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                  <text>GARDENING

&amp;unbap ltmt~ ·itntintl

PageD6
Stmday, September 24, 2006

..

rs
BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

among others.
An estimated 70,000 mushroom species have been identified worldwide, though only
about 10.000 grow in North
America. At least 70 to 80 of
the wild varieties are toxic,
and some are downrighl
lethal, including the aptly
named "destroying angel"
and "death cap."
Among edible fungi, the
most highly sought include
truffles, morels, chanterelles,

portahella (the large "filet
· ntignon" of specialty mushrooms), shiitake (a fibrous
mu~hroom commonly grown
· on dead broadleaf logs),
enoki (tender white mushroom thai thrives in cool tempemtures), oyster (matures in
an array of colors and sizes
with a mild taste), maitake
(" hen-of-the-woods" with
rich Oavors) and pom poms
(delicate, sweet taste often
compared to lobster or veal),

KENNETT SQUARE, Pa.
- Folks into fungi in and
around this Brandywine
Valley community - and
there are many -like to say
that mushroom growing isn't
such a dark science. All you
need is a healthy horse and
shade.
Plenty of shade.
Seed the spawn in manurerich compost inside a windowless building and. if the
humidity, temperature and
ventilation are right, you' ll be
able to pick a half-dozen
crops or "flushes" of highquality mushrooms at the end
of a 12- to 16-week growing
cycle.
Simplified though it may
be, that formula has a lot of
local pioneering going for it.
Kennett Square has upwards
of 85 farms listed in the
Chester County Yellow
Pages. Pennsylvania produces nearly 50 percent of
the nation's. mushroom crop,
with the bulk of that picked
by hand at the scores of
growing sheds concentrated
here.
·There are no compelling
climatological or horticultural
reasons to explain the
region's extraordinary number of mushroom producers.
"Most likely good access to
markets," said Jim Angelucci,
geneml manager of Phillips
Mushroom Farms, which
claims to J;le the largest grower of spec1alty mushrooms in
the United States.
Buyers of the fresh fungi
are just .a short haul away in
Philadelphia, Baltimore and
other cities. Mushrooms have
been cultivated here since the
1890s, initially by a few carnation growers who wanted
to utilize wasted space in
their greenhouses and generate new income from an
alternative, off-season crop.
It didn't hurt that area racetracks were willing to give
away sizable accumulations
of nutrient-rich horse manure.
"They actually paid you to
take it . off the place,"
Angelucci said. "Now a
truckload costs you anywhere
from $1,000 to $1,500."
Essential stuff, manure,
because the substrate, or
growing medium, is one or
the most important components in mushroom cultivation, Angelucci said.
"Ground up corncobs, cot- .
tonseed hulls and shredded
hardwood bark are good
sources of carbon; poultry
manure, horse manure and
ammonium nitrate provide
the nece:ssary nitrogen. Add
air and water and a little gypsum -to balance the pH (acidity)."
It isn't uncommon for
groups of commercial growers to establish compost
cooperatives where huge
stacks of decomposing material are watered, aged, blended and pasteurized, the latter
to kill any lingering insects,
before being delivered to climate-controlled mushroom
houses.
There, the compost is
spread over rows of stacked
wooden trays, sterilized and
sprinkled with spawn. The
tempemture is dropped, the
humidity raised and the
mycelium - small, root-like
· filaments - begin threading
their way through the substrdle. At that point, a thin
layer of enriched soil, the casing, is added to the top of the
compost. Pickers wJII start
gathering fully fruited mushrooms from the beds in a
matter of weeks.
"Mushrooms are one of the
most difficull commodities to
grow,"
the
American
Mushroom Institute says.
"Intensive labor is required to
produce a consistent, high
quality crop. Also, mushroom
farms today are highly tech. nical operations, complete
with extensive computerized
systems to monitor each
point in production."
William Phillips, who
founded Phillips Mushroom
Farms in 1926, is one of several growers credited with
bringing ice and eventually
air conditioning to summertime mushroom production.
That made it into a viable
year-round crop.
Donald Phillips and his
brother. Marshall, took over
management in the mid1960s, eventually steering the
farms away from the white
varietals and into exotics:

black trumpets and porcini.
Perhaps tile easiest mushrooms for novices to grow
are oysters and shiitake. Kits
are available that duplicate
commercial cultivation, and
make mushroom farming
something you can do quickly and conveniently from
home. Most aie sent with
spawn already injected into a
growing medium. Just mist
the maturing plant each day
and expose it to temperatures

Unique Antiques
opens, As

sliced, grilled portabella
mushrooms contains the
same amount of potassium as
a medium-sized banana."
Vegetarians often choose
mushrooms as meat substitutes, the sandwich-sized
portabella cap in particular.
Also spelled "portobello" and
.''portobella," it provides flavors difficull to achieve with
vegetables alone, writes Jack
Czarnecki, in "Portobello
Cookbook" (Artisan).

ranging from the mid-50s to
mid-60s.
Aside from their pleasing
flavors, mushrooms have
high
nutritional
value.
They're rich in copper and
potassium, niacin, the antioxidant selenium and B-vitamins.
"White. button mushrooms
contain more protein than
kidney beans," the U.S.
Department of Agriculture
says. "Two-thirds of a cup of

Scenes from 2006
Sternwheel Riverfest, A6

at
· Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vul. ;;6, No, :l4

'""" "')&lt;lo~il)"' "'ind . &lt;· nu&gt;

MONDAY, SEPTEMUER 25, 200b

•

SPORTS

'

• Riverside Invitational.
See PageB1
,.

•'

Cha~ene

'

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Rhoda Ann Untalan
• Timothy H. Mills
• Iva Ernestine Zuspan

•

INSIDE
• O'Bieness Memorial
· Hospital to offer
breastfeeding.class.
See Page A3~
• Mason earns CMRP
designation.
See Page A3

.~

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Hoelllchjphoto

Docks at the Pomeroy levee was filled with boats for the Sternwheel Riverfest. This year
there was a record of 18 sternwheelers and more than 50 pleasure boats.

Stemwheel Rivelfest,
another success
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - While the
weather wasn't perfect by
any means as it alternated
between sunshi ne and rain
all weekend and erided on a
wet note , this year:s.
Sternwheel Riverfest wils a
good one overall.
"The rain didn't seem to
dampen the spirits of those
at the festival. but it did
affect the size of the crowd,"
commented John Musser,

chairman. Everything but
the Chalk-it-Up sidewalk art
contest was held although
the Saturday night entertainers bad to be moved off the
amphitheater and onto the
parking lot stage because of
water running across the
stage, "Still we con~ider it a
success," said Musser.
Eighteen sternwheelers
and about .50 pleasure boats
lined t~ e docks at the levee,
the parking lots were lined
with crafters and food vendors, and there was plenty

of entertainment.
Again this year the
"Centennial'' was on hand to
take festival -goers on cruises up and down the Ohio
River, and Saturday night
featured a giant fireworks
display.
As always th e chi li
cookoff was a huge success
and winning the awards
with the People's Choice
award was John Wolfe.
Mason VFW team. Winners
of the organizational awards
as selected by judges were

Brian J. Reed/photo

Jane Jones of New Haven, W.Va., pictured, and her friends
Sue Mora, Denise Mora and Loretta Holsinger, braved a little rain but kept stirring their chili for the chili cookoff at
Saturday's Sternwheel Riverfest. Their "Bite Me" recipe,
original like most at the festival, was a secret.
Union Local 650 Union
·Chili Builders team, first;
Mason VFW, ·second, and
Denise Bunch. Attorney at
Law, third. Placing in the
individual team awards
were Grandma's Chili, first ;
The Pioneers, second. and
Bite Me Chili, third.
The duck purchased by
Judy Werry crossed the finish line first in the ducky .
de~by for the first place
prize of $1,000 in Meigs

County · Chamber bucks.
Second prize went to Phil
Harrison, a $500 sav.ing
bond from Farmers Bank;
third prize to Lee Powell, a
SI 00 savings bond from the
Ohio Valley Batik; ... and
fourth to Diana Lawson, a
$75 bond from Peoples
Bank. Numerous other
prizes were awarded.
The American Electric

Please see Festival. AS

'

Free cancer services in Meigs
BY

BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

y

~-

• Riley family holds
reunion. See Page A3
• Completes basic
training. See Page A3
• TOPS honors acl'liever.
$eePageA3
• Transters posted.
SeePage AS

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WEA1HER
'

Seutty.MIIla . . . JD11knlw hawtbey11vote
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_. Dlleerll~t~~~ ta11t issues, visit

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTNELCOM

Details on Page A6

•

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INDEX

dontvote.oom •cai1·......78U.

2 SECfiONS- 12 PAGES
'

Calendars

'

Classifieds

•

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/

Advertising paid for by AARP.

,.

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B3-4
Bs

Dear Abby

A3
A4
As

Editorials

.

A3

Comics

Obituaries
•

·,

Racine Junior Fire Deparbnent
conbibuting to community

?

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'

Members of the Racine Junior Volunteer Fire Department along with help from their advisors restored ~ 1968 Ohio Division of Forestry truck now used as a brush truck. Pictured
(from left) are Charlie Wolfe, Zach Pickett, advisors, Kyle Goode, Eric Fruth, Michael Yost.
Timmy Sands, Kevin' Layne, advisor. Not pictured, advisors Matt Smith, Kenny Layne.

And then please. IOta the pels ... vote witt•• illferllled . . . to II•••
.

,' .

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Beth Sergentjphoto

•••••••itsecurtty.....es.
'

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.: :

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© 2006 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

RACINE - Menjbers of
the Racine Junior Volunteer
Fire Department . are doing
more than cleaning the station and washing the trucks,
they're giving back to the
~ommunity.

Charlie Wolfe: member of
the Racine Volunteer Fire
Department and advisor to
the juniors said he wants people to be aware that these
yourrg people aren't just
hanging out but giving back
to not o~ly the station but ihe
village and surroundin g ·
areas.
There arc six members in
the junior fire department
who do everything from
sweep and clean downtown
streets after llooding. to pi ck-

POMEROY
-· Meigs
.County's limited hea lth care
options have caused some
improvisation resulting in
the Meigs County American
Cancer Society Resource
Center (CRC) wrere free
serv ices are offered to cancer pmients and their care
givers.
The Meigs County CRC
located within the Mulberry
Community Center is open
from 9 a.m. to I p.m.,
Tuesday ihough FriJay with
hours adjusted to meet. a
client's needs. The phone
number is 992-7520.
County
The
Meigs
American Cancer Society
Taskforce n1ade up of local

members hopes thi s best
kept secret becomes a valu able tool in the local fight
againsl cancer. The center
was funded by local dollars
raised by the Meigs County
Relav For Life and its volunteers are also local residents.
Visitors to the CRC will
'have free access to a computer. the internet and a
printer provided by the
American Cancer Society.
Other services include free
wigs for chemotherapy .hair
loss. prosthetic devices
includ ing bras. cosmetics
and appointments with the
American Cancer Society\
Patient Navigator. Coleen
Krubl. the patient navigator

Please see Service, AS

Eastern board acts on personnel
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Local Board of
Education approved supplemental contracts and other
personnel items at last
week's regular meeting.
The board approved supplemental contracts for Brian
Bowen as head baseball
coach and fall quarte1' weight
room coordinator.
following
were
The
approved as substitute teachers for the remainder of the
2006-2007 school year:
Colleen Ashworth. Jennifer
Baldwin, Samuel Bennett.
Eric
Brown,
Gary
Submitted photo
"Pimp my truck!" The "before" picture of the 1968 Ohio Cunningham. Joni Danieb,
Division of Forestry truck the Racine Junior Fire Department Leslie Dunfee. Christopher
Light, Jennifer Orion. Rena
restored into a working brush truck.
Ransom, David Stafford,
ing up trash along a two mile of forestry truck that is now a Christopher Stewart. Victor
stretch of road, to hosing off brush truck used by ·the Wallace, Deborah Wood.
the Southeru Local School department. Using money Robyn Ha\'.lk, Ron Logan.
Powers.
Sharon
District\ parking Jot.
from fundraisers, the juniors Joan
Pearce
Recently the junior fire invested around $1,000 in Cunningham,
Dietrich.
Amher
Fouty,
department and their advi Please
see
Racine,
AS
Kenneth Green, Justin
sors restored a 1968 divisiim

Kinder. Seth McCoard,
Larry Parks. Amanda Parry,
Stephan Christopher. James
D. Essick. Truv Oldaker and
Laurena Sharp.
TI1e board approved the
following as volunteers at
Eastern Elementary for the
2006-07 school year: Tammy
Adams . Nnrma Arbaugh.
Laurie Boyles. Tammi
C.1usey. Apni Davis, Ash ley
Hager. Linda Hensky. Carrie
Holter. Dee Kimes. Sarah .
Kuhn. Tanya Lambert.
Sl1aron Lawrence, Serena
Lemley, Carrie Long. Jenny
Ridenour. Melissa Scvoc and .
Alice Sharp.
Shelly Caldwell was
approved as a substitute bus
driver, and Nancy Circle was
approved as a home instructor for a health-impaired student. Sara Barringer was
aprroved as a substitute secretary.
The · fo llowing were
approveJ as substitute
teacher . aides:
Kolleta

Please see Eastern. AS.

�i$2006 UNIVERSAL

MEDIA . SyNOiCATE 1 ~

Monday, September 24, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page A2 • The Daily Sentinel
ADVERTISING FEATURE

ADVERT!SEM£NT

UNIVERSAL MEDIA SvNDIC ATfh• 3939 FyFRHARO AVE CANTON OHIO 44109

New Buffalos being handed over to Public

Community Calendar

:Local residents only have 72 hours to walk away with the 20 roll 'bricks' of n1oney

Monday, Sept. 25
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9
a.m ~ . 117 Memorial Drive.
RACINE Southern
Local School Board, regular
meeting, 8 p.m ., Southern
High School media room.

Clubs and
organizations
..

Monday, Sept. 25
POMEROY - Oh-Kan
Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy
Library.
Tuesday, Sept. 26
RACINE - Racine Area
Community Organization,
regular meeting, 6:30 p.m.,
Star Mill Park, pot luck to
be served, new members
welcome.

.By DANIEL C!YrTREtL
[J~ivma/ Media

Sylldimtt

It's like a run on the banks. The phones just
··keep ringing off the hook.
· That's because the U.S. Mint• only made
·these neW Buffalo Nickels for a few months
'and then forever stoppl!d production.
There will never be any more.
· "Now, everyone wants them, It's a
'miracle we have them. And for only
'the next 72 hours we are handing
:them over to everyone who calls
' the National Order Hotline begin··ning at 8:30 a.m. this morning,''
The World Reserve has just announced that it is also giving
.confirmed Timothy . Milton,
a.;,ay 6 free uncirculated rolls to everyone who beats the order
'Chief of Coin Operations for the
deadline for each Vault Box.
World Reserve Monetary
Those who beat the deadline and cover del ivery will get the
.Exchange.
new Buffalo ro~s for only $7.
"It took the full power of this
Each sealed Vault Box contains a 'brick' of 20 special sized
non-government agency to
rolls of twenty five Buffalos in radiant, uncirculated condition,
. come through with the mamthat's '500 coins in all.
moth U.S. Mint ballistic hags of
Beginning at 8:30 a.m. today readers can get them
nickels shown in these private
by calling the National Order Hotline toll·free at
immediately
world exclusive photos," he said.
1·800·239-2432 and asking for Dept. BN5966.
"First issue coins like these are
All shipments are backed by the power of the World Reserve
·highly sought after, but :we've never
Monetary
Exchange with a money back guarantee up to $10,000.00.
. seen anything like this, Coin values
lhe World Reserve and the United .States Mint are unaffiliates:l
fluctuate dramatically and there are
. entities and the trademarks of the World Reserve are distinguished
never any guarantees so it's like cornand wholly separate from those registered to the United States Mint
paring apples to oranges, but a forty coin
. bankroll of 1913 Buffalo nickels are now
such as "The U.S. Mint". If you miss the deadline you will be turned
· worth up to $26,000.00." ·
away and required to wait for future public announcements If
" Even more impressive are the new nickels
authorized by the World Re~rve In this or other publicatklns.
just minted in 2004. In only 2 years these new
THE WGRLD RESERVE MONETARY EXCHANGE IS NOT
nickels have already increased in value by an
AFFILIATED WITH THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT OR
astonishing 1,098%," Milton said,
.
ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY. ALL TRANSACTIONS 'ARE
"So just imagine what these special twenBACKED BY THE WORLD RESERVE MONETAllY EXCHANGE
ty five coin rolls of new Buffalos could bring
WITH A MONEY BACK GUARANTEE UP TO $10,000.00.
someday. These are .not ordinary commercial forty coin bankrolls. You can't find them
at the U.S. Mint, at the Federal Reserve or at
any local bank. You can't get them rolled this
way anywhere," he said.
In fact, these twenty five coin rolls are so
special because they reinain sealed · in the
Official Vault Boxes. Each sealed vault box
.contains a 'brick' of 20 rolls of new Buffalo
' Nickels in radiant, uncirculated condition
·:with Mint contact markings, 500 coins in all.
:0 And here's the best part. "We are giving up
:Oat) the rolls for just $7 each. The full Vault
"Boxes weigh more than a heavy solid bar of
: .999 pure silver. So he careful, you'll need
' both hands to pick them up,'' he said.
: "Remember they are uncirculated and have
:never been in the hands of the public.
: Uncirculated coins are the only ones likely to
:increase the most in value,'' said Milton,
: These full Vault Boxes of special Uncircu•lated Rolls are the most impressive gifts to
:hand .out to children or grandchildren, family
·.: members or anyone special that you want to
'impress. You just won't believe the expression
:on people's faces when you hand them out. It's
:like you just gave them a Million Dollars.
·, "The most impressive way to give them is in
~the full sealed Vault Boxes, but we can't stop
·•people from breaking the boxes open and
.:handing them out individually. So, to keep
' that from happening we are paying out a
:tremendous discount for each ·full vault box.
:That's why everybody seems to be taking at
;least 4 full boxes while they still have time to
:call to get them," Milton said.
.~ "Just think if you had saved several rolls of
•the 2004 Nickels. Right now you'd be tempted
;~to cash them all in for a huge jackpot. So for
:heaven's sake, don't ever get left out-like that
:again,'' urged Milton.
; .Beginning today at 8:30 a.m., the National
::order Hotline opens to the public. For only 72
:~hours they'll be handling the large number of
:•calls. Readers must diall-800-299-2492 ask
.:for Dept. BN5966. If the lines are busy, keep
:trying.
.
: The World Reserve has just announced that
·;it is also giving away the value of 6 free uncir·:culated rolls to everyone who beats the order
: deadline for the Official Vault Boxes.
• "We have to put limits on dealers. But
.:everyone else who calls within the next 72
·:hours should be able to get what tl\ey need," . • WORLD EXCLUSIVE: These are the never-before· seen photos that show radiant uncirculated coins li ke the ones now being released to the gen era l public in a special effort by the World Reserve. The 'bricks' of 20 rolls can not be fo und from the U.S. Mint, the Federal Reserve or from any
:Milton said. •
loca l bank. You can't get them rn the twenty five co in rolls any where. Only those who beat the 72 hou r deadline can get them. along with six
rolls free wrth each officral Vault Box.
·
·
·
On I he worldwide web at: www. CoirrVaultBoX.com

HOW TO GET
FREE ROLLS

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paintball tournament, craft
vendor,, prizes.

Other events

Reunions
Sunday, Oct. 1
POMEROY
Decendents of Joshua and
Mary Botts Wood reunion,
12:30 p.m. , pot luck lunch,
the King Farm , 38858
Smith .Road.

Saturday, Sept. 30
FRANKLIN FURNACE
- Free log home learning
seminar, 10 ~. m ., Heritage
Log Homes of Ohio Valley.

Birthdays

Saturday, Sept. 30
RUTLAND -- Summer 's
End Fest, I0 a. m., Rutland
Church of God. family
activities,
concessions,
homemade · apple butter.

GALLIPOLIS The
American
Hospital
Association
(AHA)
Certification
Center
announces that Holzer
Medical Center's Craig
Mason has earned the desof
Certified
ignation
Materials &amp;
Resource
Professional (CMRP).
The CMRP is a national
credential that distinguishes
an individual as being ·
among the elite in a critical .
field of healthcare management. Mason serves &gt;as the
Craig Mason
Materials
Director · of
Management at Holzer CMRP Examination. The
Center
in Examination tests knowlMedical
Gallipolis, and oversees the edge required of a compeHospital's Central Supply, tent healthcare materials
Laundry, . Print
Shop, and resource manager in the
Storeroom and Receiving areas of Purchasing/Product
Departments. He joins only Value Analysis, Inventory
13 other CMRPs in the Distribution Management,
State of Ohio.
Support
Services,
To earn the CMRP, an Information
Systems,
individual must satisfy eli- Finance, and Strategic
gibility requirements that. Planning/Leadership. The
mcorporate a blend of work CMRP Program supports
experience and continuing the · community of healtheducation, agree to adhere care materials and resource
to Professional Standards of managers and is designed to
Conduct, and pass the provide an objective and

rigorou' assessment of professional knowledge .
Mason graduated from
Gallia Academy
High
School in · 'I 981 and
Morehead State University
in Kentucky in 1985, with a
degree
in
Business
Management
with
an
ernphas\s in Computer
He began his
Science.
career at Holzer Medical
Center in 1988 as Cost
Analyst in the Accounting
Department. In 1997, he
transferred
to
Jenkins
Clinic
in
Memorial
Wellston. where he was
Administrative
Director,
and in . 2002, accepted his
current title of Director of
Materials Management at
Holzer Medical Center. He
'is also a member of the
AHRMM. (Association for
Healthcare Resource and
Materials Management).
Mason
resides
in
Gallipolis · with his wife,
Melissa, Assistant Vice
President and Trust Officer
at Ohio Valley Bank, and
their two sons, Cory, 15,
and Cade, 7.

