 aald real
eatete; that lho premiaea be 1ald loa and
clear olalllltne, clalma
and lntereela of any ol
tho partl11 herein; that
the procoeda ol Nld
l i l t be applied to
Plaintiff'• Judgment
and for auch other
rellol to which Plalnllff
Ia entH!ed.
Sold Deftndonta will
take notice that lhey

ore required to answer
said Complaint wlll1!n
twenty-eight (28) days
after the date ol last
publication ol this
notice which will be
publlahed once each
week lor six succes·
alve
weeks,
said
answer dote being the
151h day ol September,
2006. or ludgment wtll
be rendered accordlngly.
David
W.
Cliffe
(0059537)
Attorney tor Plaintiff
Woltman, Weinberg &amp;
Rata Co., LPA
525 VIne Street, Sullo
800
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
(513) 723-2200, lax :
(513) 723·2230
dclllleOwoltmon.com
(8) 11, 18,25 (9) 1, 8,15

Help Wanted

He lp Wanted

Public Notice
In the Court ol comman Plooa, Putnam
county, Ohio Bonellclal
Ohio, Inc. dba
Beneficial
Mortgage
Co. of Ohio
Plolnllfl,
VS
Joy 0. Ridgeway, otal
Dalandanll
Coae No. 06CV137.
Capital
Bonding
Corporation
whoso
1011 known addro11 Is
525 Penn Street, t200,

Reading, Pennaylvanla answer as to their
111101 and 234 South
4th Stroel, Columbua,
Ohio 43215. Ia hereby
nollllod that Beneficial

NURSE AIDES

Pleasant Valley Pnvate Duty is recruiting nurse aides for home care cases
located in Me1gs, Gallia and Athens
Counties. Flexible scheduling, excellent pay, mileage reimbursement, visits and hourly care available.
Cert1fication
1s
not
required.
Applicants must have one of the lollowmg: One year experience or lormal trammg or be state tested. For
more mlormation, call (304) 6757400.

AA/EOE

Ohio.
Inc.
dba
Beneficial
Mortgage
Co. ol Ohio Iliad a
Complaint
lor
Foreclosure and Other
Equitable Roller on
June 12, 2006, Case
No. 06CV137, on the
property described as
Follows·
Situated In the VIllage
ol Contlnonlal, County
ol Putnam and Sate ol
Ohio· In lot Number
one Hundred Fifteen
(115) In sold VIllage ol
Continental, Putnam
County, Ohio Parcel
No.
24-0511900000
Also known aa 204
South
4th
Street,
Continental ,
Ohio
45831, and that there
remains due and owing
S4Z,547.51 with Interoat at a varlsblo rate,
pursuant to the Note,
and currently ot lho
rate ol 13 5 percent per
annum trom January 1,
2006. and coats: 111at
lho defendants named
In the Complaint may
have an lnlorost In said
property;
thoraloro,
Plaintiff demanda that
It be found to have a
good, valid and tubslating lion on said
prem!aea,
lor
the
amount awing; lhal the
Delondanta equity ol
rodompllon be foroclooed; that elllhe parIlea be required to

liCENSED PRACTICAL NURSES
Pleasant Valley Private Duty is acceplmg
aP,plicalions for LPN ' s for pnvate duty
home care cases located 1n Me1gs County.
S1x months nursmg expenence and an
Oh1o license required Excellent working
cond1tions. For more information , call

(304) 675-7400
AAIEOE

Interest In said premiaas or ba forever borrad
!rom auerltng any
Interest thoro In; that all
Ilona on aa!d premises

be marshaled and their
prlorltleo determined;
thai said promlaoa be
sold aa upon execution
and proceeds ol said
sale be applied accordIng to law, and lor such
othar rolla! as Is just
equHablo.
Defendants llrst herelnabove mentioned Ia
further notified tha1

they are requ ired to
answer said complaint
on or before November

ment may be rendered
as demanded 111erein
Frank &amp; Wooldridge
Co. L.P.A
Attorneys
lor
the
Plslntlll.
600 South Pearl Streel
Columbus, Ohio 43206
614-221-1682
(9) 8 , 15., 22. 29, (10) 6,
13 •
---'-------'
Publ1c Notice
-------'-PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Saturday,
September 16, 2006 at
10:00 a.m ., a public
sale will be held at 211
W.
Second
St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmora Bank and
Savings Company Is
oalllng lor cash In
hand or certified check
tho following collatorat:
1999 Ford F250 Super
D
u
t
y
1FTNX21SOXED02527
2002 Chevrolet S-10
1GCCT19W428110278
1992
Olda
98
1G3CX53L5N4309670
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
reaerv~s the right to
bid at lhlo sale, and to
withdraw lhe above
colletorel prior to sale.
Further, Tho Farmer"s
Bonk and Savlnga
Company reserves the
right to roloct any or all
blda submitted .
The above described
colloteral will be sold
"as Is-where Is", with

acres, more or loss alluated In Town 7, Range
14, Ohio Company·s
Purchase and being a
part ol Fraction No. 32,
Section No 27, Scipio
Town,h!p,
Meigs
County,
Ohio,
described In Volume
239, Page 349. Meigs
County
Official
Recorda,
being
Auditor 's
Parcel
Number 17.()0453.000.
The real estolo Is
owned by Kim B. Neal,
Kit R. Neal snd Jelfrsy
Lea Neal, a one -a!xth
share each and by
David Jenkins,
an
undivided
ona-hall
Interest. Tha real estate
Ironto on State Route
143.
Oltora lor lhe real
eolato will be rocalved
by Kit R. Naol II Route
I, Box 24, Latart, WV
25253
and
whose
phone number II 304882-3190.
Blda will be received
until September 20,
2006 at 12:00 o"clock
noon.
The ownera reaorve
1110 right to relocl any
or all bide.
Kit R. Neal
(9) 13, 14. 15. 17. 18.19

Words t minOt ~xpren the /me, kmdneH and
thnti\IH 1lw11. n w tn u/ til;• demfr ofm\ lmrband
tmd Mtthelle and Victona .r fath er. lt&gt;ffre\ L
ROJIJit Thank 1011jor lilt' food flv,,ers giftr to

thr Rmnh Ch11Jmt s Fund allthl' h11fs am/
rhared tears Jeff !tad 1111 tdea lw1' l1e/ he wa~
rhOII§Itl rJf, •t or lum much he 11 ru /01 ed \fe Ius
fmmh tlum/.: lt•ufiJr tht' gift of sho 11 1/1g us haw
1m1jt.'/t tibout hmr We 11 t1u/d also l1ke w rhank
)OUjm tlfi!/Oieci'JdtUJlpor/ \l!liSCilt'Uf /)\0
wuh later whf'n Jrff J mmher pllued nwa\ Tile
tmd I would like tt• IIW~t l\ than/.: wu /or all
"'l'm•m sem ta God abme Oll l.lllf b.-half.
em h arul t'lf'n 011 ~ of them
l"l'l '''"' Ia''"''" """" 11 a~ Foorprmn In Tlte Sand
!mle "hllllllf' tlln t Jee uur
joorpr111/s Bel mue IWH n the ume whe11
Jews t .J t atn mg u 1 1
Tlumk You Dawn Mlth elle tmd Viwm a Roush

anted ads meetln
OE stand11rds

ANIIIOUI\CEMENTS

laada
lobDoae?

Shop
f'hs

s~oon
~
II rClass 1•11·eds r~i:fi~~,c.~~:::~'

Display Ads

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundaya Pilper

All Dl•play: 12 Noon~
Bu•lneaa D•v• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00 p . m .
Thuraday for Sunday•

• All ads must

rI rr~~

are llwaya contldenHII • Currant rltl card appllta. • All rill ttbtl advlll'tlllmflntl 11"111

2 {B wk) old male Ktttens
t1ger strtped ver y pl ayful
(304!773·5864

I

Free to good home English stand, tools, clothtng, storm
Red Ttch/Bulldog mt x 740· door, and many household
669 4206
1\em s Must se ll
1t6
Mabelme
Gall tpohs, OH
On e female Calico Cal, two - - - - - - - years old ftxed, liter tramed Rodney 2 famtly yard sale
Call388 0523
Fr1 15 &amp; Sat 16 Dewttt Dr
ott Cora Mtll Rd
Two female ktttens, whtte - - - - - - - - wtl h black spots, liter Sept t 6 2119 Chestnut
tratned Call 388.0523
Clot hing, aU srzes, work
school, averylhtng goes 50c:
or less (740)446 6984

Now H1ring
• Local Company needs
Parson or Persons wtth the
follow1ng background
~ Equtpment expenence
-1 Framing expenence
-1 Drywall Ftntshmg
" Pamters
" EQuipment mechantc
"CDL class A wlexpertence
Compettltve Pay ·
References will be checked
Call (304!373-0184
for apphcatton
Or send resume to
446-7 Route 33 W
Rtpley WV 25271

m

()

0
0

0

I~
1

www com1cs com

4x4's For Sale.......
..•••. , ..• . ..•••...•...... 725
Announcement.. ..... •••••. .
............. ... 030
Antiques............... .. .......... .. ....•.... . ... 530
Apartments for Rent ................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market
..................•.•••080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
... 760
Auto Ropalr ••••••...•....•••••••.•••• ••.•••••......... ....... 770
Autoa for Sale ........................................... 710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale . ... ........ .... . ....• 750
Building Supplies •.•.••••......••...... ...• .••..•. 550
Bua!nooa and Buildings •••.•. ...•••••••••.••. •..•••. 340
Buolnooo Opportunity ............................ 21 0
Business Training .. ........ ......•..•.. ..... ...•••.. 140
Campara I Motor Homeo .. ...•••••... . . .....••.. 790
Camping Equipment ....................... .... ........ 780
Carda ol Thanka ...•••••..... .•••.••.. .. ....•.••..• 01
Child/Elderly Care ... ........ .....•..•...... . •..••••. 190
EloctrlcaVRolrlgoratlon •...•..•••.•........•••.•.• 840
Equipment lor Ront ..................................... 480
EKcavatlng ................................................ 830
Farm Equlpmsnt .•.••••••... .....••••.••....•••••.. 610
Farmtlor Rent .....•••••..•.. .••••••• ••••... ...•••.•.. .•• . 430
Forms tor Solo ............................................. 330
For Looae •.•••.••.....•••••, ..... ...•••••.•• . ...••.•••. 490
For Solo.............. ......................... ..... ...•••.... 585
For Sale or Trsdo ........................................ 590
Fruita &amp; Vegatab1oa .................................... 580
Furnlehed Rooms•.•••...•.•••.•••.......•..••.••...••. 450
Olnoro1 Hauling ..••..••..•..••...•....•••.•••••.•.••850
Giveaway ......... .......................................... 040
Happy Ada ....... .......................................... .. .oso
Hay &amp; Groln ... .. .............. ........................... .... 840
Help Wonted .••. ••••••••. ... •••••.••.•• .•••••.•••.••.•..• 110

o

Houooho!d Goods ...••••..• ··········· ·" · •..••... 510
Houooalor Rent ......•••••.•.•.":..•..••••..... ...••••••. 410
In Memoriam .............................................. 020
Insurance ................... .. ............................. 130
Lawn &amp; Gorden Equipment ...... . • ...•••••... 680
Llvoatock •••.••••.•••••.•......••.••.••.•••••••.....• 830
Loot and Found ........................................ 060
Lots &amp; Acreage .......... ............ .. .................. 350
Mlecellaneoua....... • •.••.•.. .. ........ ....• 170
Mlecononeouo Morchandloe .....••••..•.....•••540
Mobllo Homo Ropa!r ..•.••••••••.•••• •••••••••••••••••••860
Mobile Homeo tor Rent ..• ••.........••.•••••...•..••420
Mobile Hom .. lor Sete •••.......••.••............••320
Maney to Loan ....... .................. ........... ........ 220
Motorcyc!eo &amp; 4 Wheelers ..••••••.• .....•••••••740
Mua!collnltrumonta ............... .••....•••... 570
Paraonala.... ............. .. ...... ...... ..•••..•. ...•... 005
Polo lor Solo .......... ....••••.•... ..••••••••.. ..... ..• 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating ........ ......•••....•..••••• 820
Prolootlonol Sorv!cn .•.......•••.•.. .... ...•••.. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Ropa!r ..... .. .......... .............. 160
Real Estate Wanted .................................... 360
Schooltlnttructton ••.••.••....••••.•... . .....••.. ... 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertlll•or . ....•.•••••....•.•••.•• 650
Situation• Wanted ........................ .......... 120
Space lor Rent •.......•.•.......•.•..•••..... •••••••.. ..480
Sporting Goode ......•....•••.....•.•.•......•••••.. 520
SUV'o lor Solo... .......................... . ...•..•••.. 720
Trucks lor Sale ... ............ ........... ....... ...... 715
Upholotery . ..••••.• . .• •.•••. ...•..••...... .••••••••••• 870
Vane For Solo .............. ............................. ..730
Wanted to Buy ...... ............... ..................... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm SuppUea .................. 620
Wonted To Do ................. ................ ........... 180
Wanted to Rent ..................,••••••...••.....••••.... . 470
Yard Sale- GalllpoUa... .•••••••••••••...••.•.•••... .072
Yard So!e-Pornoroy/Midd1o ••••.•. •••••••.••••••• ... 074
Yard Sale·Pt Pleaoont ••..•.•••••••........•.•••••• 076

