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PageB8

PREP FOOTBALL

The Daily Sentinel

"

Thursday, October 5, 2006

,I

Ethics panel approves
subpoenas in start to
pagehnvesfigation,A2

Meigs ready for .
· Buckeyes, Bt

OUR 'EXPERTS' BREAK DOWN THIS WEEK'S Hl(iH .SCHOOL FOOTBALL GAMES

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MiddlepQrt. • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)II (

Brad Shernun
Sports Edi ror
Record : 46- 14
· Llst Week: 8-2
(winnt"rs in rulli1)
G:~Ui:~.

Academy

Larry Crmn
Sport~ Writt'r
R(Yord: ...fi1:... 2J)

Ll't 'V/l·d: 5-'5
( \YillllCn 1ll Ml!;l)
c;.~ J b .t ALJdl'll ) \

at Ironton
NcltM!;IIt-York .

,\l

Nelsonyil!e- York

.n

atM .ei ~

fl!&lt;a &gt;t

Pomt PleaS:mr
Sgutb Point
:i lt

R 1vc-r Va lky

Eastern

.It

IrontOn
.M,· ,f!~

(; ,!111.!
.It

L.m Week: 7-J
(wi nn rrs in h!ilil)

i\,· .~~klll\"

Gallja Academ)·
:tt ln)nlou

Ironton .

~clsonyitle- York
.tt

Ne l~ltwi!lt• - Yo rk

.lt ~

Mci!!'

South Point

Rt,·crVallcr

;H R 1ver V.t lky

E.r'tc r n

.It

South Ga!Jia :1t
SftOtO\'iiltb E.i~t

M11ler .\ t '

Southern

, Southt&gt;rn ·

Gjlmer County
at H.mn:m

Gilmer County
.11 H.llln.m

Herbert Hoovrr

Ad. Reprt~s't· mrivt'
Record +2 I ~

South Poi11f
·df

South Gama :1t

Sisso1wille ar

R eport er
R t'(l.0 nl 39 21
Ln~t Week: 5-5
(winnt: rs i n lllllit)

e.ru:.a ,Jt

federal Hocking

Miller .1r

Chris Rathburn

PouH Pl c. t~.un

Ftdenl Hocking

Scjotovillc E.m

Beth Sergent

\ l\'!111',

ilk

,1{ ••

Herbert Hoover

South Point
at R.iv~·rVallcy

1\ l.tnL"tP

Gallia Academy
at lmnton

Gallia A'c ademy
at Ironton

Ga)lja AcadCmy
at Ironto n

Callia Academy

at

at

South Point

South Point

River Vallev

at R iver Valley

Jt

Ji&lt;t'-ICfll ,lt

Ea~tcn} 'at

Federal Hockinc
. ~South Gallia

Milkr ,a

M11ler ;a t
Soqthern

Mill er at
Southern

Si,..Onville

Herbert Hoowr.

Hrrhert Hoover

Previous Champions- 200 I: Butch Cooper ---

Soudt Point

at River Valley

Eastern at
federal Hockin&amp;

Eastern at
Fedc[JI HgdQnc

SOuth GaJiia at

South Galliw :n

Sciotoville East

Sciocoville East

~~

Gi1mer County ·
Sjswnville at ·
Herhen Houvt:r

Herbnt HooyeJ

Sissonville 11 1
Herbert Hoovt"r

L2pn",l(

~.ll ·

,\.1;uierta

M.1rien a

SOuth Pojnt

Mill e-r at

Miller at

Southern

Southern

Gilmer County
at Hannan

Gjlmer Countt

Southern

Sis~o n nllc .It

Hrrbert Hooyer

logan at

L!&gt;pn at

Marjrtta

Marietta

Shennan ~--

Grants awarded to Meigs fire departments
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

The
award
to
the appropriations committee
Pomeroy department was and, according to a news
$565.250 to.be used for· the release, wrote the original
POMEROY
The purchase of a new truck, · bill . to establish the FIRE
Pomeroy . ahd Middleport . while Middleport's award fund in 2000.
.
Fire Departments have was $37 ,213 and for ~ se in
"The legislation increases
awarded
federal purchasing radios and safe- the federal commitment 10
been
grants of over $600,000, as ty equipment.
·
fire fighting and emergency
part of the $545 million
Announcing the awards to resp"nse services," said
appropriated
for . the the local fire · departments De Wine, noting that "comFirefighter Investment and came Thursday from U. S. petitive grants were made to
Response
Enhancement Senator Mike DeWine (R- fire departments to help
(FIRE) Act fund.
OH) who serves on the . them better serve and p(otec1
•
HOEFUCH~MYDAI LYSENTlNELCOM

Eastern

· BY BETH SERGENT

2005: Bryan Walters.

gained 11 total passing
yards for the game.
Eastern, wi1h ·Only · 98
yards. total last week, will
need to do much better
than that on Friday to put
any points on the board.
When these two teams
faced-off last ,year, the
Lancers won big over the
Eagles posting a score of
40-6.

MORELOCAL~NEW'S~~..
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MORE LOCAL FOLKS~
.
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•

,. S'llbsfribe IJQday.
·,
992-21'56
.
i

'*:

··~

'1

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1 $159.95

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Makes cleanup work mUCh easier.

stocked chap with
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.Qpti.onal Va&lt;l\IUID and gutter kit attachments available.

s.. r• tec1111 STIHL ..IIIr fir 1 full liM of lllowers.
•

Offer V11 /kJ
rhtnl.l/11'1 11/17~

Commissioners
appropriate
·funds for
CDBG projectS

RACINE
Southern
High School homecoming
BY BRIAN J. REEO
festivities culminate in the ·
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
crowning of a homecoming
,.
.
queen during half-time at
POMEROY
Meigs
·
tonight 's football game
County.
Commissioners
Southern
between
the
appropriated $430,000 in
Tornadoes and the Miller
Community Development
Falcons at Bob Adams Field .
Block Grant · funds at
Before the game the
Thursday's regular meeting, ·
senior homecoming queen
representing funds approved
candidates and· parade floats
for formula· funding projects
will be driven around the
and rhe Community Distress
football field for display
grarit awarded to the Village
.just before kick off which is
of Pomeroy.
scheduled for 7:30 p.m .
The appopriations includTailgaters are also invited to
ed funds for parks and
the Ohio a,iver Producers'
recreation, fire protection,
(FFA alumni) .booth which
street improvement. sidewill set up shop outside:
.willk improvements.,. ciel!Ifield'ootween·s-7 p.rn:·, ...l.J:'~-.
ance activity (demol'ition ol "
ing concessions and pro\(id,
abandoned l]ouses), parking.
ing a tailgating atmosphere
facilities and fair housing
before the game.
.
and administration.
Today's activities include
The Pomeroy Community
Beth Sergentjphoto
a volleyball game between
Distress
grant will be used
Showing their schoo.l spifit on Halloween Costume Day are. first row (from left) senior
students and ' faculty at I
homecoming queen . candidates Stephanie Hoskins, Amber Hill, Mallory Hill, Emily to repair sidewalks, demolip.m.' followed by a pep rally
tion of condemned houses,
Babbitt, Morgan McMeeken; second row (from left) senior .escorts Eric Zeiner, Weston
at I :30 p.m . The homecomnew fire equipment, and·
Counts, Darrin Teaford, Adam Phillips, Wyatt Musser; third row (from left) Courtney
ing parade begins at 2:30
street repairs. ·
. Commissioners
also
p.m. at the high school ·and Ginther, junior· attendant, April Richards, sophomore atte.ndant. Kasey Turley, freshman
attendant; fourth row (from left) Wes Riffle, jun.iot escort, Jordan Pickens. sophomore appropriated $52,828.83 in
see Southet'n, A5 escort, Brad Coppick, freshman escort
·
rural housing preservation
funds, . and appropriated . ·
$4.000 in donations into the
budget of Sheriff Robert
Beegle. Commissioner Jim
Sheets said Beegle collected
$16,000 in donations for jail
renovations,
but
only
Mill Street Antiques,
$12,000 was appropriated.
owned by Sandra Fultz
Commissioners approved a
Brown; center, was
resolution abandoning .a porhonored as the fall ·
tion .of Pageville Roa,d, folquarter's "Extra Great · lowing a public hearing and
:Place" by the
viewing earlier Thursday.
Middleport
Present
vvere
Commissioners Sheets and
Development Group's
Mick Davenport and Clerk
beautification commit·
Gloria Kloes.
tee. Brenda Phalin

• Upward Bound
recruits area high
school students.
See Page A3 .
• More facts released
in crash probe.
See Page AS
• Hunters prepare
for fall turkey season.
See Page AS
• Meigs County Court
News. See Page AS
• Songs of praise: Why
we sing. See Page A6
• AHunger For More.
See Page A6
• Middleport Court.
See Page AS
• O'Bieness offers
driVer refresher course'.
See Page ·AS
• Ariel offers Hallow~n
magic. See Page A8

Plellse

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and Donna Hartson
presented Brown with_ ,
the traveling flag
award recognizing (he
work she has complet·
ed on her building on
the "T," and for the
, seasonal and window
displays she employs .
to promote ~er
antique business.
Susan Baker and
Bria~ Reed also serve
on the committee.
Brian J. Reed/ photo

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INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Chester

Gallipolis

Baum Lumber Inc.
,46384 State Route 248

Twin Rivers
a
Marina
L.L.C.
.
.
412 State Rt. 7 North
./'&gt;

Pomeroy
'-

Dettwiller Lumber ·
634 East Main Street

740-992-5500

140-446-6700
eopyngl&gt;l ~ 2006 $TIHL 8RYAOi·I321.Q115-10

AreyoureadyforaSTIHL?

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFI.ICH®MYDAI LYSENTINEL

16 PAGFS

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Buckeye Edition
B8
Calendars
A8
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A6-7
Movies

/

Rutland

man back
from Iran
BY lANCE CPL.
MICHAEL S. C!RJENTES
COMBAT

CO R~ESPONDENT

MCAGCC
TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. Over a period of seven
month s Marine
Wing
Support Squadron 374, of
which Lance Cpl. Matthew
Mullins of Rutland was a
member, carried out avia1ion support missions in AI
Kathleen
An bar Province of Iraq .
Scott 's
Durin g that time the
lOlst
Marines and sailors of the
. birthday
bc,ltlalion developed an
was
experience on the frontlines
celebrated
only deployed service memat a
bers can understand.
luncHeon
Some of tho se experiwith her
ence s were a sense of yearnquilting
ing for wha1 they left behind
friends at
on American soil - grass.
the forest I mu,ic. cable 1elevision.
Run Church
M ex1~an food. pi ZLa. their
Thursday. ·
friend' - but mostly their
Charlene
families and home.
.
Hoefiichf photo
'Likewise . the families and
. friend, . who remained on

Kathleen Scott celebrates lOlst birthday

•

stihlusa.com

residents and their property." pressed air foam system.
Rick Blaettnar, chief of · " Pomeroy has not had a ·
rhe
Pomeroy
Fire ladder truck for several
Department, S&lt;Jid that the years, in fact the last one
depar(fnent applied for the . was ·an 85-foot 1952!'
grant money .to be .used for Blaellnar commented.
a new ladder true!, to
As for the Middleport grant,
replace Pumper 2 which is David Hoffman , chief of the
currently in service.
Middleport Fire Department,
He .said the grant covers said that the $37.213 they
the entire cost of the truck
receive will be used for purand its equipment which
includes a modern comPlease see Gnnts, .AS

.

yard&gt; and two touchdowns going to the air more latelast
week .
Chadwell, ly, with their running game
Driggs
.and
company struggling in some games
rushed for 195 yards - · thi s season; they were even
from Page Bl
part of an offensive attack left with nega1ive rushing
that
yielded 279 total yards two weeks .ago, .
. TVC returnee) led .the way
mostly becaqse of sacks ~
. yards ..
with 94 rushing yards in
Eastern. enters 1he fray
. Last
week
·against
last week' s sh utou t of having los1 all six of its . Trimble, Eastern quarter~
contests on the year, being backs, who were rushing
Southern .
.
Fed Hock quarterback ou1scoreu 237-62,
their passes,. threw four
The Eagles have been interception s and only
Chaz Driggs passed 'for 84

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"'"v.mydail~"'"lim·l . &lt;om

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BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM .

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740-985-3301

o, :.wo6

Homecoming full of Southern spirit

at

Ht·rben Hom•t"r

Marictta

2002: Butch Cooper--- 2003: Brad Shennan --- 2004: Brad

Sis.~nville

FRIUA\. OCTOBER

•

a t Hannan

Sjuonrille al

L!&gt;pn"

M arima

1'&lt;&gt;&lt;ll"

Point Pleasant

at R1ver Valley

ar Han nan

S1~s ,m\11le .It

Meigs

River Valley

:H

M1ll t r

:1t

Poca at
"P ojnt Plelynt

Emer n at
Federal Hockin&amp;

,

Federal Hockin&amp;

at Ha nn:m

Lo.pn at

Jt

NelwnyjDe- York

South POint
· Jt

• Eastem goes perfect
at home. See Page 81'·

Gallia Academy
at lrogtoa

:tl~

Mei~

l3l&lt;.a"

Gilmer County .

.It

Record; 40-20
Last Week; 7-3
(wmners in h2ld.)

J l Jionton .

Point Pl c-a;'ant

Eastern 'at

.

Southern '

;H

· l!2g at
Po int Ple:;i~;mt

SPORTS

· Jelf Lanham
Rio GnndeAD

Ne)tonyjlle-York

Mti&amp;t ·

Sciotovillc Ejst

at HaUnan ·

Logan

Reporter
' Record; 35- 25
Last Week ; 6-4
(winners in Jnilil)

Soqrovill t East

Ci llll l'r Co uTH\'

M,t,t:n,l

Reporter
Record; 45~ 15
LasrWeek: 9-1
(winners in IMllit)

South Gallja

Ctl\llllv

~.. lt

N ews Editor
R ecord: 45-15
Last Week: 9- 1
(winnen in hm.d)

Federal 'Hocking

,If

ar Hannan ·
"

Ad . Repre~enativc
Reco rd : 45- 15
Last Week: 8-2
{winners in' h2l.d)

Snotovillf' East

.11

I

Diane Pottorff

South GaUia at

Southern
Cihn er

Nicole fields

~ &amp;Qat
Point Pleasant

South J&gt;mnt
Rivc;r Valley

SciOCtWllk· East ·
Miller

Tim Maloney

Nelsonvilk-York

frudi .lt

Eastern

Dave Harris

NeJsonyil1r-York
a t MeiJ;S
Pui n t P!ns.mt

f l'dt' r.• l Hocli11g

dt.•

At.-.Jdcmy

.It I[(~nton

I'oo a·t

E a~tc-rn ;lt

South GaDja

(~a ll i.l

Pojnt Pleasant

Jt

fednal Hockjng

Charlie 'Shepherd
Pagi i1aror
Rcc9rd; 41 ~ 19
L.1~t \X1t&gt;t•k: S-·5
(wm nrr~ in h.Q.W.)

1·.1\:TS • \'ol. ;;6, 1\:o. ~:l

A5

NASCAR

B3

Sports
Weather

B Section
A8

@ aoo6 Ohio Volley Publishinz Co.

POMEROY - While Kathleen Scot1 ''of
Forest Run who is observing her 10 I s1 birthday today may not be the oldes1 Mei g&amp;
Countian,.she is probably the mos1 ac1ivc for
someone her age .
Kathleen has been quilting at the church
for 70 years or so and her misse·s a! the
Thursday project to raise money for church
improvements have been few and far
between. Faithfulness is one of her many
traits to be admired.
She has been pianist a11he church si nce ;.he
was 16 and to 1his day come&gt; every Sunday to
play for the congregational ~i ngin g of 1he nlu
songs.ln fact she and Carolyn Salser get there
an hour or so before services so !hal Kathl een
can practice the hymns. For year;. 'he al'o

Ple•se ·see Birthday, AS

1

Please see Mullins, AS

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The Daily Sentinel
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NATION • WORLD

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:PageA2

Friday, October 6, 2006

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Unhappy hubby needs to handle sztuation
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SuGAR

BY LARRY MARGASAK

\' when they cast their votes.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
That group is much more
•
likely to "vote Democratic . .
WASHINGTON - The
Hastert . got a boost
House ethics commiuee Thursday evening from
approved nearly four dozen President Bush, who called
· subpoenas Thursday as its and expressed his support. '
investigation of a page sex .
"The president thanked
scandal sprang to life. with a him for going out and mak,.
promise by its leaders to go ing a clear public statement
. "wherever the evidence that said the 'House leader: leads us ."
ship takes responsibility and
: Speaker Dennis Hastert · is accountable," White
• said he accepted re.s ponsi- House tleputy press secre: bility for any earlier failures tary Dana Perino said. "He
· to investigate former Rep. said he appreciated that
Mark F()ley 's sexually when they got the informaexplicit computer messages tion , they swiftly · took
: to teenage · pages. But he action making clear .that'
:resisted pressure to step Rep . Foley should · step
:down.
down and promptly request"Ultimately ... the buck ed a Department of Justice
stops here," the Republican investigation. And
he
speaker said, borrowing the expressed his support for
· famous
phrase
of a the speaker."
:Democratic ·
president ,
The speaker, at a news
.: Harry Truman.
·
conference, mixed a new: Hastert held to his asser- found contriteness with
· tion that he did not know defiance.
·
about Foley's e-mails and
"Could we have done · it
_
AP Photo
: instant messages to former better'' Could the page
Former Congressional page Tyson Vivyan, 26, shown in his Atlanta home on the phone Thursday told The Associated Press
: pages until the scandal board have handled it. bethe
rece ived sex ually suggestive computer messages in 1997_, years before the communications exposed last week, froin
: broke Iast week. In the past ter? In retrospect , probably
·several
days,
several yes. But at the time what we · an anonymous sender who turned ·out to be former u,-s. Rep. Mark Foley. R- Fla.
:Republican lawmakers and knew and . what we acted top aides to Hastert about · mittee asks him to, · of and could be sumnioned ally lead the investigation,
: staff members said they upon was what we had."
Foley's conduct with pages. .course," Bonjean told The include: Hastert aides Tim joined · by Reps. Juqy
were aware of the messages.
But he also vowed to win His comments pushed back Associated Press.
Kennedy, Mike Stokke, Ted Biggert, R-Ill., whose disDemocrats were not noti- re-election and run for
Several lawmakers and Van Der Meid and Scott · trict adjoins Hastert's, . and
the time when information
fied.
House speaker again .
aides could logically be Palmer; former Clerk of the Stephanie Tubbs Jones, DThe . ethics committee
While the Committee on 111ay have reached the
summoned.
based on what · House Jeff Trandahl; Rep. Ohio. Their investigartve
speaker's
office.
:promised to finish its inves- Standards
of
Official
.
is
known
so
far. The com- Rodney Alexander, R-La .. subcommittee thus has two
Ethics
committee
chair: tigation in weeks , not Conduct - the ethics comand
two
• months, but it was unclear mittee - is investigating man Doc Hastings , R-Wash., mittee also could subpoena who became -aware !hat Rep~blicans
Democrats.
and
ranking
Democrat
former
lawmakers.
and
Foley
sent
questionable
e: whether that would occur potential · violations of
"We pledge to you that
&lt;'If staff,' including Foley, a mails to a page he spanBerman
: before the Nov. 7 election. House rules, the Justice · Howard
· Hastert's ~andling of the Department appeared to be California would provide· no Florida Republican ; and sored; Rep. Tom Reynolds, our investigation will go
issue has brought harsh, cijt- mo~ing with dispatch in its details on the subpoenas but . Fordham. However, the R-N.Y. , who spoke with . wherever the evidence .leads
told a news conference the House has no aut]mrity to Alexander about Foley; us," Hastings said.
icism from some fellow criminal inv~stigation .
Berman said the commitLeader John
committee
was seeking both punjsh anyone no longer a Majority
Republicans and conservaTimothy
Heaphy,
a
tee
did mit consider suggesof
Congress
or
an
Boe.hner;
and
Rep
.
John
member
and
documents.
testimony
tive activists.
lawyer for ex-Foley chief of
Shimkus, R-111., chairman tions ·from congressional
: An AP-Ipsos poU found staff Kirk Fordham, said his · Hastert spokesman . Ron employee.
According
to
public
state,
of
the board that oversees watchdog groups and editoBonjean
said
the
speaker
:that about half of likely vot- client had· just met with the
rial writers to naine an out: ers say recent disclosures of . FBI. Fordham emerged as a had not yet received 11 sub- ments and an internal the page program.
Hastings and Berman, in side counsel. He said the
• corruption and scandal in · key figure Wednesday when poena from the ethics com- review by Hastert's office, a
: Congress will be "very"· or he told reporters that he had mittee but was willing to likely list of those who had an unusual procedural committee could do the job
· "extremely"
important talked three years ago with testify. "If the ethics com- some involvement in events move, said they will person- without partisanship.

•

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Rice tells Iraqi leaders·they,h':lve limited '
: time to settle ~ifferences, control violence
•

BY ANNE GEARAN

· factions, Rice delivered a . to make much difference.
blunt message about . how
On Monday, al-Maliki
Americans do not see the announced a security plan
history behind ethnic and ·. to unite the feuding parties,
: BAGHDAD, Iraq
·Secretary
of
State sectarian splits, said a senior creating local committees in
: Condoleezza Rice warned · ·State Department official which Sunnis and Shiites
will work together to man~
Iraqi leaders on Thursday · present at the sessions. ·
they have limited time to
The offic1'al·
who
spoke
1 ·
age efforts at .quelling the
: settle their differences and · on con d •tmn
··
'
of anonym•ty
violence on a d. istrict-by: that the escalating waves of . . because th e mee t'mgs were district level.
·.violence are intolerable.
r·d 1· 1 ·d R'
1
con 1 en 13 • sal
Jce a so
Contentious details of the
· On a visit five weeks said Americans need to see
: before congressional elec- Iraqis working together plan must be worked out,
tions in the U.S ., Rice also rather than killing one and Shiite and Sunni parties
twice have put off negotiainsisted the Bush adminis- another.
: tration has been honest with
Rice met with Prime tions.
:Americans about the costs Minister Nouri al-Maliki
· "This is, of course, a time
:and stakes in Iraq .
and other officials as the of challenge for the Iraqi
: Administration officials sectarian cycle of revenge people ," Rice said after a
· recently have found them- killings between Shiites and brief meeting with al: selves defending their con- . Sunnis threatened to under- Maliki. "They · are a comduct .of the war, and Rice's mine his government. Shiite mitted people and ·we know
remarks reflected the politid s
·
· · 1 they w1·11 . overcome •these
:cal toll for thew
. hite.House an
unm parues 111 a: from an unpopular conflict. · Maliki's coalition accuse challenges·."
: "This is really hard each other of backing miliRice 's plane circled the
· Baghdad airport for 35 min: going," Rice told reporters tias.
during her stop in the Iraqi
Al-Maliki told Iraqi state utes before landing because
capital. "Not only do I TV on Thursday that the of a threat from ''indirect
believe that the president· country is in the final stage · fire" - mortar rounds or
. has been clear with the of "confronting the security rockets - .in the airport
:American people that this is challenge" and that s~c~rity area, State Department
:a struggle, he 's been clear would. be achJ~ved · w•thm spokesman
Sean
·. with, ·the American people · the two or three months to McCormack told reporters.
why he thinks it's a struggle come."
· In Washington
US
R_ice said Iraqis them'
· ·
. that needs to be waged." .
selves must settle difficult Senate Democrats issued a
• After meetings in the problems such as .the divi- . press release Thursday call•· Mideast With . Arab and sion of oil wea.Ith. possible mg
· attenllqn
· · to the growmg
· 1
, Israelileaders, 1thetopU.S . changes to the constitution num ber ofUS
· · casua 1·
t1es
·
d 1eve 1 of b om b
· diplomat came to Iraq to tell and the desire for _greater an d a recor
sometimes squabbling leadk · B hd d
· . autonomy
m
v_arious attac s m ag a .
ers th ey have a short wtn: dow to resolve disputes that regions.
ln . AP-lpsos polling last
:she said are spurring sectar"Obviously the securi'ty month. more than half of
· an d tnsurgent
·
· 1ence.
side and th. e political side Americans said the United
vto
: 1an
While killings among are lin ked ," Rice told States was losing ground in
: Iraqis have not abated. report~rs.
,.
Iraq. About 40 percent ·
American casualties also
In an interview with The approved of President ·
have spiked .recenily.
Associated Press, al-Maliki Bush's job performance .
Car bombs killed four said that o11ce. the Iraqis · Rice disputed that the
people and wounded 28 in work out· their differences. administration has been less
: Baghdad on Thursday. At "the political solution must than candid about Iraq. Now
; least 23 U.S.,soldiers have be obligatory, one that ·all in its fourth year. the con: died sin,ce Saturday: most parties adhere to . The pres- · flict has claimed more than
• were in Baghdad amid a ence of parties with militias 2.700 American l'ives and
:massive security sweep by in the government · is not cost more than $3()(] billion .
· acceptable."
A new book bv J·ournalist
.· U .S . an d Iraq1· force .s . ·
th
U
S
I
·
Rice d.e. scribed the task as Bob Woodward • about . the
· '
.
'd
R
. 1ce sa1
e · · roe t&gt;
"to suppon all the parties "the ability to get every- wartime White House .
and indeed to press all the body to understand precise. parties to work toward that ly how their interests are , assens that the administra.
· kl y b~caw.. e go 1'ng to "'
'-n represented and
tion routinely· has understat·
. reso1ut 10n
qu1c
· Iy t he secunty
· sJtua·
how· the1'r ,·nterests are go 1·n!!~ ed the difficultic, and
: ob v1ous
• tion is not one that can be to be served in thi s political l'od geu hard truths in lroq . ·
: tole~ated and it Is not one process ."
"I w_oul d say. go bad and
: that is being helped by
Al-Malik i made curbin g loo k at any presi de nti al
political inactiqn .''
Baghdad violence hi s first speec h in the last )Car and
In a series of meetings priority after taking () ffi ce In the d!'cu"ion · of' the fact
with leade rs repre.senting the spring . But curfews and that th i' i' \ ery tough gu1 ng
most ethnic and religiow, other
. . me a~ures have fai led is in thae:· Ri ce said .
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

I

YOUR AD INSIDE ACOMIC STRIP.

.

Friday, October 6, 2006
.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

_.Ethics panel approves four
dozen subpoenas in fast
start to page investigation

PageA3

-.BY.THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

like someone who has never
had a weight problem. If
ranting
at
overweight
patients were effective,
everyone would . be ' thin.
There are better ways for
doctors . to get the message
across.

Upward Bound recruits area high school students.

ATHENS - In an effort to
see that the potential of
umn. Please e-mail your Appalachian students does
questions to anniesmail- rrot go 'to waste, sophomores
who excel academically, are
box@c0mcast.net, or write encouraged
to apply to
to: · Annie!s Mailbox, P.O. Upward Bound. a national
Box 118190, Chicago, JL college-access program that
60611. To find out more helps promising students
abouJ Annie's Mail/;lox, and earn
their
bachelor's
read features by other degrees.
Creators .Syndicate writers · Housed in the Ohio
and cartoonists, visit the University
College · of
Creators Syndicate Web Education, Upward Bound
. JHlge at www.creators.com. . provides tutoring , advising.

preparation for the ACT or
SAT. financial aid, and assistance completing and submining college applications.
Students attend monthly
workshops
at
Ohio
University's Athens campus
and six-week, academically~ ·
·intensive summer sessions,
which simulate the college
expenence.
.
· Eligibility is determined
based on annuaj family
income and/or pot~ntial firstgenerati()n college .student

status. Students must have at
least a 2.0 cumulative GPA
and · sophomore standing at
an Upward Bound-participaling high school.
·
· For details and to download an · application, visit
http: //www.coe.ohiou.edu/ce
n
t
e
r
s
partnerships/centers/upward
-bound. You can also contact
high school guidance counselors· offic~ or OHIO's
Upward Bound' program toll
free at 866.593.0728. i;,.

; Dear Annie: My husband
' refuses to get a job, and"then
; accuses me of neglecting my
· "wifely duties" because I'm
: always at work.
· "Dan" has been collecting
Annie's Mailbox is written
unemployment
since
by
Kathy Mitchell and
January. He thinks this · is
· , acceptable, because. I have a Marcy Sugar, longtime. edi,' full-time job and my wages tors ofthe.Ann Landers colare decent. I tried talking to
: him, but he kept saying, "I'd
•
. ge( a job if y()u 'd quit nag1 ging me." Well, r quit nag; ging three months ago, and
1 he still has made no attempt ·
: to find work. He sits up until
•
'
.
'
, all hours drinking and watching TV, and then gets angry
•
•
when he has to get up in the .
'
morning to care for our infant
soit.
I've explained to Dan that
. we can't .afford child care
until he gets a job. I've told
· him we will soon lose· every, thing we have, but he doesn't
.'
t,
.
'
'
seem .to care. This man
eJlpects me to pay all the ·
bills. I have four children
from a previous relationship
living with us, and Dan's
three children spend weet(ends and summers here. The
grocery bills alone are taking
... every penny I earn. ·
When I have the chance to
work overtime, I ~e it. Then
Dan accuses me of cheating,
lying and not caring about
my family. He always says
these things in front of our 2year-old son. I would like to
stay in the marriage, but it is
becoming extremely diffi,cult. Dan ref\lses counseling,
and I am getting very tired .
- Overworked and Fed
Up in Pennsylvania
Dear Overworked: Your
husband is depressed and
stuck in a rut, and he's taking
it out on you. He accuses you ·
. , ,
I .. V ters' Guide wo"'-'· MRI'
.
of · cheating because · he
. , • po
· namto
Heres how t lt~ 0
.
Ue!ttions.
.about
Issues
In\
believes himself to be worthasked J.ey q ·
.. f ,. .,~ of each major
sand thClr am 1 ''"'
less. And if he pushes you
our member
.. ~h
didate was
candidate fur this race. Eac can
.,,
away, he won't have to take
~
d to ans.\'o"Cl eac
allowed up to \ 2&gt; wor •
· dify those
responsibility for the collapse .
· .
RP did not edit or mo
, of your marriage. Tell Dan
quesuon . .'\A.
-L-e&lt;i chcd~.
·tn . ,dictates \\tere aw- 10
~ you love him, you have conan!t"""'ers.. .e cru
sc drdes. l'he C4lndidates
the sup\lOrt or oppo.
ch~" • circle tn
fidence in him, and you think
· . of
n~ay have c·t, nsr.n
· not to """""'
: counseling can help strength-)
.
A..t· . llAlU'has provided a St,unnmr;
aw.liti&lt;JO. /'V1ol
•
: en your bond. If he refuses,
·h·on for each.of the ts.sucs. .
our
pos•
.
. · go without him. One of you ·
- • PMs this guide on io friends and family..
' needs to geta handle on this
· situation.
·• Shafe yOU! ~ willl the tandidateS. Dear ~e: I am an 18• Ask for clarification from aff'i candidate
: year-old college student. I
v.fi05e answer ~ unc\eilf.
· still live at holl!e with my
: parents, who agreed this .
; wquld be fine as•long as I
· help out with chores. I have
: managed to pay my entire .
i tuition for community col' le~ by obtaining scholar2ships.
.
Soc:ial Security
3
· I think when parents have
Health
Reform
: children, they should save
4
Medicare
. : money to help them pay for
5'
· college. My younger sister
Long-Term
6
:,says children should either
Retirement
SecUritY
., raise the·money on their own
wWw.aarp.orglelections
. or get a job instead of going
to college. Who is right? ~ -·
· Student in Florida
, Dear Student: If parents
'
.
• can afford to help their children .through college, we
, think it's great. College debt
'
· can be an enormous burden
· to young people just starting
•
, out. However, we don't
: _believe parents should sell
· their souls in order to send
; ·their kids to fancy :liniversi: ties. Most schools offer
' financial aid packages and
..
scholarships, and many state
universities, junior and com•
111111istltU' z-.tMz ..... lt'li?S tr1Mtta¥0t111heitiUII,!IOtjustthepii'IIR 4 '11w.SIIIIefaleJ811Yilte
munity C,Plleges and night
.
'
: schools are quite affordable.
·-And even When parents are
1llls ••a 2 1; flzll• lilt utthe ~ IUIIII a izlp1n.t inses tll8t • effect us al ...
1M
· paying the full load, we are in
favor of students having part. ullc llu* •2 n
Cl "as let ,.. ail In 1Mir we w.1ls wllll'elladl C'Muldate sttalli •
time jobs to help cover the ·
extra..~. You are fortunate to
·11'1-•••. . II '" ~ llu211tc.'e rer..• ... relil ....ltset:alil,. •mqlJer to
widl.,_.lletll ....
· have those scholarships, and
· parents willing to provide
lWta cs••ceii1.......,71Ufar.,_.n.UIIlv.ten' "*h
· . · room and board.
1
De8r Annie: I say bravo to
•
the tough-talking doctor who
let his patient have it about
·being too fat. This doctor was
only taking a stand against
• what he sees more of every
day. America is ~etting PAT
•
. because we can t keep our
. mouths shut long enough to
'
: get off our behinds and do
. something about it.
, When regular clothing
· sizes are XXI.., and a coffin
maker offers oversized caskets, we are in trouble. rve
heard all the excuses.
Enough! Get off the couch!
And keep your paws out of
the chip bowl! I implore all
family doctors, do not sugar·coat the obvious. Give it to
them strai~ht! .:._ Keeping It ·
· Low-cal m So-Cal
Dear Low-Cah Spoken

.

.

You may.not personally know the candidates, but you
·oari.know .ihere they personally stand on the Issues.

How to use the.
AARP voters' Guide:

.

.

Be.sure to vote on November 7th.
Inside: ,

care

care .

MRP'

.

m.r

aa. ,.......

vm

sCUmin~:
•

'

To place an ad please conta~:
· Dave or Brenda
at 992-2155

The Daily Sentinel
•

•

•
dontvote.com
...

'

..

