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                  <text>Page 86 • The Orily Smtinel

'l'uesday, Odubcr 2.4. :too6

www.mydailysentinel.com

a 13-play drive for die winand attaches the quadriceps with Cleveland, is the sec- Browns' offense managed
ning touchdown.
ond Browns player to tear just 165 total yards - 34
muscle to the shin bone.
Carson Palmer went 8-ofagainst
"Gary has fought hard to his patellar tendon since rushing
9 for 93 ya!ds,
connectfromheeBl
from Page Bl
get back, but it's an injury July. On the first 11-on-11 Denver's defense.
ed
with
Olad
Johnson
on a
The Browns dropped
bug and one of the things play of mining camp. cen32-yaro
qomplelion
on
a
Baxter, who missed the we ' re up against right ter LeCharles Bentley, the passes, didn't .do a good the next game, andtbe NFL foudb-and-1 play lhat set up
final 10 games last season now," wide receiver Joe club's top free agent sign- job protecting ~k suspended him for' the next the ~ an4 made the
with a tom chest muscle Jurevicius said. "When it ing this past offseason, Charlie Frye and failed to two. ln a separ.ite case, offense feel a lot better about
,.__ ,... '
and three games earlier this rains it pours and when a ruptured his patellar with- move the . ball inside Henry has pleaded guilty to WiCil ' '
· year with a similar injury, snowball gets going it gets out any contact and was Denver's 40-,yard line unlit marijuana poSsession 8114 a
"The last two weeks, we
gun charge, making htm were in a funk.n guard Eric .
the fowtb quarter.
was backpedalling in the bigger. It's unfortunate for lost for the season.
Crennel was asked about
Crennel has spent the subject to the league's disci- Steinbach ~ "I think this
second quarter when he Gary because he' s an inte. media reports that Bentley past few weeks lamenting pline.
is a turnaround game."
:·
planted his feet near the 5- gral part ofthis team."
·
Cincinnati
went
1-2
withincon
~i
stency
It
sure
changed
·
t
he
mood
was
recently
hospitalized
the
Browns'
yard line and tried to leap
Crennel has not spoken
on both sides of II.. ball. o ut h.im, scoring 13, 13 and in the locker room. The
and knock down a pass · to Baxter, who signed . a with a staph infection.
"LeCharles is at home his team hasn' t shown 17 points. Injuries to · the Ben~s hadn't won in three
intended for Broncos wide six-year, $30 million conoffensive line were a major
receiver Javon Walker.
tract with a $10 million and is reha,bbing. We will much im~rovement, but factor during .that . span as weeks-they had ·their bye
between losses - and had
Baxter's legs buckled signing bonus before last talk about LeCharles . on Crennel said he isn't will- well. but Henry was unques- everyone
asking what was
Friday," Crennel · said. ing to contede the season.
awkwardly and he dropped season.
tionably missed.
.
wrong with the defending
"There is adversity in
to the ground in excruciat"Our people were with Browns general manager
While Henry was.out, the AFC North champions.
ing pain. He immediately him last night," Crennel Phil Savage has a news everyone's life and you Bengals had their receiving
"By beating them, we
grabbed his left knee and it said. "He ·wants to come conference scheduled for have to deal with it when it corps funher thinned by pretty much s~~ the
comes," he · said. "If you injuries. Kelley Washington abuse we were
was initially believed that bi!ck and he was talking that day.
ng as a
BentleY's agent, Neil . can .handle the adversity is out with a hamsiring team,"
safety
Dexter
was his only injury. Baxter about rehabbing and cominjury,
and
Tab
Peny
wiD
declined
comtoday,
then
you
can
enjoy
Schwartz,
·Jackson said Monday.
was lifted onto a cart and ing back. I think there is a
the success of tomorrow. I miss the rest of the season
The next step is to get
driven to the locker room. chance he can get back if . ment.
The injury to Baxter only think that's the way you with a hip injury. Antonio some consistency back in an
Later, the Browns dis- he has the right attitude
Chatman suffered an abdom- offense missing the big play.
magnified Sunday' s repul- have to approach it. .
covered that Baxter had abou.t it."
.
"We scored what, 17
"Otherwise, you .might inal injury during a 17-14
sustained major injuries to
Baxter, who played in 48 sive showing against the
·
over
Carolina
.
on
win
points?"
Houshmandzadeh
both patellars, the tendon consecutive games for Broncos. Despite having · · as well throw your hands Sunday.
said. "There's lot of worlc
that stabilizes the kneecap . Baltimore before signing two weeks to prepare, the . up and dive off a cliff."
Without its usual comple- to be done.''
ment of pass catchers, the
Noies: No. 2 QB Anthony
Wright
could be unavailable
this compelling season is a offense had to be a little
title in 2003, the last year ing?
again
this
week. Wlight had
more conservative against
under the points system,
If the objective is to create product of the system.
an eme~gency !~J&gt;pendecto­
NOBODY was still check- · interest that draws in fans,
"Everyone thinks it's the ~'!"~idn't use any four- my, .sidelining h1m for the
ing out the standings this then NASCAR must main- most competitive one, but I wide receiver sets yesterfromPageBl
last two games. Doug
late in the season. He ran tain a way to keep people kind of look at it the other day," Lewis said Monday. Johnson, who hasn't thrown
away with that champi- watching.
way - it's the sloppiest ·"We k.ept light ends on the a pass in a game in two
system.
onship and no one could
The Chase was the Chase we've had so far. The field more than we have in years, is Palmer's backup
Scores of NASCAR tndi- catch him from August on:
tionalists hate the Chase, He even clinched the title a answer; and France correctly least competitive one," he · the past, particularly on third until Wright returns. ... RB
complaining it's manufac- week before the finale, predicted that it would take said. "Nobody has been able down and even on early Chris Perry, who missed the
to run in the top 10 every downs. Normally, it could
tured and contrived, and meaning he could have gone a few seasons before it week. No. one is putting up have been a receiver in that preseason and the first five
games while recovering
· · takes away from the model fishing in the Aorida Keys shaped into what he envi- stag~ring numbers, or that position."
from knee and ankle surgety,
of .· consistency that was instead of racing at sioned. · Now NASCAR donunating streak we saw
One near-perfect drive carried tWice for 4 yards and
required to win the title · Homestead-Miami finally has a competitive the fJTSt two years.
saved the day.
caught three passes for 26
every year before 2004.
Speedway on that final playoff race, · whe.re ifs
"With no trouble, Jeff
The Bengals failed to get a Xards against the Panthers.
absolutely impossi111e to Burton is probably the run- first down on five of their six 'He did OK physically,"
Yes, the Chase does tram- Sunday.
Where's the drama in guess who will hoist the tro- away winner of this thing. first-half possessions. They Lewis said. "He had some
ple all over that tradition.
that?
And why shouldn't phy in Homestead next But, what we're seeing this ·were a little better in the sec- rust. It's the first lime he's
But it's hard to argue that
year, is none of us are ond half, when .the offense been hit carrying the ball and
this way isn't a lot more fun. NASCAR do something to month.
But Kenseth isn't so sure immune from lrollble."
finally came together during actuall~ ~ ~-" :
When Kenseth won the prevent that from happen-

Browns

Bengals

· Cult leader faces
execution alone, As

ana

a

Mlddleport •.Pomeroy, Ohio
o

11 '

I '\J""•\td

,1•

~.._:;n

go at least five games. It
looks as though it could
swing back and forth all the
from Page HI
way to Game 6 or 7.
That's refreshing, espeJones, who nearly blew a dally after the long-suffer. thr«-run lead.
ing Boston Red Sox swept
St. Louis in 2004, and the
Jones hung on, however, . lon~-suffering
Chicago
and Detroit's 3-1 victory Whtte Sox (ljd the same tt;&gt;
tied the Series at a game Houston last'season.
apiece. Just like the Tigers,
But the Tigers are quite a
the ratings rebounded in story, too. Don't forget, they
. Game 2 from a record low lost an AL-record 119
- for the opener.
games only three years ago,
Now the Series has shift- and their revival has been
ed to St. Louis for Game 3 meaningful not only for the
on Tuesday night, and will city of Detroit, but the entire

Baseball ·

Tuesday night at new Busch
sport of baseball.
"It's a seven-game series. Stadium, where they've
They jumped out to a quick played well all year.
one, we fired back," third
"Knowing our fans and
baseman Brandon lnge said. our history it will mean a
"We're going to their place lot more if we're all
now. It should be interest~ involved with · the first
World Series that was won
ing."
Are we headed for a long in this park, rather than the
first World Series that was
series?
"We may be," lnge added. played," La Rossa said.
The Cardinals, who won "That's our ~oal. It's not
the NL CCnlral with 00ly 83 just to play, it s to win. And
victories, look much more we've got a shot. We've got
competitive than they did in a better shot than most peo.
their last trip to the Series. ple think."
Perhaps it's time to tune
They'll send ace Chris
Carpenter to the mound in.

Giants
fromPageBl
after the last interception,
periced up spirits moments
later with a 53-yard touchdown pass to Patrick
Crayton SO\)II after. But it
was too little, too late.
The
Giants
clearly
enjoyed themselves in this
one, from their defense's
trademarlc jump-shot oele~
brations to ronnins back
Brandon Jacobs celebraling

4&lt;

a touchdown 'f.O.-style on the Cowboys' star logo
in the end zone.
New York should he
happy now that it has beaten
Dalla5
each division
(3-3), · . Washington and
Philadelphia - ud gets to
play its next three game at
home. However, tbe Giants
also' come away facing twQ
serious injuries.
Arrington tore his left
Achilles tendon and is likely for the season, and defensive end Osi Umenyiora
missed most of the second
half with a strained hip.

foe'..,..

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.......... '41. .
.· 2007 Pontiac
. G6

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·------

2007 Chevy HHR

2007 Buick Lucerne CX

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....

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2007 Chevy Cobalt LS

IIIIPIIs:t._. ·
2007 Chevy Uplander

2007 Pontiac GS

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2007 Chevy Impala

2007 Chevy CokN1Iclo

OBITUARIES
Page AS

• William P. Rizer
• Mildred Cheesebrew
• George Horak

INsiDE
• Midcleport Literary
Club meeting held.
~ ~~A3 .··
• GOld star awarded
to.lodal SOldier.
See Page A3
• For the Record.
Sae Page As
• Sonshine Circle
donates to God's NET.
See Page A6
• Curtis family reunites.
See Page M

_.._

2 SI!CI'IONS -

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2007 Pontiac G6

---- a t 1.l'IO

12 pAGES

• liM I ftr 11122111
2007 Chevy Malibu LS
_..,

$111PIIW'1Ut5

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars

2007 Pontiac Vibe

Comics
Editorials

-·~

Obituaries
Sports
Weather

B Section

A6

© 2006 Ohio Volley Pub6obin&amp; Co.

CHEVROLET • CADILI 4C •
208 East Main • 1-740-992-6614 or 1
JH417

•

7-1094 •

•C

Po~neroy,

Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-6; Sat. 9-4; Sun. 12-4 • www.markDorte••s••a.c:om
-¥lftth A.. . .aowaCI c:recllt . . . . . . . . Cft4Ar.C

0

Decorating camp sites at Forked Rt¥1 .Swte f&gt;at\ for .the annual Halloween bash was such
fun. Here from the left, Tori Goble, Kyla Hawthor;rl!!, ~nah Hawley, Secca Chadwell and
Auy Hendrtx pitch ~~. to ,get the :!IM:~f :tlltnily. cimi'J&gt;et.'t'e~ fflr the iudgi~g:. ·· . ...•.

Run hoStS fun Halloween bash
BY Clwft.aE Hoaiuc:N
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

REEDSVILLE
It
couldn't have been a nicer
day for an outdoor party.
The sun· was shining, it was
warm, and the setting
beneath trees adorned with
red and gold leaves was perfect.
Everything was "just
right" as an old friend of
mine would say, for
Saturday's annual observance of Halloween at
Forlced Run State Park.
It was apparent that the
children decorating camp
sites, riding scooters up and
down the roads, and helping
parents prepare bags of
candy for the trick or
1r1iters to come later in the
day were l)aving a wonderful time.

5DFF REPORT

Everybody has a job to do at the Fot'ked Run State Park's
annual Halloween party. Around their camp fire, Kelsey
Johnson, Krista Johnson, Kayta Hawthorne. Brent Johnson,
and Alice Hawthome sack candy for trick or treat.
Forked Run personnel local and from far-away, to
hosted the party which the beautiful park which
attracts
humlreds
of
campers and non-campers, PI m•-fai'Jd .... AS

and basic safety practices,
this can 1&gt;e a safe and happy
Halloween," Swift sa1d.
MIDDLEPORT - Trick "There will be a lot of vehior treaters and motorists are cle traffic and pe9estrians in
advised to be aware of one town druing trick or treat,
another during Thursday and drivers and pedestrians
night's trick or treat activi- are reminded to be very
ties.
careful."
Middleport 'Police Chief
Swift recommended the
Bruce Swift said officers following tips:
.
with the police department
• Carry a' flashlight.
there will have a strong
• Make sure costumes fit
presence in the community, properly and masks do not
both in cruisers and on foot. obstruct vision.
Trick or treat will he held ·
• Children should not run
from 6 to 7 p.m.
·
from house to house or run
"By using common sense across roadways, should
NEWsc.&gt;MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Classifieds

....

et.arlel• lla . . cll/,...._

Houchins voted against the
m~sure.

The new ordinances proposed Monday night impose ·
a $25 refundable deposit for
t11ose using ,picnic shelter~
and restrooms in village
parks, . limits campaign
signs to those 12 square feet
in dimension,-and requires
their removal within 10

Please- C-.dl. AS .

.

GALLIPOLIS
September generally means
a new school year has
begun, and with it. a
decline in the number of
youth seeking employment.
That was the reason officials with the Ohio
Department of Jobs and
Family Services gave for
lasi month's drop in jobless
rates throughout the state.
For Gallia and Meigs counties, as well as their neighbors. the decline was significant.
·
County-by-county jobless rates were released
Tuesday by' ODJFS, showing that Gallia County's
unempk)yment level for
September was 5.6 percent,
a I percent. decrease from
6.6 percent posted for
August
Meigs County saw a
seven-tenths of a percent
drop in unemployment for
September at 7. 9 percent.
Meigs' jobless rate for
August was 8.5 percent.
The decrease in unemployment in surrounding
counties was also notewor.thy. Athens was· at 5.4 percent. a seven-tenths of a
percent drop from August's
6. 1. Jackson's rate l!lso fell

seven-tenths of a percent,
from 7.5 in August to 6.8
last month .
Lawrence County reported unemployment at 4.9
percent in September, a sixtenths of a percent decline
from 5.5 in August. Vinton
County was at 6.8 percern
last monih, a ·five-tenths of
a percent fall
froq\
August's
7.3 .
And
Washington County had the
smallest decrease of area
counties at two"lenths of a
percent, from 5.3 in August
to 5. 1 in September. .
:
Ohio' s unemploymeril
rate was 5.3 percent iO
September, down from 5.!
percent in August.
.
The national unemployment rate for September
was 4.6 percent, dowrt from
the August rate of 4.7 percent.
·
"The decline in unemployment was due primari· ly . to individuals leaving
the labor force ·and returning
to
school
in
September," said ODJFS
Director Barbara Riley.
Monroe . County had the
highest rate of unemployment in-September at9 percent, while Delaware
County had the lowest rate
at 3.3 percent.
·

PleiiSe- Jobless, AS

Low cost vet clinic in

need of clients
BY Brnt SERGENT
BSERGENT&lt;!!&gt;MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ROCKSPRINGS -Most
people love their pets but
not all can afford to give
· them proper health care
which is why Meigs County
Dog Warden Tom Proffitt
has arranged for a visit from
only visit homes of people
a low cost spay and neuter
you know and should not clinic that includes low cost
eat treats without checking vaccinations on Wednesday,
them for signs of tampering. Nov. 15 at the Meigs
• Walk with childen rather · County Dog Shelter.
than driving from block to
Proffitt said he must have
block.
40 appointments booked for
• If possible, use reflec- Help For Animals, Inc .. a
tive material on costume in nonprofit organization from
order to increase visibility.
Barbour.sville, W.Va., which
Swift said police will also is conducting the clinic. So
be on the lookout for van- far Proffitt says he has 17
dal s and others involved in appointments
booked.
criminal activity during There is a limit of 50
. trick or treat. Those com- appointments for · the one
mitting crimes will be. day, all-day visit.
arrested, he said. ·
Price s for the clinic

Issues trick or treat safety tips

INDEX

,..,c.-,....
...-.II'·

allow for space on the adjacent lot for maintenance,
but voted in favor of the
ordinance as it was consid.
ered.
Council conducted the
fimil reading and approved
an ordinance that . allows
bicycles on sidewalks that
are pan of a multi-purpose
trail such as that now proposed by the Middleport
Development
Group.