© 2008 by NEA, Inc

t.,r__"".m.,·ANT!Di_
i 8UY __.JII110
Absolu te Top Dollar US
Stiver and Gold Cams
Proofsets, Gold Rings Pre
1935
U8
Currency,
Solttatre Diamonds M T S
Com Shop, 151 Second
Avenue Galhpolts, 740 446·
.2842

Yard sale 9·16-06, 8 OOam588 La ndcontract
wanted
Baby clothes, anttques, mts· HomefTratlerlland All concellaneous household
Sidered
Needed A S A P
Prefer the countrY , Pleas e
4 YARDSALE~a!1740 949·1030
PoMEROY/MmoLE
A1pe Pawpaws and Black
3 Famtly Yard Sale Friday Ws.lnuts(Oct 1 to Nov 10)
and Sat , Vtctor Wolfe, Elm and Gtnseng Please call
Streef Ractne Anltques· _1':.:rS1.:._7:.:4.:..0·.:..6.:..98:...6:...0:.:6.:..0_ _
Hanging Corner Cupboard
washstand, sewing box Fi re Wanted to buy 2002 Sea
foam
gre en
Galltpohs
Ktng Boys clothes 4-8 Plus Bandstand Chrtstmas bulb
Stze Womens
Books
sewing supplt es, matenal Top dollar paid (740)41 8·
7520
lurntture qullltng suppltes
Zuspan Metal Sal vage, Now
3 Famtly yard sale 2 m1 out buytng ]unk cars, buses
Flatwoods Ad on Smtih· ptpe 1-beam, ttn, etc
Goegleln Dr Frt and Sat Mason WV 304-593 1904
Sept 15 and t 6, 9-3 G1rls
1 '11'111\'ll \I
stze btr1h to 3T, lots of mise
"IIHU 1._,
ttems

5 OOpm , 776:3 St AI

CLASSIFIED INDEX

~

1

o-

HI!LrWANmJ
FEDERAL

BANKING
Branch Assistant 1
Oak H1ll Banks has full-ltme
career opportunity tn our
Jackson ol1tce for a fne ndl~.
energetic self starter AS
Stanch ASSIStant I you Will
asstst w1lh overall operatton s of the branch provide
outstar dtng cu"slomer servtce domplete appltcettons
lor morlgage and consumer
loans as well as new depostt
accounts Must exhtbtt lead·
ershlp sktlls have stgntllcant
expenence In a bank, credtt
un1on or olher flnanctallnsltlutiOn Ex cellent compensation and beneftts, tncludtng
health 1nsurance and 401(k)
Pre
employment drug
screen requtred
Send
resume and salary requ1r.~-.
menta to Oak Htll Banks,
Attn Human Resources PO
Box 64 7 Jackson , OH
45640 or to hrCoakhlll·
banks com Please reference Job Code 11595E.
EOE . M/F/DN

I

4 Family Yard Sale Fn and
1110 HELPWMTI:IJ
Sat , Matn Street , Rutland,
Ohto Items toddler and
girls name brand clolhes, 100 WORKERS NEEDEO
men women clothing, vtdeo
Assemble crafts,
games, crocheted dothes
wood ttems
household rtems free kitTo $480/wk
tens, For tnfo call 740·985Matertals pro\llded
4183
Free tnformallon pkg 24Hr
801-428·4649
Big Garage Sala-·Sept
13,15 and 16
36050 80hrs, Underground, 40hrs,
Flatwoods Ad
Rain or Surface Classes to be held
at Po1nt Pleasant Moose
Shtne •
Sept 18th, 9am day 4pm
Friday and Saturday, 9 to 4 evening classes Sign up
Seplember t 5 an d 16 Wed-13th/Fn-15th 5pm at
Rouls 124 off Rt 7 byp ass Moose
any
quesltons
2nd hOuse on nght after call/(304)524·7203
·
Exxon
Meadows rest ·
Abstractors/Landman want·
dence
ed ' Full or part tlrne
Compensatton
based upon
One Mile on 143 Turn Rtght
on Lee Road End of road expenence Send Resume
Friday Only Sept 15lh to C E Hellmann Land
Servtces. LTD PO Box 235
740·992·5146
E~ans WV 25241.304 3729336
YARDSALE-

r

J&gt;r. PI.F.ASANT

ACQU1St110ns Ftne Jewelry
now accepttng resumes for
3 Famtly Yard Sale 1 2 mtles part·tlme sales Apply m per
out At 62 South Frt 15th Sat son at 151 Second Ave
161h 8-5
Galltpolts No phone calls
please
,\ND

AucnoN

fu:AMARK£1
Cross Creek Auctio n Buffalo
Auctton Saturday 7 pm 8 B'o'
from
Portsmouth,
OH
But tdlng tS full ol used mer
Ch.nd!se Seal'ng 10, 200
n We
A'r Cond'1'oned eu'1d'n•
glactly accept Vtse and
Mas1erCard (304)937·21l8

An Excellent way to
money The New Avon

earn

Call Manlyn 304-882·2645
-------ASHTON WV workstte
seeks a Secunty Patrol
Guard to fi I1a rota 1mg 32•hr
c
866 23 1
workweek
all
•
-247_6_e_x_1_106_1_o_•P_P_1Y_ _
AVON1 All Areast To Buy or
Sell
Sh,rley Spears, 304·
8 . 1429
75

BENNIGAN S
Htrtng
Servers and Expenences
Want to buy Junk Cars
erol1 COoks Apply e1 1he
(304)773·5004
Potnl Pleasant Locatton

Citlill'ElJJERLY
CARE

.,1'.1o-HELr-·w•A1·Nl-"ED-IIuo IJI!LrW,wfiD

kltncarlyle~comcaat.nat

Friday-Saturday, 4409
Bulavllle Pike, 8 OOam·?
Antique chairs, old mirror, mixer, bathroom mir·
ror, curtains, sheets,
comforter, tools, lots of
mlac.

5 rescued Ktt1ens 2 black 1
Garage sale 1442 Mtil
gray, 2 taDby, to good home
Creek 1 5 mtles from At 7,
only (304)882-3719
Thurs Frt Sat. 9am-? Ratn or
Cats to gtveaway 1309 shine
v,.nd 51 P1 P1 (304)675- - - - - - : - . , . . - - 6720
Mov•ng sate Sat Sept 16th
9-3 Pat10 turniture, computFree Pallets P1ck up at Datly er &amp; cabtnet, microwave,
Trtbune oH tce tn t~e rear
bFkes small coucll. TV

We will no1 knowing
accept any adver
lsemont In vlolatl
the law

In vlotat6on ot the taw

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Formtng Rock/Metal Band
YARD SAtE~
Call 740-992-9904 or 740· ~--oiGiiAILiiiiiiill'OiiiiLISiiioo_.J
416· 1090
GLVI:AWAY

to thl Fed1r1l Fllr Houllng Act ol 1988

EOE tttndardt Wt wKI notlcnowlngty tccept tny

ecceptt only http

r
r

t

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
'
$1.00 for large

POLICIES Ohio V1lley Publlshlnt res.rws th1 right to tldh , rlltct or cancel any 1d 11111)' lime Error• must be repor1ed on the rlr1t dsyo of
Trlbun•S«ttlnei-R-el•t.,. will bl' '"ponllblt for no mort thin the cost of IM 1pec. occupied by tM enor 1nd only the f!rtt lntertlon We
sny lou or IKpenM that results from the publlc.tlon or omlttlon of an tdvertlMment CofrKtlon will ~ m1de In the tlr.t tvlllllble edllloo

.

.

be prepatd•

HeelerJAuS1rahan Shepherd
mtx btackibrown bob-tailed
ADOPT A happtly marned F e m a I e
young coupl e longs to adopt Syracuse/Mtnersvtlle area,
a newborn Wtll provtde a no collar 740 992 723~
lifetime of happiness love &amp;
secunty E~~;penen ces patd
YARD SA.J..£
Please call Lucy &amp; Stewn ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,..
@ 1-800 276 1323

Homelmprovemente...................................810
Homea for Sale •. ,............ ............................ 310

Public Notice

Tho Home Nallonal
Bank will auction tho
following Items on
Saturday, September
16. 2006 at 10:00 a.m.
al tho Bank's parking
lot:
no
expressed
or 1997 Jeep Cherokee
Implied
warranty S
p
o
r
t
given.
1J4FJ88S3VL595149
For further !nlorma- 2001 Dodge Durango
tlon, or lor an appoint- 1 B4HS28N21 F509933
mont lo Inspect collat- The Home National
oral. prior to aalo data Bank reserves the
contact
Cyndle
or right lo reject any and
Randy al992-2136.
all bids. All vehicles
(9) 13. 14, 15
are sold, asia where Ia ,
with no warranties
- - - - - - - - expressed or Implied.
Public Noll~e
For an appointment to
_____...:.,:....:.__ see, call 949-2210, ask
LEGAL NOTICE
lor Shalla
Tho
· undersigned (9) t3, 14, 15
offers for sale an unim- ;..;.,.....:.......:.__ _ ____,

10, 2006. which Included lwenly-olght (28)
days from the last date
proved tract of real
of pub!!cat1on, or judg- estate consisting or 38

The gtrh mtd I wm;/J M t' to thank all the
Fr/e/1{11 Netghbor\ and Churt/1 Ftmulu!~ 11./10
hm e bee~t rhere for 11m tht ~ trme

Thla
newspape
ccepts only hel

\'\\til\( I \II \I..,

t

Word Ads

• Stan Vour Ads With A keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include ll Price • Avoid Abbrevlltfon•
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get

968.

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
FCI NATIONAL FUND
II, L.L.C. SUCCESSOR
INTEREST
TO
IN
ALLIANCE FUNDING
PLAINTIFF
VS
DORIS TAYLOR, eta!
DEFENDANTS
Case No. 06-CV-067
Judge Fred W. Crow, Ill
Notice by Publication
To Dorio Taylor, Fred
Taylor, decoaeed, John
Doe. Unknown Spouse
(H any) ol Dorta Taylor,
and
Jane
Doe,
Unknown Spouse (If
any) ol Fred Taylor,
deceued, whose 1111
known address to 323
Condor
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
and whoae r. .tdonce
Ia unknown, and, will
hereby taka notice that
you have been named
Delendanta In a case
thal on May 12, 2006,
FCI National Fund II,
L . L.C., Succouor In
Interest To Alliance
Funding
lllod
Ita
Complaint In the Meigs
County
Court
of
Common
P!eaa,
Pomeroy, Ohio, Clio
Number being 06-CV067 In old Court pray!ng for Judgment In tho

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CLASSIFIED

WITHERS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Ity.""