�...
•

Friday, October 6, 2006

PageA4

OPINION
Richard Land: voice of Baptist
conservatisltJ gets his point acr9s:S quietly
.I

·.The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 6, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

•'

facts

·-'Local Briefs

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necessarily a government to take · on the various ·· nifu a very thoughtful per- that "affirms and prac- bureaucratic positions, lllld son who is very willing to
tices Judeo-Christia.n values he was one of the few that discuss issues and listen."
NASHVILLE, Tenn. Jerry Sutton, senior pastor
rooted in biblical authority." could," Key said.. "He could·
The . Rev. Richard Land
He ·acknowledges differ- look sophi sticated in . the of l;Wo Rivers Baptist
wants to stay above the ences between liberals and halls of powec"
Church in Nashville, who
shoutfest of American poli- conservatives, · but said he
President of the SBC 's 'ran for president of the SBC
tics.
doesn't think Americans art~&gt; Ethics &amp; Religious Liberty in June and lost, has known
· As head of the Southern . as . politically . divided as Commission since 1988, Land for nearly 28 years
Baptist Convention's public some might thmk. He has Land has served on the U.S. and said that Land will criton icize conservatives if he
policy arm, Land has lob- just fini shed a manuscript Commission
Religious thinks they're wrong.
bied for a conservative for a book called "The . International
"He's a very convictional
agenda in Washington for Divided States of America? Freedom since 2002, 'when
almost 20 years. He knows What Conservatives and Pre sident Bush appointed guy," Sutton said, "He's
some on the left might Liberals are Missing in the him . He was also recently never in his life played to
expect him to rant from the God-and-Country Shouting elected to the Council on the crowd. He doesn't take a
public opinion poll and ask
pulpit, but . he 's more Match ," due out next Foreign Relations.
Land met Bush in the late what will make everybody
mclined to a thoughtful dis- spring.
cussion of the issues.
"My book is hopefully an 1980s when he was working happy and please every·
Yet his subtlety and intel- equal opportunity ' offend- on his father's presidential body.
:
campaign;
the
young~r
"He realizes there's ·a
lect make some moderate er," Land said. "I really try
and liberal critics consider to expose what I think are ~ Bli sh promised Land a JOb tf maJor culture war gomg O!J.
him even more of a threat.
some problems with smrie his father won. Land chose· · He's.the kind ·o f person who
"His skill is to keep . the of the things conservatives to lead the Ethics &amp; can articulate the conservaSBC from being totally say and some things liberals Religious
Liberty tive issues and ba~icall~ not
instead, embarrass conservatives.
marginalized
from say and try to point the way Commission
though the two remain Anytime I've heard hiin
, American society," said forward to a new debate.
"! don't think we're as friendly. Bush has s~ken speak, it's been well-reaDavid Key, director of
well-thought
Ba~tist Studies at Emory
divided as Ann Coulter and three limes via videohnk to soned,
Umversity's Candler School Radio America would have the Southern Baptists in through."
recent years.
A Houston native, Land
of Theology in Atlanta.
you think."
But Land's close ties to went to Princeton on a full
The 59-year-old Land has
Critics say Land gives the
credentials as an intellectual Southern
Baptist the Bush administration scholarship to study hist~ry.
and
theologian,
with Convention a reasonable · haven't kept him from forg" psychology and rehg10n.
graduating,
he
degrees from' Princeton and face, even while arguing on ing relationships with lead- After
Oxford. He reads political behalf of extremely: conser- ers on the other end of the enrolled ·at New Orleans
Baptist
'Theological
biographies
and Jane vative positions on abortion political spectrum.
"I've found it a very Seminary and went on to
Austen - one of her six and gay rights .
Southern Baptists, for -enlightening experience to earn a doctorate degree in
novels each year until he
completes them all and instance, boycotted The have a really intellectual theology from Oxford
starts again. ·
Walt Disney Co. for years discussion with him," said University.
He .returned to Texas arid
Like any lobbyist, he can for offering benefits to part- former Secretary of State
talk in detail about bills'· ners of gay employees. Madeleine Albright, who taught theology and was
before Congress and past They have also banned met Land last year at the later vice president for acapolitical campaigns, but he women pastors and declared Ciinton Global Initiative dcmic affairs at The
College,
a
also likes to talk about larg- that wives should "submit and talked to him extensi-ve- Criswell
graciously" to · their hus- ly about Southern Baptist Southern Baptist college in
er ideas.
hfe for her book, "The Dallas.
1n a recent interview with bands.
Land became an adminis"When the fundamental- Mighty. and the Almighty."
The Associated Press, Land
"1 do think you learn a lot trati ve assistant to thensaid the Southern Baptists . ists took over the SBC (in
want to promote an the late ·'80s), there were not from people you don't agree Texas Gov. Bill Clements in
. All!erican society - not ·that . many people qualified with often," she said. "I find 1987.

Immunization clinic

BY ROSE FRENCH

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

TODAY IN HISTORY

Today is- Friday, Oct. 6, the 279th day of 2006. There are
86 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
·
On Oct. 6, 1927, the era of talking pictures arrived with
the opening of "The Jazz Singer," a movie starring AI
Jolson which featured both silent and sound-synchronized
scenes.
. Ori this date:
In 1536, English theologian and scholar William
Tyndale, who was the first to translate the Bible into early
modem English, was executed for heresy.
In 1884, the Naval War College was established in
Newport, R.I.
In 1889, the Moulin Rouge in Paris first opened its doors
to the public.
In 1949, President Truman signed the Mutual Defense
Assistance Act, totaling $1.3 billion in military aid to
NATO countries..
.
In 1949, American-born Iva Toguri D' Aquino, convicted
of treason for being Japanese wartime broadcaster "Tokyo
Rose," was sentenced in San Francisco to 10 years in
prison and fined $10,000. (She ended up serving more than
six years.)
'
· ·
In 1973, war erupted in the Middle East as Egypt and
Syria attacked Israel during the Yom Kippur holiday.
In 1976, in his second debate with Jimmy Carter,
President Ford asserted there was "no Soviet domination of
eastern Europe." (Ford later conceded he'd misspoken.)
In 1981 , Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was shot to
death by extremists while reviewing a military paradt:l
In 1983, Cardinal Terence Cooke, the spiritual head of
the Archdiocese of New York, died at age 62.
1n 1989, actress Bette Davis died .in Neuilly-silr-Seine,
France, at age 81. •
Ten years ago: President Clinton and Bob Dole clashed
vigorously over taxes, trustworthiness and spending priori:ties in a prime-time debate in Hartford, Conn.
Five years ago: Cal Ripken played his last game in the
major leagues as his Baltimore Orioles lost to the visiting
Boston Red Sox, 5-1. .
·
One year ago: President Bush sought to rally flagging
public support for the war in Iraq, accusing militants of
·seeking to establish a "radical ~Iamie empire" with Iraq as
'the base.
. Today's Birthdays: Actress Britt Ekland is 6fl..
Impressionist Fred Travalena is 64. Singer MiUie Small is
60. Singer-musiciao Thomas McClary is 56. Rock singer
Kevin Cronin (REO Speedwagon) is 55. Rock singer-mnsi'cian David Hidalgo (Los Lobos) is 52. Actress Elisabeth
'Shue is 43. Singer Matthew Sweet is 42. Actress Jacqueline·
Obradors is 40 .. Country singer Tim .Rushlow is 40. Rock ·
~ musician Tommy Stinson (The Replacements; Soul
Asylum) is 40. Actor loan Gruffudd is 33.
Thought for Today: "No single man makes history.
History cannot be seen, just as one cannot see grass growing." - Boris Pasternak, Russian author (1890-1960).·

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Boil advisory

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

· jstahler~dlspatch .c omc

I'M

LOOKIN6

·FOR A

CONGRESSMAN.
· FOLEY'S

.. REALLY

POPU~AR.

GOOD
MONSTER.

'

, PAGEVILLE - The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District has issued a boil advisory for Scipio Township on
the following roads: Ohio 684 from the intersection of King
Ridge (not including King Ridge), Township Roads 457,
142 .. Pageville, Ohio 692, Sand Ridge , Ohio 681 to and
including Goose Creek, all roads within one mile of
Pageville. These customers are asked to boil their cooking
and drinking water for three minutes before being consumed. The reason for the outage is to repair a leak . The
'boil order is to be lifted at 4 p.m·. today. - ·

You may · admire the.
Pelosi Plan for lraq or·
despise it, · but nobod)l can
ignore it. It lays out a program
for
resolving
America's problems in that
tormented nation that is
squarely at odds with
,President Bush's grim determination to "stay the
course." It has provided the
I Democratic Party with a
clear road map for future
action that they can present
to the American people, and
it is bound to have an impor- ·
tant influence, for better or
worse, on the coming congressional elections and (far
more important) on the outcome of the titanic struggle
in the Middle East.
Democrats, of course, had
the Pelosi Plan as a brilliant
solution to America's current military dilemma in
Iraq. And Republicans,
equally predictably, scoff at
it as little more than a series
of proposed blunders that
· would leave us worse off
than we are now. But no one
can deny that it is a constructive contribution ro the
national debate.
If, by now, you are hopelessly confused, I apologize,
for I have misled you . There
is, of course. no "Pelosi
Plan" for ·lraq, and that is the
whole point. Our would-be
Madam Speaker has not
uttered two consecu'tive

from
downtown
San
Francisco simply means
pulling out of Iraq and
bringing the troops home by
Christmas (or some other
date).
William
It ·is hard to think of any
Rusher
comparably irresponsible
proposal by an American
political leader. It is the
exact opposite of a "plan." It
words on any proposal for doesn't even ask, let alone
solving America's problems answer, what is surely the
in Iraq . She has, instead, most important question
confined herself to calling concerning a bugout: nameupon the administration . to ly, what. would its military
"redeploy" our troops there. and political consequences
Now,
"redeploy"
is be?
defined in Webster's New
The first military conseWorld Dictionary as mean- que.nce, of course, would be
ing "to move (troops) from . the collapse of all American,
one front to another, as from international and Iraqi resis·
Europe to the Pacific." But . tance to the terrorist
as used by Pelosi, it is mere- jihadi sts and the various
ly a fancy, rather military- , religiously-inspired militias
sounding synonym for who are evt;n now slaughter"bugout" -- or, if you prefer. ing scores of their fellow
"cut and run.'· She has never Iraqis evet'y day. "Civil war"
suggested any place to is almost too dignified a
which the troops might be term for the chaos into
"redeployed" (Abu Dhabi? which Iraq would collapse.
Dubai?J, or explained what Eventually, various poles of
they might do once based political authority would
there. If 'he imagines they emerge. no doubt supported
might ·use their new location financially and militarily by
.as a base from which to the various Islamic nations
strike in some militarily on Iraq's borders. These
more de,irahle direction .· nations in turn, freed from
what direction does she have any obligation to honor such
in mind. and how many concepts a~ "democracy" or
casualt ies- i' she prepared to even
"liberty."
wou ld ·
incur:&gt;
impose even worse tyran- .
No, the Congresswoman nies than those existing

•

•

today on their own peoples,
and .the Middle East would.
become one vast cesspool of
Islamic dictatorships, bent
on expansion.
Worse yet, America :s reputation as a defender of freedom, let alone an honorable
and form:idable military
power, would tum to mud.
The terrorists, triumphant ·
over . having forced Uncle
Sam to turn tail, would double or triple in size on short
order, and, train their sights
on further terrorist victories
in Europe -- and, of course,
in the United States. (Or do
you think that, gratified by
the success of the Pelosi
Plan, Osama bin Laden and
his allies would call off their
jihad against the West and
the Great Satan and go back
to tending their goals?)
As President Bush has
tirelessly reminded us, we
didn't start this war, and the
attack on Iraq was simply a
belated response to a series
of Islru:nist assaults on the
West stretching back nearly
thirty years. No American
soldier was anywhere near
Iraq, or even Afghanistan,
on '9111 . That was our
"Pelosi Plan," and it didn't
work.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Politica7 Philosophy.)

KEvtN

KEu.v

GALLIPOLIS
Investigators probing the
accident that killed two State
Highway Patrol troopers and
a female motorist last week
on Jackson Pike said the
cruiser in wllich the troopers
rode was traveling at a high
rate of speed with its emergency lights and siren activated at the time of the crash.
Investigators said the
cruiser, a 2005 Ford Crown
Victoria Police Interceptor,
was ea~tbound, then lost control, spun into the westbound
lane and struck a pickup

truck driven by the motorist.
Sgt. Dale R. Holcomb, 45,
Trooper Joshua P. Risner, 29,
both of the patrol's GalliaMeigs Post, and Lori Smith,
32, Vinton , driver of the
pickup, all died in the Sept.
28 accident near the inter·
section with Mitchell Road.
Additional information on
the accident, now the subject of an in-deptl:t investigation by the patrol and crash
reconstruction experts , was
released Thursday by the.
patrol's public affairs unit.
A ftre that resulted from the
crash burned both vehicles,
investigators have already
found . Based on physical evi-

dence and witnesses who saw
the scene of the 5:50 a.m.
crash, investigators believe
the ftre spread from the cruiser to the pickup.
Witnesses reported hearing a loud explosion following the sound of a collision,
said Lt. Tony Bradshaw of
the public affairs unit. Due
to heavy rain and wet road·
conditions at the time of the
accident, investigators have
been limited by a _lack of tire
· marks on the road.
Nationally-known crash
recops.truction and engi·
neering experts from the
National Highway Traffic
Safe(y Administration have

been joined by reconstruction experts from Ohio ,
New York, Missouri. Ford
Motor Co. and the Ohio Fire
Marshal 's office in an
examination of the vehicles
that began Monday.
Bradshaw said invesllgators have "meticulously
analyzed both vehicles and
examined engineering and
performance aspects of both
vehicles from the collision."
Preliminary results of the
reconstruction analysis may
be available n·ext week,
Bradshaw said. Investigators
· remain confident· they wilf ~
be able io determine factors
that led to the crash.

Hunters prepare for f~ turkey season

i
I .

26. Thirty seven counties are
open for fall turkey hunting.
"Good .reproductive sucPOMEROY - It is time cess this past summer
for hunters to r;nake prepara- should equate to better wild
tions for Ohio's upcoming fall turkey abundance during
wild turlcey hunting season. . the 2006 fall turkey hunting
The 16-day season begins season compared to last
Oct. 14 and runs through year," said Dave Swanson,
Oct. 29. The fall archery- Division of Wildlife turkey
only wild turkey . season management leader.
opens Oct. 30 and ends Nov. · Swanson said Ohio's
SrAFF .REPORT

NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

I

statewide wild turlcey flock either sex per hunter per sea- ·
now numbers more than · son. A fall .turkey penni! is
200,000 birds .
required in addition to a curFall wild turkey season rent Ohio hunting 'license .
hunting hours are one-half All harvested turkeys must
hour before sunrise to sunset be taken to an official turicey
during the 16-day regular fall check station by 8 p.m. the
turkey season and one-half day of harvest.
Dogs may be used to assist
hour before sunrise to onehalf hour after sunset during in taking wild turkeys during
the archery-only season. The the fall hunting season, but
bag limit is one turlcey of not during the spring season.

-MEIGS COUNlY COURT NEWS
Subn•tud photo

Nicole Mullins affectionately welcomes hom!l her husband,
Lance Cpl. Matthew Mullins, Rutland, on Combat Center's
.Victory Field In California on Sept. 6.

pulled up to Victory Field
m a convoy of four white
buses - perhaps golden
. chariots to those who await·
from PageA1
ed, watched and cheered ..
The animated crowd of
.the safely kept home front, family
and
friends
longed for their loved ones' enveloped the 146 Rhinos
safe return. Some counted and welcomed them ·home
the days gone as others with firm hugs and a barcounted the days left.
rage of kisses .
. Most of these families'
While the Rhinos' operatand friends reached the cul- ed in air bases in Ar Ramadi,
minating point of the AI Taqaddum and Fallujah,
deployment Sept, 6. They they refueled aircrafts, mainCombat tained runways and went on
gathered
at
Center's Victory Field early convoy missions throughout
that
morning
with the entire province.
"Welcome Home" signs and
Both . parties
the
balloons. A feeling of anxi- deployed and the waiting ety, nervousness and excite- sensed that what they had
ment blended in the atmos- left behind in February was
phere as the morning sun simply their light at the end
began to heat the field.
of the tunnel.
At approximately 10
That recent September day
a.m., the feeling of restless· brought a feeling of daylight
ness overwhelming the and joy to the returning
Marines, sailors , fam.ilies Marines, including Lance
and friends came to an end Cpl. Michael Mullins, who
as the battalion members , was affectionately greeted
nicknamed the "Rhinos," · by his wife, Nicole. ·

Mullins
~

Southern

The Pelosi plan

Bv

KKELLYc!i&gt;MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

POMEROY - The Meigs ·County Health Department
will conduct a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11
a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday. Bring shot records, medical
cards if applicable. A $5 donation appteciated not required .

Ihe Daily Sentinel • Page As

for the title of homecoming
queen and they are: Mallory
Hill, daughter of Perry and ·
• from Page A1 ·
Bobbi Hill of Letart, Amber
Hill , daughter of Richard
will travel through down· and_Wendy Hill of Racine,
town Racine . The home- · Emtly Babbttt, daughter. of
coming dance is from 7:30- Debbte Howell of. Racme
11 :30 p.m. on Saturday at and . Red Babbm of
Southern High School.
. Galltpohs,
Stephame
Homecoming week is also Hoskms. daughter of Penny
. spirit week at the school and Goo?e of Racme, Morgan
·.on Monday students showed . M cMeeken , daughter .·of
their spirit by dressing in Susan McMeeken of Letart.
hats, sunglasses and ban. Escorts for t~~emor _candanas, Tuesday it was cam- dtdates a!&gt;~ Zemer,
ouflage Wednesday was · Weston Counts, Darnn
Wacky '
Wednesday; Teaford . Adam Phillips,
Thursday was Halloween Wyatt Musser.
costumes and today is
The freshman attendant
Purple and Gold Day.
and escort are Kasey Turley
Winning the award for and Brad Copptck; the
most spirited on Monday and sophomore, attenda m and
TUesday were· the seniors, escort are Ap~tl Rtchards
Wednesday belonged to the and Jordan Ptckens; the
sophomores and Thursday junior attendant ~nd escort
.
are Courtney Gmther and
went to the seniors.
Five senior girls are vying Wes Riftl~ .

POMEROY Meigs costs, speeding; Nancy C. and costs, failure to control; seat belt violation; Lisa J.
County Court Judge Steven Hagan, Columbus, $50 and Wendy M. Moore, Pomeroy, Roush, Reedsville, $20 and
L. Story recently processed costs, speeding; Kevin G. $100 and costs, 6Q· days m costs, failure to control;
Hager, Griffithsville, W.Va., jail, suspended, probation, James
the following cases:
H.
Runyon ,
· Eugene
D.
Adkins, $30 and costs, seat belt viola- assault; William R. Morris, Nelsonville, $30 and costs ,
Portland, $30 and costs, seat tion; Wesley J. Hartleben, Laura, $130 and costs. seat belt violation; Christan
belt violation, $200 and North Elkview, W.Va., $350 use/possession drug para- F. Sammons, Gahanna, $30
costs, 10 days in jail, seven and costs, probation, phy. phemalia. $30 and costs, and costs, speeding; Matt J.
suspended, probation, no cont. veh. intox .; Charles M. drug abuse; Steve H. Sebo, Long Bottom, $30 .
operators license, $10 and Hensley, Portland, $100, pro- Nadeau, Toledo, $70, ille- and costs, improper tagging .
costs, probation, no child bation, possession.
gaily taking deer; Nicholas
Katherine L. Smirl , Ann
·
Glen
W.
Howard,
Darren
R.
restraint;
R. Napper, Ewlngton, $200 Arbor Mich. $50 and costs ·
Anderson, Davisville, W.Va., Lucasville, $20 and costs, and costs, 10 days in jail, speeding; Pa~U. Spigarelli: .
$30 and costs, speeding; failure to control; David A. seven suspended, probatton , Bellaire $30 and costs
Renick
J.
Arrowood, Hunter, Charleston, W.Va., no operators license; James . speedill!i; Eric L. Stewart:
Castlewood, Va., $30 and $30 and costs, drug abuse; · A. Natalie, Columbus, $50 Letart, W.Va .. .$!30 and
costs , seat belt violation; Anna P. Jones, South Point, and costs, speedmg; Jack N: costs, use/possession drug
Mildred Baker, Hinesville, $30 and costs, drug abuse; Ommert, Toledo, $30 and paraphernalia;
Tammy
Ga ., $30 and costs, speeding; Matthew Keaton , Coolville , costs, speeding; Claude D. Stewart, Hinesville, Ga., $30
Jeremy J. Basham, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, alcohol in Osborne, Pennsboro, W.Va.: and costs, speeding; Fiona 0 .
forest
property; $30 and costs, drug abuse;, . Stigter, Missouri City, Texas,
$200, probation , possession; state
Geor&amp;e · L. Brjtton, St. Edward J. King, Pomeroy, Mary
K..
Pagnam , $130 and costs, headlights
Mary s, W.Va., $50 and $100 and costs, 30 days in Rochester, ~tch ., $30 and required; Kelli N. Tatterson ,
costs, speeding; Joan M .. jail, 28 suspened, probation, costs, speedmg.
Syracuse $30 and costs
·auckland, Pomeroy, $50 and domestic violence; Shirley
. '$
. '
Hyoungkt Park , Chapel
N.C.,
$30
and
costs
,
f~edmg,
65,
seat
belt
vto·
Hill,
costs, probation, open con- L. Lacy, Charlotfe, N.C .,
tainer in motor vehicle, $100 $50 and costs, speeding; speeding; James G. Perry. at on, Jerad T. Taylor,
L.
Lambert , Indian Trail, N.C., $100 and Jackso~. $30 and cos~s, seat
and costs, 30 days in jail, 28 Curtiss
suspended,
-probation, Middleport, $35 and costs, costs, drug abuse, $130 and belt vtOiatwn ; Damel G.
use/posession drug parapher- three days in jail, suspended, costs, use/possession drug Teaford, .Portlat_td, $30. and
Angel costs, seat belt vtolatton, Enc
nalia; Zachariah C . Butcher, probation, passing bad paraphernalia;
Middleport, $200 and costs, checks; Grace A. Landaker, Pimental , New York, N.Y.. D. Thomas, Long Bottom ,
lO days in jail, suspended, . Pomeroy, $'100 and costs, $20 and costs , assured clear $30 and costs, speedmg:
probation, no operators drug abuse; Phillip R. distance; Jerry E. Pinkerton , RogerS . Thompson, Albany,
license, $70, probation, Laudermilt, $30 and costs , McConnelsville , $30 and $30 and costs, seat belt vtolaequipment misuse; Shawn P. drug abuse; Bryan L. costs, speeding; Lee A. tton. Bradley W. Vance,
Houston Cheshtre,.$30 and costs, seat
Cardwell, Hamilton, $30 and "Lawrence, Portland , $30 Postlethwait
Texas,
$100
~nd
costs
, ille: belt violation; Roger G.
costs, speeding; Leigh A. ·and costs, seat belt violaChaney, Charleston, W.Va., tion; Mark S. Lawson. gaily taking deer; Brandon Wamsley, Mtddleport, $50
$30 apd costs, speeding; . Shade, $30 and costs, drug K. Reynolds, Ripley, W.Va. , and costs, fishmg w/out valtd
David. J . Cline, Long abuse; Timothy J. Leach , $100 and costs, drug abuse , hcense; Ryan M. Well,
Bottom, $30 adn costs, seat Silver Springs, Md ., $30 and · $130 and costs, use/posses- Shade,. $30 and costs, seat
blet violation; Ian K. Cottrill, costs, drug abuse; Joann H. sion drug paraphernalia; belt vwlatton; Barbara J.
Wilkesville, $100 and costs, Lee, 'Portland, $30 and Woodrow J, Richards , Long Wertz, Chesterland, $30 and
drug abuse; Nicholas P. costs, speeding; Sumnier D. Bottom, $20 and costs, pro- costs speeding: Charles F.
Derose, Winston Salem, Lopez , Portland, $20 and bation, use of unauthorized Williamson, Rutland, $100
N.C .• $100 and costs, speed- costs, no child restraint; plates; Julie M. Roach , and costs, improper tagging,
ing; Colt M. Eblin, Coolville, MichaelS. Magistri,Athens, Rutland, $200 and costs, 20 $130 and costs. illegally tak· ·
$100, probation, possession; $150 and costs, speeding; days in jail, suspended, pro- · ing deer, $50 and costs, huntHarry S. Edwards, Ashville, William J. Mamhout. bation , no operators license; ing w/out special permit. $30
$50 and costs, fishing w/o Racine, $130 and . costs, Glenn
A.
Roberts, and costs, hunting w/out
valid license, $10 and. costs, use/possession drug para- Langsville, $350 and costs, valid NR license.
littering; Christopher D. phernalia; Linda Marsac, probation , phy. cont. veh.
Gabbard , Mason , $100 and Elyria, $20 and costs , failure intox. , $100 and costs, procosts, drug abuse: Heather N. stop/public safety veh .; bation , no operators license;·
L.
McDaniel , Justin B. Robson, Pom~roy.
Gillian , Zanesville, $50 and Adam
FRI tOIMI&amp;- suN 11W/06
Middleport,
$30
and costs, $70, probation , disorderly
costs. speedipg; Kristopher
K.. Ginther, Middleport, $25 illegally taking deer; John conduct; Matthew S. Rohal.
and ·costs, disorderly con- A. Mcintyre, Coolville, $30 Athens, $30 and costs,
duct ; Jesse J . Godfrey, and costs, speeding; Judy D. speeding; Rebecca L. Rose,
Portland , $20 Nelsonville , $30 and casts,
Grantsville, W.Va., $30 ·and McMeeken,
' .

prevention programs, and can future service demands."
According to the release,
be used to fund ftrefighter
health and safety programs, the Office of Domestic'
acquire new nrefighting Preparedness (ODF), part of
from Page A1equipment and enhance EMS the Department of Homeland
Security awards ·the grants
. programs, DeWine said.
chasing some radios for the
"I acknowledge the many through a competitive need. It was time of reminiscing new· truck which the depart· sacrifices that firefighters based process . More than
for the birthday "girl" and ' ment has ordered and also for and rescue workers make 20,972 fire departments
her friends about the early an air processor. to breathing each and every day while nationwide applied for grants
' for use in-house , protecting our families, for 2005 and ODP expect' to
from Page A1 . days of the chur(;h. apparatus
and
also
a
cascade system of homes and businesses from award nearly 7JKlO this year.
Kathleen remembered when
mobile
tanks
which allow firethe church was built, some
rang the church bell but that early services which were men to fill breathing apparatus the devastating effects of The U.S. Fire Administration
fire. By working to pass and processes the applications
chore has now been taken held on Sunday atiemoons, while on the scene of a fire.
fund
the flRE Act, we have . and 300 fire service repre~ver by Carolyn.
In the news release ensured that fire departments sentatives from acrqss th~
and her trips down Forest
Thursday wl\i le at the Run Road in a horse-drawn De Wine further noted that an . in Ohio and elsewhere will United States review the
Forest Run Church for her buggy to get there.
updated version of the FIRE have the resources to meet grant requests :
Act
passed in 2004 "guamnweekly quilting session; her
She still lives in her own
daughter 'Mary Jane Wise home. does most of her own tees federal · funding ·for
ho~ted a birthday lun ~ heon housework , and drove her- Emergency Medical Services
Cpme By &amp; Enjoy' ·
complete with ' a decorated self around town in her own (EMS), makes it easier for
large cities and small rural
cake made by her grand- car umi l she turned l 00.
"~iuging ~n ~ltc ~trcct"
departments
to secure funddaughter, Jennifer Harrison.
She '.s a. good con versaFeaturing Blue Grass/Gospel Music
and a birthday bouquet from tionalist, has a keen sense of ing. and extended the. proher niece, Betty Knight.
humor, is seldom heard , gram through 20 10."
, @ The Corner Restnurant
It was reported that since
Other there were the peo- complaining. believe' in
~ S. 3rd An.
ple she quilts with week getting up early. and eating 200 I, more than I I00 sepa- ~ • ,
~
Middleport, OH
after . week,
Carolyn , regular meals which she rate grants have been award· ilTT...
(ktoher 9th
ed to Ohio fire dep~ments . Tammy Jones, Helen Baer. prepares for hersel(
10am·6pm
When asked "how she totaling over $97 million in
Mary K. Roush who is 94,
Edith Sisson, Mary· Nease , feels at lO I," her responst; funding. The money will .
assist in firefighting and fire
was "just fine:·
and Rosemary Keller.

Grants

Birthday

4t

•

'

1:00, 3:30, 7:00 &amp; 9:30
JACKASS: NUMBER TWO (R)
1 :20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
Sponsored by Holzer Cancer Center

~t=.!·
IOn
OhiQ Valley Symphony

10/8
.Vanessa Wilson
Vocal Reciral
. 10/9
'
Ariel Jr. Idol Finals
10/14
Magic of the Caplingers
Family Event
www.ariellheatre.org
Bor Office: 428 2nd Ave.
Gallioolls OH f7
446-ARTS

�r
•'

Page.A6

FA11'H • VALUES
Sorigs of praise: _____._____ A Hunger·For More---

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 6, 2006

Friday, October 6, :!Oo6

Small towns and countryHe is my helper. I will look t~ the poor. He has sent Me
side communities like ours
in triumph on my enemies. It to proclaim freedom for the
is better to take refuge in the prisoners and recovery of
provide a picturesque and
LORD than to trust in man. sight for the blind, to release
comforting sanctuary in a
world that seems completeIt is better to take refuge in the oppressed, to proclaim
Pastor
ly out of control. While
the. LORD than to trust in the year of the Lord's favor
Thorn
princes ... I was pushed back ... Today th is scripture is fulHollywood occasionally
Mollohan
Rev.
demonstrates a knack for
and about to fall. but the filled in your hearing'"
LORD helped me . . The (Luke 4: 16b-19, 21 b NIV).
Jonathan misrepresenting small town
Since we've been made
LORD is my strength and
life as either dull or naive.
Noble
"more
th an conquerors
my
song;
He
has
become
my
rural
Ohio
provides
its
PASTOR.
through
Christ
Jesus" (see
salvation"(Psalm
118:
1,5-9,
'
inhabitants an opportunity
TRINITY CHURCH
Romans 8:37), let us then
to live life in an unhurried events in small town 13- 14 NTV).
manner, uncluttered with America, let us remember
As great and as tenible .as each enter into the fray
many of the pressures and that evil is very real and very evil can be at times . God's again st evil now in earnest.
tumults of urban and even insidious. But let's not t~row · children press on in His right- Let it begin within ourselves
in the towel. I d9n 't believe eousness. We do not react to as we give our sin over to
thy of all ''blessing and suburban areas.
honor and glory and might
A quiet pace for living in yielding to the power of evil with evil, but respond to God for Him to forgive and
for
ever and
ever." and a safe place for raising fear. Acknowledging the fact it instead with courage, cleanse through the power of
(Revelation 5.13b, RSV) families are some of the of evil is good; running from standing up.for ·those who are His Son's sacrifice and resWe are instructed to sing to e"pectations that we've it -is not. And of course deny- weak, defending the power- urrection. Let us take the
Him, not necessarily to one adopted in the rolling hills ing it is foolish to the point less, and liberating the 'battle against evil into our
another, and this is an oblig- of southern Ohio along the of being suicidal as well as oppressed. "Open for me the homes , our neighborhoods,
gates of righteousness ; I will our workplaces as we use the
ation of love, rea:tly, an graceful waters of . the- being evil in its own right.
"Be self-controlled and enter and give thanks to the weapons of truth and love to
impulse of holy and even mighty Ohio River.
terrifying adoration.
And yet quiet, small towns alert. Your enemy the devil LORD. This is the gat~ of the tum back the advances of
So why should we not and seemingly peaceful prowls around like a roar- LORD through which the deceit and hate. Let us trust
sing .and sing enthusiasti; farmlands are not entirely mg lion looking for some- righteous may enter. I will wholeheartedly in the One
cally when we come togeth- immune to troubles, nor are orie to devour. Resist him, give You thanks, for You · Who has already secured for
er as .the people of God in they impregnable fortresses standing firm in the faith , answered me; You have us a victory that is so sure
salvation" and eternal that it will outlast
my
order to worship God? It is , against the ruthless tragedies because you know that your become
the sun and the stars.
after all, one of the most and terrors that characterize brothers throughout the (Psalm II R: 19-2 1 NTV).
Of course, that's what the
"You are my God, and I
inherent responses of love , our times . While our own world are undergoing the
will
give You thanks; You
of
sufferings"
(I
good
news
of
the
Gospel
is
same
kind
gratitude and adoration any area still reels from several
Peter
5:8-9
NIV).
all
about
...
redeeming
tliose
are
my
God, ancl I will exalt
creature can make to its unexjx:cted deaths of loved
So if evil is real and is on · whose. lives are under the You . Give thanks to the
God, who is sovereign Lord ones, young and old,
and Savior. His "majesty is (impacting our close-knit the prow I, and there is no power of evil. In fact, the LORD,. for He is good; His
forever"
chanted" even by "the community in incalculable place so safe that I cim bt: Gospel addresses evil at its love endures
(Psalm
118:28-29
as
to
my
future,
"ihere
deepest
level
the
human
NIV).
mouths of chilQI'en, babes . ways); the headlines of our sure
(Thom Mollohan and his
in arms." (Psalm 8.2a, JB) · world are dominated by evil can I tum? Where can I heart . as Jesus confronted
Yes. in fact, they sing men bel)t on maiming, feel secure? Where can I empty reli(!;ion and worldly family have ministered in
preoccupations, the fruits of southern Ohio the past 11
before they speak.
killing, and terrorizing oth- find hope?
"Give
thanks
to
the
which· are hypocrisy, hate, years. He is the pastor oj
some of whom
There Is scarcely a better ers
Community
request made than when attempt to hold nations LORD, for He is good; His and despair. " ... (Jesus) stood Pathway
children ask their father to hostage with the threat of love endures forever ... In up to read. The scroll of the Church which meets on
stop doing what he is doing nuclear weapons and some my anguish I cried to the prophet Isaiah was handed to Sunday mornings at the
in order to sing him some who bind young girls, :vio- LORD, and He answered by Him. Unrolling it, He found Ariel Theatre. He may be
song. If he has even a shell late them , and then ki.II them. setting me free. The LORD the place where it is written: reached for comments or
of a heart and but a spark of
So whether our minds are is ,with me; I will not be 'The Spirit of the Lord is on questions by e-niail at paslove in his soul, you could keeping tabs on the global afraid. What can man do to Me, because He has anoint- torthom@pathwaygalliponot give him the whole scene or are focused on me? The LORD is with me; ed Me to preach good news lis.com).
world in exchange for those - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - precious little voices then
serenading him with some
simple song. How much
more, then, do you think our
MADISON, Wis. (AP)- coalition
based
111 . left off the list of potential
employees is constitutionalheavenly Father enjoys A state-run program allow- Springfield, Va., filed the recipients under a rule ly impermissible," U.S.
hearing His children sing?
ing employees to donate lawsuit in the spring.
requiring them to ailtipt an District Judge John C.
So "sing to the Lord a new part of their paychecks to
It challenges an annual anti-discrimination policy.
Shabaz wrote in a decision
song. his praise from the charity may not exclude program,
State
called
"Excluding a religious issued Sept. 29.
ends of the earth ... For great religious
charities
on Employees
organization
Combined charitable
The state had argued that
is the Lord and greatly to be grounds that the groups use Campaign, that allows state from participation in the excluding religious cti·aritapraised. He is to be revered religion as a basis for workers to direct payroll Wisconsin State Employees ble organizations was folabove all gods." (Isaiah emplorment or membership deductions to charities that Combined Campaign solely lowing ·state policy against
42.10a; I Chronicles 16.25, on thetr governing boards, a are deemed eligible by a because . that organization religious discrimination, and
NRSV) So sing. And ifyQu federal judge has ruled.
state committee.
discriminates on the basis of that the presence of religious
cannot sing well, sing. No
The Association of Faith'
The faith-based groups religion or creed in choos- charities might prompt some
one ever claimed the Apostle Based , Organizations, a alleged they were wrongly ing its governing board and state employees not to give.
St. Paul could sing well, but
he sang. All of the Apostles
sang, even as the people of
God have lifted their voices
in songs of praise down
NEW YORK (AP) through the ages.
letter to Episcopalians . that "a process of mutual growth bishops. The church leaders,
So sing with saints and The outgoing leader of The they should follow the dis- which calls for patience, who believe the Bible bars
angels, Sinner though you Episcopal Church is ask- cussion process laid out by mutual understanding and gay relationships , b¥cked the
are; Raise your voice from ing Episcopalians for Anglican
leaders
and generosity of spirit."
creation of a separate
this world To heavenly patience amid meetings Archbishop of Canterbury
Griswold was reacting Anglican entity in the United
about divisions over the Rowan
couris afar.
Williams,
the partly to a meeting of States for Episcopal conser"Praise · befits
the Bible and gays.
Anglican spiritual. leader, Anglican leaders in Kigali , vatives. The Episcopal
upright," so "rejoice in the
Presiding Bishop Frank who plan to meet •in February.. Rwanda, last month , who are Church is the U.S. represenLord" and "sing to Him."
Griswold said in a Sept. 28
Griswold said it should be known as the Global South tative of world Anglicimism.