KKELLY@MYO"ILYTRIBUNE.COM

2007 Equinox

-·

ordinance carries a $25 permit fee, but eliminates a
per-linear-foot fee as was
originally proposed. It also
eliminates the requirement
of a survey and the permission of tile adjoining
landowners, but holds the
fence's owner responsible
for any boundary issues.
Council
President
Stephen Houchins said he
felt the ordinance should

.

-·

2007 Chft-y Silvenldo .

'

BY KEVIN KELLY

_.,......,.,....,.,

_..

1\\\\\1\l&gt;tl.Uh-.tlllllh 'l ~llll •

Area jobless rates
.dipped in September .

~. ---Erllly,

~. I'IIL.w. •
_,.,,

-

()('I()BI .H!!5 ,.!UUII

· final readings on·ordinances
permitting bicycle~ on village sidewalks and new regMIDDLEPORT
. ulations relating to fences,
Middleport Village Council and introduced three ordiintroduced a proposed ordi- l)anoes ooncemitlg political
nance on MQnday evening si,gns, deposits ·for using
designed to more clearly .p~k facilities, and CBD
define the uses of manufac- definitions.
·
The ordinance governing
tured and modular buildings
in the central business dis- new fences was amended
trict.
after its second reading. As
Council conducted the approved Monday night, the

2007GMEnvoy

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f)\'

BY BILWI J. Ria
BRerooMYDAILYSENTINEl.COM

• Eastern set to
face New Boston.
SeePage.1

....... ~·-·
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....

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Middleport CouncH considers, approves new ordinances

SPoRTS

' WEAmER
2007 Chevy Suburban LT

'\,,

-

NASCAR

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OVCS students donate
Bible study books, A6

include: $25 for a cat
neuter; $40 for a cat spay';'
$45 for a dog neuter (under
30 pounds); $50 for a dog
spay (under 30 pounds).
In addition to the spay and
neutering pr&lt;Jq~dures, low
cost vaccinations will also
be offered and include: $9.
rabies; $11, DHPPLC (distemper, hepatitis, para
influenza, lepto, parvo):
$11 , FVRCP (distemper.
upper respiratory viruS:,
C'alci ); $11, FeLV (felin~
leukemia) ; $11 , bordetella
(kennel cough. dogs only).
In addition the following
services wi 11 also be
offered: $20, heartworn1 test
(for dogs); $25 FeLV/FIV,
test for cats.
When clients fill out an
application at the dog shelter for the services they will

Please -

Ol11k. AS

�'

NATION •

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

WoRLD

wednesct.y, Od:ober as, 2006

BY KA11IY MITCt 'C I

'

AND MAIICY Sua.\R

BY STEWN R, HURST
ASSOCIATEO PRESS \"RITER

. BAGHDAD, Iraq -1\vo
~peeks before U.S. midterm
· elections, American offi_cials unveiled a timeline
Tuesday for Iraq's Shiiteled government to take spe.cific steps to calm the
world's most dangerous
capital and said more U.S.
troops might be needed to
quell the bloodshed.
.
· U.S. officials previously
'Said they were satisfied with
iroop levels and. had expected . to make significant
'reductions by year's end.
But a surge in sectarian
killings, which welled up
this past summer, forced
~hem to reconsider.
At a rare joint news conference with the American
ambassador, the top U.S.
commander in Iraq, Gen.
George Casey, said additional U.S. troops could come
.from inside or outside Iraq .to
."improve basic se,rvices for
.the population of Baghdad."
"Now, do we need more
troops to do that? Maybe.
And, as I've said all along,
if we do, I will ask for the
troops I need, both coalition
and Iraqis," Casey . said.
There are currently 144,000
U.S:forces in Iraq.
The military has expfel'sed
disappointment over its two.month drive to cleanse the
-capital of Sunni insurgents
and Shiite militia fighters
and death squads. But the
.Americans also say that for
the situation.to improve, the
:I~i government must make
:political concessions to
:minority Sunnis.
· ·
· . The timeline grew out of
:t:eeent Washington meetings
at which the Bush adminis·tration sought to reshape its
:traq policy amid mo11nting
· lJ.S. deaths and declining
:domestic support for the 44·month-old war. The plan
was made public a day after
:White House press secre-

tary Tony Snow said the
·U.S. was adjusting its Iraq
strategy but would not issue
any ultimatums.
U.S. officials revealed neither specific incentives for the
Iraqis to implement the plan
nor penalties for. their failure
to do so. U.S. Ambassador
Zalmay Khalilzad said Iraqi
leaders had agreed to the
timelirie, benchmarks heavily
laden with enticements to
Sunni insurgents.
The lack of any real .political consensus even · among
Shiites, howeve,r. has made it
extremely difficult for Iraqi
leaders to keep deadlines;
for example, they missed targeted dates on naming a
government and in moving
forward on constitutional
amendments.
Moreover,
Tuesday's
declarations
lacked specifics on how to
accomplish the goals.
At the news conference
with Casey, Khalilzad said
the timeline would require
Prime Minister Nouri aiMaliki's government to set
dates by the .erld of the year
for completing six key tasks.
Five of the markers are
clearly designed to mollify
Sunni Arabs, the Muslim
sect that makes up the bulk
of the insurgency and is
responsible
for
most
American deaths in Iraq.
The plan seeks deadlines
for passing a law that would
guarantee the sharing of
Iraq's oil wealth, amending
the constitution, turning an
anti-Baathist organization
into a reconciliation body,
disbanding Shiite militias
and setting a date for
provincial elections - all
key issues for Sunnis.
The
de-Baathification
Commission was estab~
lished after the toppling of
Saddam Hussein to ensure
that members of the dictator's political organization
did not hold government
positions.
The sixth measure called

M'I!Mto

Top u.s. commander in Iraq, General George Casey, left. and U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Zalmay Khalilzad answer questions
. during press conference at the heavily fortified Green Zone in Baghdad Tuesday. Iraqi forces should be.able to talle full
control of security in the country within the next 12 to 18 months with minimal American support, Gen. George Casey, the
top U.S. commander in Iraq, said on Tuesday.

a

for "increasing the credibility and capability of
·Iraqi forces."
Casey said Iraqi forces
would be "completely capable" of controlling the country
within the next l 112 years.
"We are about 75 percent
of the way through a threestep process in building
those (Iraqi) forces," the
general said. "It is going to
take another 12 to 18
months or so until I believe
the Iraqi security forces are
completely capable of taking over responsibility for
their own security. That's
still coupled with some
level support from us."
Casey's estimate of when
the Iraqi army will be ready
was noteworthy ·because 1t
has not changed even as the
security situation in the
couniry has deteriorated.
Iraqis are now being killed
at a pace of more th,an, 4Q
each day in sectarian fighting and revenge killing.
Complicating lihe matter
has been the recent outbreak of sustained Shiiteon-Shiite violence in the

of

once relatively calm south
of the country,
· To cu~b the spreading and
increasingly brutal killings,
Khalilzad said the United
Stat¢s was "inducing Iraqi
political and religious leaders who can control or influence armed groups in
Baghdad to agree to stop
sectarian violence," an
apparent reference to recent
secret talks the United
States has conducted with
Sunni insurgents.
~1-Maliki ·has. re~t~ly
satd he would rem m Shiite
militias but so far has taken
little public -action beyond a
dedston to move aside two
police commando leaders.
He issued a ·statement on
Monday saying the military
· had been ordered to take
action against any illegal

armed 'group, but the decla- ai-Maliki draws much of his
ration, like the · timeline . support from al-Sadr.
For that reason, disbandintroduCed on Tuesday,
ing the feared militia group
lacked detail.
· His national .security appears to be a promise that
adviser, Mouwafak ai- is unlikely to be kept in the
Rubaie, sought to add weight near term. Such a move
to the prime minister's direc- would leave the other main
tive in an interview with Shiite militia, · the Badr
CNN. He was, however, Brigade of the Supreme
equally fuzzy ab!lut what Council for the Revolution
in Iraq, or SCIRI, in a domaction would be taken.
"The Iraqi security forces ipant position.
Al-Sadr and SCTRI leader
.are going to take on anyone
. who ·challenges" them," al- Abdul-Aziz al-Hakim maintain a sharp rivalry for
Rubaie said.
Khalilzad said he had · power .over Iraq's Shiite
assurances from al~Maliki majority. Logic dictates that
that radical anti-American both militias be disbanded
which
Shiite cleriC Muqtada al- simultaneously,
Sadr would disband his appears highly unlikely.
Associated Press correMahdi Army. But ai-Sadr
draws much ()f his power spondents
Christopher
from his control over the Bodeen and Hamuz Hendawi
heavily armed fighters. And contributed to this report.

Our
Heroes

~Honor

Nowlnber.11, our ruuion will pause to pay tribute ro the tlwusaJUls
ofllltll tm4 women who ltave proudly served their country during times of
On

College tuition and fees up more than
6 percent at four-year public schools
BY JUSnN POPE

which educate nearly half of average award per student
·· American college students, decliqe. l. Pell Grants . now
had the best showing. cover just 33 percent of fourIt's what passes for good There; tuition and fees rose year public college tuition.
news right now for students just 4.1 percent to $2,272.
The tuition and fee figand parents: This year, the Price
reductions
in ures also don't include livprice of college went up California, home to more ing costs. Factoring in room
only somewhat faster than than a fifth of the nation's and board, the average price
the cost of e:verything else.
two-year public college sru" of four-year public colleges
, Tuition and fees at public dents, checked the average is $12,796. At private colfour-year public colleges increase nationally.
leges, the price is $30,367.
this fall rose $344, or 6.3
The report does not
. Community
colleges
,percent, to an average of remain a tremendous bargain · include for-profit colle,ges.
$5;836, according 'to the relative to other schools.
Colleges defend
the
:College Board's annual Aceounting for financial aid, increases by pointing to
"Trends in College Pricing" the College Board estimates growing enrollment demands,
report, released Tuesday.
their average net cost actual- and saying teaching and
Accounting for inflation, ly declined this year, and is research aren 'tlike other busithe increase was just 2.4 per- iess than $100.
nesses, where the main costs
:cent, the lowest in six years.
At the four-year state can often be reduced through
: But published prices are school level, the price greater efficiency without
:up 35 percent over the last increases baffle many stu- harming quality.
five years - the largest such dents and parents because
·•t could cut costs immeincrease since the Colle$e state finances are fairly diately by just having
Board began keeping data m healthy. Spending by siates everybody in a larger class.
the 1970s. And even though on higher . education has 1 could also·cut costs by not
:most students don't pay that increased nearly 10 percent recruiting the best faculty,"
:run list price, financial aid over th.e last twQ years. or said James Moeser, chan:isn't keeping up.
by about $6 billion. But the cellor bf the University of
: "When public companies extra funds have · merely North Carolina-Chapel Hill,
face budget shortfalls, they slowed tuition increases, which has recently signifisearch for ways to become riot stopped them.
· cantly expanded access for
more efficient. and to cut
Spending from all sources low-income students.
their costs," said James on student aid rose 3.7 perBut, he added: "low
Boyle, president of the cent last year to $134.8 bil- tuition with low quality is no
group College Parents of lion. Over the last decade it bargain." ln such a world,
:America. "For colleges and has nearly ~oubled , even low-income students would
:univ.ersities to continue to accounting for inflation . scrape by to subsidize "the
'hold the public trust, they But on a per-stUdent basis, children of bank presimust also look for ways to grant aid is only inching dents." The better answer.
hold down their costs, and upward. Students are bor- he said. is prices that reflect
not simply continue to raise rowing the rest, often from true costs and financial aid
the price they charge to stu- private lenders.
· for those who need it.
dents and their families."
The trend hardly existed 20
But a national commisAccounting for grant aid years ago, but now "about 20 sion on higher education,
- from the government and percent of the loans stodents while calling for more gov.other sources - the actual are getting, they're getting ernment funding, als\' said
:cost for the typical student is from banks," said College colleges deserve some
:substantially lower than the Board senior ·policy analyst blame for rising prices. Its
·stickcr price: about $2,700 Sandy Baum. Average debt report. finali~ed last month,
:in 20064l7. But that's 8 per- levels are still manageable, noted colleges have few
Cent higher than la~t year.
she said, but some students incentives to lower spendAt private Jour-year col- are in over their heads.
ing because doing so lowers
leges, published tuition and
In 2005-06, more students their prestige. It also says
:fees rose 5.9·rrcent, to an received Pell Grants - the they are usin g much of their
;average
o
$22.218. government's main aid pro- revenue on dubious student
:Accounting for financial aid, gram for Jow-inceme stu- services like "state-of-the'
their net price i' $13,200.
dents - than the year before, ari fitness centers and dor· Public two-year colleges, but total· funding and the mitories."
___
lol'_e_ou_c_AT_Io_N_WR_IT_ER_ _

•

BYTHEBEND

This hang-ups no big deal

..... . ...
'

•

'

.

crises 4IUl pMCe.

17m V&amp;IVIII 's Day, the Daily Sentinel wal publish a very special tribute
ho110ri11g IUWI veterans. You can join in our salute by including the
veuran ill ytRU .life, living or deceased, who have served or is currently
servillg ill a11y branch of the U,S. Armed Forces,
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Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th

Dear Annie: 1 worked
:with "Jim" for two years,
-and we became great friends.
We didn't date due to our
close worlting relationship.
However, Jim changed jobs,
· .and at the time, neither of us
was in a relationship, so we
started seeing each other.
In every respect but one.
-Jim is ·the man I want to
spend the rest of my life
with. Unfortunately, the one
thing has to do with our sex
life. Jim refuses to undress
completely. I have been in a
few intimate relationships,
and we would usually get
totally naked during . sex,
-and we always slept naked.
However, even thoQgh Jim
~n be very romantic and a
good lover. his refusal to
become completely naked
or sleep in the nude is a
major issue for me.
I have asked him to explain
this, and he can't. He is not
even comfortable with me
being naked, although he tolerates it. I know relationships
are about compromise, but I
can't think of a way to meet
him halfway. Either he stays
partially clothed during sex
or I end the relationship .
Neither option is appellling.
Do you have any suggestions?- Wants To Be Nude
Deer Wants 1b Be Nude:
Jim apparently has some
embarrassment . or aversion
toward bare skin. He can talk
to a therapist and work on
that, but it doesn't have to be
a make-or-break issue for
you. If Jim's only flaw is that
he makes love with his
undershirt and socks on, who
cares? He sounds like a great
guy, and you'd be foolish to
let him slip away because
you want to gaze longingly
at his pees. Or wherever.
Dear
Annie:
All
Americans know that the
U.S. health care system is
troubled. The rising cost of
health care, the growing
number of uninsured, the
·strains on local hospitals and
the lack of primary care specialists have been well docu.mented. More and more,
we're hearing that patients
are finding themselves
· unable to see their family
doctor when they need to.
On behalf of our patients,
we are asking that the next
elected U.S. Congress be
"the health care Congress."
That is why thousands of
·family physicians from
across the country recently

