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                  <text>www .mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 26,

2006

Bengals player arrested on drunken driving charge
Bv JoE K.t.v
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CINCINNATI - Coach
Marvin Lewis expects middle
linebacker
Odell
Thurman to be suspended
for the rest of the season following his arrest early
Monday on a drunken driving charge, making him the
sixth Cincinnati Bengal
· arrested this year.
Thurman, already serving
a four-game suspension for
violating the NFL's substance abuse policy, could
get an additional one-year
suspension from the league.
The arrest came less than a
week after commissioner
Roger Goodell
visited
Cincinnati and reminded
players of their responsibility to stay out of trouble and

represent the league honorably. It also drew Lewis'
most stinging comments
since receiver Chris Henry
was arrested last December,
starting the streak of court.
appearances by Bengals
players.
Henry and receiver Reggie
McNeal were passengers in
the sport utility vehicle that
Thurman
was
driving
Monday, · but were not
Pol·ice · said
charged.
Thurman registered 0.18
percent on a blood alcohol
test, more than twice the
legal limit of 0.08.
"1 am not pleased," Lewis
said. "It's not right, it's not
what we stand for, it's not
what the National Football
League should represent."
Thurman, a second-round
draft pick from Georgia last
year, started all but one

game during the Bengals'
first winning season and frrst
playoff appearance since
1990. The league suspended
him in the offseason for
missing a drug test.
He was arrested at 3 a.m.
Monday, a few hours after
the team returned from a 2820 victory in Pittsburgh.
Henry had five catches for
69 yards and a pair of touchdowns in that game.
Police Capt. Dan Gerard
said an officer working near
a DUI checkpoint on the
city's east side saw Thurman
drive the sport utility vehicle
across a double yellow line
and stopped him. Although
police declined to identify
the two Bengals who were
passengers, McNeal told
The Associated Press and he
and Henry also were in the
vehicle.

McNeal declined to go ' Lewis expects Thurman to
into detail about what hap- get an additional punishment
pened or why Thurman was from the _ lea~ue. Another
driving.
violation of Its substance
"Just a misunderstanding," abuse policy brings a miniMcNeal said, as.IJe left Paul mum one-year suspenston m
Brown Stadium on Monday addition to the one he is
afternoon.
already serving.
Thurman was given the
"He just obviouslY. doesn't
breath test, then released to a understand the privilege and
sober companion who drove the . right to play in th~
him home, 'Gerard said. He Nattonal_ Fo,?tb~ll League,
is sc hedul ed for a court Lewts satd. Thts wtll probappearance . on Oct. 2, the ably be dealt with very
day his four-game suspen- severel_y."
sion ends.
Lewts has repeated!Y
If convicted, Thurman · drafted players who were m
could get a tougher sentence trouble wtth the Ia~ or thetr
because of the high blood- coaches dunng theu college
alcohol level, Sgt. Jon Payer careers, and has steadfastly
said. The average senten~e defended them following
for a first-time offender in tpeir arrests once they joined
Ohio is three days in jail or the Sengals. He came down
an alcohol-education pro- harshly on Thurman, but
gram and a $500 fine, he sidestepped questions about
the teammates that were
said.

with him.
"It's socially and morally
not right to be - if by the .
test that is true - that you
are intoxicated behind the
wheel," Lewis said. ":Jt's not
correct. It's not right for our
society, and I think that's a
bad message. These guys all ·
have the ability to do the
right thing and call a cab or
do whatever it takes."
Henry has been arrested
_four times and convicted
twice, avoiding jail time so
far. He pleaded guilty to
marijuana possession in
northern Kentucky, and this
th
ded guilty to a
mon P1ea
.
d
weapon charge 111 0 r1an o,
Fla.

AP Writer Dan Sewell in
·Cincinnati contributed to
this report.

•

Re?women
split AMC
l..-end
W ee1\!

Shinzo Abe, Japan's
new leader, to bolster
. U.S. ties, repair ·
~lations with Asia, .A2

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
\\' I·.D:'Iii'SD \ Y. St:I'TI ·: l\1BER :!~, :!lltlb

.311 CE:-.JTS • Vol. :;h. :-.Ju. :lh

""'"·m)ti"il)"' ntinl'l.t·um

Preliminary police contract study draws mixed reaction

SPORTS

Bv BRu'N J. REED

• Eastern still perfect.
See Page 81

BREEOOMYDAILY SENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Preliminary results of a
study into contracting for
police services for the
Village of Middleport met
with a mixed reactton from
members of Village Council
Monday evening.
Shawn Rice presented
information about how
Middleport might enter
into a contract with the
Village of Pomeroy for
police serv ices , essentially

Browns find optimism in heartbreaking loss
Bv JOE MIUCIA

of sho ts," guard Cosey
Coleman said. "[ WaS COncerned about him. A couBEREA
Romeo pie of them were real hard.
Crennel is a bottom line Every time he got right
Bv MARK WILliAMS
coach, not one to gloss back up and he was still
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
over a loss by praising his enthusiastic and still beirig
team's effort.
a leader in the huddle. He
COLUMBUS The
But despite Cleveland's never let up the whole
University of Rio Grande 0-3 start and a heartbreak- time he was out there."
volleyball team won a ing . 15-'14 defeat Sunday
Neither did Winslow,
match and lost a rriatch on against the Baltimore who last week criticized
Saturday at the American Ravens, Crennel was more coaches for not · being
Mideast Conference South positive Monday than he's aggressive enough and
Division tri-match held in been in weeks.
taking him off the field on
Alumni Hall at Ohio
"Going ·forward, if we third
down s
against
Dominican.
co ntinue to play the way Cincinnati. He backed up
Rio lost to Urbana in we did, there is reason for his talk by coiwerting
three games, 21-30, 23-30 optimism." he said.
three first downs on the
and 22-30 and rebounded
Crennel found signs of Browns' final drive.
with a victory over Ohio
impro.v ement Sunday in
The tight end said he
Dominican, 28-30, 30-25,
the Browns' run defense, talked with his father
30-25 and 34-32.
Rio Grande (11-11, 1~3 which held Jamal Lewis to about his comments, and
3.2 yards per carry, and in the Hall of Farner advised
AMCS) played without
freshman Megan . Wills, quarterback Charlie Frye's him to stick to talking
who sustained an injury in ability to get the ball to about himself, not what he
Brayton thinks the tearn should be
the win over Mountain playmakers ·
and
Kellen doing.
State,
September
21. Edwards
Winslow.
Winslow's mouth got
Without the Redwom en
The duo of first-round him in trouble again
struggled against Urbana
picks
combined for 208 Sunday when he drew a
in losing in straight sets.
on 12 catches, flag for taunting. Crennel
yards
Sophomore outside/middle hitter Jessica Rodgers including Edwards' 58- said the team will educate
was the only Rio player to .yard toucl)down, in their Winslow on avoiding
those penalties.
tally double figures in kills third game together.
"We're keeping qur
"After I got the penalty,
with 16. Freshman libero
heads
high
after
that
loss
,"
some
players told me to
Summer Rinehart paced
the Rio defense with 24 Winslow said. "It wasn't calm down," Winslow
really a loss. That's the said. "But that's who I am.
digs.
Senior outside hitter way we feel around here. I'm a passionate player.
Lindsay Urton struggled at We're laughing. We're I'm going to talk some
the net, but did lead the joking around. We're 0-3, stuff. I'm going to stand
Redwomen squad in serv- but that doesn't tell all the over you like I beat you."
Crennel was questioned
ing,
going
16-for-16. tale."
Of
concern,
.
though,
again
Monday about the
Senior
outside
hitter
Jessica Veach posted 14 were some of the vicious Browns' decision late in
digs and freshman outside hits Frye took. The Ravens the game to throw on secat
hitter Kari Rodgers added sacked him seven times and-and-goal
13 digs. Sophomore setter and pounded him on sever- Baltimore 's 4. Frye was
hit, yet again, and his pass
Randi Rodgers chipped in al other plays.
"It's too many," Crennel for Edwards was intercept11 digs and handed out 25
said. "We're going to get ed by cornerback Chris
assists.
Urbana now stands at 17- . that worked out so he can · McAlister in the end zone.
5 overall and 3-1 in the take less hits and so he can
Crennel gave a bottom
survive. He's a guy we line answer.
AMC South.
Against
Ohio need to survive."
"When a play works, it's
Dominican,
Urton
· Frye has been a bright a good play. When it doesresponded with a huge all- spot too. The second-year n't work, it's a bad play,"
around game. She had 18 quarterback has earned the he said.
kills, 13 digs and was 19- respect of his coaches and
He said a miscommunifor-19 serving with one teammates with his gutsy cation in recognizing
ace. Jessica Rodgers also performances · in
the Baltimore's
defensive
played big with 19 kills, 23 Browns' losses.
front resulted in linedigs and was 19-for-20
"He took a good number backer Bart Scott being
serving. Kari Rodgers also
gave the Redwomen double figures in kills with 14.
She also added 26 digs and
five serve aces,
Rinehart was again a fix~
ture on defense with, a
team-high, 35 digs. Veach
totaled 28 digs, five kills
and went 18-for-18 serving. Randi Rodgers distribCLEVELAND (AP) -.
uted 52 assists, had 18
digs, posted five kills and The Cleveland Indians
. have slammed their way to
was 20-for-21 serving.
Sophomore middle hitter tyin g a major league
Stephanie Lapp added six record.
Casey Blake's grand
kills to the Redwomen
slam
in the sixth inning on
offense·.
Monday
night against the
Ohio Dominican (4-14,
Chicago
White Sox gave
0-5 AMCS) was led by
Cleveland 14 slams, tying
Davita Tucker with 25
them with the 2000
kills. Megan Cherry had 14 Oakland Athletics for the·
kills and four aces while most in a single season.
Jessica Buzenski chipped
Before. he was lost for
in 10 kills and Cassie the season with a broken
Schroeder handed out 39 hand,
Hafner
Travis
assists.
matched Don Mattingly's
Rio is now 1- 1 against major league record with
ODU this season. The six slams. Blake hit two
Lady Panthers had defeat- and Ben Broussard, Shin
ed the Redwomen at the Soo-Choo ,
Kevin
Marietta
Tournament, Kouzmanoff, Andy Marte,
September I in four games. Jason Michaels and Jhonny
Next
up
for
the Peralta each had one for
Redwomen i' a rematch Cleveland.
Kouzmanoff's
baseswith Central State on
Tuesday at the Newt Oliver loaded homer came in his
Arena. Rio swept past the first major league at-bat,
Lady
Marauders, and on the first pitch he
September 14 at CSU. saw from Texas ' Edinson
Game time is set for 7 p.m. Volquez.

Gourd business
growing on northwest
Ohio fann, A6

ASSOCIATED PRESS

eliminating the Middleport
department,
and
the
Middleport
Mayor's
Court. Rice, John Tillis
and Eric Chambers represented Middleport on a
committee studying such a
proposal, with Pomeroy
Mayor John Musser and
Police Chief Mark Proffitt
representing Pomeroy.
"Contract
services
would include the retention of a full-time salaried
investigator in both communities, and three more
full-time officers," Rice

Reduced-cost nicotine
patches.offered
to those in Meigs
Bv

said. " Sunday morning wpervisor," Rice said.
through Friday afternoon,
Rice said Pomeroy would
each community would provide dispatching serhave at least one pqtrol vices, and LEADS computofficer per shift, with one er access, and would hanmid-watch officer on ran- dl e court cases through its
dom patrol during the magistrate court.
evening and night. During
The committee estimates
the weekly dayshift , the that such a contract with
Chief would he on duty, as Pomeroy
wou ld
cost
well as the code enforce- Middleport approximately
ment officer."
$200,000 per year, thus
"Friday evening through offering the village a savSunday morning, there ings of $100,000 or more
would . be one officer on over what it costs to operate
duty in each community its own officers.
along with a roamin~
Middleport Police Chief

Bruce Swift attended
Monday ni ght' s meeting,
and sald he doesn't
believe a contrac·t with
Pomeroy would improve
police
protection
for
Middleport re si dents, and
wou ld not likely resu lt in
an increase in patrols.
Counci lman
Ferman
Moore. who proposed the
study as a potential costsav ing measure, emphasized that the study is only
preliminary, but asked

Please see Police, AS

Favorite subject ••• recess!

BETH SE!IGENi

BSERGENTIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES

.

AP photo

Cleveland Browns quarterback Charlie Frye (9) drags Baltimore Ravens defender Gary Stills
into the end zone on a 1-yard touchdown run in the second quarter of an NFL football game
Sunday in Cleveland. Frye's touchdown was the last the Browns would score as the Ravens
·came from behind to win 15-14.
left free to blindside Frye.
The result was an alltoo-familiar scenario for
Browns fan&amp; as Steve
McNair drove Baltimore
down the field to set up
Matt . Stover's 52-yard
game-winning field goal.
The Browns now have a
one-point loss , a b!owout
defeat at Cincinnati and a
lackluster flop against
New Orleans · on their
resume this season.
"We improved considering the two games before
that," safety Brian Russell

said. "But it's hard to hang
your hat on improvement
when you lose because this
game's about wins and
losses."
There's another reason
for optimism though . Up
next, the Browns travel to
Oakland to take on the 0-2
Raiders, who have been
outscored 55-6.
The Browns also could
have running back Reuben
Droughns (shoulder) and
defensive tackle Orpheus
Roye (shoulder). back on
the field.

"This Sunday, oh yeah,
you can count me in,"
Droughns said.
Without Droughns, the
Browns were · forced to
throw
the
ball
and
although their playmakers
responded, he was missed.
Like Crennel, Droughns
was upbeat Monday.
"It's too early to write us
off," Droughns said. "It 's a
long season. There's teams
that start off real slow and
get it going later in the
season. We're a team
that's capable of that."

Indians tie
record for
grand slams

Page AS
• Sally Bartels Ayers, 71
• Aladine Baker, 72
• Kathryn M. Evans, 89
• Maggie Lewis, 83
• Mildred Ridenour, 94

INSIDE
• House OKs $70 billion
inore for operations
in Iraq, Afghanistan.
See Page A2
• Genealogical society
explores cemeteries
and grave stones.
See Page A3
• Law You Can Use.
See Page A3
• · First reunion of ·
Veterans Memorial
Hospital held.
See Page AS .

WEATHER

POMEROY - For many people the desire to
quit smoking is there but not the financial
means to purchase cessation therapies (patches,
gum) until now when those that wish to quit
have an opportunity to receive nicotine patches
at a reduced rate.
"I think it's great, they ' ve had different programs for people who have insurance but now
this helps the uninsured people of Ohio," said
Brenda Curfman, Meigs County tobacco prevention speciali st.
The Ohio Tobacco Prevention Foundation
(OTPF) recently announced that it would provide uninsured Ohioans with free· telephone
counseling through its Ohio Tobacco Quit Line,
1-800-QUIT-NOW, along with four weeks of
nicotine patches at a cost of only $25. A typical
four-week over the counter mcotine replacement therapy (NRT) cycle costs more than
$100. The offer will be executed through a
coupon that is redeemable at Ohio CVS or Rite
Aid pharmacy locations for store brand patches
or through mail order directly to the caller's
home. Research indicates that the combination
of behavioral counseling and NRT is one Of the
most effective ways to end tobacco addiCtion.
More than one million adult Ohioans, including those in Meigs County, without any type of
health insurance can now qualify for this
reduced-cost ni~otine patches in combination
with highly effective telephone cessation services to aid in ending tobacco addiction.
To qualify for the reduced-cost NRT program,
callers must reside in Ohio. and be 18 years or
older with no health insurance coverage, including Medicaid or Medicare. The caller must
enroll in the Ohio Tobacco Quit Line, 1-800QUIT-NOW, telephonic counseling program at
which time the quitting specialist will determine whether the caller has any medical conditions that would prevent use of NRT.
If the caller qualifies for the program •. a
coupon is sent by mail or the caller can pay for
the nicotine patches with a credit card or money
order and have them shipped directly to -their
home; If the caller chooses to receive · the
coupon .. they can redeem it at any CVS pharmacy store or Rite Aid pharmacy store at the
pharmacy department in Ohio to receive the
patches for $25. If, after four weeks, the caller
is sti ll enrolled i~ the Ohio Tobacco Quit Line
. program and nee~s more nicotine patches, the
quitting specialist mails a seco nd coupon or
takes another payment of $25 over the phone by
credit card or via money order. In total, uninsured Ohioans could receive up to eight weeks
of patches for only $50.

The warm, sunny
weather has left
plenty of time for
every student's
favo rite subject ...
recess! These
kindergartners
from Mrs. Hil l's,
Essick's and
Rogers· classes
at Southern
Elementa(y were
busy soaking up
the sunshine this
week.
Beth Ser&amp;enl/photos

Reflection on
years of railroading

Detail• on Page A6

tions to answer on that test
and I have to credit my wife,
Edith, for coaching me
POMEROY - Whenever through," said Hall. "There
James E. Hall hears the whis- was never anything that made
tle of a train it brings back me feel prouder than sitting
memories of his years of rail - there in that big engine knowroading out of the · old ing that I had .the responsibilHobson
yards
below ity of moving materials worth
Middleport which closed thousands of dollars."
.many years ago.
He recalls his first "pay
, Hall. who will be 86 on trip" as an engineer on Engine
Feb. 14, began working for 1386, and talked abOllt some
the New York Central of his co-workers , like
Railroad, Ohio
Central · Denver Nelson who lives in
Division, on June 27. 1941 as Middleport. and the Ime Art
a firemen. After several years Strauss and Louie Reihel.
of doing various jobs on the
For Hall hi&gt; long ret irerailroad. he took the required men! has given him pknty
tests and qualified to be an of time to reflect on his
years of railroading and
Charlene Hoaftlch/photo engineer in 1950, a job he
relive me1i10rics of what he
James Hall displays a picture of Engine 1386 and his held until his retirement.
"There were I 00 I 4ucs - (jid !0 earn living .
engineering certificate.
BY CHARLENE HoEFliCH

HOEFLICH@MVDAILY SEN TI NEL COM

INDEX
2 So:cr!ONS -

12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

'" Home
. National
'il Bank

82-4

Bs
A4
As

Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

1

B Section
A6

© 2006 Ohi~ Valley Publishing Co.

"

a

Federal Mogul
settles Ohio's
asbestosliability claim
WASHINGTON (AP) -.
Federal Mogul Corp. has
reached a settlen' • nt with
Ohio that resol
nearly
$24 million in , uvironmental-damage claims the
state -had been pursuing
against the bankrupt autoparts company.
In papers filed Friday
with the U.S. Bankruptcy
CiJUrt in Delaware , the
Southfield,
Mich .- based
c:nmpany said Ohio agreed
to reduce its claims against
the company to $2.3 million
and up to 50 percent of any
insurance proceeds Federal

Please see ,Claim, A5

�PageA2

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

House OKs $70 billion more for
operations in Iraq, Afghanistan

Wednesday, September 27,2006

Nature article says government
rejected hurricane report
mentioning global wanning
BY 'RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
AP SCIENCE WRITER

Bv ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

W&lt;\SHINGTON
Despite intense partisan divisions over the course of the
iraq war, the House on
Tuesday easily approved $70
biUion more for military operations there
and
in
Afghanistan. Lawmakers also
adopted a record $448 bill ion
budget for the Pentagon.
With iraq alone costing
about $8 billion a month,
another infusion of money
will be needed next spring.
·The House passed the
Pentagon appropriations
bill by a 394-22 vote
Tuesday night, and the
Senate is due to act before
adjourning this weekend for
the fall campaign.
The House-Senate compromise bill provides $378
bill ion for core Pentagon programs, about a 5 percent
increase. though not quite as
much as President Bush
asked for. The $70 billion for
Iraq and Afghanistan is a
down payment on war costs
the White House ha~ estimated will hit $110 billion for the
budget year beginning Oct. l.
With final passage of the
. bill, Congress will have
approved $507 billion for
Iraq, Afghanistan and heightened security at overseas
military bases since the Sept.
II, 2001, attacks, according
to
the
Congressional
Research Service.
·
"If the president had told
us the truth, that Iraq and
Saddam Hussein ... presented no real threat to us, that
there was no likelihood of
weapons of mass destruc-

War funds could reach $549 billion
Congress has appropriated $437-billion since the 9/11 attacks for
military operations anc It is expected to add $70 billion for 2007.
The Wh~e HouSB estimates $110. billion is needed.
·

C0f11119Mion•t •pproprlatlona
IInce 9/11 -ella, $437 billion

Other

Afghanistan

·White House $549:-. .

Iraq
AP

SOURCE: Congres!Uonal Research Serviee

tion, that there was no con- Afghanistan and $I billi"on is
nection to al-Qaida ·... would provided for body armor and
this Congress have voted for other personal protective gear.
w·ar?" said Jerrold Nadler,
The measure includes a
Democratic-sponsored proD-N.Y. "I don't think so."
"Is the world better or vision against establishing
worse
off
without permanent military bases in
(Hussein)?" asked Tom Cole, Iraq. GOP leaders dropped
R-Okla. "I think it's better, identical language from an
and it took American action." Iraq funding bill this June.•
The bill would be the first
Opinion polls indicate the
war continues to be unpopu- of II spending bills to clear
lar with voters. but even Congress for the new budDemocratic opponents of the g~ year.
So little progress has been
war generally embraced the
Pentagon measure, which made on other bi II s that the
provides funding for body Pentagon measure also cararmor and other suppon for ries a stopgap l'unding bill
to keep open through Nov.
U.S. troops overseas.
The growing price tag of 17 agencies whose funding
the Iraq conflict is partly bills won't have passed.
driven by the need to repair Only the homeland security
and replace military equip- measure is expected to also
ment worn out in harsh. pass before Congress leaves
dusty conditions in Iraq and Washington to campaign.
The core bill contains $86
Afghanistan or destroyed in
battle. Almost $23 billion billion for personnel costs,
was approved for Army, enough to support 482,000
Marine Corps and National Army soldiers and I 75,000
Guard equipment such as Marines. That would prohelicopters,
armored vide for a 2.2 percent pay
Humvees. Bradley armored · increase for the military, as
Bush requested in his
fightin~ vehicles, radios and
· night-vtsion equipment.
February budget.
The bill provides $120
Lawmakers allotted $1.9
billion for new jammers to billion for operations and
counter improvised explosive maintenance costs, just less
devices in
Iraq and than the Pentagon request.

And $81 billion goes for
procurement
of
new
weapons, with $76 billion
dedicated to research and
development costs.
.
That's still not enough for
the White House, which
requested $4 billion more.
But House appropriators
divened that money to ease
cuts in domestic programs.
Earlier this year, the Senate
passed a version shifting $9
billion to domestic programs
but backed off in the face of
a White House veto threat.
The sprawling measure
contains good news for lawmakers -from · Maine,
California and Missouri,
among others. The bill
includes $2.6 billion for two
super-modem Navy DD(X)
destroyers. That is significant
because it wQuld allow Bath
Iron Works in Maine and
Northrop Grumman's Ingalls
Shipbuilding in Mississippi
to build one ship each.
A House-passed defense
policy bill had called for
only one DD(X') ship, to be
built in Mississippi.
The measure also almost
triples Bush's request for
eight C- I 7 cargo planes,
providing for 22 of the aircraft, which are built in
Long Beach, Calif. Several
components are manufactured at Boeing's St. Louisbased defense company.
But Lockheed Martin's F35 Joint Strike Fighter, which
is assembled in Fon Worth,
Texas, would face cuts. Bush
requested five planes, but
lawmakers cut that back to
two, though funds are provided for advanced purchases of
parts for 12 more.