Friday's gamea
South Galha at Wahama
Southern at Hannan

Wayne
Stssonvtlle
Poca
Potnt Pleasant
Herbert Hoover
Logan
Wtnf•eld

W-L
3-0
2-1
1-2
1-2
1-2
1-2

TVC
PF
0

Independents
ALL
PF
W-L
3-0
95
1-2
56
0-2
15

South Gall1a
Wahama
Hannan

PA
0
0
0
0
0
0

www.mydailysentlnel.com

ijCribune - Sentinel - l\e ster

BY ToM

116

Friday, September 22
Marietta at Athens
Ironton at Chillicothe
Logan at Gallla Academy
Portsmouth at Jackson
Saturdly, Sept1mber 23
Warren at Zanesville

Athens at Logan
Galtta Academy at Ct11lllcothe
JaCkson at Ironton
Warren at Marietta
Zanesville at Portsmouth

Friday, September 15, 2006

Browns' Frye would rather slip than slide

HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL

Friday'• gam11

Friday, September 15. 2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Bob Evens In Mason Is now
hmng
Food
Quality
Specialist to do kitchen prep
work Immediate benefits
avail Naed someone 5 days
a weeks lor all shifts Apply
wtthln

'NO El(P£RIENCf NECESSARY

• FUL.L/TIME C~S! E S
'COL TRAINING

• FINANCING AV,II..AB~E
"JO!l PLACEMENT
' ENROLLING NON

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRA ilER
TRAINING CENTERS

WYTHEVILLE, VA
.

1-800-334-1203

POSTAL JOBS
$1567-$2619/hr now htrmg For app1tca11on and free
governement Job tnfo, call
Amencan Assoc or Labor 1·
913 599 8042, 24/hrs emp
serv
- - - -- - -Help wanled at Darst Group
Home, worktng wtth elderly,
heavy lifting lnvolwd 740992-5023
-------Homemakers needed 1n the
Ashton area Mason County
to proVIde 1n-home-serv1ces
to the elderly/disabled ltght
Housekeeping and Personal
care Will provide training
Please Call (304)453-4992

Ji/iiiM!II
. . il' ""'" .......,
1MMED1ATE OPENING
EXPER1ENCED 01L l
LUBETECH

AI John Sang Ford
Lincoln Mercury we
have established a 35
year reputation ol
honesty, Integrity and
outS/and1ng customer
service before and
ahar lho se!e W!1h 1he
hottest products on the
market and as !he
fastest growl,.,g
dealership In our
regio n we are adding
staff to better service
our customers
Traln lng wtll be
provided and Is
on-going.
CompensatiOfl and
Benefits package will
be discussed during
the application
process If you are look·
tng to start a new
career or maybe do not
feel you are paid or
treated as well as you
sh ould be and you 're
tired of working tor
someone who Is not
working tor you, apply
today
Pleau contact
Jim Thomat at
(740)441-9800
or It
185 Upper Alvtr Rd.
GalUpoUo, OH .~u 31

OTRICOTA
Come JOin a dynamic there
py company w1th great
career opportumttes Fu ll
benefits &amp; generous salary
Currantly
htrmg
FT
OTR/COTA m the Atpley
WV area For delatls call
Stephante
Swtsher
at
(740)418·1398 or t -888288-9348 ext 14
Overbrook Rehab Center

o

Qualified
Wtndow
Installer/Helper Part-time-Possible Full time Quality
Window Systems, 37700
King Hill Road Pomero~
Reaumee ac cepted llll 9 2006 No Phone Calls Please

R&amp;J TRUCKING
Leading The Way

11\\\(1\1

•NOTICE•
OH10 VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
!hat you do bustness With
people you Know, and
NOT to send money
through the ma11 unt tl you
have tnvesttgated the
oHenng

MONl:"l

I

;::::ro:Lo:'"~=

::=======
rSO

&amp;lt()()L';
_
)NSTRUcnON
L.a--iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii.,J
Concealed Ptslol Class
Ohto wv Oct 7 2006
$ 75 00
9 OOam VFW
Mason WV Ph (740)843
5555

333 Pag e Street Mtddleport
OH 45760 ts currently
accephng appllcat1ons for Gallipolis Career College
the followtng full ltme STNA
(C areers Close To Home)
positiOns and two 7 am · Call Today• 740 -446 4367
7pm poSitions These postt ·BOQ-21 4·0452
lions ere 12 hour shtfts wtlh
wv...,gaiiiPOitscareercolloQecom
We also AccredtiiO Member Acc1edlllng
a Se1 Schedule
have part-lime STNA post· Council lor lnd&amp;plndltl'll College!
!tons avatlabte for all shifts
If you are Interested 1n JOin·
lng our dedicated staff
please stop by our front
oH tce and p1cl\ up an apph
catton Monday - Friday from
9 am to 5 pm No phone
calls please
Overbrook
Rehab Center •s an E E
and a parllctpant m the Drug
Free Wor kplace Program

Wtll do 8abys1n1ng m my
home All shifts and every
other weekend
Clean
home meals prov1ded For
more 1nfo
Contact Lon
Crane
740 416 0835 or
740·992·0617

For renl or sale t 7 600 sq ft
warehouse on AI 2 wtth 3
acres fenced m &amp; gated
blacktop
parktng
lot
(304)937-4127

Ohto Valley Home Health
Inc htnng for Full Ttme AN ,
PT PTA Full T1me and Part
Time CNA, STNA. CHHA,
PCA and Per Dtem PT PTA
OT, ST Accepttng appltca
!tons lor LPN's Competttive
Wages and Beneftts tnclud
·1ng health msurance and
mileage Apply al 1490
Jackson Ptke Ga lbpo~ s or
2415 Jadt:son Avenue Potnt
Pleasant WV or phone toll
free 1·866-441-1393

and Schods

121.o~a

--------Overbrook Rehab Cen ter,
333 Page St , Mtddlaport,
OH 45709, wtll be holdtng
an STNA class slarttng on
September 19th If you are
1ntarested In JOintng our d ad
~Gated staH, please stop by
our Iron! off tce Mon · Frl
9am-5pm and 1111 out an
appl tcat ton Futl-ttme &amp; partltme pOSitiOns a~adable IO
those ouallfted mdtvlduats
completmg
the
class
AppiiCflttons wtll be accept
ad until September 15Jh
2006
No Phone calls
please Overbrook Rehab
Cenler IS an E 0 E &amp; a partlctpant of the drug-free
workplace program

·

Borrow Smart Con tact
the OhiO DIVISIOn of
F'nan"a!
lnS!IluMn s
Offtce
of Consume r
AHa1rs BEFORE you rell
nance your home or
obtam a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance Call the
Offtce
ol consumer
Affaus toll tree at 1 866
278..()003 to learn 11 the
mortg'age broker
or
lender
IS
properly
licensed (Thts ts a public
servtce announcement
1
h
Oh
V 1
10
rom I e
al ey

:;P;
ub:h:
sh:ln:g:C:o:m:p:••: y:)=~

i

1.,------PRoFESSIONAL
SERVICES

TURNED OOWN ON
SOC1AL SECUR1TY ISS1?
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1-888-582-3345
WI \I I "I\ II
;;::::;:::;::_;;;;::;:::;:::;:;;;;

r10

HOI\IDi

.,_ _riFOOiiiRIISiiAiil.Eiiii-,J
14 1 acres Wtth 2 900 sq tt
home
Vtew
at
www orvb com, code It
7156 Call {740)441-1559

1997 bt-level house 2 ca1
garage 7 acres 3 Br, 2
bath 40X20 pole barn
R&amp;J Trucking now Hiring at
our New Haven, WV
Shotokan Karate··Ciasses at 12X20 deck pon neat pump
Carlelon School Syracuse 'mergsl Gallta line $140,000
Term 1nal For Aeg tonel
Hauls-Dump Olv 1 year
600 pm to 700 pm Call740·7421154
OTR
Starttng Sept 18th and 21st
then aver~ Mon end Thurs 2 Story House For Sale
verifiable exp
Call 1-800-462-9365 ask lor For more tnfo call378·61 44 (304)675-315 t
Kent
or 667 3039
3 Bedroom hous• 1n
AN 's needed .to prov tde
basic !Irs! aid at business
near Potnt Pleasant WV
Great way to make extra New Lower Prices on
S$$$1 Baa 269-6344
Limestone at Rodney Stona
Rocksprings Aehabtlttatton (740)245·5316, River Gravel
&amp; Sand also available
Canter Is now acceptm~;~
applications tor a ltcensed
\\'ANTED

beautician to work two clays
L.!~~·~~~~.,!!!~!!:"'!!"~'!!'"'!!'!!!"l!""
~
a week at our fac111ty (Must
Christmas ts com,ng Earn
have an Independent con·
gltts to give or keep with
tractor license) Interested
Tupperware Just a $500
candidates should apply to
party with two datlngs and 8
Rockspr tn gs Rehabthtatlon
$10 co-pay will earn yol.J
Cent er, 36759 ROCI&lt;spnngs
$34 7 worth of Tupperware
Aoad
Po me roy
Oh1o
products you can Keep or
45769 Etctendicare Health
Servtces Inc , Is an equal
gtve lor nlfts A $400 par1y
"
wtth two dattngs will earn
opportunity employer thai
you $238 In hostess gifts
encotJrages
workplace
...,.~
Or maybe you are look.tng ~=::::::::::::~ diversity M/F ON
lor part tJme employment to
---'-----earn that extra Chnstmas Independent Contractors Truck Om.ers
$8
cash
Calt me tod ay lor Wanted Earn from 00
INEEDONEDRIVFR '
more details (304)773-5630
to $1 500 Gross per
Oellvenng The Small Truckmg Compan\
Month
Cosmetologtst needed Call Da1ly Sentinel For more Look1ng for Trktor Trailer
dn ven '-'1th f1a1bed expenenct:
(740)446-7425
Information call Steve at
Paymg JO'A:r of gross Dmer
------~~:740
=-99::;2;
-2;15;'5;;::;
. ;:=~ ,averages $600 00 to S900 00
Local business now accepttake home afkr lll'.e!i Home
Ing resumes for a mamteever) week end anti some v.eek
nonce postttOns
Please
days dt:hH:nng to Oh K ,, VA
matl all resumes to Rt1 Box
W\ IN 310- ~ :27 2?89
366 Pom1 P1easanl WV
25550

SHOP
CLASSifiEDS

Veterinary Asststant need
ad Ellpenence preferred
but wtll tram PT/FT some
weekends
requ1red
Mtntmum
wage
Send
resume to French Town
Velennary Chntc 360 SA
160, Gall1poUs or lax
(740}446·41 01

1.a------1180

To Do

Pomeroy Awer view Off
ma111 road $26 000 Land
Contract poss1ble wtth down
payment 1 740 992 2593
3 bedroom 1 story 1 112
bath gas heat cJa 2 car
garage, tn Middleport,

$69 500 wtll consider rea
sonabte

olfer, (740)992-

_6_92_6_ _ _ _ _ __
Georges Portable Sawm1ll 4 bedroom 2 bath double
don I haul your Logs to the garage pool. 2 acres
Mill iust call 304-675-t 957
Eastern School Dtstrlct
IIW CHILIYEIDERl.\"
740·992·3465 aher 5 OOPM
4 rental hOuses For Sate"
Good tncome producing
Care for your loved one properll9s Great location'
Private room and bath 3 hot PfiC8(S) are Negotiable
meals and snacks cratts Moltveted
Sellert
In
(740)388 0118
Gallipolis
Call
Wayne
1404)456 3802
Jenny s Home Hatr Car.el
AHentlon!
For Dtsabled Shut ins Call
Local company oHertng "NO
740·378-6482
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
- - - - - - - - gtams far you lo buy your
STNA WILL TAKE CARE OF home tnstead ol renttng
YOUR ELDERLY LOVj:D • 100°'c fmanc1ng
ONES while you work Call • Less than perfect credit
Ctn,dy 740-992·5917
accepted
- - - - - , - - - - • Payment could be the
Wtll care to r 5'our loved one same as rent
tn your home (740)245- Mortgage
Locators
56011v msg
(740)367·0000

L---oiCiiARI-:iiilii._ _.