-

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Church of Jesus Christ Apostolk
VanZandt and Ward Rd .. Pastor: James
Miller. Sunda} School • 10.30 a.m ,
Evcnmg ·7:30 P.m.

Rh·erVIllley

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Hope Baptist Chun:h (SouthemJ
St .. Middlewn . Sunday school
- 9JO a.m .• Wor.;hip - 11 a.m. and 6 p.m..
Wednesday Ser\'iCe - 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary
Ellis
Rutland Flr&amp;t Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Fi~ Baptist
Pastor Jon Brock~r1 . Ea~t Main St. ,
Sund1a.y Sch. 930 a~. Worship 10:30 am .
~570Gram

Flrsi Soulhtrn Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Past,or: E. La rn~:~r
O'Bryaut, Sundt~)' School • 9:30 'll .m.,
Worship - 8:1.5 o1.m .. 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m ..
Wednesday Service~· 7:00p.m.

First Bapdst Church
Pa!itor: Bill)' Zusp1111 6th and Palmer St ..
Miqdlepon. Sunday Sch~ol- 9:15a.m.,
Worship - 10 :1 ~ - a.m., 7:00 p.m.,
Wedriesday Service-7:00p.m.

Rodne F1nt Bopllot
Pastor: Joseph Godwin, Interim pastor ,
Sl!nday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:40 a.m., 7:00 p .m., Wednesday
Services-7:00pm.

stlver Run Bapdll
Pastor: John Swanson, Sunday School · IOa.m.. Worship - lla.m .. 7:00 p.•m.
,Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.
Mt. Vnloo Boptht
Pastor: Denni&amp; Weaver Sunday School9:4S a.'m .. Evenina - 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Sel'\'ices - 6:30p.m.

Betlllell&lt;m Baptist Church
Great Bend. Route 124. Racine . OH.
Pastor: Ed Caner. Sunday Scllool - 9:30
a.m .. Sunda)' Wotship - 10:30 a .m ..
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.
Old Bethel Fret Will B•pthl Churth
2860 I St. Rt. 7, Middleport . Sunday
Service • 10 a.m.. 6.00 p.m.. Tuesday
Services -6:00

Hillside Baptist Chun:h
St. Rt . 143 just off Rt . 7, P.11stor: R~\'.
lam e~ R. Acree , Sr., Sunda) Unific:d
Sei-vice. Worship • 10:30 a .m .. 6 p.m ..
Wed11tsday Services -7 p.m.

F.ta cis of Assi si
The church ~elebrates Samt Fraoc1s on the fourth of October. Francis was born
at .1\!1-sisi i11 1182 and died in 1226. Being a wn of a wealthy cloth mt:rchant. he
had a carefree youth . Then . as a young man. he joined the CrusadCs but was
. captured and imprisoned. "in.ually ruining his health . After returning home to
Assi 111and struggling to find direction in his life, he had a conversion experience
wherein Gc)(J.spok.e to him, saying "rebuild m y church.'' Initially, Francis took

\

thJS literally, and actually !&gt;egan rebuilding the dilapid•te~ chapel that he had
been praying in. BUt subM:quenlly. Francis rebuilt the church spirituaUy by
establi shing a rule of life based on the Gospels.
He developed a ma~~ive follo~ing. whiCh uhimately became the three
Frcl.nc iscan orders (one for priests . one for nuns. and one for lay per~ons). There
is much io celebrate in Franci~ · vis ion of Chri·;,ti;mity: hi~ in~ i~lence on
following the gospel, · ,
including some very hard ideal;.
such as giving everything
·t tl

1· 740-667·3156

."Still small eno11gh to cart"

'1\ Home Bank for
Home People"

992-6451

you have to the poor; hi~ great
~) mpath y and !me tor all of

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

~.: reatiun .

·.

· Located less than 30 minutes from
Athen' , Pomeroy oi Parkersburg

740-949-221
0
'
(74())

including n'Un-human
animals: and his mystical ' 1sion that
all of cre Jtion Ieve n inanimate cre&lt;tt1on ) 1.
pan of the famil y of God . He referred to
the ~un and moon a~ " Brotl1'o: r Sun'' and
"Sister Moon." In the'-.e da)S "-"hen "e ~em to be ignoring the ~ammg ~; igm of a
'
pl tmet in peril. Saint Fraflcl' appear ... to
be :-.o,Jllethmg of a Plfdlhet We Y. Ould all
do v. dl to embra(:e alife of go!&gt; pel.

PO. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

740-949-2217

740.985-3561
'
992-1550
Sates • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

So therefore , w·hotl''' of )'Oil d«s

trot renoum:i.• all that he has cannot
lw m .1 dilciple - R. s. ·••• Luke H: 33

Michelle Kennedy
'

D1rector of Marketing

333 Page Street

Middleoort OH

Faith Baptist Chun:h
Railroad St .. Ma~on . Sunduy School - 10
B-!11·· Worship
II ll.m, 6 p .m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m. .

and Admissions
(7401992-6472

Fax (740) 992-7406

Warm Fri~:1ldl 1
,A,rmosphere

t"ortst ltun Baptist- Pomeroy
Re\'., Joseph Woods. Sunda~ School - I 0
a.m., Wonh.ip • 11 :30 a.m .

Hours
Rpm

6am-

Mt. Mariah Maptist

Mif[ie's f}{estaurant

Founh &amp; Main St .. Middlepon . Pastor:
Re\'. Gilbert Craig. Jr.. Sunday School_9:30a.m .. Wonhip - 10:45 a.m.

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooktd Meals &amp; Daily Spuia/s
Open 7 day; a wee~
740-992-7713

lfye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you', ye shall
' and il shaU
ask whal ye will,
be done
. unlo you.
· John 15:7

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x '20

The ftppliance man

povl'ny and humiln)•. wh1l c reflecting u
jnyfullmc for all of Grxr.., creation .

N. 2nd St. Middlepon. Pastor: J:lmes
E. Keesee. Worshtp - IOa .m.. 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Coolville. Ohio

209 Third
Racine, OH

·'

~2j

CENTER

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Middleport, OH

. 740·992-612,!1
Local source for trophies,
olacues t-sh1rts and more

......lty Boptht
Sunday School • 9:.\0 a .m.• Worship -

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507 Mulberry Height,.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 I'M&gt;.
(740) 992-3279
'-!!Y'
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

' KEHLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
An Accounting &amp;
Financial Services Firm
•
618 E. Main Strut • Pomeroy

.

1740) 992-7270

Wedne~a~

Cf!lurch of God of Prophecy
OJ . White Rd . off St. Rt. lfiO . Pastor: PJ. ·
Chapman . . Sunday School - 10 a.m ..
Worship - II a.m.. Wednesday S~rvicts - 7
p.m.

"

Westside ·CIIIun::h of Cllrist
33226 Childn=n 's Home Rd. Pomcmr. OH
Contact 740-441-1296 Sunda~· morning
10:00. Sun mornin g B1ble mdy:
following worship. Sun. eye 6:00 pm.
Wed bible ~tud y 7 p~

Congregational
Trinity Churth
Second &amp; lynn. Pomeroy. Pastor: Re\'.
Jonathan NQhle . · Worsh. ip 10 :25 a.m .,
Sunda)' School9: 15 a.m

Grace E~paol Chun:h
32fl. E, Main St .. Pomeroy. Stmday School
&lt;ind Holy Euchari~t 11 :00 a .m. Re\'.
Edward Payne ·

Hemlock Grew Christian Churcb
Milli ~ ter : LArry Brown. wm~hip • .9:30
a.m. Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Stuay · 7 p.m.

·· HolineSs
Cltun:h
• Pastor: Steve Tomek. Main Street.
Rudand t Sunday Won;hip-10:00 a.m.,
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Millft"S\ille
Pastor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 9
a.m .. Worship - IOa.m .

' Calvary Pilgrim Cbapr:l
Harri sonville Rood. Pastor: Charles
McKenzie . Sund:l)' Sc h ~ l 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - !I a,m . 7:00p.m .. Wedn~ay
Service - 7:00p.m.

'
Mlddl•pon &lt;;hu'l'h or Christ.
5th and Main , Pastor : AI Hanson .
Childrens Director: Sharon' Sayre. Teen
Director: Dodger' Vaughan . Sunday School
- 9:30a.m .. Wor~hip- R: I5 . 10:}0 a.m.. 7
p.m., Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

Bearwallow Rklgt Chun:h of Christ
Pastor: Bruce Terry. Sunday School -9:30
a.m.

. Worship • 10:10 a.m .. fdO p.m.
Wed!leSday Services· 6:Jn p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Brian Dunham. Warsh1p • 9:30
a.m .• Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.
Rock Spring.

Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 9: 15
a .m.. Worship - 10 .am . Youth
Fellowship. Stmday • 6 p.m..
A•tl•nd
Ri ck Boume , Sunda y School 9:30 .a.m., Wol'§hip - 10:30 a.m ., Thursday
Sef\·ices - 7 p.m
~alem Center
Pastor: William K. Marshllll , Sunday
&amp;houl· 10:15 a.m .. Worship- 9:15 .a.m ..
Bible Study: Monday 1:00pm ,
SnowYille
Sunday Scliool • 10 a.m., Worship · 9 a.m .
Pa~tor

.We-sleyan Biblt" Holiness Church
75 Pearl St .. Midd leport . P~stor : Rick
Boume. Sunday SchOol - 10 ti.m. Worship
-10:45 p.m" Sund~y E'·e . 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen·ice- 7:30p.m.

Zion Churth of Christ
Pomeroy. Harrisonvi lle Rd. (Rt.l43).
Pastor: Roger Watson, Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship • 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.~ Wednesday Services - 7 p.m. ·

llelhany

Hywll Run Comm•nlty Church

Pastor: Jolm Gilmore , Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worship . 9 a.m., Wednesday
Serv ices· 10 a.m.

Pastor: Rev.Larty Lemley; Sunday ~hoo\
- 9:30 a.m .. Worship • 10:45 a.m.• 7 p.m.,
Thursda~· Bible Study and Youth· 7 p.m.

Tup'peno Plain Church of Christ
lnslnlmental, Wonhip Service- 9 a.m .. .
Communion • 10 a.m ., Sunday School 10: IS a.m., Youth-5:30pm Sunday, Bible
Sl\Jd)' Wednesday 7 pm

Lolll'Oi ClltfFne Methodlot Chun:h
Pastor': Gle-nn Rowe, Sunday School -,
9:30 a .m ., Worship • 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.,WC!dncsday Sel'Vict. i :OO p.m.

Bndbury Church of Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon, 39558 Bradbury
Road, Middlepon, Sunday ,School • 9:30
a.m.
Worship - 10:30 11.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Ch~h of Jesus
Christ ol Latter-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-748ti,
Sunday School \0:20-11 a.m .. RC!\ief
SocietY/Prie sthood II :O.S-12:00 noon.
Sacrament Service 9-.10 : 1.5 a .m ..
Homemak ing meeting, 1st Thurs .- 7 p.m.

Rutland Church of Christ
Sunda~ School ·9:30a.m., Worship and
Communion- 10:30 a.m .. Bob J. Werry.
Minister
Brldford Ch1n:li of Christ
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; BradbUT)' Rd .,
Minister: Doug Shambl in, Youth Mini~er :
Bill Amberger, Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a .m.. 7:00
p.m.,Wednesda)' Services - 7:00 p.m.

Lutheran
St.John Lutheran Church
Pine Grove, Worship - 9:00a.m ., Sunday
School - 10:00 a .m. Pa stor: Jame s P.
Brady

Hickory Hills Chun:h of·Chrl5t
Tupper.; Plains. Pastor Mike Moore. Bible
class, 9 .a.m. Sunday : warship 10 a .m.
Sunday: worship 6:30pm Stlnduy : Bible
class 7 pm We&lt;l .

Our Saviour Luthtran Church
Wa lnu l and HenrY Sts .. Raven swood.
W.Va .. Pastor : Dav td Ru sse ll. Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m .. Worship · II a.m .
St. Paul Lutheran Churtb
Comer Sycamolt' &amp; Second St .. Pomero)·.
Sun. School- 9:4.'i a.m .. W~hip - II a.m.

Reedsvillt Churth of Christ
Pa~tor: Philip Sturm. Sunday School: 9:30
a.m l. Word1ip Sen;ice: 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Stud) . Wednesday. 6:30p .m.

United Methodist
. GI'Jiham Unit.ed Methodist
Worship - 11 11.m. Pa.~tor: Richard Nea ~
Bechttl United Mrthodist
New Ha ven. R ic ~ard Nease . Pa~tor .
Sund ay wo rsh ip , 9:30 a.m. Toes fdO
prayer and Bible study.

lletter Omrch of Christ
Sunday o;chool Q:JO a.m .. Sundar wors hip
-! 0:30 a.m.
'fhe-Chun:h of Christ or Pnrttei'O)'
lnter~cct1on 7 and 124 W. E'·anEelist:
Denni s Sargt:l}t. Sunday Bible Study •
· 9:30a.m .. Wo rsf1ip: 10:30 a.m and (dO
p,Jl;l .. Wedne~day Bible Study- 7 p.m.

Carmel-Sutton
Cirmel A Bashan Rds. Racine , Ohio.
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Wonhlp - 10:4~ a.m. , Bible
Study Wed.7:00 p.m.

Mornlq Star
Pas1or: John Gilmore. Sunda~· School · ll
a.m., Wor&amp;hip .- 10 a.m.

Ralph Spire~. Sunday School - 9:30a .m..
Wotship - 10 :30 a .m .. 7 p.m .. Thursday
Services- 7 pJIJ .

Christian Union
Hartford Church of Christ In
CluUtian Union
Hanford, W.Va ., Pastor:D11v'd Greer .
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worsh ip •
10:30 a.m .. 7:00 p .m .. Wednesdiy
Services-7:00 p.m.

Meip Cooperative hrish
.Nanheast Cl_.ster. Al fred, Pa!itor : hne
Beanie ; Sund.ay School • 9 :30 a.m..
Worship - II a.m.. 6:30p .m.

Church of God .

Ch....,.
' stor: Jane
. ~eanie , Worsh ip - 9 a.m..
Pa
Sunday School - 10 a .m. , Thursda~·
Sel"\•ices - 7 p.m

Mt. Moriah Church of God
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine , Pastor: James
Sanerf.eld. Sunday School - 9:45 a.m .,
Evening - 6 p.m .. Wednesday Service ~- 7

Wl'tilr's ChaPel Wrsleyan
Cool\' ille Road. 1'ast0r : Re v. Phillip
~iden ou r. Suncbt) Sc-hool - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - ) 0 :~0 am .. Wcdm:sda } Scrl'ice
7 p.m.

Other Chm:ches
Syracu.se Community Chun:h
2480 Second St ., SyracuSe, OH
Sun . School 10 am, Sund~· nigh• 6 : ~ pm
Under the direction or Dan &amp; Faith
Ha}'man
A ~ew Bet;;nnlng •
(Full Gospel Church) Harri !&gt;Onvil le.
Pastors: Bob arid Kay l\1at;thal1 .
Sunday Sel"\•ice . 2 p.m.

Fain·trw Hihle Chun:h
letun . W.\ a. Rt I. P a~tor: Brian May .
Sund n~ School-. 'L'U a.m.: Worship. 7:00
P-ll) .•.'W cdrlc~a~ B1i'llt" Stud) -7:01p.m
Faith Ftllo1\'Ship {'ru!OJde for ( 'hriit
Pastor Rn . Fran l..lm D1cken, , S er'vic~:
Fnday. 7 p.m.
C.11ha~·

Amazing Grace Community Churth
Pa.~ tor: ~layne Dunlap. State Rt. 681.
Tuppers Plains. Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm,. Wed. Bible Srudy i:oo p.m.

Rihle ('lum::h
Cu Rd . Pas10r Re-\' .
B\H('k wond. Snnda~ S~'h L"m l - 9JO a.m ..
Wnr sh 1p HI:J O ~ m. 7.~ 0 p. m..
Wednesda} Sm'll'e. 7 _\() p.m

Oasis Christian Fellowship
(Non-denominational fellowship)
M~ting in the Mei gs Middlt: School
Cafeteria Past!)r: Chri s Stev.oar1
\0:00am - Noon Suncla~ ; !nfonnill
Wors.hip. Children's mini stl)

Stiwn"Villt Comnnmity Aposlolic
ChuiTh
Pa~ tor W~ ynr R. h·~&gt;.dl. Sunda~ worship
• 6:00 p,m . \\l("(]ne&lt;.day · tl :OO p.m. Bible
Study

Pomcro~

Rt!joicinR Life Church
Mi~e

Forem:m. Pa~tot Emeriru., Lawrence
10:00 am
We-dneMiay Sen•1 ce~ - 7 p.m

Fmemun. Wm\hip -

Clifton Tabernacle Chun:b
Clifton . W.Va ,, Stlnday School- !0 a.m ..
Worshi,p - 7 p.m .. Wednesd:t}' Servke - 7
p.m
~e"'

Life ViciOrJ Center
Creel.. Rood . Gal11poli s. OH
Pa~tor . Bill S1111en . Sundu~ Services- 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wed ne~da~ 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.
.~77~ Geof!!e ~

Ash Stret't Chun:h
398 Ash St. Middlepon-Pasior Jeff Smith
Full Gospel Chul'('h
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. "-ioming
orthe Lh·ing Su1'ior
Rt ..HR. Antiquit~ . Pa~ tor : Je ~o:.,e Morris.
Worship - 10 :30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pm.
Wednesday Ser\'i~:c: - 7:00 p.m.. Yooth • Services: Slllurdll) 2:00p.m.
Service- 7:00p.m .
Salem Community Church
Ag11pe Life Ct1ter
Sac).: of West Columbi u, W.\'a om Lieving
''Full -Gospel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Road. Pastor: Charles Roush '( 3041 675Patty Wade , 003 Second Ave. Mason, 7732288,
Sunday School .9:30 am. Sunday
5017, Service time: s_.nduy 10:30 a .m ..
evening
sen1Le 7:00 pm. Btbly Study
Wednesday 7 pm
Wednesday ser,·icc 7: 00pm.
Abundant Grace ll.F.l.
923 S. Third St .. Middlepon. Pastor Teresa
Da vis, Sunday service. 10 a .m ..
Wednesday sel'\'ice. 7 p.m.

Hobson Christian ftllowship Chun::h
Pastor: Hersc~el White. Sunday School·
10 am. Sunday Church ~n·ice - fd{) pin
Wednesday 7 pm

Fol11&gt; Full Goopel Church
Long Borrom , Pastor: Steve Reed. Sunday
School . 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 a.m.
an&lt;l7 p.m., Wednesday- 7 p.m., Friday ~
fellowship fiervice 7 p.m .

Restoration Christian fello•·shlp
9365 Hooptr Road. Athen ~. Pastor ~
Lonnie Coats. Sunday Worship 10:00 am,
Wednesday: 7 pm

House of Heallnk Ministries
St. ~t. 124 Langs\ille, OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pasto r~ Raben &amp; Roberta:
Musser. Sunda y Si.'! hool 9:30 am . .
Worsh1p IO:JO am - 7:00 pm. Wed
Seryi ce 7:00pm

East Lelart

Rachae
Pastor: Kerry Wood, Sunday School ; 10
a.m.. Worship - ll a.m.Wednesday
Serv ices 6 prn: Thur Bible Study 7 pm
Coolville United Methodist Parish
Paslor: Helen Kline. CoOinllc Church.
Main &amp; Fifth St .. Sun. Scllool - 10 a.m ..
Worship - 9 a.m .. The~ . Scrvf.ces- 7 p.m .

lkthd Ch•rth
Township Rd .. 468C, Sunday School· .9
a.m. Worship · 10 a .m .. Wednesday
Sr:rvK:e1 - I 0 a.m .

Mkldleport Community Church
Pearl St .. Middlepon . Pas10r: Sam
Anderson. Sunday School 10 a.m ..
Even ing - 7:30 p.m., Wednesday Sel"\·icr7:30p.m.
S7~

Faith \ 'allty Tabernacle Churtb
Run Road. Pastor : Re\·. Emmel!
Rawson. Sunduy Evening ':! p.m..
Thursday Ser\'ice- 7 p.m.
Baile~·

Co . Rd hJ. Sunday Schl"lnl - 9:30a .m..
Wo~hip • 10:30 a.m. ·

Nazarene
Chun:h ()(the Nazartne
P~~tor: Allen Midcilp . Sunda y School •
9.30 a.m ..Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 6:39 p.m..
Wednesday Sef\ice~ - 7 p.m., P1~t or :
Allen Midcup
ReedsviUe Fellowship
Church of the NIWlfC'ne. Pastor:. Sunday
School · 9:30a.m ... Wors hip - 10:45 a.m..
7 p.m .. Wednesday Se rvices- 7 p.m.
Syracuse Chun:h of the Nuanne
Pa&lt;J:_or·Mil..e Adkin~. Sunday School - 9:Ml
a.m .. Worship
lfUO a.m.. 6 p.m ..

Presbyterian
Harrison\'ilk Presb~h.·rhm Chu~h
Pustor Robert Crt'"'· Wnr~h!p- 9 a.m.

Hod Community Chun::b
Off Rt, 1:!4. Pa stor: Edsel H:IM. Sunda)

·

Faith {'.ospel Church
LOng Bottom . Sunday School - q:IO a.m.
Worship - 10 :4) a.·ffi'., ' 7: .' 0 p m .
Wedoe~ay 7:.\0 p.m
Mt. Olh·r Community Church
Pa-.tor: Lav.n·l\ce Bll ~ h . Sundaj School 9 J(l a.m.. E\en ing - t:dO p m . Wedneda)
Sef\.ice - 7 p.m.
•·un Gospel Lighthoust
.H045 Hihmd Ruild. Pm nc:ro~. Pa,tm . Ro~
Humer. Sundot) School - 10 am .. [ •cnlll£
7. 30 p.m.. Tuej;(!ay &amp; Thur~ .- 7JO p.m

~tlddlfpon

l'rnlerostal Assemhl~
St. Rt . 12~ . Racine. Tornado Rd . Sunda)
Schon! - 10 a.m .• Evenin£ - I p.m ..
~'ednesdll y Scr\'i~cs- 7 pm.

\1iddlepol1 Preshyteriu
Jame;; Snyder. Sundu} School 10 ·
a.m.. ., r 11'~hrp ~n ire I I :un .

Dym·ille Community C~urth
Sunday School · 9:JO a.m.. Wor,ht p lO::m a.m .. 7 p.m.
Morse Chapel Churth
Sunday !iChool - 10 a.m.. Worship - I I
ll.m .. Wednerillay S.Cn·icc -1 p.m

Tm~hChurch

Pentecostal

S)Tacust Mission
141 I Bridgeman St.. Syracuse. Sunday
School - 10 a.m. E\·cning - 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Scn•icc - 7 p.m.

School · 9:30a.m .. Worsh1p • 10 :.' 0 a.m ..
7:30 p.m.

Hockingport Churth
·Grand Street . SundBy School· 9:30a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m .. Pastor Phillip Bell

Pi ~&lt;',

500 N . ~nd A\'t' .. M1d~ lepon. P~ sw r :

Harrieonvllle Community Church
Pastor : Theron Durham. Sunday - 9:30
a.m ..and 7 p.m ., Wednesday -7 p.m.

Pa s1or: Bill Marshall Sunday School 9a .m .. Worship - 10 a .m .. ls.t Sunday
e\'ef)' month e\·ening service 7:00p.m .:
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Mt. Oli"e United Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkc:s ville. Pa~tm : Rev.

~- ~'Mom Gospel ~1ission
Ba!d Knob . on Co. Rd . J\. Pastor: Re\' .
Roger Willford,- Sunda y School · 9:30
a.m. Wor&lt;ihiP -,,.7 p.m

Community o£ Chrbt
Rd. , Pastor: Jim Proffi tt .
Sunday Sch o~ l - 9:30 a.m .. Wonhip 10:30 a.m .. Wedn esday Service~ • 7:00
p.m.
Bethf:l Worship Center
397R2 S.R.-7. Reedsville . OH 45772, 1/2
mile nonh of Eastern Schools on SR 7 .. A
Full Gospel Church, Pastor Roh Barl'ler.
Associate Pastor Karyn Da,·is. Youth
Pastor Suzie Fiancis, Sunday ser\'ices
10:00 am woro;hip . 6:00pm Famil y L1fe
Classes. Wed . Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m.. Outer Limits Cell Group at the
church 6:30pm to 8 30 pm

Sunday School - 9 a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m.

Pi~ Grnn Dible Holines.~ Church
112 mile: off Rt. J25. Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley. Sunda)· School - Q:?ll a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 am .. 7:30 ' p.n1...
Wednesday Service - 7JO p.m.

pm .

Portl.11nd-R~:~~:ine

Pu~Chapel

Rose of Sharon Uolinm Church
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutland. P11stor: Re''·
Dewey King. Sunday school- 9:30 a.m ..
Sunda~
wol'§hip -7 p.m .. Wednesday
prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Keno Church of Christ
Worship . 9:30 a .m .. s_.nday School 10:30 a.m .. P"astor-Jctlrey Wallace. 1st and
3rd Sunday

Tuppers Plain!i St. Paul
Pastor: Jane Beattie ; Sunday School • q
a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m .. Tuesday Servicxs
·7:30p.m.
Centra! Ctustrr
~ sbUl)' (SyraCIJ!it ). Pa.&lt;~tnr: Bob Rob inson .
Sunday School - 9:45 a .m , Worsh1p - II
a.m .. Wedll('!ida.y Serv~s · 7:30p.m.

Carleton lalerdenomination•l Churdll
Ki ngsbuf) Road . Pastor.: Robert Vance.
Sunda)' School
Q:30 a .m.. Worshlp
Smke l0 -~0 am , E\enifli Ser..-ice 6

(I

Chester Church of the Nazarent
Pastor: Rev. Herben Grate, Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m.. Worship - 11 a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednesday Se1Vices- 7 p.m.
Rutland Church of tht Nazartnr
· Sunday School -· 9 :30 a.m.;' Worship 10:30 a.m .. , 6:30 p.m .. Wednesda~
Sel'\·ices- 7 p.m. Rev. Mike Clark

Heath (Middlepon)
Pastor : Brian Dunham , Sunday Schoo l 9:30a.m.. Worship- II :00 a.m.

' Danville Holiness Church
31057 S~te Route 325 , La.ngsvlle. Pastor:
Victor Roush. Sunday school - 9:30 a.m..
Sunday worship - lO :.lO a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.•
Wednesday prayer service - 7 p.m.

Pomerm· Westsidt Chun:h ol Christ
33226-Children's Home Rd ., Sunda y
School- II a.m.. Worship- IOa.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ces- 7 p.m.

J...oniBoHOnl
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m.'
R&lt;tdsviUe
Worship - 9:30 a.m .. Sunday School .
10:30 a.m .. Fi~t Suflday of Month . 7:00
p.m. !Oemce

Forest Rua
. Pa~tor: Bob Robinson, Sunday Schoo l-- 10
a.m., Worship · 9 a.m:

Cumm~nlty

. Pomeroy Church of Christ
212 W. Main St .. Sund.11y School - 9._30
a.m .. Wor~hip - 10:30 a.m .• 6 p.m ..
WedneMiay Serv ice~ . 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Cburdl ol tlw Nazamae
Pastor: Jan Lavender. Sunda) School
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 am . and
p.m., Wednesday Sel"\•ices- 7 p.m.

Entnpriw
Pastor· Arland King . Sunday School \0: 30 a .m .. Worsh ip • 9:30 a.m . . Bible
Study Wed . 7:30
flatwoods
Pu~tor: Keith ~ader, Sunday School - 10
a.m.• Worship - I 1 a.lfi ,

' Episcopal

' ice
Sund11y School - 9 a.m. Worsh1p Stn
I0 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sund:l~

Sef\·ice s 7 p.m .

Pu~mr

Seventh-Day Adventist
~,·e nth-011:'

Ad\•cnrlsr
Rd . P()ffiCro y, S~urd a}
Scn·ic,;-o;. : Sul'lti:Hh S,-hool - ~ p.m ..
Won.htp ..1 p.m
Mu\l'ocrr ~ Ht ~ .

United Brethren
\lt. Hermnn l lnited Brethrrn

In Christ Chu11'h
.'ll41 l Wid; ham Rd .·
Pu~ t ClT : Pri('T Mam nJt~il:. Sunda' S•hool () JO u.m.. Wor,h1 p - HUO a.m., 7:\')0
p .m, Wc d l'k! ~da~ Sen ice, ,- 7:(111 'p. m.
Ynuth ~ r~•up mcetm~ 2nd -&amp; -lth Sunday ~
7 p 111 '
Eden l'nilfd Brethren in Christ
Stat.:- RC'ut~· 12-k ~·t~&gt;.~t:n Reed-,qllc &amp;
Hod..mj!pon . Sun ili.!~ SL'hl.)(ll 111 a.m ..
~undtt~ \\,lr~hlp II '"" a.m \~edne-.da~
'Ser' •a, - H ill p.m . Jl.:J,tor- M Adam
Te\a~ Communi!~'

\\ill

South Bethel Cummunity Chui'Ch
Sih rr Ri dge- Pustor Lmdll Damc-l&gt;..'l•PJ

Church announcements sponsored by these area merchants
fi!il)rr funeral ~omr
214S.lllilltllll.•$17 t•

"!-et your light so shine before
"

men, that they may see your
good works and glorify your
Father in heaven ."
Matthew 5:16

Full line. of
Insurance

Products+
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AGENCIES Inc .

Financial
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Divis-Quickel Agency Inc. If ye abide in fole, and My

INSURANCE

Blll Quickel

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

Synrose First Chureh of Cod
Apple ~nd Second Sts .. Pastor: Rev. David
Russell. Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m. E''ening Service s- 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Services- 6:30p.m.

Church of Christ

Cheshil'! Baptist Churth
Pastor: Steve Linle, Sunday School: 9:30
a'm , Morning Worship: 10:30 · um.
.
Wednesday Bible Study 6:30pm : ('hoir
practice 7~ 30: youth and Bible Buddi es
6:30p.m . Thurs . 1 pm boo).: study

ARCADIA NURSING

School • 10 a.m.. Evening - 7 p n1 ..
Wcd11tsday ScrYices • 7 p.m.
Strond Baptist Chun::h
Ra\'fnswood. WV. Sunday School 10 am. Morning WOJ'§hip 11 am E\oening • 7 pm ,
Wednesday 7 p.m..

Assembly of God

Victory Baptist Independent

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

Pastor: Bob R~ndolph. Worship - 9;JO
a.m. Sunday Schoo l- 10:30 a.m.

Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd off Ne'w Lima Rd . Rutland.
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.•
Thurs . 7:00p.m .. Pastor Many R. Hutton

Carpenter Baptist Church
Sunday School - 9:30am . Preaching '
Service \0:3011m. Even ing Service
7:00pm. WednesdaY Bib! ~ Study 7:00pm. '
Interim Preacher- f-1oyd Ross

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

Jtutlud Fret Will Bapli!it
Salem St .. Pastor: Jarnte Fonner. Sunday

Pastor: Ron Heath, Sunday Worship - 10
a.m., 6 p.m.. Wc-dne~ay Services - 7
p.m.