Shinzo Abe, Japan's new leader, to ·
bolster U.S. ties, repair relations with Asia
8v HANS GREIMEL
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.TOKYO -. Japan's new
nationalist prime minister
Shinzo . Abe pledged to
repair tattered relations with
China, bolster his country'~
long-standing alliance with
the United States and overhaul the pacifist constitution
after cruising to an easy victory Tuesday in a parliamentary vote.
Abe's roadmap takes Japan
down a path toward a more
robust military and more
assenive foreign policy, delineating a fresh direction for a
leader who, at 52, is Japan's
youngest premier and its ftrst
born after World War II.
While Abe envisions a
confident Japan that can
step from the ·shadow of
decades of postwar guilt, he
conceded the country's foreign and security policy will
still rest firmly on Tokyo's
half-century alliance with
the United States.
It is a friendship that Japan
increasingly hopes will help
counter growing threats from
a nuclear-armed Nonh Korea
and a burgeoning China.
"It is necessary to buttress
mutual trust and strengthen
bilateral relations," Abe said
in his first news conference
after being elected by parliament to succeed Junichiro
Koizumi as prime minister.
"The Japan-United States
alliance forms the foundation of our foreign and security policy."
Key to Abe's push will be
revising the constitution,
which renounces war as a
means of solving international disputes and has formed
the cornerstone of Japan's
post World War II identity.
To make Japan a more "normal country,'' conserva.tives
want the constitution overhauled to give Japan's military. euphemistically known
as the Self-Defense Forces,
greater leeway in contributing
to international peacekeeping
operations. Changes would
also clarify under what situations Japanese forces might
come to the aid of an ally
tinder attack.
"As prime minister, I
must protect the peace, and
the lives of our citizem."
Abe said.
Such moves would adv;mce

•

WASHINGTON - A
government agency blocked
release of a repon that suggests global warming is
contributing to the frequency and strength of hurricanes, the journal Nature
reported Tuesday.
The National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
disputed the Nature article,
.saying there was not a report
but a two-page fact sheet
about the topic. The information was to be included in
a press kit to be distributed
in May as the annual hurricane season approached but
wasn't ready.
"The document wasn't
done in time for the rollout,"
NOAA spokesman Jordan
St. John said in responding
to the Nature ar1icle. "The
White House never saw it,
so they didn't block it."
The possibility that warming conditions may cause
storms to become stronger
has generated debate among
climate and weather expens,
. particularly in the wake of the
Hurricane Katrina disaster.
In the new case, Nature
said weather expens at the
National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
- part of the Commerce
Department - in February
set up a seven-member panel
to prepare a consensus report
on the views of agency scientists about global warming
and hurricanes.
According to Nature, a
draft of the statement said
that warming may be having an effect.
In May, when the report
was expected to be released,
panel chair Ants Leetmaa
received an e-mail from a
Commerce official saying
the report needed to be made
less technical and was not to
be released, Nature reported.
Leetmaa, head of NOAA's
Geophysical Auid Dynamics
Laboratory in New Jersey,
did not immediately respond
to calls seeking comment.
· NOAA
Administrator

Conrad Lautenbacher is currently out of the country, but
Nature quoted him as saying
the repon was merely an
internal document and could
not be released because the
agency could not take an
oft1cial position on the issue.
However, the journal said in
its online report that the study
was merely a discussion of the
current state of hurricane science and did not contain any
policy or position statements.
The report drew a prompt
response from Sen. Frank R.
Lautenberg, D-N .J., who
charged that "the administration has effectively declared
war on science and truth to
advance its anti-environment
agenda ... the Bush administration continues to censor
scientists who have documented the current impacts
of global warming."
A series of studies over the
past year or so have shown
an increase in the power of
hurricanes in the Atlantic and
Pacific oceans, a strengthening that many storm experts
say is tied to rising sea-surface temperatures.
Just two weeks ago,
researchers said that most of
the inc~ase in ocean temperature that feeds more intense
hurricanes is a result of
human-induced global warming, a study one researcher
said "closes the loop"
between climate change and
powerful storms like Katrina.
Not all agree, however,
with opponents arguing that
many other factors affect
storms, which can increase
and decre~se in cycles.
The possibility of global
warming affecting hurricanes
is politically sensitive because
the administration has resisted
proposals to restrict release of
gases that can cause warming
conditions.
In February, a NASA political appointee who worked
in the space agency's public
relations
department
resigned after reportedly trying to restrict access to Jim
Hansen, a NASA climate scientist who has been active in
global warming research.

'

Ate you 65
..or older? ·
If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
on your home delivered
subscription!

•

a swing to the right begun by Sanae Takaichi, is known
Koizumi, who fought off crit- for her right-leaning outics to send Japanese noncom- look. She's against a dualbat troops to Afghanistan and surname proposal that
Iraq in suppon of the U.S.-led would let married women
coalttton.
keep their maiden names.
The troops in Iraq have
"From today, I will start
since come home, but as Abe building a new .Japan,~ Abe
spoke Tuesday night, local said. "The Cabinet I appointmedia reponed that Japan ed today is one that will erewas planning to extend for ate a beautiful Japan."
another year its naval misThe new Cabinet met for
sion to fuel coalition war- the first time late Tuesday,
ships in the Indian Ocean.
and Abe outlined a wideOff to a fast start in set- ranging agenda covering
ting up his Cabinet, Abe fiscal reform, measures to
stocked the new govern- combat Japan's falling birth
ment with conservatives on . rate and revamping the
every issue from the econo- co~ntry's education system.
my and foreign affairs to lAbe also said he would cut
defense and women's rights.~ . ' · own pay by 30 percent
Among the new inner cir- · nd those of his Cabinet by
cle are Foreign Minister Taro 0 percent to demonstrate his
Aso, known for his hard-line commitment to trimming the
stance toward China, and budget. Reining in spending
Fumio Kyuma, who took a is a must because ,Japan's
second stint as defense chief gigantic public debt is the
and is expected to oversee largest in the industrialized
the agency's upgrade to a world and a potential time
full-blown ministry.
.
bomb for future generations.
Looking to detlect critiOn foreign relations. Abe
cism that his economic poli- said he would try to soothe
cies lack backbone, Abe also relations with Asian neighrolled out a team of budget bors, particularly China,
hawks that combines acade- and to pursue a permanent
mic know-how with experi- seat for Tokyo on the U.N.
ence to keep the recovery of Security Council.
the world 's second-largest
"I would like to follow a
economy clipping along.
more assertive .foreign poliEven hi s ininister in cy." Abe said. "This does not
charge of gender issues. mean to blindly asse11 Japan's
I

national interest but to ask
what role Japan can play in ·
the region and the world, and
what the international community should strive for."
Returning for a second
stint as foreign minister, Aso
set a summit with China at
the top of the agenda.
Japan and China are at
odds over interpretations of
wartime history, exploitation of maritime resources,
and island territories.
Chinese President Hu
Jintao has refused to meet
with Koizumi since last year
over hi.s visits to the Yasukuoi
war shrine, which honors war
criminals among Japan's war
dead . and is considered by
critics to be a glorification of
Tokyo's·past militarism. .
· On Tuesday, Chinese
Foreign Ministry spokesman
Qin Gang urged Abe to pursue better ties, and made a
veiled reference to Yasukuni
as a reason for the troubles
between the two.
"The Chinese government
attaches great imponance to
ties with Japan," Qin said.
"At present, there are obstacles to bilateral ties. The
reasons are quite clear and
'the J.apanese government is
aware of them."
Associaied Press writer
Himko Talmthi contributed
to this report.

.

.

BY THE BEND

Community Calendar
Publ~c

j

meetings

Wednesday, Oct. 4
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township Trustees , 7:30
p.m.. Olive Township
Garage.

Clubs and
organizations
Wednesday. Sept. 27
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 45 3 will meet
in special ses, ion at 7 p.m.
for the purpose of conferring the fellowcraft degree
on one candidate. It will
also be move up night for
the officers. Refreshments.
Thursday, Sept. 28
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, I I :30 at St . Paul
Luthern. Hostesses, Norma
Custer, Ann Rupe. arid
Jeannie Werry.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, 7:30p.m.,
at hall.
POMEROY - Caring
and Sharing Support Group,
I p.m .. Meigs Multipurpose
Senior Center. Program will
be Alzheimer's Disease
' updates.
Tuesday, Oct. 3
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at the
hall. Work in the fellowcraft
degree. Take non-perishable
food items for Grand

Master's food bank pro- Doster as guest speaker at I0 bv that time.
gram. Master Mason' im it- a.m. , potluck dinner at noon,
· . Thursday, Sept. 28
ed. Refreshments .
and special music at 2 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT- Parish
SYRACUSE
COOLVILLE - White's Nurse Lenora Leifheit
Wildwood Garden Club Chapel Wesleyan Church. offering blood pre,sure
open hou se, 6:30 p.m.. Rice Run Road , will cele- screenings, 10 a.m . to noon.
Syracuse
Community brate its IOOth anniversary. Hometown Market.
Center. Lori Kelly of Bob's Morning worship, I 0:30
Friday, Sept. 29
Market will speak on mums. am, Dinner on the grounds
POMEROY
- Parish
GALLIPOLIS - French at noon . Celebration ser- Nurse Lenora Leitheit
Colony Choru s. local chap- vice. 2 p.m. with reception offering blood pressure
ter of Sweet Adelines to follow.
screening s, 1.0 a.m. to noon.
lntemational. invites all tri REEDSVILLE
Powell' s Foodfair.
county area women to visit Reedsville Church of the
MIDDLEPORT - The
practices every 7:00pm. at Nazarene will observe Middleport Church of
259
Third
. Avenue. homecoming dinner on the Christ located at the corner
Gallipolis, Ohio. in the grounds. Morning speaker of Fifth and Main will serve
Gallia County Visitors will be Teresa Waldeck . a free community dinner of
Center. Su7y Parker, 992 - There will be special chicken and noodles from
5555 , for more infommtion. singing.
4:30 to 6:15 p.m. Friday.
Monday, Oct. 2
MIDDLEPORT
Revival serv1ces will be
held be held Oct. 2 through
Saturday, Sept. 30
Sunday, Oct. 1
Oct.
7 at the Middleport
RUTLAND - Summer's
POMEROY
End Fest, I0 a.m., Rutland First Baptist Church, corner Descendants of Joshua and
Church · of God, family of Palmer and Sixth Streets. Mary Botts Wood reunion,
activities.
concessions, Speaker will be Pastor Billy 12:30 p.m .. pot luck lunch,
homemade apple butter, Zuspan who will give mes- the King Farm. 38858
paintball tournament , craft sages on the judgment. Smith Road .
. There will be special music
vendors, prizes.
every evening.
Sunday, Oct. 1
SYRACUSE - Second
Annual Biker Sunday at
Sunday, Oct. 1
Syracuse Church of the
MIDDLEPORT - Steve
Nazarene, 10:30 a.m. Pastor • Wednesday, Sept. 27
Steve Combs of Leave a
POMEROY - TB skin Houchins will observe his
Mark Ministries to speak. tests will be given at 5 p.m., 70th birthday at a card
The public is invited. prior to the monthly dmner shower and receptjon given
Information at 992-7 I 38.
at the American Legion Post by his daughters in his
HEMLOCK GROVE 128 Annex. Members and honor. It will be held 2 to 4
Home.coming at Hemlock spouses who wish to have p.m. at the Heatti United
Grove Christian Church, Hal the test should be at the post Methodist Church.

Church events

Reunions

Birthdays

Other events

SUV members hear history of military disaster
I MIDDLEPORT
Ashley. He had lived in them document his ancestry
"Disaster
on
the Syracuse in the home now for membership.
Mississippi,'' the story of owned by Shirley Houston.
A discussion on recent
the worst naval disaster in
Scott McElroy, camp information regarding the
U.S. history which was the junior vice commander, ·Battle of Butl'ington Island
sinking of the "Sultana" on brought the GPS locator centered on there being no
April 27,1965, was dis- that he had purchased for known historical references
cussed by Keith Ashley at a the camp. This item is to the "Bloody 40" referred
recent meeting of Brooks- used with satellite tech- to as a pan of the battlet1eld
Grant Camp Sons of Union nolo~y to determine exact iti the recent cavalry reVeterans of the Civil War.
longitude, latitude, and enactment.
The educational program altitude of any location on
Also, there was some discentered on several facts the map.
cussion on the photo of a
including a patched boiler,
The camp plans to usc re-enactor
portraying
and overload of passengers, this to identify the exact Confederate Gen. Morgan
poor
boiler
pressure locations of all Union sol- in Pomeroy having a
gauges, and traveling diers buried in Meigs friendly encounter with a
upriver in time of tlood. County to prevent the bur- local woman was also
Ashley said the boat had a ial places of these soldiers debated
since
Meigs
capacity of 500 but due to from being lost due to mon- County considered Gen.
illegal kickbacks to Union ument erosion, vandalism, Morgan to be a mere horse
army
personnel,
the or theft. The camp is con- thief and would not have
"Sultana" was overloaded sidering the purchase of felt kindly toward him.
A proposed calendar of
with nearly 1900 Union additional computer techsoldiers who had survived nology to print maps with events for 2007 was set to
the depredations of prison the locations and coordi- include
its
annual .
at Cahaba, Ala. and nates given.
Appomattox Day bean dinAndersonville, Ga.
It was reported during the ner on Apri I 13, Memorial
Over 1700 of the Union meeting held at the Day ceremonies for May
soldiers died outright from Middleport
Masonic 19, and July 21 for the
the explosion, from drown- Temple Building conducted Buffington Island wreathing, and from hypothermia by Alan Holter. comman- · laying ceremony.
Plans for the annual
from the cold river water. der. .that the membership
One local Meigs County information table at the Thanksgiving dinner were
soldier, Austin Bridgeman Meigs County Fair was a made and set for Nov. 21 to
of Company F, 63rd Ohio great success with ten 1'\len honor the first celebration
Volunteer Infantry, was one asking for information to of the holiday by Pres.
of the casualties of this hor- join. The camp is currently Abraham Lincoln. This
rific event, according to working to· help each of meeting is especially for

Wednesday, September 27,2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Try to avoid humiliation in office
BY KATHY MITCHELl
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I'm very
attracted to a woman I work
with. ··vera" is one of the
most beautiful. wonderful
women I've ever met. r m
not asking if I should pursue
a relationship. Beside' the
obvious ditficulties that
may come with an offi ce
romance. Vera is married.
and I have no intention of
interfering in that.
But I am concerned that
when we're in the same
room together. at a staff
meeting or maybe in the
lunch room, I may subwnsciously say or do something that would reveal my
feelings. not only to her. but
to others. Aside from the
embarrassment, the office
gossip machine would start
working overtime.
How can I make sure
I'm on my best behavior
around this woman? I
want to maintain a professional
demeanor.
Confused in Brooklyn
Dear Confused: This is
an issue of self-discipline .
Talking and smiling are permissible. Drooling is not.
You won't be able to prevent yourself from, say,
blushing, but if you remind
yourself that revealing an
attraction would cause ~ou
extreme office humiliauon,
it might help put a damper
on things. Meanwhile , you
should actively seek out
women who ARE available.
Once your brain is focused
on someone else, it will be
less interested in Vera.
Dear Annie: I'm a selfconfident, capable, 25year-old woman. When my
husband is honie, I sleep
great. But when he's away,
I have a hard time. I
become paranoid and
worry about every sound.
When it's time for bed. I'm
afraid to turn Qff the light. I
lie there, heart pounding,
imagining that someone is
going to break in ..
We live in a safe building on the second floor,
and my apartment has no
outside entrance. so I
know, logically, nothing
bad is likely to happen.
I've tried a nightlight. but
it prevents me from sleeping well. The phone is
nearby so I can call 9 I I.
What else can I do? My
husband will soon be traveling more regularly for busi·
ness, and I don't want to be
terrified every night. Afraid of the Dark
Dear Afraid: This is
actually a fairly common
anxiety response. You can,

of cour&gt;e. seek counseling
or hypnosis. both of which
may be effecti\ e, but here
are other things to try:
Relax before bed, take a hot
bath. drink warm milk . Turn
on a light in another room to
brighten your surroundings.
but close your bedroom
door so the light doesn't di &gt;turb you. Use a fan or play
soft music to create white
noi&gt;e. so you don't hear
every creak. Take a self-·
defense class. Get a dog . .
Dear Annie: I have
never writteJ.l to a newspa·
per before, but after read··
ing the letter from·
"Mourning Mother in
Camarillo, Calif. ," whose·
son died from alcoholism. I
had to respond:
Dear Mother: When I
read your letter, I broke
down and sobbed. No letter
has ever touched me more•
deeply. I, too. drink too.
much. I have a great career
and a wonderful. beautiful .
wife and a daughter I don't
want to lose. l drink because
I think it helps kill the pain
of life's frustrations, but .
deep down, I · know it's
killing me . Perhaps · your
son felt this way, too.
.
I'm so sorry for your loss.
but your letter hit me like a:
ton of bricks. You've made·
me realize how selfish my
actions are, and your letter
affected me deeply, as I'm
sure it has affected others.
Thank you for writing. It.
was indeed worthwhile. l.
swear to you that if l can' t
beat this myself, I will get
professional help.
·
I have saved your letter to.
remind me of that each day.
I'm not a religious man, but
I hope that God wi II grant
you and your son peace, as~
you have reached out to me.
and probably saved my life,
-John in Florida
·
Dear John: Your letter
touched us deeply, and ir
wasn't the only one from
readers
affected
by
"Mourning Mother." We
send our thoughts .and
prayers to every person
strug~Iing with this insidious dtsease.
A1111ie 's Mailbox is writtell by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, lo11gtime editors of the A1111 l.a11ders
colum11. Please e-mail your.
questio11s to anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or wrill
to: Aunie 's Mailbox, P.O.
Box ll8190, Chicago, JL.
60611. To jiud out morf
about A11nie's Mailbox,'
and read features by other
Creators Sy11dicate writers
a11d cartoonists, visit the'
Creators Syndicate Web'
page at www.creators.com. .

guests who may be interested in membership or in the
Civil War. The camp will
furnish ham and the Maj.
Daniel McCook Circle will
furnish turkey. Attendees ·
are asked to bring a covered dish.
.
There was a discussion on
the reproduction of the veterans' burial map of Meigs
County and it was noted
that a company that can do
the reproduction will have
to be found along with
obtaining permission to do
the copying,
The
annual
Remembrance Day parade
will be held in Gettysburg,
Pa., at I p.m., Saturday,
Nov. 18. About 4000 reenactors in Civil War dress
march in the parade with
rife and drum bands, !lags.
and cavalry while ladies in
hooped skins throw flowers
to the troops and blow kisses just as would have happened in 1863. The event is
open to the public.
Work is continuing on
locating living descendants
of Pvt. Henry Dixon, Meigs
County's last Jiving Union
veteran, in order to have a -·- - - - - -- - - - -- - - - - - - - - special monument placed at
his grave and then dedicated in 2007.

GeneaIogtca
• I SOCie
• ty expIores·
cemeteries and grave stones ·

POMEROY
gravestone · repair - · espeCcmeteries and grave stones cially for reattaching the·
were a topiC of discus~ion at iparts of coumnar style
the recent meeting of the monuments.
He
also
Me1gs County Genealo'gical announced the state conven-·
Society held at the Meigs tion to be held in April next
County Museum.
year in Columbus, which is·
of you. Each of you -should
Tl1ree cemeteries which the closest location the
ha\'e individual counsel so were originally located on nation's large genealogical
tharyour interests are equal- Union Avenue as well as the convention can be held.
ly and fairly protected.
locaton of one in the Kerr's
A question on, phoRun area were brought up in tographing. 'pictures from
Law You Can Use is a response to out-of-county old newspapers was a major:
weekly consumer legal inquiries. As to the Union · topic. Clark obtaining a dig-·
information colum11 pro· Avenue cemeteries, Karen ita! cam!!ra with a large
vided as a public service Werry who has done much number of megapixels w
of the Ohio State Bar cemetery research. said ·thme accomplish this along with
Association. This article had been moved into Beech a camera stand and light.
was prepared by attomey Grove Cemetery years ago.
Keith Ashley, president, ,
Keith Golden, partner in
Another letter inquired announced receipt of the
the
Columbus firm, about where a cemetery in history of the McKnight
Krrrpma11,
Golden, Kerr' ,Run was located i1fter family. which includes a
Mei-z/ish,
Marks
&amp; reading about itin an 1882 large section on Meigs'
Busam, LLP. Articles Mcig," C(Junty newspaper. County. This will be availappearing in tlri.1 column The Society is looking for able soon at the Meigs
are i11tended to provide infonnatioin on that cemc - County Museum's library.
broad, general iuforma- tery and invite~ anyone with He abo announced that he
tion about the law. For in formaton to call992- 7874. i' trying to acquire early
i11j'ormation about a vari·
Donald Clark. vice presi- marria~e records of Wood
ety of legal topic!·, visit dent
of
the
Ohi&lt;&gt; Count~.
. W.Va .. and said,
the OSBA Web site at GenealDgical Society, wa' progress
is bemg made on
olziobar.
org. present and talked to the 1he book of ancestClr charts
www.
Before applying · this group on resources for to be published soon.
informatioll ro a specific
legal problem, readers
illlllll......
are urged to seek advice
from a11 attomey.
t Jt&gt;tU&lt;(.j, the t J(.,.Y.Jflfi"(:Wcfffth

.Relationship agreements provide protection
Q.: My "significant
other" and I plan to live
together and share our
money and our debts,. but
we are not planning to get
married. Is there a way we
can each protect our~elves
and the property each of
us will bring into the relationship?
A.: The law does not pro. vide the same protections
to unmarried individuals
that it provides for married
individuals. However, you
can put together a relationship agreement that is
essenti&lt;Jll~ a "non business
partnership agreement" to
cover your situation. A
non-business partnership is
any · partnership 6f two or
more people associated for'
any reason other than to
make a profit, and a nonbusiness partnership agree• ment ·can be enforced
through the ..:ourt.

such as who is re;ponsible
for household responsibilities and how finances will
be handled between you . It
may al so address what will
happen if and when the
relationship ends, including · how personal and
financial affair s will be
managed .

sions. If you do this. a family member·cannot overr.ide
your partner's authority to
make such decisions for
you. Similarly, through a
financial power of attorney,
you can authorize your
partner to make financial
decisions for you.
Another
document ,
called a living will. directly conveys your wishes
about certain kinds of
health care ,treatment in
special , life -threatening
circumstances. A family
member may not override
· the wishes you have stated
in a valid living will.
To cover issues that may
arise after you die (fqr
example. who will inherit
your money). you can spell
out who should receive
what by creating a will.
Also,- you can name your
partner as executor of your
estate (the person who will
handle matters after your
death according to your
will). You also may wish to
set up a trust to manage
and protect your property
while you are living or
after your death.

Q.: The parents of an
unmarried friend of mine.
disregarded her wishes
and prevented her partner
from making health care
and financial decisions for
her when she was incapacitated. Can a relationship
agreement protect my
partner and me in such a
situation?
A. : Yes. Your relationship
agreement may indude
legal documenh such as
wills. tinancial powers of
attorney, healthcare powers
of attorney and living wills.
All of these documents will
Q.: What may we ·enforce your wishes against
include in the agreement? the actions of an uncooperaA.: You may, for example, tive third -party family
provide for the death or member who ·may oppose
physical/mental disability your intentions.
For example. you can
of either of you, and/or for
create
a health care power
what happens if you end
Q.: Can one attorney
of attorney and authori1e
your .relationship.
The agreement may be as your partner to speak for represent both of us?
A.: No. An attorney is
simple · or as extensive as you in the event that you
required
by ethical guidecannot
speak
for
yourself
you wish to make it. It may
include personal matters. · regarding health care deci- . lines to represent only one

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AP Photo

Shinzo Abe, center, president of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party, chats with his fellow
lawmakers as voting starts to choose Japan's new prime minister in Tokyo Tuesday. At 52,
Abe became Japan's youngest postwar prime minister.

· The Daily Sentinel

•

'

.

/m ~w.,
ijf.,.
;.:;;(),. ,;, tlll'N~fj(Xf IKliJ(' 1ft;.'

With Jerry Kirk Fmm Covengtion, Ga.
Time2:00
Date 9-~2006
Plal'e Holiday Inn
•
Gallipolis, OH

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157 '
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Co11gress shall make' 110 law respecti11g an
establishment of rel({!ion, or prohibiting the
free exercise tlteret?{i or abridging the freedom of
spe~cl1, o~ of the press; or the right of the people peaceaMy to assemble, and to petition the
Gol!ernmcnt for a redress of grievances.
~The

First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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READER'S

Appreciated
veterinarians 1forts hailed
Dear Editor:
I would like to tell the people about the veterinarian, Dr.
Kelley Grueser. who work, at the Veterinary Clinic in
Pomeroy.
My dog. Te"Y· tore up stitchc' after being spayed, and
the ~ut started falling apart. I hoped it c·o uld be healeu by
itself. but it starteu blcedinc. I called the clinic and was
asked to bring Te,sy there. 'when I came the next day to
pick her up, there were uew iron \\itches on her and a clear
plastic cone around her neck so she could not reach the
stitches to tear them up.
.
Like my othe r dogs. eight of them all together, Tessy was
abandoned and Dr. Gn1eser told me tilat was almost a
puppy, 7-8 montils old, and the penlliarities of her behavior. He gave me amibinti' pills. to give her for I0 days, and
did not charge me anything . It wa&gt; Sunday, and I was surpri'sed he came to work on the weekend to give me back my
dog. In my opinion. Veterinary Dr. Kelley Grueser is very
knowledgeable and respon sible.
I would like to express my gratitude to him'througil the
newspaper for a wonderful job.
Alexa11dria Brandt
Coolville

READER'S

PageA4
Wednesday, September 27,2006 .

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Deaths

Aladine Baker

Margie Lewis

POMEROY - Aladine
Jean Baker 72, of Pomeroy
was called home to be with
the Lord Monday evening
September 25, 2006.
She was the daughter of
the late June and Mabel
Lamp Sinnett. Aladine was
born on October 27, 1933,
in Parkersburg, W.Va ., and
moved to Coolville in
1939. In 1952 , Adaline
moved to Pomeroy with
her loving hu sband, Seldon
Junior Baker. They would
have been married 54 years
tn October.
Adeline Baker
She was a graduate of .
Coolville High School and a member of the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist _Church for over 50 years. She was a hard
:worker ail her llle With many different jobs, including tak"
mg care of the s1ck anu elderly in her community.
She IS survived by her husband Seldon Junior Baker;
three daughters: Martha (Joseph) Stinnett. Linda (Perry
Duncan! Hysell and Joyce (Steve) Hysell; eight grandchildren. Patty, Chns, Jenmfer, Lttsa, Ronnie Jr., Steve Jr.,
Dame! and Stacy; 28 great grandchildren; three sisters:
Mary Patterson, Ruth Ann Barkley and Leota Richards;
two brothers, Clarence and Wendell Sinnett.
Besides her. parents she is preceded in death by three
brothers; Jumor, Don and Bobby, and a sister, Betty
Smnett.
Aladine had been fighting cancer for the last several
f!!Onths but 1s now at rest with the Lord . Her family would
hke to thank eyeryone for all their care and thoughtfulness
through lhw lime ot need. Our mom will be sadly missed
and in our hearts forever.
Service will be at 2 p.m. Friday September 29, 2006 at
the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. Rev.
Glenn Rowe will officiate. Burial will follow in
Coolville Cemetery.
F~end s may call from 7 to 9 p.m. on Thursday evening at
the funeral home, anu may send online condolences to fsherfuneralhomes.com.