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Friday, September 15, 2006
ALLEY OOP
Ranch Style Home, Yost
COUNTRY"LIVING
REF&gt;O, new Ranch 3bdrm, 2 Road with 2 Acres. 3 bed·
Ranch
baths,
needs finished. rooms, 2 baths, garage,
Located
in
sou1hern 01'1f0. enclo$td breueway. Pool
BriCk Home.
and Spa Included.
2 Bedrooms (large master Buy for balance due. Call lor
$83,500. Coli 7&lt;0·992·
detatls (740)4a9·914&amp;
bedroom With large walk-In
400t .
closet large make up room,
For Sale
sMylight With stnmg area and
Rou1e 7 Tuppers Plains· one

~&amp;autiful

private Oath) ltving room,
family room , Large k!lchen,
dining room. 2 lull bath·
rooms total, 8 closets total.~
car garage. Concre te drive·
way. Heat pump Wllh central
a1r. Fenced· tn back yard
with large · deck Approx. 2
112 acres of land. New
improv8ments. Appltances
included. Approx. 3 miles
from Point Pleasant, on At.
62 S. Movmg lrom area.
Must see to apprectatet•!
$160.000 0 80. Call for
appointment
(304)675·
4235 or (304)593·3220

BuiH in .1996 'Approx lBOO
Sq Ft w/2, 112 acres "3brm 2
full .baths "LAm, FRm,
·Formal DAm. Eat·in kitcllen
"All Appl Slay ·central
Air/heat ·covered Front
Porch. Deck "3 car delach
garage wIones IaII as a linished heated room 'Small
shed atlached lo garage
with a well 'Two-run dog
kennel
"Immediate
Possesion
'Loan
Assumpt.on A"il 5·5%
'located belween Rio
Grande and Gallipolis
'"S99,soo 125
ShOwn
by Appt·
740·245·0
or 740-645·
2249
- - -- - - - - Cape Cod home located on
2 acre lot. close to Pomeroy
andMeigsJr. HighandHigh
·school. Excellen t neigh·
bars.
AttacHed 2-car
garage. central NC and
heat. 2,400 sq. feet. 3
bdrms, ~ ba th s. 740-992·
2795 .New Crew Road.

Central atr, lull ba;,.ment
hardwood lloors. detached
garage, covered patio,

fenced back yard, newly
remodeled, 3 or 4 bed·

rooms. cloSe to schools.
Point

Plea san t $69,500

(740)709·t362 .

All real estate advertising
In this MWSfJ8per is
tubject to the Federal

Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal to
advertise "any
preference. limitation or
discrimination based on

race, color, religion, aei .
familial status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such

preference, limitation or
dlacrimlnatlon.:·
This newspaper will not

knowingly accept
advertlaements for real
aatate which Ia in

viol.tlon ol the law. Our
retdera are hereby
Informed that all

dwellings advllrtlsed In
thla newspaper are
available on an equal

opportunity bases.

floor, :J bedroom, 1112 bath,
double car garage, app)l. 1
acre ,· $75,000, can show
tOI0512006. (74U)667-&lt;l329

1111BIG••
In Syracuse- 2,800 sq It
quality built muHi-le\1131 brick
home, maintenance lree .
Nice .quiet neighborhbQd 3·
4 bedrooms. 2 bath, with
hardwood. trim throughout.
U·shaped k.itche("l with 40' ot
cabinets. Wood.burning lire
place. 2 car detached
garage. Nicely landscaped
.60 acre lot. Immaculate
COndition . ~ow utilities.
·
Selling pr1ce $249,000. Call
740·441·5171. Shown by
appt. only.

Rea~ Oct 181, 3br, 1ba, 20
miles from Toyota Plant
$550 a month + $550
Deposh (304)576-2217

Totally remocleleO . New outside aiding, 2 badroom1,
bath, l&lt;itchen, nice ntighborhood. Call (740)446-7425.

14xSO· singlewide. Good
con&lt;:litlon, 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths. nice yard,. storage
_ . . - building, Porter area $400
mymldwnthome.com
per month, $400 deposit.
(
)828•2750 Call (740)446 .4514 or fill out
740
--~------ applicaMn at 1403 Eastern
A"e.
THREE Bedroom, TWO ~"~•
bath. oversized 2 car
2 bedroom, NC , porch &amp;
Garage, Storage Building, awning. Very, very· nice, no
newer carpet and roof. 112
pels. In Gallipolis. (740)446·
acre te'JEII lot. Welt main·
tained hom8. Vine Street, 2003, (740)446-1409 or
RACINE . $95.000 nego· (740)446·2692

For rent Nice 2 bedroom
mobile home In Country
Very nice 3BA, bath Homes. $325 + deposit.
upstairs. furnished tBA apt
downstairs, lurniture store In 7401385.40 t 9.
·re ar. Car lot on side. ~II on Mobile Home sHes for up to
112"ac. 101 a1 t30 Bulaville t6x60 in counlry Homes.
Pike,
Gallipolis.
OH (740)385-4019.
$l35,000. 174 01 446· 47 82
Trailer tor rent with CIA.
MOBD...E HOMES
740-949•2237 .
2 full baths, living room, tam·
FOR SALE
c:!i-;.;;;.;;;~----,
uy room. large cedar sun
r".nmoo
m.::1
room opening onto patio,
FOR
RENT
dimng room, kitchen 1 utili!¥- 16xBO S~h~ltz, 2 ~cres, .._
room partial basement 10lll16 buildJn9, all kitchen
Attached large 2 car garage app_liances . Nice country Meigs Co. furnished farm
w/bui lt in cab"inets; una!· sett1ng. $60,000. (740)256· house. Acres of solitude.
tached 3 carheatedgarage. 8801.
$1 ,000 pEJr mo. (740)594tn ground pool , brick patio. - - - - - - - - 52t0 ·
professionally landscaped. 1984 14x70 MH. Central air,
APARIMENTS
Price $275 ,000 _00 Ca 11740 _ 10JC16 covered porch, good
FOR RENT
condition. $8,500. {740)388· J..-------~
949 . 2217 _
8403.
1 and 2 bedroom apart1997 14lll72, clean with fire- ments, furnished a'1d unfurplace, 2 bedroom, 2 bath
nished, security deposit
1997 14x70 3,bedroom .. 2 required, no pets, 740·992·
bath, vinyl siding, shingled 221 a.
roo!. 4 more to cnoose frOm.
daylime; 1 bdrm retrig. &amp; stove.
House lor sale in Syracuse. 1740)388·0000
two-bedroom wilh bath, ( 740)388·80~ 7
evenmg; Water, sewer, trash pd.
attached, garage and base· {740)645·6150cell
$350.
[740)367·7015,
ment. An estate sale
1.7_40:::.)_44_6_·4_7_34
_____
$70.000.Phone (7401992· 1999 Oakwood 14x70, new Oak kitchen cabinets, 2ba, 2" 2 bedroom Apartment avail3690.
bed, central air, $15.500. able in sYracuse. $200.00
deposit, $350.00 per month
HO DOWN PAYMENT even {740)441-9925
Rent. Rent includes water,
w1th less than perfect credit Great used 3BR home only
sewer, trash.
No pets.
is available on this 3 bed· $9,995. Will help with deli\/·
Sufficient income needed to
room 1 bath home in ery. Call (740)385·7671 .
qualify. 740-378-61 1,1.
Middleport. Corner lot, vinyl

Handymen spedal, comes
with 21ots: close to schools,
Point Pleasant , $24.900.
(740)709·1362.
·- - - - - - - Home For Sale Ou1Si~e
Racine, Ohio. Ranch Style,
2600 sq. ft . 4 bdr.. large
master bdr.w/walk-in closet,

1

i

I

"•

r

Have 78 mobile home needs
some repairs anct desperately. Needs cleaned no
leak, good floor 2 yrs. tirlf:
make offer. 740-992·5616.

New 2006 CiaY10n sin·
glewides starting at $199.84
Ranch style home on 2.6 per month. Trade-ins welacres overlooking the beau· comes. Call (740)385·2434.
tifu! Ohio River in l ong
lms &amp;
Bottom, Ohio located at
ACRFAGE
61818 SR 124. This six ·--ioiiiiiiiiiiliiio-,.1
room house includes 2.5
bedrooms, one full bath and Attention Hunters &amp; Farmers
a three quarter bath. 1421 160 acres, Barton Chapel
square feet of living space Rd. 20 minutes lrom 1-64,
with a full finished basement Milton exit City water. For
and an attached two car information (304)937·4127.
garage. Also includes a
Mobile Home Lot for ren1
32'X40' heated metal outnear Vinton. Call (740)441side building with concrete
1111 .
floor. Home Is equippecl with
heating, cooling, waler end Mobile Home Lot in Johnson
all elktric utilities. Some Mobile Hom.e ParK In
kitchen appliances are Gallipolis,
OH. Phone
included. For more informa- (740)446·2003 or (740)446·
tion call 740·965·33t5(day· t409.
time)
or
740·992·
2071{evanings) .
Price
$160.000.00

2 bedroom upstairs apt.,
stove, fridge, water, trash
included. Rent $325, deposit
required. [740)446-7620,
(740)441-9872. ·

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

Downtown
Commercial Pontiac &amp; Kennebec wrake the pain out
Retail space for Rent. $400/ Potlloetl20 fOr 100lb B·K
painting-let us do it
month.
Upstairs Office Farms 304 2·2667
for you"
Suites for Rent $1251 month
I Uterior Only
you pay the Ulllltles. Call
(703)526·06t7
Commercial building "For
740-985-4180
Sale" 1600 square feet, off
r10 H~~~
n
street parking. Great toeau...oU~VU.~
,......,..lnlo
tionl 749 Third Avenue in L-...!!~:!!".!.!c:!_...J
UUlJI.a
·
" - - - - - - - - " Gallipolis. Price ~Negotiable~
'
New roof! Motlva1ed Seller!
Call Wayne (404)456·3802.

St""NLEY
TREE
"
TRIMMING &amp;

rto

,
rARM

.

I

li'nrrn-..11:'11.,...

in Henderson . ·wv. ·.Pre·
owned Appliances starting
al $75 &amp; up all under
Warranty, also have recon,
ditioned Big Screen TV's

lw-.:"""'
..';;"''~m';..,..1
•KIEFER BUILT "VALLEY
' BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVE·
STOCK TRAILERS •LOADMAX
'GOOSENECK,
DUMPS
I
UTILITY

I ,

,

or

rio

5078.
-------Country blue COtJch tor sate,
ex. cond. Oak dining room
table &amp; 6 chairs. (740)245·
0135.
.:::..:..:._______
New recliner $200; sofa &amp; I.
seat $400. Mollohan Furn.
202 Clark Chapel Rd. Porter.
Phone
(740)388-0173.
Open 9·3 Sat. only.
-'------'--Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair·675-73B8. For sale,
re -conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, relrigerators. gas and electric
ranges, air conditioners. and
wringer washe rs. Witl do

2 bedroom, ~ bath, water
on major brands in
paid, $350 month , $350 repairs
shop or at your home.
security
deposit.
Call
(740)446·346t.
Used Furnilure Store. t30
Bulaville P1ke. Electric, gas
2 br apts 6 mi from Holzer.
ranges. bunk beds, chests,
Water, sewer, trash pd.
dinettes, couches, used
(740)682·9243 or 986..f3130
mattresses.
Gra\le
661 Third 'Ave, 2BA, unfur- Mo~um~nls. (740)446-4782
nlshed. $350 month plus t Galhpohs. OH. Hrs 11·5 (M·
month depo~;&gt;it. Renter pays . S,:_,i.,·-,....-....,---.,
ulilities. (740)245·9595.
~CIIANJJANFllUISES

• References

I OX I OX I 0X20

Middleport, OH

Available

• Free Estimates

r
0

740-742-2293

FRANK &amp; E~RNEST

IT'S PAilT OF MY HUMILITY
iflAININ6 --- ~'M
L~TTIN6 IT
INSULT MY

I

"'Middleport's on
Self-Storage"

I~
I
j_

Hardwood Cabinetry And Furnlillre

BARNEY

W"'WW:timbbJ'f::reekcabiinetry.Cbm

GOOD AS CAN BE
'XPECTED UNDER
'------'
TH' CIRCUMSTANCES II

740.446.9200
Huom \dditiun ....
l{t·nu1ddin).!,

l&gt;r_n ,all. Roolin .L!, .
Sicliu:,.:. lkrk~. Pole
Barn..,,
Doors/\\ indo"~
1-"n't' F~limah•..,

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

•
140·992·1611

7~11- 1 1'!2-H I ~.1

l~irk

Prkl'
' ' ' "'"' "'"u::-t

Stop &amp; Compare

Fixed for 48 months through
John
Deere
Credit.
Carmichael
Equipment
(l40)446·24 t2.