161 Mulberry AR, Pomeroy. 992-5898.
Pastor~ Re v. Walt~r E. Heinz. Sat. 'coo .
4:45 -5: 15p .m.: Miiss· 5:.31J p.m.. Sun .
C011 . -8:45-9:15 a.m... s_.n Mass - 9:30
11.m .. Dai ly Ma§S · 8:30a.m.

Baptist

r

Ruu.nd' Ch~hofGod

Joppa

Sacred Heart Catholif: ChuKh

Pagrvillt Fruwill Baptist Omn-h
Pastor: Mik e Harmon , Sunday School
9:30 to IO::m am. Worship !!t"n· i~e 10:30
to I, I :0() am . Wed . preachi"n g 6 pm

Episcopal leader urges patience during church tunnoil

p.m.

Catholic

Uberly Assembly of.God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane. Mason .
W.Va., Pastor: Neil Tennant. Sunday
Services~ 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

"'

10:45 a.m .. Suflday E'·enmg- 6:00p.m..
Pastor: Dot\ Walker

River ValiC"y J\poilo\ic Worship Center,
873 S. 3rd
Ave ., Middlepon. Re\'.
Michael Bradford, Pastor. Sunday. 10:30
a .m. Tuc: s. 6:30 pra yer, Wed . 7 pm Bible
Study

,.

Judge: Charity program can't exclude religious charities

r

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

WORS1THP GOD.THIS. WEEK

Why we sing
"Rejoice in the Lord. (i)
you righteous. Praise
befits the upright. Praise
the Lord with the lyre,
make melody to him with
the harp of ten strings.
Sing to him a new song ... "
(Psalm 33.1-3a, RSV)
There is power ·in song
- an intense. energy, subtle
spirit, mysterious essence
- that lives in .the soul of
humanity, grows from the
heart and flows from the
lips. Yet who can truly
understand , much less
explain. the vitality, intoxi'
eating intiuence, and ptmetrating force of song? Who
can capture and retain in
the intellect any rationalization for its influence
over
and . penetration
throughout creation~ •
One song sung lively can
refashion the coward into an
audacious soldier. Another
sung mournfully can buckle
the hearts of an entire army.
One song may ignite the
passion of two young
lovers. Another might
destroy · their ·amorous
dreams of matrimony. Still
another song rhythmically
intoned can blanket the
mind from the world
around, yet another makes it
seem all too real.
Song is more than some
merely corporeal force. It
was born of Spirit before
the dawning of the first natural light upon the earth.
And God Himself. has
breathed songs into the
· hearts of His faithful servants, enjoining us to sing
and make melody in our
hearts. through our lips.
Indeed, the uncorrupted
power of song was given for
the glory of God from the
beginning, when the morning stars first sang their
song of joy. (See Job 38.7)
Songs have been sung on
battlefields and by bedsides
at night, in trenches and
hospital rooms, from mountain tops to river valleys,
under the scorching heat of
summer as well as the frosty
cold of winter, in every season and for all occasions ..
But the most stirring, deeply
penetrating and inspirational · songs are those
melodies offered to the
great Giver of Song. the
Lord Himself.
The magnificent Psalms
of Holy Scripture are songs
of praise, sung by the pe.oc
· pie of God down through
the corridors of time, and in
them we are commanded to
sjng to the Lord. He is wor-

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�•
r

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio woman's

wildlife sanctuary
helps injured animals

PageA8

OHIO
MIDDlEPORT COURT
David Butcher, Pomeroy,
MIDDLEPORT
$500
, wrongful entrustMiddleport Mayor Sandy
Iannarelli fined the fol - ment: Curtis Riffle, $ 165,
lowing in Mayor 's Court: concealed weapon; Dennis
Heather
Boyles, Little, Middleport, $495 ,
Middleport , $165 , failure failure to comply (2 ), fail to
comply; · Michael ure to appear; Kimberly
Middleport ,
Pierce, M tddlepon , $165 , Dickens,
failure · to comply; Trenton $695, failure to appear
Quails, Middlep'ort, $165 _, (2), FRA suspension ; Tory
failure to comply ; Lon . Swartz, Middleport, $165 ,
Engle . Middleport. $165, failure to comply.
•
Frank · Nelson . · Jr.,
failure to comply ; Jessica
Lauderrnilt, $165 , failure Portland , posted $83 bond
on a charge of speed .
· to comply.

· Friday, October 6 , 2006

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Saturday, Oct. 7
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, regul ar
meeting, 9 a .m., Syracuse
Village Hall .

Thursday, Oct. 12
· CHESTER Shade
Rive~. Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
at the hall . Refreshments.
POMEROY . Alpha
Iota Masters, 11 :30 p.m. at
St. Paul Lutheran Church.·
Program by Jenni Dunham.
Hostesses Julia Proctor and
Ve lma Rue.

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Other events ·

Shawnee State University
. hits record enrollment

PORTSMOUTH For Bob Trusz observed that the
the fifth consecutive year, projected smaller number of
Shawnee State University high school graduates in
has set a fall enrollment com ing years will challenge
record, with 3,880 students Shawnee State to continue
registered for the. 2006-07 its growth.
"Fewer high school gradacademic year.
"We are very proud that uates means fewer potential
so many students are choos· university students.," said
ing Shawnee State ," said Associate Vice President for
President Rita Rice Morris. Enrollment Management
"These students see that Beb Trusz. "To continue
Shawnee . State will equip growing , Shawnee State
them witl;l what they need will look for ways to
for · rewarding careers and increase its profile across
Ohio. We offer what stubright futures ."
Enrollment increased I .57 dents and parents want percent over the previous low tuition. great programs,
year, and more than 18 per- small classes, and attractive
cent since 2000.
·
student residences .- and
Registrnr Steve Midkiff we have seen again and
noted that while the number again that if we can g_et stuof incoming freshmen stu- dents to visit Shawnee State,
dents is down slightly, the chances are they will enroll
attending
total number was up here ."Students
because more students Shawnee State this year
come from: 80 of Ohio's 88
stayed in school.
"Holding on to students is counties, 13 Kentucky
just as important as counties, five West Virginia
enrolling new ones," · said counties, 17 · states other
Midkiff. "We're working than Ohio, and 10 countries ,
hard at Shawnee · State to other than the.United States .
"I am particularly pleased
increase the number of students who take full advan- that our enrollment from
tage of their university .edu- Kentucky has increased ,"
cation and stay on to gradu- said Morris. "Kentucky stuate." Retaining students is dents from the nine counties
also vital to the university . nearest Shawnee State are
because fewer students will taking advantage of Ohio
These
be.available to enrolr in the in-state tuition.
Kentucky students are getfuture.
Associate Vice President ting a great university edufor Enrollment Management cation at a great price."

Ariel. offers
Halloween magic
.

GALLIPOLIS
are general admission; adult
"Creepy,
Spooky, . and tickets are $10 and student
scary•. are the moods of the tickets are $7 . .
season as The Ariel - Dater
Tbe Ariel - Dater Hall is
Hall begins offering a selec- also in final preparation
tion of Halloween-themed stages of creating the .allevents for all ages.
new Haunted Ariel Theatre.
The· thrills of Halloween This year 's haunted house .
will be ushered in with an experience will wind visiamazing stage illusion show, tors through three floors of
presented by the nationally~ · terrifying scenes, characters ,
known husband and wife and special effects . The
team, The Caplingers. The extensive tour will include
Spook-tacular Magic of The the underground tunnel sysCaplingers will be presented tern, amaze of rooms on the
in the Morris and Dorothy second floor, and an elaboHaskins Ariel Theatre, on rate mad scientist's laboratoSaturday, 7 p.m. on Oct. 14. ry filling much of the Ariel
The Caplingers have per- stage.
formed throughout the
The Haunted Ariel Theatre
United States in theatres, will open on Oct. 20 at. 6
arenas, conferences, fairs, p.m . Additional operation
festivals, schools, and more. dates are set for Oct. 21 , and
A fan of Halloween, Lonnie 26-31, opening each night at
Caplinger has planned a spe- 6 p.m. Admission is $7 for
cial presentation exclusively adults and $5 for students .
The Ariel • Dater Hall's
for the Ariel - Dater Hall.
Some special illusions have Halloween events co-sponneverbeen presented before. · sored by Sunny 93 .1, Big
Joseph Wright, Ariel - Country 995, arid Pepsi. .
. Dater Hall executive direcFor information, ·and ticktor, said that when the et purchases, guests may
Cappingers saw the theater contact the The Ariel - Dater
last January, they thought it Hall box office at 740-446would be perfect for a ARTS .
Halloween show.
Tickets are on sale now for
the Spook-tacular Magic of
The Caplingers . All seats

Local stocks
ACI- :28.39
AEP -37.26
AkZo ~1.10
Ashland- 63.63
BIG- 20.43
Bob Evans - 32.61
BorgWamer - 59.64
.CENX - 31.28
Champion- 7.23
Charming Shops - 14.65
City Holding - 40.13
Col- 56.87
'
DG -13.65 ·
DuPont -. 43.42

Federal Mogul - .40
USB- 33.69
Gannett - 57.29
General Electric -36.29.
GKNLY - 5.35 ·
Harley Davidson - 63.40
JPM- 47.41
Kroger ~ 22.72
Ltd. - 27.87
NSC- 46.17
Oak Hill Ananclal - 24.90
OYB- 25.15
BBT- 44.02
Peoples - 30.07

Pepsico - 64.78
Premier - 14.30
Rockwell - 60.28
Rocky Boots - 12.40
sears - 163.44
WaJ..Mart - 48.41
Wendy's - 34.05
Worthington - 17.75
Dally stock reportS are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the preVious day'cS transactions, provided by Smith
Ahanclal Advisors of
Hilliard Lyons In Gallipolis.

Show Off Your "Pumpkin"
In The Sentin~l

PuMPKIN PATCH
Pictures will run: ·
Monday,

October30
Deadline for Entry:
Monday,
Oct9ber2J

Qn\y

$8.00

NASCAR, Ptlae 83
Scorebotlrd, Page B4

Friday, October- 6, 2006 .

'

-·- ·of--

and
hilj1 khool varsity lp]l'li'IQ 8V8fts nvoMng
j'OOER&lt;W
tMm6 from Galli&amp;, Meigs lll1d ~ OOI.rltles.

F..-11
GaHia Academy at Ironton, 7:30p.m. ~

Poca at Point Aeasant. 7:30p.m.
~Galla at Sciolovllle Easl, 7:30p.m.
Soulh Point at River Val~. 7:30p.m.
Nelsonvif~York, at MeiQS, 7:30p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 7:30p.m.
MRier al Soultlem, 7:30 p.m.

Vole.,.

-II

OVCS at Wood Counly, 6:30 p.m.
OVCS at Wood Counly. 5 p.m,
. College Crou COuntty
Rio Grande at All Championships, 2 p.m.

Salurdly'l QllDII
Gllrr.er County at Hannan, 1:30 p.m.
.
Volteiboll
Galli&amp; Academy at Af~Jer Valley, noon

· Soccer ·

"Love Va!"
Mommy &amp; Daddy
Mail or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Child's Name:_ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

Ads must be pre-paid

Friday ... Part] y cloudy. A
slight chance of showers in
the morning. Highs in the
lower 60s. North winds 5 to
10 mph . Chance of rai n 29
percent. .
Friday
night ... Mm.tl y
clear.. Lows in the lower 4(h .
North winds around 5 mph in
the evening ... Becoming Iight
and variable .
Saturday ... Moslly 'unn¥.
Highs in the upper 60s .

No rtheast winds a round 5 . Highs in the upper 61);,.
mph.
J
'
Wednesday
and
Saturday nighl.. .Mostl y W
, ednesdlJy nigh't.. .Partl y
clear. Lows in the mid 40s .
No rtheast winds a round 5 clo ud y witli a 30 percen t
chance of ;bower,. Highs in
mp h .
Sund ay
through the upper 6(h. Low&lt; in the
Monday .:.Mostl y
clear. upper 40, .
Highs
Th ursd ay ... p an 1y c1oud y
. h in the lower 70s. Lows
m t e upper 40 s.
·~
.
· _ ·
Monday night through w1th a 40 percent chance of
Tuesday
night.. .Partly · showers . H1gh&gt; 10 the lower
cloudy. Lows arou nd 50 . 6&lt;h .

nst

STAF1' REPORT

Frfdly'a gamn

~TS41&gt;MY DAI LYSENTI NEL . COM

POMEROY - Suffering
a disappointing first loss of
the season to Wellston last
week, the tough Meigs
Marauders will try to
rebound today as an even
tougher opponent comes to
town.
Nelsonville-York (5-l ),
who trnvejs to Pomeroy tiding a three gljrne win streak,

will face the Marauders in
their last home game before
a ' two game road trip in a
c rucial matchup in the TriValley Co nference Ohio

·Divis ion.
The Buckeyes win streak
has been· especially impressive, shutting out two of
their las t three opponents ·

while outscoring them 89- is ·9-26 , while the same
13. Meigs, on the other record for Nelsonville-York
hand , dropped a heartbreak-· is 13-23.
.er in front of a packed house
Du ring the six games
16-.12 to the Rockets last played this season, both
Friday, snapping a five game · teams have also p\lt up some
win streak.
pretty big point totals.
Friday's matchup will be Nel sonville-York is averagthe bi ggest test for both ing a whopping 36 ·points
schools so far in the season per game this season, while
as both have faced a rather Meigs is just behind with 32
weak schedule. The com- points per outing.
bined record of teams Meigs
Pluse see Meip. 82
has played so far this season

.

Point Pleasant at Nicholas Co., 2 p.m.
GlotosPoint Pleasam at Nicholas County, noon

.

Crooo Country

River Valley at Plkelon lnvllalional
COIIogeSaccor
Urbana at Rio Grande , 7 p.m.
COIJogo Womont s Rio Grande at WVU Teach, 2 p.m.
COIJogo VGiiorboll
Rio Grande at Malonefllffjn, 1 p.m:

PREP VolLEYBAll..

Meigs
pounds
Belpre
BY AsHL£Y SHAW
SPORTSIItMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BELPRE - Meigs defeated Belpre in three straight
sets, 25-8, 25-12, 25-7, to
improve their Tri-Valley
C6nference record to 5-3
Thursday night.
Leading the way for the
Lady Marauders (10-5) was
setter Amy Barr with 25
assists, two kills, and perfect
6-for-6 setving.
Hailey Ebersbach made her
presence known at the net
with four blocks and seven
kills. l.ealiing at the spiking
line for the Lady Marauders
was Amber Burton with 14
kills, followed by Catie
Wolfe with eight, Lesley
Preece added seven.
The perfect service for
Meigs continued with Patti
Vining serving 10-for-10,
Cassi Whan 9-for-9, and
Talisha Beha who wen! 6-for-

6.
Kylie Billings

to

LocAL ScHEDULE

Meigs faces off against
Vinton County on Thesday at
6p.m.

WoMEN's SoccER

Redwomen
can't shake
struggles
SALEM , W.Va. - The
University of Rio Grande
women's soccer.team conld
not shake its' current slide
at Salem International on
Wednesday afternoon, losing to the Fighting Tigers,
3-0.
Rio Grande ( 1-10) lost
for · the ninth consecutive
time.
Salem improves · ro 3-9
with the victory and wins
for the second consecutive
year over the Redwomen.
SIU edged Rio 1-0 at Evan
Davis Field last season .
No other details were
made available.
Rio Grande will again
play out ·Of conference on
Saturday with a road trip to
Montgomery.- W.Va. and a
date with WVU -Tech.
Kick-off is set for 2 p.m.
!

• CoNrAcrUs

Local weather·

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

. PVH Golf Scramble, Page 82

POMEROY
- Meigs
County Board of Health,
reg ular meeting , 5 ·p.m.,
Meigs
County
Health
Department. .

CASTALIA (AP)
couple moved to a rural area
Mona Rutger's bird s and and wanted to give someMonday, Oct.9
rabbits don '.t have name~. thing ·back. She planned to
CHESTER
- Chester
She says it's because they plant habitat areas for
Township Trustees monthly
are meant to live in the wild . · wildlife on her property. ·
meeting, 7 p .m ., Chester
Rutger operates Back to
That developed into a
Town 1-!all .
· the Wild - a wildlife reha- · wildlife rehabilitation and
bilitation and education education center with bald
Tuesday, Oct. 10.
center that treats abo.ut eagles. wild birds , bobcats,
POMEROY - Bedford
2,000 animals each year.
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
turtles,
fawn s,
foxes,
More than half of the ani - s11akes, squirrels and rab town hall .
mals are released back into bits.
their. habitat while some of
Wednesday, Oct. 11
Rut,ger"s center operates
Sunday, Oct. 8
those too injured to. survive on a $ 150,000 budget withPOMEROY
- Me igs
POMEROY
- Blessing
in the wild are used in edu- out any government fundCounty Commissioners . 12
of
pets
and
animals
in honor
cation · programs . She esti - ing. Donations keep the
noon Wednesday.
, of St. Francis of'Assisi, I: I·~
mates that she talks to center open, she said .
. ATHENS - O ' Bieness According to AARP. the
p .m.. Grace Episcopld
50,000 students a year.
Hospital
in course helps drivers update ;
Boy Scouts have built Memorial
Church parking lot.
. Rutger, 55 , said the job eight of the. center's enclo- Athens will offer a class- their driving.knowledge and
SYRACUSE ~ Syracuse
never ends because people sures, and donors have room course aimed at help- skill s, prevent traffic·crashes
Community
Church,
drop off rescue anim als all helped expand the facility .
ing older people to refresh and violations, and maintain .
Saturday, Oct. 7
Second Street, will be hav:
hours of the d ay.
Clyde High School 's sci- and improve their driving mobility and independence.
ing service 6:30 p .m . Jerry
HARRISONVILLE
Most of the anjm al
Wal]da Llewellyn, AARP
ence club adopted the cen- skills.
Harrisonville
Lodge
411
,
Frederick
will be preaching.
injuries can be blamed on
driver
safety
instructor,
will
O ' Bleness is offering the
ter's bobcat, paying for its
7:
30
a
.m.
Past
·
Masters
Dan
and
Faith
Haym·an in
human carelessness and
AARP
Driver
Safety present information about
annumedication
and
feed
intervention, she said .
Pro_gram Wednesday, Oct, normal changes in vision , night to be o bsetved with .charge.
She has a bald eagle ally.
POMEROY - Carleton
hearing al]d reaction time work in the fellowc raft
If Rutger is named the 18, from I p.m. to 5 p.m .,
recovering from being elecdegree
.
Take
nonperishable
Church
homecoming,
and Friday, October 20 , associated with aging and
Animal
Planet
·Hero
of
the
trocuted when it hit power
from I p.m. until 5 p .m. in provide practical techniques food item. Refreshments at 1 Kingsbury Road, Morning
lines. Other animals have Year, her center will receive , O'Bieness ' Lower Level to compensate . for these 6:30p.m .
. services, 9':30 a .m . with
been injured by f ishing $ 10,000 and she'll win a ..Room 010 . Participants change . The following topCHESTER - Region 11 dinner at noon . Spectal
lines , hooks and p lasti c vacation.
must attend both sessions. . ics will also .be covered: the Garden Club board mee ts at singing by Day Spring after
"''m not a hero. I have All drivers, especially those impact of medications on a noon , Ches ter
rings from soda can pac ks .
United ' lunch.
Rutger has spent 15 years been overwhelmed by the who are 50 years old or person 's driving abilities, Methodist Church . Potluck.
MIDDLEPORT - Joe
operating the nonprofi t support I have been get- older, are. invited to partici- basic driving rules, license
McCloud will sing at morn·
facility at her home w ith her tin g," she said. "I know it's pate in the program .
Tuesday, Oct. 10
renewal , local traffic hazing worship service at l1
POMEROY
- Meigs a .m . at Middleport Fil'Sl
husband , Bill , and volun- the a nimals they are supDeveloped
by
the ards. adverse road condiporting."
Chamber
of Presbyterian Church .
teers.
American Associ'ation of tions, "road rage ," energy County
The
center
will
be
open
Commerce,
business-mindThe work has made her
measures ,
Retired Persons (AARP), conservation
luncheon,
noon,
one of I 0 .finalists for for visitors on Oct. 8 and the comprehensive class- proper vehicle use and ed
Animal Planet's Hero of the Oct. 29 for those who want room refresher course is maintenance, and accident Pomeroy Library. Larry
Marshall, health commisto learn about how it reha- geared toward the specific prevention tactics.
Year award .
· , Friday, Oct. 6
She said it began after the bilitates injured animals .
needs of drivers who are 50 · To enroll in the course, sioner, speaker, lunch
LONG BOTTOM catered by Wendy's, RSVP
years ' old
or
older. call (740) 592-9206 .
Hymn sing 7 p.m. at the Mt.
992-5005 .
Olive
Church ,
Lorig
Bottom . Day Spring to sin~. ·
Wednesday, Oct. 11

O'Bleness offers driver
rifresher course

Inside

OVP Seoreline IS p.m.·t o.m.)
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fa• - 1·740-446·3008
E"iMII -

Soortt

sports 0 mydailysentlneLcom

Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740)446-2342. ext. 33
5sherman@mydailytribune.com

Llny Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
lcrumO mydaityregister.oom ,

Ashley Shaw, Sports WrRer
(740)-·2342 . .... 23 .
spor1s 0 myd8ilytribune .com

Lany Crum/phlllo

Eastern seniors Darcy Winebrenner, Erin Weber, Brittany Bissell and Georgana Koblentz.l.eave the court for the final t ime at home during Thursday's high
school volleyball game in Tuppers Plains. The Lady Eagles ' fifth senior, Jillian Brannon, had already exited the c6urt.
1

PERFECTION AT HOME
Eastern closes out flawless home portion of scheduie
BY LARRY CRUM
LCRUMIItMYDAILYREGISTER .COM

TIJPPERS PLAINS - At times
they looked a little sloppy and at
times it looked like Federal Hocking
would malce it a. close game, but on
senior night at Eastern High School in
front of a packed house, the seventhranked Lady Eagles would not let
anyone ruin their night.
·

With each Federal Hocking run,
Eastern's seniors stepped up and
made plays at crucial times to keep
.the game out of fel\Ch for the Lady
Lancers as the home squad moved to
19-0 on the season, winning in three
sets 25-15, 25-16 and 25-12.
"I know in the back of their minds,
they know they are undefeated, but I
think we are playing one game at a
time," said Eastem he,ad coach Howie

Caldwell. "I think that each ·game is a
new challenge and that is the way
they look at it."
Eastern easily won the first set 2515, despite suffering through a few
critical mistakes, but game two was
much more of a challenge. The Lady
Eagles jumped out to the early lead,
but the Lady Lancers fought back and
made it close contest.
Whether it was the excitement of

BY

DAVID KRAVETS

"'-SSOCI.A.TEO PRESS

APphoto

Tigers
even
series
with
Yanks
.
NEW YORK Justin
Verlander and Detroit's
bullpen held down the New
York
Yankees'
mighty
offense, bringing just enough .
I 00 mph heat to send the
Tigers horne with a split .
Curtis Granderson hit a £0- ·
ahead tripl e off Mike
Mussina in the seventh inning
to cap a comeback from a
two-run defi cit, and the
Tigers beat the Yankees 4.3
Thursday to even their bestof-fi ve AL playoff series at
one game aptece.
·
"I hope in my heart everybody realizes we are a playoff
team," Tigers manager Jim
Leyland said. ''I'm not &gt;ure
everybody believed that."
After the threat of rain
caused a postponement.
Wednesday night, the skies
were sunny for the rare postsea.&lt;;on day gante at Yankee
Stadium. But before a some-

Pluse see Pelfedi-. 82

Bonds' trainer freed from·
prison after legal 'snafu'

Detroit Tigers'
Justin
Verlander
delivers
against the
New York
Yankees during the first
inning in
Game 2 .of
Major League
Baseball's
American
,
• League
Division Series
Thursday at
'·
Yankee
Stadium in
New York .

BY THE AsSOCIATm PRESS

the final home game for the seniors,
or the .Eagle mascot firing up the
crowd which included a group of
green and white painted fans with the
word "eagles" smeared on their
chests. whatever it was, Eastern had
trouble focu sing all night.
.
Federal Hocking closed within four
of the Lady Eagles midway through

what stunn ed cro wd of
56.252, the wild-card Tigers
e nded a six-game losing
streak that stretched to · the
fina l week of the regular ;;cason.
Verlander. his pitches
reaching tri ple-digits on the
radar w n. allowed his only
runs on Johnny Damon's
founh-inning homer. which
put New York ahead 3-1. .
Jam ie Walker, Joel Zumaya
and Todd Jones finished with
one-hit relief.
Zumaya topped out at I 02
mph. according 10 the centerfi eld scoreboard. Wa lker got
the win, relievi ng Verlander
in' the sixth.
Jones pitched the ninth for
the save. gi,·ing up a lfadoftsingle to Hideki Matsui . tlut
Jones. a soft tosser ·when
com!Jared to the Tigers· other
hard throwers, struck out
Jorge
, Posada,
retired
Robinson Cano on a soft 1ly
.ai1d gQt Damon to fly out.

New York. an overwhelming favorite with All-Stars at
every
positi on.
won
Tuesday·, opener 8-4 and had
plenty of chances early in this
one. But the Yankees slruck
out ni ne times and w·cnt 1for-8 with men in scoring
position.
Alex Roori!!ucz had another tough day at the plate.
going 0-for-4 with three
strikeouts. including one that
ended the first with ·the ba&lt;;e&gt;
loaded.
A-Rod. booed loudly after
his .final two at-bats. hasn 't,
driven in a run in his la;.t I0
postseason games and is 5fdr-40 (.125) in his la.o,t II .
He's 1-for-8 with four &gt;trikeout' in this serie,.
When the serie' re,unle&gt; in
Detroit on Fri¢ay night.
Randy John&gt;On ( 17 - 11 ) will
test hi' balkv back for New
York. opposed by fo rmerPI'ease see Plll!yoHs, Bl

questions

refuses

to

an~wer.

Prosecutors, however, say
SAN FRANCISCO
the tape is legal and was
Barry Bonds' personal trainer made in a face-to-face meetGreg AndersOn walked out of ing with Anderson.
prison Thursday, hours after a
Although Alsup dismissed
federal jupge ordered him . Anderson 's tape claim and
released because of a "legal others. the 9th U.S. Circuit
snafu ."·
Coun of Appeal last week
U.S. District Judge William sent Anderson·s appeal back
Alsup said Anderson must be to the j udge;· saying Alsup's
freed because a federal . ru ling regarding the tape was
appeals coun hadn' t affim1ed not clear enough.
the contempt order within the
"This snafu has arisen by
required 30 days after an apparent failure by the
Anderson was jailed. .
,
court to be clear of its findAnderson.' 40. could be ing's ." Alsup said.
returned to pri ~on if the
In c larifyi ng his · order
appeals court affirms the Thursday, Alsup said he
Aug. 28 contempt citation.
agreed with prosecutors tlt)t
' The trainer has been there was ample evidence
· impri soned twice for refusing
beyond the tape to question
to testify before· a grand.jury
Anderson. Prosecutors on
investigating , whether the
Thursday said the questions
Giants slugger comm itted they want ariswered are based
perj ury when he said he on athletes' secret testimony
never
knowingly
u-:;ed
in the Bay Area Laboratory
steroids.
.Co-Operative
case and a
Bond&gt; told a 2003 grand
jury inve,tigating BALCO search of Anderson's hoUse
that Ander&gt;On gave hi m what that turned up drug records,
he believed to be flaxsee-d oil some with Bonds' name on it.
The . appeals cqun could
and anhritic balm. Ander,on
la ter pleaded guilty to distrib- rule any day.
Other than the tape dispute,
uting steroids ahd money
the
9th U.S. Circuit Court of
laundering. servi ng three
Appeals
has rejected the mermonths in prison and three
it&gt; of Anderson's appeaL
months ' home detention.
- Anderson· s latest jail stint Among them. Anderson said
lasted 37 day~ . He also hi' BALCO plea deal pre· served 15 days in July and vented him from cooperating
was re lea&gt;ed when the previ- with the government's steroid
inve,tigation.
ou' grand jury expired.
Anderson also will seek to
He ha;. appealed his con.tempt jailing on several' withdraw his 2005 guilty plea
fronr-. Anderson ·s main ·con- becau&gt;e his lawyer. Mark
tention is that a &lt;.ecret. illegal - Geragm.. said the tape
ly-recorded tape of him dis- antounts to an illegal wiretap
cu,;.ing Bonds' steroid use is and .mav have been the basis
the ha.(i, for the grand jury for the case.

•

'

he

"

�'

Page B2 • ~·Qaily Sentinel

'MI'll'mydailysentinel.rom

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Dllily Sentinel • Page B3

'

Pleasant Valley _Hospital holds annual Fall-Golf.Scrnmble
S~REPORT
SPORTS@IMYDA.IlYTRIBUNE. COM

MASON, W.Va. - On
September 17 at Riverside
Golf Course · Pleasant
Valley Hospital hosted the
Annual
Fall
Scramble .f\ pproximately
144 golfeci participated in
the special event whose
proceeds
benefit · the
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Foundation which funds
technology, · education and
constrilction projects. at the
non-profit healthcare faci lily. ·I
"We are truly excited
about this year's tum-out at
the
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
Annual
Fall
Scramble," said Amy J.
Leach, director of marketing an4 public relations at
PVH and coordinator of the
event.
worked
"Everyone

together to make this event
an enjoyable experience
and the proceeds go to a
great cause that directly
impacts the community. We
are extremely appreciative
of the sponsors, players and
volunteers who made this
tournament a succe~s."
Taking first place honors
were John Sang, Howard
Miller. J.J. Wedge and Bob
Brooks. Second
p,lace
recipients
were
Sam
Ferrell, Drew Hussell ,
Jeremy Vickers and Jimmy
Stewan. Claiming third
place were Tom Cremeans.
Jeremy
Grimm,
Jared
Douglas and 'Tony Dugan .
Hole-in-one prizes up. for
grabs at the tournament
were a Ford Fusion ( John
Sang
Ford
Lincoln
Mercury). Heritage Softtail
Harley Davidson motorcycle · (Baxter 's
Harley
. Davidson), a week-long,

all-inclusive trip to Cancun,
Mexico
( AAA
Travel
Galli poll, 1 and $10,000
cash
(Norris
Nonhup
Dodge).
Volunteers assisting the
day of the event were
Wanda
Tolliver, ' Liz
Gaskins, June Niben, Belle
Manin, Ed Martin, Carolyn
Rhodes, Chris Gary, Kellie
Thomas. Dee Arnett, Will
Arnett,
Gre_g · Kaylor,
·Rayanna Easterling and
Cheryl Whitl. Mary 's Tee
Time Grille catered the
tournament
Next year 's Pleasant
Valley Hospital Annual Fall
Scramble is already scheduled for Sunday. September
16, 2007.
For more information
about the golf tournament
or the PVH Foundation.
SUbmltled ~ .
please call the Community
Relations
Department, Taking first place honors at the Pleasant Valley Hospital Annual Fall Scramble were John
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326. Sang, Howard Miller, J.J. Wedge and Bob Brooks.

•

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. ~ ~ 'Sil!toltt 'has ""'"lt11910up

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plaoe recip~
ents at the

Hospital
Annual
Fall

Playoffs
fromPageBl
Y~

Kenny Rogers (17: 8). Because of the rainout.
the t=ns lost their travel
day.
.
r,.tets' 4, Dodgers I .
NEW YORK (AP) Sure. the New Yorf Mets arc
missing two experienced
: starters. they still have Tom
Glavine, though, and his stellar pitching perfortnance put
them on the brink of a firstround sweep.
·
Making hi"-33rd postseason start - but first since
joining the Mets in 2003 Glavine tossed six shutout

• il&lt;ansas .should !ye mart&lt;ed the
bl!glnnlng of Jimmie Johnson's
valiant comebacl&lt;. 'He led 105
\8ps, 'jet !!all blew -up In his
face tn the 1tnal 'five. Part oi tt
was his fault- a pli~oad
speeding licl&lt;et - .but some of
tt was just ·tate.

yard~ sinoe the first

• n,e.(!nver \eftjJO!ldeling what
might !lave peen was siltth-place
fln\sher Carl Edwards. Like Stew·
Mt, Edwards had little to lose by
gombll~ &lt;Jn fuel, but unlike
Stewart, he dldn' give tt a try.
• A blzam! llllnsas race left the
standings scramblad - six of
the top 110 positions cha~ed and "hange Is likely 1o be the
norm ,.gain. Tile next race, Tal·
ladego, fl!lures 'to be the
Chase'S most volatile. Rest as·
sured that the drivers at the lop ·
are dreading the UAW.ford 500.