Church events

Riley family holds reunion
LETART -The Eva and
Patrick Riley Reunion was·
held recently in Letart, W.Va.
with approximately I 00
descendents attended.
Lucy Chipps was honored
for being 91 years old with
five generations of her family
being
represented.
Graduates honored were JT
Parker, a 2006 graduate of
Huntington High School; and
Katie Roush, a 2006 graduate
of Alderson Broaddus with a
communications degree.
Joe and Karen Hreha of
Pittsburgh were recognized
for traveling the farthest. and
the newest newest addition to
the family tree was Nathan
Fields, four months, son of
Sheri and Jason Fields.
Attending were Nathan
Fields, Stephen Machir,
Michelle Varian, Maddy
Hreha, Cody Russell, Sissie
Compson. Zachary Fields,

Guyla Walburn, Brandie Van
Meter, Michaela Olson,
Cari&gt;lynn Zurcher,
Nikole Wilson, Guyla Rgush,
Mary Ann Winebrenner,
Tanya Flanery, Kaylee Goff,
Lucy Chipps.
Katie Roush, Lacey
Varian, Lisa Hysell,
Heather Drake, Sierra Van
Meter, Joyce Well, Helen
Ramsey, Lynna Hreha,
Bobby Ann Edwards, Jeannie
Roush, Kylynn Machir, Pat
Winebrenner, Patty Roush.
Allie Cutlip, Lucy Goff,
Karen Hreha, Gage Smith,
Sharon Vickers, Nancy Hall.
Luke Hreha, Cheryl Riley,
Samantha Shontz.. Dylan
Lilley, Janet Miller, Kim
Hreha, Anthony Vickers,
Carol Fetty,
Jan Parker,
Jonathan Machir, Wilma
Baldwin, Jenna · Parker.
Caden Goff,
Sally Bland,
Jodi Parker, Randy Edwards.

'You, Me and Dupree' becomes realitY
serious an issue it is. If he is
unwilling to toss out hi s best
friend, you may be stu ck with
Dear Annie: Last May. my Josh until your lease is up.
fiance and I rented a three- . But insist that the next place
bedroom house with a base- you rent will be just the two
ment and a two-car garage, of you. Make it about privacy
and agreed to let. his best and not about Josh, and your
friend. "Josh," move in. We tiance may be more recepwould each pay $500 a tive.
month to cover the rent and
Dear Annie: When my
utilities. So far. Josh has paid daughter was a teenager, she
only $200. Plus, he keeps his found out the hard way that
room full of dirty clothes and she could get oral herpes by
dishes.
performing oral sex on an
How can I make my fiance mfected partner, and , he
understand that I am tired of could get genital herpes by
having the two of us pay all having someone with a cold
the bills? Josh has been look- sore pert'orm oml sex on her.
ing for work, but not very There still is no cure for herhan!. Also, Josh has a daugh- pes.
ter who lives with her mother,
Now my daughter is pregand when their electricity was nant with my first grandchild.
cut off, she washed her Herpes is a very serious conclothes in our home, even dition that must be carefully
though she earns more monitored during pregnancy,
money than I do. I asked her and if my daughter has an
not to do this without first active outbreak at the time of
getting my permission, and delivery, she will need to
she got really angry. She con- have a caesarian to keep the
stantly refers to the place as baby safe from infection.
"Josh's" house,' which really Having a C-section also
bums me up.
means spending additional
. 1 am trying .to be reason- time in the hospital and
able, and I certainly don't weeks of recuperation at
want to have a falling out home while tending to a )lewwith my fiance over this, but born infant.
I am tired of being broke after
Although the last thing on a
each payday. Please help. teen's mind is the binh of her
Wisconsin
·
future children, it would be a
Dear Wisconsin: This wise girl who learned this lessounds like the plot of "You, son in order to avoid heanMe and Dupree." The situa- break in her future. Thanks
tion with Josh is not likely to for getting this message out.
get . better, and even if he - Murrieta, Calif.·
becomes· a more reliable tenDear Murrieta: We appreant, you will still have to deal ciate the opportunity. Many
with the ex and their daugh- teens mistakenly don' t think
ter. Your living arrangements oral sex is sex. Listen up,
are not working, and you kids. [f you are pe1forming
must find a way to transmit oral sex, you are most delithis information to your nitely havi1ig sex, and you
tiance so he understands how can contract a sexually transBY KAntY MITCHELL

Sunday, Oct. 1
SYRACUSE - Second
Thursday, Sept. 28
Annual Biker Sunday at
POMEROY Alpha Syracuse Church of the
Iota Masters, II :30 at St. · Nazarene, I0:30a.m. Pastor
Paul .Luthern. Hostesses, Steve Combs of Leave a
Norma Custer. Ann Rupe, Mark Ministries to speak.
and Jeannie Werry.
The public is invited .
TUPPERS PLAINS Information at 992-7138.
VFW Post 9053, 7:30p.m. ,
at hall.

Tuesday, Sept. 26
MIDDLEPORT
Euvetta
Bechtle
will
observe her 90th birthday
on Tuesday.' A family celebration is being planned for
her. Cards may be sent to
her at Overbrook Center,
Room 204, Page Street,
Middleport, Ohio 45760.

Wednesday. Sept. 27
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453 will meet
in special session at 7 p.m.
for the purpose of confer-

• VALUABLE:· These are the 'bricks' of
20 special rolls of twenty five that everyone is trying to get. They are heayier than
solid bars of .999 pure silyer. Values of
all coins fluctuate and there are
never any guarantees, but 1n only two
years, new nickel s just minted in 2004 have already
increased in value by an astonishing 1,098%. So, to get in on this
one readers better hurry, because the fi rst 10,000 callers are getting the
value of 6 Free Rolls with each full vault box.

ring the fellowcraft degree
on one candidate. It will
also be move up night for
the officers. Refreshments.

Monday, September 25,2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

•

Public meetings

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

Rita Hreha, Kay Riley, Jarron
Hreha, Deloris Winebrenner,
Judy Young, Dakota Hreha,
Ann Machir, Sue Cornpson,
Donna Vicker, Shari
Fields, Clay Varian, Wendy
Hreha, Rich Hreha Sr. , Josh
Glover, Sally Smith, Justin
Noel, Roger Flanery, David
Edwards,John Miller, John
Hreha,Tom Roush, Bill
Winebrenner
Jr.,
Jack
Winebrenner, Mike Hreha,
Ken Vickers, Rich Hreha Jr.,
Earl Riley, Nick Lilly, Bill
Winebrenner Sr. , Vernon
Roush, Roger Winebrenner,
David Winebrenner, John
Machir, Joe Hreha, Harry
Vickers, Bob Winebrenner,
Jeff Riley, JT Parker, Jack
Well, Kevin Goff, Jim
Young. Chad Smith, Ernie
Compson,
Jason
Fields.Thomas Van Meter.

AND MARCY SUGAR

mined disease. And because
oral sex is treated so casually.
the self-esteem issues can bt:
severe. panicularly for girls.
We care about you - please
care about yourselves.
Dear Annie: This is in
response tu "Lisette," who
.hasn't spoken to her sister
"Lana" in over a year. Get
over it!
My sister and 1 were close
at one time but had a horrible
argument. Except for an
al f .
h ·
occasion
am•ly gat enng
we did not speak for over 10
years. At the age of 57, she
had a hean attack. We reconnccted briefly before she died
six weeks later.
Because of pride, I wasted
all those years 1 could have
had with her and her family.
Is the argument worth losing
your sister permanently or
carrying the guilt with you
the rest of your life? Accept
each other's faults and enjoy
one another. - Forever
Guilty
Dear Forever: You learned
a harsh lesson, but please
know that your sad experience will serve as a warning
to others. Thank you.
Annie's Mailbox is written
b ~ h M' h 11
d
Y
at Y
ltc e an
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Arm Landers column. Please e-mail your
questions to anrriesmailbox@comcast.rret, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, lL
606II. To firrd out more
. about Anrrie's Mailbox, allll
read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoorrists, visit th.e
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
to offer breastfeeding class
ATHENS - O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital in
Athens will offer a breastfeeding class for expectant mothers in October.
The class, which is held
in conjunction . with the
lactation program sponsored by the O'Bieness
Birth Center, will take
place Wednesday, Oct. 4,
from I to 3:30 p.m . in

'

'

O'Bleness' Lower Level
Room 010.
Michele
Biddlestone,
O'Bleness' international
board certified lactation
consultant, will lead the
class. Topics to be discussed
will
include :
advantages of breastfeeding for mother and child,
anatomy of the breast,
physiology of breastfeed-

ing ,
preparation • for
breastfeeding,
maintenance and management Of
breastfeeding, and advice
for working mothers.
The class is provided
free of charge; no registration is required. For
more information, contact
Michele Biddlestone ~t
(740) 592-9364.

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Completes basic.training TOPS honors
·. TUPPERS PLAINS achiever
Pvt. Laurie Morbitzer .of
Tuppers Plains has completed U.S. Army basic combat
training.
She is the daughter of
John Morbitzer of Tuppers
Plains and Valerie Baker of
Delaware, and the grande
daughter of John · and
Brenda Morbitzer of Grove
City and the late Ida
Richmond. She ,is·a senior at
Eastern High School , and is
enrolled in the cosmetology
program at Meigs High
School.
She is part of the 2nd
Battalion, 485th infantry
Pvt. Laurie Morbltzer
regiment, Echo Co., 4th
Platoon "Death Dealers" of begin AIT after graduating
Fort Jackson, S.C. She will next year.

Proud to be a.part of your life.
S!!bscribe.today • 992-2 155
'·

COOLVILLE - A yellow
rose was presented to
LaChresi a Bogardus in
recognition for achieving her
goal and becoming a KOPS
(keeping off pounds sensibly) at thi s week's meeting.
The weekly weight loss winner was Connie Rankin.
Tops recently met with 21
members and two visitors
present. The group will be
attending the fall rally to l;le
held in Cheshire, Sept. 30.
Plans were made to have a
walking group in the
Tuppers Plains and Coolville
fall parades on Oct. 14.
TOPS meetings are held
every Tuesday night with
weighin at 5: 15 followed by
a 6:30 p.m. meeting. For
more information contact
Pat Snedden at 662-2533 or
attend a free meeting.

$289
Free Delivery
FURNITURE • APPLIANCES • CARPET
Pomeroy, OH • 992-3671

�OPINION
.
M
onday,Septe!~~:2o1:!
------~~------------------~--------------~------------~~----~---.
The Daily Sentinel'

The Daily Sentinel

Help Islamic extremism, shut. up

Shut up.
When all is said and done
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
when protestors junk
www.mydailysentlnel.com
their placards, when burnmg churches cool, when a
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
murdered nun's grave
Diana
grows grass - '"shut up" is
Jim Freeland
West
the underlying message of
Pope Rage, the latest fulmiPublisher
nation to come from Islam,
this time over Pope
Charlene Hoeflich
Benedict's recent lecture on to the world body. "Islamic
General Manager-News Editor
faith and reason. When the fascists"
are
out.
pope argued. quoting a ''Extremists who use terror
Byzantine
sm1rce
on as a weapon to create fear"
----------------Muhammad, that the prac- are in.
Cougress shall make 110 law respecti11g an
tice of forced conversionWe probably have presiestablis111111'11.t of religio11, or prolribitit~g the
key to Islamic expansion dential pal and roving
over the centuries - is ambassador Karen Hughes
free e.wrcise thereof; or abridJ(illg the freedom
inimical to both faith . and to th&lt;tnk for Bush's dlsof speecl1, or of the press; or the right of the
reason , the reaction of cree t- to-the-point - ofpeople peaceably to asSt'mble, at~d to petition · anger and violence was incomprehensible . talk .
instantaneous. Just shut up, "Diplomats
say
that
tHe Govemme11t for a redress ofgrievat~ces.
the umma exclaimed.
Muslims hear (the phrase
Or, to put it more elegant-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution ly, as did Daniel Pipes : 'Islamic fascists ') as an
attack on their reli gion.
"The Muslim uproar has a thereby validating the
goal- to prohibit criticism extremists' false charge that
of Islam by Christians and the United States i.s at war
thereby impose Shariah with ls·lam," writes Morton
Today is Monday. Sept. 25. the 268th day of 2006. There norms in the West. Should Kondr.acke,
explaining
are 97 days left in the year. ·
Westerners accept this cen- Hughes' semanti c se nti tral tenet of Islamic law, ments. which he says have
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept. 25, 17S9, the first United States Congress others will surely follow. put the kibosh on adminisadopted 12 amendments to the Constitution and sent them Retaining free speech about tration straight talk. But
to the states for ratification. (Ten of the amendments Islam, therefore, represents mayhe there's more (less)
became the Bill of Rights.)
a critical defense against to it. Earlier this .month,
On this date :
the imposition of an Islamic Hugh.es wrote : "As I have
In 1506, King Philip I of Castile died.
order."
traveled the world, r have
In 1775, American Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen
The question is, will we met those who try to justify
was captured by the British as he led an attack on Montreal. retain our free speech about the violence based on poliIn 1890, Wilford Woodruff, president of the Church of Islam? Speaking at the cy differences, long-held
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, issued a Manifesto for- United Nations this week, grievances or a perceived
mally renouncing the practice of polygamy.
Pakistan's
Pervez threat from the West."
ln 1906, Russian compo., er Dmitry Shostakovich was Musharraf asked the interDifferences, grievances.
born in St. Petersburg .
national community to ban threat: Isn't she missing
In 1957, with 300 U.S. Army troops standing guard, nine the "defamation of Islam" some little old jih&lt;ld thing'!
black children forced to withdraw from Central High - a rendition of "shut up" Not that she's alone. Take
School 111 Little Rock, Ark., because of · unruly white that's a constant refrain &lt;Jt Hughes mentor Edward
crowds were escorted to class.
the United Nations - but it Djerejian. Veteran diplomat
ln 1978, 144 people were killed when a Pacific looks like mum's already to assorted Middle Eastern
Southwest Airlines Boeing 727 and a private plane collid- the word. Just read through . countries
wann to
ed over Sari Diego.
George W. Bush's address Arabs, cool to Israel Uust
Five years ago: Saudi Arabia formally severed relations
with Afghanistan's hard-line Taliban government. Former
Chicago Bulls player Michael Jordan, who'd left professional basketball after winning a half-d.ozen championship
rings, announced he was returning to the game with the
Washington Wizards. General Motors Corp. announced the
. ~UNITED
2002 model year would be the last for the Chevrolet
Camaro and Pontiac Firebird.
One year ago: President Bush wrapped up a three-day
trip designed to convey hands-on leadership during the
Gulf Coast hurricanes, promising to act on military leaders'
re4uest for a national sear~h-and-rescue strategy. A U.S.
military helicopter crashed in Afghanistan, killing all five
American crew members. Actor Don Adams died in Los
Angeles at age 82.
DEAn.!
Today's Birthdays: Baseball Hall-of-Farner Phil Rizzuto
TO
is 89. Country singer lan Tyson is 73 . Rhythm-and-blues
AME:RICA!
singer Joe Russell is 67. Actor Robert Walden is 63. Acto.rproducer Michael Douglas is 62. Model Cheryl Tiegs is 59.
Actress Mimi Kennedy is 57. Actor-director Anson
Williams is 57. Actor Mark Hamill is 55. Actor Colin Friels
1s 54. Actor Michael Madsen is 48 . Actress Heather
Locklear is 45. Actress Aida Turturro is 44. Actor Tate
Donovan is 43 . Basketball player Scottie Pippen is 41.
Actor Jason Flemyng is 40. Actor Will Smith is 38. Actor
Hal Sparks is 37. Actress Catherine Zeta-Jones is 37.
Actress Aridgette Wilsqn is 33. Actor Chris Owen is 26.
Rapper T. I. is 26. Actor Lee Norris is 25. Singer Diana
Ortiz (Dream) is 21.
Thought for Today: "The richer your friends, the more
they will cost you.·· - Elisabeth Marbury, American writer
(1856-1933).
. 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

TODAY IN HISTORY

like his close a;sociate
James Baker, who now wl'hairs the vaullted lra4
Study Group) - Djerejian
is another happy warrior of
ambiguity. The "scminul
challenge" of our age, as
Djerejian describes it. is
" the struggle for ideas
between the forces of moderat ion and extrem i,m.
whether it be sccLi la r
cxtremi~m

or

religi&lt;HI"'

extremism of no mall et
what reli g ion , no matt er

prejudices :md rcjecti''" and the extremist' '.\I n
more crcdibi lit) ...
So shut up.
lllogging online. cn lumnist Mona l'harcn reJ Hl rt c· d
on
anotll~r
111(\tkJ;I t..:,

Gco1:nc
Univ~rsity ·;

Vl.'a"hill !'lu n.

Sc; l c·d
Hossein Na sr. In an i•t tcrview wi'th ~I'R lwst I li ane
Rchm. Na sr c·o,.tcst c·c l that ··
Pope Rage \·iol cnce ;1 .~ : 1 io .;t
Chri-.tian" wa~ not LIII Jli P\n ked. ,\ , C llilre n

\\l ull!,

what culture ...
' Diane Rchm ccp1ahl y
This is a challcn~c . all restated his pm iti(lll tlJ';I Idright - a clwllel~ge tn phrase) : ·so Y"" 1i 1111 k
know what he's talking words arc 1 iok ncc·. · li e
about . But such obfus~:ation con firmed ...
is n111re than just the
So shut up
antitl1csis of reasoned niMeanwhile. li ste n to the
tique . ·h aJ,n happens to vnicc of bona fide "cxtrcnlcomply witl1 what Pipes i:-.m.'· Greal l31 itain \ u wn
call&gt; "Shariah m&gt;rm &lt;'' in the
Anjcm Choud;uy ·" l'l'J'lll'l- ,
West.
Islam r]rol1ibits "blasphe- cd in th~ E1 · ~ning St&lt;n1d;11d: ..
my ... whil'i1 inciuLks criti- "The Mu sl i111s tak~ tl1ci r
cism
llf it s prophet relig ion very sl'ritHI\I .Y a11 d
IVIuhilllllllad. The sharia non-Mu slim s mu st ;Lpprccipenall y "dc;,t h. Btlt if it is att: that aud IHU ~ l .t ho
"ex tremi sts" who carry the understand thi11 thcrl· "'"Y
penalt y out - as in the rit- be se riot1s cu11s~q u cnn.' :-. if
ual murders of Thco van you insult Islam :111d tile
Gogh in A1mterdam (2004) pfllphet. ..
He continued : "WIIlw H'r
and Mohammed Taha in
insult
~ the me s~o, a 11c of ''
Sudan (2006) - what Pope
Rage revei!ls is how shod - Muhammad is g11i11f! l(_' bt.:
ingly little se parates "mod- Sllbject to capita l pun i·,herates" from ''extremists" ment."
"Shut up:· 'ay tltc l&lt; l&lt;'dnwhen it comes to the hlasates.
''o r else:· ,l .,;t\ lhe
phcmy-taboo in the first
ex
tremi
sts. Frankl1~ lhis
place.
"Even the most moderate sounds an awful lot'" it the
and Westernized Muslims ''moderates·· are as llllll rca- ·:
will not tolerate insults to sonab le as the "l'"ilremish ." ,
the Prophet Muhammad.'' This may he shock ing -writes Tulin Daloglu , com- but it's nothing to k left ,
menting on Pope Rage from speechless over.
(Diana 'v\'t'sl ;,,. u collll illllst "
the moderate side of Islam ,
in The Washington Times . .fur The Washing/Oil /i 111, ·s.
'"Each
offense
unites Sire ca11 he conlllcll ·tf •·ia
Muslims against Wes tern dimwwest@ \·eria m .m ·r )
..·--·-·-·

..

NUT JOBS"

Letters to the editor arc "·elcome. Thn .,hould be less
tha11 300 won/.1·. All letter.,· rm' subject to .editing. must be
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good taste, addressing issues, 1101 persorwlirie.1·. Letters of
thanks to organizario11s and iiU!ividuals ll'iflnot be accepted for pub/icatio11.

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BUSH

IS~E

DEVIL!