CLIFTON, W.Va. -Margie Ferguson Lewis 83 of
Clifton, W.Va., died Sept. 26, 2006, at Pleasan't V~lley
Hospital in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
She was p~ceded in death by her husband, Clyde Ferguson.
Semce Will be held at I p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 28,
2006, at Fogelsong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason
W.Va., with visitation from 6 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday:
.
Burial will be in Kirkland Memorial Gardens. '

Kathryn M. Evans
POMEROY - Kathryn M. Evans, 89, of 42157
Enterprise Rd., Pomeroy, died Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2006 at
Overbrook Center, Middleport.
Born on Dec. 16, 1916, she was the daughter of the late
John R. and Grace Baumgardner Dill.
.
She is survived by three sisters, Faye Watson of
Reedsv1lle, Frances Carleton of Pomeroy, and Rena Arnett
ofMansfield; a daughter-in-law, Debbie Evans of Bell view,
M1ch.; three grandchildren, Sam Evans of Bellville, Mich.,
·Sherry and her husband, Ben Fulayter of Pomeroy, and
Chns and her husband, Dave Riley of Michigan.
Also survivin~ are five sisters-in-law, Sara Dill of
Pomeroy, ~Ita Dtll of Middleport, Betty Dill of Pomeroy,
Barbara Dtll of Pomeroy, and Barbara Dill of Mansfield;
four great-grandchldren, Olivia fulayter, Katie Riley, Cody
Riley, and Jesse Riley, and many wonderful nieces,
nephews, relatives and friends.
She was !receded in death by her husbands, Richard
Landers an Wather Evans; a son, David Evans; three sisters, Gloria Jean Dill, Mary Starcher, and Esther Dill; six
brothers, Paul, Elsworth, Charles, John, Carl and Bill; four
brothers-in-law, Orville Watson, Harry Carleton, Dallas
Amen, and George Starcher.
Friends may call 4 to 7 p.m . Thursday at the Ewing
Funeral Home . Services will be held at the funeral home at
1 r. .m. Friday with the Rev. Arland King officiating. Burial
w1l be in the Rocksprings Cemetery.

Local Briefs
Dinner planned
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Church of Christ
located at the corner of Fiflh and Main will serve a free
community dinner of chicken and noodles from 4:30 to
6:15 p.m. Friday. .

Horse show planned
PORTLAND - The Ohio River Producers next horse
show will be Oct. 21 at the Ponland Community Center at
Portland. For information call 740-590-9936.

Seeking singers
GALLIPOLIS - French Colony Chorus, the tri-county's only chapter of Sweet Adelines International offers the
joy of singing great tunes in low to hi~h voice ranges, and
gives free vocal lessons. The women s show chorus wel con'les visitors from Gallia, Meigs, Jackson, Mason and
~urrounding counties, and m.eets at 7 p.m . .on Tuesday
evenmgs at the Gallia County Visitors and Convention
Bureau, 259 Third Avenue, Gallipolis. Information is
available from Director Susan Russell at 446-2675 or
Suzy Parker at 992-5555.
'

Van service beginning
MIDDLEPORT - Beginning Sunday the Ash Street
Church located at 398 Ash St. in Middleport will offer a
van serv1ce to ch1ldren and adults to both Sunday and
Wednesday serv1ces. Anyone interested in being picked
up for se rvices may call 992-6443. Pastor of the church
is·Jeff Smith.

Sale to be held
GALLIPOLIS - A hot dog and bake sale will ·be held
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the New Life Church of God on
Airport Road across from Ponderosa.

Benefit sing
BIDWELL- Clark Chapel ori Bidwell-Porter Road will
hold a benefit gospel sing at 6 p.m. on Saturday. Singers
will indude Voices of Faith, ~id and Carol Hayman, Mercy
and Bnan &amp; Fam1ly ConnectiOns. The smg will support the
third annual Fall Harvest Gospel Sing on Oct. 20 and 21.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

First reunion of
Veterans Memorial
Hospital held
POMEROY - The first
reunion
of
Veterans
Memorial Hospital staff
employees and others associated with the hospital
which closed several years
ago was held recently at the
Meigs
Senior
Center
Building with over a hundred attending.
Tables were decorated in
blue and white; the hospital colors, with candle ce nterpieces
and
floral
Potted
arrangements.
mums
were
placed
throughout the entire
room .. A large display with
Y.M.H . history and photos
from a "V.M.H. Health .
Vie," along with V.M.H. t· ·
shirts and other items were
enjoyed by all.
There was a table with a
yellow rose and an inmemory list of those
deceased. A large table
was filled with photos and
memorabilia for everyone
to enjoy. June Kloes welcomed those attending and
gave grace before finger
food and desserts were
served. Plans were made
for an annual reunion with
next year's to take place
on Sept. I 5.
Short talks were given by
Mr. Scott LU&gt;:as. administrator, Rhonda Dailey,
director of nursing. Dr. R.
Patterson ,
Dr.
Wilma
Mansfield, and Dr. James
Witherell and by a person
representing each of the
departments. The talks
brought back old memories
with much laughter and a
few tears. Door prizes ,
donated by local busine sses.
were given.
Planning the reunion were
June Kloes, Glenna Riebel,
Linda Hudson, Virginia
Michael, Terry Laudermilt
with assistance with other
staff members.
Those attending were
Linda H)ldson, Pat Dent,

Tammy
Ball, · Terry
Laudermilt, Robin Manuel,
Richard Warner, Cecelia
Lisle, Diane Milliron,
Bonnie Warner, Karen S.
Clark, Joan A. Hoffman,
Beth Clark, Debbie Finlaw,
Lorna Seth, Margaret Corsi,
Wilma S1nith, Larry May,
Ruth
Spaun,
Pam
Henderson, Doris Jhle,
Diane Herdman, Linda
Cozart, Janice Evans, Karen
Roush Patterso n, Julia
Qualls, Marty Gress. Dr.
Wilma Mansfield, Mark
Werry. Dori s Mertz. June
Kines, Becky Tillis .
Schmoll,
Robert
Rosemary
Keller,
Jo
Stalnaker. Lillian (Gibbs)
Harri s, Breeanna Manuel,
Elizabeth (Mack) Leighton,
Jane Ann Hess, Donna
Aleshire. Barbara Hoffman,
Maxine
Moore-Butcher,
Tami
Sheets.
Tara
McC!ntock (Clark). Carol
Ault Shank, Rosemary
Vance, Helen Corsi. Linda
Rus se ll. Scott Lucas, Mary
Artis, Cleon Pratt, Stella
Bla11kenship,
Robert
Haning, Julia Will , John
Riebel , Sr .. Vickie Roush.
Leslie Qualls. Dr. Jim
Witherell. · Erma Smith,
Jennifer . Keller, Marlene .
Donovan, Don· Beegle.
Emogene Simms.
Marty Meadows, Virginia
Michael, Betty Smith, Joyce
Manuel. Wilma Seaman
(Ginther. Juanita Roush,
John R. Brewer, Selma Call,
Elizabeth Smith, George
Hoffman , Tina Neigler,
Mildred · Hud son, Jane
Huffman , Ruth Riflle ,
Sandra Peyton, Phylli s May,
Dr. R. Patterson, Sherrie
Roush,
Sharon
Pratt,
Loraine Venoy, Jean Wright,
Kim
roush,
Rae
Gwiazdowsky, Pam Theiss,
Rhonda Dailey, Mary
Roach, Edith McDaniel,
Mae Nelson, Glenna Riebel,
a~d Sue Beegle.
'

Police

oppose anything that eliminates the village police
department and jobs. He
said some council memfrom PageA1
bers have concentrated too
council to give it due con- much attention on eliminating employees in order
sideration.
to save monev.
"It needs further study,"
RUTLAND -. A one-car accident Sunday on County
"] don't care if it would
Road 7 (Shde Htll) sent four people to an area hospital Moore said, "but it is save five hundred thousand
w1th LnJunes, the Galha-Me1gs Post of the State Highway important that we consider dollars . .I oppose anything
Patrol reported.
·
it as a cost-saving measure. that eliminates · village
Transported from the scene of the 4: 10 p.m. accident The village is going bank- jobs ... Peckham said.
POMEROY- Sally Ann Banels Ayers 71, Athens, died were dnver Steven A. Hudson, 17, 35 Riverview Drive,
Council Member Jean
Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2006, at the Rocksprings Rehabilitation Middleport, and three passengers in the car he drove: rupt, and any means of saving
IJIOney
needs
to
be
studCriag
said council members
Center in Pomeroy.
Whitney Smith , I 8, 380 Grant St., Middleport ; Linsay · ied and considereu if it is to should · "consider '!llY
She was born July 29, 1935, in Pomeroy, &lt;laughter of the M~Kinney, 16, 31445 Snowuen Road, Pomeroy; and
remain solvent."
avenues toward savmg
late William J. and Louise Humphrey Bartels. Sally retir~d M1chael Wells, 14, 203 Park St., Middlepon.
Councilman
Jeff
·
money. and keep ·an open
from Ohio University Purchasing Department anu was a
All were taken by Meigs EMS to Holzer Medical Center, Peckham said. he will mind about the proposal."
proud graduate of Pomeroy High School Class of 1953.
the patrol reported.
Besides her parents she was preceded iu death by her
Troopers said Hudson was eastbound, 2.2 miles west of'
husband, Paul Ayers, in 1998.
CR 60 (Loop) when the car he drove went off the left side
demanding $17.3 million
Surviving are her brothers and sisters in law: Edward and of the wad and re-entered the road. The driver then overDiana Bartels and Charles and Joyce Bartels, all of corrected and slid off the left side of the road.
from Federal MogLJI to
cover environmental damPomeroy; stepchildren: Leigh Ann Bailey of Ann Arbor
The car then struck an embankment and overturned,
.age at the McConnel sville
Mich., Barbara Morrison of Ohio and Tom Ayers of Athens; coming to rest on its wheels against the embankment,
from PageA1
factory, which made part s
and several nieces and nephews.
'
the report said.
·
The family will receive friends from 7-9 p.m. on Friday
The car had disabling damage and Hudson was cited for Mogul obtains related to for locomotives, automobiles and aircraft. The
Sept. 29, 2006 at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fi$her Funeral failure to control.
.
asbestos damage at its for- company,
· which
had
Home. A private burial will held in Alexander Cemetery in
•••
mer
factory
in ow ned the factory si nee
Athens. Sally requested that donation s be made to Dialysis
POMEROY - A Reedsville-area woman was injur~d McConnelsville, Ohio.
1998, &gt;old it to Austria's
Friends and Families F. M.S. of Gallipoli s, I00 Jackson in a one-car accident investigated by the patrol Tuesday
The .pact resolves all Miba AG in 2001.
Pike Gallipoli s, Ohio 45631.
·
on CR 7A.
debts owed by Federal
The &gt;late also sought a
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralWinifred A. Marcinko, 81,41584 Marcinko Road, was Mogul's U.S. subsidiaries.
$6.6
million payment to
·
homes.com.
transported by Meigs EMS to Holzer Medical Center fol- to the state, the company
cover environmental damlowing the 8:06a.m. accident, the patrol reported.
said. The agreement is sub- age at a factory in
Troopers said Marcinko was southbound, five-tenths of a ject to approval by U.S.
mile south of U.S. 33, when the car she drove went'off the Bankruptcy Judge Juuith Ca!Jwell, Ohio. the com·
pany said . In the settle CHESTER - Mildred Pauline Wickham Ridenour, 94, left side of the road and struck a tree.
Fitzgerald, who will con- ment. the state agreed to
The car had disabling Jamage and the driver was cited sider 'it at a hearing set for
of Chester, died Tuesday, Sept. 26, 2006, at Overbrook
withdraw the Caldwell
for
failure to control.
Center in Middleport.
.
Oct. 30.
claims entirely.
She was born Jan . 31, 19 I 2, in Meigs County, the daughFederal Mogul has spent
Federal Mogul said it
DARWIN- Anna,J. Grueser, 19, 13281 Rainbow Lake the las.t five years in
ter of the late James and Elizabeth Pullins Wickham.
and Ohio opted to reach a
Mildred worked with· her husband in several business- Road, Shade, was cited for left of center by the patrol fol- Chapter II bankruptcy reor- settlement because the
es and they opened Ridenour Haruware in Chester in lowing a two-car accident Sunday on Ohio 681.
U.S.
subTroopers said Grueser was eastbound at II :48 a.m. when ganization, att.e,mpting to company's
1946. She was a graduate of Chester High School, a
shed
the
asbe
stos
liabilities
and
the
stale
sidiarie
s
·
member of Chester Council #323 Daughters of America, the car she drove went left of center in a left-hand curve it accumulated during an "would likely incur · suhthe Past Councilors Club and the Chester United and collided with a westbound car driyen by Zachary L expansion that lasted from . stantial litigation cost' in
Wood, 19,42788 Ohio 681, Pomeroy.
Methodist Church.
the 1960s to the 1990s.
pursuing and defend ing
Both cars had functional damage ..
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death in
against
the claims."
Ohio
fileu
claim s
•••
1992 by her hu sband Buel Ridenour, whom she married
RACJNE - A two-car accident Saturday on Ohio I 24
Sept. 3, 1932. She was also preceded by one son, John Buel
sent
one of the dnvers to an area hospital with injuries, the
Ridenour; one grandson, Jamie Ridenour; two brothers,
NEED A RIDE TO
patrol
reported.
Edison and John Wickham; one sister, Edith Bryant; and
CHURCH?
Rose M. Ackison, 21, 46305 Ohio 124. Racine, was
one half sister, Erma Heilman.
She is survived by her son James (June) Ridenour of transported ro Holzer Medical Center by Meigs EMS fol Van Pick Up
·
Chester; grandsons John L (Mel) and Lowell (Shamn) lowing the 6:23p.m. collision, the patrol reported.
Available
Troopers said Ackison was westbomid, 50 feet west of CR
Ridenour, all of Chester. Jason (Natasha) Ridenour of
Ariel Jr. Idol Talent
Sunday,
Beginning
Reedsville, Jared (Jaime) Ridenour of Coolville and a 34 (Pine Grove) when a car driven by Tamara L. Cundiff.
Competition
October lsi
granddaughter, Janet Ridenour of ·Chester; several great- 56. 46101 Ohio 124, Racine, backed from a liriveway
9/25, 10/2 &amp; 10/9
grandchildren; four stepgrandchildreil, Jason, Keith and access onto the highway and collided with Ackison's car.
'Children and Adults
Both
.vehicles
had
functional
damage
and
Cundiff
was
The Dove Brothers 9/28
Roger Arix and T.J . Kittle; one stepgranduaughter, Laura
• Sunday and
cited
for
improper
backing.
Auditions:
Michael;
dau gh ter-in-law, Karen
Ridenour
of
Wednesday Services
Harrbonville, sister-in-law. Opal Wickham or Chester; SCV·
A Christmas Carol
era! nieces and nephews; and special friends. Francis
For more information
10/1 &amp; 10/2
Lightfoot of Middlepo,rt and Roberta Ridenour of Pomeroy.
Call Ash Street Church ·
MTV's Reality Check
Services will be · I I a.m. Friday. Sept. 29, 2006, at the
398 Ash Street
Tour 10/3
Middlepor1 , OH
Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. Burial will folwww,arieltheatre,org
740-992-6443
low in Chester Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-9 p.m.
Pastor: Jeff Smith
· Thursday at the funeral home.
.
The Ariel-Dater Hall
•
"Come
Worship With Us"
428 Sec. Ave.' Gallipolis, OH
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfunemlSubscribe today • 992-2155 • www.mydallysentlnetcom
740-446-ARTS (2787)
homes.com.

For the Record

Highway Patrol

Claim

Letccn to the editor lilt' •relcmne. 1her should be less
than 300 mnds. All letr••rs ure s11bject to. editing, must bt'
signed. and in clude addrns and telephone 1111111be 1: No
llllsignecl /ellen 11·i// he jlllhli.1hed. Leller,\ slwrtld be ill
good taste. addre.1·.1'ing iswes, lli!t J&gt;asonalities. Letters of'
thcmks to or,~:;wu : utirms allll iwliriduais H'ifl not he accept·
ed ./(n· J&gt;ublicmioll.
.
'
- - - - - ··---·----..
_;,

Correction Policy

··

www .mydailysentinel.com

Sally Ayers

Dear Editor:
In my opinion. a 0,11e-percent sales tax would be better
til an a 50-cent surcharge on telephone lines. I think the onepercent sales taxi&gt; a fair way to fund a 91 I system and we
could have a lot more and better services for the money.
Everyone benefit&gt; from the 911 service, and the burden
•
would he shareu bv all.
Edward Ball ·

Reader Services

Obituaries

The exploitation of the egg
unknown) were under- experiment required hunFemmi,ts,
beware:
(ju&gt;t expect ·'really dreds of eggs. As Roben P.
played
Mis&lt;ouri may soon become
bad PMS," we were told) George. a member of the
the Clone-Me State. Rise up
and contrasteu with a hope- presiucnt's biocthics counand stop it.
ful spin - the great contri- cil. and Eric Cohen. editor
In
Missouri
this
November, a misleading
but ion a young woman can of The New Atlantis, recentKathryn
n1ake to an infertile couple's Jy wrote: "For this research
ballot initiative called
Lopez
the
Amenument :i
life.
to proceeu beyond South
"Missouri
Stem
Cell
.luuy Norsigian. executive Korea's failed :.lltempts,
Research
and
Cures
director of the old-school whether in Semil or at
Initiative" - promis.es to
feminist g·roup Our Bodi,es, Stanforol. many thousands
"ban IJUman cloning." In vitro fertilization possible. Our Selves. told a U.S. and perhaps millions of
actuality, the referendum In an unpleasant proces' Senate committee in 2002: women would nc~d to
like earlier deceitful state that includes prodding anu "Media coverage of human become egg donors·_ or
measures in the likes of surgery, egg "donors" are embryo clonin.-Q research (as some say) egg mercenarNew Jersey anu California given hormones to ensure has llJrgcly focused on its ie,. No r~sponsible doctor
- woulu work to do just they produce 1norc than the therapeutic
potel)tial , would allow his patient to
the opposite.
routine monthly amount of neglecting the technology's undergo such risks and bur·
The Missouri doubles- eggs - more means a better dependence on the thou- d
sands.
ii'
not
millions.
of
ens
Simply
to aid a specupeak is all too commonplace shot at success. This largely
.lati ve project of research. no
in the cloning debate. By unregulated industry has women who must undergo matter how altrui stic the
separating the concept of paid scant attention to the the substantial health risks aims. And no decent society
cloning for research purpos- potential long-term harm · associated with harvesting
would countenance the buy.es (a baby still comes out of from such hyperstimulation. their eggs."
the process, he or she is just As two bioethicists from . . Unfortunately. thou gh. ing and selling of human
on the open market."
killed before anyone can Stanford pointed out last few fem inists are ru shi ng 10 eggs
or
course. for those who
rai&gt;e the child) from the year in an article 111 join the likes of Norsigian.
In rder~ncc to restricting (like me) oppose human
"Dolly the Sheep" type of "Science" magazine. at
.1n . cloning.... on more than the
,
~.u~r
marr.:.et
cloning (you let the clone be minimum women should he t1I e
born), voters are fooled with both made aware that risks . Calilornia. an official from g round of exploitation,
the help of a willing or include infertilitY and even the American Fertility there's more at stake and a
hopelessly ignorant news death and that their "dona- A"ociation recently told a long battle ahead. But for
media.
tions," in the case of embry- reporter: '' I get concerned now, when the cloning
The fact is, cloning by onic-stem-cell research and when some women's groups de hate is s~c h a mess that
any other name is still cloning, may never actu&gt;•Oy say, 'Oh. no. we have to few people even know what
cloning. and in Missouri, contribute to a cure for any- make these decisions for they:re talking about - or
women."'
voting on. - a creative
that's what Amendment 2 is thing.
But how fair is the choice coalition between pro-lifers
ali about. It also promises to
When I went to a New
wome.n are being and feminists is a golden
these
exploit Missouri women.
Jersey fertility clinic on
Liberal feminisis are not assignment a few years ago offered .when they don't · egg to embrace. Without it,
the tirst people you might (alter ads offering upwards know what they ' re· getting a lot more states than
think of to lead an anti- of $35.000 in some college into. the benefits are over- Missouri will soon be vying
cloning fight, but they could . papers caught my eye). hypeu. and they really need for the title of the Clone-Me
be important leaders in this nearly everyone there at the the money? And as we slip State.
( KatiiiTII Lupez i.1· the edistruggle. Cloning requires . egg "donating" information deeper into thi&gt; brave new
worlu
or
cloning,
unprecetor
of National Re viell'
eggs. And women have to session was a college-age0111ine ( www.natimwlreprovide them.
·
range gal looking for some dented numbers of eggs and women· will be need- vie•v.com). Sire m11 !Je COilThere's an estimated $38 extra cash.
During my orientation, ed. Even the failed. fraudu- tacted w klowz@natimwlmillion market already in
existence geared to make-in- the ri sks (known and lent South . Korean cloning revie1uon1.)

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

' 53.55
' 107 .10 1
'2 14.2 1 J

It's better than stealing the towels
I bought an old photo
album at a yard sale a few
years ago hoping to discover something unusual mixed
in with the standard blackand-white Brownie shots of
Jim
men in out-of-date suits
Mullen
standing next to women in
astoundingly dowdv-Jooki ng dresses, as i~ey all stare
at the camera looking like
they had just caught Junior Nice. The S.S. De Grasse.
&lt;lipping snutf down at the French Line:
pool hall. What is it about
It · was a diary without
old photographs that makes words, mysterious and
everyone look as if they are telling at the same time'.
members of the Carter Was it the memorabilia of a
family about to eat sushi Grand Tour or a spy's scrapfor the first time?
book'! Not a word about life ·
When I llipped through aboard the De Grasse in the
the pages at home. it turned days when it took .seven
out to contain no pho- days simply to cross the
tographs at all. Carefully ocean. Today, seven days
attached to each page was a aboard a ship would be the
blank piece of hotel sta- vacation, then it was simply
tionery from the '30s, the the start of one.
era of steamer trunks and
few
envelopes ·
A
boaters.
addressed in that wonderThe
Bedford Hotel. fully vague, pre-Zip Code.
Southampton Row, London. party line way - "Miss
The Cecil Hotel , Bruxelles. Evelyn C_~, S.pruce
The
American
Hotel. Street, Oneonta, N.Y." Amsterdam. The Grand written in a beautifu l,
Royal Hotel. Sorrento .. The rounded script with a .founDarm,tadter - Hof . tain pen were also · preHeidelberg. The Gnmd served. There wus abo a
Hotel Suisse Terminu,. chann ing hand-written note
Turin. The Hotel Rossli. · on Hotel Royal Granue
Lut.ern . Hotel Metropok. Brcta~ne &amp; Arno \tationery

in Florence that reads :

garage sale scavengers will
find it interesting. It is full
· ·' My dear Miss C__
of blank stationery from
I met the Rutherford s who Hol iday Inn s. Hampton
said vou were here~ 1 am at Inns. Quality Courts and La
the Grand , a few blocks up Quintas .. For every mildly
the Arno. Seeing your hotel interesting scrap from a
as I was passing, I stopped four star hotel I've been
to say ' How -Jo-you-do?'
lucky enough to stay in,
Sinccrclv.
there arc 30 · mean little
Anna s..:..__,
miniatme desk pads from
cookie cutter chains. There
It was hard for me to !lip will be no great mysteries to
through the pages and not solve about my travel s
fi1)d myself making up sto- except "why was he such a
rie&gt; about Miss Evelyn and cheapskate')" and "where is
Miss Anna - ·'A ·Room Chloride, Miz."' '
wi th a View" meets "Nancy
The scrapbook is starting
Drew."
to bulge. I've started throw"The Rutherfords 1 At the ing in the plastic keys hotels
Grand. Hardly the place for pass off as keys now, figurour set, now is irl Why, mg they w1ll look quaint
they're litJie more than and old-fashio11eu in the
tradesmen putting on airs. I coming day s or thumbprint
hear l1crbrother had to g~t a Joc.ks .anu retina scanners.
job! Can you imagine'? At some Ji&gt;tant (I hope)
What · on earth ' can · they estate sale, pawing through
ex peel to get out or' a visit to the piles of antique COs,
Florence'.' As the y say in DVDs. laptops, and iPods, 1
India. 'The spoon cannot can almo'l hear a collector
taste tl1c "'up 1'"
say, "Wow, plastic keys.
Sonn aft~r I bought the How quaint. What kind . of
,,:r"pbon, , I ' tarted auding nu t would save the,c ''"
stationery from every hotel
IJim Mullen is the author
or molcl where I stayed. My of " It Ji1kes a Villa!ie Idiot:
pages,' too. are blank bul the Comp/i('{lting the Simple
story .they tell is so much Liji!" mul "Bab\' :, First
k" fa scin ating. Seventy Ton on. ·· Yt m cw1 il:'ach him
yc:~rs from now I dou.ht any
at jilrl_mu/!nt @mywa_\:(·om.)

Mildred Ridenour

...

A~~4

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel

•

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

/

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard, Page 86

Local Weather
Today's Forecast
Forecast far Wednelday, Sept. 27

crty/Reglon

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

High I Low temps

Mll&gt;h

LocAL SCHEDULE

HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL----'----- - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - -- - - - - -- -

POMEROY - A sch&amp;dule of upcoming colk:Pge
and h~ school var'Sity

teams from

Youngtlown • •'
Manafleld •
72" 151 "

sportng events

ll'l\Oolvtng

VC trips Tornadoes

Meigs and Mason ooun!les.