~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~uw~
THE BORN LOSER

,.-.5 PORT~ WE.~ ~0 r-\UGII. -~
&amp;.HE.R I~ 'if-I.E. GOOD ct.t&gt;

'Ofl., 'IE.Ml' 1-W/\E. ~E. WI•-'&lt;~
~POI':.T~ NlE ~TIE.R TOt».'&lt; f

IMPORTS

C&gt;t&gt;..'&lt;S!

~·
and Sons

;·

BIG NATE
. HOW WOULD
YC&gt;1J SPEND

LET "S "'"" YOU JUST
FOUl!&gt; OIJT YOU f-\AVE
ONLY Z 'i HOURS TO
LI...,E . WHAT WOULD

YOUR

LA~T

flAY ON

'(OU DO?

EARTH~

WELL .
THI'\T
WOULD
DEPEND
ON WHAT
DAY IT
WAS.

Hill's Self
Storage

'.A:! Ihil

I

I

'

Dinner and Karaoke
Saturday, Sept. 16th

Spaghetti Dinner
6:00 pm - 6:00 pm
Cost $5.00

Goofy Gala
9:00pm- 12:00 Mid
Ladies to bring desserts

Women's Auxiliary
Eagles Aerie #2171
224 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio

Spaghetti Dinner
Saturday, September 16th,
2006
6:00 pm till 8:00pm
$5.00 a plate
Goofy Gala Karaoke 9·11 :_00

Saturday Band
AMIX ,9-1

'' t6 ' 1~rli:to•*t~
~

m"
~~L'!~!!!?.:~

A

IT WOULD
MATTEI'. IF
IT WAS
A SUNDAY.
,....,&gt;=.SUNOAY·s
MY TV
NIG.HT.

OF COUR~E. IF "'FA.MILY
GU'(" WAS A RERUN,
THAT WOUL.D SE. "

DIFFERENT STORY.

........
PEANUTS
M'&lt; DAD 60U6~T ME T~IS ~ELMET, SIR ..
I&lt;E 5A&lt;f5 61RL5 CAN PLA'f' SPORTS JUST
AS WELL AS 80'&lt;5 CAN ..

I TRIED IT IN THE POOL. AND
I ALMOST DROWNED.

Cornerstone
Construction

Ellm View

Apartments

JONES'

Tree Service

SUNSHINE CLUB
WHAT IS fT11.fAT MAkE'S A NWJ
9f ~ AF1tR 1-!CVR, DIW AFTrR
'VA'&lt;. LISTUHOO 1D UNHAPPY ktJI'lW

&lt;.CMP!Alkl IM.Jr LIFt 1

I

i

·Mantey's ~
Recycling

GARFIELD
HI!Y! WHI!RI0'5 fHI!
CAKE 1"HA1" WA!l
IN fHE OVEN?!

11" HA!IN'"f
RISEN YE'T"!

PlYING TOP PRICES ftl

·loll••

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, September 17th
Factory 12 gauge/22LR
Match 12 Noon

P"-mE. CR.N'Il.l~ AA£ &amp;.TIE.ll-7'

Are you in the market

r

Qr ··

WELL, I'M

1-tERE, AIN'T I

&amp;

'

"---1"0-R_RENT_,;,_,I

J

f
Ir

CONSTRUCTION

• New Homes

?!

.---. ,--..:--r-:::._:........:::::..=.:_:..:.-.( I

i

PSI

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

I

~~

2A59 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis
11. FOR FREE
I
TfS

L--~FO;;:R~S:'A::,J,:iE-.,J

~~=~====~
0

r__..:...,:_.....

83

.

16

4oA53

Advertise
in this
space
for ·
ss4 per
·month

\liEU.,

HUK YEA\-\

DADDY IU:VLD 1-lAV&amp; U&gt;ill.D t,W
~IOOSLY DIS~

4-·Wan
Klt!Obl

44 Till voN
46 LOHhllr

7 Frll-perly
fllbiiW

47 Chlrgea
51
rudaly
52 Bobylltter,

Allpess

The percentage ..
play advertised ·
Comic Fred AMen wrote, MAn advertising
agency is 85 percent confusion 8nd 15
percent oommlssion .M
AI the bridge table, Mrcentages can be
confusing because they have a habit ol
changing. For wcample, lool&lt; at North's
and Soulh"s hearts. How you would ~ay
that suh combination for no losers?
Then took at the auction. Would you now
play the.suit differently?
West 's leap 10 lour spades sllows e~l
good spades (or pemapa seven very
gOod ones). WBSI wiY also normally have
a relati\lely weak hand, but he mlltrt ba
strong, ye1 not make a slam-try because
SoU1h hes shown opanlng·bkl strenglh.
Wesl hopeslo buy the conlraC1 and per- ·
haps deny his opponents a chance to
find a cheap sacrillce.
In isolation, to ~ay the heart su~ wllhoul
loss, you should cash the ace and king.
You succeed if the suit breaks 2-2 or the
queen is a singleton: a combined 53 per·
con1. (Cashin~ the ace. lhen planning 10
run the jack nex1, works only 51 porconl
olthe time.)
But when West has eight spades, he has
room for only flve other cards. In contrast, Eas1 has 1t spaces
hearts. dla·
monds and clubs. Now the chances ol a
2·2 split or a singleton queen" have
dropped to 43 percent. In this situation,
cash the heart ace, cross to the board,
and run 1he jack (unless lha queen has
awaarad, ol course). This Una succeeds
62 percenl of the11me. (Even If West has
only seven spades, the percentages are
50 and 61, respec1lvely.)
I arrived at these figures by using the
analyzer at Richard Pavlicek's Web site;
www.rpbrldge.net.

11 From

olttn
53 Naval otl.
55 Prompted
58 Lip, alanglly
57 Ignited
58 Plano part
59 Country

utedln
push-ups
Survey
finding

15

Saturday, sept. 16, 2008
By Bemlce Bede Oeot
Your ability to achieve your goals .and
ambitions looks quite good in the year
ahead. You might not get everything you
wish, bur what you end up with wiH be tar
more than you ever thought possible.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) -There Is a
possibility you could be taken in by a person who has an enchanting personality
. but lacks substance. Approach others
with an open mind and a critical &amp;Je.
LIBRA (Sep1. 23·0c1. 23) - lnslead of
basing your judgments on emotions and
feelings; strive to be logical and practical.
It you allow the former to prevail, the
results coul~ tUrn out to be undesirable.
.SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - h isn't
necessary for you to match the spending
of wealthier people in order to be
accepted. You have much more to offer
than a materia listic lifesty)e.
SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)- Your
chances lor achieving your objectives
look good, btJI you need to be careful
about hOw you approach them so others
dorl'l find your methods selfish or offensive.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. t9) • Be
careful to whom you listen, or he or she
could turn out to be the one with all the
wrong answers. Bear In mind that hard ,
cold facts and flowery, convincing phrases are not synonymous.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. t9)- II you're
In need ot financing for some kind ot
enterprise you'd like to undertake, it
, would be much wiser to go to strangers
rather than friends, because it could sour
a gOAd rela1ionshlp.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - II could
turn out to be a major mistake to dopend
on a recently acquired ally for something
important. This association needs much
more seasoning before being put to the
test.
ARIES (March 21·Aprilt9) -II you are
performing a service tor anottler, cton 't
take it upon yourself to suggest how
something should be done.lf things don't
turn out well. you'll be blamed .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ~ Chancy
invol'llements or actl\lities a~n't likely to
be your tong suit, so il you get Into any,
minimize the risk·taklng as best you can,
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- This is the
wrong day to allow your assignments or
responsibilities to ·pile up. What you neglect now may never get done or become
harder to accomplish down the line.
CANCER (June 2t ·July 22) - Don"t
throw your weight around, especially If
you are Involved with someone who Ia
not as bright as you are. Qnlool&lt;ers will
sympathize with your target and crlticlze
you .
.
LEO [July 23·Aug. 22) - just becauee
you have a 101 of Ink In your pen doean't
mean you should go on a check·wrltlng
spree. Be realistic ebout your needs and
handle your resources prudently.

Heiden and
·

Wltl

19 R1'1

20 Kept up the

n..

18 Fore
40 Trot and
opposha
canhW
OOWN
22 Warrior
41 Buolnaaa
Princeas
mag
1 Uae a
23 Playback
42 Style
remote
machine
43 Bowling
2· "Sign here"' 24 ~
lana

marks
3 Bottle top

21 Banish
23 Enormous

45 Car·waah

181'¥8

4 Give a .
26 Bygone
apaoch
28 ICU unht
5 Monotony
29 Jacquee'
6 Roman
friend .
highway
30 Requires
7 Pay homage
34 Houoilglaoo 8 Oodge,
36 TV brand
as leKII
38 Py1hon or
9 Workout
wrap
localea
39 More1han 12 Mlllgated
willing
13 Valuablalur

25 9-dlghno.
27 Trevl
·29
31
32
33

s1ep
46 Fake
Fou~1aln
48 Within sigh'
colna
49 lle1ray 1
Strong conlldanca
- ox
SO Lop off
Recede
54 Ave.
Forest mom
croseers
Jazz
instrument

35 Campad out
37 Moat
uncouth

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by luis Campos
Celetntj c~ cr;plogl'ams ar• crt~ltd !tom qiiOtailion$ ~ faiTIOI.IS people, past and present.
EliCh letter Mllhe Qpher s!Jnjs lor anofler.

Today's clue: Sequals V
"YX

WGX

YTGER
LFX

PTL

YX

YWM

SVKLVON

NXX.
YX

NFVGEXM

Tl

LFX

YX WGX SVKLVON Tl

NXX

LFX

YTGER. "

OWKEWVPX

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'A grealartisl is never poor.' - lsak ~nesen
•Artists have a right to be modest and a duty to be ".'ain." - Kar1 Kraus

Astr.oGraph
'lbur'llrlhdlto:

...

addr.

60 Old disco

16 Rv&amp;IUtthd

lor

•

s..,.

10 Hock

17

Opening lead: • A

INTfLL.16ENC~.

New John Deere Compacts
and 5000 Series Utility trac- 1997 Toyota Tacoma extend.tors @0% Fixed lor 36 eel cab, $4,700 080. Call
months through John 17;,;40:0~3;::67:;·,:,72;:6;::6:;..- - - - .
Deere Credit. Carmichael II!
Equipment (740 )446 .2412
SUVs
L_ _.;,FOiiillt.SIIAiiil.iiE-.J
Quality John DHre Hay
Equipment lor less-round 2002 Che\ly Avalanche
balers, square balers &amp; 1500.2 WD. loaded, 77.000
mower conditioners @4.7% mileS, red/gray, !.·title, 20

t

.