Public nr.aetings

chapter are to take two
dishes for the potluck dinjoined together at a rally in
ner which will follow
Thursday, Oct. 26
Washington, D.C. At the
installation.
POMEROY Meigs
rally, my colleagues and I
Monday, Oct. 30
Board
Of
demanded that candidates SWCD
POMEROY - Oh-Kan
running for office from either Supervisors meet in regular Coin Club, 7 p.m., Pomeroy
party commit to fixing our session, noon, at the office.
Library. ·
·
Wednesday, Nov. 1
system before it is too late.
REEDSVILLE -Olive
Annie. there is something
your readers can do to help. Township Trustees, regular
Please let them know about session, 5:30p.m., township
Sunday, OcL 29
the Guide to Health Issues garage.
RACINE - Reunion of
for Voters available online
descendants of John R. and
at www.familydoctor.org.
Grace Dill, I p.m.. home of
This easy-to-use guide proBuddy and Sally Ervin,
vides nonpartisan informa29753 Oak Grove Road,
tion about the top ~ealth
Racine. Take covered dish,
issues facing our country
Thursday, Oct. 26
and questions voters can
POMHROY- Alpha Iota beverages, and family picpose to candictates.
Masters, II :30 a.m hin- tures. Retta Dill Arnett
observing 80th birthday.
We all must get involved cheon at Coventry Manor.
to ensure that Americans
TUPPERS PLAINS have access to quality health VFW Post 9053 will meet
care for generations to come. at 7 p.m. at the hall in.
- Larry S. Fields, M.D., Tuppers Plains.
. Wednesday, Oct•.25
Fellow and President,
HARRISONVILLE
. LANGSVILLE
American Academy of Harrisonville Chapter 255, · Evangelist Gary Polard,
Family PbysiciaDs ·
Order of the Eastern Star, Mullins, W.Va. , speaking 7
Dear Dr. t'lelds: Thank
you for showing our readers will hold its I OOth annual p.m. Oct. 25-27 at the House
how to become involved in installation of officers at of Healing Ministries, S.R.
the future decisions of their 7:30 p.m. Members of the 124, Langsville. Special
health care. We hope they
will look for your brochure.
Dear Annie: My wife had
an affair with her best
friend's husband. How did I
find out? Her friend alerted · POMEROY - Leah Oi'd the "bummers" arrive. The
me. I had no due. I trusted presented a review of "The slaves eagerly await their
her. Through her · best March" by E. L. Doctorow freedom, but then have
friend's diligent, exhaus- when
the . -Middlepon .. nothing to do but follow the
tive, extensive investigat- Literary Club met recently army. One of these is Pearl,
ing, they were caught. The at the Pomeroy Library. ·
the daughter of a slave and
friend discovered their regThe novel is based on the the owner of the plantation,
ular meeting place and historical Civil War march who at about 14 is already
arranged for a waitress to by
General
William strikingly beautiful. Her
get a plloto of the two of Tecumseh Sherman through story carries the reader from
them lovingly . holding Georgia, ,South Carolina this early raid to the end of
hands across the table. The and North Carolina. While the march and the end of the
friend also managed to find the controversial Sherman war. She becomes a druman incriminating e-mail and plays a constant role mer "boy," a nurse, a care,·
two messages on her hus- tbroughout the book, . it is taker for her "step-marn," a
band's cell fhone.
the moving army itself and substitute parent for a small
Annie,
don't want more than .20 mdividuals, boy, and finally a young per·
advice. My marriage has some ficttttm~s and some son who is ready to move on
ended. To all of you hubbies real, who provtde the stones · ·to a new and better life. .
out there, don't be a naive and emottons that tllustrate . 1\vo confederate soldiers,
ostrich. There are signs. Be just how war overturns peo- Will and Arty, provide some
aware and alert. - D.G.
comedy in their many mispie's hves.
Dear D.G.: Thanks for
Ord used a map to show · guided exploits.
Arty
the warning. Your ex-wife's the path of Shertnan 's believes that he is on a misfriend sounds like . she march to Atlanta and sion from God and that Will
should be with the FBI.
Savannah and the deviOU$ . is his helper as they trade
Annie's Mailbox is writ- double routes used by the uniforms from Confederate
ten by Kathy MitcheU and master strategist who split Army to Union Army whenMarcy Sugar, longtime edi· his troupes to c&lt;;mtmue ever they feel the need.
tors of the Ann Landers through South Carohna and
Many individuals are
column, Please e-mail your North Carohna.
.
introduced . by
author
questions to anniesmailThe book begms as Doctorow and illuSifate the
box@comcast.net, or write Atlanta has f~len and out- devastation of the march.
ro: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. ~ders are roamt.ng the outly- One is Private Brazil who
Box 118190].. Chicago, 11.. m~ areas lookmg for su~~ has done nothing during the
66611. To JIM out more phes, mostly food and 3;01- campaign but try to stay
about Annie's Mailbox, mals, lJ!ld often d_estroymg alive. When all those of
and read feahu'es by other all that ts left. At Fteldstone,
CI"Mkkrs Syndicate writers a wealthy planter, his wife,
and cartoonists, visit the and their two sons make
Creators Syndicate Web their escape to the supposed
page at www,creators.com. safety of Savannah JUSt as

Reunions

Clubs and
organizations

Address : ------~---

Phone:---.,.--------

.
k-----------------~
.

The Daily Sentinel

Corporal

Bob Johnson ·
1991-1992
Marines DeSert.Storm
tove, Your Family ·

Refreshments and costume
judging following trick or
treat.
Annual
Sleepy
Hollow event canceled due
to high water at marina.
POMEROY Caring
and Sharing Support Group,
I :30 p.m., Meigs MultiPurpose Senior Center.
Topic will be stress during
the holidays. ·
Fnday, Oct. 27
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner, 4:30 to
6:15 p.m. , Middleport
Church of Christ, comer of
Fifth and Main. Soup beans,
com bread, hot dogs and
sauce. desse11 will be served.

Other events ·

Saturday, Nov. 4
SYRACUSE - Edward
Wells will celebrate his 90th
birthday Nov. 4. Cards may
be sent to him at P. 0 . Box
836, Syracuse, Ohio 45779L
His daughters are Ruetta
(Bob) Crow of Syracuse and
Jayne (Danny) Mitchell of
Ravenswood. W. Va.

Thursday, OcL 2fi
MIDDLEPORT
Halloween party following
Trick or Treat, in FeeneyBennett Park, across from
the legion post and next to
the Middleport Post Office.

Birthdays ·

Middleport Literary C.lub meeting held
higher rank have been
killed. Br.azil is made a .
seq1eant and discovers that
he ts a namralleader of men
and likes doing it. Other
characters
are
Emily
Thompson, a southern
maiden lady who becomes a
nurse in the northern army,
High Pryce, a news correspondent from London, Mr.
Culp, a master photographer, Coalhouse Walker, · a
freed slave and pioneer soldier in the Union Army, and
numerous others.
In a brief summary of
Sherman's life, Ord noted
that he is a native of
Lancaster. His foster father,
_Thomas Ewing, was a U.S.
Senator and was probably
instrumental in having
Sherman appointed to the
Military · Academy at West
Point. He was there at the
same time that most of the
generals of The Civil War,
both'· Nonh and South,
attended and maintained a
close personal relationship
with many of them for his
entire life.
Ord
said
General
Sherman was called "Uncle.
Billy" by his men. He loved
them and grieved at their

deaths, but he truly believed
that he wa~ on the right side
of the war and that the sooner it was brought to .an end
the better the entire nation ·
would be.
After the review, 16 mem'
bers and
one
guest
answered roll call by comparing the devastation of
ci vii war with any other war
or natural disaster. The next
meeting will be held at the
Pom_eroy Library on No':· I.
Nadme Gaebel wtll revtew
Labynnth by Kate Mosse.
Pat Holter will serve as
hoste5s for the meetmg.

'Gold star awarded to local soldier
MIDDLEPORT - Sgt.
Joshua R. Hooten of the
U~ited States Marine Corps
was recently awarded the
Navy and Marine Corps
Achievement Medal (Gold .
.Star in lieu of second
award) for his support in
Operation Iraqi Freedom .
More specifically Hooten
was
awarded
for:
"Professional achievement
in the superior perfortnance
of his duties while serv.ing
as tower watch supervisor,
for Marine Air Control,
Squadron I. On March 24.
2006 · in
support
of
Operation Iraqi ·Freedom,
Sgt. Hooten was working
local control when an AV8B Harrier landed .on a
closed runway and crashed
into construction equipment. · Hooten immediately

sgt. Joshua R. Hooten
declared an emergency and
coordinated wjth ground
control to direct emergency
personnel to the accident

site. He continued to simultaneously coiurol multiple
flights of aircraft while
overseeing the emergency,
remaining calm and collected. Sgt. Hooten's timely ·
professional response prevented any further incidents
between · emergency vehicles and arriving aircraft."
Hooten is a 2000 graduate
of Meigs High School. He is
the son of Lisa McDonald
and stepson of Harley
McDonald of Middleport.
He is the brother of Jessica
(Dustin) Butcher and grandson of Jean Gilmore, all of
Middleport. He is the grandson of the late Bob Gilmore.
In addition to serving in
Iraq , Hooten has also
served in Afghanistan and
is currently stationed in
Yuma, Ariz.

Suspect a natural gas leak?
First; move your feet!
•
Then call when you're down the street.

I

Outside or in, detecting a natural gas leak is easy. To help you SMEll a leak from a gas

Rocksprings Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center and the Meigs
County RSVP are proud to announce the development of the
Tender Hearts Program. The goal of the program is to enrich
your life as well as the lives of the residents.

Volunteers age 55+ are needed in the Reception Area and in .
Activities. Join us at Rocksprings on October, 27th, 2006 between
the hours of 2-4 pm ., for the kickoff of the

lll Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769 ·
(740) 992-2155·

singing nightly.
Friday, Oct. 27
TUPPERS PLAINS
Bethel Worship Center
hosts "Heroes Unmasked,"
a fall outreach program, for
children of all ages, 6 to 9
p.m. Food, games, candy.
Stories a~ut Bible characters
at
667-9748.
Information at 667-6793.
Sunday, Oct. 29
POMEROY
"The
Uplifters'' at Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church, 6
p.m. at the church. Soup
supper will follow.
SYRACUSE. - Asbury
United Methodist Church
hosts a songfest for the
United Methodist Church
Cooperative Parish, 7 p.m .

Church events

Your Name: - - - - - - - - -

In Honor Of

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

ANNIE'S MAILBOX Community Calendar

-U
.

The Daily Sentinel

PageA3

Tender Hearts Program.

At this time we will discuss the program, answer your questions,
and complete the application process for those interested.
•

line or appliance, a familiar odor like rotten eggs is often added to natural gas. Or you
might SEE blowing dirt, bubbling water, or an unusual area of dead vegetation. Aleaking

'

pipeline mign: also make,a hissing sound you can HEAR.
Natural gas pipelines are the nation's safest method of transporting energy. V\lhile it's
unlikely that a problem could occur, accidents can happen. Remember to call the Ohio
Utilities Protection

Servke (OUPS) at 1~362-2764 at l!!asi two ,ox;rldng days before

you slart to dig for arvy landscaping 0&lt; construction project on your property-it's the

law! And if you ever suspect a gas ieak-walk away, right away. \Nhen you're dear of the
RNa, call your local

natural gas_companyor9·1-1 for emergency response.

Refreshments will be served, If you have any questions, you
can contact Diana Coates, RSVP Director. at 740-992·2161,
candy Simpson, Administrator Rocksprings or Patty Lance,
Rocksprings Business Office Manager, at 740-992-6606.
Th1s safety awareness message is brought to you by the natur1l gas member complm•es of the

Oh io Gn As$ociation.
L__ _ _ _ _ _ __

•

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentiilel
.

..

www.mydallysentlnel.com

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

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

VIEW

Sensible.·
· Needs for 911 l1111Juestionable .
Dear Editor:
For years now, we have been told in the case of emergency, call 911. This is reinforced in the television shows
we watch and the advertising we hear on the radio. Every
county in Ohio except Meigs has the availability in case of
emergency to just pick up the tel~phon~ and call 911. On
Nov. 7, we will have an opportumty to JOin the rest of the
country by approving the 911 initiative.
· We are being asked to approve a 50-cent monthly surcharge on our telephone bilL The approval of this will also
allow the ~ounty to receive the 37-cents per month currently charged on everyone's cell phone. Without or own 911
system, this mandatory cell phone charge will go elsewhere
in the state.
911 makes sense.for Meigs County; ask any child what
number they ·should call in an emergency. For that matter,
ask a senior citizen what number they would like to remember for an emergency call.
·
911 just makes sense.
Tom Reed

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MARK

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992-2156.
Our main number Is

(740) 992-2t56.
Department extensions are:

dressy? I could change into comes the hormone therapy,
something more casual," I then the breast implants,
tossed back. I don 't know if then the · ... well, never
at me as if I were wearing a
large flounder on my head.
there really is anything mind. Sorry, it's just not my
"WhatT I knew what she
more casual. No shin at all. thing. I didn't marry a
meant, but I wanted to hear
I suppose. Or maybe one of woman so I could become
Jim
her say it.
those hospital gowns that one.
Mullen
'That shirt."
doesn 't close down the
But it's not just that. Can
That · shirt? This shirt was
back.
you imagine a man saying
one of my favorites. It wa~
We were going. to the , to a woman. "You're not
actually made in Hawaii.
nei ghbors for dinner. If you . wearing tha1, are you?" Not
How often are you going to change, but plenty of time can·t wear an aloha shirt to twi-ce, he wouldn't.
find a Hawaiian shirt made to wonder if I was making dinner with friends, where
Sue knew I was not backin Hawaii? Once in a life- some horrible fa~hion ·faux can you wear one' It's not ing down on this. I had
time? 1\vice? It's all cotton, . pas as we . niade our way JS if I, Y&gt;as wearing my . drawn a line in the 'laundry
not rayon like most of them through the D.C. traffic pajamas to the office or a basket. I was wearing this
-n owadays. It is a work of like wearing white after pair of buckskin pant&gt; to a Hawai ian shirt and that was
an, the Rembrandt of my Labor Day or leaving a PETA rally.
the end of the discussion.
price tag hanging off my
closet museum.
"Didn't you get I he
" Wait a minute,'' she said
slee'(e.
"It makes you look fat ."
memo?" I thought but did and Y&gt;ent back up stairs. In
The Hawaiian· shirt had a not say. " They've got this two minutes she was back,
I looked in the mirror.
The shirt did not make me bright unnatural blue back· new thing now. It's called wearing a Hawaiian shirt of
look fat. My fat made me ground with large black and . 'Casual
Saturday.' her own. Bolder-and sillier.
· ivory colored leaf designs Basically. it says I get to
look fat.
"Oh no," .I said, "I don 't
Sue has said, " You're not all over it. The word "bol"' wear whatever I like and wam to be one of those
wearing that, are you?'• so comes to mind. The words nobody can say anything couples that dresses like
often that I don't really hear "devil-may-care" come to about it. especially my wife.· twins. People will make fun
it any more. Sometimes I mind. The word " beach- I'll e-mail you a ,·opy. It 's of us behind our backs.''
think she would say it if I comber" comes to mind. signed by Jimmy Buffet.
"Oh. I wouldn't worry
were wearing a tuxedo to a The words "the Hawaiian You can 'ee how casual about that." 'he said,' 'Tm
formal dinner at the White Punch cartoon character" clothes wrecked hi' career... sure they already do."
come to mind.
House.
I know there are men out
(Jim Mul/m is the autlwr
"I think there's a ukulele there who let their wives of :· It Takes a Vi/loge Idiot:
"You're not weanng
that?" she would say in the attic," Sue said. " You pick their clothes for them. Complicating the Simple
moments' before we stepped want me to wait while you I figure it's the first step Life.. and .. Baby 's First
out of the house, leaving go get itT'
toward having tiJe complete Tanoo . .. You can reach him
"Do you think it's too sex change operation. Next 01 jim_mul/en@mvwarcom.)
me not enough time to
"You're not wearing that,

are you?" Sue was looking

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Wtlliam Paaick Rizer, 56, Nitro, W.Va. and foonerly of
Syracuse, passed away at 9 a.m. Friday, Oct. 20, 2006, in the
Genesis Valley Care Center in South Charleston, W.Va..
- He was born Dec. 20, 1949, in Hartfool, W. Va., son of
Wtlliam Edward Rizer of Nitro and the late Wtlma Marie
Lavender Ri 7.er. He was a 1
d carpenter and a member of
Local # 1169 Caqlenters Union at Point Pleasant
In addition to his mother he was preceded in death by a
brother, Dennis. Michael Rizer.
·
· In addition to his father he is survived by his wife, Sharon
Cogar Rizer, four daughters, Kristy L (Joe) Saunders of Nitro, ·
Amy M. (George) Reitmire, Tara J. (Michael) Ferrell and
Billie Jo Rizer. all of Sy,racuse. He is ;Uso survived by six
grandchildren: Kolten Saunders, Mickenzie Ferrell, Bradley
Reitmire, Britney Cottrell, Michael Shawn Ferrell and
Bethany Ferrell; a sister, Vicki L (Roger) · Tolley of
Sissonville, W.Va., and a brother, Kenneth H. (Paula) Rizer of
Portland.
'
Funeral servi-.es were held 2 p.m. Thesday, Oct. 24, 2006, in
the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. Friends called from
noon until the time of the funeral service: Cremation followed.

LUCASVILLE No
one was there for Jeffrey
Lundgren.
The cult leader who once
had more than a dozen followers had no one to mourn
him Tuesday at his execution. Not his wife, not his
son, not even the laWyers
who took up his case.
The brothers of one of the
five family members he had
taken .one at a time into a
barn, bound and shot, were
there for their.sister. So was
the prosecutor who tried the

case.