Wednvaday 'a gamaa

72" 147"

~

Gal~a.

Volleyball

Trimble al MeiQs. 6 p.m.
South Point at South Gallia, 5:30p.m.

~

Scon

Bv
WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPON DENT

Soccer
Pt. Pleasant at Ravenswood, 6:30 p.m
Crots Country
Meigs at Alel(ander Invite. 4 p.m.

*Columbus ~

-

RACINE - Playing its
toughest week of the season
against a, three-game slate
that includes two state ranked opponents, · the
Southern Lady Tornadoes
(3-9)
showed · marked
improvement but fell in four
sets to the tough Vinton
County
Lady
Vikings
Tuesday night in Racine.
Coach Tonja Hunter's
charges
battled
tough
throughout the contest. but
the athletic Vikes endured to
win 25-15, 25-15. 19-15,
and 25-16.
Southern was led by
Whitney Wolfe-Riffle who
was 21-28 passing , 12- 15
serving, 14- 19 spiking. with
three assists and five kills .
Stephanie Cundiff was a
perfect 19-19 serving, 13- 19
spiking, 20-33 passing with
two kills; Sarah Eddy was
21 -25 passing. 11 - 11 serving with an ace , 11-17 spiking, and three kills: and
Emma Hunter was 12- 18
passing with nine assists, a Please see .Tornadoes, B2

College Soccer
Rio Grande vs. Shawnee St.. s p.m.
Women '• College Soccer
Rio Grande vs. Shawnee St. , 6 p.m.

~

73" 150"

Tbur~dey 'a

Cincinnati
•76" 151 "

WVA ·

tf.:
........
\. r

qemu

&lt;

Volleyball
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5:30p.m·.
. 'Southern at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Ironton at Gallia Academy, 5:15 p.m.
Hannan at Teays Valley. 6 p.m.
South Gallia at OVCS, 5:30 p.m.

il

SOc::car

Point Pleasant at OVCS. 5:30p .m.

~ Cloudy ~ Thunder-~
t:__::)
storms
.
Panr
~

c:!dv

6

////

Shower$

~

""
Rain

Flurnes

NORTH BALTIMQRE
(AP) - Inside Anna and
Jim Miller's barn is a cornucopia of colors, sizes
and shapes.
A pink flamingo nestles
its head under its wing.
Beside it is a painted but- ·
terfly house with thin slits
for doorways. A green and
yellow Afncan Warty vies
for attention.
"People were wondering
what we were growing out
here," said Anna Miller on a
warm and sunny day at their
farm. So she enlightened
them at a recent village
Rotary meeting with the
answer- gourds.
The basketbalL The dip;
per. And, of course, the
African Warty.
Miller and her Quarry
Farm Gourds growing partner, Dick Bostdorff of
Bowling Gree'n, sold pure or
"true to type" seeds in 47
different varieties this year.
They also sell plants and
mature gourds themselves.
A French Dolphin gourd
sat on one table in Miller's
barn, its shell thick with
veins.
"There's a variety called
the duck gourd," she said,
surveying some she had
painted. "I thought this one
looked like a flamingo, so

that's how I painted it," she
explained.
Bostdorff grows Giant
Bushels, which mature to
weigh more than I 00
pounds, in his greenhouse.
And it seems there are
almost as many uses for
gourds as their are varieties.
Miller wears a necklace that
features a small gourd, the
size of a large bead, nestled
into a kni:&gt;tless netted pouch.
And aside from the usual
bird houses, bowls and decorative pieces are instruments like lpu (Hawaiian
gourd drums), lamps and
chimes that people create
out of the fruit.
Most, however, are not
edible.
Reputation-wise, it certainly can't hurt that gourds
are very hardy once they are
cured (or dried).
"They can last from 50 to
I 00 years. They're like
wood. If they're not out in
the rain (or protected from
the elements by a varnish),
or totally abused, they last a
while," Miller said.
Most interesting, however, is not necessarily the
gourds themselves, but the
way they're grown; or
"raised" as Miller refers to
the process.
Miller said her "main

purpose" as a grower "is to
produce pure strains of
seeds." That means attending to each plant out in her
field to ensure that crosspollination does not occur
among the many varieties
she grows out there.
In fact, the female blossom of hardshell gourds
blooms for only one night in
the summer. So in order to
maintain pure seed strains, ·
growers must hand pollinate
and then practice tsolation
techniques.
Miller explained .that in
July she begins at 3 p.m.
each day by covering
emerging, but not yet
opened , . female blossoms
with a mesh bag. Once they
bloom later in the evening,
she unties the bag, rubs an
opened male blossom from
the same plant onto the
female, and then re-bags the
female so that insects don't
carry pollen from other
plants of different varieties.
She must work quickly
before darkness or mosquitoes drive her inside.
"It's hard to find seeds
that are true to type," Miller
maintained.
Along with fighting off
insects like the cucumber
beetle, decorating last season's gourds and selling

the products, Miller ends
up working full-time in
the summer.
The business keeps her
busy year-round, however,
particular with the seed
portion of the business. She
performs a "germination
check," which tests how
many seeds sprout in a particular group, making sure
they "test out at least 80
percent."
In mid-February seed
selling kicks into high gear,
with many ordering by maiL
In the gourd-raising
world, word-of, mouth often
generates a good amount of
business, and that kind of
advertising is certainly
.aided by Miller's presence
at shows and festivals
thtoughout the year:
No stran~er to plants she sold dned !lowers for a
number of years - a modest Miller, who jumped into
the gourd game in 2000,
merely said she's "won
some prizes."
This year she'll return to
the Ohio Gourd Show that
will be held from Sept. 30 to
Oct. I. and will be experiencing a big change instead of its traditional
home in Mount Gilead, this
year's show will be held in
Greenville.

News groups win lawsuit in Ohio over poll access
Bv JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS -A federal judge on Tuesday stntck
down a 2004 directive by
Ohio's elections chief
against exit polling within
.I 00 feet of a voting place.
U.S.
District
Judge
Michael H. Watson ruled
that a verbal order by
Secretary of State Ken
Blackwell before the 2004
presidential election violated the press' rights under
the First. Amendment.
Watson ordered Blackwell
to issue an explicit clarification by Oct. I 5 so that exit
polls can take place in this
year's election.
The lawsuit was brought
by five television networks ABC, CNN,
CBS, Fox News and NBC
and The Associated
Press, which had formed a

consortium to collect exitpolling data in Ohio and
other states.
"It's a victory for certainly all the organizations that
gather information from
voters on Election Day,"
said
attorney
Susan
Buckley. "It is very important that this information
continues to be available
not only to the public, · but
to scholars and historians
and the Iike."
Watson had issued a temporary order in 2004 that
allowed the news organizations to conduct exit polls
that year. His ruling
Tuesday means polling can
'ontinue in the future,
Buckley said.
Attorneys for Blackwell's
office were reviewing the
ruling, said James Lee, a
Black well spokesman.
"The secretary of state's
office followed the law as it

was written at the time,"
Lee said. "Now we have
from a federal judge issuing
a different interpretation.
"But it's important to
reinforce that the media has
an obligation to act responsibly and nut interfere with
voters as reP.orters conduct
exit pulling. '
.
The networks and the AP
had said exit-poll reporters
were allowed to conduct
interviews within I 00 feet
of polls in the March 2004
primary. According to the
suit, Blackwell had told
county boards in February
that since state law does
not specifically regulate
exit-polling, "in keeping
with Ohio's past practices,
exit pollsters should not be
disturbed solely because
they are conducting exit
polling within the 100foot-boundary."
A spokesman at the time

said Blackwell anticipated
a crush of voters and media
in the closely watched
2004 election and told
boards to enforce a state
law that bars anyone
besides voters, election
officials, challengers and
witnesses from inside the
100-fopt limit.
On Monday, a federal
appeals court agreed to dismiss another lawsuit filed
just before Ohio 's 2004
election. It involved 35,000
voters' registrations that had
been ·challenged by the
Ohio Republican Party
because unforwardable, certified postcards sent to their
addresses by the party had ·
been returned. ·
The state opted not to
appeal · after several plaintiffs presented evidence that
they were properly registered, and the suit was
dropped.

Ice

~

Wednesday... Mostly sunny
in the moming ...Then becoming partly cloudy. Highs in the
upper 70s. Southwest winds 5
to 10 mph.
Wednesday night.~.Partly
cloudy with a sli~ht chance of
showers
In
the
mostly
evening.. .Then
cloudy with a chance of
showers after midnight
Lows in the · mid ~Os.
Southwest winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 50 percent
Thursday...Showers with
a slight chance of thunderstorms. Cooler with highs in
the mid 60s. Northwest
winds 10to .15 mph. Chance
of rain 80 percent.
Thursday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 40s. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.

· Friday... Partly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the lower
60s.
·
-Friday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in .
the upper 30s.
Saturd'ay... Partly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the mid
60s.
Saturday night ...Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 40s.
Sunday; .. Mostly cloudy
with a 50 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the upper
60s.
Sunday
night ••• Partly
. cloudy. Lows in the mid
40s.
~onday
through
Tuesday.•. Mostly
clear.
Highs in the mid 70s. Lows
around 50.

•

have embarrassed ruling
Republicans ' and are a focus
of several statewide races.
The committee's second
submission
included
179,887 valid signatures,
shortofthe 193,740required
for certification for the ballot, Blackwell's office said.
State law does not allow
the su.p porters a third
attempt to submit the signatures, Blackwell spokesman
James Lee said.
McTigue said he had not
seen the letter, which was ·
issued Tuesday.

,,

FoolbaU

Portsmouth at GalliaAcademy, 7:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wayne, 7:30p.m.
Green at South Gallia , 7:30 p.m.
Wahama at Clay County, 7:30 p.m.

Rock Hill at Ri11er Valley, 7:30 p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 7:30 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 7:30 p.m.
Wirt County at Hannan, 7:30p.m.

Volley bell

OVCS

at Cross Lanes,

5 p.m.

INSIDE

Redwomen volleyball
sweeps Central State

•

• Go~ legend Byron
Nelson dead at age 94.
See Page 82

SPORTS BRIEFS

Rio to hold
'Midnight
Madness'
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RIO GRANDE - Rio
Grande
basketball's
"Midnight Madness" will
be held this Sunday, when
fans will have the opportunity lo meet the men's and
women 's teams, as well as
see coach Ken French's
new-look Redmen in action.
Festivities will begin
around I I p.m. Sunday in
the Newt Oliver Arena. A
shoot-out between students
· and administration will proceed the "meet the teams."
MIAMI (AP) - The
The women's team will
Cincinnati
Reds are still
be introduced at II :55 p.m.
Sunday, followed by the playing meaningful gaines
men's team at midnight. thanks to their three-game
French will address the winning streak and the St.
crowd , then warm-ups will Louis Cardinals' swoon.
David Ross hit two home
begin around 12:10 a.m.
runs
into the upper deck and
Members of the 2006-07
the
Reds stayed within
Redmen will compete in a
striking
distance in the NL
3-point shooting contest,
.
Central
with
a 5-3 victory
dunk contest and will also
face off in a 10-minute over the Flori&lt;la Marlins on
Tuesday night.
intrasquad scrimmage.
Third-place Cincinnati is
2 1/2 games behind division-leading St. Louis,
which has lost seven
CoNTAcrUs
straight. The Cardinals, who
lost 7-5 to San Diego on
OVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.- 1 a.m.)
Tuesday. are I 1/2 games in
front of Houston, which
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
beat Pittsburgh 7-4 for its
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
seventh straight win.
E-mail- sports@mydailysentinel.com
"We're riRht in the thick
SPOiti_Slo"
of the race, Ross said. "A
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor lot of people counted us out
(7401 446-2342, ext 33
when we had our lull, but
bsherman@ mydailyt ribune .com
we still have high expectations.
This has been fun, and
Larry Crum, Sports Writer

Reds
still alive

9mllot

Now""'""" -0.. piOiln"' lttllunbtltllbll

-C*plurodlnlho-lplj'• , " ' - - ~
k - 01 pr1tllod on • ""'~~'" mouoo pod.

v1111 www.mydllfyllntlnel.coni llld •

hi ~~~ua buaon.

For Purchase,
Refinance or Construction
www.fbK.com
•Pomeroy 992-2136

'Tupper$ Plains 985-3385
"GallipoliS 446-BANK

'Mason 773.0400
•rointPieasant 6 74-8200

'r~v~ :~ A.r-r 1.,M "':l'l.t&gt;•··!ilgt' ;;' .'llt~ &lt;tnd ;~ LU~~-· O ;;m

for-12 serving.
The Red women · notched
13 serve aces on-the night.
Sophomore middle hitter
RIO GRANDE - The
Larry 6oom/1ohatn
Universit~ of Rio Grande Stephanie Lapp produced
Eastern's Erin Weber .blocks· the spike of Meigs' Amber Burton during a high school volley-· volleyball team moved over seven kills on the night and
ball match in Tuppers Plains Tuesday. Eastern won the contest in three games to remain the .500 mark for the first freshman La•yc Mosack taltime this season with a lied five kills .
unbeaten on the season.
straight set victory over visit Rio Grande. head coach
ing Central State, 30-7,30-6 Patsy Fields was pleased to
and 30- I 2 on Tuesday see the production from her
evening at the Newt Oliver substitutes. "We got to play
Arena.
some kids that don't get on
Rio Grande ( 12-11) was th e tloor very pften for us ,
able to rest some of its' walk- but work hard in prJctice,"
ing wounded and still get Fields saic\. ''I was real
solid play from the rest of the . pleased with Jennilyn, I
roster.Senior outside hitter thought she did a great job at
BY BRAD SHERMAN
regular seaEastern's Erin Weber was Lindsay Urton paced the Rio libero for us and she had
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
son,
and unstoppable al the net, as the offense with 13 kills and four some good serves.
Eastern has senior amassed 20 kills and aces. She was on the verge of 'Rio is on a bit of a roll,
ROCK
SPRINGS
already 11
blocks.
Darcy double figures in digs with having now wuil three of its '
Eastern High School's volleybeaten five Winebrenner had 10 kills nine. Sophomore outside hit- last four matches and seven
ball team continued its march
those while Katie Hayman added ter Jessica Rodgers added II out of the last 10 . Rio
'of
toward a perfect regular seaopponents seven kills and five blocks at kills and paced the Rio . sweeps the season series with
son with another straight
once
this the net. Jillian Brannon and defense with 20 digs.
Central State. having previgames victory - this time
year.
· Brittany Bissell chipped in
Sophomore setter Randi ously beaten the Lady
over county rival Meigs on
Eastern four kills each, Kelsey Holter Rodgers had a good overall Maruaders. September 14 at
Tuesday.
still hasn't two and Me~an Broderick game with 25 assists, six Central State.
The Lady Eagles, who are Winebrenner dropped a one.
kills. 14 digs, three aces and · The Lady . Maruaders fell
ranked ninth in the state in
game in any
Amber Burton led the Lady went J6:for- 16 serving . to0- 12ontheseason.
Division IV, won by scores of match thus far this season.
Marauders with II kills fol - Freshman Jennilyn !'vlhrtin
Next up for Rio Grande. a
25-20, 25-23 and 25-16 to run
Meigs' second loss of the lowed by Catie Wolfe with six stepped into the Iibera spot road trip lo Montgomery ,
their record to 16-0 overall. season to Eastern dropped its·
and perfom1ed well with 17 W.Va .. to face WVU-Tech 6
Please see Eastern, Bl
Only six games remain in the record to 6-4 overalL
digs and three aces on 12- p.m. on Thursday evening.
BY MARK WiLLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE TRIBUNE

&lt;

ACI- 28.22
Kroger - 23.09
AEP-36.72
. Ltd. - 27;82
Akzo- 60.25
NSC- 43.14
Ashland - 64.05
Oak Hill Financial BIG -19.93
24.75
Bob Evans - 30.30
OVB- 25.15
BorgWarner - 56.80
BBT 7" 44.21
CENX- 31.81
Peoples - 29.69
Champion - 7.30
Pepsico - 65.43
Charming Shops Premier - 14.89
14.81
Rockwell - 56.39
City Holding - 39.57
Rocky Boots - 11.48
Col- 54.54
Sears - 160.18
DG -13.98
Wai·Mart - 49.25
DuPont- 43.21
Wendy's - '6 4.26
Federal Mogul - .40
Worthington - 18.92
USB -33.27
Dally stock reports are
Gannett - 56.80
the 4 p.m. closing
General Electric -35.44 quotes of the previous
GKNLY ~ 5.35
day's transactions, proHarley Davidson vided by Smith Financial
64.58
Advisors of Hilliard
JPM -46.90
Lyons In Gaiilpolls.

Home Town Lo;1n'
* Lower Closing Co:ns\
* Faster Closing nme
* More Flexabllity
Less Red Tape

; ().&gt;000 ~10 k~.~'l c11 r P '' 1¥ •'1'k'' r,,W, u.;rq::w:t~(J ,Jn

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V,liU('~ .~r'll:'l i '

Friday'• qamea

Local Stocks

Workers' ·Compensation
referendum falls short on signatures
COLUMBUS (AP) - A Ken Blackwell 's office to
· referendum seeking to the Committee to Protect
reform Ohio's workers ' Injure~ Workers, Widows
compensation
program and Ot'phans.
failed to reach the required
The committee wants to
number of signatures to repeal changes in the Bureau
appear on the Nov. 7 ballot, of Workers' Compensation
the secretary of state's lhat it claimed eliminated
office said Thesday.
.&gt;orne · benefits and made it
Backers of the reform more difficult for workers to
measure failed to submit qualify for others, said Don
enough valid signatures on McTigue, the group's lawyer.
their first attempt and were
The agency's $215 million
issued a letter in August loss in a hedge fund and $50
giving them I 0 days to turn million investment . in rare
in more, according to a let- · coins with now-convicted
ter from Secretary of State GOP fundrai ser Tom Noe

Girl• SOccer
Pl. Pleasant at Charleston Gattl ., 5:30p.m.
College Volleyball
Rio Grande at WVU Tech, 6 p.m.

:::::

Weather Und&amp;rgroond • AP

AP Photo

Anna Miller displays .some of her decorated gourds at her farm near' North Baltimore. Miller and her Quarry Farm Gourds
growing partner, Dick Bostdorff of Bowling Green, sold pure or "true to type" seeds in 47 different varieties this year. They
also sell plants and mature gourds themselves.

* "·"
Snow

~
•

~
~

good floor
game. 7- 11
'"&lt;"A,
serving .
~
'
an
d 10-11
.-~
spiking .
Amber
Hill
was 4~. . . .;.
·'- ·.;;rt
5
se~ving,
"ii'-~
2-4 passing
with a kill;
Rashell
Wolfe-Riffle Boso was
7-13 passing,
6-8
serving,
and
5-6
spiking
wita
a
block; and
Chelsea
Pape was
10-17 passing , and 23 serving.
Cundiff
Kaylyn
Spradling was 9-14 passing,
Adelle Rice 2-4 passmg, and
Kasey Turley wa~ 4-5 spikmg.
Vinton County was led by
Casey Puckett with thirteen,
Megan Zeigler had ten.

I ·

I

(740) 446-2342, ext 33
lcrum@myd~ily regis ter. com

THING HAPPENS
WHEN YOU DON'T
ADVERTISE
NO ONE
NOTICES

YOU
ANYMORE

The Daily Sen.t:in.el
('740) 992-21 5 6

Please see Reds, XX
'

.

�Wednesday, September 27,2006
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

ASSOCIATED PRESS

IRVING, Texas- Byron
Nelson's graceful swmg and
gentle manner earned htm
the mckname "Lord Byron,"
a tnbute to the courtly
Texan whose kmd, carmg
style wtth fans and competitors made htm one ot the
n)ost well-hked figures m
sports
But what wtll forever set
Nelson apart ts a smgle
record, one that no golfer
has ever approached hts ll
stratght tournament vtctor(es m 1945, the greatest
year m the ht story of golf
Nelson dted Tuesday at
94, the end of a hfe spanntng eras from htckory
shafts and meager prtze
money to tttamum heads
and multtmtlhonatres The
T&lt;trrant County Medtcal
Exammer's Off1ce sa1d he
dted of natural causes
Hts wtfe, Peggy Nelson,
told famtly fnend Angela
Ennght that her husband
appeared~ fme as she left
thet r Roanoke home for
B1ble study Tuesday mornmg
"!' m so proud of you," he
told her, somethmg he often
sa1d about her church
mvolvement, Ennght satd
When she returned, Peggy
Nelson found her husband
on the back porch, whtch
faces the woodworkmg shop
where he spent much of hts
free ttme
Arnold Palmer called
Nelson "one of the greatest
players who ever hved "
"!don't thmk that anyone
wtll ever exceed the thmgs
that Byron d1d by wmnmg
I 1 tournaments m a row tn
one year." Palmer satd m a
statement

The closest any player has
come to Nelson's streak IS
stl!, f1rst by Ben Hogan 111
1948 When Ttger Woods
reached that number tn
1999-2000. Nelson was typtca lly grac1ous when puttmg
h1s own mark onto perspective
"A nyttme you make a
record stand for 55 }ears,
why, you ' ve done pretty
good,"
he told The
Assoctated Press
Last month, when Woods
current streak of PGA tour
wtns reached ftve and
countmg, he d1dn't sound
conftdent that Nelson's teat
would fall anytime soon,
companng 11 to Joe
DtMagg1o's elustve 56game hmmg streak
"In thts day and age, wtth
th1s competttton, to won II
on a row would be almost
unheard of" Woods sa1d
"What Byron accomplished,
that goes down as one of the
great years 111 the htstory of
our sport
D1Magg10's
record, l see that bemg broken more than wmmng II m
a row '

Nel son won 18 tournaments m 1945. also a record
for a calendar year He captured 31 of 54 tournaments
m 1944-45 , and won a tot,ll
of 52 events, mcludmg ftve
maJors the Masters m 1937
and '42, the US Open m
1939 and
the PGA
Champtonshtp 111 1940 and
'45
Then , at age 34, he retired
after the 1946 season to
spend more ttme on h1s
Texas ranch
"When l was playmg regularly, l had a goal ," Nelson
recalled years later "! could
see the pnze money gomg
tnto the ranch, buytng a
tractor, or a cow It gave me

Btssell three, Wmebrenner
two and Amanda Eason one
Btssell had 44 asststs for
fromPageBl
ktlls Metgs' Barr handed
out 16
Both teams return to play
and three each by Leslte
m
thetr respectt ve TnPreece and Amy Barr Barr
Valley
Conference dtvt swns
also had three blocks, as dtd
Preece, wh1le Burton chtpped on Thursday Eastern entertams county nval Southern
m two
Holter scored II pomts for whtle Me1gs plays host te
the Lad) Eagles followed by another state ranked team
Hayman and Brannon wtth Thursday when Alexander
10 aptece Weber had five, VIS IIS

Eastern

Lnc enttve ''

Nelson's long, flutd sw mg
" cons1dered the model of
the modern way to stnke a
golf ball In 1968, he was
the ltrst player to have a
PG A Tour event named for
htm, an honor that remams
h1s alone
"We have lost a gtant m
the game
someone who
elevated the game m every
way as a player, an ambassador and a gentleman."
sa1d Ben Crenshaw, a twotune Masters champton and
w111ner o! Nelson's tournament 111 1983 "Whoever
came up wtth ' Lord Byron,'
they got 11 exactly nght"
Nelson was an active host
for h.- event, recrmttng
players through genume
fnendshtps wtth them and
the1r admuatwn for htm
That connecuon helped
make hts event a popular
stop and the No. l fundratser fot chanty on the PGA
Tour- more than $94 mtlhon smce the tournament's
mceptton, mcludmg $6 3
mtlhon thts year The U S
House recently voted to
award
Nelson
a
CongressiOnal Gold Medal
for phtlanthropy, the legtslatton , Congress' htghest
award, ts pend111g m the
Senate
"Our players, young and
old, looked to Byron as the
consummate role model of
our sport," PGA Tour commiSSioner Ttm Fmchem
satd "Hts legacy spans
across ht s htstonc perfor
mances, the gentle and dtgnlfted way he camed htmself and ht~ tremendous contnbuttons to golf and SOCJ·
ety"
Nelson held the PGA Tour
records for most consecuttve made cuts (113) and for

Tornadoes
from PageBl
Jesstca Harkms nme.
Alltson Graves had seven
and Kara Reed seven
In the first game Southern
took a 1-0 lead, and battled
tough through a 7-5 tally
and .Casey Puckett's first
serve Puckett scored se~en
stratght pomts and Vmton