•Siewe!t'S -•speed at
1Kansaswl1.21.7.53 mph. He

-1go1111 hlllf that fast -when
lhe&lt;l!OSlled:lhe finish line ...

o8l1ll ttwnl under .caution.
• An almost alilrmlf11 number of

Perfection

APphalo

fingertips ."
Pollack could move his
arms and legs when he was
taken off the field on a protective back board. X-rays
and a magnetic resonance.
imaging test detected the .
cracked bone.
"When you hear you
broke your neck, iJ sounds
kind of bad." Pollack said.
When they told me I fractured my C-6 (vert!!'bra), it
was kind of - I don't know.
I had a lot of peace. I never
cried once."
Recent X-rays indicated
that the bone is healing: He
is still feeling effects from
the injury.
"My first two t1ngers on
my .left hand are still kind of
numb on the fingenips. and I
can't feel' things a lot of
times," he said. " But that 's
starting to come back. I 'm
staning to feel more and
more stuff."
Even if the bone heals
w,ithout surgery, Pollack
faces a long rehabilitation.
" It definitely wouldn't be

lengmy enough to miss the . head every day amd does all
whole of next season,~ be of the &lt;:hofes he :can no
said. "But like I said, let's longer acoomplish because
when I get of the brace.
worry about
10 it. I' ve got more impootant
"I can't deal without crythings w be worried about." ing right now," he said io
The halo brace is screwed mid-sentence.
inro Pollack's slrull, im~
Pollacl., the 17.dt over.all
bilizing his neck. While
pick-out{)fGeorgia last year.
wears the brace, he's essen- got a late stan on bis rookie
season because of a contract
tiaJiy housebound.
"I wake up, play video dispute, A sprained knee
games, basically sit aroand also slowed his transition
the house all day," he said. from defensi~e end to line"There's not much I can do. backer. l'hi;; year, a pulled
I feally can't go out. I go to hamstring during training
the doctor's office once a .camp set him back
week and get X-rays, get my
There was no !;elf-pity
halo tightened and my when he talked about his ]at.
screws tightened and every, est setback.
thing."
"Coming into this year, I
The brace prevents him wanted to be a Pm Bowler,"
from putting his head on a . he said. "I had .a bunch of
pillew at night.
goals I wanted to reach. But
"'That"s one of the rough- that 's not something I look
est pans, the pan I probably at and go, 'Dang, why me?'
struggle with the most" be I oould be homeless on the
said. "I probably don 't sleep .street loqking for a way to
about four honrs a night."
.feed myself and looking for
Pollack got choked .up a way to pay the feht. rm
when he talked about how just so blessed and fortuhis wife, Lindsey, cleans his nate."

mat

lie

innings and New York Angeles
against · Greg
scratched.out enough run' to Maddux, who has 333 career
beat the Los Angele&gt; wins . Steve Trachsel or
Dodgers 4-1 for a 2-0 lead in Oliver Perez will pitch fo~
New York.
their NL playoff -erie,.
The Dodgers dropped to l Jose. Reyes drove in two
I
J
in the postseason since
runs from the leadoff spot. ·
wmnmg
the 1988 World
48-year-old pinch-hineF Julio
Franco hustled to beat out a Sene;,.
They also lost Nomar.
double-play ball for an RBI.
and Billy Wagner earned his Garciaparra ip_ the sixth
inning because of a leg injury •
second consecutive o;ave.
he hobbled across first on
Two days earlier. the NL
East champions .I oM Orlando an infield hi! in the fourth .
The All-Star tir;1 baseman
. Hernandez to a calf injury leaving him on the sideline; ha' been playing with a
with ace Pedro Martinez all &gt;trained left quadricep&gt;.
The 40,year-old Gtavine.
postseason.
with
290 major league win;,
But now, thef re one win
from the NL champion,hiP' outpitched a 25-year-old
senes.
·rookie who own;, one.
The Met&gt; will go for the
Lo' An&amp;e le., left-hander
sweep Saturd") m Ln' . Hon~ -Chii:! J Kuo 'hut nul the
''

Me15.1!'or six innings ~n Sept.
8 at Shea Sla!iium m fus.only
big league victory. That was
one reason he got the start in
this one.
..
Wi 1son Betemit homered
for the Dodgers off Aaron
He1lman in the eighth.
.
Cardinals 2, Padres 0
SAN DIEGO (AP)- Not
even Sar Diego native David
Wells could save the Padres.
who appear to be headed for
their ;,arne ol' postseason fate
against the St. Loui&gt;
Cardinals.
•
"Alben Pujols and Jim
Edmond; hit RBI singles off
Well&gt; in the fourth inning
and Jeff Weaver held the
popgun Padre;, in c heck. givmg the Cardinal' a 2·0 lead
in their NL &lt;,erieo;.

me

San Diego .ha, now lost September collapses .e ver,
nine stratght postseason improved to 8..0 in the postgames dating to its World season against San DJC~so.
Series sweep at the hands of That includes division senes
the New York Yankees in sweeps last year and in 1996.
1998.
Weaver, lllllking his secPujols got three more hits ond postseason start, outafter homering in .the 5-1 vic- 'pitched Wells, who was maktory in Game 1. '
mg his 17th posl:l&gt;CaSOn stan
Weaver, dumped by the and 27th appearance dating
Los Angeles Angels with a 3- to 1989.
10 record. and fo1.1r relievers
Weaver gave up two sincombined on a four-hitter. gles in five scoreless innings,
The Padres have only I 0 hits allowing only two Padres
in the first two games and are baserunners as far as second
0-for-1 0 with runners in base. He struck out three and
;coring position.
walked three.
Game 3 is Saturday at St.
Relievers Randy FIOI'eS,
Louis. Game 4 would be Josh Kinney. Tyler Johnson
Sunday, if necessary, but his- and Adam Wainwright
tory suggests otherwise .
pitched four inninf of twoSt. Louis, which barely hit ball. Wainwri t got the
avo ided one of the biggest Ja;,t fo1.1r outs for
save. 1
'

".

--TQ~t:AOEGQ-tlATA ~ -

illlllJX:lf.Oct:8

-

...'lj' r .... ,- i j.s J s;s;
C• r.~ _:::.
---' '...J r ~ .r .::. J =.:::...!-

)

No. 12 ALLTEL DODGE

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

·

!ll
~

VERSUS

.~IIIPJ.,_'Ii!:J

fl

,

-4romi\e races at 1.5-mlle
'llacl&lt;5 are -mlrc!Y being dedded by fuel ml\eCe.

.....

"'-"

--POints

leader Jeff
illl1an has
finished In
:the .top 10 In .

'four:straiCht

races ••.•
\lark 'Mertln

;~ 1

't£ f
0

.~

mlm.provect1tom
101h1D:tMd In jJOints
'ljlln Of"fllle races.

..

In a

• . .!1 lilt- Jeff Gordon
1t1es !finished 'lUIS ide 'l:he:top
30 1notwo-oftllell8Strour
raoes .... Kas.y l&lt;ahne'S \a!lt
;three1inisheute 16th, 38ltl

.ancl33rd.

t 'l l lc'l IIIII ft.

NIISCllt el'flcllll

.un\ifoely .tD be able tD ta1&lt;e ad...,,.. of that'stre~ since
'he now trails Burt&lt;m ~ 273
jJO\nts.

game of the season.
But if Meigs can adjust
and
get English schooling
fromPageBI
the Buckeyes on Friday, the
And with those numbers, Marauders may 'b e able to
it may come down to the pull off the victory.
first big defensive stop
For Nelson~lle- ¥ork, it
which -determines the out- will be up·tlie always tough
come, sometlhing Wellston . Jay Edwards and his passing attack which will help
discoverea last week.
Last week the Rockets · push the Buckeyes to suelimited Comelius English, cess. They will also rely on
Meigs' leading rusher, to 88 his quick feet, along with
yards on nine carries w-ith Bear Lewis, to help move
57 of ltiose coming in a the ibaJ1 Friday night.
touchdown run 11ne in the
Friday'·s game is slated .
game. It was the first time for 7:30p.m. Friday night in
English has been held under Pomeroy.

Cincinnati Bengats linebacker David Pollack (99) is attended to by trainers after he sustained
a season ending neck injury during their 34-17 win over the Cleveland -Browns, in this Sept. 17
file photQ, in Cincinnati, Pollack wi ll know in a couple of months whether the cracked bone in
his neck is heating propeny or whetl •er he'll. need career-ending surgery to fix it

• Race: John Deere 250
• - " ':Talladega
(Ala.) Superspeeoway
(2.666 miles}. 94
laps/250.604 miles.
• When: Saturday, Oct. 7
• LMt year's winner:
First race
• Quool\fylng :
First race
•'Race record: F1rst
race
• LMt """': Mike Skinner. 1n a Toyota,won the
Las Vegas 350 at Las
Vegas Motor Spelidway.

•·!1"11r
l&lt;ase!'
l&lt;ahne,so strn~th\s
.on "lntermedlllte tracks," is

Douglas
and Tony
Dugan.

worked so hard. I don'ahink
people iealize how ha!:d they
have worked."
iBI&lt;I!Uion led ·the way with
fmmPageBl
17 points on the night, with ·
Weber posting 13 points,
the second ~;et, but a fiery
Kelsy Holter with seven
speech from Caldwell got the
point&lt;;, '&lt;atie Hayman with
girls back in the game.
six points, Winebrenner with
Eastern rebounded with a
four point~ and Brittany
strong sbowing from Jillian
Sissel and Amanda Eason
BJ:annon, Erin Weber and
with a point.
Darcy · Winebrenner and
Those seniors who took
pulled away to a 25-16 victocourt in their final home
the
ry.
cames
included Gemgana
The Eagle momentum carBrannon,
lied over into the final set Koblentz.
Winebrenner,
Weber
and
with F,astem jumping out to
me early lead and holding it Bissell.
But the c-elebration is not
throughout. And a' a fitting
over.
In fact if things go
end to lhe home careers of
tbe Eastern seniors, with the according to plan for the
score sitting at 24-12, the Lady Eagles, the relebrations
~;eniors left the court together . are just beginning.
and were replaced by the . ''One thing we did tell
.underdassmen who .e asily them is thai we ar;e oot satisgrabbed
final point to win fied, we don't want to
it 25-n
become complacent. . We
. . And .as the Lady Eagle want to go as far .as we can
~niors left the coun togethpossibly go," Caldwell said.
er, they received a standing "So we are g&lt;&gt;ing to work
ovation from the fans who. harder, we did some things
showed their appreciation for tonight we shouldn't have
.everylhing the team has done .done so tomorrow we will
to Eastern High School.
come in and pr&amp;:tice and get
"They are a special group," ready • for the next two
said Caldwell. "The last four games."
or five years of v&lt;JileybaJI it
Eastern will take its unde· has been like a sorority. feated record to Trimble
Everyone takes tar~ of one Tuesday and will end the
another and they are so close · regular season nex:t Thursday
knit and · the seniors have at Waterford.

• " -: Dollar General
300
·• ·Where: LOwe's Motor
Speedway, Concord, N.C.
(1.5 miles), 200
laps/ 300 miles.
e Whell: Friday, Oat. 13
• t.Mt ·- ' s winner:
Ryan Newman
WCI''z'lyiiC-: Jim·
mie Johnson, Chevrolet,
187.735 mph, Oct. 14.
2005.
• Race reconl: Mark
Martin, Ford. 155.799
mph, May 25, .1996.
•U&amp;tweell: Points
leader Kevin Harvick.
won the Yellow Transportation 300 at
Kansas, holding off Matt
Kenseth .

+!enselll.ana i(evin Harvie!&lt;.aruwlthln 100 lJ0\11\s,

Grimm,
Jared

BY JoE KAY

.

I

tlenny&gt;Hamlln, W.Srtin, 'Matt

, .ler:emy

MeigS

J.J

Nllllultta&lt;ll9i!olnt 1881!1111~
llliies iritD 1!. &lt;Only four drivers -

.Cremeans

I 00

RvAN NEWMAN

~

•ll~~n ·Win:theCMse,
thanl&lt;s (I&amp; the~-. 'bil!iBurton

Scramble
were :rom

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Surgery would involve
fusing venebrae in the neck,
a career-ending procedure.
"One doctor said it: Not
very many people walk
away from a broken neck,
twice," Pollack said. " And
that's something that kind of
hits horne, you know.
"When you fuse two vertebr-ae tog~tJ:ler. ~e hkehhood for IDJUry IS greatly
increased."
.
.
The former ftrst-round
draft pick was injured while
tackling Cleveland's Reuben
Drough~s
dunng . / the
Bengals 34-17 vtettJry on
Sept 17 at Paul Brown
S~um. At first, he thought
be d only pmched a nerve a so-called "stinger" - on
· the tackle.
. "I couldn ' 1 really feel my
~ arms for a little while. That
was scary," he said. "I knew
something was wrong. I
assumed it was a real bad
• stinger because I had tin• gling from my neck: to my

l!ihed~.!loum!.alld1!fth

-;In .order, &lt;17-;ear-&lt;lld Wlllrk
lb!tin, 4S,.,...old .Dale ~
end~illd Jelf&amp;IWI. .

r

,.

c

fin\9h line.
•8qltirle!oce •petd.off ln\'lhe'lllln.qulll «JJ ..The-..00 fln-

vat ley

Pollack's neck h
CINCINNATI - BengaJs
linebacker David Pollack
will know in a couple of
months whether the cracked
bone in his'·neck is healing
properly oc whether he'll
· need · career-ending surgery
to fix it.
In his first interview since
the injury, Pollack said
Thursday that he has to wear
a halo brace· for two more
· . months. If the cracked vertebra has healed by then, . be
can start rehabilitation and
eventually
resume
his
career.
"If it heals by itself, then
I'm fine," he told writers in a
conference call from his
Cincinnati-area . home. "It's
just a matter of tibw it heals.
If it doesn't .heal properly,
then I'U.. have to have
surgery."

place

at the
Pleasant

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
. Annual Fall
Scramble
.were Sam
· Ferrell, Drew
Hussell,
Jeremy
Vickers and
Jimmy
Stewart.

pitted had left Stewart with a sub' • " - : UAW·Ford 500
stantial k!ad - and since the sec.., • - : Talladega (Ala.) Super,
speedway (2.666 miles). 188
ond-place driver al the time, Casey
Mears, aiSQ ran out of gas -he
) \aps/501.208 miles.
won a"f''l"'. The 27th VIctory of
. \( e - .: Sunday, Oct. 8
eua,._!l_: Dale Jarrett StewartS career wasn't one he
particularly cherished, but It was
..., •'QI WJII• ...-: Bill Elliott,
unlike any other. The 35-year-old is
ford, 212.809 mph, April 30,
noted for his brilliance behind the
1987.
wheel.
Vlatorles based on strategy
· - - - -: Mark Martin, Ford,
have, by his own admission. been
188.354 mph, May 10. 1997.
uncommon. ~ It's hard,~ he admitel81t-: Torr; Stewart won a
ted , "to be disciplined.' Stewart's
race Ill' stretch\~ fuel. Honest to
victory was hardly the only unexgosh, tt's true. Tony the Tiger
stooped to conquer. He used his
pected development in a race that
rioggln for once. The Banquet 400 seemeo bizarre from Its very be- ginning. In the first year in which
ended w~h the top two finishers
he faileo to make the Chase for
coasting across the finish line.
the Nexte) Cup, Stewart. the reign~wan's.Chevy ran out of gas o~
ing champion. won one of the 10
tum two, perllaps two-thirds of a
Chase races for the first time. In'
lap shy of the finish line . Since rehis career.
maining on the tracl&lt; while &lt;Jthers

~4111d.{)QeyMei!IS,&lt;did

·Claiming
thi~d

comment, wrlta: NASCAR This Week. qo The Gaston Gazette , P.O.

Once a star on the rise, Newman has hit the skids.. this season
BrMuiiii&amp;Uiaon
NASCAR This Week

.I

Ryan Newman, a former Raybestos
iRookie of the Year and a winner of 12
Cup r.aoes at age ;28, finds him!)elf in a
surprising slump.
Newman, like teammate and former ·
Ghampion Kurt Busch, failed to make
the Chase for the Nextel Cup for the
first time this year. His most recent
victory, in New Hampshire on Sept,
11!, 2005, was 38 races !~go. He's 17th in
the points standings. ·
"The emotional feeling is &lt;&gt;bviously,
I won't say depression, but sometimes
&lt;!isgust, sometimes frustration, sometimes a little bit just frustrated and
upset," he said. "Th~ bottom line is I
know we had .a rough 11ffseason at
~ke Racing.
·
~This is Dot an :ex:cuse, but you
.asKed for a reason. Matt (Borland, his
crew chief) and .a lot of people at the
. shop had been so in..(lepth in meetings
.and .things like that to make the &lt;:ar go
fast that we haven't been .able to put a
lot of -emphasis and focus· on making
the Alltel Dodge go ~111ound in .a cir-cle
real quicK. [think that's ;pan of it. I
think we're ;playing -cat&lt;:h-up with a
few things, technology-wise, and I see
thatgetting better over time, obviously. Our struggle in raoe t.rim has put
more empbasis on us ~oing race trim'
in practice, which we've ~ot a lot of
mticism for, whether it was deserved
or .not. We're definitely to a point
where we're struggling now."
The emphasis on race performance
has, in turn, affected Newman's quali"
fying, which, until recently, was a notable strength. Newman has won 37
-poles in 11!1 races, but he has only two
this year.
·
The next race, at ThUadega Superspeedway, doesn't appear panicularly
promising. Newman, from South
Bend, Ind., finished 33rd in the drcuit'·s earlier vi~it to the restrictorplate traCk. Though he hasn:t fared
particularly well at such venues, it's
pertinent to note that Newman &lt;lid fin-

Alter leading 105 of the 267
laps . a comedy of errors relegated
Johnson to a 14th-place finish at
Kansas. Not the least of Johnson's
problems was a penalty for speeding
exiting pit road on the 263rd lap. "I'll
have to go and see where that was,"
said Johnson. "I definitely don't feel
1 was speeding on pit road, but the
computer doesn't lie ... •

NASCIUilltls - ' s - ··
Dlltton .gMo hllltoiko: "Twenty-nine
penalties were issued during the
Banquet 400, and five went to cham
pionship contenders. Rookie De11ny
Hamlin was twice penali~ed for pitroad violations. By far, Johnson 's 'infra(:lion was the most costly.'

••u

~,

•1 7 til I ic
.lltwiiU!lT 5 1 •

One of many notable Talladega
upsets occurred on Aug.'2, 1981 ,
when Ron Bouchard won the only
major NASCAR race of his career.
Bouchard, driving for Jack Beebe .
took ·advantage of the fact that Dar·
rei\ Waltrip, Terry Labonte and Harry
Gent were occupied with one another. Bouchard, from Fitchburg, Mass.,
astonishingly swooped by all three
on tlte' final lap. The top seven finish·
ers all drove Suicks.

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

~

John Clark/NASCAR This

'IIIII llswan Ns

111M!, .a -'dy Wiibhtder for

'llllrlllllli l7.111 .,._ In ..., points standings.

ish third in this year's Daytona 500 , .
leading 23 laps. That's his second-best
.. finish of the season. A handful of driv·• ers - Jimmie Johnson, Thny Stewart
and Dale Earnhardt Jr. - have dominated recent races at such tracks.
"You've got a bunch of Chevrolets
and a couple of !~rivers who obviously
know what they're doing at those race

~

the past ceuple Of - · Is cunenlly

tracks," said Newman."! think it has a
lot to do with the car and what car
they're taking to the race track- not
necessarily manufacturer-wise- and
the bottom line is it takes a better car
than driver to win those races."

Contact Monte Dutton
at hmduttonSO@aol.com

The average salary tor a Ne)(le\
Cup driver in 2004 was betWeen
$1.5 million and $2 -million, but
. some of the series· top drivers make
as much as three times thi3t. But
where they can rake in the cash is by
performing well on the track- a
NASCAR report in 2004 statecl that
drivers can take home 30 to 50 percent of their race winnings each
week. For example, Tony Stewart
earned $346,361 for winnfng in ·
Kansas laSt week. He might pocket
around $150,000 of that total.
Those kind of figures really add up.
Jimmie Johnson has earned more
than $7.4 million this year in wlnn&lt;ngs, meaning hes probably taking
In around $3.5 million in addition to
· his considerable scuary. You can add ·
to all of this appearance fees. spollsor bonuses and any number of side
projects, and it:s easy to see how the
top drivers are amorlg the most highly compensated athletes in the
world .

•

�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
.

PRo FoomALL

~Ohio --IMn\11
Morlh ........."'"'!":" IIOIIL
w.&amp;. llf fill
w.L
-Logan . .. . . .
. ..:!-0 ...119 ..SS ..... 4-2
- - .. ' .. ... .. ".
. ......2-1 "."I'll . ' .!!8 .....2-4
lariotvlllo .. ..
.. ' .2-1 ...IJ7 .. .1111 .... ..s.:J
W.mtn . .. .. .
.. .. 1-2 ...42 ... 108 .....:!-2
Athons .............. .. ...... .O.S ...40 ... 132 .....1-5
loulh Dltlll£ I

w.L~

fill

AU.
llf .f ill
... 171 .. 109
... 111 .. 107
... 157 .. 1!16
..•89 ... 175
... 117 . ~

llufloJo
Miami

warren 11 Jadcson
: t..ooan at Mariette

Ch"'-Uo
Mlnneaote
1 Green Bay
Detroit

PA
88 e-&lt;
.500 96 91
.500 70 85
.250 51 71
,75()

'

ss

WL T Pet

PF PA

Denver

2 1 0 .867 36 31

San Diego
Ke.naaa City
Oakland

2 1 0 .667 80 23
1 2 o .333 57 32
o 3 o .000 27 79

-

NAl"IOtiAL CONFERENCE

Ohio valley Contlrence
t:NC
PF

AU.
fill
w.L
llf
Pil
Clwepeoka . . ... . ......
. ... 1-0 ... 28 . . .7 ..... .2-4 ... 188 . .203
Coal G""" .................... 1-0 ... 27 ...28 .....4-2 ... 168 ..68
Ro&lt;l&lt;tiftl . .. . .
. ... 1-0 . " 53 ...28 " ' ..4-2 ...2t7 .. 1~
w.&amp;.

F.....'otai!M

1VC

PF

w.&amp;.

1VC

·F.....'Igo~~M

..

,

PF

w.&amp;.

...+2 ..138 .. 153
2-4 •. ,80 " . 114
. ,5-1 ... 168 . .87
. .2-4 ...80 ... 11s

ss

-..a~~~v-.

'federal HOCking ................ 1-0
lllmble " .... ·. " ..... . """ .. 1-0
.... 1-0
Wsterf!lm
Eastern . .
. .o-1
Miler .
. .o-1
Southern .... . ....
.o-1

Pil

...19 .....:!-2 .. .1!16 .. 121
...1S
.. 5-1 .. .214 .. 70
...12
...
... 16
...82

Pil

o .......

AU.
w.L PF

.. .27 ...
5· 1
".40 ..
4·2
. .. IS ... 12 ......4-2
. . •0 .... 4!! ......o-e
... 12 ... 19 . .
.().6
...0 .... 27 .. . ... ~~

,o . . . " ..

.

Pil

... 122· .. 34
... 154 .. 109
.•. 95 •. .80
...82 .. :287
...40 ... 129
... 115 ..72

~~13
Meigs 11 AleKander
Belpre at Vlnllln County
wattmn at - Y o r k

Vinton County at Alexander ·
·watllton at Balpie
Nolsonviiie-- at Meigs
e-m at federal Hoci&lt;ing
Miller a1 Southern
waterf!lm at Trimble

MiHer at Eas1em

Fadenll Hocl&lt;ing at Trimble

Southern at Waterf!lm

lncllplndlnll
·

ALL
PF M
Sou1h Gailla .................. :5-1 ... 1~ .. 78
~

Wahama ......................4-2 ... 140 .. 85
Hannan ... ..... ...............o-5 ·. . .21 ... 164

F..._.,. game

F,....,o 1 .,.,. 1s

1

SoU1h Galli&amp; at SclottJvilte East
Slotunlly'spme
Gilmer County at Hannan

South Galli&amp; .at Symmes Valley
Butt
. alo at Wahama

I

S.Unllf, Odtaibllr 14

Hannan at .Bishop Donahue

· C.rdlnill Conflnal08
lW.
w.&amp;. PF

CARD
w.&amp;. . "PF

fill
. . ' 2-0 ... 75 ' . .34

PDca '' . '.
· Sissonv~le .....

Wllyne "" ".
Logan '.

Pil

. '.4-1 ...180 . .88

. .........2-ll ... 27 ... 19
...4-1 . .. 104 ..70
". " .... .S·1 .. ' 101 .. 35
" .5-1 " .156 ,..82
. .......... .1-1 ... !16 ...59 ..... 1-4 .. .89 ...154

I'Qint Pleasant ..
· Herbert Hoover .................1·2 ... 56 ...107 .....4-2

.. .155 ..151

'''' ..o-.2 '' .58 '' .85 '.' .. 1..S '' .105 '.182

. . '.

Wlntlold .. . . . . .

. ...

.o-s ... 40

Ftldi'* ·QIIliMS
Sissonville at Helbert Hoover
Winfield at lD!III1
·

,_,Q

... 78 ..... ,,.. ..

I'

.se . . .as

1S

Si8IIOI1Viite Ill Logan
Winfield at ·PI:Jca

f'Dca.at I'Qint Pleasant

Point

93 91
81

92 .

New Orteans
A-tlanta
C.mllna

3

0 .250 67 ,5
0 4 0 .000 71 115

UUitlal. . a..gul

.:::"-.'i""t
~OOI.S

PF PA

78 83

·~·
~rk 0etro11'•" • - ~rk
88 78
~·u1..0 •
•u
aenas
.68 96
71 126 ...
... ,II dl),00t.4

a

Detro~ 4, New'!tlrk s. serill !ted

I
tp
,.,.,011.4
1 New-6, Loo~ngalao5
1
~.·oat. 1

.

IIMdl ......;:

.:

-~·
o • - 1 • - - r'""k
""'!\ ~ . L o~.--

Oetroltat~OC,:~n

' lklndey'oGoDallas 45, Tan,.,..... 1-t
tiouaton H, Miami 15
Atlanta 32. Arizona 1o

C L ·A S S IF IE D

......

llau
ani
11
CMIION--.

, s

p .m.

Oat&lt;land at Min....,.., 4 t09
1 (ESPN2) , H,,.
ary

.Oat, 1

I New'lbrk~ fs.e)atLooA"""""

Gllllla

(Maddox 15-14), Bl06 p.m. (!'01()

1-1

Frldlly,Oct.l

. . . . . . 011.1

'

Now '!tlrk (Johnson 17·11) at Detroit • New '!bile (O.Pirrez :!-13) at Leo AngMioo
(Rogers 17-8), 8:09p.m. (ESPN)
(Pirnny 16-9), 4:09p.m. (ESPN), ",..,_

lndlal'laPOIII 31, N.Y. Jet&amp; 28

Buffalo 17, Mlnnnota 12 .
Baltimore 16, San Diego 13

....'1'

Saturdoly, Ool. 7

Kansas Cfty 41 , San t=ranci!ICO 0
Caronna 21 , New Or1ean&amp; 18

New Vork at Detro~. 4:30p.m. (FOX)

Sundey, oat.•
Oetroh at New '!tlrk, 8:05 p.m. (FOX),

St. Louis 41 . Detroit 34
Washington 36, ~sonvllle SO, OT
· Cleveland 24, Oakland 21
'New England 38, C incinnati 1 S

necessary

Chicago S7, SeaHie 6
Mondey'oGimo

S&lt;lndoy,()c1. 8
Burflllo al Chlcago, 1 p.m.
Detroit at Minnesota, 1 p.m.
St. Louis at ·Green Bay, 1 p.m.
Tenne~e 11 tndlanapoMs. 1 p.m.

lin 0'

1

-~

MlnMM• va. "'k'"nc!
· ~. Oct. s
Oakland 9, Mlnneoota 2
,
Oct. 4

Philadelphia 31 , Green Bay 9

_,

1

.........,, Oil. t

Leo Angoleo at Now 'lbrk, B:1g p.m.
n • (FOX). Wneceoaary
1

~. Ocl.l
St Louis 5, San Diego 1

classified@ mydailytribune.com

Tlw"'*', Oct S

·

.

.
Oakland s. Minnesota .2, Oakland '"'"'" eerles 2~
1
SOiilllrdoly, Out. 7
. senes 2-0
Frldlly,&lt;lct.8
j San Diego (C.'1bung 1Hi) at St. LOuis
Minnesota (Radke 12-9)• al Oakland · (SUppan 12-7). 1:09 p.m . (ESPN2)
(Haren 14- tSi. 4:09 p.m ..(ESPNi
I
8undiiW,&lt;Ict.l
!lotul&amp;y, Oct. 7
San Otego at St. Louis, 1:09 p.m.
Minnesota (Silva 1 1- tSi at Oakland 1 (ESPN), n _ . r y ..
(Harden 4.-0i. 4:30 p.m. (FXi. n neoos·
........,,Oct 11
sary
1 St. Louis at .San Diego. 4:1 7p.m. (f'OX).
Sundey, &lt;let 8
·
nnooossary

Miami at New England , 1 p.m .
Tampa Bay al New Orteamo, 1 p.m.
Wash ington at N .Y. Giants, 1 p .m .

Cteveland at Carolina, 1 p m .
Oakland at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m.
N.Y. Jets at Jacksonville, -4 :05p.m .
Kansas City al Arizona , 4:05 p.m.
Dallas at Philadelphia, 4:15p.m .
PittsbUrgh at San Diego, 8:1 5p.m .

Pleasant at~

WltfM atlblsla

would come home the winSPORTS CORRESPONDENT
ners. ThurSday, the Lady Does
got it done.
RACINE - It was a ni~t
"I rouldn 't pinpoint any one
of firsts at Southern Htgh person or any one thing that
School l}lursday . night. was different tonight,''. added
Southeq! ptcked up · 1ts first Hunter. "It was just a matter of
league win with a five-set win · everyone putting forth a very
(25-17, 25-18, 21-25, 22-25, good floor effort and good
and 18-16) over the Miller movement at the net."
'Falcons, and excluding a nonAll the matches took similar
league Tri-match win earlier courses. Tied numerous times,
this season was the first time the first match was knotted at
Southern had won two in-a- 9-9. Miller slipped away to a
row.
15-13 lead on Megan Embrey
"We are improvin§ " said serves, then· Amber Hill
Coach Tol\ia Hunter. We are notched four straight on top of
definitely hustling much better a Miller side-out to give the
and comin.g together as a hosts a 17-15 lead. That was a
. team. The grrls 111e supporting lead they never relinquished
.each other and woricing as . Sarah Eddy served five
together as a unit. But, overall straight, includm,g game-point
hustling is the biggest thin,g. to give SHS a 25-17 win.
Our desire is starting to .surRasheU Boso and Hill were
fare."
Credited with good movement
Jt was senior' night for the at the net. Eddy and Whitney
Lady Tornadoes, now 5-12 Wolfe-Riffle each had a cooand 1-8 in the Tri-Valley pie big kills in the victory run.
Conference Hocking Qivision.
Southern spread the wealth
Amber Hill and Adelle Rice in the second gllllie win. Every
played their last home league Lady Tornado contribu(!:d
,game and both had good with nearly identical stats and
games according to coach put an e]lclamation point on
.Hunter.
Hunter's take on the total team
Southern went up two effort. Emma Hunter led.the
¥ames to none at Miller earlier ~gin that match with five
m the season, but couldn' t put points and Steph~e Cundiff
the victocy to rest. Last night, and Bosodid well at the net in
Soutltem made sure that if the the 25-18 SHS win.
match went five ,games, they
Miller's Brooke Humphrey
8Y ScxnT WoiR

..

...,....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _O::;r;.,;F~I;;,XTo

Or Fax To

.

Nowyouean haw borders and graphics
~
added1o~rdassmed ads
(.,~

..m

Monday thru Friday

. 8:00 a .. m. to 5:00 p.m.
AJl

aroutid porch, 3
&lt;bedrooms, 2,5 baill.
room over garage.

a.nt

Ylloili;

s.

BlaCktop driveway.
Hilltop views, Owner
has 4lUITeDt appraisal of
S185,000 (ATO). Seller
offering to pay all closing cOsts. Immediate Occupancy.
, 41530 Fo" HUI Road, Pontel'!'Y• Ohio

1MJ m.r ._

ao&amp;· CHEVY COL· HundNcl Flftaelt NOTICE OF PUBLICA· p!Mil t«lllt '" ' 0
fl
ll
D 0 (115) In 88111 ,..... &lt;II TION
•
a.n.d, 11te1 11p1111 lliii1GCCS1441211145563,
CAAA-

21100 DODGE

V

A

Cantli*illll,

PUIIIIIm IN ' TI4E

COMMON

-«-.lei Deland8nls

CoUJity, -Qhlo Pli-1 PLEAS COURT .
'10 fllll' or (o 10
111 No.
~11tll0000 OF IIIEIGS COUNT\', bot .paid aiel )udg-

284FP2111XYM80864, AIMI -

"' 21M

OH!O

·

-

lhiW Clays 11om

PviiMOf,
Oltta,
..., . _ the riUh1 10
blcl .. lllle eele,end10
wltlicl.-w the .....,.

.-, ...,....m
111c11e. end

.ao

tt.

cunenav .,.

llle-4118.5,.._11

,...

-

fl'loo' 10 .... ........,.

'from

:IDUII, end
Flll'llwr, The ...,_ :lite...._
8enll end $twinge ..... nemed In lhe
~I
-lhe Complelnt IIIII¥ , _
rlgh110 ~ eny or an en lt;leowl In •Ill
blclnubmll*zd.
. property:
lhz1er.w..
The ..,_ . IIMc:rlbed Plelnllll dlti•lllll n.t
cal Ia el wtll bot ecild II be found Ia , _ e
"• le ttzoz le", wllll pol, Wild end 8Ub-

cal*tel

no
e l l l ' - or
Implied
W8rrenty
glwn.
For
furtlter
tnfonnll••, or tar""
eppalnloiM'illa loio;pecl
co._..l,prlorla-

dtlle COnliel Cyndle Dt'

1,

eiallng lien · an zelcl
p.....,._,
-

far

!he

owtna:'lltel .l lle

De..ndenta ZQIIIty ol

!Memptlon bit fa,...
.; -aHIIteper-

ta.

bot Nqlllred 10
Randy 1117,......2131. • to lhelr
{10}4,5, 6 .
ll••ln.alclplln..._
• or bot""-.,..,...
fnlm -11111 any

o...t ;

Jon~e

looking for a Single
Christian Ledy, 40 ·55 YIS

u•

r

304)67S.32SO

ANNouNa:Hxls

Ward

I

·r

Rd.