Lundgren had only the
warden at the Southern
Ohio
Correctional
Institution and a prison
_
AP plloto guard who ensured that he
would cooperate with his Death penalty opponents, from left, Sister Alice .Gerdeman, Daphne Miller and Julie Prybysz
set up signs in front of the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility in Lucasville, Tuesday. A
executioners.
"Jeffrey preferred we not small group of ,death penalty protesters gathered at" the prison prior to the execution of
attend,", said James A. Jeffery Lundgren, who was convicted·of killing a family of five in 1989.
Jenkins, one of his lawyers.
was there," Bailey said after Avery family members
The upshot of his teach"Jeffrey thanked us but
the
execution,
also
attended
cleaned
up
after
dinner.
ing:
Jesus would return to
. Mildred Fern Cheesebrew, 93, Logan, died Monday, Oct. asked us not to attend."
another
by
Kent
Clisby,
Lundgren
told
a
jury
in
earth only when the
23, 2006, at Hocking Valley Community Hospital in Logan.
Lundgren, 56, was con- brother.
1990 that he was a prophet Kirtland Temple he had
She was preceded in death by her husband, Rev. Frank victed of murdering the
Lundgren showed no of God and therefore not
Cheesebrew.
been dismissed from was
Avery family: Dennis, .49; remorse for his crimes as he
worthy of the death penalty. recaptured.
Funeral will ·be held immediately following visitation Chery1; 46; and their daughawaited his death.
"It's not a figment of my
from 5-7 p.m. and Order of Eastern Star Ser\-ice at 7 on ters, Trina, 15, Rebecca, 13,
He told the jury the spiri" I profess -my love for imagination that I can in
Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2006 at J.E. Humphrey Funeral Home and 7-year-old Karen in God. my family , for my
tually
unclean had to be
fact talk to God, that I can
in Shawnee. A-gra:vcside service will be held at I p.m. on 1989. No one on Ohio's children, for Kathy (his hear his voice," he told the dea It with and referred to
Thursday, Oct. 26, ai Riverview Cemetery in Middleport. . death row has killed more.
wife)_ 1 am because you jurors. "I am a prophet of the killings as "pruning the
Lundgren was bound, not are,.. Lundgren said in his God. I am even more than a vineyard.''
with duct tape as the final statement. Lundgren ·prophet."
Lundgren was careful to
·
Averys, but with four fabric m&amp;rried Kathryn after the
Lundgren formed the cu It make sure no one would be
·
George Horak, 90, of Pomeroy,. passed away on TUesday, straps to a g11mey in the killings.
with about 20 members looking for the Averys.
The evidence against him after he was dismrssed in Before the murders, he
October 24, 2006, at Hickroy Creek Nursing Home in Athens. death chambet. There, he
received the chemicals that showed that . Lundgren, 1987 as a lay minister of the directed Cheryl Avery to
Services will be held at 11 a.m. on Friday, October 27,
killed him 17 years after he upset by what he thought Reorganized Church of
write to her family and
2006, at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in. Pomeroy.
killed.
was
the
Avery
family's
lack
Jesus
Christ
of
Latter
Day
inform them that they were
·Visitation will be held from 5-8 p.m. with a vigil service at
He could see the witness- of faith, arranged a dinner Saints, an offshoot of the
moving to Wyoming and
7:45 p.m. at the Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. A full es but didn't look. Donald
hosted by cult members in main Mormon church.
would provide coritact
· obituary will run in Thursday's edition of The Daily Sentinel. Bailey, the brother of
1989 in the northeast Ohio
Lundgren said God com- information when they got
Cheryl Avery, watched the . city of Kirtland. Afterward, manded him, through interexecution and rose when he and his followers led the pretation of Scriptures, to settled.
The case was cracked
Lundgren was brought into Averys one by one · kill the Averys, who moved
the death chamber. But Dennis first , Karen last from Missouri in ' 1987 to · eight months later when a
dissident cult member,
Lundgren avoided eye con- to their deaths in a pit in a follow his teachings.
tact upon entering and - barn. ·
Some cult members upset that his wife had been
to
become
stared at the ceiling during
Each was bound, and moved into a rented farm- selected
his final statement and as he Lundgren shot each victim house with Lundgren, call- Lundgren 's second wife,
waited for the poison to take two or three times. A chain ing him dad, sharin~ their tipped off authorities. The
effect.
saw was used to muffle the paychecks and anendmg his bodies were found in
POMEROY - Here is a listing of dates and times when
"I
wanted
him
to
know
I
gunfire
while remaining classes.
January 1990.
local trick-or-treat events· will take place:
6-7 p.m.; Thursday, Oct. 26, Pomeroy, Middleport,
down .from 341,000 in September 2005.
Rutland, Syracuse, Racine, Wolf Pen Community;
August. The number of
County and city rates are
6 to 7:30p.m. Thursday, Oct. 26, Le~ Falls;
7-8 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 26, Portland,
unemployed has decreased unadjusted, meaning they
from PageA1
6-7 p.m., Monday, Oct. 30, Chester, Reedsville, Tuppers
by 32,000 over the year do . not take into account
from PagiA1
Plains.
·
,
348,000.
The seasonal adjustments in
from
Residents are asked to tum their porch lights on if they
The number of workers September unemployment employment.
receive an appointment
are participating in the annual event for. children.
unemployed in Ohio in rate for Ohio was down
(The Associated Press titne and pay for the serSeptember was 316,000, from 5.9 percent in contributed to this story.)
vices in .advance. The dead-

Deaths

Mildred Cheesebrew

George Horak

.

Clinic

line for applications is
Friday. Nov. 10. To make an
appointment for an animal
call Proffitt as the Meigs
County Dog Shelter at 9923779. Because Proffitt is on
the road several times a day
if no one answers leave a
message on the answering
machine and your call will
be returned.
··we need this in our atea
and I'm going to try· to get
the clinic to come every
other month." Proffitt said .
adding that a Dec. 20 clinic
is tentatively sc heduled at
the shelter as is one for
March . Proftin said the visiting clinic is part of an outreach program for the com·munity:

·Forked
Run
from PageA1

seems to have everything
nature has to offer.
POMEROY -The Meigs County Board of Elections
Gouts, ghosts and goblins
will be open from 9 a.m. to noon on Nov. 4 for absentee greeted visitors to the park
voting. Nov. 6 is ihe deadline for casting an absentee ballot area where the party was
in person at the board offJCC.
·
·
taking place: Skeletons,
Those requesting absentee ballots musi mail their appli- tombs, vampires and witch.cations so that they are received .at the board office by Nov. es, along with displays of
. 4. Those who cast ballots in the general election must pro- carved pumpkins, inflated
vide a form of identification when requesting a ballot.
funny figures, some animated, some not, wen:, used in
displays as campers prepared to compete for the
MIDDLEPORT· The Fellowship of Christian Students. prize of being the best decois sponsoring a fifth quarter party and coffee houliC Friday rated camp.
evening directly following the Meigs High School football
"Every spot is filled ," said
game until midnight at the Middleport Church of Christ's Cindy Chadwell who was
· Family Life Center. Entertainment will be provided by the making it a family outing as
'band Troth. Ravored coffees and fruit smoothies will be her husband Jim and others
served. Cost of admission is $1 and a canned food item. All food scurried about tacking up
collected will be donated to the Rejoicing Life Food Bank. The . signs about the evening's
· event is for all high school and middle school students.
activities. and preparing for
'
the big chili supper to come
HAUNTED
where everyone eats free.
ARIEL THEATRE
The late afternoon and
MARIETTA- A special meeting of the executive com- evening brought lots of
3 Terrif~ing Floors
The
children
mittee of Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional activity.
OcL 26-31
Development Dis~rict wi!Ibe ~eld ~t 6:30p.m. on Oct. 31 enjoyed games and crafts
Open Nightl~· at 6
and General Policy Council w11l meet at 8 p .m. at Manetta conducted by the adults and
trick or treating ar{)und the
Country Club. 705 Pike St., Marietta.
Cllartene Hoelllch/photo
$7 Adults
campsites. Then as dusk set Be wary, a vampire is here. says Audrionna Pullins as she
$5 Stuilets
in, they settled around a decorates the family campsite.
·
campfire for storytelling.
IFYOUDARE!
"It's so much fun we group around a campfire
scary of course, followed by
MIDDLEPORT - Members of Middleport Masonic
The Ariel-Dater Hall
come every' year," chimed a filling treat bags.
Lodge will hand out candy at the Masonic Temple during a haunted hayride.
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-ARTS (2787)
trick or treat Thursday evening.
CBD to include businesses
now located there.
Council also:
from PageA1
o Voted
· unanimou&gt;ly
against hiring an applicant
' as a call-in police disdays after the election.
. The new regulations for patcher. •
• Approved a resolution
DARWIN - A one-vehicle accident Sunday on U.S. 33 the central busi ness district eliminating inactive water
strengthen and clarify lansent Middleport man to an area hospital with injuries, the
Soop Bean~
guage relating to the use of department accounts.
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reported.
torn Urt•ad
• Excused Council mem manufactured and modular
James R. Ellis, 19, 829 Page St., was transported to office units, and prohibits bers Sandra Brown and
Hot Dogs &amp; Apple Pic
Holzer Medical Center by Meigs County EMS following mobile and manufactured Jeff Peckham 'from the
the 10 p.m. accident, according to the patroL
homes
111
the . CBD. meeting.
Troopers said Ellis was westbound when he swerved the Councilman Ferman Moore
o Approved
ap,propria(;toryland Belicwr~ "Shl'lh~ St•arl~ ••
sports utility vehicle he operated to avmd colhs10n w1th a said the lan guage . a' it tions adjustments for the
&amp; Da\'C and l)('hbil' Uaik~
deer and lost control of the vehicle.
.
exists relating to manufac- mayor·, office. lite depart The ve~icle went off the right side of the road, struck a tured office units, " leave ment and police depanment.
o Appro' ed payment of
ditch and overturned, the report sa1d.
room for interpretation."
The SUV had severe damage and Ellis was citeq for failThe new regulations also bilh in the amount of
ROad CR 1241 R~~i~~~!J.~
$12.725.26.
amend
permitted
uses
in
the
ure to controL

Christian coffee house

•

Beach and moan

The Daily Sentinel
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Voting deadlines

SYEARS

Lerten to rlre ediwr are welcome. They should be less.
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include addre.~s and telephone number. No
unsigned letters &gt;rill be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities: Letters.of
thanks to organi:ations and individuals will not be accepted for publicarion. -

all stories is to

BY IOHN McCARTHY

MIDDLEPORT - Leaf pickup will be~in in Middleport
on Nov. 1, according to Village Admimstrator Bradford
Anderson.
The street department will begin pickup on the lower end
of town and work towards uptown. Residents are asked to
rake leaves to the curb for pickup.

I PoDS

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

1n

,.

Leaf pickup

•

Our main concern

No one there to mourn cult leader at execution

Jobless

Today is Wednesday, Oct. 25, the 298th day of 2006.
There are 67 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Oct. 25, 1854, the "Charge of the Light Brigade" took
place during the Crimean War as an English brigade of
more than 600 men, facing hopeless odds, charged the
Russian army duting the Battle of Balaclava and suffered
heavy losses ..
On this date:
In 1400, author Geoffrey Chaucer died in London.
In 1760, Britain's King George III succeeded his late
grandfather. George I L
In 1918, the Canadian steamship Princess Sophia
foundered' off the coast of Alaska; some 350 people perished.
·
In 1939, the drama "The Time of Your Life," by William
Saroyan, opened in New York.
_
Thought for Today: ."Life is not a spectacle or a feast; it
is a predicament." - George Santayana, Spanish-born
philosopher ( 1863-1952).

be accurate. If you know of an error

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Trick-or-treat times in
Meigs communities

TODAY IN HISTORY

Correction Policy

www.mydailysentinel.com

Local Briefs

THE NATION's ISOLATION..•

· Pomeroy

Reader Services

Wednesday, October 25, 2oo6

P.Rher

ple would have lost a child ally makes a better case for
. About 20 days before
to abOrtion, had they not the war we're in than the
Election
Day,
the
Associated Press wire ran
h&lt;Jppened upon his speech.
White House itself?
He's
no
strariger
to
lonely
This election will be a
an excerpt from Republican
fights. He rel:ently ushered character test for the elecSen. Rick Santorum 's 2005
book, "It Takes a Family"
through the bipartisan Iran torate. If you believe that
Kathryn
Freedom and Support Act Rick Santorum should have
(Intercollegiate
Studies
Lopez
and he is constantly focus- shut his mouth about (to
Institute, 2005). In it,
ing attention on the threat take just one of his oppoSantorum had dared to write
that we face from Iran . nents ' favorite examples)
the following: "Children of
two parents who are workWhile most candidates are how fundamental the family.
ing don't need more things. to believe they did it for any cutting and running from is to children and to our.
They need us! In far too other reason than to suggest Iraq and anything like long- couimy - how children·
many families with young to Pennsylvania voters that term fortitude on the War on need parents more than they
children, both parents are Santorum is a Neanderthal. Terror, Santorum is warning need stuff-. then you want
working, when, if they real- But can anyone really dis- us about the nature of our someone else. Bob Casey
ly took an honest look at the agree with what he wrote? enemy and the long haul.
Jr. , a prirn:eling who doesn't
budget, they might confess Santorum faces the possibil- · Pennsylvania voters are even do .his debate prep
that both of them really ity of defeat this November . faced with a clear choice. work, is waiting in the
don't need to; or at least because he doesn't say what They
can
vote
for wings, ready to be one of
may not need to work as he thinks people want to Santorum, who has shown America's 100 senators. He
hear, but what he believes adult leadership, or for won't trouble you with tiremuch as they do."
In the book, the senator should be said. He's a truth- Democrat Bob Casey Jr., some warnings about the ·
continued: "Some are work- . teller; for .that, Democratic who ducks too many erosion of the family, or
ing because they think they chairman Howard Dean debates because his petfor- about 'the fact that wellmust buy their kids and calls him "one of the most mances at them are simply armed- fanatics are hard at
themselves more things that . mean-spirited and corrupt embarrassing. Their votes work plotting to kill us, our
they 'need' - instead of Republicans
in will not mlly ..elect a senator allies, our troops. He won't
giving of themselves to Washington."
but also set a tone for 2008. bother with too much of
Translation: We hate him They will send a message as substance. -He has his eyes
their kids. And for some
parents, the purported need because our special-interest to how serious we are about on happier topics: getting
to provide things for their groups want him · gone. the War on Terror, about the elected, and getting rechildren simply provides a Serving in Congress since struggle to preserve the tra- elected, and . . _ what a
convenient rationalization 1991, Santorum has been a ditional family, and about leader.
for pursuing a gratifying stalwart defender of inno- the importance of leaderFor the voters of the
career outside the home. cent human life. One night ship itself. Are we willing to Keystone State, this is a gut
But in this world, at a time in 1998, even though he face the truth about th'e check. It will have consewhen it is increasingly diffi- knew the Senate did not enemy, an enemy that wants . quences far beyond 2006,
cult to raise children well, have enough votes to over- to destroy us and our way of and
far .
beyond
we should all recognize that ride Bill Clinton's veto of a life? Are we willing to Pennsylvania.
our kids really need fewer ban on partial-birth abor- · embrace a politician like · (Kathryn Lopez is the edithings and more mom and tion, Santorum stayed · at Santorum who - far from to~ of National Review
work and .talked about what being a rubberstamp, as Online (www.nationalredad."
The AP editors had no abortion really is. He would Casey ridiculously alleges 1'iew.com). She can be conostensible reason for run- later learn that a TV-flip- -. says what he believes on tacred at klopez@ natiorwl·
ning this excerpt; it's hard ping young unmarried cou- important issues, and actu- review.com.)

111 Court Street• Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992~2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

READER'S

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Santornm speaksfor America

The Daily Sentinel
'

PageA4

,,

-

~~

.

Council meetings

pm

Distributing candy

Council

For the Record
.

Harvest Festival

Highway Patrol

Saturday, Oct. 28, 2006
Starts at Noon

a

Free Meal

Singing

I Assembl

'

�.. ••

..
•

The Daily Sentinel

'

PageA6. .·

LocAL • STATE

w~.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

October as. 200fi'

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

LocAL ScHEDULE
'""hill'
_
_
_
_ _eo1ege
POMEROY
- A
80hedule
Of~
. , . from Gdl. Melg8 8tld Mason OOlftiM

. . Womono-.
d"''"'""
COLLooo

RiO

G~ande

It Ohio Dominican, 3 p.m.

Jlw!ldty'ITom•nent VOiaybell
Eastern YS. New Boston (at Wellston), 6
p.m . ..

CoUogo \loiiOyl&gt;oll
Rio G..- at Mouotlan State, 1 p.m.
Fdd . . . . . . . .

roaenn

Athens at GoNia Academy, 7:30p.m.
Pl. Pleasant at Heltlert Hoover, 7:30p.m.
Sout!1 Gallia ot Lincoln CC , 7:30p.m.
AIYer Valley al Coal GIOYO, 7:30 p.m.
llolp&lt;o ati'Aeigs, 7:30 p.m.
·
Big Creole at Hannan, 7:30p.m.
COLLooo
Country

c-

RIO Grande Red White invite, ~p.m .

.,_n

Snt . . . . . .

·,

I L ltljo[,...

....