JOb dunng the Great
Depresston but found work
111 1931 w1th a bankers'
magazme
The same year, he entered
hts ftrst tournament, the
Nattonal
Amateur
111
Chtcago, where he mtssed
quahfy111g by one stroke
W1 th JObs hard to fmd, he
turned professwnal 111 1932
Nelson was excused from
mthtary servtce dunng
World War II because he
was a hemophthac With
many foes m the servtce, he
faced weakened ftelds sttll, hts accomphshments m
the war years were astounding
In 1944, he won 13 of the
23 tournaments he played
But 11 was the followmg
year that wtll forever h ve as
one of the greatest m golf
htstory Bes1des hts 18 wms
and streak of 11, he also fintshed second seven umes,
was never out of the top I 0
and at one pomt played 19
consecuttve rounds under
70
"The Streak" ts honored
m a senes of dtsplays at the
course where h1s tournament ts held It mcludes th1s
quote from Nelson "The
streak was somethmg 1
never thought could happen.
I look back on it now and tf
I dtdn 't see so many facts
and figures, I'd almost think
tt was a good, long dream "
The course already boasts
a larger-than-life statue of
Nelson, by 1\Jesday mght,
several flowers had been
placed at !Is feet
Nelson was voted AP
Male Athlete of the Year m
1944 and 1945 He was
elected to the PGA Hall of
Fame m 1953 and to the
World Golf Hall of Fame m
1974 He's now stxth on the

all-lime wm ltst, behmd
Snead, Jack N1cklau s,
Hogan Palmer and Woods
Although Nelson conlln
ued to play m an occas1onal
tournament after 1946, he
retreated to h1s 673-acre
ranch m Roanoke, Texas,
and never returned to compettttve golf full time He
spent ume on the course m
the 1960s as one of golf's
early TV announcers
Nelson developed a wtdely tmttated ''Texas style''
swmg th at was upnght and
compact, unhke some of the
unw1eldy swmgs of early
players
"The mechamcs of my
sw mg were such that tt
reqmred no thought,"
Nelson satd "It's hke eatmg You don't thmk to feed
yourself If you have to
thmk about your swmg 1t
takes that much away from
your sconng concentratiOn "
Nelson 's form was so perfect, so conststent, that the
U S Golf Assoctatlon mcknamed the machme 11 uses
to test clubs and balls the
"Iron Byron "
"! once watched htm htt
20 dnvers off a fatrway m
pracuce, and the traJectory
never vaned," recalled Bob
Toskt, who toured wtth
Nelson and became a
famous teacher
"And he could htt a 1-tron
or a 2-Hon that camed over
200 yards no more than 15
feet m the atr," Toskt sa1d
"I've never seen anybody
else h1t the ball qmte the
way he d1d"
Funeral
arrangements
were pendmg, w1th an
announcement
expected
Wednesday. Bestdes h1s
wtfe, Nelson ts survtved by
hts brother Charles Nelson
and sister Ellen Scherman

County took control en mght and good net play
route to a 25-15 wm Vmton from Whllney Rtffle and
County took an early lead m Sarah Eddy, Southern took
the second contest, whtch an early 8-3 lead m the thtrd
was htghlighted by several contest and raced to the 25good volleys The vtsllors l 5 wm Cundtff had seven
led Southern 11-7, and pomts m the wm and Rtffle
edged to a 14-10 tally five
In the finale, Southern
before Ze1gler broke the
game open at 20-11. The tned to battle mto a fifth
Lady Vtkes then breezed to game, but after bemg tted at
the 25-1 5 w111
9-9, Vmton County took a
Fueled by a good 12-11 lead and used a good
Stephame Cundtff servmg front hoe game to post the

25-16 wm
In the reserve game,
Southern pulled off a btg
three-set wm 15-17, 21 15,
25 8 Breanna Taylor had
12 pomts, Katte Woods had
etght, Lmdsay Teaford had
etght, Samantha Patterson
had seven, and Ashley
Walker had f1ve Vmton
County was led by K
Marshall wuh seven
Southern goes to Eastern
Thursday

smgle-season sconng average (68 33) unul both were
broken by Woods
Nelson's mark on the
Masters was honored m
1958 when the path that
takes golfers over Rae's
Creek to the 13th tee was
nanied Nelson Bnd~e, commemoratmg hiS final-day
charge over the 12th and
! 3th holes that sent htm to
vtctory 111 1937 He later
was the annual honorary
starter, along wtth Gene
Sarazen and Sam Snead
Nelson made hts final ceremomal shot 111 200 I
"Today we have lost a
truly wonderful gentleman,"
satd Btlly Payne , chatrman
of Augusta National Golf
Club and the Masters
"Byron has meant so much
to so many people, and has
been an 111tegral and tmportant part of thts tournament
smce he first played here 111
1935 "
John Byron Nelson was
born Feb. 4, 1912, on the
famtly farm m Waxahachte,
Texas, and started in golf m
1922 as a cadd1e at Glen
Garden Country Club 111
Fort Worth. One year, he
won the cadd1es' champtonshtp, defeat111g Hogan m
a playoff
It was the beg111nmg of a
nvalr~ that never really
matenalized Though they
were born stx months apart,
Nelson won all five of hts
maJOr champtOnshtps before
he was 34 and Hogan won
all mne of hts after he was
34
.
After graduat111g from
htgh school, Nelson got a
JOb as a ftle clerk 111 the
accounting offtce of the
Forth Worth and Denver
Ratlroad and played golf 10
hts spare ume. He lost hts

Public Notice

Public Notice

deg. East, II 0 feet to highways, easements,
the West end of a stone right of ways, zoning

seams are
Case Number 06cv054
Wilmington Savings
Fund Soc
Plaintiff
vs
Timothy
&amp; Pamela
Bentz
Defendants

State ot Ohio
school land
leeseo Reference Is made
to vol 163, at page 436
of the deed records ot
Meigs County Ohio
The real estate above
described Is subject to
Court of common all leases, easements
Pleas,
and rights of way of
Me1gs County. Ohio
record
In pursuance of an Parcel Number· 19-

order of sale to me 00091
directed from sa1d
court In the above anti·
tied action, I w111
expose to sale at pub·
lie auction on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Court House
on Fnday, Oct 20, 2006
at 10 00 am, of sold
day, the followmg
described real estate
EXHIBIT 'A'
Legal Desc11pl10n
Situated In Sect1on
#1 6, Town #2, and
Range #12 In Sutton
Township of Meigs
County, Ohio and
beginning on the West
line of the road which
rune p.arallel to the
South line of original
Lot #5 at a po1nl a distance of 22 feet, more
or less, East of the
Southeast corner of
A C Coopers Lot or
what used to be the

Commonly known as

111 Cross St, Racine,
Ohio 45n1

Current

Owner

T1mothy &amp; Pamela
Bentz
Property at 11 1 Cross
Street
Racine, Ohio 45n1
PP# 19-00091
Prior Deed References
Volume 18, page 317
Appraised
at
$17,000 00 Terms of
Sale Cannot be sold
for less than 213rds of
the appraised value
10% down on day ot
sate, cash or certified

check, balance due on
confirmation of sale
The apptalsal did not

include an
examination

house

Interior
of the

described Real Estate.
The
following
described real estate
situated
In Salem
Township,
Meigs
County In the State of
Ohio,
Section
2,
Township 8, Range 15
of the Ohio Company
Purchase and being a
new parcel created out
of the Herbert L
Wellman
property
(Meigs County Official
Records Vol 78 Pg
381) bounded and
desc11bed as follows.
Commencmg at the
Intersection of the
West hoe of Salem
Township Section 2
and the centerline of
Ohio State Route 124,
Thence along the cen-terline of Ohio Stale
Route 124 the follow
lng ftve calls 1) South
85 degrees 50 minutes
55 seconds East a distance of 118 77 feel to
8 point, 2) South 88
degrees 50 mmutes 55
seconds East 8 distance of 118 n feet to
a point, 3) North 89
degrses 01 minutes 40
seconds East a distance of 134 36 feet to
a point, 4) North 87
degrees 02 minutes 34

Robert E
Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney tor the plain- seconds East a dissame, thence Wast on tiffs
tance of 281.84 feet to
the line parallel to the Johnathan
Matson, a point, 5) North 82
East line of Cooper's Attn
degrees 35 minutes 49
Lot e distance of 41 3 Mason, Schilling
aaconds East a disfeet, more or less, to Mason
lance of 27 20 feet to a
the Weal line of the 11340 Montomery Rd , point, sold point being
Section, thence North Sullo 210
the !rue point of beginon aald Westline a dis- Cincinnati, Ohio 45249 ning tor tho parcel of
tance of 400 feet, more 51 3-48fHJ829
real aatate herein
or leas, to the south· (9) 13, 20, 27
described
wool corner of what It
Thence leaving tho
or waa William Burri, - - - - - - - - centerline of State
thence on the line parPublic Notice
Route 124 along a line
ollol to the Wool lint - - - - - - - created by thto ourvoy
tlol'llotld, to tho Woal Shlflff Saito
North 05 dogrooo 28
line oltho above men- Coot Numblr 05CV095 mlnut•a 45 aecanda
tioned road ot tho Burri Horbert Wollman
Eut a dlttanco ot
or what uoad to bo Plolntlff
1170 34 IHI to en Iron
Burrl'o oouthooot cor- VS
pin oot by lhla eurvoy
ner, thence wool on tho Shawn Etrlo
ooalng an Iron pin all
wool line of tho oald Dofondenta
or roloronco by thla
rOid IO tho PIICI of Court of Common lUrvey II 30 77 fill,
btglnntng Tho oforo- Plooa, Molga County, Thence along a line
llld doocrlbod real Ohio
Cllllld by lhil eurvoy
olttll being located In pureuance or an South 79 dogrHo 30
within tho boundarloa ordor of oato to me mlnutet 58 eecondo
of tho lncorporolod directed from oatd E1at 1 dletance of
Village of
Raclno, court In tho above ontl- 197 61 feet to en Iron
Molgo County, Ohio tlod action, I will pin tot by thlt aurvoy,
txpOII to 1111 II pub- Thence along 1 line
Parcel' 19-00091
All of tho oil, goo ond lic auction on tho Front craotad by thlo ourvoy
other mlnerala are Stopa of tho Molga South 05 dtgrtoa 28
rooorvld to tho Seto of County Court Houoo minute• 45 1econd1
Ohio under tho provl- on Friday, Oct 20, 2006 Wttt a dletance of
olono of tho tow gov- at 10 A.M , of llid dey, 684 88 fall to an Iron

a

f.

created by
survey
South 30 degrees 00
minutes 00 seconds
East a distance of
164 441eet to a point In
the centerline of Ohto
Stale Route 124, pass1ng an Iron pin set for
reference by this survey at13665feet,
Thence along the ceoterhne of State Route
124 the following five
calls 1) South 59
degrees 40 minutes 02
seconds West a dislance ot 13 76 feel to a
point, 2) South 61
degrees 40 minutes 30
seconds West a doslance of 85 72 feet to a
point, 3) South 67
degrees 29 minutes 57
seconds West a dtslance ot 82 05 feet to a
point , 4) South 75
degrees 34 minutes 39
seconds West a dislance of 68 67 feet to a
point, 5) South 82
degrees 35 minutes 49
seconds West a distance of 74 81 teet to
the point of beginning
containing
5 3357
acres more or less
SubJect to all legal
easements The above
description waa made
In accordance with an
actual survey conducted under the supervlslon of Eugene Triplett,
S-6766
conducted
March 16 and 17, 1999
Bearings are aoaumed
and are used to
axpreaa angular mauuremento
only
Audltora Parcel • 13·
00623 002
Current owner· Shown
Earle Property at 31150
SR 124 Longovlllo,
Ohio PPt 13·00623.002
Prior Dood Roforoncoo
Volume 128, Pego 533
Appreleed at ta,OOO 00
Terma of S.lt Cannot
be told for 1111 then
213rdo oftho Apprelood
value 10% down on
dey of 1111, ceoh or
certified chock, btl·
anco duo on conllrmolion of 1111 The
appraloal did Include
an lnterloroxamlnatlon
of tho houao Robert E
Beegle, Melga County
Sheriff Attorney for
the plaintiff Crow &amp;
Crow 110 W Second,
Pomeroy. Ohio 740992-6059

Public Notice
SHERIFF SALES
CASE
NUMBER
06CV042
Bank of New York
Plaintiff
vs
MatthewThalssatal
Defendants
Court

of

Common

Pleas, Meigs County,
Oh1o
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
Court In the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at
Public Auction on the
front steps of the
Meigs County Court
House
on
Friday,
October 20, 2006 at
10 00 am, of said day,
lhe
following
described real estate
The following real
estate situated In the
Couhty of Meigs, In the
State ot Ohio, and In
the VIllage of Pomeroy
Situated In Fraction 25,
Section 20, Town 2,
Range 13 of the Ohio
company s purchase
Beginning at a lance
post on the wast side
of Sugar Run Road,
near the tool of the
Beech Grove Cemetery
Hill, corner to A
Leifheit and tho Old
Brlckyerd Lot thonco
N. 46 deg W. along the
west aide of the road,
105 5 feet to en Iron
pin, thence S 62 1/2
dog
343 !set to an
Iron pin In the II no of
tho Brldkytrd Lot and
the Looloy land, thonco
S 36 1/4 dtg E. tlong
tho
Laoley
and
Brickyard Lot llno,
101.3 teet to len co
poat, corner of tho
Brickyard
and
A.
L.elfholl't toto, thonco
N 82 1/2 dtg E. 380
tut to tho place of
beginning, being 1 lllp
ot land 100 fHI wldo
off tho eoutheutorly
aide ot the Brlckyerd
Lot, containing a trifle
over 8/10 of en ecro,
aavlng and excepting
the coal end mlnerolo
lhoroln and tho right to
mine the 11me whhout
encumbrance to tho
aurlact and right cf
way along any mineral

w.

Except the west and
heretofore sold to
George L.elfhlet, Jr. and
Anna K Lellhlet, by
dead dated February
19, 1906, and recorded
In Volume 94, Page
533 Record of Deeds
of
Meigs County, Ohio, to
which reference IS
hereby made
Except also an aasemont and right of way
12 feet In width across
the north side of sa1d
8/1 0 acre lot, whtch
right of way was
heretofore sold and
conveyed to George
Leifheit, Jr and Anno
K Leifheit, which sa1d
way must be at all
times kept closed by
gates and the expense
of maintaining sa1d
gates to be born equally by the sa1d Lellhe1ts,
their
heirs
and
assigns,
and
the
grantees here1n, the11
heirs and ass1gns
Excepting and reservlog unto the grantor,
Myrtle Sisson, an
estate for pnd dunng
har natural lifetime
Thla estate a hall be
personal unto tho
grantor and shall not
be assignable, trans~
Iarabie nor encumbered during tho llfetime of the grantor.
Furthermore,
this
ottate ahall not be convaried Into cash nor
any other oooet
Parcel No. 16·01571·
000
Commonly known 11
290 M~lberry Avenue,
Pomlfoy, Ohio 45769
Apprelaed
at
$41,000 00
Torme of 1111. Ctnnot
be oold lor loll lhtn
213rdt olthe epprateld
value. 10% down on
day of aeta, caah or
certlflad chock, btl·
anco due on confirm•·
lion of 1111
Tho epprelaal did not
Include on Interior
oxomlnellon ol tho
hou11
Robart E
Boogie,
Melga County Shtrllt
Allornoy
tor
tho
Plalntlll
Michael Wlory All
John D. Clunk
5601 Hudaon Drive
Suite 400
Hudoon, OH 44236

The Daily Sentinel · Page 83

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

mrihune - Sentinel - 1\e

Golf legend and fan favorite Byron Nelson dead at age 94
BY JAIME ARON

www.mydailysentinel.com

Public Notice
IN THE COURT OF
COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
JP Morgan Chase Bank
as Trustea lor Equity
One
ASS,
Inc.,
Mortgage
PassCertificate
Through
Series
2004·5
Autgnee of Mortgage
Electronic Registration
Systems,
Inc
as
Nominee for Popular
Financial
Services,
LLC
Plaintiff
vs
Edith Barnhouse, et at
Defendants
Cese No 06CVIOO
Unknown
Heirs,
Devisees, Legatees,
Administrators,
Executors, Creditors
and Assigns of Edith
Barnhouse, deceased
whose last known
address Is unknown , Is
hereby notified that
JPMorgan Chase Bank
as Trustee flied a
Complaint
for
Foreclosure and Other
Equitable Relief on
July 14, 2006, Case No
06CV1 00, on the proparty deecrlbed aa follows
Parcel No. 1
Situated In the Village
of Pomeroy, County of
Melga and Stall ot
Ohio And known aa
being Loll No 151 end
180 oa ohown on Plat
of Horton end Dabneya
Addition to Pomeroy
The 1111 11111e lnclud·
ld the land on which
the gerege lor tho roaldtnct II IOCIItd
16-00072 000
18·00073.000
Parcel No 2·
81tuatld In the Village
of Pomeroy, County ot
Metga end Stele ot
Ohio·
And known 11 being
Loll Number 157 end
158tt ehown on the
Pitt of Horton and
Dtbneya Addition to
Pomeroy Beginning 11
tho Southwell corner
of Lot No. 1118 tbovo,
Thence South 4·112
dog. Eut, 22 IHI to 1
etaka on the South
olda of a etono wall;
Thonco NortK 60-314

wall on the South side
of Lot Number 161,
Thence North 4-1/2
deg
West to the
Southeast corner of
Lot Number 160,
Thence North 89 deg
West along the South
line of said Lot 160 and
along the South tine of
said Lot 159 to the
place of beglnmng
16-00076 000
16-ooon
Parcel No 3
Situated In the VIllage
of Pomlfoy, County of
Meigs and State of
Ohio,
Beginning
al
the
Northwest corner of
Lot
Number
158,
Thence South n deg
West, 55 112 feet,
Thence 44 t 12 deg
West, 78 leal, Thence
South 46 1/2 dog West.
40 1/2 feet, Thenca
South 1/2 deg West,
207 feet , Thence North
76 1/2 deg East, 302
feet, Thence North 2
1/4 deg West 163 feet
to the satd Seyfried s
Southeast
corner,
Thence along said
Seyfried's South line,
South 80 314 deg. West,
feet
to
the
f 10
Southeast corner of
Mrs Thomas Lowden's
Lot, Thence South 77
dog West, 40 feet,
Thence along sold
Lowden's West line,
North 1/2 deg Watt, 96
feet to the place of
beginning,
ALSO a permanent
right-of-way 16 feet
Wide ICrota Lot 162
from the premise•
herein convtyld, (ttld
right being mentioned
tn deed to Louie
Seyfried from Kenneth
Seyfried end Mergertt
Styfrlad, 11 al, Iormor
grantort, to which reftrance
It
hereby
me do)
ALSO tha following
dotcrlbod rotleatate·
Excepting 111 of Loll
158 end 180 It It the
Intention ot lht Iormor
Ortnleea to convey ell
of the 1111 property
by
Borlht
owned
Styfrlld at the lime ol
hlf docould with tho
exception ol 1 portion
conveyad to Edith
Thomu and with the
exception of Lola 158
end 160, which have
been convoyed by
dsad of even dele
hlfewlth
Subject to all legel

ooo

ordinances,

restric~

tiona and conditions of
record
16-00074 000
16-00075 000
9 Liberty Lane
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PARCEL NUMBER 1600072 000,
16·
00073 00,
1600074 000,
1600075 000,
1600076 000,
&amp;
16-

ooonoo

Property Address 9
Liberty Lane, Pomeroy,
OH 45769
Also known as 9
Liberty Lane, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, and that
there remains due and
owing $59,241 62 with
Interest at 7 75 percent
per
annum
from
February 1, 2006, and
costs that lha defendants named In the
Complaint may have
an Interest In said
property,
therefore,
Plaintiff demands that
It be found to have a
good valid and subsisting lien an said
premise&amp;,
for
the
amount owing, that the
Defendants equity of
redemption be loreclosed; that all the parIlea be required to
answer as to their
Interest In said premia•• or be forever barred
from Ollerttng any
Interest therein , that all
liens on said promisee
be morahalod and their
priorities determined,
lhal oold premloes ba
told as upon execution
and the proceeds of
oald solo be applied
ICcordlng to law, and
for ouch other relit! 11
ltluattqullabla.
Dolendent 111111 herolntbova mentioned ta
further notlllod that
lhay art raqulrod to
enawor ttld complelnt
on or bolore 21th Dey
of November, 2008,
which lncludea twentylight (21) deya !rom
lha 1111 date of publl·
cellon , or Judgment
may be rtnderod 11
damended therein.
Frank &amp; Wooldridge
Co LPA
Attarneyt tor Plelntlff
100 South Petri BlrHI
Calumbut, Ohio 43208
814-221·1182
(0) 27, (10) 4, 11. 18, 25,

(11) I

'

CLASSIFIED
Gallia
County,
OH

E-mail
classtfted@ mydatlytnbune com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PL
V

mrihune

TO Place

Oearltiru-

Wp[d Ad1

•POLICIES•
OhloVallay
Publishing reoarves
lherlghtto edll,
reject or eancel any
ad at any time
) Errors Must B
eported on the firs
ay of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
eglalor will
b
eaponalble for n
ore than the coat o
he space occuple
the error and onl
he Hrst Insertion W
hall not be liable fo
ny loss or expans
hal reaulla from th
ublieatlon or omit
ion of an advertls
ant Corrections wn
made In the firs

vallabte edlllon

Box number ads ar
lways confidential
Current rate car
pplle&amp;
All Real Estat
dvertlsements ar
ubjecl to the Federe
air Housing ACI o

\'\'\ot

r
~

r:::::::::=~

1

r

Thursday for Sundays Pa1••~

POLICIES Ohio Velley Publlahlng reNrves the right to edit reject or cancel any ad at any time Error s must De reported on the first dll)' of
Trlbune-S.nttnel Aegl1ter will be reaponelble for no more than the co1t of tho apace occupttd by the error end only the flrat lnaenlon We
ar~y 1011 or eltpenu that reaull1 from the publication or omission olan adverUnment CorrKllon will be made In the llr1t available edition
are alwayl confidential
Cur.-.nt rate card appllll
All real Illata advertiMmefltl are subject to the Federal Fair Houatng Act of 1968
acceptl only help wanted Ida meeting EOE etandardl WI will not knowingly acc.pt any advertlllng tn ~tlolatlon or thellw

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

I

~~~~llooners

"---------'
Fo.und m Cheshire small
201b male dog Posstble
Pomeraman brown/black
w1th some tan (740)367

r•o

kttncarlyle@:comcast net

YWJSALE-

r-------,.1
~~~D

Sunday Display 1 :dO

• All ads must be prepaid"

C ~€;i'o1 1 I i~OV4f1-r
'foil '?;1.\'t&gt; i'o 1!&gt;12.1 r.lr., A
'0\JC.~~'f of IL-11'1'6 NS
C:l'\\

I

i

p.m

For Sund•ys Paper

YARDSALE

1Dewayne FISher wII not be L,--GiiiiiAiiiiLLI;;;;,POiiLISiiili-,.1
respons ble lor Tabatha
F1sher debts from 9-9..06 on 1200 Orchard H1ll Ad Frt
ANNouNCEMENTS 29th Sat 30th 9 ? Name
brand clothtng old trunk
sw1ng toys lots of m1sc 2
m1tes down Ad 7 south
Adopt A happtly married watch 19r Signs
couple wants to gtve your
newborn wonderful opportu 3 family Thurs Fn &amp; Sat
n1t es tmcondtiiOnal love &amp; corner of SA 554 &amp; 850
secunly E11penses patd B•dwell Dryer stove hutch
Please call Barbara &amp; John other furniture baby doth
~@:;r1::;80;;:0;:9:;:4.:.;1:.67.:;8;:;0,__., tng crafts fence post many
other 1tems
GtvF.AWAY
L,
Garage Sale FriiSat Sam
5p m 5915 SA 790
Rescued 2 female black Clothing stove ralr gerator
long ha red kinens 6 weeks porcela n Dolls rns bu lbs
old to good home (304)882 prom dresses queen bed
3719
"
comforters Amish rugs a1r

r

Publication

Include Complete
Description • Include A Prlcl!! • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include PhoiHI Number And Addresli When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

\1 I'",,..,

~NAIS

Bu•lne5s Day• Prior To

In Next Day • Paper
5~:~::;~ In-Column 1:00

f1

\

(740)379

~ast

of the season f•ve famr
ly garage sale 9 5 on 28 29
and 30 of September
Located on corner of SR
554 and Watson Grove
Road Everythtng 1/2 off

&lt;1 Z7

www com1cs com

me

Moving sale 834 Georges 11:'11~0:-------,
Creek Ad Gall polls Ohto
HELP WAN'Il:D
Otshes furniture something - - - - - - - - - - '
- - - - - - - - for everybody._9/26 9128.
'
968
Found black ma le Lab
An E)(ce ant way to earn
Rockspnngs area call to 1014
YARD SAtE~
money The New Avon
This
newapape
cla1m
or
grvtng
away
to
good
PoM•-:ROYIMIIlOI
F:
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
ecepts only hel
home
------~antecl ads mHtin
Baby
gtrl
c othes ApplicatiOns are bemg
OE atandardo
Rocksprings Road between accepted for e~penenced
-Fo-u-nd-S-he-pl1-er_d_m_ox_la_rg_e Rehab Center &amp; l&lt;tngsbury Electnetans Apply at AB
~We will not knowing
Electncal Contractor Inc
male dog Morntngstar area ~~~~d Saturday September 3314 Moss man Avenue
ac~ any adver
Call to I D 740 949 1059
sement In vlolatlo
Pornt
Pleasant
wv
f lhalsw
Benefit &amp; Bake Sale Fnday (304)675 1537
9a m 2pm Bethel Worship -c::-:-:----::--Center 112 m11e north of AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
•
Eastern High School on Sell Shirley Spears 304
CLASSIFIED INDEX
Route 7
675 1429
4K4't For Sole
725
Garage Sale Friday Sept Cabinet shop In need of pro
Antlqueo
530
29
Three famtly 34 1 duc11on ltne assembley and
Apartmento for Rent
440
Ru!land Street Middleport cleaner two openings call
Auction and Flea Market
060
740 245 5992
Ra1n or shine
Auto Part1 &amp; Acce110rle1...
760