.Q67
.1097 42

t• •• ••

Y
• L
~=:e:av:e::a:m:::::e::ss::a:g:e=-==::;;::====~

John Deere 10 fl. No Til Drill ex. cab $2,300. 90 Ford 1·
tor
rent.
Carmichael ton $2,995; 97 Chev.
Equipment (740 )446 .2412 . Silverado 4x4 $5,500 B &amp; D
AtJio Sales, Hwy. 160 n.
John Deere Mini Excavator/ _(740)446·6865.
Tractor Loader Backhoe/
Skid . Steers. Carmicllael
TKliCKS
15
Equipment (740 )446 .2412

I

9

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both
South Wtsl Nortll Eott

992·3194

mpg.
$11 ,900
080. ~;;;;;;;=J.=======
(740)446-8050.
--------2003 Chevrolel Trailblazec
~r~~;.;;,;,;,;..,._.i.,_, EXT LT. 4WO. Thud row
LrVISI'OCK
seat. Garage kept. Like new
condition.
51 6. 500.
(740)446·7484 or (740)441 ·
•taEFER BUILT •VALLEY 7411 .
'BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVE· ~~;..,....,....,....,....,....,.,
STOCK TRAILERS •LOAD4x4
MAX
'GOOSENECK, L--.:F~O,;:
, R:,;Si:;A;:t~E-.,.1
IY.lr.K
DUMPS
l
UTILITY ~
Apt for rent,2 or 3 Br .. No J..-OiOiiiiiiOiiliiliiiiiljlo,.J •ALUMA
•ALUMINUM 1991 TOyota 4x4 . Too. many
Pets, 740-992·5858.
TRAILERS ·a&amp;W GOOSE· new parts to list. Sharp
33 4.5"x12' white vinyl siding NECK
HITCHES. trucK. $4,500 No trades.
APART- $150· 39t2•x12'white solid Carmichael Equipment (740)992-5329 (740)416·
.BEAUTIFUL
Athens
MENTS
AT
BUDGET vin•,.
,, soffit $325- t roll ridge
6396.
PRICES AT JACKSON vent $35· t roll roof Jell 432
ESTATES, 52 Westwood sq.fl. $25- misc. channel
1997 Ford 350 4x4 dual
Drive from $349 to S448. piec~s. (304)6"?'5·4197.
wheels, goose neck hitch,
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call ·
flatbed. new tires. 47,000
740-446·2568.
EQual 33 4.5"x12', white vinyl Sid·
actual miles. (740)446·8189.
HotJsing Opportunity.
ing $150, 39 12"x12' white
solid vinyl soffit $325, 1 roll $500!
Cars!
Police 89 Ford F-250 diesel, 4
Brand new 2 Bedroom ridge \lent $35, 1 roll rool felt ImpoundS from $5001 For wheel dri\le , make a good
~~ 29670 Bashan Road
Apartments Washer/dryer 432 sq. fl. $24, Misc. chan- listings 800·391·5227 x3901 fire wood trucK, runs good!
Racine, Ohio
Need to sell your home.? llookup, stove/refrigerator nel pieces (304 )675-4197
S2,000. 740-~3-1065
45771
All types of roofing:
Late on payments, divorce, included.
1961 Cadillac convertible.
740·949·2217
New or Aepa~r
40
job transfer or a death? I Also available units State Higllland House floral Sola Very good condition, leather
MOT!lRCVCJ.F!;/
Seamless Gutter
can buy your home. All cash Route 160. Call for de1alls Ofl ,white background origi· Interior, classic. (740)245·
4WHIUERS
(I', S!tltf!tO'~i~
Downspout
and quick dosing. 740·416· (740)441.0194 or (740)441· nail price $2,000 asking 9t42
1184.
$350. Two-plaid Wing-Back
3130.
o.\•
' '
...
2000 400 EX, runs great
Chairs by Ethan Allen, origi· 1992 Acura Integra LS.
I&lt; I ' I \I""
S1.600
(304)675·2263
cloan
title,
records
a'llailable,
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· nai prloe $1,200/each ask·
Hours
ESTIMATES
157,000mi. ale &amp; cd player,
7:00 AM • 8:00 PM
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
lng $250Jeach. will give
2000 John Deere Gator 6 X
r::r 1
Townhouse
apartments, away wrap-window Valance new speakers 740-992- 4, 165 Hrs. • $5500,00. 740·
111411 mo. pd
HOI.N.:S
and/or small houses FOR In matChing fabric ot Seta. 2454.
992·5t69.
RENT. Cell (740)441-1111 Call (304)675-1481
1994 Pontiac Grand Am
for application &amp; inform8.tion,
2005 ELECTRA Glide
2BR home· Vinton Ave.
JET
$400. Police Impounds\ For Classic
smokey
gold
$375mo.+sec.dep.Youpay ~~
AERATION MOTORS
Hsllngs 800·391·5227 ext. pearl/black, -cruise control,
Residential • Commercial •.Generai "C ontracling
utilities. Gas heat. (740)446·
•
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In C548.
enhanced stero sys., securi·
Prnn ting • Doors • Wmdow!&gt; • De..:ks
~644.
St()d(. Call Ron E\lans, 1· 1994 Saturn SLZ--5 speed ty sys., plus other extras.' • Siding • Roofing • Room AUditions • Remodeling
800-537 ·9528.
trans., excellent mechanical 20,000 miles, ell!cellent con- WV 038992
• Plumhing. • El ectrical 740-367-0544
3br, 2 bath •. large llvln~
cond.. like new tires, air dltion . $16.000. 740·992· OH 38244
• A..:toust1..: Ceiling
740-339-U12
NEW AND ' USED STEEL oond. and engine have been 69t9.
room, family room, craft
Ste~l Beams, Pipe Rebar overhauled, 34 to 40 miles
room, $625 w/deposlt
For
Concrete,
Angle, per gallon gee. Asking 2005 HD Soltai! Deuce.
(304)675:35t2
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel 52 000
3900 miles, Like New condi2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
·::::·:.:::·...:94:.:.:.9·::22::02:.:.·_ __
4BD. t1/2 bath. 66 Gartield.
Orating
For
Drains, tlon .. S2300 In eKtras. Must .
Starting at $385 and up
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l 1999 s"tratus, $2,195
sell . 740-992·777 1.
WID hookup, $575 dep.
Central heat &amp; alr, WID
Scrap Metals Open Monday, 1996 CavaNer, $1 ,695
5575 rent. you pay utilities. 6
hook-up, coin operated
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; 1997 Taurus, $1.899
month lease. Construction
laundry, owner pays water. FridaY. Sam-4:30pm. Closed 1995 Concord 73,000 miles,
Top • Removal • Trim
workers OK. (740)446·2515.
sewer &amp; trash.
1
Thursday.
Saturday &amp; $2,350
• Stump Grinding
4bd, 2 bath HUO home. Buy
(304)882-3017 Sunday. (740)446-7300
1989 Mustang GT, $t,900
Bucket Truck
$32,9001 For listings 800·
1999 Oaewoo Lenganza,
Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp; Trade, new Washer &amp; Dyer, $2.200
391·5228 ext F254
- - - - - - - - - bath, upstairs, . clean, no for Tilt BeQ Utility Trailer. 1998 Cavalier Z24 , $2.199 Honda CBR . 600 F41.
Ell!ce\lent condition. Must
Accepting application· 3BR, pets. Ret/deposit required. Wanted Car CD Stereo 1998 Cavalier, $2,780
sen. Call (366)916·85391 bath, 2 story farm hotJse, (740)446·t5t9.
(6 t3)385·t928
19971&lt;2500 4x4, $4,500
.local area.
recently
remodeled,
t997 F-t50 4x4, $4 .650
lnclucles refrigerator and Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
t992 F250. $2.999
I'Elli
CAMPERS&amp;
eleclflc range. Approll! . 7 rciom apartments at Village
1995 Daote 4x4, $2,495
FOR SALE
MoroRHOMfS
Manor
and
Riverside
miles out Lincoln Pike. LP
1997 Wrangler, $4,395
~as
heat.
$4001dep, Apartments In Middleport.
t996 Taurus. $t.999
From $295-$444 . Call 74 o. AKC registered Bassett
1998 Dutchman camper.
$450/rent, ·
Includes
2000 Neon, .$2.999
992·5064. Equal Housing Hound puppies, brown/red &amp;
New
condition. $3,500. Call
water/trash . (740)256-1106.
2003 Neon. $4,395
Opportunili~s.
·
white, 1 male, 3 female,
(740)446·3117
2000 Alero ,$3,300
- - - - - - - - - · wormed/shots
$200.
AttenUonl
1995 Eclipse, S2.5oo
(740)367·765t.
Rome Auto Setae
1999 19 ft. Camplr te pop-up
Immaculate
2
bedroom
503 Mill St. • Mldtllllllllll41710
Local company offering "NO
camper,
refrigerator,
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· apartment in the country. Mclead's Pet Grooming
1411-992-3894
7
4 _ _ indoor/outdoor smve, heat
_ _..:;(:::.40
..:;144:.:::..1:::."9
:.:5:::.4..:;
grams lor you to buy your New carpet &amp; cabinets, welcomes your business.
................ lt.rtll.lll··freshly painted &amp; decorated, Call 740 _667 _3915 for 2000 . Chevy Cam8ro V-6 /AC very good condition.
nrasl•m
home instead ot renting.
auto, T·lops, 84,000 miles. 740-949-0020
WID hookup. Beautllul coun·
• 100% financing
appointment and, directions.
..•• -lltiiiiiii:IIJIII.I,•••
"11{\111 ...
• Less than perfect credit try setting. Must see to Reasonable prices 34 years $6,600 (304)593·4750
- I I U I . .1ttll ..
appreciate.
$399/mo. experience.
accepted
2000 Ford Taurus SE. V6,
tO
• Payment could be the (6t4)595-7773 or 1-600· =:::.:::::::.:::::.._____ auto, AC, new tires &amp; brakes
HOM£
796·4686.
Pet Sale Remote Training $3,000. 1740)446·0425.
same as rent.
lliiiiiii,.CMI •lllllllol•llllMII
L\IPR0\~~\1EVTS
Collar" for large dog. Hardly
Mortgage
Locators.
1:1111111~ l o l l IUI.n&amp;lfMirtl
Now ta~lng applications for used. Paid $165 will lake 2001 Dodge Stcatus 4 dr.
(7401367·0000
BASEMENT
ICIII flllllltll lllc•l
books for $6,200-$6 ,600
one bed apartments. at .$tOO. (740)388-0191 .
WATERPROOFING
Price $5,000. (740)446·
Spring Valley, Green and Newly remodeled , fur· BrooKside
Ullcondition al lifelime guar·
apartments. Call Aat Terrier puppies. Tails t759.
nished, 3 bedroom house In {740)446·1599 tor informa- docked, 1st shots. Males
antee. Local references furYOUNG'S
Gallipolis. Also 2 bedroom
$t25, female $150. Call 2006 Honda Accord. 4 door, nished. Establ iShed 1975.
lion.
garage apt. Call (740)379·
4
cyl,
5
speed,
aluminum
(740)379·95t5 or (740)645·
Call :24 Hrs (740) 4462~3 ·
- - - - - - - - - 6857.
wheels, 6 disc . CD changer, 0870, Rogers Basement
One bedroom apartment.
13,000 mi le's. Uke new Waterprooling
Roorn Addltlans &amp;
Pomeroy 2 Bet., 1 bath, new Location: 403 1/2 Third Ave. Registered Chihuahua pup· $18.200. (740)4 41 -7390.
One block from GAHS pies, shots &amp; worm~d $200
-====~~~~:;;:;::--1 Remodeling
CIA. $550. 740·643·5264
N&amp;wGarayes
Washer &amp; dryer hookup ..For 9304)695·3t Ot
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing '
an application call (740)446·
Pomeroy Big 4 Bedroom .
• Roofing &amp; Guttens
Registered
Miniature
4639.
• V!nyl Siding &amp; Painting
CIA, 2 lull paths, . lots of
Pinschers.· Males and
Patiaand Poreh Oeck!ll
ceilingtans. $850rent. 740·_ -~------ females.
$200
oach.
wv 036725
ROOMS
FOR
RENT
•
.
643·5264
17401386 6766
Construction Workers·Large :..._....:..._ _ _ _ __
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Pomsroy Big 4 Bedroom/2 newly remodeled furnished Siberian Huskies. $350,
992 ·62t5
Full Baths. NeWly remod· apartment 1n Middleport. AKC &amp; APAI registered, 6
Pomeroy Oh10
eled. 5750.00. 740·843· $125.00 each person per weeks old, 1st shots, vet
25 Yenrs Locnl E•penence
5264
week. Call740·44 '·5171
check. (740)707· 1964
I"

j

•

• Q7
• A K 10 6 3
• J 5
4o KQ 10 I

Or 992·6635

"Insured"
Call GaJV Stanley

740-992-6971

by Ron's TV {304)675·
l n~ured
7999
· ALUMA
"ALUMINUM
Free E~timate~
- - - - - - - - - TRAILERS •ea:w GOOSE· 4f7
Berber carpet 6.95yd. \linyl NECK
HITCHES . .,,__ _ _ _ _ _.,
5.95~d. New rocker recliners Carmichael Equipment
AlnUS
S199.95; new couch &amp; (740}446-2412
vnn S
toveseat $450 _ Mollohan
l''-"' ALE
Carpet 76 Vine St. . 100 bushel gra\lity bed on
heavy duty wagon,; 1 row 92Dodge 15passengervan
Gallipolis. OH (74 0) 446· New Idea corn picker; Paul St ·600 ; 96 Dodge Gr.
74_4_4_·- - - - - - Baer, At. 7, one mile west of Cara\lan $1 ,500; 98 Chev S·
_
Broyhill hide-a-bed sofa; Chester,
(740)985·3830 10 Blazer S3,200; 01 Pontiac
sofa; chair; end tableS; look for Mail Pouch sign on Gran Prix $3,500; 9B Chy.
dresser; vanity w/stool; tull _ba:::.rn:::.·------- Sebring 2dr $2,500: 97
size bed; entertainment cen· GMC Jimmy "Blazer $2,600;
tar; microwa\le stand; 2 win- Farman A with Cuhivators 00 Ford Ranger 4x4 $2.600;
sor chairs; clef rod iron and side Dresser $1 ,850. JD 00 Ford Escort ZX2 $:2.200:
bench; Pioneer 1.000 watt 6ft Bush Hog $3,500.94 Toyota Tercel $1,000; 99
round sound new. (7401245 • (304)593·4750
Caravan $2,500; 97 Dodge