Please

call

(740)367-7609.
.:.......:.....
_ __

I
.___ rib
Grover. 9·29·06

l'ARDS.u.E

Exercise Items

.FOUNIJ

4114'a For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ............................................ oso
An~~q~Ma .......................................................sso
llpeltmanls far Aenl ......................, ............ 440
lucllan -1nd Flee Mertcel............................-080
AUla 1&gt;-11'111&amp; Ac-rlee .......................... 780

Notice

lnllii•lhaniln:-ell

·-- -- - - ------·

on

before the
dey o1 24,
2006 or JUdgment wilt
be rendered accard-

·
Rural

Dzwelapment
Plzlnllfl

SlepMn 0. Miles
Attorney lor Plaintiff
18
W. Manumen1
Aven'ue

Daylan, Ohio 45402
(9) 22, 29, (10) 6, 13, 20,
27

......, 1

•••'"

holidays,

insurance,

vacation,

1

,,THE

OH-KAN
COIN CLUB
Coin Show
Sunday, Oct. 8
9am- 4pm
Holiday Inn
Gallipolis-

HAS

SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

l)pportuntty, ................................210 ,

C1it14&gt; 1re &amp; Mellor -

................:.......... 710
Canipllli Equlprnan..................................... 780
Cenlo « Thenlci ................;.................... .... 010
. ChllciiE..._., ea.-. ....................................... 1110
Eledrlaiii/IW!Igoation ..............................,ll40
"EcptJptMnt tar "-nt.............., ......., .. ,.........410

insurance single/family plan, denlll plan,
life

o.znd 8ullelinga ............................. 940

tluel- Training ....................................... 140

health

long-'term

disability .and retirement

Send resumes to:
1!'1 -nt v.llay H i It I

1--atng... ,,.., ........ ,............................... aso
Farm EQulprnant ..........................................&amp;10
F.arnw 111r -Aent...............................:............4SO
· Feome'torSelll ............................................. aso

~ - ' - -.......... ;...................,......................410

For:::a.t..,...,.............,,...................................585

Fcir'Sele or Trzda .........................................SIIO
Pr.ultl &amp; VII a.btee ............................... ,.....SIO

www~lley.org

Nalp Wilitld ·

~rcadia Numag ee.ter is now
hiring STNA's .f or afternoonsud
night shifts.
Full and part time positions
.available,
.Come join our aring team!!

'PleiESe app~ in .penon or all
7404(i7-3156

"Purnleheci"-........................................G&gt;
"

Glnenlt tteullt\g .......................................... .l$0 .
Gh•w.y, ....,. ...............................................-040
Happy Acla ....................................................oso
" ltoiy &amp; Grleln .....................;............................ll40
Help Wllnted .................................,.--............ 110
Home l m p r a -.................................. .81b
farSele ........... ...... :.......................... 310
Ita! uhald Gaoda ....................................... S10
for •Aant .......................................... 410
In •morlem ....................................... ,........020
130
!.awn .a Gel'llltn Equlpment~.............. J...~ ...860

m.urence .....................................................

Lt....aock.........;.................................. ,........ .630.
lzDl!l and Found .......................:................ ,.. oeo
.._ &amp; .....................................................350

M'-lle-.............................................. 170
. . . _ . _ Men:hilndlae ...................... .540
llabllll HcHM Aapzlr ................................... .860
llabllll Homeo tar Rent ...............................-420
IIOblle Hameo lor Sele ................................320

Ask for Jane Ann~

llanoly to u..n .............................................220
~· • W-1'8 ..................:.:.....740

.....llnlllru- ................................... 570
"*'"onnlle ............. ..................:.... ..... ' ......... '. 005
Pets far Selll .......................................... ,..... 560

l'komblllll&amp; Haallllll--················""""""""""""""""820
Po I 1 Lionel Sorvlcel ........................ :........ 230

or

lngly.
USDA

tlullcllllll ~ ........................................ 550

Cllre.

salary,

$$STNA's$$
New Wage Scale!!

colleCtion prac-

lion. 5ald Deltndents
will like notice that
you ere required lo
•na•r uk:t Complaint

direct patienl
Excellent

~~Wa~iilld~-~~~~~~

Ohio, -.g C.. No. wllhln twenty-eight
OlcwOII
"'l--lnlil clap zflor lite pUbllce-

•••t

with

;: ......
·-...

f'.._

Joannar.g ·on prayHzno !111 aelcl IHMIII
lng tar j1 Ia
In .lite
In tho Court Ill com-· be n• ...led end thalr emounl ol t86.155.83
mon Pleas, PUtnem .prlortiiM ,...,.,lned; wtlh h•.at ......,n
·counly, Ohio 11M iiltclel lltel aelcl poa01l1 1 t •
eccan1111111a .lite termo
· Ohio, Inc. IOid • 11p1111 a.cu- of lite na1e 1n1m 'May a,
Bznefletat
Mortgooge lion end IIM-..!1 IJI 20011, -1 paid end lor
Ca. ol Ohio .
uld ulz be applied faNe~...,.. A · ulel
Plzlnllfl,
,eccardlng Ia lew: end Mooi!MiZ Doied on lite
VS
farWJCI'Iallw-a falloWIIIII -~.J-r G. IlLia • .,.. 1111 Is lUll eqo 11 tla.
rMI - · or which
Deloi-• t1ret aiel
Defendant,
C.. No. II6CV137.
1 . . - n•llloiMI le Joanne Ferguson II
~piUii
Booding further nllllfled lltel tho of:
Carpat'lition
IIIey required 10 .. lurtlter IIMc:r-ln
laat idd1- le • - aelcl complalnl PlelniHf'a mortgqe
5Z5 Pltnn Street. fZOO, on or.....,.. Nawi1 t o racorclecl on July 1,
-..g. ......,.ylwlnlz 10, 20011, Which lnclulf- 11t1 In Volume 183
234 Salollt ed twenty1lght (21) page
615
of
IM
11601 4111 S!Jwl, Calumbul, deyo fnlm tho leet dtlle Marte-ge Aeeonla of
Ohio 43215, le llel'8by of publlcelion, or JudR- Melgo County, Ohio.
nollfled BzMitelal ment may be . . . - Alaa known as: 748
Publie

lluta"'-Pzlr..................................................770
~for:SZte ..............................................710
..... · - - f a ; S.te ............................. 750

.applicants

or hospital related area, worilifli

llzdlo, TV I C8 Repair ............................... 160
, Aael &amp;tella Wlntecl .................................... 360
SCitoalelnliti'UCtion .. - .............................. ,.150
Saed • Plznll hrtlliar ...........................:.. 650
• Slluillanl W.nted ....... ................................ 120
Space tar Rant ............................................. &lt;I&amp;O
Spaolh. Gaada ...........:............................... 520
SUY's for 5alo ..............................................720

'

§ot-' Som.erliing t'"~
t"o t-hat' SpecialSom.eone

tar Sete ............................................ 715
Uphol 1My ................................................... 870
¥ani ForS.Ie.............................................,.730
W.ntecl to Buy ............................................. OliO
W.nteclto Buy- Fann SuppiiM .................. 620
· W.lllid To Da .............................................. 110
W.ntecl to Rent ......................................: .....•70

. Say it: in
~he

C(as-siffeds!
------- .. -··-- _.. _._ . .

Sale- Galllpolls ............. .......................072
'l'anl Sele-Pomerl&gt;y!WIIddll ......................... 074
'l'anl S.le-Pt. Plaeunl ................................ 076

'

0

ra.

31aml~. Rt. 160 ecross from
Butavllle Rd . &amp;-5. Friday &amp;
FOUND- St. Bernard. male. Satunlay.
dark ·brown w!white mal"tl.· 528 .Kerr Rd. First l ime
ings. On Fairfield Church clothes, new set golf clubs,
Rd . on t 013. (740)37&amp;-2330 mis. Fri , Sat. 9am·?

ollice

0

1

==...:..=-==--T ..... ~ ,..J
... ~
'1..1...1'1!•
... u

.

eve. Sept. 28.

to good home. Born Apr. tsl
Yam
Solell
t93
2006. 74Q-992·5232.
·Gr..nMer Drive !l1il~pol~
Rain Cancels Oct 5111 &amp; 71h
Kittens
to
giveaway Household· Items, Teen
(304i67 5-mn
Clothing,
Mary
Kay.

r

in .a physician

AA!EOE

. . . . lilt~. Ill~ In -IICIIs given.
lite
S.ld Defendenll are
Court41 ...... County, required to • - •

c-on

experienre

o·

'-'-----iiilo_.l

must have a oorrent WeSII/irginia lioeMe.·
One-year

0

(740)448·9385 or (740i44fi.

B week old kitten, 2 male, 2
YARD SALE·
female. Part Siamese, ...,
GAu...IPoLJs
spayed/neuter
Voucher
inolu®d. (740)4-41- t269 .
1015/06-t0107106, 9·1 Tires,
t~ . clothes, car seats, high
After 5:00PM can 740-949chair. John Deere Ga1or. lOts
3408. Three male kittens ·
accessories, Green Terrace
Fern . Shel1ie/Min. Collie mix. Pari!.
Parents on premises. Give

is currently

LPN

0

07.20. Missing since Thurs.,

GM.li.WAV

5 Cats spayedlneu1ered, lil·
ter !rained (304i675-1673

F.ull time- LPN-

PH or Medical Assistant

W1U.. Nl&lt;~ I?" vo L- VG"
1~1'o -1~ CoMNit&gt;il&lt;. A4~
l)l'\'11.-- w~ t:JI;:'If&gt; j_..D I' I-nA- ~ •

• Aeward for missing lamlty
dog, Lola, 4 mo. old female
J wiU not be responsible lor . Australian Shepherd. If you
debts , past or present, other have seen her or she was
than my own, Douglas C. sold tO you , please call

(JIM)~·

prem~eeo

end-

F..-

lm .a

ell'!_,

old. Who us trust Worthy,
Who likes 10 COOk &amp; listen tO Lost: Male Pomeranian,
country music, who is drug orange wl1h blond taiL
tree, ptease Call Bob Vicinity of 554, Wheaton and

............... 35!0

r
•=••
wll ..ad ,... . . - .,
Feta11011..... 111t11 11te
.,.

()zezMo. OI
- , _ e n d - o1
John tloe, ·Unlmawn ell claim., llenti and
SpOo- o1 ' Joomna lnleoiel o1 any or lite
F... •on, W ,........ -.._ lhzlllte
d I CI
d, ell liell'8, PIC 0II fn1m lite"ule
4eviEEEE,
llgllllt, 41 Ulel p!MI- bot
I a , - - . applied
·10
the
eclmlnltill-a, eclmln- Plelnlnt's Judgment
l8lnllrend end far IIICit .ottter
-~~~wj1a. iiiW Ia whlclt USDA
add I le unlmawn, Auoel Dwelapmenl II
wtH ~- ·Milllloid.
lhel on July 14, 21101, S.lcl Defendolnt Is
U S D A A ~ r a I cllrecled
to
lhe
Devllap~ tiled lis Camplelnl
-rein
Camplelnl
.
In nollce under tho lliir

accepting resumes

,_,..1ront.._
'*

$trvk:o HVAC ·poSITION AVAIL·
INSTALLEIIS Cullomor
AaprMintlllyt- One (1) ABLE WITH A WELL·
lion of commercial carpet in Immediate opening exists ESTABLISHED ATHENS
a church and a hospital. wlt1l a chemical marofactur· AREA CONTRACTOR. WE
References r&amp;QUired. Ph. er in Mason County, WV lor HAVE AN OPENING FOR A
candidates possessin!l the SERVICE
TECHNICIAN
(740)446·0332.
- - - - - - - - lollowlng skil~:
WITH 3 VEAAS OF COM·
Cattle Manager/herdsman
MERCIAL AND AESIOENfor 300 cow~ commercial •Advanced
skills
in TIAL EXPERIENCE. MUST
cow/calf
operation
in Microsoft OOice, including HA.VE A CLEAN DRIVING
Southeastern Ohio. Must be OutloOk and Exeel
RECORD. 80% OF WORK
experienced in oowlcatt •H igh level ot computer rN ATHENS AREA. EXCEL·
operation, hay production, skills. including managing LENT .WAGES BASED ON
and fence main1enance, etc. personal fOes and folders
EXPERIENCE .
SEND
Competttive salary, housing, •Ability to create and man· DETAILED RESUME TO:
health i~rance end other age spreadsheets
HVAC POSITION, P 0 BOX
benefl1s -Offered. A~ply with ,.Ekcellent V8rbal and writ· . 363, THE PLAINS. OH
resume , ref~rences and ten communication skills 45780
salary reqUirements to r...... uired, as·,.ell as an ablli· ~------,--­
Ben"..lct Inc PO Box 315 "'1
Janitors now lliring In Point
...u '
.,
' ty to wot'k well with cus·
Me Arthur, Oh io 45651 or tomers and others
Pleasant. evening shift , 2hrs
fax to (740~596·3811 .
per night. Mon-Frl. $6/per
•Past office experience wfth hr., . must pass background
demonstraled organizational checi&lt; &amp; drug-test . Ptease
and tetephone skills
call WorkForce (304)675•Accounts Receill8ble expe· 0857 or (304-)946-,675
rience ~lpful
'
•SAP experience a olus
Make 50% selling Avon. Call
(740)446·3358.
Individuals meeting lhese . - : : - - - - - - - . , NO EXPERIENCE NECESS ..RT
requirements must submit a Ohio Valley Home HeBHh ,
'FULL·TIME WSSES
'COL -m.-.t~ING
resume to this ad post· Inc. hiring tor Full Time RN ,
• FINANCING AVAILA!l.E
marked no later than PT. PTA. Full Time and Part
I JOll PlACEIJIENT
• ENR()LLING !l(lW
October 13th, 2006 prov1d-- Time CNA, STNA, CHHA,
ing contact mformation. PCA anl'l Per Diem PT, PTA
employment and salary_his- OT. ST. Accepting applica·
tory. and descriptions of any lions lor LPN'.s . Competitive
relevant training programs or Weges and Benefits includ·
expenence. Candidates of IOQ health insurance and
interest will be con1acted for mileage. Apply at 1480
assess- JackSon Pike. Gallipolis or
1·800-334-1203 pre-employment
ments/ interviews. EOE . 2415 Jackson Avenue, POin1
-••lllllllfai:Co&lt;ti1!Me!rom
t.....::::.:==:=:=~:....J Rapty to: CLA Box 546, c/o Pleasant. WV. or phone toll
Galltpolls Daily Tribune, PO free 1-86&amp;441·1393.
c.rtlfild SUI Driver
Applications .are being Box 469, Gallipolis, OH
Our guest service oriented
accep1ecl for Substitute Bus 45631
Driver position with· the - - - - - - - - - dining room is looking to hire
lrtendly. energetic servers.
Gama County Board of
Put on y~ur best smile and
MA/DD.
Qualifications:
apply in pe(son a1 the .
Current bus driwr physical
Holiday Inn of Gallipolis: No.
abstract. CDL with Class B
endorsement . bacl&lt;ground
EXTRAI EXTRA! phone calls "pl9ase.
checi&lt; and school bus certlfi·
Motor Route Dnver
Persons needed to work
cation. Applications are needed in the Henderson.
wtth developmentally disable
available at the Guiding
GallipoUs Ferry, Crab Creek individuals in the Point
Hand SchOol. 6323 N. SA 7· &amp; Redmond Ridge area.·
Pleasant area. Autism
ChOihlro, Ohio 45820. The $BOO month In&lt; as little ass Services Center offers
Gailia County . Board of
... R/00
!;lours a day Call
excellent benefits, competi·
m
is an Equal
Davk:l Hill
tive wages , and flexible
Opportunhy Employer
hoors. For mot"e Information
District 8aies Manager
(S04)675-1SSS ex1. 20
pklese call (S04i525-80t4
Certlflod
NuNing
or visit
autlimaervic•·
•u••m tor full time and
FEDERAL
center om
for
details.
temporory (90-dayi work In
POSTAL JOBS
Application deadline is
a 114 bed long lerm oare $15 .67-$26.1 9/hr., now hlr· October 1 , . 2006.
State facility.
Full·tlme
ing. For appllcalion and tree
amplllY"'8n1 offers an exten·
alve benefit paoklna, includ· governement job Into, call
TR~CKING
American Assoc. of LabOr , •
ing State dvil eerVice retire· 913 _ 599 , 8 ~ 2 . 24 /hr~. emp. Leading The Way
mem, ' eartt up 10 15 days
A&amp;:J Tr~tng r;~oW Hiring at
11808tlon per year. t8 days ~·•:..rv_._ _ _ _ _ __
our New HOven. WV
slat leave and 12 plus paid Forming Rook/metal bend
Terminal. For Regional
holidays; health/life insur· Looking for singer. Call :
Heula--Dump Div. 1 year .
ance is available. Salary Is 740·992·9904 or 740-.4~6·
OTR
commensurate wtth el(peri· , 090.
11ertfiabie e"'P·
ence. . Muat have a WV ...:.:~------ Call 1·800-462·9365 asl&lt; to•
.cNA C1f1tf1o1tton to
Furniture warehouse/deli \/·
Kent
I -VI__,_ _ _._.~ erypersonneeded. Applyin
n
'""""' •N ~•
etn.r 1 OED or person
10·5, ~lfestyle Raody tor I -ardlng &amp;
high wchool dlptoma. Furniture,
3rd
Ave ,
Ctlollenglng ca-r?
Contact Kimberty B!Hups or Gallipolis. No phone calls.
Apply lor a CHHA ciBSSes
VICky Berkley at Lakin HatrStyltm: Do you wanl oegtnnmg
Oct.
9th.
Hnanltal
, Lak in, WV at 304
. . to work at an innovative Applications must be sub·
... _
675·0860 ,
extension
mitted by Oct 61h. We help
124/125, Monday through sttlon 1ha1 offers the best
wfjob claeement and are
F1
compensation /benefits
r day, 8:00 a.m.- 4·00 p.m. package in lhe area? Flesta also hiring PCA, CHHA &amp;
Lakin Hospital is an EEO/AA
empl
Lak·n
" I Sak)na Is lOOking lor highly STNA!! (740 )441 -1377
1 Hospua
creatwe , licensed Hair
oyer
conducts pre -employment Stullats for our ,Muon, WV Roekspnngs Rehabilitation
d rugIaIco h0 I
1es t•mg. salon!
.,
-Benefits included Center provides residBnts
Employees may be exposed guaranteed hourly wages, with outstanding nursing
tO S1reamline or seco ndhand up to 52°m services commis- care and rehabili1ation servsmoke.
. slon. retai lllsnn1ng commis· ices hE!Iping them return to a
- - - - - - - - sian~ . 401 (~). pa~'L~cat1on . lite ot independence a1
Pllnt Mllntenance
medical vis1on . ~dental and home We current ly have
1i1e ins., advanced educe· opportun111es tor AN 's work·
Heiner's, ~ DIVISiM of Sara 1ion , immecllale clientele and mg t2 hour snifts at our tacH·
Lee Food &amp; 'Beverage,
h
IC I
·
d · Po
Oh'
muc more al 1·
·327 - ity 1ocate 1n meroy, 10
seel&lt;s qualified maintenance 7001 tor more info or apply We offer 8 competi1lve
engmeers tb work. in the 0
n ,. 1
n
e. salary scale. an excellern
Hum·1ngton· bake ry Du t~
""'". ~· tjesta,Satpns cpm
benefit package and a sup·
include prer.tentatlve mainte·
portlve work environm ent
nence. machine fabrication, Hallmark Shop (Qhlo R1ver Interested
candidate5
electrical work, basic plumb· PlaZB· Gallipolis) will inter· should
apply
10
·
1
1
1ng, refrigeration recai r, YIBW
or sales assoc ates Ro~sprlnns Rehab lll1atlon
·
l,i..
_,
1
welding, machine shpp Tuesday, Oct 101h from 2 Center, 3\3759 Aockspnngs
2
work. ba~ery produc1ion noon tiii Pm
Road.
Pomeroy.
Ohio
eQuipment repair and trou45769. Extend•'ca•e hea'h
bl h t'
C d.d
Help wanted at Darst Group
"
es oo mg. . gh
an I ell
ales Home. working with elderly, Services. Inc. is an enual
"1'""'
must have a h1
s dot
opponunlty employer that
degt.. or GED, 1o;...nical heavy li11mg involvel'l 740- encou-~s
wo•kplace
·""
992-5023.
' "" 3 ~
tra1n1ng or certilic8t1Dn in a
Clive""'"''· MIF DN
ma·n
~ ot t dy
·~·,
1 1ena nee tleiU
Su
Overbroo+; Center IS cwent·
mlerv•ewer
and p1ellious maintenance ly acc:aptmg applicallons lor Telephone
axpenence. ~ply In person Dietary Technician or AnUf\1· eMcellent computer &amp; comH · · · B k
.....
8 1 th
e
emers ' a ery alent for 20 hours per week mulliC8tion skills. futH1me
1708
Outlet.
Eastern Pleasestopoy8nctfilloutan no benefits s'1o per hour
Avenue .
in
Gallipolis, applicatron toda·' ·II you after 4 weeks training, ·$8
-t
m
d
'
...,.... ween 9 ·001 · · an .have questions please con· per hour durmg tra1rnng ' in
2
Sa
·OOp.m.. Monoay· tufday. tac1MicntlleGilmoreat992· Pomeroy, start tinmedieiely,
call Marti. 800.556·3583
No Rhone calls please EOE.· 6.472 EOE
CARPET.

&lt;/o"--......._
· .zszo.n.,.or~w

7-40-992-2478

1.7 CHEVY C2!iOO 8aldll
4th · ~ 1lelge -Caunly C... 41 Ita -dillon 1t.1 -1n
2GCEK1tii2V1111217, Canllnenlil,
Ohio ~
· -Onler of Sale bot
1118 TO'IOIA T100 41111, -lnd lt.l U.. P.0.80K151
lellueci .I OIIteShellllol
J1W20C71'0D111517.
-Ina ·due -lnd 100E.2ndai:f~~Dmzn~t, . . . . . Caunly,Ohio,IO
The Fzm•e ..niland owing 147,147.51 wllh Ohio iiS'IW
IPprelee, edui11M In
Savings
Company, h*'llll otl a • I ' I U ·s D ll 'II u -1 I lite D1i11V lenllnet -lnd

Pleasant Valley Hospital

ONo.....,

POLICES :
~ ,_.,..._rwtttDecRt, rtfeDt. or OMOelanywl.t•nw tlrM. Error. mutt be Nf¥WIId on the rl,.t ct.y of
'Mbu • 8L a I Ft ;I Is wll ..
for hD mar. tt.n the aa.t ot tht .,... oocupled by 1he errar and anty tt. flrat lrtMrtton. W. st.ll not be
..,., '-or..,._ thll
pliiMDMkln orCI!Iflleekln at..-. ilildw•tlw::•ot eorr.ctkln wllba ,..._. t-1 the"flret _.....edition . • Box
. . . - , . cun,.uotlal. •·C unwd
CiMd ........ •All ...,......, wdwa:tW•••• .,.
to the ,..,_1 Fair tw.lng Act of 1-- • n.la _ _,..

'NEEDED to bid on Install&amp;·

PUBUCltaTitE
NOnCE: .. lierwby

Brand new l story
colonial with wrap-

Graphics soc for smau

kttncartyJ4comcast.lllit

Clay Townh0use .1016-,0f7

Spouee

E!iilll

:Qorders $3.00/per ad

S I.OO·far iof'9e

,.. ·startYeur AdsWJittA Ke,a o d•lndude-Oimll'llt
011 apt~on-.1~ ll1Jirioe • Jhrold Ubredlth •
• IftCiude PflonelkiM- Aftlll ~ . . . . WeeMd
• IIIII Should Aun 7.,..

CLASSIFIED INDEX

ForaDI•,•• ·-

112-2'157

Ojpeello~c

tlelp Waiilld

Slll\mii!J,

l\egister

ca~t:::; (740) 4~2342 (740} 992-2156 (304) 675-1_333

Fo r fast res uIts . ad v ert is e i n The 0 ai Iy Sent i neI c Ias s i f ied s !

Ohio,
Inc.
.dbe • • • • d J d - . 1tlgll
~.
a.n.rtclel 1lorlpfe l'nink t. Wooldridge . Mlddl1 part. OH 457*1
......, -on
~- 41 Ohio flied a .CO. UO.A
•nd 11te1 O...ndllfil,
OCtober 7, ao&amp; .81 Cantpllllnl
'1Dr &amp;IIIII....,. 1111' the .John Doe, UnknoWn
10:00 a.m., a ·public
1'11111dl,
·
of .Jo8nllll
wtll bot h8klotl 211 Eqo•lllbl8 R81W on 110 Saulh t'lllllt . _ . .F 8,.._an,
..1111
n
W
Second
St., JuN 12, ao&amp;, CIM oCah r' .,QhloliDII&amp; d8t 1 U, ~II 1181ni,
l'v-..ay, Ohio. The 1*1. CIICV117, on ilh8 114o121·1112 •
cii\IEE t,
l1gil EE,
Fan·-.-.
and puptl'l\ dwctR d a
18)1,15,-22,21, (10)5, 11•c_,_..._,
SIIVInga Colt¥8~ J8 F'*-:
18
_..I - .. -ldmlnwlllllll far - h In •
I nn . .
hltl4111end
hllnd .or ... tlfteddteck «Canlha*tl,c-.y
EEII"EEI boti8QIIInid
lite tal'bwlhg .collllll; &lt;II ,.....,. &lt;II
~ 1llotice
. 10 . . up ""' I.....
81:
·
· Ohio: In lol Nullllier
·
In .tel

~sentinel

Qrrlbunr

!0 Place

across the net, Miller roul.d
not return a spike and SHS led
17-16 .and topped .off the win
1'8-16 for the 'first~ win
of the year.
Riffle was 1~f-20 ipilcing
with.ei,ghtkills, 15~f-17-serv­
in,g and 1'8-of-23 passiQg with
ten assists. Cundiff was 17-of19 spiking with four kills .and
a 6-of-14 passing night;
Emma Hunter was 22-of-24
serving with two aces, 13
assists, one kill.and two .dinks;
and SaJ&lt;th Eddy was l~f-20
servin,g with an ace. 20-of-32
spikin,g with eight kills and
22-of-39 passing. Hill was 6of-7 serving and 3-of-S passing with a kill; Boso was ~f5 serving, 8-()f-8 SJl00!1g with
a kill and a dirik; Rice was 1'1of-19 passing, and 8-of-9 serving; Kaylyn Spradling was 1~­
of-17 passing and ~f-4 serving. Chelsea Pap was 12~f-l3
servin,g and I O..Of-14 passin,g;
and Kasey Turley was 6-of-6
passing, 5-of-5 serving, and 3of-3 spiking with two kills.
Miller won the reserve
game 25-11 and 25-22. Kasey
Turley led Southern with 11
points.
Southern goes to Federal
Hocking ·On Tuesday then to
Meigs Wednesday. ·

scored six points in a dose
third game. Her .effoltS helped
life Miller from a 20-19 deficit
to a 24-20 advantage late in
the game. That set was tied
four different times before
Miller brought home the 2521 will.
.
Flashbacks of the disappointing loss .at Miller crossed
the minds of both play.ers and
ooaches, but Southern, even
after dropping the fourth
round 22-25 resrouped .to
ensure ali SHS VIctory in the
finale. ln the fourth canto,
Embrey led the winners with
six and Stonney Humphrey
had five. Katie Searles had
four. Adelle Rice and Cundiff
each had four points in the &gt;;e~
for Southern.
Southern trailed early in the
finale after talting a 1~ lead.
Hovering ar&amp;und a slight
deficit of 2-3; 4-5, and 5-6,
Southern took an edge on a
trio of Cundiff Selves to lead
8-6. Miller held tight, but perhaps it was the atmosphere of
the hometown crowd and
senior night that kicked. in.
Frosh Kasey Thrley stepped
up and made some b1g plays in
the finale and·also in the prevmus &gt;;et.
Tie at 14-14, Southern went
up one, then Miller tied it at
15-15 and later at 16-16.
Finale after several volleys

www.mydallytlibune.com
www.mydailysentlnel.com
www.mydai!yregister.eom

E·IDIII

. . ., , .

I St. Louis 2 , San Diego 0 , St.l.Duts -

;.

Websltas;

Southern wins second straight

AU.
w.&amp;. llf

fill

...SS
.. 82
.. • 16
' .. 19
' .. 12
... 1s

-Aioundar .............. ....... 1-ll
-nville-'lbrk ............. ... t-O
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. ............ 1~
!l_otpre . . . . . ..... " .. " ...o-1
' Meigs .. '.''
.• '' . .. ' '' ' .•o-1
· vinton County
.. ...........o-1

8948

PRo BASEBALL '

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

QCrtbune - Sentinel -

/

lli-VII~ Col.-..atce
~Divlllon

PF PA
117 73

WL T Pet PF PA
s 1 0 .150 9485
310750 89 · 42
220500 66 ?8
03 0 ,000 27 67

Tampa Bay

. F,....,-.13
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South F'tlln1 at Coal G"""
Fairland at&lt;R""r Valley

Pet
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So'""

-Fairland ......
. ......Q-1 ... 26 . ..27 " ' ..o-e " .74 ... 189
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'Sou1h Point ...... " ... . " ...... o-1 " ' 7 ' ...28 ' " " t-5 " .82 ... 168
Coal GrtMI It Chosapooka
Fairland at Rod&lt; Hill
Sou1h F'tllnt at R""r Valley

Wl T
1 0
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22 0
120

s

Philadelphia
O.llu
Wuhlng1on
N.Y. Giants

I

-

www.mydallylisntiMI,com

Fri.clay, Octo11er 6, aoo6

North
WL T Pel
PF PA
400 1.00011S29
220 .5006365

W L T Pet
s 1 0 .750
St. louis
S 1 0 .750
Arizona
1 s o .250
S.n F,_flOIICO 1 3 o .250
Seattle

WL T Pet PF PA
... Q Q 1.000 12~ 87
•
22o .500n1•
, 5 0 .250 66 113
0. 0 .000 -47 121
W L T Pet PF PI\
• 0 0 1.00086
s 1 0 .750 98 85
120 .3334854
13 0 .2506989

Baltimore
Onclnnatl
Pl11oburgh
C'"-land

Athons at Olltlloothe
.Jickson at Galtla Academy
Ironton at Ponsmouth
Logan at warren
M a - at Zanoslllllo

-

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,.,_....,_
Zanosvltle at Athens
Chltlloothe It Ptlnsmouth
Goltla Acodomy at Ironton

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22 0
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" 1-2
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Portsmouth .. ' .. ''.' ' .. ' ''.
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Pageft4

McCar1'f' Barnes· Donnet 85. Come and see what we

have.
"Cremeans·Garagesate--Fri
&amp; Sal. 9am . tt29 Sunoet
Orivo. Galltpol~. Something
tor everyone! Household
Items, coats, books, shoes.,
good clothes, costume jew·

•!'Y·

\

'
10

-c.,

·~
www.comlcs .com

3

.,..

C 2006 by NEA, In&lt;:.

•----.. .--.. r· WA.1111'
I
ED
nrBuv
'--llliiiiiiiiilliiilo_.l
..________.!

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••-~-----"1

r~ -~~....:.,-I

YARIIS!Wl·
GAil.II'CU'i

~--~~---..,

I:"UMUOUI/1\'WJIJU,

S11··--,·1~
1111
¥ardsaleFri . andSat.8to5, Oct.-uu 1 and-.
""'"' "' Absokrte Top Dollar: U.S
~
nd
Go
ChurCh,
11
Ho.,.., of •-na•v 1 Silver and Gold Coins,
1128 .-::~eco Ave.. liipolls.
OH.
Fitch, Rt. t24 , Portland. Prootsets, Gold Rings, f&gt;fe·
~~-'!":"-~--.., T__ime
_ t_o_:oo_-_s:_
oo_ _ _ t935
u.s. Cu.,rency.
r~
'VARDS!Wl~Solitaire Diamonds· M.T.S.
PoMotov~ ...,1"' Day only moving sale. Coin Shop, 151- second
Friday, October 6. 9:QO-· Avenue. Gallipolis, 74D-446·
4 :00.
Super--single 2842 .
2 l 112 mHes out lieving waterbeds . bedding, tree- ~--,----Road, West Columbia. Oct. stand, bow, home Interior, Buymg JUnk cars,Truol&lt;s &amp;
1
'~and71h
0111
·
cothing.
misc.small furm•- Wrecks, Pay .Cash J 0
·- - - - - - - - - 1ure, t1.11Chen
L•
items. 3rd Safvage
(304)773·5343
3 famHy yard sale. sat. only, hou8e on right 5cou1 Camp ( 304 ~ 674 • 1374
Oct 7th, 9:ooam-?: Shoes. Road In Chester. 11m Smith ::.;..:.;_..:;.____
household . goods , som3 1'81idence.
Buying Jufll( Cai'S,lrucks &amp;
clothing, books, etc. Look
Wroctcs, Pay Cash J D
tor sign ot Tupper Plains Paach Fork Rood, Maurer .Salvage
(304i77S·S:l-4S
ceutlon lrto. ·
Rooldo
Fri••• nd s111 (""'i67._1374
--------nee, ....., • · •· ~
6 &amp;7 . Ral n 0r .hlno.
3 tam"V. Oct. 6th-7th, ,a.m.
Wlln1 to ·buy new and Old
4pm, 4 miles Rt. 143, Sat. , Oct. 7, 9:00·.Sj00, junk car&amp;Jtruok&amp;lvans. 740Pomeroy,
Iorge
lodles Dow Spencer's. 605 Moln 416-t594 or ?40-416-t588

I

clothes lots ot

·

St

Fil'81 one this u.aar, sat. Oct
,
m1SC .
., Radne . Americln£ao'e
,.
1een -i&lt;arootce rty
71h·,
9am-4pm ,
495 305 Wright St.. Pomoroy.
pa
Shoestring Ridge, Galllpolll, Oct. 4th· 7th.
8:00am .. machine, houtehc*l ttems,
lots misc. '
OH.
4:00pm. Lots ot nice things.

Faml~.