©

Immediate OpennlQS for part
t1ma 911 dispatchers at the
Mason County 911 Canter
Po nt
Pleasant
West
Virg ma Appllcat•ons may
be p1cked up at the 911
Canter behmd the I brary
S
u b m
1 1
upphcaiiOnslresumes to the
91 1 Center or PO Boll 38
Po•nt Peasant WV 25260
Posi!IOn
closes
30
September 2006
---.,-----Interested 1n hrnng ele;pen
anced limber cutter Call
(7411)68~ ·7318 after

•

no

710
750
...... 550
340
• 210
140
.. 790
780
01 o
• 190
.840
480
830
610
430
330
• 410
..... 1185
..... 590
580
450
850
040
050
640
11 0
81 0
31 0
510
410
020
130
660
630
060
350
170

540
860
420
320
220
740
570

005
560
820
230

160
360
150
650
120
460
520
720
715
870
730

090
620
180
470
.• • 072
074
076

9 30ih 8 00 5 00 Big
sates multl fami ll~s Ware
house
Road
Baum
Addi!IOf1 behind Skate A
Way look for balloon&amp;

Capitol Medical

• ATTENTION CNA o
Garage &amp; Deck Sale Aa•n or
$$NEW PAY RATES$
Shine Lewis Lane 1 mile out
Sandhill follow signa Thur·
Frl 8 ? cloth ng pressure EMj:lerlenced Agency CNAa
canner mlcrowa'w'e to.ols Apply In Person &amp; Receive
A Free Gas Cardl l
gold b!llls old cabinet old &amp;

Fmloc

%~u~

Call Today!II 800 576 6348

www capltolmedleal net
Absolute Top Dollar U S
Silver and Gold Cotns
Proofsets Gold Rings Pre
1935
US
Currency
Soltarre Diamonds M T S
Cotn Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446·
2842
Buying
G1nseng
September 1st for fresh
September 1Sth for dry
Calt
Woodlandw1se Bolan cals
740 274 0.326
Buy1ng Junk Cars Trucks &amp;
• Wrectl:s Pay Casll J D
Salvage
(304)773 5343
(304)674 1374
A1pe Pawpaws and Black
Walnuls(Octt to Nov tO)
and Grnseng Please call
ttrst 740-698 6060
--.,.-----Want to buy Jl nk Cars
(304)773 5004
--'--......,-.,---Want to buy new and old
runk cars/trucks/vans 740
41 61594 or740 41 61588
I \11'1 ( l\ \II'\ I
.., 1 In II I ..,

HELP WANn:n
100 WORKERS NEEOEO
Assemble crafts
wood terns
To $480Jwk
Matetlals provided
Free 1nlorma11on pkg 24Hr
801 428 4649

Oh10 Valley Home Hea th
Inc h1nng to ~ull Ttme AN
PT PTA Full T1me and Part
T me CNA STNA CHHA
PGA and Per Dtem PT PTA
OT ST Accept ng apphca
liOns for LPN s Compelrtlve
Wages and Benel1ts ncllld
rng health msurance and
m•leage Apply at 1480
Jackson P1ke Gallrpohs or
24t5 Jackson Avenue Porn!
Pleasant WV or phone toll
free 1 866 441 1393

Part ttme Apt cleaner (1x per
wanted
Call
(740)441 1341

Sal

r

~

2006 by NEA Inc

wee ~)

Announc~m;:ent:i·~··:~··i::::::::~:::::;;::~:~~:::::::030
Auto Repair
Autot for Sale
Booll a Motora for Salt
Building Suppllea
Bualnooo ond Bulldlngo
Bualneoo Opportunity
Bualnooo Training
Campoli &amp; Motor Homet ...
Camping Equipment
Cerda ol Thank a
Child/Elderly Cera
Electrlcoi/Relrlgeratlon.. •
Equipment lor Rent • .. •
Excevattng
Ftrm Equipment
Ftrmt for Ront
Ftrmt for Sola .
ForLtiH
For Solo
•
For Solo or Trade
Fruha &amp; VtgetabiOI
Fumlohad Rooma
Gone111l Hauling
Giveaway
Happy Ada
Hoy a Grain....
Help Wonted
Homo tmprovamento
Homeo for Sate
Household Goode
HouaeaforRent
In Memoriam
Insurance
Lawn &amp; Gordon Equipment
Livestock
Loot and Found
Lola a Acreage
Miscellaneous
Mlecellaneoue Merchandise
Mobile Homo Repair
Mobile Homos for Rant
Mobile Homos for Sale
Money to Loan
Motorcycloa &amp; 4 Wheelers
Musical Instruments. •
Personals
Poll for Sale
PlUmbing &amp; Hooting
Profuslonal Service•
Redlo, TV &amp; CB Repair
Real Eotate Wanted
Schoololnotructlon.
Sserl , Plant a Fertilizer
Situation• Wanted
Space lor Rent
Sporting Goods
SUV'a for Sole
Trucks for Sale
Upholotery
Vans For Sale ...
Wanted to Buy
.
Wantod to Buy- Farm Supplloa
Wantld To Do
Wanted to Renl
Yard Sale- Gallipolis
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle
Yard Sate-PI Pleasant

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(. ~
,.,
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

All Dl•play. 12 Noon 2

Monday· Frldav for Insertion

• !;tart Your Ads With A Keyword •

To

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Djsplay Ads

Dally In-Column 1 00 p m

6,g,

1\egister

675-1333
(7!~~ Togg~:~~~s (304)
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

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

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

Websttes
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ca~r;~::v... (7!~~ To44~:!~~2

...._.~

Ir"===~=~::\:'N=~I ro
1

HfwWANWD

The
Athens Mergs
EducatiOnal Serv1ce Center
has anttclpated posttlons for
Educa!lon Coordinators 1
full I me m Me gs Local 1
part trme 1n Eastern Local
and 1 part t1me n Southern
Local
Bachelors Degree
1n EducatiOn or related fie d
requtred Coordinators Will
be respons ble tor 1m pte
mentmg afterschool 1nter
vent1on and ennchr[lenl pro
gram
Respons b1ht1es
1nc ude worktng w1th fam1
hes teachers and adm1n s
trat ors to 1dent1ty and devsl
op 1nnovat1ve hands on
learnmg aci1V111es n all aca
dem!c areas ass1sttng n
planning &amp; development of
program mclud ng contract
1ng for serv1ces that meet
tdenhhed learning needs
workrng w th1n a specifmd
budget
aSSISting With
recrUitment h r ng and
superVISion of program staff
&amp; volunteers and other
adm nrstrat1ve dllt es and
reports as requ red Th1s 1S
a TANf grant funded post
liOn {$ 13 per hr ) Wllh bene
fits only for the lull t me poor
tron
Leiter of nterest
resume and references
must be rece.ved by 12 00
noon Oct 2 Subm 1 to
John
D
Costanzo
Supenntendent
Athens
Me1gs Educaltona Serv•ce
Center P0 Box 684 320
1/2 E Marn St Pomeroy
OH
45769
Equal
Op p ortunity
Emp oyer/Provtder

JOO PLACE!.IENT
ENRO..l NG 10CN1

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

1-800-334-1203
Circulator&amp;
Htgh 1ncome pa11:l tralntng
no e11penence lull t1me part
t1me 877 834 0430
Data Entry Clerk wth bas1c
Accounting and Computer
skills Sond resume to
Resume PO Box 27 Po1n1
Peasant wv 25550
FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$15 67 $26 19/hr now h1r
1ng For Apptlcatlon and tree
governemcnt 10b mfo cal
Amencan Assoc of labor 1
913 599 8042 24/hrs omp
serv

NRA
Recruiters Needed!
Help renew membaf
sh1ps of past and
present NAA members
And help protect your
2nd Amendment nghts
..-up to S81hour
~Full or part t1me
schedules
.rweekly pay and
bonus po\ent al
.rPatd vaca tions
tra1nmg and holidays
.. Profess1ona wor~
env~tonme nt

CALL TODAY
1-877-463 6247
ext 2331

R&amp;J TRUCKING
Leadmg The Way

R&amp;J Truck•ng now Hmng at
our New Haven WV
Termtnal For Reg anal
Hauls Dump Drv 1 year
OTR
Help wanted al Oars\ Group
venfrable e~p
Home working w11h eldBrly
Cal t 800 462 9365 ask tor
heavy lifting Involved 740
Kent
992 5023

HOMFS
FORSAJ.E

P

Borrow Smart Contact
the OhiO 011/ISIOn of
Fmanc al
lnst•tul•on s
Olf•ce of Consumer
Afla1rs BEFORE you ref1
nance your home or
obtmn a oan BEWARE
of requests tor any large
advance payments at
fees or msurance Call the
Ofl•ce of Consumer
Af!Sirs toll free at 1 866
278 0003 to learn it the
mortgage broker or
lender
s
properly
licensed (TI11s 1s a public
serv•ce announcement
from the Ohto Va ley
Publtshtng Company)
I'RmlS~ ION \1

SER\IU:S

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We W1n1
1 888 582 3345
UHIISI\11·

All real estate adver1talng
In lhls n,ewapaper 11
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act o1 1968
which makes It Illegal to
advertise any
preference limitation or
dlscnmlnatlon based on
race color religion sex
familial status or national
ongln or any inlantlon to
make any such
preference llmltatlon or
discrimination
This newspaper will not

knowingly accept
advertlaements for real
estate which 11 In
violation of the taw Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings advertlaed In
\his newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases

Duple"- apartments lor sale
w1th vrnyl s1d1ng carpor1 s
cur ently occup1ed wrth ten
.__...;F,;~liiiRiiSii\liii~iii.-' ants 32)(40 block garage All
'
on 7 acres Located on St
1996 Redman 28x60 1n At 160 Vmton $34 ODD
Apple Grove 304 593 6719 (740)388 t579 or (740)339
., ew
onlme
al 01&amp;9
www orvb com code 8246
Handyman spectal comes•
3 bedroom 2 bath w1lll frre w11h 2 lots close to schools :
pace 40x60 barn R1o Pomt Pleasant S24 900 •
Gra11de area On 8 flat aces (740}709 1382
$120000 (740)709 1t66
House and 10 77 acres at
4 bedroom 2 bath double Ml A to Pnvale w1th great
TRUCK DRIVER
ga1 age pool 2 acres v1ew $155 000 {304)695 •
Full time with benlflta
Eastern SchOol 0 smct 3722
Minimum 3 years expe
740 992 3465 af\EU 5 OOPM
•
rlence with tandom
Log Cabin 3 bedrooms 1R
trucks Apply 111 per
4 rental houses For Sale
25 acres very
son THOMAS DO IT Good ncome producing t/2 bath
CENTER Golllpollo
proper! es Great locatiOn secluded great hunting ask
OH Ask for Gene
Prlce(s) are Negotiable •ng $170000cal(304)674
Motivated
Seller!
In 0069
Galllpo 1s Call Wayne - - - - - - - (404)456 3802
Ranch Style Home Yost.
Road with 2 Acres 3 bed ~
About $3000 down 812 S rooms 2 baths ~araQe
3rd Ave Middleport Totally enclosed breezeway Pool
remo deled 3 bedrooms 1 and Spa mclu ded
Call 740 992
Perfect credit not $83 500
Concealed Pistol Class bath
Ohio wv Oct 7 2006 reCiul red Payment $525 4001
$75 00
9 OOB"\ VFW Appra ised S70 000 740
Mason WV Ph (740)843 367 7129
The
One
5555
Affordp.ble peaceful l!vlnQ
Newer 2BA og nome 1
- - - - - bath I eve lot surrounded by
larm land $55 000 Cal
Gatllpolll Ctreer COir.ge
(740)446 2801
(Careers C ose To Home)
Call Todayl 740 446 4367
Attention!
mymldwe~thomt com
1 800 214 0452
Loca company offering "NO
(740)828·2750
wwwgallpoltce~eercol.geeom
DOWN F'AYMENr pro
Accre dl•d M•mDer Accredlln; grams for you 10 buy your
Coun~:l lor lnilllpei"KKttnl College•
THREE Bedroom TWO
.and &amp;:hco•I:17&lt;1B
home Instead of rentln~
Will~-----_, tOO% financing
bath oversized 2 car
70 MiscELLANEOUS
Less than pertec\ credit Garage Storage Bu1ldlng
...
. accepted
newer carpel and roof 1/2
Payment cou d be the acre level lot Well ma1n
ta ned home V111e Street
For Sale 13 loot steel spire same as rent
staircase Call (740)591 Mortgage
Locators RACINE $95 000 nego
ltable 740 949 aotor
0081
{740)367 0000
3t 0

HO:\Il!.'-1

Rocksprtngs Rehabllllalton
Center provides restdents
w1th outstanding nurs ng
care and rehabilitation aerv
Ices helping them return to a
life of Independence at
home We currently have
opportunhlee lor AN sat our
tac tlty located In Pomeroy
Oh10
We offer a COM·
PETIVITE
SALARY
SCALE,
an excellent
benefit pAcke~e and a iiJP
portlve work environment
Interested
cand dates
should
apply
to
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Center 36759 Rocksprings
Road
Pomeroy
Ohio
457S9 Extendleare Health
S rv1
1
1
e cas
nc IS en aqua
opportunity emp oyer that
encourages
workplace
diversity M/F ON
SALES PERSONNEL
Full lime wtth benlflta
uuat be experienced
In hardware , lumber
and bulldlnQ materlala
Appl~
In peraon
THOMAS 00 IT CEN
TER Gatllpolla, OH
New Lower Pr1ces on
Ask for Qene
Lrmaslone at Rodney Stone
llooio.-----olll (740)245 5316 Rtver Grave
&amp; Sand also avarlable

r

NO EXPER ENCE NECESSARY
Fut.L T ME CLASSES
COL TR...IN NG
• FINANCING AVA L.ABLE

"':;~':;:~:~

Thll r

BID

iUTi

.......

I

Very n1ce part brtck 3 bed
room on 52 acre lin shed
basemgnt w th day hght
entrance hardwood floors
heat pump nee~r Pomt
Pleasant (304)675·1536

·------.,.1
JSIV 1\louu: Ho)1ES
· mRSAu:

Mrdwood lloors detached
All Types Masonry Br ck garage covered pat1o
Block Stone Free Est mate fenced back yAI d newly
[304)882 368B
304 593 remade ed 3 Of 4 bed
rooms c ose 10 schools
642t
Pont Pleasant $69 500
(740)709 1382
Comlortable house llvmg
Hook n Go local Ira ler room dln1ng roorr 2 bed
mov1ng (7 40)388 8228
room bath good basement
cotJid have additiOnal room
II\\ \4 I \I
"'l'il""'"_::""_____.., heat pump deck large lronl
fj
HuslNESS
porch good Ne•ghborhood
0m:lR11JNTf\
(304167, 1536

1986 Mays Forest Lane 1 2
bedroom ready lo be
remodeled Must be moved
S4 000 (740)245 5612
1997 14x72 clean w1th l1re
place 2 bedroom 2 ba[h
1997 14 .. 70 3 bedroom 2
bath v nyl s1dtng sh nglad
root 4 more to choose from
(740)388 0000
dayttme
(740)388 8017
evenmg
(740)645 6150 cell
2003 60x80 mob le home tor
sate [740 446 0527

•NOll CEo
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG Co 1ecomrnends
that you do bus ness Mlh
people you know and
NOT to send mo11ey
through the ma11 unt t you
have 1nves\lgated the
oflenng

Great used 3BR home only,
$9 995 Will help with dehv
House tor sa e In Syracuse ery Call (740)385 7671
two bed oorn w th bath
attached garage ana base New 2006 Claylon sm
ment An estate sale g ew•des starling at $199 84
$70 000 Phone (740)992 per month Trade ms wei
comes Cal (740)385 2434
3690

�Wednesday, September 27, 2006
Wednesday, September 27,2006
ALLEY OOP
Attention Hunters &amp; Farmers
160 acres B&lt;trton Chapel
Rd . 20 minLJtes from 1-64,
Milton exit City water. For
1ntorma!ton (304)937 -4127.
Four bUilding lots from 10.43
to 12 00 acres along St At •
143 one mile east of
Hantsonville. Pr1ced from
$2695 per acre. 742-3033
Mobile Home Lot for rent
near Vtnton. Call (740)441·
1111
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson
Mobile Home Park in
Gallipolis.
OH .
Phone
(740)446-2003 or (740)446·

1409.
RI-AL "''l',m:
\\'A\'11-J)
wanted
landcontract
Home/Trailer/land All cons1dered
Needed AS A.P
Prefer the counh y. Please
Call 740-949-1030
Need to sell your home?
Late on · payments . divorce,
job transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All cash
and quick closing. 740-4 163130

IU \1 \1

1"10

~

HOUSES
tuRRt:Nr

2 Bedroom House. Newly
remodeled
on
Bob
McCormick Road . $500/mo.
Call
~740)441-0194,
(740)441·1184 ,
2BA (possible 3 BR). 1 bath.
lull basement, large wrap
amund deck. 1 acre. $550
month plus f,rst and fast
mOnths ren t and deposit.
Call any1ime {304)634-91 40:
2B R home- Vmton Ave .
$375 mo. t sec. dep. You pay
lilihttes. Gas heat. (740)446-

3644.

Attention!
Local company ottenng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" programs for you 1o buy your
home tnstead of rentmg
• 1OO"a hnanctng
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could oe the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators.
[740)367-0000

Apt. for rent 2 or 3 Br.. No Berber carpet 6.95~d. lllnyl
5. 95yd. New rocker recliners
Pets. 740-992·5856.
$199.95; new couch &amp;
BEAUTIFUL
APART· loveseat $450. MoUohan
MENTS AT BUDGET Carpet 76 Vine St.,
PRICES AT JACKSON Gallipolis, OH ~740)446ESTATES, 52 Westwood 7444
Dn'ie trom $349 to $448.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call New recliner $20tl: sofa &amp; I.
seal $400. Mollohan Furn.
740-446-2568.
Equal
202 Clark Chapel Rd. Porter.
Houstng Opportunity.
PhOne
(740)388-0 173.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAl· Open 9-3 SaL only.

-420 MoBILE Ho~m;

ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I

Thompsons

Appliance

&amp;

Townhouse
apartments, Aepalr-675-7388. For sale.
and/or small houses FOR re-condiMned
eu1ome1ic
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
14:&lt;80 singlewide. 3 bed- for application &amp; lnlormatton. washers &amp; dryer s. retrigera·
tors, gas and electric
rooms. 2 full baths, 6 miles
from GallipOlis down At 7. Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp; ra~ges, air conditioner~. and
All electnc. central air. $400 ba th , upstairs , clean no wrm~er wash~rs . Wt!l do
dopos11. $400 rent monthly, pets. Ref/depos it .required. rapatrs on maJOr brands In
shop or at your home.
app11cattons being taken , 1 (740)446-1519.
year lease. No pets. Call
S40 l\1&amp;.'EJ.L-\NWl\'i
(740)446-451 41or mom info. Gracious living. 1 and ,2 bed·
. MERCHANil5t:
room apartments at Village
~ bedroom. AJC, porch &amp; Manor
and
A1verside '
JET
awning. Very, very mce. no Apartments in Middleport.
AERATION MOTORS
pets. In Gathpotis (740 )446- From $295·$444. Cali 7402003, (7401 446·14()9 or 992-5064 . Equal Housing Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
Opportunities · ·
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1(740)446-2692
800-537-9528.
3Br. Aefrtdg &amp; Stove .Washer In Gallipolis. clean, upstairs.
&amp; Dryer 1 nc l ude~ (304)576· 2 bed rooms. 2 bath , dish2934
"old
porce lain"
washer. WiD hookup, $500, Large
deposit,
references. Prestone anti- ireeze iher·
For rent: N1ce 2 Oedroom
mometer nice $155: Also
{740)446-9209.
mobile home m Country
high standard 12 ga. pump
Homes. $32!l • deposit. Large
One
Bedroom shotgun eKcell ent $145.
{740 ) 385 -40 19
Apartmenl in Point Pleasant. (740)533·3870.
Mobilo Home tor Rent, 2-3 ' $495/mon th includ es Bll
NEW AND USED STEEL
bedrooms , HUD approved. Utilities (304)675-5819
Steel Beam s, Pipe Rebar
(304)675-3626
Concrete.
Angle,
Now accepting applications For
Mob1le Home siles for up to for 2 Bedroom Apartments. Channel, Flat Bar, Sl eet
For
Drams,
16:&lt;80 1n Counlty Homes 6
mi les hom Holzer. Grat1ng
(740)385-4019.
$425/mo. Waier. S8wer, Drivewa~s &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
TraSh paid. (740)682·9243, Scrap Melals Open Monday,
One bedroom furnished
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
(740)988-6130.
mob1le home lor renl Priva te
Friday, Bam-4:30pm Closed
lol with a carport No pets. Now taking applicatiOflS tor Thursday,
Sa turday
&amp;
References - reqUifed. $450
one ,b ed apartments at Sunday. (740)446- 7300
mo. plu s deposi t. (7 40)446Sprin g Valley, Green and
4782
BrooksiOe apartments. Call
r::~-----....,
(740)446-1599 tor informa·
440
AI'AI!I'I\U:NI'S
lion.
f'()H RENT
Pol e. Barns
30ll:50ll: I 0
One Oedropm· apartment. $6,995. Painted metal, slid·
1 and 2 bedroom apart · Locatton: 403 1/2 Third Ave. er, free delivery. (937)718ments, furntshed and unfur- One block from GAHS . 147 1,
www.nationwide·
n1shed, security deposit Washer &amp; dryer hookup. For barns.com.
requned, no p.ets, 740-992· an applica tion call (740)446- i~~;:;:;:~""::----,
2218
4639.
I'F:rs

I"OR Rll\T

2BA WOH 480 Paxton Rd.
$350 monlh $350 dep., 6
1BA Jplicabnt All util1ties
month lease -t ut. {740)446pd (740)441·01 17
2515.
2
bedroorr.
apt
on
3 Bdrm . house in POmeroy, Centenary Road , water
$450.00
Mo.,
$450.00
paid, appliances furn ished.
deposit. No ins1ae pets. WID hookup. close to
740-992·2979 alter 4:00 HolLer. no pets. Call
PM. Hud ApprOYed.
after
(740)4 46-9442

L.,.-oiiiiliOiiiiliiiii.-;;;,.,1

r

OUR SALE

One bedroom, nicely furnished apt. quiet area, suitable tor 1 adult , private
dr1veway w/carport. no ·pets.
$400 mo. dep. required .
(740)446-4782.

Comme rcial building ~For 92 S-10 121,000 miles.
Sale" 1600 square feet, off Runs good, fa ir condition,
street packing. Great toea· good gas milea~e 5995.
tion ! 749 Third AIJenue In {740)446-8054;.
Gallipolis. Price •N egotiable"
New roo!! Motivated Sellerl
I \I,:\ I "I l'l'l II...,
.\ I I\ I "I l H k

:r;,10;:::=:::;;::===~
FAAAI
E.9!.m!1ENI'

-

' KIEFER BUILT 'VALLEY
'BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVESTOCK TRAILERS 'LOAD-

2000 Chevrolet Tahoe LT.
loaded ktBther interior, 3rd
raw seats, moon roof. 5.3
eng., excellent condition
$1 1,500. 740-742·2675.
40 M!YIURCRW

4 WIIFJ'liliS

MAX

•GOOSENECK ,
DliMPS
&amp;
UTILITY 05 Honda Rebel , tess then
.ALUMA
~ALUMINUM 900 miles. windshield, sad$2,400.
Call
'TRAILERS •e&amp;W GOOSE- dlebags,
NECK
HITCHES . (740)645-2193.
Carmltllael

Phillip
Alder

Quality John. Deere Hay
Equipment for less-round
balers , square balers &amp;
2003 Honda XR100 , excelmower Condition·ers C4.7"•a
lent' condition, FM F exhausl
Fi~~:ed for 48 mo11ths through
other ex1ras $1.200. Call
John
Deere
Credll.
Carmicha el
EqUipment (7401245-5585

r

(740)446-2412.
LIV£1&gt;TOCK

' KIEFER BUILT 'VALLEY
'BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVE·
STOCK TRAILERS ' LOADMAX
'GOOSENECK,
DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
'ALUMA
'ALUMINUM
TRAILERS 'B&amp;W GOOSE·
NECK
HITCHES.
Carmichattl

(740)446-2412

2003
Suzuki
Intruder
Voiusia.
2.800 miles.
Excellent co0dition
Like
new. $4200. Call · 992 -2 076
after 5.

•RENTALS •SALES
~INDA'S •SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
, PAINTING
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
••Take the pain out of
us do it
for you"
Interior Only

painting~lct

740-985-4180

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Leave message
before 6PM

740-446-0007 Toll t'rce 877-669-0007

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

brakes, new baltery askmg
2 • male Basel Hound pup- 3 young registered Angus
ptes, 9 weeks old. $150.00. cows. 1 registered Angus $12.000 wm consider pick
up on trade i304)576·2383
740·669 -6006.
heifer_ 1 young registered

- - - - - - - - Angus bull. Ph.N (740)2562 male CKC registered 1352

I I-ll IS
!'0\('JU II·.
( 0\S I Ill ('( 10'-:

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
MJ~tV
.;)
• '-""¥.

o

~. Cot).crtte '\1\'urk'
26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

CAMPERS &amp;
MmnR Ho~1•:s

North

MONTY

free

Middleport, OH
10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

,'"'••. ,.

Vulnerable: Roth

South

•-Jh

'

.