Local Weather

Working on the project to purchase Bil:!le study books for overseas are from the left, front,
Tina Sargent, Jay Jarvis (homeroom teacher), Michael Wright, Braulyn Carter, Annie
carman; second row, Andrea VanMeter, Kyle Scouten, Luke Hamad, Ale.x Trent, and back
row, Todd Simms, Joey Absten, Grant Foster.

•'
'

~

Today's Forecast
Fonloasl lor WadlE I I hJ, Ocl25

Ohio State cloSes 6 Curtis family reunites
elevators that fail
emergency brake tests
BY ANDREW

In the past year, the university's elevator fel,l3ir ser- .
WEI SH.IfUGGINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
vice responded to stx complaints about the elevator
COLUMBUS Six .where Polakowski died.
campus elevators failed
In three cases, a problem
safety tests conducted by occurred because the elevaOhio State University after tor was either overt~
a freshman was pinned and someone was · jumping·
killed by an elevator in a inside or someone was temdormitory, university offi- porarily trapped, according
cials said TUesday.
to university records. 1lte
.Six of 29 campus eleva- records don't provide additors tested since the acci- tional details.
dent Friday failed a stan~
Stradley Hall's otber eledard brake test, said Molly vator also had three comRanz, Ohio State student plaints that involved jumpaffairs director of facilities. mg. overloading or tempoThey will be closed until rary entrapment.
The umversity is testing
they have been repaired and
recertified, officials said at a all 68 residential elevators,
Ranz said, including 41
news conferenoe.
All six elevators had high-rise elevators similar
passed full-scale tests to the one where the accirequired every five years, dent happened.
That elevator and another
including an August 2003
one
in Stradley Hall were
test that approved the elevaamong
those shut down by
tor where the accident happened, Ranz said.
. the state Department of
In addition, that elevator Commerce. Brake5 failed on
passed spot safety checks· in both when tested at 125 perDecember, June and July, cent of their load capacity.
she said.
·
Ohio State plans to have
all high-rise elevators in
dormitories tested by·friday
and the rest by next week.
fire officials say the elevator that killed Andrew ,
Polakowski, 18, of Erie, Pa.,
exceeded its 2,500-pound
weight capacity by as much
as 1,100 pounds when 24
people crowded onto it.
Polakowski was the last
person in the group of students to enter the elevator
on Stradley Hall's third
floor when it unexpectedly
began to descend with the
doors open, cimpus police
said. Polakowski, a prt!business major, was pinned
when he tried to escape
through a gap between the
top of the elevator doors
and the third floor. He died
because he couldn't breathe,
·the coroner said.
University police said
Thesday alcohol was not
involved in the accident
and there was no evidence
of a prank.
1lte students "simply
wanted to stay together as a
group so they could leave the
building at the same time,"
said Rick Amweg, assistant
university police chief.

POMEROY - The 99th
annual reunion of the Cwtis
family of Meigs County
was held at the American
Legion Hall in Alexandria,
Ohio recently.
. The family originated
with · David and Sarah
(Grow) Curtis arriving in
Meigs County in 1811 .
Charles
Curtis
of
Dayton, president, conducted the meeting where
an original photo of Hoit
Williams
and
Mary
Catherine (fosterCurtis
was displayed, by Keith
Ashley. Hoit was born in
1861 in Olive Township,
Meigs County.
Plans were discussed for
the I OOth reunion of the
family which has tentatively been scheduled . to
be held at Racine n the
third weekend in August.
A special two-day eveclt
will be' held in honor of
the occasion and attempts
will be made to invite all
family members including
several Meigs County
branches of the family,
Eastman, Gaul, Hood.
The family historian is
attempting to finisb rompiling a history of. the

descendants taking information until the · 2007
reunion. Anyone desiring
information or wishing to
provide assistance may call
992-7874.
Those attending this
year's reunion were Ruth
Army Mae Muska of
Columbus; Dora Crispin
and
Ann . Kerns
of
Westerville; Judd and
Jennifer Weilad of · Wast
Mansfiel(j;
Stormy
Dulovicb -and son William
J. of Wotthington; Mrs. and
Mrs Loery Morland and
family of Toledo; Arvilla
Showalter of Toledo; Paul
and Bobbi Bradford of
Athens; Briad and Donna
Bradford of Wooster; Don
and Maxine (Johnson)
Bailey of Johnstown;
Douglas
and
Carolyn
Bissell of TUppers Plains;
Albert and Marilyn (Curtis)
Pooler of Miamisburg;
Sandy ·(Curtis) MacDonald
of
Reedsville;
Brent,
Rachel and Bryce Dennis of
Sugar Grove, Keith and
Emma Ashley of Pomeroy,
Betty Duke of Alexandria;
lnzy Newell of Chester;
Elmer and Darlene Newell
of Chester.

CORNWELL CENTER
for Cardiovascular and Diabetes

J ~

SPECIAL TO THE ·SENTLNEL

I

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46°127"

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cloudy. Highs around 50.
West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday nialut-Mostly
clear. C,Oid with lows in the
upper 20s. West winds
around 5 mph .in the
evening... Becorning light arid
variable.
Tbu rsday ... Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent

lower 50s. South winds
around 5 mph.
.
Thursday . night-.Rain;
Not as cool wzth lows 1n the
lower 40s. Southeast wind~
MOund 5 mph. Chance of
rain 80 percent.
.
Frlday•••Rain
likely~
Highs in the lower 50si
Chance of rain 70 percent. ,

'

Local Stocks
•racer-2u.o

ACI-34.10

AEP-41.$1
Aklo-15.12
A1111111d ....,

Rio Grande at Mount Vernon, 2 p.m.
Collego \lolloybll
Alo Gi"ande at Walsh, 3 p.m.

Eagles face Tigers
BY buY S..Mv ·
SPORT's.MYDAILYSENTENEL.COM

BY MARK WIWAMI

,f '

practiced jl;eneral surgery. fellow of the American
He was unstrumental 10 College of Surgeons.
developing the Tumor
A complimentary contiRegistry and the Thmor nental breakfast will be
Committee, which he .s erved at the event at 8
chaired for several years. a.m., and displays will
Schmidt was very active also be set-up for attenwith the Gallia County dees to review. The proChapter of the American gram itself, which is open
Cancer Society and other to the public, will start
civic organizations . He promptly at 8:25 a.m.
was also a member of the
For more information
Coller Society. the Gallia abour
r!tis
year's
Cou11ty Medical Society, Symposium. or ro .register.
Medical contact the Hospital's
American
Association, Ohio State Education Department at
Medical Association, and a (740) 446-5313.
.

.

Southern at Eastern , 7:30p.m.
Crou Country
OHSAA Reglonol Meet (Pk:lceringtOnl
.
Coltop-

Redwomen
sweep Shawnee

):ilgh I Low temps

Schmidt Symposium set for Nov. 4
GALLIPOLIS The ·~Genetic' Counseling in
I Oth annual Lewis A. Oncology"; Rahul Thaly,
Schmidt, MD, Memorial MD, from The Ohio State
C ••cer Symposium will be University
Medical
held on Saturday, Nov. 4, ·Center, who will present
from 8 a.m. to noon, in the "Robotic
Surgery
in
Holzer Medical Center Urologic Oncology"; and
Education &amp; Conference Abbas E. Abbas, MD, also
Center, located on the from The Ohio St&lt;Jte
Ground Floor of the Charles University
MediCal
E: Holzer, Jr., MD Surgery Center, who will speak on
Center, located at the rear of "Esophageal Cancer."
the facility in Gallipolis.
The annual symposium
Speakers for the event is held in memory of Dr.
will include Sandra Hazra, Lewis A. Schmidt, who
MD, of Akron General joined the -staff of Holzer
Hospital, who will discuss Hospital in 1967, where he

Wahomaat~Calhollc. 7:30p.m.

Ud. :....21.24

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o.to: . . .,._~,.. - 241.78

BIG -20.88

OVB-25.15

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P 101 u·-10.98

·~~-80.41

CENX-36.18
Ct&amp;ttplw - 7.27

DG-13.74

P F I 1-U.20
PieuuiM-14.08
Ra hel-51.65
hcl(y ltoota - 12.88
SeMI - 178.12
Wll MM't- 51.30

Dlul"ont - 4U8

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ClllnniiiC . . . - 14.84
City lklldiiiC- 31.21
Col-118.45

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• Physician oflices for cardiology.
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• Cardiac llld vascular testing

• Cadleterization Laboratory for low-risk
cardiac and vascular procedures

• Peripheral artery disease rehabilitation
• Cardiac and_pulmonary rehabilitation

• Pediatric cardiology
• Diabetes and endocrine disease
dia«nosis and uuanem
• ~education

• Clinical research

RIO GRANDE - . The
University of Rio Grande
volleyball team moved back
to the .500 mark on the season with a three-game victory over visiting Shawnee
State on Thesday evening at
the Newt Oliver Arena. Rio
won by the scores of 30-24,
30-19 and 30-20.
With the victory, Rio
Grande (17-17, 4-9 AMCS)
swept the season ·series over
Shawnee
State.
The
Redwomen have a threematch winning streak over
the Lady Bears dating back
to last year.
- Rio Grande placed three.
players in double figures in
kills, led by sophomore outside/middle hitter Jessica
Rodgers with 13. Freshman
outside hitter Kari Rodgers
added 11 kills and freshman
outside hitter Megan Wills
chipped in 10. Jessica tal:
lied 16 digs on the defensive end while Kari totaled
II.
Senior outside hitter
Lindsay Urton was also a
factor at the net with two
Solo blocks and three block
assists as well as posting six
kills.
Freshman libero Summer
Rinehart paced . the. defensive effort for Rio Grande
with 28. Senior Jessica
Veach and sophomore setter
Randi Rodgers also reached
double figures in kills With
16 and 12 respectively.
. Veach was stellar in serving the ball with, a teamhigh, three aces on 21-for21 serving. Randi was I 9for-19 serving and handed
out 34 assists. ·
Shawnee State (9-16, 013 AMCS) was led by
Elizabeth Eby in kills with
II. Becca Day added eight
and Carly Cameron chipped
in seven. Adair Piquet led
the Lady Bear defense with
19 digs followed by Day's
17.
. ..
SSU setter Kendra Massie
dished out 36 assists.
A huge factor in the match
was the tremendous passing
by Rio Grande. The
Redwomen were flawless at
56-for-56.
Rio Grande head coach
.Patsy Fields was pleased
with the overall effort, even
though she still felt that her
team lapsed a bit at times.
"We went hot and cold, like
the third game, we just
wouldn 't step up again,"
Fields said. "It's like all six
of us can' t play hard at the
same time."
·

WELLSTON - Beating
two
Southern
Ohio
Conference
teams
is
Eastern's next task en route
to a return to the regional
high school volleyball tournament.
The powerful Lady Eagles
hope to soar over the New
Boston Lady Tigers in a
Division IV district semifinal 6 p.m. on Thursday at
Wellston High School.
"The name of the game in
the tournament is win one
and survive," Eastern coach
Howie Caldwell explained.
"We know that its one-anddone if we don't."
Eastern, still yet to lose a
set - let alone a match all
season, hopes to continue its
dominance over opponents
when it takes on the Lady
Tigers tomorrow. New
Boston (14-8) fmished
fourth in the SOC behind
Beaver Eastern, •Portsmouth
Clay and South Webster · all of which are still alive in
the tourney.
South Webster and Clay
play in the other district
semifinal on Thursday. The

two winners will meet for
the district championship on
Saturday, also at Wellston
High School.
'
"Last year we . played
Portsmouth Clay in the dis;
trict finals , two years ago we
played New Boston in the
district semis," Caldwell
recalled. "We've never
played South Webster, we
know they have an outstanding team."
The news of the Lady
Eagles' command of the
court has flowed down the
Ohio River to the New
Boston area and New
Boston · coach
Racheal
Coreill. .
"Eastern's a very tough
team, we're going to have to
play very tough defensively." she admitted.
The Lady Tigers, who do
not use a libero, will depend
on a defensive back row.
"They're all willing to get
on the floor and get after the
ball," Coreill said of her
defenders, including Oinger
Horsley, Kayla Wiley and
senior Jessica Veach, who
she is counting on t&lt;i defend
against the hard-hitting
Eastern spikers.
The Lady Eagles, with

OVP file photo
Eastern 's Katie Hayman passes to ·a teammate during a high school volleyball match earlier this season .
their corps of All-Tri-Valley
Conference · team players,
will use their unmatched
.power at the net to try and
overtake the Lady Tigers .
Erin Weber and Katie
Hayman will match up
against two New Boston
juniors, Kelsey Toft and
Katie Williams, at the center
·of the net.
The Lady Tigers do bring
experience in the setter posi-·
tion in Kendra Wiley.
Eastern setter Brittany

BisSell has been putting the game, five game match and
ball in perfect position on working on some things we
the net for her hitters all sea- haven' t worked on all year
son and will need to contin- long.
"If we don ' t get by
ue to do so Thursday so that
the power of Eastern's Thursday ni ghts game then
offense can make its intimi- there won' t be no· Saturday,
dating net presence known. if we don't get by Saturday
"We know that the compe- there won 't be no Regional ..
tition is going to be more
:·we just play one game at
diffiCult than what it was a time."
earlier," Caldwell said.
The Divi sion IV regional
"Practices have been a little · tournament will be next
longer this week, trying to week at Lancaster High
get ready for maybe a four SchooL

Cardnials take 2-1 World series lead
BY BEN WALKER
I&gt;S' SASESALL WRITER

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Chris
Carpenter was well on his
way to a World Series win
when, all of sudden, people
swarmed the mound to
examine his hand.
No smudge, no scuffs. Just
a cramp, and it wasn't about
to blemish his outing.
Carpenter looked every bit
a Cards' ace as he threw the
Detroit Tigers a curve, pitching St. Louis to a 5-0 victory
Thesday night for a 2-1
Series edge.
Carpenter used big breaking balls to spin three-hit
ball for eight innings. And
with Jim Edmonds hitting a
key double and St. Louis
taking advantage of a poor
throw,
the
Cardinals
return~ their focus squarely
to the field.
Gone were any reminders
of the squabbling · Kenny ·
Rogers caused with his
smudged left hand in Game 2.
Oh, Rogers heard plenty
from the sellout crowd at
Busch Stadium during
pregame introductions, as
of
"Cheat-er !"
chants
echoed throughout the ball park. But that was about the
only noise the Tigers caused
in this game.
Looking fierce with his
CoNTACI'US
three-day beard, Carpenter
showed why be won the NL
OVP Scorellne (S p,m.-1 a.m.)
Cy Young· Award last year
1:740-446·2342 ext. 33
and is a top contender this
season.
He struck out six,
fax- 1·740-446·3008
walked
none and kept the
E-m~~ll - sponsO mydaitysentinel.com
Tigers' trio of Placido
Sporta Staff
Polanco, Ivan Rodriguez
Brad Sherman, Sport• Editor and Curtis Granderson hit(740) 4o46-2:&gt;4? e&gt;&lt;t 33
less in the Series.
bstlerman 0 mydellytribune .oo m
Carpenter's lone problem
came in the seventh inning.
Larry Crum, Sporl8 Writer
(740) 446-2:&gt;42, e&gt;&lt;l. 33
As Polanco led off by lining
lcrumOmydallyregister.com
out · to good friend Albert
Pujols, Carpenter hopped off
Alhley ShiW, Sport8 Writer
the mound and looked at his
(740) " 6-2:&gt;42. e&gt;&lt;l. 23
sponsO mydailytribune .com
hand.

Cardinals manager Tony
La Russa, a trainer and the
entire St. Louis infield converged on the mound, peering at Carpenter's bare right
hand. Plate umpire Wally
Bell also went out to check
as reliever Josh Kinney
began wanning up in a hurry .
All in all, it certainly was a
lot more attention than
Rogers attracted on the field
after a yellowish-brown
mark was spotted on his
hand - he said it was a mix
of dirt, spit and resin, while
others claimed it was illegal
pine tar.
A moment later, Carpenter
was deemed to be OK. He
proved it, too, by continuing
to set down the Tigers to
constant cheers. He drew his
biggest roar when he got a
standing ovation as he carne
to .bat in the eighth.
Braden Looper took over
1
iri the ninth and finished the
combined three-hitter. .
Game
4
will
be
Wednesday night, provided
a forecast of steady rain
holds off. If it does, NL'
championship series MVP
Jeff Suppan will start against
Jeremy Sonderman.
The Tigers had homered in
all I 0 postse ason games
before Carpenter stopped
them. And a Detroit team
that averaged 5 1/2 runs per
game throughout the AL
playoffs has scored a total of
five in the World Series.
It was somewhat of a surprise, too. Carpenter gave up
a season-high seven runs at
Detroit in June, and the
Tigers' starting lineup was
i)itting .356 against liim.
Carpenter had waited a
long time for this opportunity. He was inju red and
missed the entire 2004 postseason,
including
the
Cardinals' matchup with
Boston in the World Series. a
Red Sox sweep.