"

'

ALL BUSINESS: Lessons to be learned
ftom Amaranth hedge fund implosion
Bv RACHEL BECK

hedge funds because they cent decline JUst last week . for the momh ;h it 'had . to
employ alternative trading atier a milder-than-expected , unload ;tsscts to al'l&gt;id be ing
strategies, which in recent winter allowed sttpplics to shut down The '''""i'""Y
NEW YORK - Hedge years have largely beat the surge and thi s year's hurri- ckclined to commcn1 Inn her.
fund Amaranth Advisors 'broader market. But the . cane seasnn has so far had
Financiul 111arke1 " ha,·e
apparently forgot that it wa' funds also take on Jots of no impact on production . On hu·gc1y
shr u gg~d
u!'f
supposed to hedge its hets. risk to try to secure such Thursday, the most actively Amaranth \ lossc' and tile
Its big push into natural gas rewards which can back- traded ti.1tures contract trad- imp;tct won ' t l i~c lv alli:ct
trading led the tirm to lose fire.
ed below $5 for 1,{)()0 cutJic what con&gt;LIIlll'r' pay li •r n;1t- ,
about two-thirds of its $9.2
Dozens of funds including feet of natural gas.
ural ~a~ I hi'"' wi r111: r lo Ill' &lt;It .,
billion in assets.
Long
Term
Capital
·Amaranth added to its their' lwmc&gt;.
l!tn
its
On its Web site, Amaranth Management _ which had woes by heing highly lever- mvesturs, who thouglll . llwy ·
trumpets that it follows a two Nobel Prize-winning agcll. meaning it borrowed were buyin~ iato a di ' LT '&gt; i"broad spectru.m of altema- · economists on it~ staff and money to cover its costs and fi ed lund. l1a1c·n ·t l&gt;c~ n
tive investment and trading Bayou Group have col- tl1en scrambled tu meet mar- spared.
strategies in a nighly disci- lapsed due to everything gin calls when its bets went
Goldmcm Sac hs Cirnu p
plined, risk-controlled man- from outright !'raud to poor bad.
Inc. said one of its fu1&lt;ds
ner." But that turned out to money management.
''This showed a lack of listed nn the London Stock
he far from true, rocking its
Amaranth
exemplifies adherence to their defined Exchange. Goldman S:~u hs
investors that included some how good can quickly turn leverage &lt;\nd expo,ure toler- Dynamic Opj~H'Illllit ics I ILl., ,,
of the biggest financial insti- bad. Natural gas futures ances, which allowed them could lose 2.5 Jll'lct'nl to 3 . ,
tutions and pension funds.
soared to $1 5 per I. 000 to become susceptible to the percent
in
Scpt•·•nhcr
It's the latest blowup in cubic feet last year after htlr- downturn in this very b~.:&lt;.:aU \~ or ib C;'\ j)O \ \I I'C 1
the hedge fund world. which ricanes disrupted Gulf of volatile market." said Brian acqmJin~ to a IL'gul.!hliJ 1'11 continues to grow in popu- Mexico output and specula- Shapiro,
principal
at ing. San Di l'~o (\qrnty .
larity and power yet has no tors bid up prices on fears of CarbonB;hcd Consulting. Employees
Hc· tirc•ntcnt .,
oversight to keep its prac- a cold winter. For a time. which provides research &lt;Uld Association. a jlL'II 'I i l lll frrnd
tices in check and protect Greenwich, Conn.-ba.,ed advisory services to hedge wi1h about $7 billion in
investors.
Amaranth piled up billions funds and investors.
a&lt;Sets that 1:1'1 1c'; " had
There are now almost in paper gains as a lone
In a letter to sharclmluers committed $ 17". l.llillitll\ to
9,000 funds, with asseL' top- trader in its Calgary. Alhena Monday, Amaranth founder Amaranth. c'lnll;IIL'd it· l11st
ping $1 trillion, drawn fmm office made winning bets on Nicholas Maoun"
a t(&gt;r- $-15 million 1111 the invt•, t·
a broad investor base. That's where future prices would mCr portfolio m&lt;magc r with mcnt. Tho.~o,c ~-'" 'in rail..'\ \\'l..'l'e
very different from 1990, go. By its cou nt . assets a solid reputation in finan - made bc fnrL' ,\nJtr r:rn th 's
when 600 hedge funds man- under management rose cial circles _ told inve,tor&gt; disclosure of 11idl'l lo"e'
aged only about $39 billion from $7 .4 billion at the start that the year-t1i-date losse'
All th is Cll\11 \'' · tln ve
for a client base largely of the year to $9.2 billion in in its mulitstn1tcgy fLn\ds • moruh ... after ; 1 cnu1r d~·l i-. •··
made up ol' rich individuals. . late August.
cmlid top.35 percent.
\i011 ov~rtllflll'd ~~ ruk th at
according to the ChicagoHowever. those gam'
l:ly lute Wednesday. anoth· would have brought ilc'd~· e
based Hedge Fund Research evaporated as futures prices er letter revised ih yeui- to- funds under l i.S. s,.,.," iti'cs
Inc.
for natural gas plunged this date losses to)\5 percent and and Exchun,,e ( · {llllllli .,.., j~ ~ n
Investors are attracted to summer, including a 12 pt'r- said it would lnsc fi:'i pc·rccnt ~o,urx:rv i "iin n .

www .mydailysentinel.com

2006

Obituaries
Rhoda Ann Untalan

--------------------------------------------------~·

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Monday, September 25,

Rhoda Ann Untalan, 46, of Mason,- passed away
Saturday, Sept. 21 2006. at St. Mary&gt; Hospital.
She was a homemaker.
Untalan was born Sept. II , 1960, in Pomeroy, daughter
of the late William Ferguson and Marjorie (Lee) Ferguson
Stewart. In addition to her pa nts, she was preceded in
death by her brother, Terry Ferguson; an.d aunt, Betty
Hawley.
Survivors include her husband, Robert U ntalan of
Mason, daughter/son-in-law, Misti (Jeremiah) Alison of
Mason; daughter, Christy Stewart of Point Pleasant ; grandchildren, Jordan Stewart, Kailyn Alison,; brothers, Charles
Ray Ferguson of West Columbia, and Greg (Shelly)
Ferguson of Mason; sister/brother-in-law, Terry (Pete)
Camp of West Columbia; stepfather, James " Biddy"
Stewart of West Columbia; stepsisters, Toni Givens of
Mason, Kellie (Rod) Hogle of DeGraff, Ohio; stepbrother,
James " Bub" (Jill) Stewart of West Columbia; aunt, Pat
Proctor of Middleport; uncle, Larry Lee; nep~ew , Colton
McKinney of West Columbia; spec ial friends, Mary
(Ronnie) Adams and Judy Young.
Funeral service will be held at I p.m. Tuesday at
Foglesong-lucker Funeral Home in Mason, with Rev.
James Keesee officiating. Burial to follow in. Sunrise
Memorial Gardens. Visitation will take place from II a.m.1 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral home. Condolences may be
sent to foglesongtucker@ my way. com via email.

1imothy H. Mills
Timothy H. Mills, 58, of Gallipolis, Ohio, passed away
Friday at Holzer Medical Center.
He was born Nov. 22, 1947, in Gallipolis, the son ofthe
late James and Beulah Gibson Mills.
He was retired as resident firefighter and assistant lire
chief of the Gallipolis Fire Department.
Mills joined the GFD March 2, 1971, and served as the
department's secretary from 1978 to 1989 and as treasurer
from 1979 to 1995.
He was promoted to ·second lieutenant on March 8, 1985,
and to first lieutenant on Sept. 27, 1983.
On Jan. I, 1985, he was promoted to captain and was
appointed assistant tire chief on Jan. I, 1992, the rank he
held until retiring on March, 15, 200 I, for a total of over 30
years of fire service with the Gallipolis Fire Department.
He served as resident firefighter from 1993 to 200 I.
Prior to being resident liretighter, Mills was the manager
of NAPA Auto Parts in Middleport, Ohio.
He was a Master Mason of Patriot Lodge 11496, Free and
Accepted Masons of Ohio.
Mills was also a U.S. Army Veteran.
Surviving is his. daughter, Angie (Charles) Henry of
Gallipolis; son, Mike (Dawn) Mills of Morristown, Tenn. ;
grandchildren, Jason, Brenna, Stormie, Sunee, Hope ,
Darian and Michaela; sister, Jane (Tom) Prose of
Columbus; and his special friend, Carla Wagoner.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his
brother, Jim Mills, and a sister, Susan Mills.
Funeral service will be held be at II a.m. Wednesday in
the Cremeens Funeral Chai&gt;el with GFD Chaplain Bob
Hood officiating.
·
Internment, with tire department honors, will be in the
Ohio Valley Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the funeral
chapel.
.
Ftre Department memorial services will be conducted at
7 p.m. Tuesday in the chapel followed by Masonic services
at B p.m. conducted by Patriot (Ohio) Lodge #496, F &amp;
AM.
Firelighters from the Gallipolis Fire Department will
serve as Honor Guards during the visitation hours at the
funeral· chapel. ·
Military graveside services will he conducted by the
Gallia County Veterans Funeral Detail Team followed by
the·Gallipolis Fire Department graveside memorial service
and the issuance of the "Final Fire Call Alert."
Active caskethearers are Bob Poling, Mike Null, · Joe
Cremeans, John Elliot, Rob Northup, Jim Johnson, Keith
Elliot and Kevin Plantz.
Honorary casketbearers are the remaining Gallipolis firefighters.
In lieu of flowers , memorial contributions may be made
in Mills' memory to the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Department, 2018 Chestnut Street, .Gallipolis, ()hio 45631.
There will be a ~athenng of the family and fnends at the
.lire station followmg the services at the cemetery.

TRANsFERs POSl'ED
POMEROY - Meigs
County Recorder Kay
Hill reported the follow- .
ing transfers in real
estate:
Insurance
Booth
Agency, Inc ., to Sheila
Erlewine, deed, Salem.
Secretary ·of Veterans
Affairs to Robert Lee
Bailey. deed. Suuon.
Thomas
McMahon,
Gale McMahon. to State
of Ohio Department of
Transportation, right of
way, S~:ipio.
Hou sehold
Realty
Corp.,
Household
Finance Corp., to James
E.
Lucas,
deed,
Salisbury.
Frances E. Heck stall ,
deceased. Frances E.
Lu ckadoo, deceased, to
Carl Clive Luckadoo,
affidavit, Rutland.
Carl C. Luckadoo to
Sharon L. Taylor, deed,
Rutland.
Sharon L. Taylor to
Peter J. Pohjala, deed,
Rutland.
Antiquity Ohio Baptist

Iva Ernestine Zuspan
Iva Ernestine (Grinstead) Zispan, 89. of Mason, died
Sunday, Sept. 24, 2006 at the Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center. Visitation will be held from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at
the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home. Funeral services will
be held at 1 p.m. Wednesday.
other programs for it]formation and support . ·
• Helping you identify
resources for financial
from PageA1
assistance,
medication
needs,
home
health
care,
for this area acts as a midinsurance
questions,
dle-man to connect cancer
patients with a variety of transportation and other
services. Krubl can also concerns.
• Listening, t aring and
be reached directly at 1helping
you in your time
888-ACS-OHIO.
Among Krubl 's many of need.
• Identifying activities
services she helps assist
that
can help ensure a bet.clients (free of charge) in
ter
quality
of life.
·
finding
financial
• By helping cancer
resources to cope with the
survivors
learn to self- ·
many obstacles cancer
navigate
.
presents. For example, she
The Meigs County
recently helped a client in
her early 20's with no American Can~:er Society
insurance and cervical Ta skforce in an attempt to .
cancer work out an afford- publicize the CRC i&gt; hopable payment plan with ing to get the word out
her doctors and find a pre- through church bulletins,
fliers and possibly a
~cription drug plan she
poster
coloring contest in
qualified fer.
The Patient Navigator the sc hools. lf you would
Program can also help you like to put an announcement or flier in· your
by:
church
bulletin or know of
• Pro,viding literature
any other way the group
on coping with cancer.
• Referring you to sup- could publicize the CRC
port groups, classes and call 992-7520.

Proud to be apart of your life.
:Subscribe today • 992-2155

~

I

Church
to
Tuppers
Plains-Chester
Water
District , right of way,
Letart.
Suellen V. Smith to
TP-CWD, right of way,
Letart.
Robert P. Plicht a
to
TP-CWD, right of way,
Letart.
Clara R. Duffy, John
E. Duffy, to TP-CWD,
right of way, Letart.
Aaron Sayre, Shirley
Sayre , to TP-CWD, right
of way. Letart.
Aaron Sayre, Shirley
Sayre, to TP-CWD, right
of way, Letart.
Leo
Morris,
Linda
Morri s,
to
Chris
Sheehan, deed, Scipio.
Charles C. Calaway to
Barbara S. Miller, deed,
Olive.
Grace A. Kitchen to
P.
Bunce,
Donald
Michelle Bunce, deed,
Bedford.
Dwain Edwards, Linda
Edwards, to Brian M.
Schwartz, .deed, Rutland.
William K. Marshall,

Unique Antiques opens

Beth Sergentjphofo

Chip Werry wanted to open an antique store with flea market prices which he feels he's done with the new business
Unique Antiques at 222 East Main Street. The store sells
Amish furniture. candles. leather wallets, gift baskets, a
variety of antique furniture, pop culture items and basically
anything "unique" that can be crammed in a 19-by-17 foot
area. The store Is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday · Friday, ·
10 a.m. to 7 p.m., Saturday, noon to 5 p.m., Sunday. The
phone number is 416-0827. Pictured trying out some of the
store's Amish furniture Is Werry with sister Jenni Durst who
also Works at the store.

Racine
from PageA1
materials to turn the beat-up
old truck into a working
asset to the department.
Though it was hard to put a
final figure on just how
much money and labor.went
into the truck, the junior
members said it probably
means more to them than it's
actually worth.
Kevin Layne, member of
the Racine Volunteer Fire
Department. and junior advisor said restoring the old
Dodge truck was a task the
junior fire depm1ment could
do together, teaching them
how to work together.
"It's been a good experience and it 's nice to give
something back to the community," Timmy Sands,

AP BUSINESS WRITER

Service

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

Festival
.from Page A1
Power Co. again hi s year
sponsored a line throwing
contest with trophies and
cash prizes being awarded. For the second year,
Kevin Layne of Racine
took first place, with Ben
Morris of Racine coming
in second, and Matt Athey
of Pomeroy, third .
There was plenty of
music to entertain the fes-.
tival
goe rs .
Paul

A!!~·
Ariel Jr. Idol Talent
Competition

9/25, 10/2 &amp; 10/9
The Dove Brothers 9/28
Auditions:
A Christmas Carol

10/1 &amp; 10/2
MTV's Reality Check
Tour 10/3
www.arieltheatre.org
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis. OH
740-446-ARTS (2787) .

junior fire department member said of why he joined and
stays with the department.
Another reason why the
·junior fireman stay with the
department is the experience
which allows them to go out
on calls with the Racine
Volunteer Fire Department
to observe. The juniors said
some of the more memo- :
rable experiences a,re extrications from car wrecks and
a seven alarm fire in
Portland.
Layne said the juniors
also receive monthly training from the fire department
on how to work various fire
and rescue equipment. There
are still a few slots open for
new members that' must be
14 years old to join.
The Racine Volunteer
Fire Department covers 67
square miles and has 37
active members.

Crystal E. Marshall, to
Nathan Roush, Carolyn
S. Rou&gt;h. deed, Sutton.
Nancy E. Young to
Brian
Young,
deed,
Salem.
Donald
P.
Bunce.
Michelle L. Bunce, to
Roger A. Imboden , deed.
Bedford.
Henry Bentz, Doro(hy
Ellen Bentz, to Dorotha
Jannine Petrel , deed,
Sutton.
Lawrence Bush, Violet
L. Bush to Connie Mae
Tucker, deed, Letart.
Tom
Kugel ,
Patty
Kugel, Aaron Sayre,
Shirley Sayre, to TPCWD, right of way,
Letart.
Earl Schultz to TP- ·
CWO, right of way,
Olive.
,
Jimmie . E. Ford, Hazel
H. Ford to TP-CWD.
right of way, Letart.
Mable B. Brumfield,
Earl Wood, to TP-CWD,
right of way, Chester.
Janice
K.
Pullins,
Janice K. Ru sse ll, to
Janice K. Pullins, Janice
K. Pullins Revo~:able
Trust, deed, Lebanon .
Ella N. Reeder, Carol
F. Aufdenkampe, Dale C.
Aufdenkampe, to Dale
C. Aufdenkampe, Carol
F. Aufdenkampe, deed,
Olive.
Ten Point Pursuits,
LLC, to Margie M.
Bartee, deed, Chester.
Sandra Kay
Kerns,
Richard Kerns, Roberta
Ann Ridenour, Marilynn
M. Trussell, to Thomas
W. Karr, Diana .S. Karr,
deed, ·Chester.
Danelle Johnson to
Gregory T. John so n,
deed,
Village
pf
Pomeroy.
Lynn S. Brown to
James Toney Dingess ,
Susan M. Clark, deed,
Village of Pomeroy.
Franklin Real · Estate
Co. to Artex Oil Cu.,
right of way, Salem.

..

Harold F. Erlewine.
to
Regina
Erlewine.
Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
easement. Salem.
Paul
Orin
Ervin,
deceased,
to
Wilma
Ervin, affida~it, Sutton.
Wilma
Ervin
to
Wendell Ervin , Peggy
Ervin, deed, Sutton.
Wilma Ervin to Donald
Wayne
Ervin,
deed,
Sullon.
Jeffrey
A. Church,
Angela
J.
Church,
Lucille M. Donaldson. to
Clarence A. Lambert,
Sally J. Lambert, deed,
Olive.
.Argyle Lloyd Deeter,
deceased, to Thomas L.
affidavit,
Deeter,
Lebanon.
Deeter,Thomas L.
Karen· Deeter, to Joseph
David Rose, Teresa A.
Rose . deed, Lebanon.
Eva Robson, deceased ,
to Baer Builders · and
Developers ,
deed,
Village of Pomeroy .
David Shain, Terry
Shain. to TP-CWD. right
of way, Letart.
Robert Matthews , Jr. ,
to
Rita • Matthews,
S.
Colley,
Richard
Christina Colley, deed,
Village of Pomeroy.
John
A.
Hawley,
Bertha M. Hawley, to
Mallhew A. Grubb, deed,
Sutton .
Syracuse First United
Presbyterian
Church ,
Fir st
Pre sbyterian
Church.
to Syracuse
Community
Church,
deed ,
Village
of
Syracuse.
James F. Evans, Debra
Evants, James T. Evans,
Porter.
to Mark C.
Theresa R. Porter. deed,
Chester. '
Scott Setty to Jeffery
R. Thomp son, Beth A.
Thompson ,
deed ,
Columbia.

For the Record
Divorce
POMEROY - A divorce was filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Donna Braun, Rutland, against
Kenneth Braun, Pomeroy.

Local Briefs
Plan dance
BELPRE-· A round and square dance will be held from
7 to II p.m. on Saturday at the Lunch-N-More Restaurant,
214 Sione Rd., Belpre, with live music by Randy and the
Renegades. Earl Welch will be the caller.

Eastern
from Page A1·

Fridley, Tammi Lavender,
Melissa Swindell, Kiml;lerly
Carl, Debbie HilL and Trudy
Stewart.
The board also:
• Approved placement of
Doeffinger and Joey student teachers in district
Wilcoxon entertained on classrooms.
Thursday
night,
the
• Approved an agreement
Meigs High School Band, with Anthem to provide
Still Standing and Bad medical and pre scription
Habit on Friday, and drug, and Medical Claims
Myron
Duffield , Services. Inc . to provide
"Calliope King of the · third-party claims services
World, " Phil" and the for dental claims . .
Thrill , the Mudfork Blues
• Approved an agreement
. band and Warner Road on with Strategic Managemem
Saturday night.
Solutions to provide E-rate

consulting services for the
2007 funding year in an
amount not to exceed $1,200
or I5 percent of the funding
requested for the funding
year, whichever. is less.
• Approved an agreement
with Strategic Energy, LLC
for the purchase of electricity December, 2006 to
December, 2009 through the
OSBA, BASA , and OASBO
School Pool Program.
• Approved open enrollment students for the
remainder of the school year.
• Approved 2006-07 bus
routes as recommended by
Transportation Supervisor
Arch Rose.
·
• Set the next regular meeting for 6:30p.m. on Oct. 18,
in
·the
Elementary
Conference Room.

ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?
In order to vote in the November 7, 2006 General Election you must be
registered by October IOth, 2006.
Vote at your new precinct and avoid long lines at the board on Election Day
by changing your address (if you have moved within the county ) or if you
changed your name, by updating your registration by October, IOth. 2006.
The board of elections will be open from 9:00am. until 9:00p.m. on Tuesday,
October IOth, 2006.
You may also register at the following locations, Meigs County Department
of Human Services, Meigs County WIC Office. License 'Bureau. Board of
' MR/DD, Pomeroy Public Library. Middleport Public Library. E~stern High
School Library. Meigs County Treasurer 's Office, and all are'a high s~:hools.
For any additional information, call 992-2397, or stop by our office located at
117 E. Memorial Drive, Stc .... l. Pomeroy, Ohio. Meip County Courthouse
Annex.
Oftice located behind Holzer Clinic, Meigs Branch on &gt;econd tloor (former
County Infirmary) .

�'

STERNWHEEL RlvERFEST

The Dapy Sentinel

PageA6
Monday, September 25,

2006

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Scureboard, Page B2

SCENES FROM 2006 STERNWHEEL RIVERFEST
Monday, September 25, 2006
LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY -A iehedule o1 upcorning col~
and ngh !IChool va~ sporting events invoNing

teams from Gal~a. Melgs and Mason counties.

BY MARK WILLIAMS

Monday'&amp; g•mtt

Volleyball
River Valley at Ga!lia Academy, 5 p.m.
South Gallla at R.oek HiR, 5:30 p.m.
Eastern at Nelsonville-York, 6 p.m.
Covenant Christian at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Southern at Alexander, 6 p.m.
G0 1t
Wahama at Regional Golf Tournament

Tunday'e gamva

Charlono Hoeftlch/ pholo
Cha~ene

Hoeftlch/photo

No that's not Myron Duffield at the calliope. It's Kathleen
Scott of Forest Run who will be 101 on Oct. 6 making a
guest appearance at the Sternwheel Riverfest.

· One of several bands performing at Riverfest was Phil and
the Thrill who entertained with soulful blues ;md all-out rock.
Cha~ene

Hoeftlch/photo

Volleyball
River Valley at' Chesapeake, 5:30p.m.
South Gallia JV at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Gallla Acad. at Portsmouth, 5:15p.m.
Eastern at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Miracle City at OVCS, 5:30p.m.

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE - For 1he
first time since 2000. the
University of Rio Grande
men's soccer team had to
take the tield in the regular
season after a loss.
Perhaps the loss to EmbryRiddle last week caused the
sluggish start. perhaps it was

the play of visiting Wabh, or
perhaps it was a combination of both. Whal~ver lhe
reason, lhe Redm~n struggled but still managed to win
2-1 in the American Mideas!
Conference South Division
opener al Evan Davis Field
on Sunday evening. ·
The game had been moved
10 Sunday due to inclement
weather on Saturday. Rio

Grande (7-1. 1-0 AMCS).
ranked No. J in lhe latest
NAIA Top 25 poll, with the
victory gave head coach
SctJll Morrissey his 250th
viclory of his career and
extended Rio's conference
unbeaten streak to 46 games.
Wal sh {5-3, 0-1 AMCS)
drew first blood and gained
control of the game early
when Aaron Davis scored

Central Stale at Rio .Grande, 7 p.m.
Wednesday'• gamea
Volleyball
Trimble at Meigs, 6 p.m.
South Point at South Gallia, 5:30 p.m.

Croll Country

Southern at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Ironton at Ga!lia Academy, 5:15 p.m.
Hannan at Teays Valley, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at OVCS, 5:.30 p.m.
Soccer
Point Pleasant at OVCS, 5:30p.m.
Girls SOccer
Pt. Pleasant at Charleston C~th.. 5:30p.m.
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at WVU Tech, 6 p.m.

Hoeftlch/photo

INSIDE
Charlene Hoaftlchjphoto

Cha~eno

Hoetllch/photo

Pumpkin and gourds of every kind and shape were dis-'
played at the Sternwheel Riverfest by Steve and Carrie
Morris of Harrisonville. The gourds ranged from snakes to
swan types, and the pumpkins from the traditional to '
cheese shaped, and featured the Cinderella pumpkins one
of which Carrie displays here.

• Bengals edge Stealers.
See Page B6
SPORTS BRIEFS
' .

Brlan J. Rood/photo

Brlan J. Reed/photo

Paul Gibbs was one of the competitors in Saturday's line
throwing contest. The contest is an annual event at the
Sternwheel Riverfest.

Cha~one

Hoeftlchjphoto

Chili cookoff organizational winners were left to right, Jeff
Circle accepting for Carpenter Local 6!;i0, the Chili Builders;
John Wolfe for the Mason VFW; and Denise Bunce for her
law business.