(703)528-0617
'II

I~(

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
~

..
Hardwood Cabinwy And Furniture

HOUSEIIOUJ

t.ar~t

C.oons

'Red 'Rose Breenlwuse
50447 Tornado Rd.
Racine, OH
740-949-1183

Appliance
Warehouse
m Henderson,' WV. Pre·
owned Appliances staning
at $75 &amp; up all under
Warranty. · also ha'Je reconditioned Big Screen TV's

www.ti,..l&gt;•,......l&lt;••bin«try.•o"'

. ,,

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

t~~~j;=~=:::~

• New Homes

..;

THE BORN LOSER

Fe,o~, 'll\1&gt;-1 Kit&gt; Of MIKE.
1&gt;..

REAL PIS\OL 11-\Ef-\· l-\ffi

6 Weeks
12 Total Sessions
Mondays &amp; Wednesdays
6pm
$75/person
Bring your own mat
Limited class size!
For more 1nfo: 675-7222

CARDIO FUNK

PVH
Wellness Center
Tuesdays &amp;
Thursdays
6 p.m.
-1

/.

$2/member
$3/non-rnembers
For more info:

675-7222

I HAVEM'l

E'IEN

IMPORTS

SHOWN

Athens

'IOU THE

"LOOK"

'~"'!::;:~~~
4ft(
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
Downspout

\

. PEANUTS

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM
111411 mo. pd

~

Cornerstone
§ '" ~ Construction
Rt!sldentlol • Commercial • General Contractlna
Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
• S1ding • Roofing • Room Ad~ i tion s • Remode ling
'NV 038992
• Plumbing • E!ectrkul 740·367·0Mol
OH 38244
• Accous ti ~,: C eiling
740·331·3412

SUNSHINE CLUB

JONES'

Tree Service
Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding

Bucket Truck

- anlu's ~
Recycling

97Tauru s $1.988
g5 Eclipse $2,495
00 Neon $2.995
03 Neon $4,388
99 Daewoo $2,395
00 F·250 quad cab. diesel,
4x4 $13,388

GARFIELD
"AR"fiF'IC.IAt. 6PARROW

FLAVORING-APPE:C'"

'503110 SL• MIIIGIIIII.IN 45168
140-892--38114

..............r .... ,. .... _
Mltllllll L

97 GMC K-2500 4x4 $4,495

Company reserves the

98
97
97
00
92
96
99
01

rfght to reject any or all
bids submitted.
The above deacrlbed
collateral will be sold
"as Is-where is", with
no
expressed
or .
Implied
warranty
given. For further
information , or for an
appointment
to

Cavalier $2 ,995
Cavalter Z-24 $3,0138
Wrangler $4,695
Alero $3,995
MustanQ GT $2,495
Mustang $3,895
Status $,2.495
Eclipse GT $7,988
Rome Auto Sates

(740)441·9544

inapect collateral , prior

For sa le. 200! Lincoln
Continen tal Loaded, 51K
miles, garage kept. Ongmal
owne1. $ 13.500
Ft1o\1e
(740)367·0430.

to sale date contact
Cyndle or Randy at
740·992·2136. (9) 27,
28, 29.

S

Public Notice

Shop the
Classifieds!
•

ThliCI&lt;S

IUR SALI:
1994 Ford Ranger XLT AC
auto 4 cyl
low miles
{740~245-5283

I r

•-'l&gt;'l'li&amp;' .J.,:·•''"'~

L:'U!L~"l!i!LII!:!I.!ml!!l!i

PUBLIC NOTICE
will take place at the
·NOTICE: Is hereby Pagevllle subdlvlafon
given that on Saturday, In Scipio Township lor
September 30, 2006 at the purpose of vacat·
10:0D a.m., a public lng lho pubic rlghi·Of·
&amp;ale will be hold at 21 t way. The hearing lor 1y.
Cook Motora
W
Second
St., this closing Ia IChed·
328 Ja ckson Pike
Pomeroy, Ohio. The uled lor October 5th at
1740)446·0103
Farmers Bank and 1 :00 p.m. at the
Savings Company Is Commissioner's Office 2002 Che"Y Cavalier, looks
selling lor cash In which Is located on the .and .run&amp; great. 117,000
hand or certified chock third floor of tha Court m iles, automatic. $4,500
the following collator- House. Everyone fa OBO. Call{740)256·1253.
al:
·welcome to attend,
2005
FLEETWOOD Please contact the 98 Neon Sport, automatic,
PIONEER 27' TRAVEL Commlsaloners at 992· sharp car, r,uns Qreat '93
T R A I L E R 2895 II you have any Borella, autOmatic, runs
great. {740)388-82&lt;8queatlona.
1EB1T27X56009533
The Farmers Bank and (9) 27, (10) 2.
98 Taurus $2,395
Savings
Company,

PUBLIC NOTICE
On October 5, 2006 at
9:00 a.m. a viewing

--lf:=--

11~-- ro·,n~~·:ll

(740) 949-1405

$4,500; 1998 Chev. pickup
$2,900; , 1993
Nlssan
Kingcab
$3,200;
1999
Voyager van $3,500. We
have Sunfires, Cavaliers,
Saturns, Neon , Fireblrd,
Toyota and
others. 3
months/3,000 miles warran -

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS

~~--~N~I

FREE
ESTIMATES

L.,.-..,;oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO.,.I

YET!!

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
4577t
740-949·2217

Alllypilo of rooting:

j

reserves the right to
bid at this sale, and to
withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings

•0

BIG NATE

Pet Sale Re mote Training
Collar for large dog. Hardly
1994 Pontiac Grand Am
used. Paid $165 will take
$400. Police Impounds! For
$100. (740)368-0191.
listings 800·391· 5227 ell:t.
Rat Terrier 7 months old C548.
white .w/black spots $125
{304)773,5343 (304)674- 1995 Subaru lmpreza 2.2, 4
dr, tilt, new tires , all wheel
1374
dtive, cassette, clean, 85k.
Reglslered Chihuahua 'pup- $2,875. (740)379-2748.
~Jies, shots &amp;. wormed $200
9304)895-3101
1997 Ct1rysler SebrinQ LXI.
2 door, power windOws, sun·
FJu;r~ &amp;
root, leathe'r Interior, CD
VEGJ:.'TABLES
player, new tires, air conditioning $1,895 If no answer
Kiwi Fruit! Cherry and leave message (304)882Hickory nut size , smooth 3854

Ohio,

)

~\.

Berry Patch , StAt. 124, East 1998 Cadillac
Davill a,
ot Syracuse, Ohio.
Excellent Condilion, 77,000
miles, 2 owners, Fully

Pomeroy,

!

P""WP..N T 10 f\EAR
WI-lA.I I~E \)\\)
'I£.~Tf.R 1&gt;1&gt;-.'{'2'

1;:=:1\j

$4,500: 2002 Kla Sporlage

Begins October 16, 2006

IS "l

;--.,

2002 Cavalier 59, 395 mtles

Wellness Center

1J9ai~p

m:rillune

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
~oint

1 Tant dweller 44 Tslk a lot
6 "Joy to the 46 Happened
- "
to
11 Phllly team 49 Pleasant

l@ll'n!inttt i&gt;\l'!Jl!lter

(304) 675-1333

YOUNG'S

Advertise
in this
space

CARPENTER
SERVICE
· Room Additions &amp;
Remodahng
· New Garages
·ElectricAl &amp; Plumb ing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
· VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

for

. wv 036725

V.C.

YOUNG
992-62 15

'54 per

Ill

month

Pomeroy, Oh10
25 Years Local Expertence

.-

Pass

2NT

Pass

Pass

GFIIZZWELLS

14 Legacy
15 Rock plant
t6 Kaogh
relative
17 That
muchacha
18 Gathered

East
' Pass

Pass
Pass

The lead that
leads to success

Smells
53 Loud and
rude
54 Apartment
dweller
55 -blanche
56 Begins
to appear

dust

21 Day ona
23 Informer
26 Form 1040
expert
27 Here, to
monsieur
28 What' s
cooking
29 Spun

DOWN

31 Bard's river
32 High spirits
33 Be a role
model
36 Gluck
of opera
37 -de plume
38 Corn
serving
39 Pacb1m ,
lt1lllllliUI
40 Bach opus
42 Yr. parts

1 Born as
2 W. Hemisphere pact
3 -Execs
4 ~lz range
5 Motor city
6 Clnlnarbnl
. sila
•
7 Killer whale
8 Bleachers
cry
9 Not am.
or med.
10 Cave, oflen
12 Medium's
session
13 Mirth
18 Summon
halp
19 Twin of
Artemis

Often the opening lead decidas lhe lale
of a contrac1, but this deal centers on a
later lead. If you were the declarer in lour
hearts, now would you plan the play
after WeSI leads 1he spade queen 10
your ace?
Sou1h opened 1Wo clubs, slrong. Norlh
responded 1WO diamonds, weak. Sou1h
rebid two hear1s, promising at least a
five·card suit, North continued with two
no-lrump, snowing 0-4 points. (In the
1ournamen1 wond loday, North would
rebid 1hree clubs as 1he double negative.
Then, if_threa no·lrurpp IS 1he bes1 final
con1ract, it wtll be declared by the ·
stronger hand.) S1nca lhree near1s
would nave been nonlorcing, South
jumped 10 game.
You have nine tricks: two spades, sill.
hearts and one club. Vou mighl gel very
lucky and drop a single1on heart king,
bul lhal willllappen only 12.5 percent ol
the time. Better is to try to ruff a diamond
on !he board. Suppose, !hough, lhal you
lead a low diamond at trick two. If the

;

defenders are on the ball, East will win
and shift to his trump, killing your con-

with this layout.
Vou should try 1o Ioree WaSI to win lhe
'lirsl diamond trick- at 1rlck two, play lhe
diamond king from your hand. Here, you
are now safe. West may win and lead a
low heart, bot you win in hand and continue with another diamond. If West
takes lhe Irick and plays another 1rump
to slop lhe ruff; you lose no heart trick.
And il East wins the second diamond
trick, he does no1 have a trump to lead.
Either way, you are home lree.

G

AstroGraph
'1llur 'lllrlhdo,y:

Thursday, Sept. 28, 2006
By Bernice Bade O•ol
A large ambition and soma smaller
desires you've harbored - but haven't
been able to fulfill in !he past - could
beconie realities tor you in the year
ahead. An associate you meet might give
you the formula that will make them possible.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - A friend of
yours may come to you 1of' some advice.
II will be Important to this person that you
take the time to hear him/her out. Be
realistic in your suggestions, but sensi·
tlve as welt.
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-Nov. 22} Recognition tor a job well done Is within
achievable range. AQ&lt;nowledgemenl for
your efforts may come In the form of a
t~romotion, but more important lo you will
be the respect attached.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) ~
Spend some time concentrating on ways
to further you r personal ambilions and
1nterilsts. Realistic deliberation on your
part will result in constructive means that
lit the formula .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan . 19) Secrecy enhances your possi bilities tor
success regarding a matter of serious
significance to you . If you need to dis cuss it in order to soe things clearly, do
so only with those Involved.
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 19) - A social
acquaintance yo~ recently made could
begin to take on greater significance to
you. What develops beiWeen you will ere·
ale a valuable and binding relationship.
PISCES . (Feb. 20-Ma~ch 20 ) - With
encouraging support, an assignment
!hat WOlJid normally have been a laborious lask could now lurn inlo one that Is
relatively fun to do. The right atty is what
makes the difference.
ARIES (Mafch 21-April19) - A delicate
matter thai could have serious ramitica·
lions it handled poorly should be dis·
cussed one step al a time. II you don't
ignore lhe sensitivities involved, you can
resolve the sihJalion.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - II yoU are
able to come to terms with olher people's
vieWs, you'll find you'll be able to relate
better to a transaction now taking place,
making II possible to finalize a good con·
tract
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)- A project In
which both you and your mate are col·
lectively Involved has eKcellent chancgs
of exceeding your expectations - If you
keep In mind each olher's Idealism.
CANCER (June 21.July 22)- Mix prac·
tical and prudent procedures. alon~ with
·the spirit of service expected by o1hers,
and your financial affairs will have much
more punch to them, resulting In greater
earning Power.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 2:2) - You're pr&amp;sently
caught up In something complicated that
lnvollles frlende , but It can be sorted out
to everyone'• aatlllflctlon by rememberIng to keep goodwill In lhe relatlonahlps.
VIRGO (Aug. 23 -Sepl. 2:2) -You might
not g1t everything you want, but , when
the bottom line 11 tallied , you thould
came out on the plut elde of the ledger.
Being grateful, and not greed~. mekea

' !hie po11lbla.
SOUP TO NUTZ

20 Japaneee
mat
22 Weather·
board
23 Study
lor a test
24 Parka
25 Plano fixers
28 Travel
guide
30 Santawinds
34 Nutty
confection
35 Smudged
40 Trumped·
. up
41 Like many
gargoyles
43 Lemon peel
45 -!Ide

46 UK network
47 VIctorian,
e.g.
48 l.ike the
horizon
50 Gullet
51 First name
in advice
52 Ave.
crossers

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celetomy C1pher ayplqjrami are created from quotations by lom;)!Js people, past and present
Eadlletter ll tile cittler starl(ls lot anotller

tract

~·

equipped, $5,500. (740)4463389

PILATES
PVH

••
SILAS !! WHAR 'YA
TH'
RELIABLES 'i'!

Stop &amp; Compare

by Ron's TV (304)875- skin, 740.992-7449. VIrgil's - - - - - - - 799i

API&gt;IlfCIATf YO!Jit
tlfLPING Mf fiNl&gt;
. MYS~LF.. IIJT itliS
/
S~~MS Lli'f A
LOT F.Ott A
FINI&gt;Ett'S fE~.

BARNEY

1987.

II\ \IH\1

North

Opening lead: • Q

College Rd. • S} rticuse, OH 740-'192 -0122

Downtown
Commercial
Retail space for Rent. $400/
mont h
Upstairs Ortice Mexican Redhead AmazQn
Suites lor Rent $125/ month Parrot wlcage and playyou pay the Utilities. Call stand. $200. Call: 740·992·

Wesl

Pass

Answer to Previous Puzzle

opposite

around

Dealer: South

t

Mum Pots $3.00/each
or 4for $10.00
12" Baskets Hours:
varlet)'
9-5
$10.00
of (o\orst

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• K Q J 10

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;
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Quality Work at a Fair Price!
All Work Guaranteed I
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'D
..
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OPE Cenlfled
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ATV Parts 8. Service Available
'''PP'P

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• Garages
• Complete
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9 6,

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' Leave a message

97 Beech Street

•

~outb

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
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CONTRACTING

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

East

10 8

K 4 3
A 10 5
"' 761

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• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
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"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley

•

·t

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4171

7 fi 4 2

ofo 98S32
West
• Q J

70 Pine S1re e1 • Ga lli po li s

13~6

09·27-06

•

. 64

rfamil1J (e}:i1M:I

740-742-2293

H D. 2003 Ann iversary wide
Equipment
glide, 10,000 miles, over
54,000 in extras "plus", new

43 Zig's

13 Home annex

(740)446-2412

New John Deere Compacts
and 5000 Series Utility !rae· 2003 Bo mbardier DS650
tors @0% Fixed· lor 36 Baja HMF exhaust, i-razor
monthl
through
John ti res, $3,500. (740)441 ·
Deere Credit. Carmichael 5150.
Equipment (740)446·2412

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Equipment

John Deere 10 ft. No Til Drill
for
rant
Car michael 1995 Y~maha Virago in
Equipment (740)446·2412. eKcellent condition . Gold
w/maroon trim . Original
$3,000
firm .
John Deere Mini Excavator/ owner.
Tractor loader Backhoe/ (740)446· 1662.
Skid Steers. Carmichael
Equipment (740)446-2412

The Daily Sentinel • Page B5

BRIDGE

r

M1niature Dachshunds 10
One BR apt. in Spring Valley.. weeks old asking $300 Boer bucks. 1 reg . full blood ,
·2.5yr old 5300. 1 92% 1yr 1994 Nomad, slide out 5th
WID hookups. HUD! PRC (304)593-3820
wheel, ex. condition . Call for
&lt;&gt;d. $150 (740)367-0682
3br in Letart, $500/month, S:OOp:..n_'------- vouchers accepted . Call
~ 7 40 )256 - 6392.
price.
AKC
reg.
Boston
Terrier
Vet
$300/deposit prefer HUD, 2 bedmom upstairs apt {740)446-0834 or {740)645checked, shots &amp; wormed, Guneas, 3 months old, have
\304)882·2858
sTOve. refridg. water. trash 4846 icell)
born Aug . 19. Parents on 20 mixed pearl. blue, black &amp;
mctuded . $325 • deposit
4bd , 2 bath HUO home. Buy
Twin Rivers Tower is accept· premises. Ready to go in while, $10 eacn. (740)367$325 .
(740)441 -9872.
$32,900! For listings 8000682
1ng applications tor wait1ng Oct Call (740)388-9325.
(740~446- 7620
391-5228 ext F254
Its! for Hud-subsized, 1- br,
CKC Jack Russell Terrier
' APARTMENTS
NOW apartment. call 675-6679 puppies $125. (740) 2564BA. 1 1/2 bath . 86 Garfield, AVAILABLE.
Equal Housi ng Opportunity
1652.
$575i month, $575 deposit, 6
Brand new 2 Bedroom
month lease ,. ut (740)446·
Apartments Washer/dryer
2515.
hookup. stove/re fng erator
House in Rio Grande area .tncluded. 1 located in city, 1
SSOO mo. plus $500 security approx. 1 mile outside ctty Comme rcial building "For
Rent" 1600 square feet, off
depostl. Call (7401367-7774 limi ts
Also availaOie units on Slate street parking. Great locaafter 5 :00pm
Route 160, Ca.ll lor details tion! '749 Third Avenue 1n
Pomeroy 2 Bd., 1 bath , new (740)44 1·0194 or (740)441· Gallipolis. Rent "'Negotiable"
Cqll Wayne (404)456-3802
C.'A. $550. 740-843-5264
118·1

FOR SALE

www.mydailysentinel.com

Today'sclue: NequaJsS ·

" JYCE
JIIEY

SA

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AS E N E CAR

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Never !rust anyone over lhir1y.' - Abbie Hoffman
"II lakes a long 1imelo become young.' - Pablo Picasso

lllllDAILT C.~
PUIIUI \:)~

Olour
Rtor'~l'lgl lttrers ol
scrombled words
low to

form

the

be·
four simple words.

I' ll I' I' II I' I
IIIIIIIII

6 ~~;~:~~&lt;UMBf~EO I' 17 jl

SCRAMLETS lNSWERI 91'16.116
Noggin - Widow- Enjoy - Vendor -OWN GOOD
I had.C&lt;,unscled a friend and she got angry ~&lt;ith me. "The
quickesl way to lose a friend,'' my husband said, "is to tell

them something ror their OWN GOOD."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

I

I~ JU&amp;T e,I.YIIJGc .. .
~ ..,f'.oi..V&amp;T'MYtiJO. .. .

~~,
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�SCOREBOARD

The Daily. Sentinel

PREP FOOTBALL

HIG"- SCHOOL FOOTBALL
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
North Dlvlalon

SEOAL
ALL
W-L PF PA
W-L PF PA
Logan ......... ·-'-{·......
2-0 .... 66 ...26 .....3-2 .... 136 .. 102
Manerta ...... .J. ............. , 2-0 .... 56 ...6 .......2·3 ....91 ... 79
Zanesville ...... ........ ........2-0 .... 90 ...6 .......3-2 .. . .150 .. 103
Athans . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 0-2 ....8 ....90 ...... t -4 .... 85 ...206
Warren ......................... 0-2 ....0 ....76 ......2·2 .... 47 ... 144
South OMolon
SEOAL
ALL
W-L, PF PA
W-L PF PA
Chillico1he ...... ... ............. 2-0 .... 85 .. .47 ..... .4-t .... 137 .. 101
Ironton . .............
...1-1 . . 62 ... 67 ...... 3-2 ... 127 .. 115
Portsmouth .. . .. .. .. ..
.. .. 1-1 ....27 ... 54 ...... 2-3 ... 132 .. 138 .
GalllaAcademy .......
.. ... 0·2 .... 59 ... 69 ...... 3·2 ... 163 .. 107
Jackson .............
.. .0-2 .... 39 ... 69 ...... 2-3 .... 119 ... 110
Friday, October 6
Friday's games
Chillicothe at Jackson

Zanesville at Athens
Chillicothe at Portsmouth
Gallia Academy at Ironton
Warren at Jackson

Portsmouth at Gallia Academy
Marietta at Ironton
Zanesvine at Logan
Saturday's game

Logan at Marietta

Athens at Warren

Ohio Valley Conlerence

OVC
ALL
W-L 'PF PA
W-L PF
Coal Grove . .. .. .. .
. .....o-o .... o .... 0 ....... 3-2 . ... 141
Rock Hill .. .'.........
. ......0-0... . 0 ....0 ...... 3-2 ... 164
Chesapeake . ..
. ... .' ...0-0 .... o ....o. .. .. t-4 .... 140
River Valley .....
. ......0-0 .... 0 ....o. .. .. t-4 ... 58
SouthPoint .·........
. .. ....0-0 .... 0 ....0 ., .... 1-4 .... 75
Fairiand ...
..0-0 .... o ... o ...... 0·5 . ... 48
Friday's gamea
Friday, October 6
Chesapeake at South Point
Coal Grove at Fairland

Coal Grove at Chesapeake
Fairland at Rock Hill

Rock Hill at Ri\ler Valley

South Point at River Valley

PA
..67
.. 117
.. 196
.. 135
.. 140
.. 142

Tri-Valley Conference

Ohio Division
TVC
ALL
W-L PF PA
W-L PF PA
Meigs ..... . ................ .. ..0-0 . .. .0 ....0 ....... 5-0 .... 181 .. 71
Nelsonville-Vorl&lt; .............. ..0-0 . . .. o ....0 ..... .4·1 .... 182 .. 57
WeUston .. .. .. .. . .. .
.. ..o-o .... o ....o ....... 3-2 .... 122 .. 14t
Alexander .. .. ..
., ...o-o .... 0 ....0 ....... 2-2 .... 103 .. 102
Belpre . . . . . . .. ..
. ....0-0 .... 0 .... 0 ....... 2-3 ....61 ... 81
Vinton County .. ..
. ...0-0 . ... 0 .... 0 .. .....2-3 ....67 ... 84
Hocking Dlvlelon
TVC
ALL
W-L PF PA
W-L PF PA
Southam .......................0-0 .... 0 .....o ... _... .4-1 .... 115 ... 45
Federal Hocking . ..
. ...0-0 .... 0 ...o ....... 3-t .... 69 ... 27
Trim~le .. . .. . . . .. .
. .....0-0 ... :o ....0 ....... 3-2 .... 114 ... 109
Watoriord ......................0·0 ... .0 ....0 ....... 3-2 .... 82 ...68
Easlom .. .. .
. ......0-0 .... 0 ....0 .......0-5 ....62 ... 197
Miller ..........................0-0 .... o ....o .......0-5 ....28 ... 110
Frtdoy'o games
Friday, October 6
Belpre at Alexander
Wellston at Meigs
Nelsonville-Yor1c at Vinton County
Trimble at Eastern
Federal Hocking at Southam
Waterford at Miller

Vinton County at Alexander
Wellston at Belpre ·
Nelsonville-York at. Meigs
Eastern at Federal Hocking
Miller at Southern
Waterford at Trimble

Independents

ALL
W·L PF PA
South Gallia
.4-t .... 117 ..66
Wahama .. .. .. . .. ............3-2 .... t t2 .. 52
Hannan ..................... . ..0-4 .... 21 ... 124
Frtdey'o games
F~day, October 6
Green at South Galtia

South Gallia at Sciotovilte East

Wlrt County at Hannan

Gilmer County at Hannan

Wahama at Clay County

Saturday, Octobir 7

Cardinal Conference

CARD
ALL
W-L PF PA
W·L PF PA
Sissonville...
. .... 2-0 .... 27 ... 19 ....4-Q ....96 .. 49
Poca ............... ... ........ 1-0-.... 28 ... 21 ..... 3-1 .. . .112 .. 75
PointPioasant ................... 1-0 .... 21 ... 20 ... ... 1-3 ....74 ... 125
Wayne ................ .... ..... 2-t.. .. 62 ... 20 ...... 4-1 .... 117 .. 47
Herbert Hoover .
. ... _,_, .... 43 ... 59 ......4·1 .... 142 . .103
Logan .. ,.....
.. ... 0-2 .... 58 ... 65 ...... t-4 ....80 .. 125
Wintleld . . . .. .. .
. ... 0-3.' ... 40 ...78 ...... 1-4 ... 59 ..83
Frtday'a gamea
Friday, Oclobor 8
Poca at Herbert Hoover
Logan at Scott
Point' Pleasant at Wayne
Roane Co. at Sissonville

Sissonville at Herber1 Hoover
Winfield at Logan
Poca at Point Pleasant

PageB6

11·2), 10:05 p.m.

WOII

Thurodoy'o GM*
Toronto at Detroit, 1:05 p.m.