St. Louis
Cardinals
starting
pitcher Chris
Carpenter
reacts after
a double
play to end
the seventh
inning
against the
·Detroit
Tigers in
Game 3 of
the World
Series on
Tuesday in
St. Louis.

.

AP photo

Carpenter · allowed onl y
Edmonds delivered the big
one runner past first . base. hit the Cardinals missed the
Brandon loge singled and · last time·they held the World
made it.to third in the third Series under the Arch - in
on a two-out wild pitch, then 2004, St. Louis scored a
catcher Yadier Molina total of one run in two losses
blocked a curve that to Boston.
.
.
But th at was at the old
bounced to keep a run from
scoring. Granderson ground- Busch Stadium, now a mere
ed out to end the inning .
hole in the ground adjacent
Edmonds hit a two-run to the new ballpark. In this
dou.ble . in the fourth . A new place •. Edmonds douthro wing error by Tigers bled that run total with one
reliever Joel Zumaya and a swing in the fourth inning.
wild pitch by Zach Miner
Preston Wilson, hitting
gave St . Louis its other run s. high in .the order because he
Workins on 13 days' rest, was 5-for-5 lifetime agai nst
Tigers lefty Nate Robertson Robertson, led ·off with a
opened with three hitless sharp single
for the
innings. That's about normal Cardinals' fi rst hit. Pujols
for the Cardin~l s- they were showed his strength and ski II
a weak 23-34 against left- wh en, despite being a bit
handed starters this season.
off-balance, lined a double
Yet it was the lefty-swin g- down the ri ght-field line that
ing Edmonds who got the hopped into th e stands.
key hit against Robertson,
When Robert son went to a
who was pulled after five 2-0 count on Scott Rolen.
inn ings.
After
that, Tigers manager Ji m 4yland
Robertson bided his time on. went to th e mound. Two
the bench talki ng to Rogers. pitches later. Rolen walked
perhaps picking up so me to load the bases with no
secrets abo ut pi tch ing in outs.
cold weather.
The crowd in the lower

deck was standing, hoping
for action . And after a force"
out at the plate, Edmonds
came through. He pulled a
hard grounder down the line
that hobbled first baseman
Sean Casey had no chance to
get, and St. Louis led 2-0.
In the seventh, Zumaya
made a poqr ch oice on
Puj ols' comebacker with
runners on first and second
and no outs. Zum&amp;ya tried to
go to third base and threw it
wide past Inge. and both
runners scored.
Miner's wild pitch gave
St. Louis another run in the
eighth .
Notes: Molina had an
adve ntu reso me a t-bat hi s
first time up. He flipped his ·
bat and headed to fi rst on a
3- 1 pitch, onl y to have Bell
call it a stri ke. Then. he
hooked a line drive th at hit
left-field ump Randy Marsh
in the back in foul territory.
... Casey had not played the
field since iu:tjuri ng his calf
Oct. JOl in the playoff opener.
... Rolen has an eight-game
postseason hitting streak.

..

�Page B2 •

www.mydailysentlnel.com ·

The Daily Sentinel

Wed,nesday, October

25, 2006

Wednesday,

October 25, 2006

www.mydallysentlnel.com

'

The Daily Sentinel • Page

83

CLASSIFIED

t ~~ J.t'a.....;.I'UR-~-IbNr-·:...JI l ~~ l.r....;~-·RINr-.._.ll..__.FOR•PErs•SAJ-.~:_.1 r'
.2000 Flootwood 141&lt;60. like 2 bed, t bath, kitchen, livl'lj,
new, central air, 2 bedroom, dining, bsmt. Hardwood
big balh, 810Y8. $15,500.
floors
$500
month.
.14x70 Clayton, 3 bedroom, Excellent coodilion. Call for
·1 bath, 810111!, refrigerator, Applk:ation (304)675·7902
carpet, excelent condl·
.tton. (74:0}446-8955.
2 bedroom house on .State
Aoute 568 . Pets welcome!
2001 , I BxBO, 2 acres, 1Ox16 _Ca:ci='(I'-740=)44_H_&gt;1_9_4._·_ _
building, appliances stay,
lhlngled root, nice country 2BR home· Vinton Ave.
eettlng. $57,000. (740)256- $375 mo.+ see. dep. You pay
8801 .
utilities. Gas heat. (740)446-

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(304)773-5343

Local Employer looking to
hire full time Receptionist.
Must be iast lelirning and
able to multi task and handle
stress. Computer knowledge
is a plus. Pay starts out at
$8 .00/hr. Please
send
resume to CLA BoM ~ c/o
Gallipolis' Tribune, PO Box
469, Gaftipolis, OH 45631 .

li""""'""'""'""'""'""''il

:~~~~~~~~;(30:4~)6:7~4·;13~7:4------,

Local Insurance agency
seeking part time receptionIst. Weekday hours only.
.lnsurance eXperience .help·
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resume to Box TSC 19 c/o
Point Pleasant Register 200
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CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4'a For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcemeni .................., ......................... 030
Anllquea .......................................................530
Aportmenls lor Ronl ................................... 440
Auction and Flee U,rkor1 .............................080
Aulo Parts &amp; - . o r l e s ......................- .. 760
· Aulo Repair ..................................................
Auloa lor S.le ..............................................710
&amp; _._lor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ........................................

no

sso

Bualness •nd Bulldlnga ............................. 340
- - · Opporlunlly ................................. 210
Buslneso Trllnlng-..................................... 140
Campers &amp; MOior ,Homes ......, .................... 7110
C.omplng Equlpmenl ................................... 760
. Cords ol Thonka .......................................... 010
. ChHci/Eide~y Core ........ ................................ 1110

· Electrlca11Relrlgerllllon .................. ............. 840
. Equlprnenllor Ren1... ........................ : ......... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpmen1 .......................................... 610
Farms lor Rent.. ..........................................430
Forma lor Sale ............................................. 330
ForLuae ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
. For Sale or Trllde ......................................... SIIO
FNIIII &amp; Vegela-..................................... 510
Furnished Rooms ......................................... 450
General Haullng ........................................... BSO

Gl-ay ............... ..........................:............ 040
Happy Adl....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Groln .................................................. 640

·

~wan111c1 ................................................. 110

· Home 1mprovernenta...................................810

Homes lor Sale .........................., ................. 310
Hauwohokl Gooda ....................................... 510
11ou- lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memorlom ....................., .......................... 020
lnourance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpmenl ........................
L l - k......................................................830
LOIIInd Found ........................................... 080
Lola &amp; Acreage .............................:.............. 350
Mlacelllneouo .............................................. 170
M-lllneouo MercNindiM .......................540
Mobile Homo Atlpo!r ....................................BID
Mobllll HornM lor Atlnl.. ............................. 420
Mobile HornMior S.le .............. : .................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Molorcycles &amp; 4 WhMianl ..........................740
Muolcellnolrumenta ................................... &amp;70
Pel'aonolo .....................................................
,_lor Sale ................................................ 510
Plumbing l HNIIng .................................... 120
P-lo11111 Sanllceo ................................. 230
Alldlo, TV l CB Flepelr ......... ...................... 180

eeo

·

..
•
•
·

oos

·
:

,.

.

,_..

~

W.nted ..................................... HO

lclloole lnolrucllon .....................................180
- , Plotnl l Fef!IIIDr .............................. 510

lttultlone Wentecl ....................................... 120
Space lor Renl. ...................... , ..................... 4to
Sporting Ooodo ........................................... &amp;20
SUV'I lor Sale .............................................. 720
TNCkllor Sale ........ .................................... 715
Uphola~WY ......................................... ., ........ 170
vane For lille ......... ...................................... 730
· W - l o luy ............................................. 010
· Wanlld lo luy- Farm Supplles .................. l20
: Wanlld To Do .............................................. 180
Wanlld to Aant..- ......................................... 470
Yard Sale- Oalllpollo ....................................072
Yard lille-Pomeroy/Middlo ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pl. PIHiint ................................ 078

300 Briarwood Dr.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
(740)441·9633
Holzer Asslflted Living.
Gallipolis
has
Emp. loyment
Opportunltle's tor Full
Time, Part Time and as '
nescled
Resielent
Assistants. Prefer experienced STNA, "but not
required. Please apply in
person or send Resume
to attention: Diane
Camden AN , DON .
EOE .

255$0
Loc:al

Manufacturer

toOidng for w~clera.
P-1pplylnporoon
ol:

SFS Truct. Sales,
2150 Eo-.. AVOOU!I,
Gllllpotle, OH.
No phano colo plaaao.

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304LOOKING FOR ALICE
675·1429.
Organized. caring individual
•
needed to function 'as
Bartender: Honest, reliable, H A-a.
IN
1 local
60 polling place workers
ou~eeper anny Jl
dependable only. Apply at househokl. Will prOYide care
needed. No experience 5
needed. Must be energetic l&lt;yline Lanes 11 th Frame for two smal l children and
and able to work 7:00AM Lo;;:u!;!ngi!e~!iillliiii!iiiiiil provide a mid-day meal,
until 7:00PM Tue~ay,
!!!!:
naps, and help establish
November 7th . Must also be
Delign Engl~ yr.
daily routine . Individual will
available 1or one day o1 Paid
rnenut.cturtng dnlgn
provide daily housecleaning
e•pertenee.
Autocacl
and will help with general
know!""- A.....,
training. (877)834.()430.
__.. ..,...,. It
organization of the home
2150 Elttem Aveand preparation of the
80hrs, Underground, 40hrs.
GalllpoUa, Ohio or
·
Surtace Classes to be held
evenrng
mea1. Hours are
at Point Pleasant Moose
aubmH resume to SFS
8:00A.M. to 4:00P.M. Salary
October 23rd thru October
"T:rudc Silas, tnc. P.O. negqtlable.
References
27th,
day, 4pm evening
Box 786, Galllpolit,
required.
Please send ·

9ar:n

classes, Sign up Monday- II!;;O;;H;;4S63e;;l;;.E!!!!!E
Friday Spm at Moose any ""
questions
call/(304)524·
FEDERAL
7203
·
ADM IN. ASSISTANT/SEC ·
RETARY/BOOKKEEPER
nQeded for position In
Custom Cabinet business.
. Strong customer service
skills needed to assist
clients wlth quotes end bids
Must be able 10 muhi·task
and adapt Well to busy envr·
mnment Will aleo type let' tera and repons, answer
Thorough
phones, etc.
knowledge of MSWord,
E~ecal
&amp;!"'d QuickbOOk&amp;
requi red · w11n ~ood book·
keeping tkllil 1 mutt. Salary
commel)lllratt with eMperl·
II'ICI. Send reaum11 to
John Mechlr, Timber Creek
Cuo!l&gt;m Cablnotry 2459
Still Routt 180, CliiiiPolll.
OH 45631

Aay &amp; Son's Complete Car
Cleaning 2615 1/.2 Jackson
Ave. Pl. Pleasant, wv (304)
675·7375 . We wash by
hand special ccinplete was
job $4.00 off. Exterior wash
jobs $2.50 ofl

more:

Tra rnlng rn Wytheville, Virgiraia

This
cctpls

Fannin Church Repairs only
1·7ol0·418·5062.
Drywall repair, ceiling, lloor
tile, add or remove walls,
painting,
· carpentry,
handrails, handicap ramps.
sidewalk, plumbing repairs.
35 years experience. Free
est. With ·God In mind at all
times.

Join the winning team!
Tnllnlng- Two week initial &amp; orientation classes
with continued ongoing
training.
Management- The best
management team in the
country to assist you.

~$

ALLIANCE

WAJI/IliD

I have openings for 2
females ,2 males or a cou·
pie in my home. 24 hr care.
25 yrs. experience, rates
staning at $1 ,500
13041675 6183
'

SALES
ASSOCIATES

&gt;1 1 "\I

.r_LosroiiFOUNDiliiiAND-.._.1

r

~

Don't Wl"l your Loved 3 yrs. old, 3 SA, 2BA. Lg.
Onealn a Nul'ling home. Porch ,
Heat
pump,

TO DRIVE

-car

{.~

MEDI HOME HEALTH
AGENCY

....... PAN

Help wanted at Oar81 Group
Home, working with elderly,
he&amp;V'j lifting Involved. 740992·5023.
Here we GROW again!
Friendly, Efficient · Office
Staff NeeDed for Bu1y
Chiropractic Office. Ple. .e
HAND-DELIVER reaume1
to
SICk
tO
Health
Chiropractic,
10A.
Old
AJrpon Ad , GallipOliS. Coli
(740)446-7460 tor more
Information.

An Exceftent ¥1.; to earn
money. The Ntw Avon.
Coli Mlrllyn 304-882·26-15 Large, Local Property
Casualty Agency seeking
Energetic sales oriented quality Individual Interested
poople needed Immediately. In Career. P&amp;C license preNo e~~~;per l ence neCessary. ferred . Competitive com Must be money motivated pensation pacltlge. Send
aelf starter. High Income resume : Customer Service
potential tor right pef80n Representative. PO Sox
Coil now 1877)834.()430.
744, Aftlens, OhiO 45701

Companion and care giver
for an elderly person in my
home ~rlvate or semi private
room with bath. 1 have 20
years ot experience &amp; reference. Call (740)446·4300.
Home away from home.
Elderly men and women in
my house, 30 years experi-

II you are looking to start
a new career or maybe
you don't feel you're P$id
or treated as well as you
should be and if you're
1ired of working for
someone who Isn't
working tor you, give
Pat Hill,or Brad Sang

HAS OPENINGS FOR

RN ......

$28 PEA HOURI
$42 PER VISIT
Call Vicki Reynolds, AN.
CHnical Manager at
(7o10)441-1799 or 1-800·
481-6334.

ence. 740-667-6668.
11"\\\11\1

4' bedroom, 2 bath, double
garage, pool, 2 acres, ·
Eastern School District.
74D-992·3465 after 5:00PM
Good inCome producing
properties. Great location!
Price(s) are Negotiable.
In
Motivate.;!
Seller!
GaUipolis.
Call
Wayne
(404)456·3802 .

accepting applications for a
Home Supervisor position,
Training will be pr.ovided. 11
you would like to take
advantage of this opponunl·
ty, application will be taken
at 8204 Carla Drive 8:()().
4:00pm. An equal opportuni·
ty employer. FJM/ON.

Overbrook Center is current·
1Y accep1·tng app1ica 1·tans for
full and part time AN's .
Competitive wages and benefits pedl:age avaHable. All

~- 00 per hOUr
Must be 18 years or Older
..
h
I'" d ·
must ave varu rrvers
license and own vehicle

remodeled. 3 beelrooms. 1
bath . Perfect creelil not
required Payment $525.
AppraiseCI S70,000. 740·
397·7129.
A-onl
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams for you to buy your
home instead o1 renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than pertect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators .
(740)367-oooo
cBe..;a.:;u::tif::ui..;R::a:.nc::h_Sty_le_Ho_m_e
on 2 112 acres. Must see to
appreciate.
2br, 2ba,
kitchen, din!ng room, living
room, family room, 2 car
garage.
Price reduced
$149,000 (304)675-4235 or
(304)593-3220

7 40

r

so·

people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail until you
have investigateCI the
offering.

-

j

MONEY

This n ...apeper 111111 not

knowingly accept
advertiHment. for rw1 ·

nance your home or
obta.,· 0 loan. BEW•RE
~
o1 reqtJests for any large
advance payments pf
tees or insurance . Call the
Office
of Consumer
Affairs )oil free at 1-866·
278·0003 to •-arn
•" the
~
mortgage . broker
or
lencler
is
properlY
Ncensed. (This is a public
service annouocem~nt
trom the Ohio Val ley
Publishing Company)

176
1

.

.

and Son '•

Ainoe

challengln~

S.Harvlullcong, RFalrllowoOOdnob'!
•

111

Help Wanted

Help Wallted

j

l'llomNoN.U.

~

5m'IW

House with large lot, 2 oar
garage; wood floors, maple
kitchen , ~.,. gas
fireplace
$82,500 (304)675·2364

I

TURNED DOWN ON

~~xtrtosl riO.

Help Want8d

I, I \ I 1 ' I \ I I

Ranch Style Home, Yost
Road with 2 Acres. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, garage ,
enclosed breezeway. Pool
and Spa included.
$83.500.
Call 740·992·
400, .

..........

fiiijj

-m y m l -.oorn

(740)828-2760

. lfoMEs

"-!"'"-liloiliDooio·_ _. :~ec:~~'!~rt~oo':ct:r~~

I

j

BEAUTIFUL
APART~
MENTS
AT , BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESt''YES 52 w
ood
~·
,
estw
Dri\10 from $349 to $448.
Walk to shop &amp; mOVies. Call
740-446·2568.
E.qual
Housing Opportunity.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- ·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!