=jjjr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
A

r.L~--RRP--W.·---.,J
10

Fri &amp; Sat, sam. Brond nome Cheap prtcsc.
l"llreo
Fn 6th and
clothes, baby clothes &amp; 69_2_A_rt_Lewts--.-M-,---po-rt-. Sat 7th.
Beocll Grove .~
hems, mloc. 333 3rt\ /We.
Amlque glao&amp;, kids clotho&amp;. Rood, Rutland Loglon area
100WOIIICEIIS-OED
E·........ll"ln ....__...
A--ble
~
11 CraTI1i,
.....,,,,........ ......,.
beanies, evening clotheS,
Fri/Sat
8:00· 7
t 34 •-~ 1sc Wod Thu
wood ttama.
~. m .
.,
1'1., Thppers Plain&amp; St. Paul U.M.
Portsmouth Road. Antiques.
Fri
Churcil bi:Mment 11ie. oct.
To $480/wk
glassware , cha irs , childs
,
Mmerlals provlded.
rocker, pictures, braes bed, Big garage solei Rt. t24, 6 "" 9 ' 00 "·m·-· 7 :00p.m ., Freelnft&gt;rmatlonplqj. 24Hr.
Syracuse. Baby clothes, 0 et.7 " 9 :00. .m.--2 :00p.m
eot-428-4849
misc. ttems .
high chair, ·strciner, toys, 0 lothing, ditlhti, lumiture,
Garage sale 1 ~05 Sunset small
boys
clothing, ~=-hold 118m&amp;, books, and 80hrs, Undarground, 4ohrs,
Or. Fri· Oct . 6, 9:00..&amp;:00, women's ·and men's clothing •
·
Surface Cluaee; to ba held
Sat.· Oct. 7. 9:00-1 :oo . and ·lots more . Thurs 5 and Yard and bake
at Polnt Pleas.ant Moose
8118
Tools, guns, antiques, glass· Fri. 6.
sa••....ur..', October 7, 2006 , October 9th thru October
were, misc. Items.
...,...,
24m 9a ctav -4pm
1
,pon Sale . ~-pt. 8ths 8:00A.M.·3:00P.M. altha cl , ms· ,
i~ondaynng
Garage ~lo . 47t Kathy 51. Ca
~
IOCilil room of Honilonville ...... Jgn up m
•
Fri. &amp; Sat. Nlce clothing, Antique, and House hold Prebylterlan Church . - An 'Friday 6pm at Moose any
sheets &amp; nnens, Boyd bears, ltflms. Sixth and Palmer. antique table is one item for questions caU/(304)524dishes, Longaberger bas· Middleport. .
sale. Everyone welcome.
7203
kets.
-C--S_ _ _ _Sa_elf_
• E II
lean
Yard I ur· V&amp;rd SAle!
Teaford&amp;, 305 "'n "'ce en1 way
to YJn
A
SILENT Tyree
HUGE 5 Family Yard Sale - nIture
Blvd.,
Racine. money. TheN f1W ....wn.
Fall
cleaning!
Ret ired AUCTION/vintage. amlques, Monday, tlonday OC1. 9. Call Marilyn 304·882·2645
•
1eache r seUinn' all dreS! Fenton, Federal Glass, 1119:11100;;-A.;.M.;.·~
·?~~~--. Applications are being
clothes. Baby-2T girl items much more!
Oct. 61h·1th.
Household i1em. Somethinn Main St., Rutland
.
VAIUI S.41.J)o
accepted for expenenced
•
Electricians. Apply at RB
for everyopel Fri. &amp; Sal Garage Sale! Rt. 7 above
P1.J:As4Nf
Electrical Contractor, Inc.. ,
~ Oam 10 ? · 195 Fairfield Eas1em School. 9:00AM··
33H Mossman Avenue ,
Church Rd.
5:00. Sat. 1th. Fumlture. Frlday&amp;Saturday 123 Park Point
Pleasant,
WV
HuD&amp; 6 family garage sale. housewares, an1iques, toys, Drive &amp; 2317 Jefferson /!we. (304)675-,537
ttems tor evervone. Twin girl books .- crafts, ctealgner Vacuum c~aner, computer, ATTENTtON CRAFTEAS:
clothing. Thurs,Fn. Sat clothes, and tabl9 saw. books, DVD's. CO's, holiday
"uch mote. .
decorations, nloe women&amp; Overbrook 'Reh&amp;b ilitation
,4727 SA 160
,.,
"
ctothes size 1&amp;26
Center will be hosting It's
9 1
Qa
1 A 7 bove
,Oth annual Oktoberfesl on
Huge Inside ene It yard
rage a e.
t. a
~Ia Ffl. Oct. 6 &amp; Sat OCt. 7, Eas1em School. 9;QOam--- Rummage and Bake Sale
October 7, 2006
~ Sa ..__ F ~&lt;
c th 11 Ch urch Ha u. Saturday,
Evems -"in at ~ O:OO AM
8:30am -6:00pm,
Debbie 5 :vuym.
t. nn. urnuure, e. o c
'"'""'
OrNe Chapel ·off of St. At. housewares. antiques, toys, Thursday,
Friday
and and end at 3PM. Interested
Salurday. 2222 JaWon cratters shoulD contact
11 · deslnner
t 41 . Lots of everyth•·ngl ·' boo"•
- · cra•s
111
Also hOt dogs and various OOthing and much more . Avenue 9am-?
Michelle
Kennedy 1.: at
baked goods will be sold. Te.ble Saw.
-....- -Sa-11'-- -m-ilas--out- (740)992-6472 no later than
3 112
Sa10
Wednesday, OC1008r 4th.
Walch tor signsl
Huge tour family garage
nd Hill Road on ·the rigtlt.
" o•'ng aale al Fren~ C""
F
...t ot"
·
M
y'
l.il'
..
safe- Sam·? , Oct . 5th•7th , riday and Salurday Bam· ,....,., om 1ve
expenence
1
Dare Care on ~rd A.ve. Sat rain/shine, Qne lfii~ up Mile 2pm
required
Job
location
Oct 7th, 9am·?
Hill Road in Racine , boys
Mlddlepon area. Please cell
·~
(7~01645 18"" F II tl
and girls clothes, 0·4T.
· AUCI10N ~
..
• ::ro.
u
me
Porct) &amp; yard sale, 5 fam ily, matern•"ly, women's 4· 16
li'LE'A u,~
position.
.........,....,
;_________
7398 At 588. Fri . Sat.
h ld
nd name brands. house o
AVON! All A
I li " "
., 5 N
Sunday, 10 11 I· · ew 1
hems, misc.
Croa.s Creek Auction Buffalo
reas. 0 ~Y or
used stuff . Come do your
Sell. Sh1rley Spears. 304Fri night 90 % used mer·
, 1429
Chnstmas shopping here Indoor Sale, Oct 6 &amp; 7, chandice . Auction Saturday 67-~------R:.:ea=:llv~n:::ice::_:S1::utl:::...- - - Guns, craltsman tools. must· 6 PM Little Dave with cake Bartender/Waitress. Jericno
cal tnst Longaber/"lQr bas
Thursday &amp; Fnday, 9am·
··
ll'~
•
and Ptei Building is lull of In n,
804
22nd
St.
5IWT"I 2130 Cia Chapel kets, Fenton, old~ C811"1Bras, used merchandise Seating Applications now bemg
,.......
Y
· lots of m1sc .. 3-4009
Baby ctothes &amp; ~ems. adu~ Flatwoods Road. At the cor· for 200 We gladly accepta-:..cc~•;_P'_ed______
clothing, household items
Visa and Master Card ner of.,Rt. 7 and Flatwoods
Canv~mer wanted· only exp
(304i937·2118 or (304i550·
·•·
Yard sale Fn &amp; Sat. 9e.m·? RoadacrossfromTwlnOaks
parson
neel'l · apply
1616
271 Georges Cr&amp;ek Ad
StatiOn.
Sle0he!1 R-c:~y ld 18 39
(740)446 -7039

=::_______

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Pr.

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1

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www

R&amp;J

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--

.,
Scllooi Bus O!lwr Tlllning,
October

23-24-25·26·27,
10:00am - 1:OOpm.
1.11 sossiO!lS to be held at :

2006.

.,.MeiGS local BU6 Garage,
S689S SR 124. Mlddlopon,
Ohlo 45760. (Behind the
new Elementary School).

1997 Felrmont Calabr1ty 3
BR, wa~ In cloaots, LR , format LA, kitchen, Island, bar,
pantry &amp; Nt In area, bR oft
to the sl$. 2 complete BA,
laundry rm . House very
secluded, large bade ctecM
that overlooks t~e 1811:36
abol.le ground pool ·&amp; priv.te

.FrtdiJ; Ottober 6, 2006
AllEYOOP
14X80 olngtiWido, 3 be&lt;!- Commerdal building "For
rooma, 2 full baths, 6 i'niles Rent" 1600 square loot, off
from Gollipollo ~ At. 7. street perldng. Groat locaAll electric, central air, S.WO tlonl 749 Thlni Avenue In
ClapOoit, $400 '""' rnontnly. Qollpolis. Rent 'Nagot,_'
~- be~ 11Mtn, , Cal~ (404)456-:!802
year - - No poll. Coli
(740~14tbr--

=·

!w~.Z.

_)8_12_1_2_750
__

dooro,

tor

ACAOSS

2 windows, sholwo ·

bulh lnolda. EICCOiient condition.
10•16.
$1,350.

PNilllp

(740)2~.

Alder

Disl:ricl Currently haS awil~
u• loliowing supple-

.blo.

. mental position: ASSIS·
TANT BOV'S BASKET·

will include assisting with the (304}675-315t

TPC water, .h eat pump,
paved driveway. letart Falls.
740·247-2532
- - -- - - - - Very nice part bric*, 3-bedroom on .52 acre, finished
basement with day light
entrance, hardwood· floors,
heel pump, near Point
Pleasant (304)675-1536

3 bedroom 5 ~ on _69 acre.
country setting. Possible
tand contrectwlth tO% .down
or rent wilh op. 10 buy. Price
S80,000.( 740 )256 _1567 .

varsity and JV basketball
p;ograms and any extra
responsibKities !hat may be
assigned by the Head
CoaCh Please send letter
of interest and resurnoa to :
Scot1 G!ieen, Pr incipal.
Eas1em High SchOOl. 3890 0

3 Bedroom. 2 Balh, 306 2nd
Ave .

Middleport,

r

Ohio

State

Route 7, Reedsv111e, Basemen!, double garage.
740· and la1ge deck.
Firm.
985-3329
Equol $63,000. 740-992-2571.
Opportunity Employer_
3 bedroom. 2 bath, wittl fire·
place, 40x60 barn. Rio
Trainer Position
Grande area. On8flataces.
Are you interested in a $120.000. (740}709- 1 166. ·
rewBfdlng position? PAIS is
o.mently ~ing a part ttme 4 bedroom. 2 bath. doub&lt;l
staff for Mason Couiily. WV garage. pool, 2 acres,
providing

residential/com-

The

• position is Monday -Friday
· 3:30pm-6:30pm located in
Mason, WV. High school

Criminal ba~ground check
required . Must have reliable
transponetlon and valiD auto

j

. Concealed

Pistol Class
· Ohio, WV, Oct 7, 2006 ..

: $75.00. .
9:00am. VFW
· Mason WV. Ph . (740)6435555,
'

GMMpolls C.... College
(Careers Close To Home)
· • CaHToday! 740-446-4367.
1-800-214-()452
-- 91~iJIOiscareercollege .com

Accred"!ld Mem~r o\cl;r&amp;diting
CouOOI tor lndap8ndent CollegltS

ar1CI Schoola 12748.

MlsmJANEoo;

WANTED:
Responsible
party to take on small
monthly poyments on High
Qe1Mon Big SCreen TV. 1_
~ •
-

98 3970

110

WANIID

.
1

To Do

1..,--·

All

5/bedrooms 3!full baths can buy your home.
cash
Large Rec , Room Formal end quick closing. 740-416·
Living Dining Room TV
ROom lnground pool 2 car
1

All

Types Masonry, Brlolc., garage,

360

sq .

feet,

Block, Stone, Free Estimate,

~~=~===~

riaO ,

1..,------·

4/acr.. $220,000 ,
(740)44..1-1145
ftoulls
(304)682-3699 . 304-593- ApprO&gt;t
FOR &lt;IbM
6421 .
Comfortable house, livi'ng
George~ Portable Sawmill, room. dining room. 2 be&lt;!- 2 oadroom hOuse for rent

110 Cim.D'Ji'J.JJ~i
· CARE :v

--"""!!!"""---.
r

=

Will take care of loved onecook, clean. (740)245-5601
~-

*'..,.... .

cttacrimlnltion. ".

r.
Borrow Smart Contact
the Ohio Di--o·s·o
·o" ol
•
'I
Financral
Institution's
Office
ol
Consumer
Aff!trs BEFORE you refi·
nince you r hOme or
obtain 8 loan BEWARE

of requests for any large
8dvance payments of
fees or 1nsurance. Call the
Office
of
Consumer
•11ao·- toll free et 1_866.
~ '"'
278-0003 to learn·lf the
IT\Qr1gage
broker
or

'

tho-..,

mMwnysoch
piw,..anoe, tlmttanon or

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH;
lNG CO. recommend
· that you do busineS$ wit
: pe;~ople you know, and
NOT to send mon
through the mail until you
have invest1geted the
offering.

3644.

All ,.., . . . . MWntelng1 2br. House for rent In dawn·
In ttlk1 a paper te 1 tOWn Pt. Pleosant $350
8
oubjoet to
Fwlr Houllng Ao1 of 1118 · month (304)593-1994
Whk:h !MIIil It llt.PI to
3BR home- SR 554, B;dweli·
..,y
$575/mo- sec. dep. raterpret.Nnoe, tlmlt8tkJn or
encos, all eloc. (7&lt;10)446dtKrlmlrwtion bMed on

...,.,'cotor, rel~n,iwx
tamltlal.t«UI or Nlltonll
origin, or ..,y lnlilntion to

•NOTICE.,

.r .
4

._~-

.•

Thta

FIWWIPIPir Will not

tmowtngly aco.pt
adwrtt.emwnt. for ,..., ·
"tltt wnk:h Is In
vtolltion or the
our

taw.

.......... ,.hereby
Informed thllwll
dWelllnp •hMI1Md tn

this ~p.r •re
avalllbli on an equal
opportun~ bnel;.

For S.le--34575 Crew Road
· Po
Th' ·
"UST
In
mercy.
IS ts a""
SEE TO BELIEVE home. s
bedrooms, 3 baths, full fin1shed walkout basemen!
wJldtchen. All this and an

3644.
3br, 2 bath, · large living
room , family room, craft
room,on Sandhill RD. S625
wldoposit (304)675-3512
~-tlont

local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro"grams for you tQ buy your
homo instead of renting.
' 100% financing
• Less than perted credit
accepted ·
' PaYment . coUld ·be the
same as rent
Mortgage
locators.
(740)367-0000
FOR RENT 2 BD AM
HOUSE
MIDDLEPORT
74a-743 _5264 _
House for rant on Hidden
Valley Drive 3 bedroom

&amp;Ktre lot for $1.59,9000 (price wnree water $500/mo. Call
18 firm) Call Larry Cohrath (7401285 .7571 .
Realty
----~--740_ 592~3015 _
New 38A, 1 bath, attached
- - - - -. - -garage, $500 per mo.,
Handyman spac1al, comes deposit &amp; ref
(7-40)4-46with 2 lots. close to schools."
,
· ·
280
Point Pleasant. $24,900
(740)7,09· 1382
Pomeroy 2 Bet., 1 bath. new
C!A, $550. 740-843·5264 •

e

~House and ~ ,0 .77

r ~~

limits:

8786boforeBpm.

t.

i

Ho

('.._, IU-"•

'

Hey

____________ _
.

10% OFFWIAD

.

...

~

' '

WW'tlf.U.IN:w eakcaltln*»'.aoa

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gdlpolls

!iii;:.;;;;.;;;;,;;:;..___

Meigs County FairQrounds
Arrival: Oct. 211, 2006

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

-

'LOAD'GOOSENECI&lt;,

l

9:00om-11:00rom

ttours
7:00 AM • 8:00 f&gt;M '

:=======~

f..-nlly
IIIL'LM·

UTILITY

. 'I.LUMINUM

Jl 6a
' ,~,A
M'
~nlnn

.

(3Q.t.)895-3866

f"'fi

~ ~~
~VK.:C

- 740-992·5858. _ _ . Call(304)773-5626
_.:..:::__.:_:_:.::_:::..:__:_
-------BEitUTIFUL
APART· Cemetery lots tor sale In
IIIENTS
BUDGET Ohio . VaHey . Memorial
PIIICI!s I.T JACICSON Garden. Discounted price.
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Call . (863)689-4482
or
Dri'IO
$34Q to $448. (740'""·3926.

Watk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call

740 _446 _2566:

Equal

Housing Opportunity.

. ...
I

1

.
'

.

(']a.m1J_q ....

PEANUTS
WELL. YOU SAID A
MUSIC 50X 15 THE
MOST ROMANTIC 61FT
TllAT A SOV CAN
611/E TO A GIRL ..

, &amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Supercharged $299500~
Riverview Motors. 2 blocks
above
McDonald&amp;,
Pomeroy,. 740- 992 "3490 ·

'70 Pine Sl~ • Gallipol~
44Ci-0007
'r:=;:;===:;=========~

A·

I

-~llil5!"'"-~-----.

TRU&lt;X~

FOR SAI.F.
1998 Ford Ranger 4 wheel
drive, ext cab. $4,000. Call

1LL PUT IT WITH

ALL T~c OTf~EitS

Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
• Sidins • Roofmg • Ruom AddiL10m "Rr:modeling
W't/ 038992 • Plumhing • Electrical 740-367-CIMt
OH 382.W
• Accous1ic Ceiling
740-llt-3412 '

SUNSHINE CLUB

. JilES' .

Tree Service

2000 Harley Oav1dson 1200
Custom Sportster. Loaded.
extra
chrome,
$6,900 .
(304)593-1997 or 1740)4410355.

·

C.o!~&amp;

MIJTOR BOllES

Top • AelnoYal • Trim
. • Sfuql Grindillg
Bucket Truck

I

1969 Airs1ream (Tagalong)
32', good condition, 4/new
tires, AJC. new hoi water
tank.
new
plumbing, · L----.!!~~~~~L
$10,500 (304)675-4475

____J,
'

GlRREL:D
I

1999 Jayco Eagle 5th whttel
2-t' with slil'te. Mint condition ,
hitch
Included ,
extras.
$7,999 . locally located
(304)965-15t3.

Mt;, THf C00Kif5,
THE TV ReMOTE

AN~

I

Very good conditOO . IMther - - - ' - - - ' - - - -

7_4 D_:).:_S3:_9.:_
Chihuahua
puppies,
9 t_lo_n_I:_
·2:_0.:_
39:_._ _
weel(s old &amp; one 7 mohths 2090 Ford Ta urus SE

1

Re*lmtial • Commercial" Genel'tll Contr.ctlng

oO

L~--•FORiiliO,SiiAiiU:Iiir-.J inlerior, classic. (740~245· Truck Camper. w/battl. AC . ·
14_2_ _ _ _ _ _ _ TV Antenna on lop $4,800.
9_
_
2 male CKC registered 1978 Sliver An niversary
Mlnla!Ure Oachstl_unds 10 , Edition Corvette . red , auto.
k
ld
k
$ 300 new tires/battery. . T·lop,
wee s o
as 1ng
I304) 593 3820
·
c0ver 'included, $9.500
(304\773-5957
AKC Golden Ret pupp1es, - - - - - - - shots &amp; wormed . Si200 each 1991
Cadillac
DeVille,
(740)643-0013.
leattler tnt. EJCcellenl condl -

IT IS~ ITS 1/Efl.'{
SPECI.A.L ..

Cornerstone
Construction

"
·•

Special

·r

.

."

• Home Oxygen
•• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System
~fPt:~~'tt"'ll!!lt1P.j!l:.,•.,

Leave a·messa e

t

1

(304 ) 675"33.53

J

...,1 I'\ 14 I "

I

i

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

11::10

.,.,

.

59 Ex6uin
8obby I n - 60 "C" lnt:S.
7 Banipost
20 Key In ciMtt
Foi.22 ~ , 1i1 Motor lodge 8 Watercraft
24 Amlit's org. 62 Pltlont' org. 9 Au1o rod ·
63

llollolr

East
"

Wetermekln

lelto-

1 Crunch

32. Slow pitch •
3S llcMintlte

.,._

2t~

~byline

3 Compna

34

31 Trelltllg
36 l'1lctt enlrnll
38 Stnmge

44

10 Silty drop

H8nollul1"

·extr~

12 Brain
46 ,~ wilt
proteclors 47 Wine
19 ExplodeS
8I!Wd

DOWN

29 Woodld

partner ma1&lt;es a takeout double and
your right-hand opponent passes, what
would you do?
The daal occur!8d during the 1972
World Team Olympiad In Miami Beacll.
At most tables, South opened one diamond, West ur.ially made a takeout
do-. fudging his hand to be a tad
strong for a one-tpado overcall, North
raapondad two or throe clubs. and Ent
tMd four hearts. When this ended the bid- ·
ding, tho contract want down one. Wt?;?
At most tablas whore South opened
three diamonds. Weat tloOOiad, deapMe
the flaw of tha - o n heart, North
poaaell , faanng o complela mlo11t, and
East furnptid to four hearts.
·
Against four hearts, South started with
his lOur top dlemonds. Not having X·rW)vlslon, daciofllf (East) ruflad tha fourth
with dummy's {Wesfs) haarl king, but
ttten had to lo9e a trump trick: down one .
When Italians Walter Avare11i and
Giorgio Belladonna sat East and West ,
Belladonna doubted three diamonds and
Avarelli passed. West cashed two club
tricks, Eaat diSCarOing hiS two spades.
West took the sp&amp;da aoa and gave h~
partner a spade ruff. East cashed the
hean ace and led a heart to hif!; pArtner's
ldng. West continued with th' club
.queen, which South had to ruff In his
hand. Declarer ran his trumps, but lost
the last trick to East's heart Queen for "·
down throe - an 800-polnl windfall lor
the lttlllans.
This gels my vote for the most remar1&lt;able pass of partner's takeout double
ever.

HOM•.·
'

~w-lir\iifPltliil()iiii'E
tii'•~liii!NIIiill'Or.J
...,

FR

1~
sH=op-::.-:-cL--=-=As-==siF=IED:--=-::5F=oR=-=-BA~RG=---AI~NSl lfg~n{.E~Er~:P~;,:

Advertise
in this
space

CARPENTER
SERVICE

old. call (7-l.0)992-733S

s 2,900 Call 17401446 _0425 _ Ur.conditional llfet1me guarantee Local refelences furV UITS &amp;
2000 Neon 4 door a1r, auto- mshed. Established 197 5.
__
EGETAJILI&lt;S
mat1c,
$2 .900
080. C811 24 Hr~ (740} 446·
_17_
40
_1_25_6_-,_6_52_ _ _ _ 0670 Rogers Ba sement
K
F
c
1w1
ruitl
harry and
Wate rproofing
Hickory nut size. smooth 2002 Chevy CavHiier. looKs - - - - - - - - skin. 740-992-7449 V1rg11 s anel runs grea t 117 ·000 Decks Sldmg, iOOfmg. floor·
Berry Patch: St. At. 124. East rnilas , automatiC, $4,500 mg. and all remodeli ng
of Syracuse Ohm
080. Call (740)256·1253.
needs No Job 100 big or

'GAIZZWEUS

YOUNG'S

BASEMENT
', w•TERPROOFING
"

Room Addlllona l
Remodeling
New Gan~gn.
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Rooting I Guttert
VInyl Siding I Painting
Petto •nd Porch Decks
WV036725

.'

~('~

,

~\

•ri'l

1~,

lliV'''r"'-

SOUPTONUTZ

ss4 per .
month

qc;:_;.n~, ~

'

------------· -------:-:--'----- -

I

.

0•

you have wor1ced hard and long on but
didn't seem to be gOing anyplace. All will
won&lt; out adllantageous~ for vou and
others invotlled.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- You may feel
8 need tO Integrate )'0Ur'88H With some
kind of group lnvoMtment, ao It theM is .
nothing on the agenda, formulate some
social plans wf1h roo friends of longstanding. Know whbre tc 100k for
romanoe and you'll finel it. .
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2o4~No\t. 22) - 'tbu are
likely to bet more aMpt at hwldting chal·
lengtng slluSitfoM· than you usually are.
In tact. When the going gets tougtl,
everybocly-belter get out of your way aM
Just watch you wort.:.
SI.GITT"RIUS (Nov. 23·0oc. 21)- You
understand h rules o1 the game of life .
anti knOw hOW 10 play them well. You
i'night be lnatrurT'IItntat In helping a negative friend see the good in hlslhet sttuation.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-.Jan. 19) - Even
thOUgh you might have to deal With some
changes you didn't initiate and don't like.
you won 't get ruffled. Instead, .you'll
make the shifts in cOnditions won&lt; to your
advantage.
AQUARIUS (Jan; 20-Feb. 19) - Ck&gt;Se
relattonships may be an area tha.t calls
for your attention . To yourcr&amp;dlt. you'll do
all you can to make things worto; out well,
even if you have to redefine yourself in
the process .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - If you
devote your time and effort toward mate·
rial gratification for past efforts, your
goats and ambitions will begin to boar
fruit. II pays to be Industrious, even with
difficutt jobs ..
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - You are
always far more effective In a taadershlp
role than you are as tollower or supporter, and today will be no different. If you
see someone in charge groping, step .
forward and take the lead.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - With a lit·
tte clever ac:ljustind on your part, ttlings
have a way ot woticlng out quite well. So
don'~ be disturbed If early indicators are
a bit off the mark It's the finish nne that
counts.
GEMINI
(May
21-Ju pe
20)
Companions .might overlOOk ths S~d.,an·
tages that can be garnered lrom m•king
tne most of a tough Situation . But once
you use your analytica l powers 10 over·
come problems, you'll Me everything.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- When It
oomes· 10 competitive situationS, your
aacret to auccess will be your ability to
owroome troubling conditions that exlsl
for you_. Creativeness generates good
luck.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - II people keep
an open mind ana are willing to Jhlnk on
a different plane, tt'Nty can always learn
something of value from others. Vo u may
·learn tmportwnt lnformstlcn you can un
well .
'
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pt. 22) - YOur oreal·
eel opportunities could come from things
or oondltlqn11 thwt may be unpredictable:
Oon't keep your lcteasto yourHII or think
the'; won't be MIOOmea.

for

V C YOU NG Il l
""rnr•

1\1~ IS~~ PU.'Ibi'T-'
~1&gt;\e

00

.

Finally, ~u may b&amp; ~tble to find the way
to resolve an Important arrangement that

NOT TO
RUN, THI'.T's
"LL .

We Deliver To You!

Free Rent

£11m View
Apartments

II.
18 lind

-

54Gem91Mt
58 Colollul

_,

SM:urcMy, Oct. 7, 2001
By BerniCe- 0001

r JUST

Call GaiY Stanley
740-74Z•Z195

an

-iiliiilliililrr_.l

r

Pass

16 U1&gt;1:aolold

26-"monater

-~;;,

l&gt;E&lt;: t t&gt;E 1&gt;

Available
Free Estimates

•=====::;

-'-=.:.:...:~::.:____

Dl&gt;l.

.

TRIMMING&amp;
GEWEIAI.
~

7•Q-992·

_ _.::__.:..:__ _:___
CONVENIENTLY LOCI.T·
ED&amp; A~l
Townhouse
apartments,
ondlor small houaas FOR
FORS-'IJ!
RENT. Call (740)441·1111 RO!J8Irod, Now &amp; Rebuih In
Stock. Call Ron Evens, 1· ~. .
for app41catlon &amp; lnformotlon.
B00-537-9526.
06 Ecllpee $6,500
FOR RENT MIDDLEPORT
o3Neon $4,395
1 &amp; 2 BD RM APTS, liTILINEW
~110
USED
Sl1!Et.·
05
Ram 2500, 4 dr, d;asel,
TYS PD. 740-843·6264 .
Stool Beams, Ptpe Rebar 4•4 $29,999
for
Concrale,
Angle, 00 F~250 qu.ed cab diesel,
ChanllEII. Flat Bar, Steet 4x4 $12,488
.Grating · For
Drains, 00 Neon $2,888
DriveWayS &amp; Watt&lt;ways. L&amp;L 00 F350 quad cab. di09el
SCrap Metals Open Monday, 4•4 $22,BB8
Tuesaay. Wednesday &amp; at Grand Prtx GT $8.499
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed• CD Atero $3.695
•
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; ~5 Ecllpee $2,298
9!i Mazda 626$1395
Sunday. (74Q)446-7300
2&amp;3 Bedroom Apt.
98 Taurus $2300
Starting at $385 and up
Venl Free 3·Piaque Propane 97 Taurus $ 1850
Centr&amp;l heel &amp; air, W!O
or Natural Gas Heater,
97 Wrangler $4.495
hookup. Coin operated
(Manual Contrc&gt;) $t43 .95
B9 Mustan~ GT $tB95
Aluminum Roof Goaling.... 94 Corsica $895
laundry, owner pays
water. sewer &amp; trash .
, 5--Gal. &amp;36.95
94 Cutlass Cierra $1495
Bloclttop FiHer and Sealer.... 92 Olds El h E' ht •
5 ~-• $t2.95
g ty og ot.4 95
"""'
98 Wlndstar $1695
Beautllul Fall Mums .......... 95 Dalwta 41&lt;4, V6 51895
3 for S11 .97
(304)882-.3017 flltnt'Pius Han:twlre
92 F250 VB 4X4 $;3,295
97
2500 8
(304)675-4084
KV . auto. 4X4
Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp; '-"i~;.;;.;.;.;,;..._..;...., ·$4395
be.th, upstairs, clean . no
BUDDING
97 Cavalier $3095
pets. Ref/deposit required:
SUPPLIES
98 Cavalier Z24 $2688
(740)446·1519 . ·
'
--96 Mustang $2.999
Pole
Barns
30x50JC1 0 92 Dodge Gargo van. tow
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
miles $ 2,500.
room apanments at VHiage $6,995. Painted metal , slid·
Rome Auto SIHI
Manor
anti
Riverside er, free delivery. 1937)718·
••,.. ~••
17_,....
~
Apartments in Mtddleport. 1471 .
www.ne t'1onw•'d e·
ba
From $295-$444. Call 740- i!Or!;:ns::i.co
:;::;:m:.,
. _ _ _ _.., 1961 Ca dillac convertible.

PFrs

.

P"~\) 'ia.JR wcili:.C&gt;
I~ "'\ ::.:)llt.U.£I&gt; !

;,

"Insured"

42'

.

~ &amp;OOC&gt;"""

~IG'NATE

STA'NLEY 111EE

riding lawn
'
R
•
,....,
mower. uns good, o150.
JOhn Deere 30" cut riding .
Firewood ror aale, $30 e
~10
Auros
load ntlt· 101• 1 $35 1 t/1 lawn mower, like new. $900.
.
u
" ·
' (740)441·1127 or (740)446- ~--1'011-iiiSiiALF._
. _,J
740· 992·3276,
delivery
""~
available.
2002 Saturn 4 D, Auto,
JET
52,000 miles $6995.00
AERATION MOTORS
Auros
1995
Buick
Riviera

i

west rw.uo

,...Orl

14 Luttbatjlck
7
tool
52 Dlb!Or't

21=;!, . . .
knol
need
22 Repul ..... 49 c;-botlm

hlrd

23 Eorllt tone 50 Faint glow
24 Elnttein't 53 Moon, Ill

dlr.
35 lllg-tlctcit 37 LAtltrencl. 4 Aquiirlum
39 p...,.. fillers
danian
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CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Clmpoa
Celetlrtiy ~ cryptOgrlrl'lllf CI'Ntld 1rOm QUOI.ItiOnS by IIITIOUS people, PIS! ercl crestnl.
·
Ekt!ldllr 1n lhedphe.- moos~ i.nothef.

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION -"A woman welches her body uneasily, as !hough n
ware an unreliable ally in lite bailie -lor love." -leonard Coh8fl

!==1-;7:40:·:99;l:-';196;::::

,

Saaro

1\\~~~LL ...

P"t\ 11\/&gt;.N 1:) O~l.'{
/&gt;..:) 1-\1~ \oiiORC&gt; ...

AYailable

~T

froni

'il'l \~t W()IZ.U) OF Ml ~~-,'

Daily, Weekly, or
Monthly Plans

&amp;
..
GIWN

$1 .00 per bale.
40 5616

THE 80R~ LOSER

Iii;;~~~~~~~l~or~m~o~ffi~ln~ro~nnia~tio~n~~ .

Alfordahle
Dependable
Full)' Insured
&amp; Bonded

r:.... :viii&amp;--·'
'

: o\prll 28, 200~

A fee of $20.00 will be
charg9d for early arrival,
late arrival. earty removal,
late removill, or anytime
acCess is wanted to
fairgrounds other than
stated dates. Building
space is first come
first serve.
Inside Storage: $4 .00111
Open Span: $2.00/11 ·
Inside Fence: Sl.OOIIf
Call 985-4372

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

' • Prompt &amp; quality
work
Have 1000 Belos ol m~ed . • Affordable Rates
~=e.14~~006satu;~~ hay tl1ls years never • References
Row

W&amp; All
MARcH TO
OUR OWN
ll'l
BEAT!!

740.446.9200

• I...- .._

~

13111.- 51 tu Jl•

opPo-

MANEY

Hal'froH Clblllenoy Alld FlriDe

r

STOCK TR~ILERS

so-

nent opens three diamonds, In prtnclple
showing a good seven-card suit and
some 6-1 0 hlgh-card points. After your

T~tE. '

John
Deere
Credit
Carmichael
Equipment
(740)446--2412.

MAX
DUMPS

- ..•

LOok only at tha East hand. With both
sides vulnerable , your lert·hand

/IPLU~

I

~

Equlpnwtt for less-round
balers, square balers &amp;
mower conditioners 04.7% '
Fixed for 48 months through

..aeF:EA BlllT •VALLEY
.11~ -HORSE &amp; UVE-

47 W...lng
dlvtoo

;:::&amp;...