OHSAA compulor rotlnga
Baltimore at N.Y
. Y~. 7:06p.m.
COLUMBUS (API- Hero are the second Tampa Bay at Cievel8nd, 7:05p.m.
weekly football oomputer ratings from the Kansas City at Minnesota, 8:10p.m.
Ohio Hlgl School Athletic Assodation for Oakland at LA Angels, 10:05 p.m.
the 2006 season Rat1ngs are by divisK:ln
and region with record and 8\lerage ~·
level points per game (top eight teams 1n
each region advance to regional quar1erfi·
nals):

DIVISION lit
Region 12-1 , Cots DeSales (5-01
12 5000. 2, Cin: Indian Hill (5-0) 10.6000.
'3, Lane. Fairlield Union (4-1) 8.5500. 4,
Wave~y (5-0) 8.2000. 5, New Allany (4·11
6.7500. 6, Bexley (4-tl 6.5000. 7, Gin.
McNicholas (3-21 6.3500. B, Cirdevi~e (41) 5.8000. 9, Goshen (4-t) 5.6500. tO,
Gall. Gallia Acad. (3-2) 4.9690.
Ol~tSIONtY
Region 15-1, Bellaire (5-01 13.4910 2,
Williamsport Wesrfall (5-0) 9.5500. 3, New
Lel!ington (5-Q) 9.3500. 4, Martins Ferry
(5-0) 7.9500. 5, Cols. Eas1mocr Acad. (41)7.5000. 6, Pomeroy Meigs (5-0) 6367CT
7, St. Clairsville (4-1) 5.7500. 8. Ironton (32) 5.6280.~- Chill . Unioto (3-2) 5.5500. 10,
Wollslon (3-21 5.3780.
DIVISION VI
Region 23-1 , Lane. Fisher Cath. (5-()) .
7.2~. 2, Beallsville (5-0) 6.9400. 3, Otd
Wash. Buckeye Trail (4-1) 5.8290. 4,
Shadyside (4-1) 5.6280. 5. Danville (4-1)
5.2500. 6, Racine Soutnem (4· 1) 5.0440
7, Sugar Grove Beme Union (3-2) 4.30CIO.
8, Crown City S. Gallia (4-t) 4.2280. 9,
Bridgeport (4-1) 3.9170. 10, Harvest
Proparalory School (3·21 3.6500.

x~tinched

Dtvlaion
93 64 .592
82 75 .522
76 81 .484
76 81 .484
70 87 .446

•-New Yorl&lt;
Philadelphia
Atlanta
Florida
Washing1on

W L Pet

Central Diviston
W L Pel

St. Louis
Houston
Cincinnati
Milmukee
Pittsburgh

Chicago

80
79
76
73
65

76
78
79
84
92

.513
.503
.497
.465
.414
.405

64 94
West Division
W L Pet
San Diego
85 72 .541
Los Angeles
83 74 .529
San Francisco
76 61.484
Arizona
74 83 .471

Ct&gt;orado

GB
tt
t7
17
23
GB
t 112
2112
7 112
15 112
t7
GB
2
9

11
74 83 .471 11

x-c!irched division

Washington 7, N.Y. Mets 3
San Diego 6, St. l:ouis 5
Arizona ? , San Francisco 1

division

y-clinched playoff spo1

PA
7
3t
32
55
64
34

92
61
PA
44
32
60
67
PA
23
49
84
74
PA
46
44
64
85

N.Y. Jets 28, Buffalo 20

lllasday'oGamas

Chica~o Cubs 14, MHwaukee 6
San Q1ego 7, St. LOUIS 5

Moore.

CHICAGO BEAR5-Piaced LB Jamer

Williams injured reserve. Signed L~ Rod
WilSon from the practice sQUad. S1gn_ed
WR Brandon Rideau to the pract1ce
squad. Released WR Dan Sheldon lrom
the practice squad.

TRANSACTIONS

Released LB Tracy While.
SAN DIEGO CHARGEA5-Piaced TE
Aaron Shea on injured reserve. Signed 5
Andre Lott. Released 08 Brett Elliott
from the practice squad. Signed TE Kelly
Griffeth to the practice squad.

SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5-Signed WA

.-

Marcus Maxwell to the practice squad.
·Released WA Cory Rodgers from the
practice squad.

HOCKEY

Nallonal Hockey League
NHL-Suspended
Columbus
0
Aostislav Klesla two regular-season
games tor a low hit on Chicago C Tuomo
Ruutu during a Sept. 22 preseason
game.

ANAHEIM DUCKS-Assigned RW

Colby Genoway, LW Curtis Glencross, D
Kent Huskins, G David McKee, LW Bjom
Melin, LW Drew Miller, C Geoff Peters, D
Aaron Rome, D BreH Skinner, C Karl
Stewar1, G Michael Wal, and C Petteri
Wirtanen to Portland of the AHL
Assigned AW Boby Ryan to Owen
Sound of the OHL and 0 Brendan
Mikkelson to Vancouver of the WHL.
Released RW Simon Ferguson.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o (

SPORTS
• High school football
previews. See Page 81

CAROLINA HURRICANEs-Assigned

G Justin Peters, F Keith Aucoin, F Jesse
Boulerice. F Patrick Dwyer, F Dave
Gave, F Brad Isbister, F Scott Kelman, F
Shane Willis, 0 llm Conboy, D J.D.
Forrest and D Derrick Walser to Albany

olthe AHL.
LOS ANGELES KING5-Loaned LW

PA
59
36
98
76
PA
20
47
54
68

ST. LOUIS CARDINALs-Announced a LIN Nick Foligno to Sudbury ollhe OHL
and DTomas Kudelka to La.thbridge ol
the WHL.
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS-Recalled G
Martin Houle from Philadelphia of the
BASKETBALL
AHL.
National Basketball AaaoclaUon
DALLAS MAVERICKs-Signed F Dirk PITTSBURGH PENGUIN5-Assigned

two-year player ,development agreement
with Batavia of the f'..lew York·Penn
League.

Nowitzki to a contract extension through
the 2010·11 season.

LOS ANGELES LAKERS-Re-signed
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ARIZONA CARDINALS-Signed DL

G Devin Green.

Chris Cooper. R&amp;leased DT Langston

0 Matt Carkner, D Micki DuPont and 0
Alain
Nasreddine
to
WilkesBarre/Scranton of the AHL.

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH

meeting of the Meigs Local
Hoard of Education by
Superintendent
William
POMEROY- The Meigs Buckley who noted that
Local School District has Meigs was one of several
been awarded a Carol M. school districts in the state
White Physical Education to receive the federal grant
Program (PEP) grant of money.
$322,392 from the U. S.
He said that the money
Department of Education will be delivered over a
for use in after-school phys- three year period and is for
ical education programs.
use in developing afterThe announcement was : school programs in all three
made at Tuesday night's buildings. It will entail hirHOEFUCH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

ing three instructors and
purchasing a wide variety of
physical education equipment for use by the students.
While a main concentration for use of the grant
money will be on physical
education, he noted that it
can also be spent on devel-.
oping healthy eating habits
and nutrition, along with
some professional development of physical education
and nutrition teachers to

is

keep them abre~st of current
research, issues. and trends.
The entire emphasis. said
the superintendent, is to
promote progress toward
meeting state st~ndards for
physical education, panicularly in low-income areas.
According to the info rmation Buckley received ,
the overall ·goal of the program is to enhance the
· physical, mental, social and
emotional development of

frmnPageBl

Please see Grant. AS

on

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Walking
briskly along Pomeroy's riverfront promenade, Don Stevenson
POMEROY -' The regional stops
to pick up a penny.
director of the Ohio Association of
"I
always
have to stop and
Public School Employees Local 17 pick up my wife's
money," he
said Wednesday its union members said, before taking off
again.
and the Meigs Local School District
is
walking
across
Stevenson
have reached a bargaining impasse.
Ohio
all
88
counties
- to
OAPSE Local 17 represents 84
spread
awareness
about
cancer
non-teaching employees of the district, including bus drivers, secre- and to honor his friend, Regis
Shivers of West Lafayette, a
tarial staff, custodial staff and cancer
patient.
other workers.
It's not Stevenson's first
"OAPSE members have not
marathon
walk to raise awarereached a contract agreement after ness. At 62,
he walked 3,000
meeting with a federal mediator miles from Seattle,
Wash. to
(Monday)," said Anthony Vernell of
Portland,
Maine,
and
at 63, he
OAPSEIAFSCME's Athens office.
walked to lighthou ses in
"Generally speaking there are . Washington,
both walks for
two burning issues to be resolved,"
Alzheimer'
s
Disease
awareVernell said. "Those are health care
ness. At 64, he walked 4,0ClQ
and health care cosis for our mem- miles
from Tijuana, Mexico to
bers and ·salary increases.''
Alaska
for
Anchorage,
Vernell said there are other con- Multiple Sclerosis.
tract language issues · to be
He climbed to the 12,300-feet
resolved, as well. The district' s level
of Mt. Ranier to benefit
npn-teaching employees are work- the American
Lung Association.
ing under the terms of a contract In 2004, he hiked 106 miles
between the board and the union
across the Cascade Range that expired on June 30.
blindfolded!
Vernell said another meeting with
Stevenson, now 70, is an Ohio
the mediator is planned but has not
native,
but lives in Auburn,
been scheduled. Meigs Local Wash. He
is a former school
School District Superintendent Bill
teacher
and
truck driver, pastor
Buckley was not in his office on and Christian
author. He is
Wednesday to comment on the
negotiation process.
Please see Walk, AS

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Aladine Baker
• Braden Michael Rizer

INSIDE

Don
Stevenson
· is walking
across
Ohio's 88
counties
to honor a
friend with
cancer and
to raise
awareness
and funds
for the
American
Cancer
Society.
The
"Pacin'
Parson"
hit downtown
Pomeroy
on
Tuesday
afternoon.

• House OKs terrorism
detainee bill in victory
for Bush; Senate nears
approval. See Page A2.
• Firefighters visit Ohio
Valley Christian School.
See Page A;J
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Israel frees Palestinian
deputy prime minister
of Hamas after month
in jail without charge.
See Page A6
• Pauline Atkins
memorial held at DAR.
See Page AS
· • TOPS honors best
BY BETH SEAGEN.T
loser. See Page A8
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
• 'Ham radio class
POMEROY Forget
registration still available.. what you think you know
See Page AS
about people who call them-

Reds

chi ldrcn from kindergarten
through senior high.
Last fall the district hired
a grants writer to work on
securing · supplemental
funds for the district. This
award,
according
to
Buckley. is a result of hi s
work. While the di strict
technically "hired" the grant
writer, he is paid only for
grants he secures and from

BY BRIAN J. REED

TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING-Racatled G

Karri Ramo and C Blair Jones from
Springfield of the AHL. Reassigned G
Sean Burke and D Andy Rogers to
Springfield.

federal grant for -after-school programs

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

l.auri Korpikoski to Hartford of the AHL.

Robbins and F Ryan Vesce to
Binghamton of the AHL. Returned C
Cody Bass to Mississauga of the OHL,

~eigs gets

.OAPSE employees,
Meigs Local reach ·
bargaining impasse

OTTAWA SENATORs-Assigned G
Jeff Glass, G Kelly Guard. D Cha~ie
Cook. D Neil Komadoski, D Nell Petruic,
BASEBALL
National Loaguo
. F Danny Bois, F Andrew Ebbotl, F
ATLANTA BRAVES-Activated RHP Chanse Fitzpatrick, F Jeff Heerema, F
Arttu Lutlinen, F Brian Maloney, F Cory
John Thomson from the 15-day DL. .
PHILADELPHIA
PHILUES- Peeker, F Grant Polulny, F Bobby
Announced ·a tv«&gt;-year working agreement with Williamsport of the New YorkPenn League.

"ww.m)daii)'&lt;'ntind.eum

I Ill I(SII \\ , .'-;l·. l'TFMBI-:R :!!-I, :!UO(l

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Tuesday's Sparta Transactions

PA
51
60
53
54

Art show slated
in Diles Park, A3

Brandon Miree from the practice squad.

LA. ooogers 1t, Colorado 4
Noah Clarke and LW Matt Moulson to
Manchester of the AHL.
\
Wednesdly's Gomes
NEW JERSEY DEVILS-Assigned G
Diego, Dallas
Arizona (Vargas 11 ·10) at San Francisco
Frank Doyle, G Gregg Naumenko, G
Monday's Game
(J.Sanchez 3-()), 3:35 p.m.
New Orlea ns 23, Atlanta 3
Jordan Parise, D Alex Brooks, 0 Mark
Houston (Hirsh 3-4) at Pittsburgh
Sunday, Oct. 1
Fraser, D Tomas Harant, 0 Nate .Kiser, D
(Chacon 2-3), 7:05 p.m.
Dallas at Tennessee, 1 p.m.
Eric Lundberg, 0 Olivier Magnan, D Dan
Cincinnati (Michalak 2·3) at Florida
Miami at Houston , 1 p.m.
MeGillis, 0 Bryan Miller, 0 Mike Mottau,
(A.Sanchez 9-3), 7:05p.m.
Arizona at Atlanta, 1 p.m.
F
Nicklas Bergfors, F Patrick Davis, F
Philadelphia (Hamels 9-81 at Washington Indianapolis at N.Y. JetS, 1 p.m.
Stephen
Gionta, F Ivan Khomutov, F
(Astacio 5·5), 7:06 p.m.
at BuHalo, 1 p.m.
Pierre-Luc Letourneau-Leblond, F Chris
N.Y. Mots (P.Ma~inez 9·7) at Allanla Minnesota
San Diego at Baltimore, 1 p.m.
Minard, F Ryan Murphy, F Mike
(lHudson 12-12), 7:35p.m..
San Francisco at Kansas City, 1 p.m.
Pandolfo, F Justin Papineau, F Rod
Milwaukee (Bush 12-11) a1 Chicago Cubs New
at Carolina, 1 p.m.
Pelley, F Jason Ryznar, F Aaron Voros
(HI116-7). 8:05p.m.
. DetroitOrleans
at St. Louis, 4:05 p.m.
and F Pair Vrana to Lowell ol the AHL.
San Diego (Young 11-5) at St. Louis Jacksonville
at Washington, 4:15p.m. Returned D Matthew Corrente to
(A.Reyos 5-7), 8:10p.m.
at Oakland, 4:15p.m.
Saginaw of the OHL, 0 Kirill Tulupov to
LA Codgers (Lowe 15-B) at Colorado Cleveland
New England at Cincinnati, 4:15p.m.
Chicoutimi of .the QMJHL, 0 Sean
(Cook 9-141,8:35 p.m.
Seattle at Chicago, 8:15p.m.
Zimmerman to Spokane of the WHL and
'rhursday'o Gamaa
Open:
Pittsburgh, Denver, N.Y. Giants, F Kyell Henegan to Shawinigan of the
Houston at Pittsburgh, 1235 p.m.
Tampa Bay
OMJHL
L.A. Dodgers at Colorado. 3:05p.m.
Monday, Oct. 2
NEW YORK RANGER5-Reesslgned
Cincinnati at Florida, 7:05p.m.
Green Bay at Phlladelphie, 8:30 p.m. G AI Montoya, D Martin Richter, F Lee
Philadelphia at Washington, 7:05p.m.
N.Y. Mots at Atlanta, 7:35p.m.
Falardeau, F Dwight Helminen and F
San Francisco 4, Arizona 2

Monday's Games
Cleveland 14, Chicago Wh~e Sox 1
Toronto 5. Boston 0
Milwaukee at St Louis, 8:10p.m.
N.Y. Yankees 16, Tampa Bay 1
San Diego at Arizona, 9:40p.m.
Minnesota 8, Kansas City 1
Seattle 10, Qakland 9, 10 Innings
PRo FOOTBALL
L.A. Angels 8, Texas 3
Tuesday's Games
Boston 5, Tampa Bay 1
Natlonel F!&gt;Otboll League
QaUolt 4, Toronto 3
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
N.Y. Yankees 5, Ba~imore 4
East
Cleveland 6, Chicago WMe Sox 0
WL T Pet PF
Minnesota 3, Kansas City 2
New England 2 , 0 .667 50
Qakland 12, Seattle 3
2 , 0 .667 68
N.Y. Jets
Te•as 5, LA. Angels 2
Buffalo
120 .333 53
Wednesday's Gamao
Miami
120 .333 36
Tampa Bey (Corcoran 4-9) at Boston
South
(Beckett 16-10), 7:05p.m.
WLTPct
PF
Toronto (LiUy 14-13) al Qatrolt (Robertson Indianapolis 3 0 0 1.000 90
13-12), 7:05p.m.
2 , 0 .667 47
Baltimore (Benson 11 -11) at N.Y. Yankees Jacksonville
Houston
49
030.000
(Wang 18-6), 7:05p.m.
030 .000 33
Chicago While Sox (McCarthy 3-7) at Tennessee
North
Cleveland (Carmona 1-9), 7:05 p.m.
WLTPct PF
Kansas City (Redman 10- tO) at
Bahimore
3 0 0 1.000 70
Minnesota (Silva 10-14), 8:10p.m.
3 0 0 1.000 85
Oakland (Zito 16-91 al Seattle (Meche 11- Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
B), 10:05 p.m.
120.333 48
Texas (Eaton 7-4) at LA. Angels (Weaver Cleveland
030.000 45

we're still right there."
The
loss eliminated
Florida, which has lost four
straight, from a wild-card
berth. The Marlins recovered from an 11-31 start to
get within two games of the
wild-card lead Sept. II.
"Even with the odds, I
still believed we had a
chance," first-year Marlins
manager Joe Girardi said.
"It hurts."
The Reds, meanwhile,
have revived their playoff
hopes thanks to the
Cardinals'Iosing streak.
"We're battling and trying
to stay alive," Reds manag·
er Jerry Narron said. "We're
doing everything we can,
playing everybody we
have."
Ross' second home run of
APphoto
the game, ruid 21st of the
Cincinnati
Reds
closing
pitcher
Scott
Schoeneweis,
left, is
season, was•a two-run shot
congratulated
by
catcher
David
Ross
after
getting
the
save
which bounced off the seats
in the upper deck in left and after the Reds defeated the Marlins 5-3 during a baseball
gave the Reds a 4-0 lead in game at Dolphin Stadium in Miami Tuesday. .
the third.
Belisle was lifted after
''I take a lot. of pride in
His homer to open the _allowing Donttelle Willis' taking the ball." Willis said.
second inning landed in the two-out RBI single in the "You definitely don't want
first row of the upper deck fourth that made jt 4-1.
to see someone celebrate
in left. Norris Hopper fol"It felt good just to get a when you can't celebrate::
lowed with an infield hit start," Belisle said. "It was
The Reds regained their
and eventually scored on disappointing not to go fur- four-run lead on Royce
Chris Denorfia 's RBI sin- ther into the game, but that's Clayton's RBI double in the
gle.
a result of throwing too sixth.
"I didn't see the first one many balrs and too many
Matt Treanor's sacrifice
land, but I saw where the pitches."
fly in the sixth brought
second one wound up,"
Ryan Frankl-in (6-7) Florida within 5-2.
Ross said.
relieved Belisle and worked
Pinch-runner
Reggie
Denorfia finished with I 1-3 scoreless innings for Abercrombie scored from
four hits and Hopper had the win. Scott Schoeneweis third on · pitcher David
three .
pitched one inning for his Weathers' fielding error in
"I don ' I know how I did third save.
the ~ighth to make it 5-3,
that, but it just happened to
Willis ( 12- 12) gave up but Weathers retired Miguel
be one of those games five runs and seven hits, Cabrera on a called third
where everything worked struck out three and walked strike for the final out of the
out," Denorfia said. ·
five in five innings.
inning with the tying runs
Matt Belisle, making his
"I was terrible, I didn't on base.
first start of the season after pitch my game but I tried to
Notes: Ross has three
28 relief appearances, keep it close," Willis said.
multihomer games this seapitched 3 2-3 innings for the
Despite the Marlins ' elim· son and five for his
Reds and gave up one run ination from the postseason , ·career.... Florida's loss
'and three hits.
Willis still wants .to pitch in ensures the end of three
"Matt gave us everything Sunday's regular-season consecutive winning seahe had," Narron said . "He finale against Philadelphia, sons. The Marlins (76-81)
hadn 't started a game · all which is one game behind can finish no better than
year, and he took it to the Los Angeles in the wild .500 by winning their final
very limit."
card .
five games.

Adult gunman ki11s
ho~e, self at
Colorado high school, A2

2006 .

GREEN BAY PACKER5-Signed FB

PA

Washington 31 , Houston 15
Cincinnati 28, Pittsburgh 20
Indianapolis 21 , Jacksonville 14
Carolina 26, Tampa Bay 24
Baltimore 15, Cleveland 14
Seatllo 42, N.Y Giants 30
St. Louis 16, Arizona 14
Philadelphia 38, San Francisco 24
Denver 17, New England 7
Open: Kansas City, Oakland , · San

Atlanta 12, N.Y. Mets 0

GB
11 112
12
27
35
GB
1
8112
21
37
GB
6
12 112
15 112

WL T Pet PF
,2 0 0 1.000 67
San Diego
2 , 0 .567 . 36
Denver
Kansas City
0 2 0 .000 16
Oakland
0 2 0 .000 6
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
WL T Pet PF
Philadelphia
2 1 0 .667 86
Dallas
t 1 0 .500 44
N.Y. Giants
t 2 0 .333 81
Washington
I 2 0 .333 57
South
WL T Pet PF
New Orleans 3 0 0 , 000 76
Atlanta
2 1 0 .667 37
Carolina
t 2 0 .333 45
Tampa Bay
.0 3 0 .000 27
Nonh
W L T Pet PF
Chicago
3 0 0 1.000 79
Minnesota
2 1 0 667 51
, 2 0 333 58
Green Bay
Detroit
0 3 0 .000 37
Wast
WL T Pet PF
Seattle
3 0 0 1.000 72
2 , 0 .667 47
StLouis
Arizona
1 2 0 .333 58
San Francisco t 2- 0 .333 7t
Sunday'• Games
Chicago 19, Minnesota 16
Green Bay 31, Detroit 24
Miarr'li 13, Tennessee 10

Monday's Games
Cincinnati 5, Chicago Cubs 4
Houston 5, Proladelphia 4

Houston 7, Pittsburgh 4
Cincinnati 5, Flonda 3
Washington 4, Phila~lphia 3

PRo BASEBALL
· American Leegue
East ~vision
w L Pet
x-New York
95 62 .605
Boston
84 74 .532
Toronto
83 74 .529
Baltimore
68 89 .433
Tampa Bay
80 97 .382
Central Division
w L Pet
y,Detroit
95 62 .805
y-Minneso1a
94 63 .599
Ch~ago
87 71 .551
Cleveland
74 83 .471
Kansas City
58 99 .369
West Division
· w L Pet
x-Qakland
91 68 .560
Los Angeles
85 72 .541
Texas
79 79 .500
Seante
76 82 .481

~

Netlonot Lotguo
Eeat

Wednesday, September 27,

Brian J.
Reed/photo

'Born (again) to be wild'

WEAmER

Delallo on Pllllo AS

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

The Daily.Sentinel

INDEX
2 SECOONS- 16 PAGFS

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
As
Places to go
A7
Sports
B Section
Weather
AS
© aoo6 Ohio VaUcy Publishing Co.

y

selves "bikers" and "Do not
judge, or you too will be
judged," because you're
invited to the Second Annual
Biker Sunday, whetheryou
ride a motorcycle or not.
The Second Annual Biker
Sunday begins at I 0:30a.m.
this Sunday at the Syracuse
Nazarene Church with
Pastor
Steve
Combs,
founder of "Leave a Mark
Ministries" of Grove City
speaking. Free food, including a hog roast, will follow
Combs' service. A scenic
ride will happen after lunch.
The event is for all denominations and ages.
Last year at this time
Bobby Fox of Middleport
thought he knew what
defined a biker and that definition was a narrow one,
one that he thought only
included "partying" as he
put it. Living that "partying,
biker lifestyle" Fox said he
had no intention of changing but after attending last
year's Biker Sunday he
leaned being a biker could
go hand in hand with being
a Christian and suddenly the
definition of being a biker·
was no longer one-dimensional for him.
"I had no intention of
going," Fox said, explaining
his wife talked him into

Beth Sorgont/photo
Farmers Bank recently donated a new sign for the Meigs
County Cancer Resource Center located in the Mulberry
Community Center. Pictured are (from left) Paul Reed, president Farmers Bank; JoAnn Crisp, co-chairperson Meigs
County Relay For Life: George Harris. Jr .. sign creator; and
Ferman Moore, president Meigs County American Cancer
Society Taskforce.

Fanners Bank donates sign
to Cancer Resource Center
"The bank made a commitment
to
become
involved because we know
POMEROY - Believe it early detection dr~stically
or not Meigs Coumy docs increases cancer survival
have its own Cancer rates." Reed said. eluding to
Resource Cenler funded hy the many programs and
local Relay For Life dollars resources for early cancer
Beth Sergonlfphoto and now a sign on the lawn detection the CRC pro,
Sadie Fox, 8, of Middleport takes a seat on her dad Bobby's of the Mulberry Communily
1991 Harley which will be at the Second Annual Biker Center is there to advert isc motes . "We wanled to do
what we as a corporation
Sunday this Sunday at the Syracuse Nazarene Church.
its existence.
could do to help oul. "
Farmers Bank recentl y.
attending Biker Sunday and Combs at any time with any donated the sign. ma9e by . The CRC was brought
now he says his life has problem and he is accessible. George Harri '· Jr. fr\r 1he i 1110 ex is1ence bv local
funds raised for Relay For
totally changed, . mostly
Combs and '" Leave a CKC whid1 offers free can- Life which this year grossed
because of the message and Mark Ministries" sponsors cer service~ to area rc ~ ld~nt'~ .
m·er $40.000 in Meigs
manner of Pastor Combs, a around 25 rides and events
For
Farmers
Bank Counly alone .
biker himself.
each year designed to intlu - President Paul Reed the rc~ ­
"That is iusl awesome:·
"He doesn't preach, he
son the bank became JnAn1l Crisp of Meigs
ence
the
biker
world
and
talks to you," Fox said, sayinvo lved in the prt&gt;jcct wa s
ing he knows he can call
Please see Donates, AS
siniple, ··Early dctectiu!t."
Please see Sunday, AS
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

•

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