97 Beech Stre· et

42 a:'se!O'•

cousin
14 Muaclo

South

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
Affordable Rates

-- -

1 Klnd or

13=

Wesl
Eost
• A K J 10 9 6 4 2 • 8 3

MANlEfS
SElf STORAGE

•

David Lewis.

5

1

CONTRACTING .

.'~~Work
26 \'ears Experience

09-t&gt;*

• J 54 2
• AK Q 6
• J 982

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
740-446-0007 "loll Free 877-669-0007

C

Warehouse

•

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

GENERAL
oncrete Removal
dR 1
an
ep acement
--~\ AI 1)'pt$

North

(famibt •·&gt;:1133:1

I

tiable. 740,949·60t0!

j

Sieling, fireplace in living
room, good carpet, tile lloor
In kitchen, French doors
Open to master bedroom.
jacuzzi tub, off street park·
ing. Payment around $550
per month. 740-367-7129.

Alder

An....- to Prevloue PuD:It'

41 Mounteln

ACROSS

Phillip

Appliance

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

r Mc::i!..r~

.Jill

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

Tea-cup Yortde·Poo, female,
l!ny Yorkle, male, tiny apple
head Chihuahuas. Lovely Ia!!
babies. (740)446·9428,

Commercial building •For
1 Rent" 1600 equare teet, off
street parking. Great loca·
1 br Trailer furnished, utllltitt tk&gt;nl 749 Third A\lenue In
paid, 7 miles hom Power Gallipolis. Rem "Negollable'
Plant In Letart $350 a Call Wayne (404)456-3002
mon1h (304)882·21158

4 Bedroom· 2 Bath
•
lift
. , . . . . . ,I

lWin Rivers Tower Ia acceptIng applications lor waiting
list lor Hud-subsized. 1· br,
apartment, cln 675·6679
Equal Housing Opportunity

www.mydailysentinel.com

woar
I.IM
'=~~,
S@\\411¥\-J&amp;t.~s·
.
14••4 •r ClAY I. POllAN --_,..
_- - -

0 •tcarro~t

ltHtn of the

l011r &gt;erolllblad -d• b•·

low 1o form four

Jimplt word1.

0 L I C0

'r11 1
GNIc I .
+:.;--:-;:-:-,.....-11
~ s 1 1 1 ::...:.

I

You can alwayHOUnJ on

someonr 10 sllte Jhe•· know a
wecessful penon. lt:s usutlly
, . - - - - - - - - . because they wcntlo the Slme

I

0-;;;~olo~t
~J.....:;M"--'U'ir-'Q:&lt;r-'O:::..,.U~Rr-;1
-1.~-1.~·~...1.~-J.~-J.~--1

'"• '"''"' ouolod

by fillinl!' in 1ht mts11ng WOldS
yow deve~ ft:wn ll'tP No. 3 btlow.

PRINl NUI.IRRID t!1ml IN
1HI$! IQIJAR! S

ICIIAII&amp;.ITI AHIWIIII 9111106

Normal- Knave- Nudge- Voi&lt;:ed- VWEO GAME
"Maybe kids 1110111d have IIIOif Jespctt for adults," my son
Jemllted. "if !hey could be laU&amp;ht to play a VIDEO
GAME."

ARLO &amp; JANIS
f~E. WEATHER'&amp;
5Tl~LHOT.

lilt SIGLltJ
~~E. Ull/oii~TAKA!!&gt;Lf..

SOUP TO NUTZ

-e

WileN lbU Go
10~.
WtLL ""'"' Be IAiellJ&lt;iliG lfje
Wtll·EaRN!t\ HaRP·I'&lt;&gt;U&lt;ii&lt;T
SCIIRS oF VICI!&gt;R\ioR 1oltU..
'l6u Be WeeRinG SJ&lt;IRTi'P ·

a

�-.

1

Friday, September 15. 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

ALONG THE RivER

LiviNG

Keeping Up With the Joneses:
New exhibit connects
Welsh history with local heritage, Cl

Travel &amp; Destinations:
Five ways to have
fun this fall with the kids, D1

·u

.. II you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, cjo The Gaston Gaze tte. PO. Box 1538, Gaston ia, NC 28053

SyMinle 300,

TNT

12:30 p.m., Sunday

1 Race: Sylvania 300
1 Where: New Hampsh1re Inter·

~..

TNT

llc7N200,

3 p.m.. Sept. 23

national Speedway{1.058

m1!es). 300 laps/317.4 mi les.

11 • When: Sunday, Sept. 17
• Last year's winner: Ryan New·

man
• Qualifying record: Ryan New·
man. Dodge, 133.357 mph,
Sept 12. 2003.

Tnlokhrlle
New Hampshire 200,
2 p.m., saturday

1

Race record: Jeff Burton,

Ford, 117.134 inph, July 13.
1997.

• ""'n Harvick won the race at
Richmond. Kasey l&lt;ahne made
the Chase. Tooy Stewart didn't.
,HaNick was the game. l&lt;ahne
was the set.· Stewart was the
match. He lost~ In straight sets.
• Television's insisten.ce on

tracking points standings lap b)'

lap Is silly, since points aren't
awarded until the end of races.
However, if they must foist this
nOnsense upon us, the only appropriate time is the final race
of the re&amp;ular season.
., Before the CIMN)' Rock 'n Roll
400, the Barenaked Ladles per·
fOrmed an awful version of the
national anthem. The rendition
was off-key and flat. A barber·
shop quartet this group is defi·
nltely not.

he fini shed 18th, a lap behind
- put the final na:ls iq a mystifying collapse at the very po int
where, a year earlier, the ch'amp
t'1ad been at his best. Thirdplace fi nisher Kasey Kahne wa s
the beneficiary of Stewart's collapse. He eked into the Cha se,
clearing the hapless Stewart by
16 points. There was virtually
no competition between the two

in the actual race. Harvick. in a
Chevrolet. passed another
Chevy driver, Kyle Bu sch, on the

• Race: Dover 200

·

1

Race : New Ha mpshire

• Where: Dover (Del. l inter· 200
national Speedway (1.0
miles), 200 la ps/miles.

• Where: New Hampshire
International Speedway,

New England 300 .
July 16

Last year's winner: Ryan

• When: Saturday, Sept &lt;16

1 Qualifying record: Davi d

1 last year's winner:

1 Race record : Dale Earn-

Crafton, Chevrolet ;

hardt Jr.. Chevrolet,
130.152 mph, May 30,
1998.

• Last week: Kevin Har\lick, the
nexH&lt;&gt;Iast lap. He held Busch ' • Last week: Kevin Harvick
embodiment of Richard Chiloff by .154 of a second and en- began a weekend sweep
dress Racing 's resurgence.
ters the Chase third, 10 points
with a win in the Emerson
boosted his chances for a
Radio 250 at Richmond.
behind Matt Kensetn and five
cha mpionshtp with a· victory in .
the final race of the regular sea- behind Jimmie Johnson .
"There's a long way to go ." said
son, Richmond International
winn ing crew chief Todd Berrier.
Raceway's Chevy Rock 'n Roll
400 . Tony Stewart's utter failure " If we win aga in next week, we'll
talk some junk .~
to defend his championship -

109.244 mph, July 21,

2001.
1last race: Mark Martin ,
in a Ford, won the O'Reilly

200 at Bristol Motor

Speedway. It was his fourth
victory of the season.

E

THE CHASE FOR THE NEXTEL CuP

s
u
Stewart

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

lap of the Chevy Rock 'n Roll400. "I

more top-five finishes this year

than Stewart.

us tryi~g to get by. Iknow he wanted
to get to the front in a hurry, but it's·
a long ·race, and it was too early for

that." Added Marlin's crew chief,
Richard (Slugger) laooe: "A lot of

Photos by John Clark/NASCAR This Week

Jeff Gordon (24), Dale Earnhardt Jr. (8) and Jimmie Johnson (48) ntce In close quarters at the season-opening Daytona 500 In February.
The tllo are racing slde·by·slde again, this time In the lO·nice Chase for the Nextel Cup. (Below).Matt Kenseth leads the points ~lng ln.

would suspect Stewart might have
been- trying to bring out a caution

Chase b)' teams: Hendrick M&lt;&gt;
torsports 3 (Jimmie Johnson,

flag to keep from getting lapped.

Kyle.Busch, Jeff Gordon), Roush
Racing 2 (Kenseth. Mark Mar·
tin), Richard Childress ·Racing 2
(Kevin Harvick, Jeff Burton),
Dale Earnhardt Inc. 1 (Dale
Earnhardt Jr.), Joe Gibbs Racing
1 (Denny Hamlin) and Evemham
Motorsports 1 (Kasey Kahne).
bility tori$ Wix Filters Lap
Leader Award to Nextel Cup drivers ranked in the top 35 of the
Cup points. Even though Kevin
Harvick led 154 of the 250 laps
~rd winner

was Ted Musgrave, who led
once for 111aps.
·

ij

·-··IH&gt;t
-l&lt;asey
l&lt;ahne, the
season's

biggest winner, raced his

way Into the

Chase....
Kavin Harvick
staked his
claim as a fe
'vorite by winning for the third
time. That's the most single
season wins ever for Harvick.

., Wllo'o hot - Tony Stewart,

make the Chase .... Since
2004 champ Kurt Busch also
failed to make it, no one who's
ever won ~ still has a chance
ID do so this year.

people had something vested in the
race, but just because this team
wasn 't vying for a spot in the Chase
didn't mean tonight wasn't impor·
tant for ,s. ~

NASCAR This Week's Monte .
Dutton glvea hlo take: "Acynic

-.Here's the composition of the

The Busch Series denies eligi-

POMEROY
Hugh
rocks and debris falling
from the hillside on West
Main Street in Pomeroy
near the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge entrance early
Friday evening resulied in
damage to three vehicles
but no personal injury. ·

don't know what Tony's problem
Was," said Marlin . ~ He just dumped

onship-determining Chase for
the NeKtel Cup.
., Denny Hamlin is the first rook·

Whatever happened, it didn't work."