Tim Faris, 10, of Licking County: and his dog, Pugsley, found a
dry spot aboard one of' the sternwheelers Saturday afternoon.

Local weather

Brlan J. Reed/photo

Southern Girl Scout Troop 1204 stepped off in Saturday's
Sternwheel Riverfest parade.

Monday ... Partly cloudy.
Highs around 70. West
winds 5 to I 0 mph. .
Monday night ... Mostly
clear in the evening .. .Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 40s.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Thesday ... Partly cloudy.
B~an J. Reed/photo
Anna Layne presented winners of the line throwing contest Highs in the lower 70s.
with cash prizes and trophies. Winners were, right to left. Southwest winds around 5
Kevin Layne, Racine, first place; Ben Morris, Racine sec- mph.
Thesday night...Mostly
ond; and Matt Athey, Pomeroy, third.
dear. L,ows around 50.
Southwest winds around 5
mph.
Wednes'day ... Mostly
sunny. Highs in the mid
The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155
70s .
•

Wednesday
night...Partly cloudy. Lows .
in the upper 50s.
Thursday ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms .
Highs in the mid 60s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Thursday night...Mostly
cloudy with showers and
thunderstorms likely. Lows
in the upper 40s. Chance
of rain 60 percent.

Proud to be apart of your life.

Vlnvl
Slartlngll

Lab tests and X-rays are
available in Albany!
Bnng your physician order to
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's
convenient location at the Albany
Medical Clinic. No appointment is
needed for these diagnostic services.

lab hours Monday - Friday
8 a.m. to Noon • 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
lilian J. Reedjphoto

The Meigs High School Marching Band, under direction of
Toney Dingess, made their second Sternwheel Riverfest
appearance in· Saturday's parade . The band gave a special
show Friday afternoon .

VISIT US ON THE WEB
www.mydallysentinel.com

•

Imaging hours Monday - Friday
8 a.m. to Noon • 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

(740) 566-4725

Jayne Arthur,

Mr

Mike SMrp, RT

R11rlng
Stlrtllllt

$129
per
Sq: Ft.

BerberCarP81 $695
Starting It

per

6Months Same
·As cash
(with approved credit)

Tennis lessons
to be offered
GALLIPOLIS

-

lhe day witll a n which also
earned the title of AllTournament Team Captain.
MASON,
W.Va .
He was joined un the team by
Wahama team captain' Dclnny teammate Shay Brooks, who
Roush and junior Justin added a 76 to lhe team score.
Amold led the White Falcons Logan High School was led
to a foulh-place finish in the by Daniel Wagener with a 76,
Riverside Golf Club High which also placed him among
School Invitational Golf the elite on the AllTournament held Saturday.
Toumamem Team.
Roush shot an excellent 75,
Jackson High School tinwilh Arnold close behind ishcd tifth in 1he competion,
with a 78. to help the White but placed both Morgan
Falcons to a season-best Dobbins
and
Anthony
score of 316. Darin Reece Malone on the all-tourney
added an 8lto go along wilh squad with their pair of 76's
Mike Lavender's 82 for the for the day.
team total.
Soulhern 's Bryan Harris
Also for Wahama, Adam shot a 76. but just missed the
Roush's 86 did not count in seven-man All-Tournament
the play tive, count four for- Team. A tie-breaker, which
mal. The 75 score for Danny . used the back nine score,
Roush also placed him on the elimimated Harris from the
All-Tournament Team.
five competitors that shot that
The tournament
was score.
played on a wei and so~gy
AIso for Southern, which
course due to the ovem1ght finished seventh as a team
heavy rains in the area. The with 332 points, Patrick
play began in a light rain that Johnson and Jake Hunter
soon gave away to sunshine ·each linished with 81 and
and wann temperatures and Alex Hawley carded a 94.
only the last three groups on Taylor Deem's II 0 score was
the course had to finish 111 the tifth.
evening's heavy rains.
Warren (332) finished sixth
Twenty te;uns were sched- in the tean'l slandings foluled for the tournament, but low~d by the Tornadoes;
four withdrew prior to the Ravenswood (332), Meigs
start. Gallia Academy and (333). Ripley (335), Point
River Valley were the two Pleasant (348), Belpre (355),
local teams choosing not to Eastern (364), Roane County
(371 ), Waterford (380) and
participate.
A fi ne
team
from Buffalo (390).
Charleslon Catholic High
Meigs' Kirk Legar paced
School shot an excellent 308 · the Marauders wilh a 79 and
to win lhe champ ion 's Dan Bookman followed with
plaque. Adam Skaff and 81. Dastin Vanlnwagen's 85
Evan Cole led the winners and Steven Slewarl 's 88
with a pair of 74's which also rounded out the ninth-place
landed both of them on the team score of 333. Joey
All-Toumamem Team.
Blackslon was titih at 96.
Athens High School and
Eric Milhoan had a round
Logan High School were tied of R3 to lead Poinl Pleasant
for second after the lowesl while Will Garrison and
four scores for each leam Chris Long followed with 87
were complied wilh scores of each. J.T. Reynolds had 91
314. Logan's fifth score was and Curt Grimm a 94.
better than that of the tifth
Eastern's Michael Owen
man from Alhcns so Logan had a fine round of 81 while
recived the second place teammates Jake Wamer (92),
plaque.
Kyle Edwards (93) and Nick
A.J. Cadamagnani, from Scholtz (98) followed.
Athens, was lhe medalist for Nmhan Carroll tired a 106.
STAFF REPORT

SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM

Thuradav'a qom11
Volleyball
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.·
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5:30p.m

Tom Ree,d, right, chairman of this year's chill cookoff presented a miniature chili pot trophy to John Wolfe of the
Mason VFW team which won the people 's choice in the
tasters' test.

Please see Reclmen. B6

Catholic wins Riverside

Meigs at Alexander Invite. 4 p.m.
Cottage Soccer
Aio vs. Shawnee St. (at Valley H.S.), 8 p.m.
Women's College SOCcer
Rio vs. Shawnee St. (at Valley H.S.) 6 p.m.

Cha~ene

a lot of time in the second
half claiming lhe lead as
Massie scored again in the
461h minute to put Rio ahead
to stay 2-1. Junior forward
Guy Heywood assisted
Massie on bmh goals.
Walsh was not fi nished
playing however. getting
two tremendous scoring

·lC! VI' RS I Dt·: GoLF CLUB H IG II SCHOOL INVITATJ ON AL

· College Volleyball

Chili cookoff winners in the independent teams were left to
right, Grandma's Chili, first, with Margaret Eskew accepting
the award; The Pioneers , second with Martina Arms
accepting; and Bite Me Chili with Sue Mora ·accepting.

afler a shot dellected off Rio
goalkeeper Derek Talcott
and went straight to Davis.
who shot it past Tal cott to
give the Cavaliers a 1-0 lead
in the 81h minute.
The 1-0 lead held up until
freshman forward/mid-fielder Jason Massie scored 1he
first of his lwo goal s in the
37th minllte to tic the game.
The Redmen did not waste

Soccer
OVCS at South Point, 5:30p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Poca , 6 p.m.

While rain forced cancellation of the "Chalk It Up" sidewalk
contest Saturday, when the sun came out late~ in the day
these two Minersville youngsters, Sierra Cleland and Austin
Arnold, decorated anyway. Jane ·Harris of Dan's said 43
youngsters signed up to participate. She plans to try it
again next year.

Redmen slide past Walsh, Monissey collects 250th win

The

0.0. Mcintyre Park District
will be holding tennis lessons
at the Raccoon Creek County
Park on Saturday mornings
between Sept. 23 and Oct, . I4
Children 13 and under will
Larry Crum/photo
be from 10-1 I a.m. and 14 Southern's Bryan Harris shot a 76, nearly making the All-Tournament Team at Saturday's
through adult will be from II Riverside Invitational in Mason. W.Va.
a.m. until noon.
Tom Hopkins will be the
instructor, equipment will be
provided.
For more information, ·
including cos1, contact Mark
COI.UMBIA. Mo. (APJDanner at 446-4612 ext. 255.
At times. Chase Daniel
looked like a player making
his fourt h career sian. Btll
Missouri's sophomore quarterback hit more than enough
high notes to help his leam
GALLIPOLIS The .
complete a perfec1 non-con0.0. Mcintyre Park District
femnce schedlile.
is looking for someone ·to
Daniel threw 1wo touchcoach a first and second
down passes to Will Franklin
grade, as well as a fifth and
and ran for another score,
sixth grade soccer team
compensating for a lost fumfrom
Washington
ble and illlerception in
Elementary this upcoming
Missouri's Jl -6 victory over
Fall Youth Soccer League.
Ohio on Saturday.
·
All games will be played
'"Is he perfect'; No," coach
· at Raccoon Creek Coumy
Gary Pinkel said. "Is he going
Park on Salurday mornings
to get .a lot beuer? That's th~
good
news: He's going to get
and
Tuesday/Thursday
AP photo
evenings.
Ohio State's Brian Robiskie (80) catches a touchdown pass a lot better as he goes."
Missouri's' defense shllt
For more information against Penn State corner back Tony Davis (11) at Ohio Stadium
down
Ohio aside ti·om an SOcontact Mark Danner at during the fou rth quarter of a football game in Columbus.
yard drive in the ,econd quar446-4612 ext. 255.
ter, ' overcoming
three
turnovers. The Tigers also
blocked two kicks.
Afler prevailing in whut
CoNTACfUS
Anlonio Smith returned
BY RusTY MILLER
Pinkel
characterized as a slopASSOCIATED PRESS
interceptions for touchOVP Scorellne t5 p.m.-1 a.m.)
py
game,
Missouri is 4-0 for
downs as the Buckeyes beat the first time·
since 2003 and
1-740-446-2342 .ext. 33
COLUMBUS - In about No. 24 Penn State 2~~6 on
only the tifth time since 1925.
lhe time it ·took 79-year-old Saturday.
Fax -1 ·740-446·3008
"Missouri beat Missouri a
Joe Paterno to jog toOthe lock"In the Big Ten. it 's lot today," Pinkel said. "And
E-m• II - spons 0 mycta1tysentinel.com
er room, Troy Smith and No. always
a
four-quarler
Sports Staff
I Ohio State's defense turned game.'" Ohio State coach we still won 31 -6.''
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor a close game into a rou1.
Daniel was 18-for-34 for
Jim Tressel said. "We won a 258 yards. offsetting a lost
(740) 446-2342. eort. 33
Smith threw an acrobatic four-quarter game:"
bsherman@ mydailytriDune.com
fumble ·on the opening drive
37-yard TD pass in the
Paterno, the Nittany and an interception near the
Larry Cium, Sports Writer
fourth
quarter,
then
end of the lirst half. He was
(740) 446-2342, e•t. 33
knkins
and
Malcolm
Please see Bucks. 86
Ierum@ mydailyrag1ster.com
on-target just enough, hitting

Missouri wins big over Ohio

Coach needed
for youth soccer

Bucks rout Penn State

Franklin for 68- and 9-yard
scores in the first half. and
s~:ored untouched on a 5-yard
keeper in the third quarler.
"Too many mistakes. too
many criticil errors. too many
penalties," Da,nicl said. "We
overcame a lol of lhem .
"I didn 't complete as many
passes today because we were
throwing downlicld. and I
missed a couple of throws'·
Franklin caught four passe;
tor 99· yards and leads the
team wilh four 10uchdown
receptions. The 68-ymi.l catch
in the rim quarter is the
longest pass play in Pinkel \
six seasons.
Thomas Christy caughl an
X- yard touchdown pass from
Auslen Everson in the sectmd
quarter ti1r Ohio (2-2), which
has been outscored 55- 13 in
losing its last two. Coach
Frank Solich is 5-2 against
Missouri. all the victories
coming when he was at
Nebraska.
In So!jch's last game al
Missouri in 2003, the Tigers
beai Nebraska for the lirst
time since 1978.
"There were some bright
spots early on.' ' Solich said.
. ··Bllt as the game wenl on we
wore down and we were JUSt
not able to sustain things on
either side of the ball ."
Ohio was held to 188 total
yards, although the lone

touchdown
capped
1he
longest drive of the season
against a defense ranked first
in the Big 12. The Bobcats
had four firs1 downs in the
tirst quarter against a team
that had not allowed any in
the opening yuwler.
,"We felt the momentum
coming out &lt;.&gt;f halftime,"
defensive end Xzavie Jackson
said. "ThtU was a IUrning
point for the whole leam, not
just 1l1e i.leknse."
Everson was 13-for-23 for
110 yards before being,
replaced by Brad Bower midway through lhe fourth quar1er.
Th~ two blocked kicks, one ·
· on a tidd-goal altempl and
another 011 an extra-point
allempt. kept the Tigers' 14-6
halftime lead from being closer. Marcus Bacon blocked
Man Lasher's 38-yard field
goal attempt to prevenl Ohio
from laking advantage of
Daniel's fumble, and Lorenzo
Williams blocked an extrapoint kick in the second quarter.
"Anytime you don't get
points on the bo;u·d it's a huge
momentum &gt;hift for the other
team." Ohio running back
Kalvin McRae said. "We
could have used those
points
Solid1 blamed Lasher for
kicking lower than usual.

�SCOREBOARD

; The Daily Sentinel
HIGH S CHOOL FOOTBALL

PREP FOOTBALL

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

Ohio High School Football Scores
Sunday's Result

No rth Division
SEOAL
PF
W·L

~ogan

2.0

"thens

~arren

.·.·

South OIVIIIo n
SEOAL
W·L
PF
2·0
85
1·1
.62
1-t
27
1}2
59
1}2
39

t;htlhcothe

Jronton ..

Portsmouth
43alha Academy
Vackson
•
Friday's res ults
-Manana 35 Athens 8

76

PA
47
. 67
54
69

69

W·L
3·2
2·3
3-2
.. . 1-4
2·2

ALL
PF
138
91
150
85
47

102
79
103
206
144

W·L
4-1
3·2
2·3
3·2
2·3

ALL
PF
137
127
132
163
119

PA
101
115
13a
107
110

PA

Friday, September 29
Chillicothe at Jackson
Portsmouth at Galha Academy
Manetta al Ironton
Zanes111\le at Logan
Saturday, September 30
Athens at Warren

Chtlllcothe 47, Ironton 14
:Logan 3 1, Galha Acadamy 26

-Portsmouth 21, Jackson 19
;
Saturday's result

55, Warren 0

••

6
.90

0

1}2

~Zanesville

a

2·0 ..~ .
2·0
90
0·2 . 8

,ManeMa
.Zanesvtlte

••

PA
26

66

Ohio Valley Conference
W-L

.IJ.O

Coat Grove .
R ock H1ll . . ,
€hesapeake
.A1ver Valley
South Pomt .
.fairland
~
Friday's rasulta
l'ols18 43, Chesapeake 6
Coal Grove 48 , Sc1otovllle East 0
)1e1gs 34. Fatrland 14
P1ke Central 20. Rl\ler Valley 13
Wellston 21, Roc}( Htll 14
~aunt VIew 34, South Point 21

0·0
0·0
0·0
0·0

0·0

OVC
PF
0
0
0
0
0

ALL
W-L
PF
3·2
141
3-2
164
1·4
140
1-4
58
1-4
75
0
0
05
46
Friday, September 29
Chesapeake at South Point
Coat Grove at Fairland
Rock H1ll at Rwer Valley
PA
. 0
0
. 0
0
0

PA
67
117
196
135
140
142

Tri·Vall~ Conference
Ohio 0 1\llalon

.

TVC
W·L
0·0
0·0

.Meigs . .
-Nelsorw 11te-York
Well ston
'JI\texander
Jlelpre .
J11nton County

0·0
0·0

PF
0
0

.. 0
0

ALL ·
PA
.0
0

.0
0

0·0 .. 0
...
0·0
0
Hocking Dlvlalon

•

•

0
0

W·L
.5·0
4·1
3·2
2· 2
2·3
2·3

TVC

PF

W·L
1}0
0-0
0.()

Southern
Federal Hocking
·'rr1mble
Waterford ...
Eastern
,Miller

181
182
122
103
61
67

W·L
4·1

3·1

PF

11 5
69
114
82
62

3·2
3·2
O.()
0 .
0
0·5
.. 0-0 .. 0
0
0·5
28
Friday, Septamber 29
Belpre at Al exander
Wellsto n at Me1gs
Nelsonville· York at Vm ton County
Tnmble at Eastern
Federal Hockmg at Southern
Waterford at M1lle r

0.()

Friday's reaults
Belpre 42. Eastern 6
Meigs 24, Fairland 14
V1nton County 23. Mmfo rd 0
Wellston 21, Rock Hill 14
South Ga!l1a 14, M1tle r 8
Southern 2 1, W1rt County 10
:Beallsv1 1te 20, Waterfo rd 6
Saturday's results
•Fed eral Hockmg 26, Alexander 7
Netspnvllle- Yo rk 35, Tnmble 0

0
0.
0

PF

PA
71
57
141
102

81

a•

ALL
PA
0
0
0

.. 0 ... 0

PA
45
27
109

68

197
11 0

Independents
W•L
'-1·1
3 ·2
0·4

South Gallia
Wa hama
Hannan
Friday's results
South Galha 14, Miller 8
Wahama 28, Hannan 6

ALL
PF
11 7
11 2
21

PA
66
52
124

Cardinal Conference
S1ssonv1lle

Poca
~t nt Pleasant
Wayne
'Herbert Hoover
Logan
W1nf1eld .

Friday's results
Herbert Hoover 35, Clay County 1a
Logan 14, Chaj:imanvlile 7
Poca 40, Buffalo 14
Poml Pleasant 21 , Winfield 20
-51ssonvlll e 7 1 Wayne 6 OT

1-1

43

0·2
0· 3

58
. 40

PA

W-L

21
20
20
59
65
78

4·0
3· 1
1·3
4·1
41
1·4
1·4

19

Saturday's Results
Akr Buchtel 49 Akr N 7
Bellatre 26, Lisbon Beaver 7
Can McKtnley 28. Can GlenOak 3
Ctn . Fmneytown 22. Aeadmg 16
Ctn Hughes 35. Day Meadowdale 14
Ctn 51 Xavter 23, Covtngton (Ky) Cath

3
Cm Taft 42. Ctn Woodward 12

Cle . Cen Cath 14, Cle Hts Lutheran
E 13
Cle St lgnattus 28 Mtshakawa (lnd )
Penn 7
Cols Franklin Hts 18 London On1ano
St Thomas Aqu 1nas 7
Day Dunbar 28 , Cots Harlley 25
E Cle Shaw 21 , Euclid 20
Fremont St Joseph 35 T1ff1n Calver1 7
Gates M1lls Gilmour 41 Pamesv111e
Har\ley 24
Granville 37, Newark Cath 36, OT
Lakewooct St. Edward 14 Hollywood
(Fia) Cham1nade-Madonna 7
Magnolia Sandy Valley 61 , New
Ph1ladelph1a Tuscarawas Cent. Cath 33
Malvern 34, Bowerston Conotton Valley
Mason 18 Akr Hoban 14
Nelsonvllle-York 35. Tmnble 0
Norwal ~ St Pau l 49 Ashland Map leton
12
(W Va)
Cath.
49
Pa rkersburg
Ports mouth Notre Dame 13
Parma Hts Holy Name 26 Cle VASJ 0
St C la1rsv1lle 19, Wheele rsburg 6
Stewart Fede ral Hockmg 26, Albany
Alexander 7
Tot Ottawa Hill s 28, Edon 13
Tot St John's 31 , Tot Scott 12
Warren JFK 50, Cle John Adams 0
Youngs Mooney 21 Mentor Lake Cath
16
Za nesv111e 55, Vtnce nt warren

o

PRO BASEBALL
American League
East Dlvlalon
W L
Pet
GB
93 62 .600
x- New Yo rk
Boston
83 73 .532 10/l
Toronto
82 73 529 11
Baltimore
68 Sa 436 2S Y1
Tampa Bay
60 95 387 33
Central Division
W L
Pet
GB
z-DetrOit
94 62 603
Minnesota
92 63 594
Ch icago
87 69 558
Cl eveland
72 83 4 65
Kansas C1ty
58 97 374
West Division
W L
Pet
GB
Oa kl and
90 65 .581
Los Angeles
84 71 542 6
78 78 500 12'h
Texas
Seattle
75 81 4a1 15 '

I

ALL
PF

96

11 2
74
11 7
142

80
59

PA
48

75
125

47

103
125

83

Friday, Seplember 29
Poc a at Herbe rt Hoover
Lapan at Scott
Point Pleasant at Wayne
Roane Co. at Si ssonVIlle

Saturday's Games
Chicago White SOl( 11, Seattle 7
L A Angels 6, Oakland 2
Toronto 5, Bos ton 3
Mmnesota 8, Balttmore 5
Detro1t 15, Kansas C1 ty 4
Tampa Bay a, N Y Yankees 0
Cleveland 6 Texas 3
Sunday's Games
Toronto 13. Bos ton 4
Tampa Bay 11 , N Y Yankees 4
Mmneso ta 6 B altimore 3
Cleveland 11 Texas 6
Ch1cago Wh1te Sox 12, Sealtle 7
Detroit 11, Kansas C1ty 4
L A Ang els 7, O akland 1
Monday's Games
ChiCago White Sox (Garland 17·6) at
Cleve land(L ee 12·11 ), 7 05pm
Boston (Wakef ield 7-1 0} at Toronto
(Marcum 2·4). 7 07 p m.