25 Kind or

7 6
J 85

A remarkable pass
over a double

YGU f&gt;ON'T
rrltEl&gt; TO
GUT IAGJ;

... -------------.
.,

-.....,•-,::---.,,-

caW(304)9S7·2705

2
Bedroom
l.partmont, 2nd
Awnue,
Getllpoli$:
"~ I
Also available units on State
Route 160. Call for details
(740)441.0194 or (740)441- 2 ·Nel&lt;lel Cup Tickets,

acres a1 T
•
•
992-5064 . Equal Housing
P.
h .
taking applications tor home OpponuniHes.
o. nvate wit greal lnnics tamilyorientedneigh- - ' - ' - - - - - - vtew. $ 155 ·000 (304 )895 " bof'hood Located on Ann Dr Modern 1 bedroom apt Gall
3722
tender
is
p roperly
3 bedroom, 1 112 bath, 2 car (~40)44&amp;.0390 .
licensed (Th1s is a putll1c
garage oul bu1ldlng large
.. Ranch Stvle Home Yost d
•
oad yard , Now taking applica11ons for
.
serv1ce announcemen 1
,
·
aOc c. 18 rge 1en
.
v
Road
With
2
Acres
3
!:&gt;eel·
A
$
one bed aoartments at
t rom the 0 hto
a11 ey
va•lable 0 ec. 1, 750 with
PubliShing Company)
rooms. 2 baths, garege same deppsit Vou util ities Spring Valley Green and
endosed breezeway. Pool (740 }44 1. 1127 or (7401446- Brrmks1de apartments Call
and · Spe included .
(740)446·1599 tor 1nforma·
8731
$83 ,500
Cal l 740·992- - - - - - - - - tion
4001
Taking applications for home _:_----~-One bedroom apartment.
on V.imon Ave . 3-4 bedroom.
Ranch Style Home. Yost 1 bath. family room, gas fire- Location. 403 1/2 Thtrd Ave.
TURNED DOWN ON
ROBd with ·2 Acres 3 bed· place. 2 car garage , large One bl ock 11om GAHS.
SOCIAl SECURITY ISSI?
rooms. 2 be1 hs. garage aeck &amp; hoi tub. Avallabl e Washer &amp; dryer hoolwp. For
No F'ee· Unless. We W1n1
enc1oseo breezeway Poo• Dec , S7SO with .same an application call {740)4461-888-592-3345
deposit you pay uh!l tles _46_3_9________
and Spa mcluded
I~ I 1 J I " J \ I
SB3.500
Call 740-992· 1740)441-'t27 or 17401446- ,
1W1n ~~ver&amp; Tower IS accept·
400t
673;
ing apphcat1ons for wa•tlng
Very -n1ce
38R. bath
,..~~u.LEn":"!IFS ' list tor Hud-SUOSIZed. 1· br.
1u.
upsta1r~ turnrshed 18R apt
apartment, call 675-6679
Equal Housfng Opportunity
downstairs Furniture store
1996 Redman 28~~:60 m
rear Car lot on s1de All on
Apple GroV! 304·5~j.6719 m
1f2 ac lo1 a1 130 8 ulavl/le 2 Br $ 375 per Month in
v1ew
ontme J
a1
Pike
GalhDoiiS.
ON Pomeroy HUO approved
WWW•Orvb corr COOt 8246
51 ~ 5 000 .17401 44 6-478 ? · 74 0-992-7546 afler 5 OOPM
M Alt

aualhy John Deere

~

..:. ........ .' ' '

~'

!?tate
Farm
Museum,
Fairgrounds
Road.
Pt. 1 Angus x Char. steer, dub
calf, broke to lead. Very genPleasant. gam ·to 3pm, tte. very good 4-H project.
antiques, otd .Dotl!es, deco- (740)379-2254.
rated stoneware, actvertis- ;___;________
ing. local memorabtlla, mar- 2 yr old Bla~ Mare
bios, doaler,spaoa available, Purebred Quarter Horse 4F
(740)992-SOBB
ree sale
w/papets
S900

"'

10 7 4 3

tAKQJ86
• 76

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

==:";;m;•;;'';-Ow;;";;=;;
'

through
John
Deere Credit Carmichael '
Equipment (740)446·2412

TRAILERS 'B&amp;W GOOSE·
NECK
HITCHES,
Antique and old bott~ show, Clrmlchei-1
Equipment
Oct. 7th at West Virginia (740)446-2412:

Appraisals

9 4

• A Q 10 9 7 4 3

Opening lead: • A

·~LUMA

~tlftlUM

$350 monthly dop $250. No _1_184_.- - - - - could have addl1ionel room ,
heat pump, &lt;10Ck, large ~ont pets. Call (740)446.0004.
Apt. lor rent 2 or 3 Br.. No stretch

I porcll. """"
""""' Nolghbo~-~
"~ 2bdr. Houtie !rashly painted,
1304)675-1536
1
new carpet, full baSement
gerage. Rat. Dep .. No Pats
Elderly
Cere.
(304)675-5162
Experienced/Re ference&amp; .
Sunday thru Thrus. 9:00PM .
2BA homo- VInton l.vo
S375 mo. + sec. dop. 'lbu pay
7:00AM. Call Mary 740utllttios. Clas heat. (740}446·
985-4262.
Par90nal care for male or
female In my hQme_ Mary
(740)389-011 B.

•

3t

monthl

•

17 G.lor Bowl

S.Utlo

-b

on.

Rd:

lnnct111
45..,..

15 Klndolp19-

Dealer: South
Vulnerable; Both

Apartments · Washer/dryer
hookup, stove/refrigerator AntiQue . sale made by 8yrs old Rat* Pony/Morgan
Included. 1 looated In city. 1 Meillnk Mfg. 16" high , 14' ml•. SSO·Ibs , black wlwMe
approx. 1 mile outside city wide on wheels. (740~446· blaze 1aoe for sale/trade for

don1 haul your Logs to the room, bath, gOOd besament
MiHjustcall304-675-,957.

.AKQ

In Henderson, WV. Pre·
awned ~lanceS starting
at $75 &amp; up all under
Wananty, also have recon·

202

Mobile Home Park In _s!O_D_:p_m_.-~--Gallipolis,
OH.
Phone
(740)446-2003 or 1740)446- 2 bedroom ga18go apt. First
and last months rent of
1409
·
$350.00 .
No utilhies.
Central air, fuU basement, Wanted: Lot. Buy or rent for References req. in Mason,
hardwood floors, detached newmobilehome.
W.V.· 304·n3-9181 or304garage. covered Patio, 0156,
874·3131 .
fenced back yard, newly
remodeled , 3 or 4 beet·
2br. Apt . for "Rent downtown
rooms . close to schools,
P1 . Pleasant, $350 a month
Point Pleasant $69,500.
call Don (304)593-1994
{740)709-1382.
; _ _ - ' - - - - - - - Need to sell your home? APARTMENTS
NOW
Lale on payments di..,rce
Charols~ HH~ 277 Country .
•
• AVAILABLE .
Lane (2 miles from Holzer)
lob transfer or a death? I Brand new 2 Bedroom

I

•

9 5 2

"pplillnc.

r &gt;VN&lt;'""""''"
•---- ,--------

L--riAiiCRF.AGEiillliliilr-,1

I'

•

s_._depostt
__·

~U.£

2

•

7 40-446-0007 Toll Free 1J77-669-0007

mobile hor,ne ln Country

•

.AQ853
• K8

70 Pine Street • GallipoHs

For rent: Nice 2 bedroom

X J 10 2

Eut

&amp; MEDICAL 'EQUIPMENT

pets, ref. required . $475
month $475 dop. (740)3677025.

required Payment $525.
bedrm. laundry rm. rg &amp; ret.
Clark Chapel
Porter.
Appraised $70,000. 740- "'1
fu rnished, very cl., in cfty, no Phone
(740)388·0173.
36,7-7t29.
~ly,_~---'1.18 acres.. . Sandhill Rd. pots $425/mo. $425 deposit, o_pe,_n_9-_3_Sa_t_on
1
Attention!
Sunset 'Lane Priced to sell first fl. .(740)44 -0596.
ThOmpsons Appliance &amp;
1304)675:S039
1BA
furnished
apt.,
1BR
furRepair..f\75·7 388. Fr. sale,
Local company offering "NO
nished
mobile
home.
No
re-conditioned 8 l
t&amp;tic
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- 3.2 Acres in Morning Star
pets.
Refldep.
requ!red.
washers
&amp;
dryers,
refligeragrams for you · 10 buy your Area w!right-A~Way. 740·
(740)446-4782. Gallipolis. tors, gas and electric
home instead of renting .
949-2544
OH.
ranges , llir conditioners, end
• 100% financing
wringer washers. Will do
• Less lhan perfect credit Attention Hunters &amp; Farmers
:2 bedroom apt tor rentlocat- repairs on major brands in
160 acres, Barton Chapel
accepted
ed on At. 588. No pets. Call shop or et your oome.
• Paymenl could be the Ad. 20 minutes from 1-64,
(419)359-1768.
Mitlon exit. City water. For _:__:__:__ _:____ Used furniture store, 130
same es rent.
Mortgage
Locators. information (304)937-4127.
2
bedroom
apt
on Bulaville ~- Gas ranges,
(740)367-DDOO
Centenary Road , water bunk beds, Ctlests, dinettes,
Mobile Hoine Lot for paid. appliances furnished , couches, manresses, ne¥.•
near Vinton. Call (740}441·
W/0 hookup, close to washer/dryer $400 set.
1t11.
Holzer, no pats. Coli ·(740)446-4782 Gallipolis,
Mobile Home Lot in Johnson (740)446-9442
, after OH, HIS 11·5 (M-S)

"BBI-:-;s;;;;~:-""l

.ru

~

Outlet

insurance. Paid training.
· Hourty rate starting at $6.50. $8.00/nour.

Men . women , children .
Spacious tully equipped
gym. Bltanga's Martial Arts
Center. Middleport 740·
992-5715. open dally.

rUI\

~

··-

•

I~

• J 10 9 8 5 4 3 2
esl

NOW OPEN

diploma or ·GED required
No eKperience necessary.

Karate self-defense, protessional B!ael&lt; Belt instructor.

.Interior Only
d , . , _, no

bath. Vinyl siding, shing4ed Mobile Home snes for up to ditioned Big Screen TV's
fool. 4 more to chOose from. 16x80 1 Count
•
.
_
daytime;
n
'Y Homes. by Ron'• TV (!IM)87517401388 0000
7
9
(
•
· evening; 1!1-!&lt;10;;:1;385;;,;-40;;;;,t;;;·_ _ _.., 7199
255 Massey Furgersen .
7401388 8017
Eastern School ' District.
Dediel , excellent condition.
740·992-3465 after 5:00PM 1740)645-6150 call
Berber carpet 6 95yd vinyl $6500
. .
·FOR ·. , - ·
·
. 740-992-2822.
- -------~w--iiliit....,.iiililil'-.,.l. 5.95yd. New rod!er recliners
4 rental houses ~For Sa~" 2003 tSxSO mobile home for ....
$199.95: new couCh &amp; John Deere 10ft. No n1 Dr~l
"Middleport's only
Good inconie producing sale. ( 740 1446·0527 ·
1 end 2 bedroom apart· ~veseat $450. Mollohan for
rent
Carmichael
Self' Stor-ie"
properties. Great locarion 1 Grea1 used 3BR home only ments. furnished and unfur- Garpat
76
Vine
St., Equipment (7~)446-2412.
Price(s l are Negotia~e. $9.995. Will help with deliv· nished, security deposit Gallipolis, OH (740)4-46Motivated
Sellerl
In ary. Call (740)3B5-767l.
required, no pets, 7"0·992· 7444.
John Deere Mini ExcavatorJ
Gallipolis. Call
Wayne
2218 .
- - - - -- - - Tractor L-oa der BacktlOe/ Klmmy's Furniture
(404}456·3802.
New 2,006 Clay1on sin· - - - - - - - - For Sale : Loveseat , chair Skid Steers. Carmichael
:_..:._:__:______ glowidos stoning at $199.84 1 bedroom apt. on Vine St. and otloman • $250 . Call Equipment (740)446-24 t2
About $3000 dOwn. 812 S. per month. Trade-ins wet- Gall (740)367-7886.
740·992·1987.
,.
T
New John Deere Comn•..- 291 UJICulr) Sill!el MXIdleport. OH
3rd. Ave .. middleport tOtally comes. Call (740)385-2434.
"'r-o"""'
remodeled . 3 bedrooms, 1
1 rm efficiency -apt. all utili- New recliner $200; sofa &amp; I. and 5000 Series Utilfty trac 740-7M-07SI
bath . Perfect credit not
Lors &amp;
ties paid, fumlshed . 2 seat $400. Mollohan Furn. tors
Fl.:ed tor 36
7..S7-7442

munity skill training with indi·
Yiduals with MRIDD.

MoB~s~

for you':

IH
__om-'-os--_$32
__
£7ol0)385..t019
Mobile H
fo R
ome
r
ent,
1997 14JC72, ctean with fire- Appte GrOYe, WV area call
place. 2 bedroom. 2 bath .
(304)576-3389 or (304)5931997 14x70 3 bedroom. 2 87
_ _1_4_ ·_ _ _ _ _ _

OH 45772. Phone :

rJamihJ

painliflll"lel us do it
3~R. 2be.

11.,....
5Litle

.

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

"Take tilt pain 0111

For ~le ' ment. storage buildings,

BALL COACH . The duties 2 Story House

42 Funy frillld

43tt.ftta•,•

11 Enjop . .

ea..

The Eastern Local School

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

-t

Downtown

'*"'·

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

Amish built S1:orage building.
Less than 1 year old. Double

Commercial Commeloiol building 'For
-~~-tor
Rent. $4001 Sola' 1fJOO oquare loot, off
• .,.. IJ ...........
2 bodooom, AIC, porch &amp; month. Upatalro Ollloo
89
11111cing. G - IOca·
:;.
_(7_40_.
"""""·
*'!.
wory
no SUltaa Rent S125/ mont11 lion! 749 Third Awnue in
1900 sq. t1 Green School lWo Story Muse/1 acre. pats. In Orlpolis. (740)446- you 1111' t1o Utilhios. Coli Galllpollo. Prtoe 'Nogolloble'
district &amp; 5 ml. lrom new hlgl1 4Bd, 1 112
D.R.. 2008. (7&lt;10)446·t409 or
roof!
Soller!
Call
school , very clean &amp; ready kitchen, utility room , fire (740)4462882
to be moved into. Am&lt;ing 1 1
logs 1M
17~0 1441-()41.94 pPace
•
ng
$99,900.
lus QBS
family room
, 2 room
car
_•ff_e_r_3p_m_ _ _ ___,_ garage, front porch, base·

For more intonnation coo, lact
Paul McElroy,
(740)742·2990 by October
: 11 , 2006.

www.mydallysentinel_.com

•

':::' S&lt;C~lA-ctt.~%· :::

_ _ _....;.....;; -

lor ClAY I. I'OUAII ....;;.__ __

'""""' ol tilt
fovr tero!Oblod ·orordr bet., 10 '"'"' lour -ds

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I

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1
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I

I

ORYAN
-,r--lr--Jr--r.-1'
-l-!1_!
. • • _ . .

trs

Overheard while leaving the
sports arena. 'Athletic champs
r--~~--- are getting so young. tltey give
C 0 J U NE 'autographs in- -··--·

...

I1--r.,sr-T,-T,.;..T.II,...:Tl-1 ()
1..- ' - ·- ' - ·_

.....,j.

.
_ .- • ·- • -

-

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Compleoe the chvckle QuOted

by fttl.ng 11'1 the

tEl TEl$ IN ,.

•

lr""' .s10p

~·:~N~E l!TIUS

I

we'd'
No 3 b•low.

tMl!ir'I'.J

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I

SCUM.uT$ ANSWERS IOilM6 ·
Misfit- Tronp -

Vc!clt -

va.JOy - OFF my CAR

If rain can wash away tons of top soil, why can't it
wash llWay the dirt OFF my CAR?
.

ARLO&amp;JANIS

I

�.'"f

'
•
.. '

2006 Bos EvANs FARM

Friday, October 6, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • The Daily 5entinel

ALONG THE RIVER

fEsTivAL VISITOR's GUIDE
INSIDE TODAYS EDIDON

Going strong:
•
Youth football league celebrates
two decades of growth, Cl

,.

tm

· An inside look at :his week!s game

·Is there a real threat among the sure bets?
1111 Ten

....._

CMrllll

W L Plct. W L Plct.
' ONoSIIite 2 0 1.000 50 1.000
Micl1iilai&gt;

2
Purdue
1
• Iowa
1
WiSconsin 1
. i'enn State 1
lllnois
1
Mich. Slate 0
Indiana
0
N'westem 0
Minnesota . 0

0
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2

1.000
1.000
.500
.500

.500
.500
.000
.000
.000
.000

5
4
4
4
3
2
3
2
2
2

0
1
1
1
2
3
2
3
3
3

1.000
.800
.800
.800
.600
.400
.600
.400
.400
.400

Pulllue at Iowa, noon
Indiana at Illinois, noon
i'enn State at Minnesota, noon
Northwestern at Wiscoosin, noon
BGSU at Ohio State, 3:30 p.m.
Michigan St. at Mich1gan, 4:30 p.m.

COLUMBUS- Who might
be the mystery gliest? Who
oould be the spoiler?
'
Ohio State's ne~ six opponents before Michigan on Nov.
18 will all be decided underdogs against the Buckeyes.
After a non-league game
against Bowling Green on Sat·
urday, OSU will play Michigan
State, Indiana, Minnesota,
Northwestern and Illinois.
Those five teams currently occupy the bottom five spots in
the Big Ten standings.
So, what's to worry about?
The upset, of course. Probably two out ofevery three Ohio

Jim
Naveau
uma News
jnaveau@limanews.com

The

419-993-2087

·
h'
State ,,ans ·you run mto
t IS
week will invoke the memory ·
of the 1998 M1'ch!' gan State
game, when MSU stunned No.
1 OSU, if you try to tell them
the Buckeyes should go into
the Michigan game unbeaten.
Some of·these same people
probably also accepted it un·
questioningly when Hollywood

offered two movies in the same
year recentJy in which Heather
Locklear and Diane Lane
plaYed women who were hav·
ing a hard time finding a date.
Maybe they can convince
themselves that even Indiana
iscapableofanupset.
So, just who is the most dan·
gerous team left on Ohio
State's schedule.? The. list
might look something like this:

the first half again'st Notre
Dame, they could scare the
Pittsburgh Steelers. If they
play like they did against lllinois last Saturday, they could
justbefrighteninglybad.

Illinois (Nov. 4), Northwest·
em (Nov. 11); Of the three,
the on\y"one to even think
about is Northwestern beRe111rAe cllance
cause the gameis in
Minnesota (Oct.28):1f''"is Evanston. Ohio State lost
'"'
there two yeats ago, won a
game were in the Metrodome close game in 2002 and
it wou.ld be a little scarier, but
it's in Ohio Stadium. On the pulled out a narrow win
other hand, Minnesota has a back in 1994.
No c:lllnce
So. dance
decent quarterback (Bryan ·
Indiana (Oct. 21): The ques·
Michigan State (Oct. 14): Cupito), a decent running
The Spartans are just psycho · back (Amir Pinix) and coach tion at Indiana is the same as
every year. When does basket·
enough to pull a big upset.
Glen Mason did pull off an
ball practice start?
If they play like they did in upset in Columbus in 2000.

Purdue ................................467.2
Michigan State :............... .... 433.2 ..
Minnesoi:B .......................... 402.4
Penn State ............. :............ 401.8
Michigan, .............................389.4
Rushing Olfe.lse
Michigan State .................... 220:8
Minnesota ....... ................... 203.0
Penn State ................... ...,... 199.6
Michigan ......... ..................... 192.6
lllinois ....................... ,.......... 178.8

Pass Offense
•
Purdue ................................317.6
10wa ............ ........................ 233.0

Ohio State ... :......... .............232.6
Michigan State ....................212.4
Indiana ........................... .....204.2
Total Defense
·Mlchigan ..............................238.2
Wisconsin ............................252.8
Penn.State .......:..................259.4
Iowa .................................... 292.4
Ohio State .... ,..................... 293.0

Michigan ................................36.4
Penn State ............................81.8
Michigan State ... :................ 107.0
Ohio State ....... ................... 109.6
lowa .................................... 117.2

P8ss Delaase
Wisconsin ............................ 134.8 .
Hlinois ............................. ..... 173.2
lowa ....................................175.2
Penn State .......................... 177.6
Ohio State .......................... 183.4

\ [)1\ IDL-4L L E.~DERS
~Yards

PJ. Hill, Wisconsin ..................598

Antonio Pittman, Ohio St.........567
Tony Hunt Penn St. ................525
Amir Pinnix, Minnesota ........... .477
PllssiiC Yards
CurtiS Pamter, Purdue .......... 1,538"
TIC)' Smith, Ohio St............... 1,070
John Stocco, Wisconsin ..........976
Chad Henne, Michigan ............963
Bryan Cupito, Minnesota ..........95 7
Aec eMngYards
Mario Manni~, Michigan ....452
Dustin Keller, Purd&lt;re ..............395
Darien Bryant, Purdue ..............392
Anthony Gonzalez, Ohio St.......373
SeiW;fl Lymon, Purdue ............362

2006 OSU SCHEDULE
Sept. 9

W35·12
W24-7
W37-7
w28-6

Sept 16
Sept 23
5ept 30

Cincinnati

U.'RRMY
Oct. 14
Oct. 21
Oct. 28
Nov. 4
Nov. 11
Nov. 11j·

. . _ , . _ 3:30p.m.
@Mich. State 3:30p.m.
Indiana
Noon
Minnesota
3:30p.m.
@ Illinois
18A
@ Normwestem
18A
Michigan
3:30p.m.

Penn State
@IoWa

w38-17

COnrent compiled by ~m Naveau ar'&lt;l
~ by Jeff Braun • The LJma N&lt;Ms
© 2006 The LJma N&lt;Ms. ReproduCtiOn of all or any portJOO of this matenal
is prohibited VMtxJut express coroenL
~

A look at some of the key match ups in the game
between No. 1 Ohio State (5·0) and Bowling Green
(3-2 ) on Saturday at Ohio Stadium:

Renhen
Bowling Green receil.er Ruben Ruiz (10
catches, 123 yards) might have had some
explaining to do last Saturday, but rt wasn't
to coach Gregg Bllmdon. RuiZ was with
the Falcons in Athens when his wife Rebecca ga,Je birth to the couple's second child early Saturday morning.
Iowa's defense might have had some
explaining to do to coach Kirk Ferentz
after rt allowed Ohio State's Anthony
Gonzalez to catch tv.o touchdown

Qulltelt I U
~there is an overtooked component ofTroy
Sm~h's game, ~-is that he doesn't make mistakes. The OSU q~arterback has not thrown an

interception in eight of his last 10 games. His
four touchdown passes in a 38-17 win over
No. 13 Iowa last Saturday gave him 12 for
the.season. He has thrown at least twc 10
passes in fNery game this season except the
Penn State game.
.
·
Bo~ing Green has used both Anthony
Turner and Freddie Sannes at quarterback.
Turner has started three gannes and Barnes
got the starts when Turner was suspended for
the opener against Wisconsin and missed the
Kent State game with an injury.
Turner has completed 57 percent of his .
passes. He has four touchdown passes and
three interceptions. Barnes leads Bowling
Green with 392 yards rushing and also
caught four passes as a receiver in a 21·9
w1n over Ohio University last Saturday.
Advanti!Ce: Ohio State
Rum I blcks
~there is an CM!f·

passes for the second consecutive
season. Rcy Hall got his firSt si~ificant
action of the season and caught a touch-

d&lt;mn pass at Iowa.
AdvanUIII :
Ohio State

and end Vernon Gholston has 3'1.!. That pressml has helped Ohio State create 13
tu11101et'S in its first m.e garres. Bowling Green
has turned the ball over 1f tinies, includl.ng
three that opposing defenses scored on.
Defensive end Devon Parks sta~ against ·
Ohio State when~ beat BGSU 24-17 in
2003. He has 15 cqreer sacks. End Diyral
Briggs was th~ week's Mid-American Con·
terence Defensive Player of the )Nee!&lt; after
getting twc 5800 against Ohkl University.
~:Ohio State

Ullebldms

Jannes taunnaitis has intercepted a pass
in Ohkl State's Ia~ four gannes and is the
team's leading tackler with 41. The lineback·
Offeashe
.
ers'
role in the de1ense has changed somelne
ooat from last year, though. This year's
Ohio State glOup has only 4 of the team's 18 5800.
ran to the
Last year, the linebackers had 1.911! sac!ls.
left behind
Bowling Green's top linebacker, Terrel
tackle Alex Wh~e. ranks third in the country with 11.7
Boone (6· tackl115 a game.
'
8,325) anc
Alh&amp;d se: ONo Stale
@.lard StfNe Dek\nshe blc:ks
RelYing (6-8,
Jamario O'Neal will move into the starting
329) often
lineup
at safety to replace Anderson Rusagainst Iowa.
sell,
who
suffered a season-ending knee inBI1Niing Green
jwy
on
a
kickoff
at Iowa. It will be O'Neal's
starts a fresh·
first
career
start.
nnan and a red·
Both teams have starting cornerbacks
shirt fi'eshman named
Antonkl Smith. Bowling Green
on its defensive starts tWo
true freshmen at safety, Jamahl
line, ooich
Brown
and
Jerrett Sanderson.
·
could spell
Ad\&amp;
A 8 :Ohio Stale
trouble aePinst
5peclll teams
veteran linemen Wke Doug
Ohio State's Ted Gim Jr. hasn't relimed a
Datish, !&lt;irk Bar- pu~ or kickoff for a touclldcM'n this season,
ton and the Mo- but that could charl!Jl on Saturday. 81.1Ming
hawk Man, TJ.
Green has already given up tv.o long ki:k re-Dcwinlng.
turns for scores. Kent State took a kicl&lt;df re-The BGSU often- • tum 98 yards for a touclldcM'n and Buffalo
5Mlline has a definite ran one back for 94 yards ard a 10.
northY.est Ohio fl&lt;M:Jr, 1\ffil
BGSU's Sean Ellis is 3 of 4 on field 9J111s
Q-esMew's l'illy Uchtenste@r, a with a long kick of 38 yards. Ohio State's
three-year starter, at center, and Aaron Pettrey is 4 of 7 but has missed Only
St. Hervy's tiel/in Huelsma'1, a once in his last m.e kick&lt;&gt;. The Falcons' punter
Alonso Rojas tried tv.o fake punts last week.
first-year starter, at tackle.
Advantage: Ohio State
Adli&amp;itllli: Ohio State

c

looked component ot
Antonio Pittman's
game, ~is that the
Buck.eyes' taillack
is faster t11an most
people think he is.
Tnat was on display when he continually tnlnced to
the outside against

rushing for 117 yards.
Pittman anc Chris Wells
(78 yardS 8fli!i'lst Iowa)

srould do well against a BoM·
ing Green defense that~ up
216 yards rushi"gto t&lt;ent State
and 197 yards /lWiinst WISCOilSin.
BoWing Green has had three baH cani·
ers gain 100 yards Of more this season, but
tv.o of them have beet; its quarterbacks. Redshirt freshman running back Chris Bullock
became the third when he !PI114 yards
on 21.carries 8fli!i'lst Ohio University.
He has 235 yards for the season.
.Mia I I •Ohio S.. .

Jim Naveau's
Player of the VJeek
QB - Troy Smith
The senior quarterback completed 16 of 25
passes for 186 yards and 4 touchdowns in
last week's ~- 17 win at Iowa.

Ohio State Leaders
Ill! Yards
Touc:hdcMns
TIC)' Smith ......... .1,070 Ted Ginn Jr. ................ 5
Antonio Pittman .......... 5
RulhlrC Yards
Antonio Pittman .. ....567
p

Aacet~ Yards

Anthony Gonzalez ....373

Interceptions
Jhmes L.aunnaltis ....... .4

Tackles
James L.aunnai!Js ...... 41
Sack&amp;
Quinn Pitcock .............. 4
Field goals

Aaron Pettrey ............. .4

Buckeye·Brain Busters
1: Who is the hi@lest-Coach jim Tressel's respohsc
when a reporte r 's ques rion referred
to th is we ek '!&lt;~ game against
Bow lin ~ Gree n as "a ~ reak ."

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Kathryn R. Fruth
• Lori L. Hensley
• Sylvia Ann Neal
• Thelma M. Shaver

.

Bv. MICHELLE .MIUER

last . Tuesday's
. At
Gallipolis City Commission
meeting, Commissioner Joe
GALLIPOLIS
Giles questioned the lack of
According to Stephanie a lef~ turn · arrow at the
Filson, public information· intersection. ·
officer for the Ohio
According to General
Department
of Manager Rob Lee of Bob
Transportation, complaints Evans Restaurant, .many
·by citizens about the inter· · patrons have also comsection of Ohio 7 and the plained about the intersecSilver Bridge Plaza parking tion and fear a major accilot have been heard.
dent will occur without a
"We are completely UJ.' for left turn signal.
re-evaluating the site,"
Filson said.
Plene He Pl•ll!· A2

ranked team Bowling
Green has eve.r played
before facing No. 1
Ohkl State?
Ans\uers:

2: When was the
last time Ohkl State
won an outright Big
Ten football title?

•.Local Briefs.
See.,.A6
• Fibromyalgia
Support Group to
meet after summer
break. See Page A6
• Meigs obServing
Red Ribbon Month.
SeePageA6 "
• For the Record.
s.ePageAB

Blackwell makes his
case d~ring area stops
on his support of traditio~:~al
values and drew compar,
isons between himself and
GALLIPOLIS
his Democratic opponent,
"Southeastern Ohio is in my U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland,
plan for economic growth during
in
his · stop
and
job
creation," Gallipolis, one of II south·
Republican gubernatorial eastern cities on a tour he's
J.
Kenneth taking that also included a
candidate
·Blackwell said Friday dur- visit to the Pomeroy Gun
ing a rally in support of his Club later in the day.
campaign on the steps of the
The
candidate
was
Gallia County Courthouse:
Blackwell a\ so touched Please see Blackwell, A2
BY KEVIN KELLY

WEATHER

KKELLY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

1. No. 2 Oklahoma in 2004;

2. 1984;

•

4 SECilONS- 28 PAGES

3. Two

days Until kickoff

A3

Celebrations

C4-s

Classifieds

D2-5
insert

Obituaries

A4
As

Regional

A2

Editorials

3: How many Big ten
losses did Ohio State
have the last time
It won an outright
Big Ten.t~le?

Sport's
Weather

B Section
AS

© 1006 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

CHEVROLET • CADILLAC • PONTIAC • BUICK • GMC
208 East Main • 1-740-992-6614'or 1-800-837-~094 • Pomeroy, OH
Houn: Mon.-Fri. 8-6· Sat. 9-4· Sun. 12-'4 • www.mark orter m.tom
•

·

Please see Brlcl&amp;e. A2 •

.

River Valley
Homecoming Queen
Shannan Smith gets
a hug from 2005
Queen Melody
Spencer Friday' at
the River valley High
School homecoming
game. Smith's
escort Jon Casto
and Principal
Michael Jacobs
shake hands in the
background.
lan McNemar/photo

MMILLER~MYDAILYTRIBUNE. COM

- • Agency warns of ·
staph infection.
SaePageA3

Comics

Filson explained that the
work already cothpleted on
lhe new bridge has been
fully
inspected . and
approved, ~nd that the
framework issue is in no
way related to completeq
work or the original bridlle. ;
ODOT will be meeung
with the contractor next
week to determine the
safest, most efficient way
to move forward. Officials
· are not certa·in at this time:
what the t;ffect will be oq
the project schedule, but
delay is likely.
·
In a separate issue, since
the recent rock slide that
interrupted traffic for a couple of days in mid~
September, Filson said he~
office has been inundated
with public inquiries a~t
the structural integrity of
the existing bridge.

.State·will re-evaluate .Are~. high sclwol royalty :chosen
intersection at plaza

INSIDE

Around Town

is,ue for the contractor, not
for 1he public."

POMEROY -. Since
construction began in 2003
on the Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge replacement project, rumors as well as the
reality of setbacks have
been the norm and the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation · (ODOT)
District 10 wants to set the
record straight on the latest challenges.
According to ODOT, one
of those challenges is not '
public safety. However, .
ODOT's latest obstacle has
a connection to a bridge
. project in Puerto Rico
where work was temporar.
. ,
·.
.
·
courtoey ot ooor
ily hailed because the Th1s artiSt s rendermg of a v1ew of the new Pomeroy-Mason Bridge that will hopefully be a
portable framework used reality someday but until that day the project has experienced its share of delays, includto support the newly- _ed the latest which is a saftey issue for the work crews.
poured concrete during .
·construction between the framework design was
"ODOT is currently crews on site," said District
towers (also called a form scheduled to be used on the working with the contractor I 0 Public .Information
traveler) failed.
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge to .determine the best way to ·Officer
Stephanie
M.
The same temporary proJect.
'
ensure lhe safety of work Filson. 'This is a safety

INDEX

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

$t.!)O•\oi.~O . ~o. : ~ -

1

BY BETH SERGENT

Details on P... AB

.

•

f

Ohio State leads the Big Ten with 18 quarterbi:r;k 5800. Tackle ~inn Pitcock has four

I' OIIHIO\•
··
,, II(
. Ill t.')lol·l•(,a 11 IIJOI*'•(ktolwr:-L
· 1·
:!tltH)

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

Defenshehe

News for Gallia &amp;. Meigs counties

ODOT addresses latest bridge rumors

• High school football
·action. See Page 81

e

1(7N!j on his WilY to

Mil&lt;e Hart, Michigan ................672

N. Illinois
@ T9l&lt;IIS

t lhio \ .ol in l'&lt;~hli,hi ""~ t o ·

'

Total Oft'ense

Sept 2

•

SPORTS

AllnDit 10 cllance
Bowling Green (Oct. 7),

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: BOWLING GREEN (3-2, 2-1 MAC)

Hom~town

•

Strickland announces
Middleport trail funding
BY BRIAN

J. Rl::m

BREED@MVDAILVSENTIN EL COM .

Senior Amber Hill
was crowned the
2006 Southern High
School homecoming
queen at Friday's
homecoming ceremonies during half·
time during the .
Torrl'adoes' game
with the Miller
Fal~ons. Hill is the
daughter of Richard
and Wendy Hill of
Racine. She was
escorted by Weston
·
·counts.
'Beth Ser&amp;ent/photo

Ambet Haning was
crowned the 2006
Meigs High School
homecom ing queen
in ceremonies precedmg the Meigs-·
Nelsonville football
game on Bob
Roberts Field Friday ·
night. Her escort
was Charlie Meister.
Cha~ene Hoe~lchj photo

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