Seeking highly motivated
individuals to work in wellequipped facility with latest fools
and equipment. Pay
commensurate with experience
Hyundai Technician
810 E. State Street-Athens
Apply to Larry Porter, Service
Director
740-589-3632
2 Toyota/GM Technicilu)s
900 E. State Street- Athens
Apply to Rick Taylor, Service
Manager
740-589-3672
· · Body Shop Technician
, 830 E. State Str~t- Athens
APPly to Mark Dillard,
Body Shop Manager
.
740-589-3651
Also Ofilhe web at
www.donwood.com
E.O.E.
.a&amp;U DONWOOD'NC
. . , . . AUTOMOTIVE

lor appEiicallmtion v&amp;llneli&gt;rmwatlon.
Apartments

•2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
•Central heat &amp; A/C
•Washer/Ciryer hookup
•All electric· averoglng
$50-$60/month
•Owner pays water, sewer.
trash

(304)882-3017

e
•

I

Have picture 13x17 of the
president
John
35th
FHzgerald 'Jack" Kennedy
and brother RObe~ Francls
'BOOb( Kennedy Leglsiator

·

r

Jim's Fo!lll Equipmen1
Straw $2.50. (74Jl)6o15-0045
2150 Eastern Avenue
=740=-3600.
•Gallipol~. OH •5631
(740)446·9777
Get your new Hollar)dHoy
AUTOS
Equipment earty and save
toUR SALE
1.000 bft 00 roond balers L------!III.,J
and discblne for October
plus O% lor 4 years.
01 Dodge Intrepid S3,IJO(l
03 Ford Taurus LX $7,500
Jim's Farm Equipment
95 ChrySler NV $2,800
2150 Eastern Avenue
02 Ford Focus SE $4,800
Gallipolis, OH 45631
95 Mercury GM $4,250
(304)675-4452 or (304)675·
(740)446·9m
Get your Earn, Bird Service 1252.

!! !!!!

r·o

•

A

r

6 foot

t961 Cadillac convertible.
Very good cond ition. leather
interior, classic. (740)245·
9142
1987 Olds Toronado, very

good condition, newer ti res.
$
(740)441 7390
1,700. Call
.
.
1989 COf\lette1 Convertible.
·1
59,000 act ua mt es, ex.
cond . St t ,800. (7 40)446·
_75_7_8_
. ---.,.---

Brand new Coda Snare
2150 Eastern Avenue
Clrum Includes carrying
Gallipolis, OH 45631
1740)"" 97n
case, practice pad and
·
"t"t\l"
•
stand, $100; Ludwick Bell Kit New Massey Ferguson
c
e1 • c1
0% fixed
with carrying· bag, $150; ompa 1ra ors
(740)992·7168
lor 36 months, plus em 5%
::-:--:---;:---:--:-- discount on units in stock
Washburn five string banjo, with good selection.
Hyster guitar, Air compres· .......,----~:sor 30 gal., , 101220 volt John Deere 10ft. Non Drill
very gOOd condition/air· tor
rent.
Carmichael
dryer. 740·949-2253.
Equipment (740}4.46-2412.

FRurrs
•-•Vioiii'XiEI:iiiiii:o.Biiii.Elliio_.

r ·-

Condition. 2 buil t-in ohild
seats, 2 sliding, doors. Call
(749)367-7997.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
"1:111""~--.....----~ Unco ndnional Hfetlfne guar·
MO'roRC\'Cl,Fs'
amee. Loca! .references fur~
4 W=·m
··~
nishod. Establlst1 ed 1975.
OLI"A.A"~
'-.
.., ...iirliiiiiiOiiiiiirr-_.1 Call 24 Hrs. (740)
0870, Rogers Basement
"03M Special Edition 660 A
Waterproofing.
Rafter
white
Brother's
exhaust, very fast. needs little work. $2,800 (304)675·
2263

j«J

44fi.

4 H da S do
B on
ha w, motorcyr.l.e, 2 windshields. Honda
co.,er, exc. con d. New bat·
tery,
leather · saddle
bags.17401367-7 997 .

Fixed for 48 months through
CommerCial building "For John
Deere
Credit
Sale' 1600 square leet. ofl Carmichael
Equlpmen1
street pafking. Great toea- (740)446-2412
tionl 749 Third Avenue in
Gallipolis. Price ·Negotiable"
Ln~
n~•~n
New roo1! Moti\lated Seller!
Call Wayne (404)456·3802.
~:-----::--:- •KIEFER BUILT -v'ALLEY
Living room suite. end •EJISON "HORSE
LIVE·
tables, lamps, dl~ng table , STOCK TRAILERS 'LOAD·
stove, trig. Call 1740)446- MAX
'GOOSENECK,
6741 .
DUMPS
&amp;
UnLITY
·
•a.LUM'
••LUMINUM
"
..
"
TRAILERS 'B&amp;W .GOOSE•

2000 Dodge Quad Gab
TruCk , $7500 OBO;
d c
D
2003 Qua
ab
odge,
$16,000 OBO.
69
(740)256-61

-------2000 Toyota Corolla LE,
auto, !oade&lt;l,· 36 mpg, good

Blazer $4500 ; 99 Dodge
Caravan $2500; 98 Chry
·
$2000 : 97 Ch ry
eb nng

s

Conv.

$1800; 94 GMC pu
St500: 94FordFt50S15DO;
99 Ford Contour 52000: Ot·
Dodge Rem van $2600: 96
Ford Explorer $2200; 94
Toyota -Tercel $900 . B&amp;D
Auto Sales, Hwy 160· N.
(740)446-6865.
-'-----'---truck Tahoe, Blazer
4x4; Chevy truck Nissan
4x2, Kia
. Sportage, Ford &amp;
HITCHES . Dodge vans ; Cavaliers,
Sunfires. Saturns, Neon,

a

I
•

-.

t6' Garage door with all 'KIEFER BUILT 'VALLEY
hordwore(304)882·3184
'BISON 'HORSE &amp; LIVE·
STOCK TRAILERS 'LOAD2 lots· Ohio Valley Memory MAX
•GOOSENECK,
Gardens. Call (7 40)441- DUMPS
&amp;
UTILITY
0754 or (740)245-5003 •ALUMA
•ALUMINUM
Ieave message.
TRAILERS 'B&amp;W GOOSE-

6 seat 2004 Ma'"""""ia Hot NECK
•·C
1h

• HITCHES.

1 E 1
1
M
qu pmen
2412
(304)675·3259 or 1304)674· :..(7_40-')-:-U_I-:---:--3447
New John Deere Compacts
JET
and 5000 Series Utilty trocAERATION MOTORS
10r!;i 0 0% Fixed for 36
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In monthe througn John
Stock. Call Ron Evans, t . Deere Credit. Carmichael
800·537-9S2S.
Equipment (740)446-2412'
Tub, asking $2,500 contact

•rm c

Friends of
Ruth Ann Sattler, MS, AN
are invited to a

Retirement Tea at
Holzer Medical Center
Thursday, October 26, 2006

12 Noon- 2 pm
Ho~pital's

Toyota. Grand Am. Others in
stock, starting at $1.600. 3
Altair steers &amp; replacement months. 3,000 inlle warranty.
heifers, reasonable pri ced Cool&lt; Motoro, 328 Jackson
740·256·9250 or 740-441· Pike, (740)44E.fl103
5705
----.,.--,-.,.-,-S&amp;S Auto Sales
Bulls &amp; Heifers: Club. ShOYI
320 S. Pennsylvania Ave
&amp; Commercial Grade. CaN
W~llston, Ohio
(740)384·0473 .
ewnings I304)937 -41 27.
altar hours: 1740)669·0302
Open Monday, Wednesda•
Butdler lambs-$1 .00/lb plus
,
&amp; Friday 10am-6pm
bUtcher cost. We deliver
after butcher w/i 30 mi. 1994 Musta.ng GT. 5.0 5
(740)446-9814 evenings . or speed, black with black inte·
leave message.
rior. extra olean, $4.750;
- - - - - - - - 2000 Dodge Caravan, 4
FOf sale: Pigs, ready to go, door, 105,000 miles $3 ,900;
wormed , males cawa!ed. 2000 Escort ZX2. auto. nice
(7o10)245·5622.
$2,900

Don't want your loved
ones in

I have openings for
2 females, 2 male or a
couple in my home. 24
hr. care, 25 yrs. exp.
Rates starting at $1500

304-67 5-6183
George
r-tf C:hicken Noodle Benefit Dinner
Saturday, October 28, 2006
1:00-4:00
Long Bottom Community Center

unties

&gt;

..

•.
"' .

·""'"'
1-;

It ........

"'

.

• ''i. .

'

.

::·

.

.,

.

.

~7¥

SUPPuis

Pole
Barns
30x50X10
$6,995. Painted metal, $1ider. hae delivery. (937)718·
1471 i
www. natlonwlde~
barns.com.

Help W111ted

Help Wanted

0

NURSING SUPERVISOR
Pkasanl Valley Hospital is currenll y accepting
resumes for a Nursing Supervisor. Must have a

minimum of three to five years of c"perience'
in an acute care setting. Two yem of manage·
ment c~perience preferred. Critical care ex peri·
ence preferred, but not

required.

Current WV

License.

•

health

insurance

single/family

plan,

•
•

Flexible scheduling. excellent sal ary. holiday,
dentaJ

plan, life insurance, vacation, long-Lenn disability and retirement.
Send resumes to:

Pleasant Valley !Jospllal
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant,

Fax

WV 25.5.50

(3()4) 675-4340
to: {3()4 ) 675-6975
or apply (Jn·line at

www.pvalley.org
AAIEOE

'

~alltpoli~ iall~ QI:rtbunt

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
-....-·

a nursing

home?

''

'

French 500 Room

Stop by and wish her well!

cnevy

Reach·
'

ADVERTISE
YOUR .
BUSINESS .
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