NY Yankees (Wnght 10·7) at Tampa
Tennessee
0 3 0 000 33 76
Bay(Seo3·t0). 7 ·15pm
No rth
PF PA
W L T Pet
Kansas C1ty (De La Rosa 5·5) at '
Mmnesota (Bonser 6·5). 10 p m
3 0 0 1 000 70 20
Baltimore
Oakland (Loa1za 11·8) at Seattle (Baek
C1nc1nnat1
3 0 0 10008547
4·1). 10 OS p m
P1ttsburgh
1 2 0 333 48 54
Te11as (Volquez 1-5) at LA Angels
0 3 0 000 45 68
Cleveland
(Saunders 6-3), 10 05 p m
Wast
Tuesday 's Games
WLTPct
PFPA
Tampa Bay at Boston, 7·os p m
San Otego
2 0 0 1 000 67 7
Toronto at Detroit, 7'05 p m
Denver
2 1 0 667 36 31
Baltlmor* at N Y Yankees, 7 ·05 p m
Kansas C1ty
0 2 0 000 16 32
Ch icago White So~ at Cleveland, 7 05
Oakland
0 2 0 DOD 6 55
pm
NATIONAL CONFERENC E
Kansas C1ty at Mmnesota, B 10 p m
Eu t
Oakland at Seattle 10 05 p m
WLT Pet
PFPA
Texas at LA Angels , 10 05 p m
Philadelphia
2 1 0 667 86 64
Da llas
1105004434
National League
N. Y G1ants
1 2 0 333 81 92
Ee&amp;t Divisio n
Washmgton
1 2 0 333 57 61
GB
W L Pet
South
x·New 'r'ork
93 62 .600
W L T Pet
PF PA
Ph1ladelph1a
82 73 529
Atlanta
11
2 0 0 1000349
Flonda
76 80 487
17 1{2
New Orleans 2 0 0 10005341
Atlanta
75 81 481
1a 112
Carolina
1 2 0 333 45 60
Washington
68 87 439 25
Tampa Bay
0 3 0 000 27 67
Central Division
N orth
W L Pet
GB
W L T Pet
PF PA
St LOUIS
ao 74 519
Ch1cago
3 0 0 1 000 79 23
Hous ton
77 78 497 3 112
2 1 0 667 51 48
Mmnesota
76 79 490 4 112
Cmcmna11
Green Bay
1 2 0 333 58 a4
Milwaukee
73 83 468
Detrott
0 3 0 000 37 74
P1ttsburgh
65 91 417 16
West
Ch1cago
63 93 404 1a
PF PA
W L T Pet
Wast Divi s ion
Seettte
3 0 0 1 000 72 46
W L Pet
GB
St LOUIS
2 1 0 661 47 44
83 72 535
San D1ego
1 2 0 333 58 64
Anzona
Los Ange les
82 74 526 1 112
San Frenc1sco 1 2 0 333 71 85
San Franc1sco 75 80 484 8
74 82 .474 9 112
Colorado
Sunday 's Gamel
73 82 471
10
Anzona
Ch'icago w, Minnesota 16
1 Green Bay 31, Detroit 24
x·clmched division
1 Miami 13, Tennessee 10
N.Y Jets 28, Buffalo 20
Saturday's Games
Wash 1ngton 31, Houston 15
NY Mats 12, Washmt~ton 6
Cincinnati 28, Pittsburgh 20
Philadelp hia 8, F lor~da 6
Ch1ca go Cub s 11, Cincinnati 4
Indianap olis 2 1, Jacksonv llle 14
Carolina 26, Tamp a Bay 24
Houston 7 St. Louis 4
Milwaukee 10, San Francisco 8
Baltimore 15, Cleveland 14
Seattle 42, N Y· Giants 30
Colorado 10, Atlanta 9
San Diego 2, Pitt sburgh 1
St Louis 16, A rizona 14
Anzona 9, L A D odgers 3
Ptltladelphl a 38, S an Franci sco 24 J
Sunday's Gamea
Denver 17 1 New England 7
Washington 5, N Y Mats 1
Mondey'a Game
Cl nclnnat1 3, Chicago Cubs 2
Atlanta at New Orleans, a 30 p m
Philadelph ia 10, Florida 7
• Sunday, Oct. 1
Milwaukee 5, San Francisco 3
Dallas at Tennessee, 1 p.m
Co lorado 9, Atlanta 8
Miami al Ho uston, 1 p.m
San D1ego 2, Pittsburgh 1
Ar izona at Atlanta, 1 p.m
LA. Oo dg ~n s 5, Ar izon a 1
Indiana polis at N Y Jets, 1 p m
Houston 7, St LOUIS 3
1 Minnesota at Buffalo, i p m
Monday's Games
San Diego at Baltimore, 1 p m
Ch1cago Cubs (Mill er 0-2) at Cmcmnat1 1 San Francisco at Kansas C1ty, 1 p m
(Arroyo 14- 10), 12 35 p m
New Orleans ar Carolina 1 p m
Houston (Albers 0-2) at Philade lphia 1 Detroit at St LOUI S, 4:05 p m
(WoH 4·0). 7OS p m
1 Jacksonville al Washin gton, 4 15 p m
Was hm gton (B Perez 1·0 ) at N Y Mets J Cleveland at Oakland, 4 15 p m
(G tav1ne 14·6), 7 10 p m
New England at C10cmnati , 4 15 p.m .
San D1ego (Wells 2·5) at St LOUI S
Seattle at Chicago, 8 15 p.m
(Suppan 12·7}, 8 10 p.m .
Monday, Oct. 2
A nzon a (Gonzalez 2· 3) a t San
Green Bay al Philade lphi a, 8 30 p m
FranCISCO (Schmidt 11 ·8), t O 15 p.m
Tuesday's Games
Housto n a t P11t sburgh, 7 05 p m
C1ncinn at1 at Flo nda, 7·05 p m
The APTop 25
Phli adelphta at Wash in gton, 7 05 p m
The Top 25 teams m The Assoc iated
N Y M ats at Atl a nta 7 35 p m
Press college football po ll , w1th ftrstMilwaukee at Chicago Cubs· 8 05 p m
place votes m parentheses, records
San D1ego at St LOUI S, 8 10 p m
through Sept 23, total points based on
LA Dodgers at Colorado 8 35 p m
25 pomts for a f~rst -p lace vote through
A r~ zo n a at San Franc1sco, 10 15 p m
one point lor a 25th-place vote, and
previous rank in g
Record
Pt s
Pvs
1 OhlO St (59)
4·0
1 ,617 1
Nat ional Football League
1,513 2
2. Auburn (2 )
4·0
AMERICAN CONFE~ENCE
3. Souther n Cal (2) 3·0
1 491 3
Easl
4 Wes t V ~r gm 1a (2) 4·0 1 404 4
W L T Pet
PF PA
New E ngland 2 1 0 667 50 51
5 Fl or1 da
4·0
1 363 5
N Y Jets
2 1 0 667 68 60
6 M1c h1gan
4·0
1.318 6
7 Texas
3- 1 1.196 7
Buffalo
1 2 0
Mlam1
1 2 0
8 Louisvi lle
4-0
1,165 a
South
9 LSU '
3· 1 1 11 4 10
10 Georgia
W L T Pet PF PA
4·0 972
9
lndtanapolt s
3 0 0 1 000 90 59
1 1 V1rgm1a Tech
4·0 945
11
Jackso nville
2 1 0 .667 47 38
12 Notre Dame
3·1 a79
12
Housto n
0 3 0 000 49 98
13 Iowa
4·0
864
14

a

6

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

PRO FOOTBALL

~~; · ~~

I

14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25

;;

Oregon
Tennessee
Oklahoma
TCU
Clemson
Florida St
Cahforma
Nebraska
B01se St
Rutgers
Georg1a Tech
Mtssouri

3·0

3· 1
3·1
3·0
3·1
3·1
3·1
3·1

4·0
4·0
3·1
4·0

805
656
613
563
529
510
508
327
226
117

P~bllc

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Office al Contracts
Legal Copy Number:
060452
Sealed proposals will
be accepted !rom pr..
qualllled bidders at the
ODOTOfflce
ol
Contracts until 10:00
a.m. on October 18,

~N::o=T::Jc'=E::T::Oc:B=::I:D=o=ER=s=- qualllled blddera at the
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Office 01 Contracts
Legal Copy Number:
060453
Sealed proposals will
be accepted !rom pr..
lllled bldd
qua
ers at the
ODOTOIIIce
ol
Contracts until IO:OO
a.m. on October 18,
2006 Prolect 060453 is
located
In
Meigs
County, CR 24•0_00
(Union Avenue) and 15
a Resurfacing (2·Lane)
project. The date set
lor completion ol this
work shall be as set
lorth in the bidding
proposal. Plans and

ODOTOfflce
ol
Contracts until 10:00
a.m. on October 18,
2oo6. Project 060465 Ia
located
In
Meigs
County, SR 692·0.48
and Is a Bridge
Replacement
(f
Bridge) projact. The
date sellar completion
ol this work shell be as
set lorth In the bidding
proposal. Plans and
Speclllcatlons are on
lila in the Department
ofTransportatlon.
(9) 25, (10) 2

Weeke nd Sports Transactions
BA SEBALL
American League
BALTIMORE ORIOLE S-Announced
' the res1gnat1on of T1m Bishop co nd1·
t1on1ng coach, effeclive at end of t he
season Announced Norfolk of the IL
1 wtll be the team's Triple-A alfll1ate nex t
season
HOCKEY
Nat ional Hoc key League
I CARO LINA HU RRI CANES-Assi gned
I G Kns Mayott e, D Brandon Roac h, F
Dan DaSilva, F Ryan Steeves, F Dave
Svagrovsky. F P9ter Tstmka Us and D
M1ke va'rnace to Al ba ny of th e AH L
CHIC AGO BLACKH AWK S-Srgned G
Bnan Boucher to a one-year contract
COLORADO AVA LANC HE-Assrg ne d
j D Kyle Cu m1skey, C Ben Gutte, RW
1 John Lat1b erte and G Tyler Weiman to
l Albany of the AHL
DALLAS STARS-Assign ed F Krys
Barch , F Chris Conner, D Mark Ftstlc. F
Mtke Green, F Yared Hag os, F Martus
HoHe l. F Joh n Lammers, F Tuomas
Mlkko nen, F Marty Sert1c h, G Tob1as
Stephan, F Janos Vas , F Franc1s
Wath1er, an d o Marty W11lord to Iowa of
the AHL Released LW Kip Brennan
DETROIT RED W INGS- Rel eas ed F
Ryan Keller F Rya n Ou lahan, G Logan
Koopmans and D Derek Meech
•
EDMON TON OIL ERS-Ass1 g ned C
Kyl e Brod zlak, C L1am Reddox a nd LW
Tim Sest1to to Wllkes- BarrefScranton of

I lhe AHL.
N ASHVILLE
PREDATORSReass igned F Aam zi Ab1d. F Shane
En diCOtt, F Parn ck Leahy, F Cal
O'Re111y, F Brandon Segal, F K1m Staat ...
F Camel W1dmg, 0 She ldon Brookbank.
D Ville Kolstl nen G Karl Goehnng. G
Scott Retd and G Pekka Rmne to
Mtlwaukee ol th e AHL
PH1LADELPHIA FLYERS-Sr gned D
Oskars Barlulrs 10 a rhree-ye ar con·
tract.
PHOENI X COYOTES-Assrg ned C
Randall Gelec h, C Jakub Ka rels, C
Oilv1er • Latendre sse
C
Pascal
Rheaume. G Philippe Sauve. D Logan
J Stephenson, G Josh TordJm an and C
ca mel W tnm k to San Antonio of the
AHL
1 PITTSBURGH PENGUIN5-Asstgned
D
Wad e
Skolney
to
Wtlkes
Barre/Sc ranton of the AHL
ST LOU IS BLUES-Ass1gned F Jon
OfSal vato re, F Cam Ke1l h, F Peter
Se Jna
F David Backes, F Carl
I Soderbe rg and D Tomas MoJZI S to
I Peona of the AHL.
TAMPA BAY LI G HTNING- Assigned
LW Z denek Blatny, D Sylvam Dufresne,
I D Dou g O' Bnen C E nc Healey, C Blair
Jones. RW Marek Kvapil, G Karrl Ramo
and D Geoff Waugh to Spnngf1eld of the
1
AHL. AS Signed 0 Vladimir Mihalik lo
Prmce George of the WHL

I
I

'1

__P_u_b_l_ic_N_o_ti_
ce
__
NOTICE OF LIEN SALE
The personal property

www.dot. state.oh.us. Administrator

2006. Project 0604521s Specifications are on and contents of the foi-

The proposed process
will be avarlable lor
comment
!rom
September 25, 2006
until November 8,
2006. In general, the
process states that

loeated
In
Meigs
County, USR 33/233·
5.69/3.76 and Is a
Bridge Repair project
The date set lor com·
pletion ol this work
shall be as set lorth In
the bidding proposal.
Plans
and
Speclllcatlans are on
file In the Department
o!Transportatlon.
(9) 25, (10) 2

Card of Thanks

Office ol Systems
Planning &amp; Program
Management
Ohio Department al
Transportation
1960 Weat Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43223
• Card of Thanks

A HEARTFELT
THANK YOU
To FuhermanS Net church. Mason ne1gl1·
bors, andfrieruis, a "heartjt!lr' thank voujor
helping the R1chard Rawfmgsfamilyjournev

3 pm • 11 pm shift

lowrng storaga units
will be auctioned lor
sale to satisfy tho llan
ol Hartwell Storage.
The sale will be held at
the Hartwell Storage
Basket A Day Giveaway
lacllity, 34055 Laurel
Cllll Rd ., Pomeroy,
for the
Ohio on October 19,
2006 at 6:00 p.m.
Month of October
Untt #22
$15 per ticket 2 for $20.
Denise Weekly
284 Palmer St.
Over $2500 in Baskets
Middleport, Ohio 45760
Unit #49
Sponsored by Southern PTO
Deena Hardwick
Rt.1 , BoK131
Info &amp; tickets ca II
West Columbia , WV
JENNIFER HOBACK
25287
Unit #77
Bonnie Shea
P.O. Box 16
Syracuse, Ohio 45779
Unit #74
!1111 Kautz
41475 Starcher Rd.
Public Notice
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Laos Summit, MO
Unit #60
64086
Leigh Cantor
(9) 25, (10) 2
P.O. Box 413
Burns, TN 37029
'Unit #8

Restaurant Server

38321 SR7

3 pm • II pm Shift

Long

Help Wanted

lila in the Department
ofTransportation.
(9) 25 (10) 2
•
- -- - . , - - - Public Notice
-------NOTICE TO BIDDERS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Office ol Contracts
Legal Copy Number:
060465
Help Wanted

through RtcluJrd s Slclatess and passmg You

sent cards, vwrtd, and made those wonderful
phmu calfs that Ru·Mrd lothd fo!W{Jrri to
Banks Corurrucnon, thank you for v.orkmg
late into the night ru bmld the urgently needed ~icap ramp ThanlcJ to h1s Middleport
Class of J9j2 classmates for all )OUr ttme
and attention, arui for all the dtllcwu.r food
you suppl1ed for thefonlify. 71wtJt. you to the
emplo)et:S of F1sher Funeral Home,
Hosp~ce, and Holzer Home Health Ccmt for
your nteded profwtonal servtce A11d ro the
tmpfovus of Cmwnutry of Cart and
Pleruanr Vall~ Home Medu·a/ Eqwpmem,
our hats go off to you and Dirertor Greg
Ka)lor. Your .1enur 11a.r above wuJ beyond
what »aJ reqwrrd You CJ~T~aZed the famliv
mth }Our fast serv1u a"d \Oil contmued to
touch our heorts w1th \OUr joflow-IJP VISit

and book. on utuit&gt;rnandmg gnevmg Our
jamth »Ill~ eremafl\ grutefil! tn all Mai
God bless wu "''h blc-umgr mnjlowmx.

COOLSPOT IN COOLVILLE
HELP WANTED
Fuel Desk Cashier
2 pm to 10 pm &amp; 4 pm to 12 am shifts

(Must be able to work both)
Kitchen Cook
7 am • 3 pm Shift

Dishwasher 3

• II

740-949-2169

Angela Powell
Botlom ,

Ohio

45743
Unit #3
Rae Mash
P.O. Box 42
Tuppers Plelns, Ohio
45783
Unit #74 ·
Crystal Kautz
1405 R.ldgev1ew

CARDIO FUNK
PVH
Wellness Center
Tuesdays &amp;
Thursdays

Featured Speaker:
Robert Lewis, MD
Public is invited

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

·''

6 p.m.
$2/member
$3/non-members
For more info:

•

,.

Galli a
County

OH

classlfied@ mydailytribune.com

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

675-7222

Websites:
www.mydailytnbune com
www.rnyda1lysentinei.com
www.myda1iyreg1ster.corn

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

Oetul~ir~

Word Ads

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN

~
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...
\\'\Ill'\! I \II \ I \

Ohio Valley
Publishing rnerves
the ~ght to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Must

r

ANNOONmlmTS

ADOPT A happily ma med
young co uple longs to adopt
a n8'Nborn Wtll provide a
litetlm e of happiness, lo\19 &amp;
secunty Expenences pa1d
Please call Lucy &amp; Steven
@ 1-1100·276·1 323

:

T:

:

POLICIES Ohio Y1ttey Pubtllhlnfl r....-w1 tht1 right to edit, r.jKI, or Clnt•l JIJly 1d Ill 1ny tin. Error• mu1t be rwporttd on the 11111 d•y of
witt be reeponllbl• lor no mor• thin the co1t of the epace occupied by the 1rror 1111d only the flrlt lnurtlon We
•ny loll or l lllplln.. thll re11.11la from the publlt::lllon or omiUion of 1n •dwrtl..ment Correction will btl m1d1 In ttw llrl l I VIIIable edhlon
1re IIWIYI conft dtntlll. • Current rete Clfd IPPI-. . • All rHI fttltl ldvertlstmant• are
to tht Ftd•r• l Fai r Houtlnfl Ac1 of 1968.
.ccept1 Dnly n•p w111t•d 1ds !Meting ! 0! st•nhrds. WI wm not knowingly 1ccept
vlol1tlon ol the t1w

Trtbun.&amp;rnllnef.R-s~l• t•r

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

WAmED

olu1a

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Bu•lne•• Daya Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1 : 00 -~·····
Thur•day for Sundav•

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Adl With A Keyw ord • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbrevlatlans
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• A.ds Should Run 7 Days ,

rI

11\\\(1\1

GIVEAWAY

S1lver and Gold Coins,
Prootsets, Gold R1ngs, Pre1935
US
C urrency,
Solitaire Diamonds- M T S
Com Shop, 151 Second
A\IE! nu e, Gat11pohs 740-446·
2842.
.

~e;:J;:t:;f;;G PGt:f&gt; I

1li1S IS A -rs s.r
&lt;'I=" 1"8€ !;;" ~J;R" t: Nc
C:l';f - f"EOEI:&gt; I IJ'{

~t=TVri*K (

Free k1ttens to goad hOme
Call (740 )446·4529
Rescued, 2 female black
long ha1red k1ttens, 6 wee~s
old to good home (304)882·
3719

Wanted to buy 2002 Sea
foam
green
Gall1pohs
Bandstand Ctmstmas bulb
Top dollar pa1d (740)41 8·

To good home long &amp; short
ha~r. male &amp; female kittens
(304)675-8195

r

Borrow Sma rt Contact
the OhiO DIVI SIOn of
F1nanc1al
lnst ii UIIon's
Office
of
Consumer
Affa1rs BEFORE you ref1·
nance your home or
obta1n a loan BEWARE
of requests f9r any large
advance payme nts of
fees or Insurance Call the
Off1ce
of
Consumer
Al1curs toll free at 1·866·
278·0003 to learn 11 the
mort gage
broke r
or
lender
IS
p1 operly
licen sed (ThiS IS a publiC
se rv1ce announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Pubilsh1ng Co mpany)

., :z,.

~

7520
I \11'1 tl'l \II'\ I
'\ 11{\f{j'\

© 2006 by NEA , Inc.