'R Is for Race' Is a

children's NASCAR primer

Kahne in, Stewart out of season's 10-race championship finale
ther is in contention for one this year.
.
Said Stewart ·after falling out of the Chase field: "This is
proof of how tough this series is and how tough it is just to
RICHMOND, Va.- When NASCAR narrowed its cham· make this Chase. It's a big letdown, obviously, but at the
pionship field by means of the Chase for the Nextel Cup · same time, there are 10 guys that earned their way in, too."
Invariably, someone prominent is bound to be left out. In
format, someone was bound to be left out.
2005,
neither 9ordon nor Earnhardt Jr..made the Chase
Matt Kenseth and Jimmie Johnson, whose.regular-season
performances far exceeded those of anyone else, will begin field'.
The former champions in the field are Kenseth and Gar·
the 10-race Chase at the top of the standings, but it's far
don.
Former champions who competed in every race but
from assured that either will wind up winning the title. Undid
not
make it are Stewart, Kurt Busch, Dale Jarrett and
der the terms of the chase, it's now almost an even match
Bobby
Labonte.
between 10 drivers: Kenseth, Johnson (-S points), Kevin
Kahne, the season's biggest winner with five victories,
Harvick (·10), Kyle Busch (·IS), Denny Hamlin (·20), Dale
made
the Chase at Stewart's expense by finishing third in
Earnhardt Jr. (·25), Mark Martin (-30), Jeff Burton (-35),
the
final
regular-season race. Stewart was !Sth, a lap down.
Jeff Gordon (40) and Kasey Kahne (·45).
The
reigning
champion missed out by 16 points.
.
Forty· five points :-the separation from first to JOth- is
"I'm just relieved," said Kahne. "I had so tnany things to
roughly the difference between finishing first and 10th in a
think
about if. I didn't make it. To make it is huge for my·
single race. Had the field not been tightened following Har·
self,
for
Dodge ... and for my whole team.
vick's victory in the Chevy Rock 'n Roll400, Kenseth's q~ar·
"I
raced
all night long. When there were about 15 (laps)
gin over Kahne would've been 466 points.
·
From here on out, the battle is between the 10 finalists, to go, I knew I couldn't finish second, that I needed to hold
though 43 drivers will continue to compete in every race. on for third, and it was time to just take it easy and make
sure I didn't do anything stupid."
Those not in the Chase can do no better than 11th
Since Nextel came on board as corporate sponsor of
. Contact Monte Dutton at
NASCAR's premier series, two men have won champi·
hmduttonSO@aol.com
onships: Kurt.Busch (2004) and Tony Stewart (2005). Nei·

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

"R is for Race: A Stock Car AI·
phabet" (Sleeping Bear Press,

$16.95) is a children's sports pictorial. Author Brad Herzog has earned
awards from the Council for Advance·
ment and Support of Education. The
publisher's web site is www.sleepingbearpress.com .

: i ·.~ r,~(~,;~~~

-,WJ11lk;

Earnhardt liked Gordon,

Three vehicles were damaged but no one was injured when these huge rocks fell from the
hillside on West Main Street near the bridge entrance Friday evening.

Rock fall limits access to Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

The reigning champion 's night
began to go south - and his reign
began to end -when Stewart
tapped Marlin from behind and spun
out the veteran driver on the 35th

the cut for this year's champi·

the 2005 champion, failed to

Marlin

s

Tony Stewart
vs. Sterling Marlin

2005 titlist Tony Stewart made

./ ... ,;

Charlene Hoeftlch/photoa

Pomeroy Patro(man Brent Rose erects a barrier near the
Marathon Station on West Main Street to keep traffic out of
the area threatened by further rock falls. The highway was
also closed near Save-a-lot on the Middleport side of West
Main but _later reopened. Assisting with traffic control were
Officers from the Pomeroy. Middleport and Mason Police
Departments and the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.

R

Cup champion Kurt Busch nor

, ~--

v

)

c

ie to make the Chase since the
format was Implemented in

$1.50 • \'ol. -tO . 1\'n. :~-l

Sprague, Chevrolet,

• No one who has ever won the

2004.
., Only l&lt;anseth ahd Harvick have

PonH.'I'O~ • \Iiddlt•JJOI'I• (,allipnlis • Seplemht'l' J .... , 200h

• High school football
action. See Page B1

128.819 mph, Sept. 17,
2005.
• Race record: Jack

. Chase has a chance to do so
this year. Neither 2004 NeKtel

I)

Ohiu \';dh·~ P11hli ... l1illg ( n .

SPORTS

Rick

l&lt;anseth would lead
Jimmie Johnson by 57 points in·
·stead of five. He would lead
10th-place l&lt;ahne by 466 instead of 45.

Ill

•

Green, Chevrolet, 157.916 CraWford
mph, June 6, 2004.
• Qualifying record: Matt

place, Matt

at Richmond, the

$ept17 ·

laps/ 211.6 miles.

Newman

•If the old system were still in

~

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs codnties

Sylvania 300 •:

• Whan: Saturday. Sept. 23 loudon (1.058 miles), 200
1

a

OBITUARIES
Pages A3, AS
•V. Virginia Addlesburger
• !=lenni Carr
• Hyllia Jean Eblin .
• Dorothy Ann Fisher
• Charles W. Gilmore
• Earl H. Keefer .
• David D. Matthews, Jr.
• S. Virginia Pickens
• Goldie Marie Shriver
• Clarence St. Clair, Jr.'
• Mae Vineyard

Pomeroy Chief of Police
Owners of 1he damaged
Mark Proffitt said the .vehi· cars which were travelinu
. Street
"
cle damage was caused by west on West Mmn
small stones propelled ·into were Robert Hayes, Cathy
the air and across the road- Price, and Leah Bryant, the
way as the larger rocks fell police chief reported.
The bridge was closed
to the ground and settled
behind the concrete harriers &amp;nd traffic was kept out of
along the 'highway. "We ' re the area for more than two
fortunate nothing worse hours as cleanup work took
happened here." Proffitt place and loose rock on the
overhang was knbcked
commented.

down by equipmenl work·
ing on top of the hill. It was
then reopened on 1he
premise that the emergenc y
had passed.
However, upon investigation
Saturday
morning
Leonard Hicks, project supervisor for the conslruction
company, said "it was determined that fraclltres in the
worsened
facing
had

143rd Annual Emancipation Day
Celebr~tion

officially lucks _o ff

If Jeff Gordon's name was Earnhardt, the fan s would be screaming

"go Jeff, yah-yah!' The only thing

wrong wi th you fans is that Jeff is capable of beating Earnhardt' s record
and you can't stand it. Earnhardt recognized that Jeff was a great driver
and gave him credit for it. Wake up,
fans!

If NASCAR thought Jell was in the

wrong, they would have done something about it. After all, we are not

watching "powder-puff Saturday night
race." This is the real thing, and
ftracing stuff happens. •

Ruth Tomlinson
New Bern. N·.C.

GRE AT BEND - The.
Ohio Power Siting Board has
accepted. American Electric
Power \ application for a
new power plant in Lebanon
Township. and AEP is awaiting dates lortwo public hearin g~ on that application.
The OPSB is .the state
agency that will approve or
den y AEP's plan to locate
an lnlegrated Gasification
Combined 'Cycle at its Great
Bend site.
In April. two groups. the
Ohio Energy Users and the
lmluSifial Energy Users of
Ohio filed motions to intervene in the case, and lEUOhio al so tiled -a motion to
amend or di smiss the appli·
cation. Those mo.tions were

• Meigs County
calendar. See Page A3
• Local Briefs.
SeePage AS
•Teammates
honor fallen player.
S.., PageA6
. • Parkersburg and
Charleston hospitals
to be sold. See Page A6

Please see AEP, A:S

Everyone has a right to his or her
own opinion. Many, many fans rate
Gordon at the top of their personal
lists. Others dislike him. Ws their right.

wake of

Details on Paeo A6
. BY MICHELLE MILLER
MMILLER® MYDAILYTRI8U NE.COM

INDEX

GALLIPOLIS - Nine
people, including several
, 4 SECTIONS - 24 PAGES
Gallia County residents,
A2 have been convicted for
Around Town
their roles in a Detroit-toCelebrations
C3-4 Gallipolis drug trafficking .
D.Section ring, local and federal
dassifieds
insert authorities said .
Comics
Results of a probe into the
· Editorials
A4 ring were announced by
Movies ·
C3 Gregory G. Lockhart, U.S.
attorney for the Southern
Obituaries
A3.As Di strict of Ohio; Gallia
Regional
A3,A6 County Sheriff David L.
B Section Martin; Col. Paul D.
Sports
McClellan, superintendent
Weather
A6 of the State Highway· Patrol
© ooo6 Ohio VaHey Publbihing Co. and Gallipolis Police Chief
·I

•

AEPawaits
Great Bend
project
hearings
BY BRIAN J. REED

,
Mlchaffe Miller/ photo
From left Kimm Williams, Toledo, a member of the 5th United States Colored Troops (USCT) and Bill Jackson of Gal lipolis ,
a WWII Veteran raise the American flag at the 143rd Annual Emancipation Day Celebration. The event continues today with
a morning worship service qeginning at 10 a.m. and an afternoon program, featuring Dr. Roderick McDavis, president of
Ohio University, Athens, beginning at 1:30 p.m at the Gallia County Fairgrounds, Gallipolis.

Black

Please see Bridge, Al

BREED®MYDAJLYSENTtNELCOM

INSIDE

but why don't his fans?

O\'erni g-lll." He said there was
a real possibility that more
rock would fall which could
thrcalen passing motorists.
That threat was · reported
to · Di stri ct I 0. Ohio
of
Deparlment
Transportation, officials and
il was immediately decided
to temporarily clt?se the

•

R. Clinton Patterson .
The annoum:ement , was
made in conjunction with
Timothy P. Murphy,. FBI
special agent in charge .
Cincinnati Field Division
and Superintendent John
Monee of.the Ohio Bureau
of Criminal Identification
and lnvestigalion in Ohio
Attorney General Jim
Petro's offi ce.
Authorities said that Shane
" J.J ."
Shortridge
of
Gallipolis, pled guihy to 1wo
charges of drug trafficking
conspiracy and was sen·
tenced in U.S. Dis1ric1 Court
on Aug. 4 to 222 monihs ( 18112 years) in federal prisllll.

William "Hill side" White
of Delroit pled guilty on
Aug. I 10 con spiracy to
po.,sess with imcnt to distribu te more than 50 gram s
of cocaine and is awaiting
. sentencing . He face a mini mum sentence of I 0 years
.imprisonment.
David
Hawkin s
of
Gallipoli s pled guilt y to
conspiracy and is awaiting
sentencing.
Tara
Ma ynard
of
Gall ipolis re ce ived four
months impri sonment for
her · part in the drug ring's
operations . authoritie s sa id .
Ronald Bl anchard of
Bidwell' recei ved five years·

probalion and
Duju an
Alex ander of Detroit awaits
sentencing.
According 10 lhe Gallia
County
Sheriff 's
Deparlment. the con victions
were a result of two search
warrants executed in 2005.
On Feb. 14. 2005. she riff 's deputies serv ed a
searc h warrant at 1834 Ohi o
141. Gallipo lis . 1he rcs i·
dence of Tara Maynard and
Shane "J.J ." Shonridgc.
Shortridge was not present
al the time of the search.
William "Hillside" White
and a another man from
De1roit were present in the

Please see Probe, Al

Southern
teachers will
get pay raise
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT® MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE - Afte r nearly
14 month s o f legal w·rangling, the Southern Local
Edu cation
Associat ion
(S LEA l will receive a I percem pay ra ise retroactive to
Jul y I. 2005.
The 1xiy raises were
approved last week l)y lhe
Oh io
Department
of
Education 's
Financial
Pl anning
Supervision
Commi ssion , which oversees all financial decisions
in the district. The commis~ ion ·..; ,·ote was un animous
de, pi lc months of debate
and

cu n ~ i de r atio n .

Whe n

·"~cu

~o m m l ,;:-. i o n

why the

\llteJ for the

roisc.
Southern Local
Sd1ools
Supcrin lcmlcnt
Mark Miller spc,·ulillecl that
the c&lt;Jm mi" ion liked ll'hat

Please see Teachers, Al

•

�</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="16661">
            <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="16660">
              <text>September 15, 2006</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="257">
      <name>arnold</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2204">
      <name>cotton</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1958">
      <name>hoback</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4314">
      <name>osborn</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1220">
      <name>vineyard</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