www.comlca .com

HELl' W ANTiil&gt;
100 WDRKERli NEEDED
Asse mble crafts,
wOOd 1tems
Carport Sa le! Wedn esday
To S4BO/wk
Materials prov1ded
9 _27th and Thursday 9 _28tt1
Ty ree
Blvd ,
RaCine Free lnlofmaiiOn pkg 24Hr
42_8_·4_64
Cloth es-Lm ens- P1II ows- _ _ _8_0_1._
_ 9__

~~~~~~~~~~c:ra:h~lt:em:•:·~•:nd~M~·~~~--,
CLASSIFIED INDEX

4x4's For Sale .................................. ............ 725
Announcement ............................................ 030
Antlques ..................................................•.... 530
Apartments for Rent .•...............•................. 440
Auction and Flea Market............................. 060
Auto Parts I Accessories ............ .........•... 760
Auto Repair ........••...............................•.••.... 770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710
Boats I Motors for Sale ..........•................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................550
Business and Buildings ..........................•.. 340
Business Opportunlty ....................••........... 210
Bualneas"Tralnlng ....................................... 140
campers I Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 760
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ..............................•........ 190
Electrlca1/Rafrlgeratlon .••...........•.....•.......... 840
Equipment lor Rent. ....................................480
ExcavaUng ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment.......................................... 610
Farms for Rent............................................430
Farms lor Sale ..................•.......................... 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale...........................................•............585
For Sale or Trada ......................................... 590
Frulll 1 Vegetablea ..................•.................. 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng...........................................B50
Giveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads .......•..........•.............................•••.oso
Hay I Graln ..................................................840
HelpWanted.•.... ......................................••..•1tO
Home lmprovaments ...................................810
Homea for Sale ............................................ 31D
Household Goode ....................................... 510
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410 .
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
lneuranca ..................................................... 130
Lawn I Garden Equipment .............•.........•660
Llveetack..................................................... 630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots I Acreage ............................................350
MlecellantOue .............................................. 170
Mlecellanoous Marchandlse....................... 540
Mabile Homo Repelr.................................... 880
Mabile Hames for Rent.. .............- ..............420
Mobile Hameelor Sala ................................ 320
Money to Loan .............................................220
Motorcycleal4 Whaalera.......................... 740
Muolcellnatrumenta ................................... 570
Pereonala ..................................................... 005
Petalor Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing I Heatlng .................................... 820
Profeaelanal Servlcea .................................230
Radio, TV r. CB Rapalr ...........•................... 180
Real Estate Wanted .....................................360
Schoolelnatructlon .•...•...•........................... 150
Seed • Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
S~uatlons Wanted ....................................... 120
Spece far Ront. ............................................460
Sporting Gooda ..•.•................................•..... 520
SUV'alor Sale..............................................720
Trucks for Sale ............................................ 715
Upholetory ................................................... 870
Vane For Sale...............................................730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllea .................. 620
Wanted To Oo .............................................. 160
Wanted to Rent ............................................470
Yard Sale· O.lllpollo ....................................072
Yard Sa1e-Porneroy/Middle .........................074
Yard Sale.-Pt. Plaaunt ................................076

An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304·682·2645
ApplicatiO ns are bemg
accep ted ~r axpenenced
Electnclans
Apply at RB
Electncal Contractor Inc ,
3314 Mossman Avenue
Pomt
Pleasant,
WV
(304 )675·1537
AVON! All Arees ' To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears. 304
675·1429

Help wanted al Darst Group
Oh1o Valley Home Health,
Home, work1ng wtth elderly,
Inc. h1nng for Fu ll Time RN ,
heavy liftmg, Involved 740·
PT, PTA, Full T1me and Part
992·5023
T1me CNA, STNA, CHHA,
Immediate Openmgs tor part PCA and Per D1em PT, PTA
lime 911 dispatchers at the OT, ST Acce ptmg appl!ca·
Mason Co unty 911 Cente r, 11ons for LPN's Compet1t1ve
Po mt
Pleasan t
West Wages and Beneltts 1nclud·
Virg1n1a ApplicatiOns may 1ng t1ealfh Insurance and
be p1cked up at the 911 mtleage Apply at 1480
Cente r beh ind the hbrary Jackson P1ke, Gai11polts or
S
u
b
m
1
1 24 15 Jackson Avenue, Po1nt
appl1cabonslresu mes to the Pleasant, WV, or phone roll
911 Center or PO Bo ~ 38 tree 1.S66-441 · 1393
Pomt Pleasa nt, YN 25260
Pos1tion
closes
30· Part t1me Apt cleaner (1x per
weak)
wanted
Call
Sep•1ember·2000
!740)441-1 34 1.

R&amp;J TRUCKING
Leading The Way
R&amp;J Tr uckmg now Hmng al
our New Have n. WV.
Terminal For Regional
Hau ls·Dump 01v 1 year
OTR
verifiable exp
Call t -800-462·9365 ask 1of
Kenl

Capitol Medical
AITENTION CNA's
$$NEW PAY RAT ES$
Expenenced Agency CNAs
App ly In Person &amp; Rece iVe
A Free Gas Ca rdt!
Call Todaytll 800 576 6348

www capitOimfKhcal

net

©®L

• NO EI(PERIOICE NECESSNW
• FUU TIME CLASSES
• COL TRA INING
• FINAIIICINO AVAILABLE
'JOB PLACEMENT

' ENROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTO~·TRAILER

TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVI LLE VA

1·600·334· t 203
Cl rculatol"'
High 1ncome, pa1d tra1nmg
no e11perlence. lull time part
time 877·834·0430
·Data Enlry Clerk w1lh bas1c
Accounting and Computer
sk1lls
Send resume to
Resume PO Box 27 Potnt
Pleasanl, WV 25550"

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$1567·$26 19/hr.. now hlf·
tng For application and tree
governament job 1nfo call
American Assoc of Labor t ·
913·599-8042. 24/hrs emp
serv
Interested 1n hiring experienced !I mbe r cutter Call
(740)682·7318 ahe r 6pm

MoNEY
TO LoAN

HNOTICEH

Want to buy •Junk Cars
(304)773·6004
Want to buy new and old
junk cars/lruckslvans 740·
416·159 4 or 740·416·1588

H OMES
FOR SALE

k ltnc•rtyle@lcomcaat net

us

ar

Buyi ng Junk Cars,Trucks &amp;
Adopt:A happily mamed Wrecks, Pay Cas h J D
(30 4)773·5343
couple wants to give your Salvage
newborn wonderfu l opportu· (304)674· 1374
nllies. unconditional love &amp;
Ripe Pawpaws and Black
secunty Expenses pai d
Walnuts(Oct1 to Nov 10)
Please call Barbara &amp; John
and Ginse ng Please caU
@ 1·800·941 ·6760
first 740·698·6060

r

Now you con hove borders and graphics
'-'
added to your classified ads
(. ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!iJIII
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Display Ads

Dally In - C o lumn: 1 :00 p .m.
Mondav- Frlday for In•ertlon
In Next D a y ' s Paper
Sunday In- Column : 1 : 00 p.m.
Frlldorv For Sunday• Paper

Monday thru Friday

I

Mondays &amp; Wednesdays
6pm
$75/person
Bring your own mat
Limited class size!
For more info: 675-7222

Well ness
Center

.. Sentinel -

I

6 Weeks
12 Total Sessions

September 26, 2006
1 p.m.

~rtbune

CLASSIFIED

E· mal!

Begins October 16, 2006

Stroke Support
Group

13
15
17
16
19
18
21
23
25

TRANSACTIONS

PVH
Wellness Center

prov~ld~e"":w~rl:tt:e~n-~c~o:m~m:.e~n:ts
~=~~====-:S~e:al~ed~p:r~op~os~al~a~wlll
must be received by
Notice
be accepted !rom pre·
the close of business
on November 8, 2006.
Gordon Proctor
Department
ol
Transportation
(9) 25
.;..;.______
Public Notice
- - - - - - --

•

: Others receiving voles : Boston
College 42 M1am1 37 Arizona St 34 ,
Purdue 34 Michigan 5 1 20, Te)(aS A&amp; M
20. Penn St 19, Texas Tech 17,
Arkansas 13 Was hington 13, Wake
Forest 12 Wisconsin 6, Houston 5,
UCLA 5, Alabama 3

PILATES
ODOT will
Interested pertles and
the general public an
opportunity lor early
Input
Into
major
updates ol Ohio's
statewide transports·
tlon plan, ACCESSO·
H10. Thoro will also be
opportunities to review
and comment on draft
versions ol
both
ACCESSOHIO
and
Statewide
Ohio's
T r a n s p o r t at I o n
Improvement Program
(STIP) when under
development.
Any comments con·
corning
the
0 D0 TPu b I I c
Involvement Process
should be In written
lorm and transmitted
to:
Ms. Jennller Townlsy,

www.mydailysentinel.com

77
70

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

NOTICE OF AVAIL·
ABILITY TO THE PUB·
LIC
STATE OF OHO
DEPARTMENT
OF
' TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
The Ohio Department
ol
Transportation
(ODOT) hereby notnlaa
all Interested persons
that the proposed
0 D 0 T P u b 1I c
lnvolvomant Process
will be available lor
review end commantat
Its Central Office lac•
lion. 1980 Welt Broad
Street,
Columbus,
Ohio; a copy ol the
complete process can
. be requested by call·
lng 614-644-1204; or a
copy may be down·
loaded !rom OOOT's
w e b s I I a ,

Monday, September 25, 2006

Monday, September 25, 2006

a

Day Carroll 52, Hamilton Badtn 33

x-chnched diVISion
z-chnched playoff spot

Friday, September 29
Gree n at South Gallla
Wahama at Clay County
Wirl County ,al Hannan

CARD
W·L
PF
2·0
27
1·0
28
1·0
21
2·1
62

PageB2

This newspapeJ will not
knowingly accept
advertisements tor real
estate whic h Is ln
vlo tetlonot thetaw Our
readftrs are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertlaed In
this newlpflper ate
available on an equal

L:::••:~::rt•:n:lw::~:"::'·::~

_

Du plex apartments tor sale
with vinyl Sidin g, carports,
currently occupied w1th tenants. 32x40 block garage All
on 7 acres Located on St
AI 160, V1nton. $34,000
(740)386· 1579" (740)339·
01a9

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W1nl
1 a88·5B2·3345
IH\11"1\11

HOME&lt;;
FOR SALE

1·877-463-6247
oxt. 2331

Great used 3BR home only
$9 995 W1ll help with dellv
ery Call (740)385·7671
New 2006 Clayton s1n·
gtew1des stan1ng at $199 84
per month Trade-1ns wei·
comes Call (740)385-2 434

Attention Hunters &amp; Farmers
160 acres Barlon Chapel
House and 10 77 acres at Ad 20 m1nutes from 1·64
MI. Alto Pnvate w1th great M1lton ex1t C1ty wa!er For
" ew $155 000 (304)895· 1nlormat1on (304)937-4 127
3722
Mobile Home Lot for rant
near V1nton Gall (740)441 ·
11 11

1996 Redman 2Bx60 m
Apple Grove 304·593-6719
v1ew
on line
at
www/orvb.com, code 8246
House lor sale m Syracuse.
two-bedroom With bath,
3 bedroom, 2 bath, w1th lire·
attached. garage and base·
place, 401160 barn A1o
ment
An estate sale
Grande area On 8 flat aces $70,000 Phone (740)992·
$120,000 (740)709· 1 166
3690
4 bedroom, 2 bath, double - - - - - - - - garage, poo l, 2 acres, Log Cabin 3 bedrooms 1
25·ac res very
Eastern School Dislnct 112 bath
~:::--"!:"'
740·992·3465 after 5 OOPM secluded great huntmg ask·
150
ScHooLS
1ng $170 000 ca n (304)6744 rental houses "For Sale" 0069
L-.siiiillliilrl'CilililiiOiiiNO.,.I Good tncom e producll'lg
properties Great locatiOn I -R-an_c_h_s-~-le-hom--e-o-n26
GaNipolll Career College
(Caree rs Close To Home) Pnce(s) are Negotiable acres overlookmg the beau·
Motivated
Se lle r' ' In
Call Todayt 740-4 46· 4367,
tlful Ohio A1ver 1n Long
Gallipolis
Call
Wayne Bollom, Oh10 located at
1·800·214·0452
(404)456·3802
61818 SA 124
Th1s Sill
WNW oe•lpol~taunrcollege com

_____,

6 . room house for sale 1 lot
10 Railroad St . Middleport
Ca ll 740·992-2857

.. .

•

tu ·u u1

Tu Do

T1uck Dnver. EQUipment
Operator needed, MUST
HAVE CDLs
APPLY IN All Types Masonry, Brick ,
PERSON AT J OORILLING Block.. Stone. Free Estimate,
COMPANY RACINE, OHIO (304 )882•3688 • 304 "593·
6421

i

Wo\NTED

L.o~-----·
Landcontract
wanted
Home/Trailer/ Land All con·
Needed A S A P
s1dered
Prefe r the country Please
Call740-949·1030
Need to sell your home"
Late on payments d1vorce
JOb transfer or a death? I
can buy your home All cash
and QUick C)OSinQ 740·41 6·
3130

Attenttonl
Local compa ny ottermg 'NO
DOWN PAYME NT" pro·
grams lor you to buy your
home Instead ol ren ting
• 100% financmg
• Less than perfect credit
accepled
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Locators
Mortgage
(
)
_
740 367 0000

Ranch Style Home, Yost 2BA home· Vmton Ave
Road w11h 2 Acres 3 bed· $3 7 5 mo, -t- sec dep You pay
rooms. 2 baths, garage ut1hl1eS Gas heat (740)446
enclosed breezeway Pool 3644

About $3000 down 812 S
3rd Ave , Middleport Totally
remodeled 3 bedrooms, 1
bath
Perfect credit not
reqwed Paymen t $525
Appra1sed $70.000. 740·

~36:::7~·7:_:1~2_:9'-~---

and Spn
,$83 500
4001

Tile
b

Central a1r lull asement.
h dwood lloors de1ac'ed
ar
.
'
garage, covered
patiO,
1ence d bac k Ya ro , na wl y
1

~r-~
W
::-~
·- n - - , remodeled 3 or 4 .bed-

!!!!I!,...,.,.;;;;;;!!J 1' 80

Mob1le Home Lot 1n Johnson
Mob1le Home Park 1n
Gathpotls
OH
Phone
( 74 0) 446·2003 or (740)446·
1409
"""'"""~-,...--....,
Jb..:AI. Fsi'A n:

room house 1nctudes 2 5
bedrooms, one full bath and
a three quarter ba th 1421
squa re teet at 11v1ng space
wdh a full flmshed basement
and an anached two car
garage
Also Includes a
32 x 4o heated metal out
Side building 'With concrete
floor
Home 18 equipped
with heating, coot1ng, wa te r
and all electric utlhlles
Some k1tchen appliances
are mcluded
For more
1nformat 1on call 740·985 ·
33 15(dayt 1me) or 740·992 ·
2071(avenlngs)
Pnce
S160.000 00

116

Llll

2003 60x80 mobile home for
sale (740}446·0527

SERVICES

L....

OH . Aak tor Gene.
11\ii..,....

t997 14li72, clean w1tl1 lire·
place, 2 bedroom 2 bath
1997 14x70 3 bedroom, 2
bath. vmyl Siding. Shingle&lt;!
roof 4 more to choose from
(740)388·0000
daytime,
(740)388·80 17
evem ng
(7 40)645·6150 cell

I'R~ION4L

Roc ksprtngs Rehabtlttatta n
Ce nter prov1des res1dents
With ou tstandmg nursmg
care and rehab1l1tat1on serv·
1ces helping them return to a
l1fe of mdepende nce at
home We currently have
opportunitieS tor AN's at our Accrfldlt&amp;cl Member Accre!lllng
Couoc1l lor lndRpelldenl College~
tac11ity located 1n Po meroy, anl Schools 12748
Ohio
We offer a COM· - - - - - - - - . PET1VITE
SALARY
Ove rbrook Rehab Ce nt er.
SCALE,
an excellent
333 Page St , Middlepor t,
be nefit package and a supOH. 45709, w1 ll be holding
po rtive work enwonment
an STNA class starttng on
Interested
candidates
September 19th. If you are
should
apply
to
Interested 1n JOining our ded·
Rocksprings Rehab1htat1on
1catad staff. please stop by
Center 36759 Rocksprings
our front oft1ce Mon · Fn ,
Road.
Pome roy
OhiO
9am-5pm
, and 1111 out an
45769 Extendica re Health
appllcallon Fu ll·tlme &amp; part ·
Services, Inc 1s an equal
time positions available to
oppo rtu mty employer that
those quatllled lndl\llduats
encourages
workplace
the
class
completmg
dlverstly MIF DN
Applications Will be accept ed unt1l September 15th
SALES PERSONNEL
2006.
No Phone calls
Full·11me
wl1h
benlflto.
please Overbrook Rehab
Lot Attendant needed Full·
Must be experienced
t1me Apply 1n person at
Center IS an E 0 E &amp; a par·
In hardw1r1, lumbtr
Norns Northup Dodge.
tlc1pant o1 the drug -tree
and building metertala.
workplace program
Apply
In
penon
NRA
THOMAS DO IT CEN·
Rocrullan1 Neededl
TEA Galllpollt, OH.
1
MISCELlANEOUS I
Help renew member·
A1k for Gent.
sh1ps of past and
for Sale, 13foot steel spiral
'E:'nt NRA members
sta trcase
Call (740)591j help pmtect your
TRUCK DRIVER
0081
2nd Amendment nghts
Full-time with benllh•.
.I Up to $8/hour
New Lower Pr1ces on
Minimum 3 years expe.
,; Full or part hme
rlen ce with tlndom
L1mestone at Rodney Stone
schedules
l ruCkl. Apply In per·
•
an
THOMAS
DO
IT
(740)245·5316, River Gravel
.t"Weekly pay and
&amp; Sand also ava1lable
bOnus potenMI
CEN TE R
G1lllpolla,
.-'Pa1d vacations .
tra1rnng and holidays
..rprofess1onat work
enwonment
CALL TOOAY

1988 Mays Forest Lane, 1·2
bedroom, ready to be
remodeled Must be moved
$4.000 (740)245·5612

rooms. close to schools
Pomt Pleasant 569 500
(7 4017 09·1382
Comfortable house , l1vmg
room, d1mng room . 2 bed
room, bath, good basement
could have adctltlonal room
heal pump, deck large front
porch. good Neighborhood
1304!675·1536 .

IFIND AJOB IN THE CLASSIFIEDS I

Rl\l\1'

;;:=:;:===::,

~r 10

Hous•···
' l:.o;J

L__..;,ffio;R;;.;REIIIilrli~• .,J
2 Bedroom House, Newly
remodel ed
on
Bob
McCormick Road $500!mo,
Call
(740)441·0 194
(740)441 11 84
2 br, 1 Qath, central a1r 1636
Chatham Avenue. Gallipolis.
Oh10 Ava1tabte Oct 1st
(740)208·7861 or {740) 446·

4234

Included
Call 740·992· 3 Bdrm house m Pomeroy
5450 00
Mo
$450 00
depOSit
No 1ns1de pel$
740-992 2979 alter 4 M
PM Hud Approvad

BIG Dna

SiUfi

·IIIBTmymldwet thome.com

(740)828·2750

THREE Bedroom, TWO
bath
overs1 zed 2 ca'
Garage Storage Butldmg
newer carpet and roof 112
acre level lot Well ma1n·
tamed home Vtne Street,
RACINE
$95 000 nego·
liable 740-949·80101

3BD. 1 112 Bath, laundry
room. garage cen tral aH
Jackson P1ke a1ea secur~ty
depoSit
&amp;
relerence6
raqwed 740·446·0885
4bd, 2 bath HUD home Buy
$32.9001 For ilstlllllS 800·
391 ·5228 ext F254
Pomeroy 81g 4 Bedroom
CIA 2 full baths
lOis df
ceiling fans $850 rent 740843·5264
'

~~:~~02 ~~O-~~~~h26~ew,

�· Monday, September 25, 2006
ALLEY OOP

!ten_

A

I

Local company oHenng ~No
DOWN PAYMENT" programs lor ~ou to blly your
home Instead ol renting.
• 100 01o f1nancrng

Commen;tat building "For
Renf 1600 square teet, otf
street parking Great toea·
11ont 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Rent "Negotiable"
Call Wayne ~404) 4 56-3802

Commercial building "For
Sate" 1600 square feet , ott
street parking. Great location! 749 Third Avenue In
Gallipo~s. Price "Negotiable"
New rool l Motivaled Seller!

Would like to trade a
J..lospital Bed tor a good
Queen or Full size Bo~
Springs and Manress ( must
be in excellent condition )
1304)675·1602

. .

r

• Less than perfect credit

accepted

Downtown
Commercial
• Payment could be the Reta11 space for Rent . $400/
same as rent
month
Upsta1rs Office
Mortgage
locators Suites lot Rent $125/ month Pole Barns
30~50x10
(740)367·0000
you pay the Ulilllles. Call $6.995. Painted metal, slid,
F.QuiPI\IENf
(703)528·0617
er, free delivery. (937)71 8-t47 1,
www.nationwide- 'KIEFER BUILT 'VALLEY
IUR REI'Ir
barns.com.
*BISON "HORSE 1 LIVE10
STOCK TRAILERS 'LOAO.
HOlJSEIIOUl
I'F.Ts
~ 4K80 singtewtde. 3 bedMAX
'GOOSENEC.K.
(;o(HJ!;
IURSALE
rooms. 2 full baths. 6 miles
DUMPS &amp;
UTILITY
from Gallipolis down At 7.
'AlUMA
•ALUMINUM
2 male CKC registered TR
All electric, ce!ltral atr. $400
AlLERS "B&amp;W GOOSEMin.iature Dachshunds 10
deposit , $400 rent mflnthly.
NECK
HITCHES.
weeks
old
asking
$300
appiic.3tions be~ng taken, 1
Carmichael
Equipment
Appliance
(304)5Y3·3B20
year lease. No pets Call
(740}448-2412
(740)446-4514 for more info
Warehouse AKC reg. Boston Terrier. Vet 2004 Kabota with end
checked, shots &amp; wormed , loader, brush hog , belly
2 bedroom . 2 bath. private
lot, Green School District, 1n Henderson. WV
Pre- born Aug. 19. Parents on mower, scrapper blade.
no instde pets .• $400, owned Appliances start1ng p•emises. Read)' to go in Diesel engine , 4x4, new
deposi~ . (740)446 -6890
al·. $75 &amp; up all unde1 OCt Cell (740)388-9325.
co ndition, will sacrifice
$9.999. (740)446·311 7.
Warranty, also have recon2 bedroom. AIC. porch &amp;
CKC Jack Russell Terriers
ditioned
819
Screen
TV's
awning. Very, very nice, no
Bwks old, smooth coat , Tri - John Deere 10 ft. No Til Drill
rent. · Carmichael
pets. In Gallipolis. (740)446- by Ron's TV (304)675- colo r. red &amp; white. Vet. for
2003, (740)446-1409 or 7999
chacked. taUs clocked, shots Equipmen1 (740)446·2412 .
(740)446·2692
&amp; worme cl. 4 Generation
John Deere Mini E ~cava tor/
$175
Berber cwpet 6.95yd. vinyl Pedigree
Tractor Loader Backhoe /
3Br. RefridQ &amp; Stove, Washer 5.95yd. New rocker recliners 1304)6757071
Skid Steers. Carmichael
&amp; Dryer included (304)576 - 5199 95. new couch &amp;
Equipment
(740)446-2412
2934
lovesea t $450 . Mollohan German Rottweiler puppy
Carpet
76
Vine
St ... lor sate. Registered, male, NeW John Deere Compacts
For Rent Tratler. 2-3 bedGallipolis, OH (740)446· mother &amp; father on premis- and 5000 Series Utility tracrooms , HUD approved.
es Call (740).245-9037.
lors @0% Fixed for 36
7444.
1304)675·3626
months
through John
Me~ ican Redhead Amazon Deere Credit. Carmichae l
New
recliner
$200;
sola
&amp;
I.
For rent. Nice 2 bedroom
Parrot w/cage and play· Equipment (740)446-24 12
mobile home in Country seal $400. Mollohan Furn.
stand. $200. Call: 740-992202
Clark
Chapel
Ad.
Porter.
Homes. $325 + deposit
Quality John Deere Hay
1987.
Phone
(740)388·0 173.
(740)385-4019.
- - - - - - - - - Equipment for less-round
Open 9·3 Sat. only
Pet Safe Re mote Training balers, S(luare balers &amp;
Mo01Ie Home sites for up to
Collar for large dog. Harcly .mower conditioners @4.7%
16x80 in Country Homes. Thompso ns Appliance &amp;
h h
h
F. d 1 48
1xe or
mont s 1 roua
used. Paid $165 will take
(740)385·4019.
Repair-675-7388. For sale,
$100. (740)388-0191 .
Johri
Deere
Credit.
re-conditioned automatic
Equipment
One bedroom· furnished washers &amp; clryers, refrigera- - - - - - - - - - Carmichael
mobile hOme for rent. Private tors, gas and electric Pygmy &amp; Boer Goals &amp; 2 ~740)446·2412.
lot with a carport. No pets. ranges, air condition ers, and CoOnhounds (304)675-1 585
LivESIOCK
References required. 5450 wringer · washers. Will do - - - - - - mo. plus deposit. (740)446· repairs on major brands in Rat Terrier 7 months old ·-------~
white wfblack spots $125 ' '
4782.
shop or at your home
(304)773-5343 (304)674- *KIEFER BUILT *VALLEY

r

iO

FARM

MomLE Hom:s

r

i

ArA.RTMENlli
FOR RJ.NT

1374

MlSC.lJANfl.JUS

·-·M.iEiii.RiiOiii!AiiNiilliiiSE-·_.1

..,
1 and 2 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurJET
nished, security deposit
AERATION MOTORS
rsquired , no pets, 740·992- Repai red. New &amp; Rebuilt In
2218.
Stock. Call Ron E~Jans , 1800-537-9528.
APARTMENTS
NOW
AVAILABL E.
"old
porcelain"
Large
Brand new 2 Bedroom Prestone anti-freeze therApa rtm ents WashEirldryer mometer nice $155; Also
hookup, stove/refrigerator high standa rd 12 ga. pump
included, 1 located in city, t shotgun e~cetlent $145.
apprm. 1 mile outside city (740)533·3870.
limits.

__E_
W_A_N_D_U_
S_
E_
D _S
_T_E~E-[
Also available units on State N
Route 160 Ca ll for details
~740)441-0 194 or (740)44 1. Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
F
C
A I
or
oncrete,
ng e.
1184
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
For
Drains.
Apt. for rent 2 or 3 Br No Grating
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Pets. 740-992·5858.
ScrapMelalsOpen Monday
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Friday, Bam·430pm. Closed
PRICES AT JACKSON Thursday,
Sa turdf'IY
&amp;
EST.&amp;,TES, 52 Westwood Sunday. {740)446-7300
Drive from $349 10 $448.
Walk to sh op &amp; mo ..ies. Call
Equal
740-446 -2568.
Housing Opportunity
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhou se
apa rtments.
andfor small houses FOR
RENT. Call {740 )441 -1111
lor application &amp; informat ion.

- - - - - - -- Ra1 Terrier puppies. 1st
shots , $75 a piece. Call
(740)441-1218 after 6pm.
-------Registered Chihuahua puppies. shots &amp; wormed $200
9304)895·3101
Siberian Huskies, $350,
AKC &amp; APRI registered, 6
weeks old, 1st shots, vet
check. (740)707· 1964.

r
Kiwi

Fruit!

Cherry

and

Hickory nut size. smooth
skin, 740-992 -7449. VIrgil's
Berry Patch, St.Rt. 124, East
of Syracu se, Ohio.

r

7268
--

=·------

i

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVEI~\'
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

11161 Cadllac corw•rllblo.
X
Very good conciHion, leather
in1erior. classic. (740)245· ·L.,--,jF·O·R·S·A·LE-_.1
_91
_4_ 2 _ _ _ _ _ _
l •v'"'' " the pain but
1994 Pontiac Grand Am 1997
Jeep
Wrangler
painting-let USdo it
108,000 miles litt kit, Black
for you "
$400. Police Impounds! For 740 _645-4717
listings 800-391-5227 ext.
Interior Onl~
C54B.

44

flO

:_:__c_______

L

FoR SAU:

40 MOTORCYCIEi/

FOR.SM£ ·

Cook Motors
328 Jackson Pike
(740)446-0103

Nice Ranger Bess boat with
trailer, 200 HP engine.
2002 Nissan Allima 2.5 S. $ 2 ,600 or best
offer.
auto, remote start, alloy ~
367 _7529
wheels. driving lights, new
tires, 78 It miles, exceUent

40

HOME

ADVERTISE
. YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

SHOP CLASSIFIEDS
FOR BARGAINS

I I \liS
CO\! 'IU II·
CO 'IS IIH &lt; 1'10\

Quality Work at a Fair Price!
All Work Guaranteed I
All Makes &amp;. Models
Pickup 1.. Dellvel)l Avalklble
OPE Certified

'TConcreie Work ,
'l6 Years Expericm:e

David Lewis
740• 992 "6971

,..

1•
44
·':!!1

-

-

-

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

,
'

TtCUM irH

'"~
STAN lEY

IT'~ ~ ITt'lr~

..- CONSTITUTIONAL 0~
. UN(,ONSTITUTIONAL --IY~ l&gt;ON'T us~ A
SCALf OF oNe
TO nN!

M!U'r•:rt

- · o•~F
- WI
- AI&gt;
10%

-

-

-

-

1

fll

BARNEY

•

NEXT TIME A TOURISTER
COMES IN, SNUFFY, LET 'EM

740.446.9200.

740-742-2293

160 ·Gallipolis
U. FOR FR ESTIMAT

* Le'ave a message

DO A LI'L SHOPPIN' !!

---\t"

2459 St. Rt.

•
._
~

w

ROBERT

MANLEY'S
SELF STORAGE

•'

.•

BISSEll
CINSTRUCTION

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

• New Homes
• Garages

10x10x10x20

THE BORN LOSER

• Complete
Remodeling

992-3194
or 992-6635

P"LCY\E.~ Wf&gt;,HU:.'::, fi&gt;JIIIL'{"&lt;&lt; P"I-\OW COI&lt;\E. \o.IE- 00\'\\ AAii(}
rlf&gt;..:&gt; 1\ (, P. S. 11'1 lf\[IR. Cf&gt;..R,
P., C. P. :'&gt;. It-\ OUR. CM, POP?

140-992-1611

"Middleport's only

so TI-\E-'1' worn C£1 LOST...

Stop &amp; Compare

Seii-Stora1e"

I

NOW OPEN
Klmmy's Furniture

~

~

Outlet

t::~~~!~~~i~------~

~u rn i tun·
\1 ~el•lkl~'"·

OH

740·7~4-07 5 1

·See ·
:, Rgcky '"RJ"
. ' Hupp ·

7411-.'t17-7.Ul

BIG NATE

IMPORTS
Athens

pttwri&amp;Sil"'l
andSons

.-L
1

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bash an llood

Racine, Ohi11
45771

All types of rooffng:
New or Repa1r
Seill llleSs Guile•
Downspout

"

'i;i
I'

I

•

...

:cJaasiHad

.' .

\.

FREE
ESTIMATES

~

~

iii

~!~1"~!~:~!2.!1

PEANUTS

74D-949-2217

Sl:te• s·x1o·

M'{ DAD TOOK ME TO

to 10'x30'

ANOT~ER

Hours

HOCKE'( GAME

..-'----

LAST N16HT ..

7:00AM - 8:00 PM
11 1~II lltl.' . 1-&gt;IJ

GOT TO MEET
Tl.fE MAN Wl-!0

ZAMBONI ..

D~IVE5 T~E

ZUCCI-!IN I ..

.Cornerstone
Constructicm
Rt•sidt•nlitll • C ommcrciul • ( :t' lll' l'lll ( ·,llll l"a• 1in!~
Pa intin g • l&gt;olli'S • \Viultow.~ • J) ,· d .~
• S1diug • Rooting • Room Addiliun~ • l{,. ,,,, ,d ·ltllt'
WV 038992
• Phunhiug • Eh:~.: lr il· al 740 -36 7 0544
OH 38244
• AlYI• u~ til' Ccil1ng
740-339 J112

.......

ldlh

SUNSHINE CLUB
~V. 1).JI&gt;'r' JUST

JONES'

Dally

ARREST~.P

. I.QJI£

Tree Service

OIP.

Top • ~emoval · Trim
• Stump Grinding
• Bucket Truck

Large
One
Bedroom
Apartment in Point Pleasant.
$495/month Includes all
. Ullli11es (304)675-5819

I

\

Now accepling applications
for 2 Bedroom Apartments,
6
mile s from
Holzer.
$425/mc. Wa ter. Sewer.
Trash patd. ~740)682· 9243 ,

GARFIELD

-Manley's ~
Recycling ·

1740)9~8·6130 .
Now tak1ng applications for
one bed apartment s at
Spring Valley, Green and
BroOksicle apartments. Call
(740)446-1599 for Information.

Tut GARFIELD to 36&amp;42
'•

503 Mill Sl• 111111111111. IH 45780

, ....112-3894

. . .,. . . . . . . . . . . ., ...", ...... ,111ft
Hrmt-

11• _ _ 111,,H,.-oto ...
SM1,.1!1UI . .11.11111

One bedroom apartment.
Locatton: 403 112 Third Ave.
One bloc!&gt;. from GAHS.
w aSher &amp; dryer hookup. For
an applicatiOn call (740)4464639.

PAYING TOP PRICES ,OR

j

illllllttl• , . . •1111111l11•11111h

C.OoltUcl-niii·C•••
·-··1111110111
lCIII Ftrturrul Prlcnt

One bedroom. nicely furnished apt qUJet area, suitable lor 1 adu lt . private
driveway w/carport. no pets
$400 mo dep required .
(740)446 ·4782.

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

One BR apt. in Spring Valley

Twin Rivers TCtWer is acceptIng applications for waibng
list for Hud-subs1zed. t - br
apartment. call 675·6679
Equal Housing Oppmtunity

!t:=~~q_~

..

{

(304)882-3017

W/ f) hookups. HUDIPRC
vouchers ac cept~d Call
(740)446-0834 or !_740~6454846 (cell)

·~ \

.•

Call Gary Stanley

®alhpohs !latlp lribune
(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Room Additions &amp;
Rem odeli ng
New Garages
Ele~lri ~al &amp; Plumbing
Ro oting &amp; Gullera
Vlt'l yl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
WVOJ6725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992 ·62 15
Pomeroy, Oh1o
25 YeA r s l oca l E~ p enenct•

""

GRIZZWELLS

Advertise
in this
space
for
1
54 per
month

West
Pass
Pa ss

~ortb

3•
Pass

Easl
Pass
Pass

6\l\.1.1\\~R. ~~M£'5
'lbU REM!~D Mf- OF
A srA~!IU

C\1!\l.A
~?

A tough start
to the week
Man Groening, the creator
of The Simpsons, Wrote; "Warn ing signs
that lover is bored: 1. Passionless kiss·
es; 2. Frequent. sighing; 3. Moved, left no
forwarding address."
That last one would tend to
leave no doubt. Here, though, Is a deal
that would doublless stump most players
at the table, but In the quiet of one's
home, one should lind the wlnnlng play
because a warning bell ha~ been rung.
.You are the declarer in fou r
spades. West leads the heart two. You
take East's elghf with your ace ancl play
a trump to the queen on tl'le board. After
West follows low, East wins w~h his ace
and returns .the heart (lueen . HoW would
you proceed from there?
North 's limit raise was
game-invitational. promising at least
lour-card spade support with 10-12 support points and eight losers.
You hilve 10 tricks : tour
spades, two hear ts, two diamonds, one
club and a diamond ruft on the board.
But you might lose four tricks : two
spades ancl two hearts. Suppose you
cover East's heart queen with your king.
West ruffs ana you will later concede two
heart tricks to East. Instead. play low on
the heart queen. East wins the trick. bul
what does he do neKI? If he shifts, YDt;~
win and draw trumps . If he leads the
heart jack, you COIJer with your ·king .
West ruffs. but now clummy's heart t 0 is
high .:.... you still get two heart tricks. And
if East tries a low heart, you play low
from your hand. Whatever happens. you
will win th6se 10 tricks .
Finally, it hearts unexpecteclly prove to be 3-2, you are still all right,
losing at most one heart and two
·
spades

G

45

Cure

48 Ben &amp; Jerry

a

1 Hop jet
rival
4 Diner ordtr 49 Bring
7 Team 's goal
logether
tO Advarslly
51 ,Apply salve
t t Kentucky
53 Tell a
piOneer
whopper
13 Byron work 54 Gobbhld up
t411orsaclick 55
15 Close
56 Diligent

-•"'9-

relatives

insect

16 Garden·
57 Cakellka
pond tlsh
cookie
17 Scuba sport 58 Baseball 's
19 Hunky-dory
Met 21 Antique
22 SoUiheasl
Asian
23 Raises
1 VCR button
one 's voice
2 Burglar' s
26 Cross al
" kay "
risk
3 Abominable
30 Spo&lt;ty !niCks
Snowman
31 Robust
4 Headed for

DOWN

5 Protracled

energy

Opening lead: ¥ 2

1',

"Insured"

2&amp;3 Bedroom Apl.
Starting at $385 and up.
Central heat &amp; air, WID
hook -up, coin operated
taunclry, owner pays water,
· sewer &amp; hash.
·

In Ga llipolis, clean . upstairs,
2 bedrooms. 2 bath . dish ·
washer, WID. hookup, $500.
deposit,
references.
(740)446·9209.

-

A K 2

"' 6

Sout h

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

eac

Place Y

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lro·••r···'
~ "u
Fr~c b t iman·...

Ellm View
Apartments

Gracious l1ving. I and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments tn Middleport .
From $295·$444. Call 740992-5064 Equal Housing
Opportunities.

W I\ K 7 '4

MIJRft~Y

Master Ce&lt;tlfled Mechani cs
AlV Parts&amp;. Service Available

J10653

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: B oth

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Authorized Service For:

• QJ 9 8
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Since

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• A

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South

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t978

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and Replacement

~til

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70 P ine Sln.·et • Gal lqm l1..,
7~0-441i- tltlt17 Toll Fr·«·I!77-M&lt;J. fll!ll7

Le;nt! ml'"iSnge
b&lt;fore 6 PM

1998
Cadillac
Deville,
4 WHEF.l.F.R~
Excellent Condition, 77.000
mites, 2 owners, Fully
equipped. $6.000. (740)446· 1995 Yamaha Virago in
e~cellent condi tion. Gold
3389
wl maroon trim . Origi nal
200.2 Cavalle ~ 59 ,395 miles owner.
$3,000
firm .
$4,500: 2002 Kia Sportage (740)446·1662
$4,500: 1998 Chev. pickup H D
$2,900;
t993
Nlssan
. . 2003 Annl'lersary wide
Kingcab
$3,.200;
1.999 glide, t O,OOO mile s, over ·
Voyager van $3,500. We $4.000 in e.:lras "plus" new
have Sunfires, Cavaliers. brakes, new battery ask.1ng
Saturns. Neon, Fireb1rd,
will(304)576-2383
consider p1ck r
up on trade
Toyota and others . 3 !12.900
months/3,000 miles warran·
&amp; MaroRs
1y.

.

MONTY

"

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

7~11·985-4180

1997 Chrysler Sebring LXI, ..,
2 door. power windows, sunroot . leather interior, CD 2000 Chevrolet Tahoe LT,
loaded leather interior, 3fd
player, new tires, air condirow seats. moon rool. 5.3
ti1ming $1 .895 rt no answer
leave message (304)882 - eng. , excellent condilion
3854
$1 1,500. 740-742-2675.

North
09-2j-06
• KQ 9 8
• 10 6 53
• 7 4
o!o A J 2

•

(7amihj •·&gt;:rm ~ :~

VANS

i

Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp;
Qath, upstairs, d ean. no
pets. Ret/deposit reQuired
(740)446· 1519.

Phillip
Alder

'•

1998 Chevy S·10, Standard,
mile age 131 ,000, rulli good . . - - - . . - - - - - - .
$500!
Carsl
Pollee driiJing to Marietta evaryday,
Impounds from SSOQI For gas mleage 28 miles to the
tistinos 600-391·5227 K3901 gallon, $3,000. 740-6673655.

r.i&lt;":,.....=-=:-=...--:::,.-,;=======-. __

'

ACROSS

-- -Tacoma.
----1997
Toyota
Extras,
~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; S4,BOO OBO Call i740)367·

Auro;
IUR SALE

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

5616

coridrtlon. $·io,soo. 740- riO
74H675.
:_:::_:::::.:::_______
IMPROVEMENTS
78 Camara Race ready. Lw-ililiiilirllliiilririiirro~
never raced Street Legal.
BASEMENT .
'BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVE· $&lt;1.000 080. 1997 Dodge
WATERPROOFING
STOCK TRAilERS 'LOAD- Dakota SLT, extended cab. Unconditional lifetime guarMAX
"GOOSENECK, VS $5,000 OBO 4~4 call for antee. Local references furDUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY more detail s {740)446-2615 nished. Established 1975.
'ALUMA
'ALUMINUM
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 44698 Taurus $2.395
TRAILERS · B&amp;W GOOSE·
0870, Rogers Basement
97 Taurus $1 ,988
NECK
HITCHES.
Waterproofing .
95 Eclipse $2.495
Carmichael
Equipment
00 Neon $2,995
(740)446-2412
03 'Neon $4,388
Vers81ile
Home
99
Daewoo
$2,395
Improvement.
Everything
3 youn,g registered Angus
cows. 1 registered Angu s 00 F-250 quad cab, diesel, from additions to leaky
faucets. Specializing in
heifer. 1 young regi stered 4•4 $13;388
oeram1
c tile, granite and
97
GMC
K-2500
4x4
$4,495
Angus bull. Ph.# (740)256marble installation. 74098 Cavalier $2,995
1352.
742·0900
97 Cavalier Z-24 $3,088
BOOr bucks, t reg . full blood , 97 Wrangler $4,695 .
2.5yr old, $300. 1 92 % tyr ' 00 Alero $3,995
old, $t50 (740)367-0682
92 Mustang GT $2,495
96 M 1
$3 895
Gtmeas, 3 months old, have
us ang
'
20 . d
I ~
~ ~ &amp; 99 Eclipse
Status $2,495
m1.:e pear ..... ue. UlaUfl.
GT
$
01
7 ,988
whlte, $tO each. (740)367Rome Auto Sales
0682
_::17_40.::)44_c_1_·9.:_544:...:.._ _
Fo r sale: 200 1 Lincoln
Continental. Load ~d . 51K
miles, garage kept. Qriginal
owner. $t3,500. Phone
(740)367·0430

~'

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Have 1000 Bales of mixed 1994 Ford Ranger XLT. AC,
hay this years never we1. auto, 4 cyl.. low miles,
$1 .00 per bale. 740·992· (740)24S.S283.

10

I \In I -.. 1 1'1 '1 I I"
,\ I I\ I -.. I I u f,

www.mydailysentinel.com

6

32 By way of
33 Extinct bird
34 Period of
decline
35 Slid down

High
explosive
Came to
"Cradle
of Love ..

7

8

36 Harem
jewelry

18 Bka.
Astonished

20

cry

42 Ball sounds

Common
door sign

41 Taxi device

22 Gentle
42 Mr. Lugosl
parson
43 Valhalla
23 Arlmna city
host
24 JackeUiyle 44 Moscow

25 Faucet

turndown

· problem
26 Darrick
arms
27 Blvds.
28 C'-ry

45

.

47 FJound

tuna

singer
29
9 Diamond or

Lesfy
vegetable
31 Overrule

39 Squander
Sedaka
40 Famous
11 Bucket
numero
handles
4t Comfy shoe 12 WrHing

39

35 Grimace

46

Comic Rudner
First 007
movie
(2 wds.)

dwelling
50 Sieze
52 -

as·~ e111he8

37 Drag along
38 Happen

assignment

next

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
C.Jebnty C1pller C!)'t:llOgr!ms a:e crtaled lfom quotations by !an'(IUS people. past ai'Mj p!'~tfll.
Each letter in lhe opl1er s\arlls ICf aiiOlher
·

Today's Clue: 0 equals Y

" K Z Y X W C 0 G C N 0 ·y B M W K Z Y J N T X B I

MW

P Z X Y X F C H C X I Y .N U B X F W H S N C C
KZY

IFW. "

G M K V z"Y B

-

TXY

SMC C 0

UNBNUMXCN,

XW

CX YI

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The most expensive habit in the world is celluloid.
no1 heroin, and I need a fix every few yea1 s.~- Steven Spielberg

8
'~:~.:~~~ S©R~~-~£zttS
UMI
'OLLAN _..;__ _ __
0 scron-:bld
bo·
WOlD

AstroGraph
l1lrur 'lltrtlldll)o:

TueadaY,. Sept. 26, 2006
By Bernice Bade Oaot
Ways and means to add to your
resources are likely to be created by the
very persons you haYe helped in lhe
past. Events could unfold In ways where
those good relationships will proye to be
invaluable.
LIBRA (Sep1. 23-0cl. 23) - l1 won 't be
100 smart 10 run up big bills, knowing it
could be difficult to pay them oft later.
Purchase only what you need and/or can
afford, and you'll like yoursell far better
lor it.
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- For what·
ever reasons you can·• even explain to
yourself, you could step out ol character
and be testy to the very persons you
shouldn't. Instead, gel a grip and be
pleasa nt to all.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2 1) Someone with wllom you've had words
might try to make amends. II you insist
on hanging onto your self-righteousness,
you could lose this friendship fo rever. Be
1eceptive.
CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - A
venture or project that hasn't bee n working oul as you had thought could be
turned around with some new innovation
on your part. Pu1 on vour thinking cap..
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - In
reaching for a monumental ambition, if
you're not careful. you could step on the
toes of the very person who could help
you ac hieve thiS goal. Make amends
immediately.
PISCES .(Feb. 20-March 20) - It isn't
necessary to act against your own interests in ordar to placate a sorehead who
does n't deserve it in the tirst place.
Figure out how 10 do what needs doing
·
without him/her.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - It'll only
make you look small if '/ou think "you
need to continually remind another abou t
how much you've done tor the person .
Let this Individual repay yo u in his/her
own way and time.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - II you see
a collective eftor1 isn't producing what Is
e)(pected , reassess the Situation .
Chances are the cause Is simply a laCk
of shared harmony and with just a little
planning can be set right.
GEMINI {May 21-June 20) - Jobs or
tasks you truly di slike will stand In the
way of letting you get onto projects you
consider fun and fulfillinQ. so don' t pro- ,
long the agony. Do them first thing.
CANCE R (June 21-July 22)- A tnend·
shit:l you don't want to lose could be a
touch-and-go situation, owing to some
past misunderstanding . Put your pride
aside and be the first to offer that hand of
affection.
LEO (July 23-Au~J . 22) - Stand by your
word and do lor your family that which
you promised you would . You'lllike yo ur·
self batter. and il will open up beller com, munlcatlon between you and your loved
onea.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - Don't
expee11mmedlale payback lor aomething
you do for your frlanda . They are not like·
·IY to forget or overlook your klndneta and
will raturn the favo r when the timing Ia

14;1td

~~

CLAY R.

Reort;:JI!Qe le!lert o! th•
four
worda
low to lerm four 'irnplt words

r-------,"'

f---TGT--1,.,_~.::;E...:.V-¥E-I !
N

'

'--'---1.---l'---.l....J "'

.. 1don' I think I'm middle
aged," my sislcr announced.
"Well," Ilaughed. "I believe
you reach middle age when
caul ion is all you exercise."

O Comglete

the chFJcki e quoted
by l1lling in lht miuin9 words

L.....l--L-l-..L....J_J yov devtioo frOfr! steo Na. 3 beicw
-1'-Rit:i j :iiJ.::IE;;£:;1[;;0:--0 1
;-&gt;;-&lt;.-,!:-&lt;.-r.,--.,;--.,.-.

6

I! i llRS "" IClU'~rs

ANSWERS 9.1/JOI•
To"·ord - ·Ohm- Re~el - Yonder - EYEBROWS
My srnndma gave me the funniest advice once. She told
me not to hire an clectiician who had scorched
EYEBROWS!
SCRAMLETS

ARLO &amp; JANIS
OH,

OARI.l~

1 FORG.or ro CHAR&amp;&lt;.
/IIY I'HO!Jf,.'

AIJD l $0 WAIJTE.D
TO fAK€. A WA~K!

!

~
y /

) \

•.

'r ight

~ ... IT'-$

AI'~\..U1Wf
~E-.,,...._..;

SOUP TO NUTZ
AN BPPLe 6 Da~ KeEPS
THe. !&gt;oCToR awa'l.

I HeaRD iT KeePS

dwa~

&amp;lD 8ReaTtl Too~

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

:\1

\ItO:\ \1

Fooi'B \1.1 . Lt. \&lt;;n·.

Monday, September 25.

www.mydailysentinel.com

·

atop it early in l'ittsburgh 's
playoff victory in January.
Palmer had three fumbles,
two interceptions and was
sacked six times, yet overcame them with four touchdown passes while going 18of-26 for 193 yards.
''[didn't take anything personal into this ~arne," said
Palmer, who dunng the offseason said how much he
hated the Steelers. "1 didn't
come in here thinking. 'It's
payback time, let's get these
guys.' I came in here thinking
it\ a divisional game and let's
get a win.''
Chris Henry, the wide
·receiver hurt on the same play
as Palmer. wasn't as diplomatic.
"We planned on coming
back this year and beating
Pittsburgh two times," said
Henry, who caught Palmer's
other two TD passes among
his five receptions.
For the Bengals (3-0), it's
one down and one to go. TI1e
Bengals and the Baltimore
Ravens (3-0) already own

two-game leads in the AFC
North over the Steelers (1-2).
who couldn't withstand a second mediocre game in seven
days by their own rehabilitating quarterback.
Ben Roethlisberger, recovering from an offseason
motorcycle accident and
appendicitis attack, was an
ineffective 18-of-39 for 209
yards and three interceptions.
Kevin Kaesvi ham made the
third and final pickoff, on a
third-and-! 0
from
the
Bengals' 16 with Pittsburgh
trying to drive for the tying
score in the closing seconds.
With the Ben ~;als scoring
21 points off Steelers
turnovers, Palmer twice hit
Henry for touchdowns for a
14-7 halftime lead. Then. after
the Steelers seemed in control
even while leading only 17- 14
in the fourth, Palmer took
advantfige of fumbles by punt
returner Ricardo Colclough
and running back Verron
Haynes
to
hit
Houshmandzadeh on TD
throws of 9 and 30 yards only

54 seconds apart .
Houshmandzadeh
had
missed two games with a heel
injuf)' but, with the Steelers
limitmg star Chad Johnson to
one catch for II yards, took
advantage of man coverage to
make nine catches for 94
yards.
Colclough's fumbk at the
Steelers 9. recovered by Tony
Stewart, was the turning
point. An inexperienced
returner. Colclough tried to
catch a tumbling punt that
was aided by a strong wind
with his hands over his head
but never controlled it, and the
Bengals scored on the next
play.
"You can put t~at on me,
too," Steelers coach Bill
Cowher said of using an inexperienced punt returner in a
key sttuatton.
Besides . the turnovers,
Cowher was especially
unhappy the Stee lers had
penalties for excessive celebration and taunting.
'That will not happen
again . That's on me," he said.

Stover kicks Ravens to first-ever 3-0 start
CLEVELAND (AP) Matt Stover kicked the
Ravens to their fu:st 3-0 start
since the franchise moved to
Baltimore.
Stover booted a 52-yard
field goal with 20 seconds left
· Sunday as the Rave ns
remained unbeaten with a 1514 win over the Cleveland
Browns.
Stover's 12th career gamewinning kick came after
Ravens cornerback Chris
McAlister intercepted a pass
by Cleveland's Charlie Frye in
the end zone with 3:2 1
remainin~ as the Browns (0-3)
were drivmg.
Baltimore's Steve McNair
then went 6-ot~9 for 52 yards
to set up the · 38-year-old
Stover, who spent five years in
Cleveland but left in 1995
· when owner Art Modell
moved his franchi se to

Maryland.
As the kick by Stover. tl1e
only former Browns player
still on Baltimore's roster,
sailed through the uprights,
Baltimore's bench erupted in
celebration while Cleveland
fans )Jemoaned another tough
loss for the Browns.
Cleveland led 14-3 at halftime and was only one play
from putting the game away.
Stover also kicked a pair of
32-yard field goals.
McNair finished 23-of-4 1
for 264 yards and threw a 3yard TD pass to Todd Heap on
the first play of the fourth
quarter. The Ravens (3-0)
sacked Frye seven times and
limited the Browns to just 91
total yards in the second half.
Frye, making big riays on
the fly and shakmg · off
Baltimore's best shots, threw a
58-yard touchdown pass to

.Retired military
officers criticize
Rumsfeldat
Democratic hearing, A2

Sports Roundup _

·

Bengals get satisfying win over Steelers
PITISBURGH (AP)- He
hated the eight months of
exhausting rehabilitation, and
the team that made him go
through it. Carson Palmer didn't pfay the way he wanted
against the team he dislikes
the most, but the result couldn't have been more satisfying.
Alternating between brilliant and awful, the Cincinmiti
quarterback threw two touch.
down
passes
to T.J.
Houshmandzadeh less than a
minute apart midway through
the fourth quarter fo llowing
PittSburgh Steelers turnovers
and the unbeaten Bengals rallied for a 28-20 victory
Sunday over the Super Bowl
champions.
"We're a better team than
we were last year and we
expected to come in here and
win this game, but it took
everything we had," running
back Rudi Johnson said.
Especially from Palmer,
whose focus has been on the
Steelers almost since the
moment Kimo von Oelhotfen
tore apart his knee by rolling

2006

Braylon Edwards and ran for
Frye's 1-yaid TD run with
another TD. He had the 24 seconds left before. halfBrowns in position for a big time capped a 74-yard drive
win, but on second-and-goal during which the Bro:-vns' secat Baltimore's 4-yard line, he ond-year QB had to scramble
got blindsided by Ravens line- from trouble before fmding
backer Bart Scott on his pass his primary playmakers intended for Edwards.
Kellen Winslow, Edwards and
McAlister, though, had Dennis Northcutt · as
excellent position and stepped Cleveland took . a surprising
inside of Edwards to pick off 14-3 halftime lead.
Frye's throw.
Frye shook off a vicious hit
McNair took over from · by Adalius Thomas and tinthere, completing four straight ished 11-for-14 for 169 yards
passes to move the Ravens in the second quarter.
mto field-goal tenitory.
The Ravens, who went 0After Stover 's kick, the for-6 on third-down converBrowns' last chance ended sions· in the firSt half, finally
when linebacker Gary Stills began clicking on offense after
stripped Joshua Cribbs at the halftime and pulled within 1432 and recovered the ball.
9 in the third on McNair's
Frye finished 20-of-32 for a · short scoring toss to Heap.
career-high 292 yards for the
Baltimore went for 2, but
Browns, who were without McNair's pass to Heap was
leading
rusher
Reuben broken U(l by rookie lineDroughns (shoulder).
backer D'(..!weU Jackson.

NASCAR

Thrilling late pass propels
Burton to Dover win, points lead
•

DOVER . Del. (AP) - Jeff Burton's winless streak is
over and a week of controversy is behind him. Up ahead:
A run to the Nextel Cup title, with a whole lot less competition to worry about. .
Burton finally led the lap that mallers Sunday, finding .
his way back to Victory Lane at Dover International
Speedway after a thrilling late battle with Matt Kenseth .
The win parked Burton in the lead of NASCAR's Chase
for the championship and ended his 175-race winless
streak.
Sunday's Dover 400 likely ended the title hopes of
Kasey Kahne, Kyle Busch and Dale Earnhardt Jr. - ·each
of whom had his own problems to fall all but out of the
Chase .
Burton nipped at Kenseth's bumper in the waning laps,
ducked beneath him, pulled side-by-side and still kept
falling just behind . It wasn't until six laps were left that
Burton finally scooted by with the cri ti cal pass.
" I knew the sooner we got by Matt, the beuer chance we
had of winning," Burton sa id.
All that work to pass Kenseth was for n ~ug ht , though:
He ran out of gas.
,

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
5° CENTS • Vnl. 56, No. :~5

then in the second half, . I
don ' t think we ever rea ll y
go t goi ng.
"We had a couple of
from Page 81
good chances, the keep_er
makes a good 'save, but
chances late in the game overall, I just really, from
only to be denied by Talcott. my standpoint, the effort
Morri ssey,
although wasn't good enough in the
:pleased to get the victory. second hal f.
was not pleased with his
"There were just pieces
team 's play on the pitch. "I missing today and 1 don ' t
t'hought we were s lo w know wha t it was, but it
starting, give Walsh a lot just wasn't a good perforof credit," Morrissey said. mance, " Morrissey said.
"I think we finis hed off the "We got the result , all
last 25 minutes of the first credit to Wal sh because
half and 1 though t we did they played their hearb
well.
·
out, but we need to
·"Our creativity was real- improve.' '
ly good, the final ball was
Morris sey thought the
just a· little bit lacking,'' two stops by Talcott late in
Morri ssey added . "But the ga me were critical.

Redmen

" Absohtiely, we talked
about that in our sco utin g
report how they would
play their opportunities,"
Morrissey said . "Just, once
again from my standpoint,
the effort was not good
enough.''
Rio out-shot Wal sh, 175 with an 11 -4 advantage
in shots on goal. Talcott
posted three saves for the
game and Walsh goal keeper Ben Pflum tallied nine
saves.
Rio Grande wi ll face
Shawnee
State
at
L~ casvi ll e Valley High
School in the second game
of doubleheader with the
squads
women 's
Wed nesday at 8 p.m.

TUI·.SJ&gt;A Y, SU'TI-:1\1 HEK :t6, :til()(&gt;

"ww. m) d:oit) scntind.mm

Beer sales and festivals still don't mix for some

SPORTS
• Saints slam Falcons.
See PageB1

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Like a
foaming beer head quickly
rising to the top of a glass,
the .issue of alcohol sales at
festivals on the parking lot
spi lled over again last nigh t
at Pomeroy Village Council.
Councilman
Pete
Barnhart asked Mayor John
Musser if members of the
group who visited council in
July and were opposed to
beer sales on the parking lot
could have input mto developing and implementing
guidelines for festivals held
on that parking lot.

PRO GOLF

Europe wins in another Ryder Cup
STRAFFAN, Ireland (AP)- Favorites or underdogs in
the Ryder Cup, it doe sn' t matter to the Europeans. ·
·
They boasted of having their best team ever, then
backed it up in dominant fashion by turning the Ryder
Cup into another rout Sunday to win for an unprecedented third 's traight time.
Luke Donald holed a I0-foot par pull that gave Europe
14 points, all it needed to keep the shiny gold trophy.
Moments later, Henrik Stenson closed out his match, and
the celebration was on.

"I'm opposed to anyone
other than council or elected
officials making those decisions," Musser replied.
Musser went on to say,
"We've had the Sternwheel
Festival for 18 years and I
don't know why we need
guidelines now. A lot of people feel everything is fine."
Barnhart said he believed
confining alcohol consumption to the parking lot was an
important issue to many.
"People see things aren' t
being confined to the area
(parking lot)," Barnhart Said.
" It's not like they don't want
the festivals. "
"They just don't want beer

served here," Musser said.
"Not exactly, it's. more
issues,"
abo ut eontrol
Barnhart answered. "It's
nothing personal."
"Yes, it is personal in my
opinion,'' Mu sser replied.
Musser then made reference to a '·guest view" letter
to the editor published in the
Aug. 4 edition of The Daily
Sentinel
by
Brenda
Barnhart. spouse of Mr.
Barnhart, concerning events
that were alleged to have
happened at the 2006 Blues
and Jazz Festival where
alcohol was served.
"That letter is a gross
exaggeration and I fee l a

personal attack on me and
the community," Musser
stated. ·
Musser said the letter didn't adequately · describe the
exchange between Mrs.
Barnhart, himself and council when the issue of beer
sales was discussed at a July
Pomeroy Village Co undl
meeting.
"All she basically said in
her letter was that I said the
festival was good fo r the
com munity but she didn't
say the other things we
talked about and that I tried
to address eve ry point,"
Musser said. "She led readers of The Sentinel to

Reds rally past Cubs in ninth inning
CINCINNATI (AP)- Roy ce Clayton's pinch-hit single in the ninth inning drove in Chris Denorfia and lifted the Cincinnati Reds over the Chicago Cubs 3-2
Sunday.
The Cubs led 2-1 in the ninth but Ryan Dempster ( 1-9)
had his ninth blown save of the season. Pinch-hitter
Todd Holl andsworth led off with a double and Dempster
uncorked two wild pitches that allowed pinch-runner
Ray Olmedo to score.
.
Chris Denorfia then singled to left and moved to third •
on Scott Hatteberg' s base hit. Dempster issued an intentional walk to Rich Aurilia and was relieved by Scott
Eyre, who gave up Clayton's single through a drawn-in
· ·
infield.

believe that's all that we
said, it wasn'L
As for the letter's statement that Mrs. Barn han witnessed "sexual intercourse
on steps of businesses and
cubby holes throu gho ut the
town" Musser said he didn't
witness any of these acts and
knew of only one incident
that could've been misinterpreted as a compromising
act inside a private business.
As for the leiter's statement that an officer fro m the
Pomeroy Police Department
said he was told not to arrest
anyo ne at the Blues and Jazz
1

'

Please see Beer, AS

Drng dogs ·
sniff out hits
but no drngs
at Southern

PAVING FINISHED

PRO BASEBALL

OBITUARIES
Page AS
•Iva Zuspan

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
• • U.N. expert wams of
anti-rights trends in
counterterrorism
measures.
-See Page A2
• Nationalist Abe's rise
could herald new age of
rivalry with China.
See Page A2
• Gardeners leam all ·
about herbs.
See Page A3
• Lisle birth.
SeePageA3
• Sonshine Circle busy
with projects.
SeePage AS
• Chester DofA meets.
SeePage AS
• Library offers new
DVD/CD cleaning service.
SeePage AS
• Father wins custody
over smoking ex-wife.
SeePage AS
• Dean:s list released.
SeePage AS
• Revival services
announced. See Page AS

Bucks

Jenkins . Given a second
it 21-6 with 2:31 left.
The play was reviewed by · chance. Kelly converted a
officials to check if Jenkins 21-yarder with no time left.
had stepped out at the Penn
fromPageBl
A heavy
downpour
State 35. But several replay slowed to a sprinkle in the
angles
appeared to show second half.
Lions' coach for the last 41
Jenkins
spiking the ball to
The Buckeyes finally
years, ambled to the locker
room midway through the the ground before he got broke through on their second possession of the third
second quarter and didn't into the end zone.
"I
was
lucky
they
didn't
quarter, driving 75 yards in .
return until the start of the
me
spiking
the
ball
review
nine plays, capped by
fourth because he was sufon
the
!-yard
line,"
Jenkins
Antonio Pittman' s 12-yard
fering from the flu.
with
a
grin.
said
run
up the middle . Pittman
He got back just in time to
Moments later, Antonio finished with 110 yards
see Smith turn a. possible
Smith
stepped in front of a rushing on 20 carries.
~a~k into a critical score as
pass
by
Morelli meant for
Paterno probably wished
the Buckeyes (4-0, l-0 Big
Ten) expanded a 7-3lead on Deon Butler and sped along he hadn't come back for the
,
Brian Robiskie's 37-yard the same route as Jenkins final quarter.
for
a
55-yard
score.
Ju
st
five
plays
after
touchdown catc~.
Just
that
quickly
a
span
Paterno returned, Troy
"That play that Smith
of
a
little
under
12
minutes,
Smith (12-of-22 for 115
made when we almost had
the
last
two
TDs
separated
yards and two intercephim, he threw that ball on
by
less
than
90
seconds
tions)
made it 14-3, rolling
the button in the end zone,"
Paterno said. "Tha! was a the Buckeyes made the win right to avoid the rush and
appear easier than it really then doublin g back before
super play."
heaving the ball 60 yards to
On a day when Penn was.
The victory extended Robiskie in the Ohio State
State's defense put the
Ohio
State's winning streak end zone.
clamps on Smith and his
to II in a row, dating to last
"We have a saying: 'Who
favorite target, Ted Ginn Jr. ,
year's 17- 10 loss at' Penn says we can't score every
the Buckeyes persevered.
· "The mark of a champi- State. The teams ended ·up time we get the ball?'" said.
onship-caliber team is to shari ng the Big Ten title in Smith, who had a string of
152 consec uti ve passes
keep plugging along - to 2005.
"The
game
li
ved
up
to
without an interception end
keep going, keep goi ng, ·
exactly
what
it
was
supon
his second throw of the
keep going," said Smith,
posed
to
be,''
Ohio
State
day.
who said he went against a
Paterno said he . saw
Tressel rule by' reversing center Doug Datish said . "It
was
a
backyard
brawl."
to know the ditferenough
field on the pass to
Penn
Stute
took
a
3-0
lead
ence in' the outcome. ·
Robiskie. "I tried to impro"We were very competivise and keep things goin g." at the half when Tony Hunt
With the Nittany Lions (24 carries, 135 yards) and tive unti I the end when we
(2-2, 0-1 )' seeking a touch- Morelli ( 16-of-25 for 105 made two major mistakes.''
down and 2-point conver- yards with th ree intercep- , he said. running his hand
sion that would tie i(, lions) led the Nittany Lions th rough hi s · wet hair.
Jenkins . picked off an into field-goal range. Kevin "That's a good football
Anthony Morelli pass and Kelly yanked a 23-yard team we were playing in a
raced down the left sideline attempt with 3 seconds left tough stadium. We had a
61 yards for a score to make but he was roughed by chance to win it."

Eastern remains
perfect, Bt

YOUR AD INSIDE ACO·MIC STRIP

,.

'

..
Brian J. Reed/ photo

Workers with Shelly co·. were putting the finishing touches on Middleport's most recent paving project. The men. pictured
here on Mill Street, were raising manhole covers on the new!y-paved streets.

Middleport Council considers new ordinances
Bv

BRIAN

J.

REED

8REED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport -Village Council
conducted the first reading
of two propose~ ordinances
at Monday evenmgls regular
.
meetmg. .
One ordmance, ts proposed
. by the vtllage s planmng
commtsston, and. relates to
fencmg regulation s. The
new . ordinance
would
require . payment of a $25
permll fee for constructmg a
new fence, and an addtttonal

WEATHER

'

per-foot fee, and requires
adjoining landowners ·to
grant· permission for any
new fence built.
· The second ordinance
amends an existino ordi· nance prohibiting bicycles
on village sidewalks . The
amendment is necessary to
allow for bicycles on sidewalks that are part of a
multi -purpose
trai l.
Members of a commiuee of
the
·
Middteport
Development Group are
working to secure funding
for such a frail; which would

Please see Drugs, AS

Picture perfect

be used for walking and biking, and could include exist- ·
ing village sidewalks.
In other business, council
reviewed promotional inaterial relating to the village's
proposed operating le~ y
rep lace ment. CounciI members plan to conduf! a door,
to-door campaign to promote the levy and insert a
flyer in The Daily Sentinel
clo.~er to Election Day.
Mayor Sandy lannarelli
reported that newly-paved

Please

RACINE - Three drug
dogs sniffed out hits but no
illegal drugs yesterday at
both Southern Elementary
and Southern High School
during what was described
as a "proactive" district lock
down required by law.
Special drug dogs meant
to sniff out a variety of narcotics had hits on 16lockers
at the high school and four at ·
the elementary school. The
dogs were under the control
of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Office and law
from
enforcement
Parkersburg, W.Va.
These hits are defined as
the dog detecting what could
be the odor of illegal drugs.
However, if the dog stopped
at a student's locker this
doesn't mean that student is
taking narcotics and could ·
mean either the student was
exposed to drugs in a second-hand man ner or it could
mean the 'adjoining locker
was the act ual "hit. "
Adjoining lockers were also
searched.
At Southern High School

see Council, AS

Detallo on Page AS

Gizmos~ Ga

r

Historical group plans genealogy fair

INDEX

STAFF REPORT

2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGFS

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

To place an ad please contact:
Dave or Brenda
at 992-2155

The Daily SenJinel

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B Section

Weather

As

© aop6 Ohlu V~tlley Publlohing Co.

NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHESTER - Plans are
moving forward · for · a
Genealogy . Fair of the
Chester-Shade Hi stori cal
Association
and
the
Historical
Bedford/Lodi
Group to be held on Oct. 21
at the Chester Courthouse.
The Fair to be held from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. is open for
both beginning and experienced researchers and there
is no charge to . attend.
Representatives of the sponsoring gro ups and the
Daughters of the American

Revolution and the Sons of
the American Revolution
will be present with information about their organizations and qualifications for
membership.
Copying of both black and
white and color items along
with three ring, comb,
velobinding services will be
available at the Fair, according to Kaye Fick. She said
that tables are for rent at $ 10
eac h for genea logists and
vendors.
·
·
Computers will be available for use by the public
and experienced researchers
will be there to give tips on

use them in ge nealogy
research.
The Association is also
asking that anyo ne with
family histories, old obituaries, sc hool and church pictures and hi stories; o ld
Meigs County maps. copies
of war records of Meigs
County military personnel
and old Meigs County yearbooks are being collected
and it is suggested that they
8rlan J. Reed/ photo
be brought along whe n
Kailyn
Alison.
3,
of
Mason.
W.Va
..
and
her
grandfather had
attending the fair.
General
Hartinger
Par~
all
to
themselves
Monday.
so there
Fick aso reported that
Book Ill of Old Meigs was no waiting in tine for the slide. swings or other equipment in the playground . .Monday was a picture-perfect early
Please see Fair•. AS
autumn day. with warm temperatures and sunny skies.

·.

'

~

j

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