4

Tractor Loader Backhoel 080. Call (740)256-1253.
Skid Steers. Carm ichael
Kiwi and Tumlpa , VIrgil's Equipment (740}446·2412
94 Chev 1-1on Irk $3000; 92
Ford Hon $1900; 05 Toyota
Berry Patch, East or
Quality John DHrt Hay 4d, 4x4 SAS, 6,000 miles;
Equipment for !ess·round 01
FOfd Mustang $6000:
co •• 1:'
DodgeN
F 00
d
~~~:..
balers, sQuare balers &amp; .
eon 52800 ; 00 or
mower conditioners 04.7% Escort $2000; Ot Chev S-10

HEC K

'I

HOME
·~-~
1998 Chevy venture, Greet ...oriori"'iiiiPIIOriiioi'iiiioi=~iio'iio"r
•·

condition. Call after 5pm
(740)367-o493.
-------·2002 Chevy Cavalier, l09ks
and runs great. 117.000
John Deera Mini Excavator/ miles . automatic, $4,500

r

•·
FOR SALE

1999 Chevy Cavalier, 4

MUSICAL
Starting price $795.
Door, Auto. $2800 OBO;
~ WmtiJMENTS
- - - - - - - -· 2001 Chrysler Sebring,
'--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiio.,.l Jim's Farm Equipment, Door, Auto; $3800 OBO :

i1!111"--::--':""-.,
&amp;

I

s

"' the spring
done now before
rush
on
your
Farm
Equipment. Call tor appoint·
mentordropby. Pidcupond
dell\19r available
-:--::--:;:--:-- Jim's Farm Equipment
$50. No Sunday Sales. Andy
2150 Eastem Ave
v... ..
2
8
r~.JUUr, 103 1 tate Route
Gallipolis, OH 45631
141 , Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 .
40)o446· m
9
17
Shetti Pu ......ies. 11 weet.l\tl
old, 1st shots and wormed . Several used 3 point Tillers
No papers. $100.00 each.
4 foofoott
5
740-698..()4.75.

2000 Dodge Dakota 4x4. VB 1B ft. Hi Lo camper, gresit
~agnum SLT, loaded, ext condition. w/ reffig, stove,
cab. 18' wheels. buckshot oven, micro, fum , A/C , bath •
t~res.
Asking
$5.500
4. Call aftBf 4 OOpm
740)441·1426
J13IJ
"'ANS

~MvnroU.
~~ r.·o__=:::::::.
:==::=_[iii.'JIMioiiiiil_.. -~-::"-:)446_'·
-h-~-~1-:2:-Eq-:-u-lp_m_•_nt
I:A~"UJ,X.
-=-

wo~omoii7401441-D194.

•

'

AntiqueGhanc:telter. Unique,
beautiful, crystal light.
$700.00 OBO. 304-3n6428 ·

Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp;
bath, upstairs, clean, no - - - - - - - - , pets. Aetldeposit required. Kenmore 9 wbic feet, CheSt
(740)446-1519.
Freezer. Hot Point Washer
$100·oach. (~)675·5375
Garage
Apt.
2br,
$280/month. In Mason, WV NEW AND USED STEEL
First and last months ·rent in Steel Beams,· Pipe Rebar
advance. (304)773-so.W or For
Concrete,
Angle,
(304)n3-9181
Channel , Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
room apa~ments at Village Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Manor
and
Riverside Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Apartments in MkXIIeport. Friday, 8a"m-4;30pm, CI08ed
From $295·$444. Call 7ol0· Thursday,
Salurday
&amp;
992·5064 . Equal· Housing Sunday. (740)446-7300
Opportunl1ies.
STEEL BUILDING: MOV·
Immaculate 2 bedroom lNG- Must 9911 quanzet Slyle
apartment in the country. steel building. 2Sx34 paid
New carpet &amp; cabinets, $8,nQ will sacrlftce for quiCk
fresh~ painted &amp; decorated. sale $6,44o- brand new, still
WID hookup. Beautiful coun· on pal~t. Call 1-fl00.352·
try sattin~ . Must see to 0469
appreciate.
$399/mo. - ' - " - - - - - - - (61oi)595·7773 or 1.800· WANTEO: Raoponslble part
to take on sma!l monthly
·
798
-4686.
paymerls on High Deflnltlon
New . 2BR
aportments. Big Screen TV. 1-800.398·
hookup, 3970.
Washer/dryer
S1oveirefrigerator included. ljlr;...~B!~JDll1NG----,
Also, units on SA 160. Pe1s

'"'

'G-4

,.,.,,...._li:'C'

·
Townhouse
apanments, on same pr'clure, nrce,
$
by
S
ndlor
small
houses
FOR
2.000.
anger,
•
RENT. Ca ll (740)4~1-1111 (740)992·5616

Now taking applications for
2BA Apartments. Wat.er,
Trash, Sewer paid. $425/mo
plus doposlt. (740)882·
9243,(7oi0)9BB·6130.

o,

House and 1 77 acres at
Mt. Alto. Private· with great
vrew, $155.000 (304)8953722

:;;:;::::::::=~

Truh

-·

Card ol Thanks

The family of Paul "Junior" Hauber
would like to say ''Thank You" to all our
friends, neighbors and family for your
many expressions of love, sympathy and
compassion during our loss.
Special thanks to Squad 90 and Meigs
EMS personal, neighbor and·hospice
nurse Dana Johnson, Mike and the folks
at White Funeral Horne. Pastors; Adam
Will, Eric Ross and Norman Butler for
your visits, prayers and words of
encouragement. May lhe Good Lord
Bless each and everyone who has helped
us in anyway.
Wife Melody and children
Debbie Dailey. Doug Hauber, Denise
Dawson, Scott Hauber an~ families

Help Wanted

TBhree
Bedroom,
Two
na •
FOR SALE
athroom, oversized two car
HHP Accepted. 17•0)388·
garogo, stor•go building, 112
03J1
acre level lot. Wafl malrtoxl2331
WANim
1 1 112 Story, aBr.n3ath. A.ll tllned home.
Reduced
Aeacty for a rewarding and 110
1
career?
Apply
$89
,900.
740-949-8010.,
Tractor Trailer drlYBrs with 2
Porch &amp; Decl&lt;. 7•0.949· ~VI~~I"o~St~re~et.;,·,;,R,;,IC;:In~o,;,
. --,
yrs COL and some flalbad lore CHHA Cl... beginning
Nov.
6.
Apptlcationo
rruat
bo
Houoecloanlng.
Referoncoo.
2253.
MOBFORR.ES~
experience . Driver averages
Eatlmatee. Two - - - - - - - ~
$600.00 to $900.00 take aubmlned by NO\I. 3. We can FREE
assist
with
job
placement
women.
Call
(740)367·7422
3
bedroom.
Mouse
In
home after taxes. Home
every week end. Delivering and also have positions : - - : - - - - - : - - - Pomeroy. River view. Ott
opens for PCA, CHHA and Leaf remowl . Please call main road. $26,000. Land 14x55 two bedroom mobile
to OH, KY, VA ,WV, IN 330·
STNA. 1740)992·0990 1· (740)245·9310 or 1740)339· Contract posaibla with down home wAot In Middleport,
527-2l89
16· 1as.
888·993·0990.
3612.
payment. 1·740·992·2593. $!5.500. 7
CALL TODAYI
1"n-4tw247

Card ol lllanu

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

(504) 615-5136
AA/EOE

Informed ttt.t aM
dwtllinv- advert'-&lt;! In
this newspaper . .
avallllbMI on an ....,
opportunity bun.

No Fae Unless We Wlnl
1-681!-582·3345

. .

$148/mol 4 Bedroom HUDI
4% - .. 30 years II 8%.
For listings 800·391·5228
ext F254

readers are hll~

I SOCIAL SECUFifrv 1881?
~

Taking applications tor small .
1 bedroomhomeonllncoln
51. ·n
l u: ..'"'leport. Call 304 •
m~
576·2000.

estate which Ia In
violetion of the lew. Our

New Helix Cuts Curl also
Foil Hilte, price vary depend·
lng on length of hair.
""INhere· All About You, slxtn
arid Main St.. ~ - Pleasant,
WVA 304-675· 1411
Sue Underwood Special
10%-off perm, color, cap
hlhe. 1
Ucenae
Debl
Adkins
W'Hti.;illlpoiiiCirMrcollgl.com
• cx:redl!..:l Mfltlb.r Accr•dlllf'lll MaBMce Therapy 20°.4·off

CQuncll ~r tncttpena.l'll Colt~
tn&lt;~ Scflooje12748.

r

Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp;
RehabUitation Center hes openings
for Certified Nursing Assistants.
Twelve hour shifts, shift
differential, excellent salary.
holidays, health insurance,
slncle/family plan, dental, life
Insurance, vacation, .long-tenn
disability and retirement
For lnlu.'llllltlon. piMse contact:
AnlleOIIInd
Director of NUISif11

All I"NII ..tatrt advertising
In ~Ia Mwapllper Ia
subject to me Fedttll
Fair Housing Act of 1MI
which makes it lllepl to
adver1iM ".nw
preference, limitation or
dlscrtmlnltton baled on
rece, color, ,.uglon, nx
familial status of ntUonel
origin, or any Intention to
make env such
prefe,..nce, ,ilmltedon or
discrimination."

:;:::::;:;::===~

c.-

Po1ltion Available
Fuel truc:;il: driver, must ·have
Cl101 B COL Hazmat l
Tanker prlferred but Non
Hazmat &amp; Tanker Will be
considered, local route ,
gooG hOUIO, good benefb
CLA Box 9§ clo Clllllpollo
Tribuna PO Box 489
Gallipolis Ohio 45821 .

593

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do business w'ith

Financial
Institution's
Office
ot Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·

Must have clean criminal .
d &amp; be d
reoor ·
rug 1ree
Please call
Continental Secret Service
Bureau Inc
9am-3pm- Mon . Ttlru Fri
D 1·800·869-8975
rug Free Workplace
EOE
- ------Someone for plum~ng. sid·
ing, insulation, odd jobs. references required, (?40)992-

WANDD

About $3000. down. 812 S.
3rd. Ave., Middlepar1. Totally

~===ro=Lo=AN==~

Middleton Estates will be

i

4 rElntel houses "For Sale"

ance. at
Applications
be --;:--::--:::::--Gallipolirt.
raken
8204 CartawillDrive
~
(across from golf course)
Security Officers
9:00·4:00pm . An equal Full time position availat)e
**NOTICE**
opportunity
employer.
in Gallipolis
FIMJON.
Mon-Tues-Sat-Sun
Borrow Smart. Contact
Third shift· Midnlgh1 to Bam the Ohkl Division ot

interested applicants should · 6862
pickupanapplicarionat333 1150 .
SoKJou;
·1
Page Street , Mlddlopon,
INsniUCI'ION
OH . For additlonallnforma· ...ooiolitiiiiiiiiiiiiio-"
tion please contact Hollie at
Concealed Pistol Class
(740)992-6472 EOE
Ohio, WV, Nov. 4, 2006,.
$75.00.
9:QOam. VFW
Part·tlme driver, flexible
hours, G::lass 8 wl1h hal·
Mason WV (7ol01843-5555,
740-416·3329
ardous materials and
tanker
endorsement.
Apply at Ferrell Gas,
Galllpollo
Colllge
800·518·2273 or 614·76-1·
State
Route
588
or
8239
(Caretlll
Close
To
Home)
0960 and ask fof Jean.
coii (740)245.Q493 or 1·
Call Todayl740·446-4367,
Moi,KE MORE MONEYI
BOD-642·13.27.
1·800·214·0452
•11.50/hour
•Full and Pan time
IChfldUIII
•Medical Benelltl
•Palo 1Tilnlng
•VICitiOnt every 6
monthl
And MUCII Morll

Appliances. Meadowhlll off
Sandhill Rd . was $89,000
reduced
to
$79,900
(304)675·5253 or {304)5935949

•NOTICh

oooll tO(Ioy
(740)446·9800 or
1.800•272-5! 79 .

You may also app!y in
person at
-------Mic:kfleton Estates will be
195·Upper River Ad.,
accepting applications for
Gallipolis, Ohio
"Direct Care Staff. You would
Monday~Friday
be part of a team that provides servk:es to indivKtUals Saturday bartender apply
with MRIDD. We provide on any day after 3pm at VFW
the job training and guld· Post 4464, 134 Third AVe,

resume to John · Mechlr,
2;459 State Route 160,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 or
inquire tor John at (740}.
POSTAL JOBS
446·9200 no later than
St5.67-S26.191hr.. now hlr· OctOber 31 2006
lng. For opplk:otion and tree
goiJ9rnement job Info, call LPN/RN's
needed
In
American Assoc. of labor 1- Ga!Upolls, ·Ohk). Pediatric
913-599-81.'&gt;42, 24/hrs. emp. case Days/PT. Call Primary
serv.
Care Nursing Services at

---------

"-·

Perfect

the error and on
11m lntorllon.
""'be liable

"""'

Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for lorqe

• All ada muit be p...pald'

Will pick up unwanted and
junk
Bicycles.
Phone
(7ol0)379-9278 please leave

... I

lor
lhln lho COli

-~~~

1m

want
buy new and old
junk carsl!ruot&lt;s/Yans. 740- .
416·1594 or 740·416-158a

I

ntlble

OK

addedtoyourdas$1fl~dads

Thursday far Sunday•

a message.

will

nyloN or

~

~t %~I KflkiTt,;&amp;~C;;iAi;iRi;;L:~Y:LE::~~===-:------l · ..,ln:o:llaP::W:AJI/IliD=~~L,rao__w,; T~Iil loi l r-.-I L,e.o_.;,!i ioi ri~li AIEi i i r -'
I I~
fr

Trlbu,..Senllnel

ller

Now you con have borders and qraphlcs

Display Ads

i

'-

i

. • St1rt Your Ada WM A byword • Include Complete
Detcr..,tlon •lnchMiil A Prtc:.. • Avold AlabNvl.tkln•
• Include li'bOM ........... Alld Add,_ Wh4in Needed
• Adl...,kl Run 7 Deya

Owner financing
you own your Iandi

alpU-Ion

Oeatllfir~

pets. In Gallipolio. (740)446· lisl tor Hud-subslzed, 1· br. Clmper, $2 ,500 (304)4582003. (740)446·1409 or apartment, call 675·6679 1612
(740)446·2692
EquaiHooslngOppoflunily -~-::----~
AKC
Boxer
puppies,
3BR, 2ba, dblwide, no pets UpstaR apartment 2 bed- Champiol')
bloodlines.
rtlf. re(lulred. Close to room . 49 Spruoe Street Ready now $350 -$600.
A.V.H.S. $475 monlh, $475 $400 per month, water and ~1304;.:...;).:..74.:3..;·36-'-71'-._· _ _ _ .
dep. (740)367-7025.
trash induded. (7-40)«6- =__:_:__:__ _ _ _ _ 86n days, (7..0)256·1972 Doberman pups, AKC, 8
Nice 94 mOdel 2 bectroom, 61181"tlngs.
~eeks, 1stb = l pedlg~~~
all electric, nice lot. Betwet~~
~
a:rmBpman 1"74Q)J ~8:1
a
Rio &amp; Bidwell on 5.54.$400 a
""'L~
•r
''
•
·
FORJbNr
month
plus
Cleposit . .._ _oiliiiiiiiio-rl Full blooded Lab puppies
(740)645-5736 or (740)448· ~
$100· Choc .. ye liow &amp; bIactt
6865 ·
hOme lot for :(740)441
0931
x100' mob,·~
I'IJ
; - - - " - - : - .- - : ·: - - rent ·,n "ldcl~ $125 nAr
APAluMENrs
~ ,_..,
•· Pomeranian Puppies, 6
1354
month , 7•"-•16
FOR Roo'
~ .
weeks old, First shots and
Commercial bUilding •For wormed, s1so.$200. 1• Jack
1 and 2 bedroom apart· Rent" 1600 ~re feet, oft Russell Terrier mix, male,

Bedroom
homes
20031.&amp;x80 mobite home for 3
1
144
aae
· (740 6.0527 ·
$500/mo, . Very clean, rice'
Greet used 3BA home only neighborhoOd, ·10 minutes
$9,995. Wil help wltll dellv- West ol hospilal. Attached
ery. Call(740)385-7671 .
gerage, No pets. deposit &amp;
references
required .
New 2006 Clayton sin- (740}446·2801 '
gtewide6 starting at $199.84
3 br. house for rent Park Or. mente. furnished and unfur- street p&amp;rklng. Great locaper month. Trade-i ns wei........
comes. Call (7-40)385-2434. Pt. Pleasant all app, fum. , all nished, security deposit ttonl 749 r rwrd Avenue tn
elecl. 304-675-ol060
required. no pets. 740·992· Gallipolis. Rent 'Negotiable'
&amp;
u.JI3
2218.
,CaH Wayne (404u~
,_...... 3802
~'E'·~
3
Br.
house
for
rent
-Racine.
A
"---~--~--pi 3 Br. trailer tor rent Aedne . 1 BR apt in Spring Valley. Downtown
Commercial
·
7ol0·949-2237 .
HUDIPRC vouchers accept· Retail space tor Rent. $4001
GOfLAND?
month.
Upstairs Office
·
38R home- SR 5S..., Bidwell- ' ed. W/O hookups. Call Suites for Rent $1.251 month
Government Funds
740 1 4 ~ 834 . or I7 40l6o1 5• you pay the Utll~les. Coli
tor ~ st time home buyn! $575/mo· sec. dep. refer· 1
11) _ __ _ _ (703)528-0617
ences, all. olec. (740)446- 4
_846
__109
__:
~ you own land or
2 bedroOm Apt available in
lamlly land, ZERO DOWNI 36«.
·YoUr land is your credit!
Attention!
Sy'racuse. $200.00 deposit .
(740)446·3093
1!:!
.....
~. - - - -_...,
$350.00 Per month rent.r
10f"'"~
~
Local company ofloring "NO
ZERO DOWN!
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- Rent includes water, sewer,
GooDs
trash. No pats. SuHiclent
'J
- l e Homo Lollor ronl grams tor you to buy your. Income neOOed to qUalify.
_
-6
_
3pc;; Oak ent. ctr. $300;
naar VInton. Call (740)441· home Instead of renting.
740 378 111
I 1II .
• tOO% financing
- - - . , - - - - - Dining rm suite tbl, 9 ch
* LGS$ than
credit A Hidden Treasure. Largest ' buflhutch $700; 9 cu. "ft.
Mobile Home lot in Johnson accepted
apartments !n the area. chest
freezer
$200.
Mobile Home Park In ~ Payment could be the Newly renovated, brand new (304}674-5780.
Gallipolis,
OH.
Phone sam&amp; as rent
everything, starting at $425.
(7ol0)446-2003 or (740)446· Mortgage
Locators. Cell today before they ars au
(740)367.0000
ThompSons Appl!ance &amp;
1409.
gone.
Laurel Commons
For
n~ .. " - · House lor rent In Clifton Apartments (304)273-334&lt;' Aepalr-6 75·7388.
sale,
,
.fti'AL~IAI.I!.
re-conditioned automatic
$400.
Apartment for rent, 1-2 washers &amp; dryers, refrlgera~~ 00
_ secu
• rlty. dep. req. call Bdrm., remodeled, new car- tors. gas and electric
107
olU"'t
N8ed to sell your home? , - - --o
: - - - - : - - - - : pe1, stove &amp; trig., water, ranges, air conditioners, and
~ "lddle
·
Late oo payments, divorce, House lor rent. Pome roy, 2 sewer, trash ........
M
po rt. wnnger
was~
,..,rs. w·11
• do
· b ra,,.
...- 1n
job transfer or a death? 1 BR, CIA, dean, new carpet, $425.00. No pets. Ret. repailll on m1f0r
shop
hom
740 ""·5264
can buy yoUr home. All cash nice level lot, At 833. Small required.
"V'hT"
•
or at your
e.
7 416
75
and ql.lck ctostng. 40· out bldg. $4 plus utilities Apt. for rent 2 or 3 Sr.. No
3130.
&amp; dep. No pets. . 740-843- Pets. 74().992·5858.
n.~:-. • ........,11'.0:'
I~ I \ I \I '
526-1.
- - - - - - - - - 1;
-._ _ _ _ _ _ _,.

.

To Place
l\egi~ter
m:ribune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call I Ollay•••
446-3008
Or Fax To
992·2157

2 bedroom. A/C, poroh &amp; Twin Rive,. Tower~ oCCOjll· 3 Rat Terrier pups $50 each
awning. very, very nice, no ing awlications tor waiting also 1986 22 foot , HI·LO.

l..,r_..~-&amp;~lr._..FOR_4x:_ALEilr . l r

8

-

---·-···----

�•

'
Wednesday, October 25, 2006

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 25, 2006
ALLEYOOP

www.mydallysentinel.cDm

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
~EA

BRIDGE

ACROSS

, Public Notice• In ~~:.;:~';'~::•;.:
· Your Rlaht to Know. Delivered Rlaht to

Attorney
for
the Lowden'• Weal line, Deportment imd the John
N.
lhle
Plaintiff
North 1/2 dog. w.t, 118 deedllne for blda Ia Chllrpmon
Roberta A. Hill
to the plllce of November lOth, 2006 Alta D. Smith Director
200 E. 2nd Sl
beginning;
at 4:30 p.m. Contnct Dellld Sept. 5, 2008
~~~
Pomeroy OH 45769
ALSO 1 permanent will be awarded on (10) 25, (11) I
Court of Common 740-992-8368
right-of-way. til IHI November 13, 2008.
Plea,
(10) 11 ,18,25
wide ecroaa · Lot 162 The Vlllega haa the
p bll N tl
llelga Counly, Ohio.
f;om the preml111 right to ICCipl or reject
U c o ce
In pursuance of on
herein corweyed; (llld any or all blda.
order of 111e ·to me
Public NotiCe
right being mentioned (10) 23, 25, 27, 30, (II) NOTICE OF ELECTION
directed from said
In deed to Louie I, 3
ON TAX LEVY .IN
court In the above anti- IN THE COURT OF Seyfried from · Kenneth ·
EXCESS OF THE TEN
.MILL LIMITATION
tie action, I will expose COMMON · PLEAS, Seyfried llld
to ule at public auc- MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO Seyfried, et al, foriner
Publ)c Notice
. REVISED CODE, SEC·
tlon on the front steps JP Morgan Chase grantors, to Which ref· .
TIONS 3501 .11 (G),
of the meigs county Bank aa Trustee for erence
Ia
hereby NOTICE OF ELECTION 5705.19,5705.25
court house on Friday, Equity One ABS, Inc., made).
ON TAX LEVY IN· NOTICE Ia hereby
November 11, 2006 at Mortgage
Pass- ALSO the following EXCESS OF THE TEN given !hill In pur10 a.m., of said day, th$ Through
Cerilflcate described reel alllete: MILL LIMITATION
auance of a Reeolullon
following described Series
2004·5 Excepting all of Loll REVISED CODE, SEC. 01 !he VIllage Council
real estate:
Assignee of Mortgage 159 and 160. H Ia the TIONS 3501.11 (G), 01 · tho Vll'-ga of
All that certain lot Electronic Registration Intention of the 5705.18, 5705.25
Rutland, Rutland, Ohio,
place of parcel of land Systems,
Inc.
aa Granteei to convey all NOTICE Ia hereby peued on !he 11th dey
shuate In tho VIllage 01 Nominee for Popular of the real property given !hill In pur- of July, 2006, there will
Pomeroy,
Meigs Financial
Services, owned by
Bertha o..nce of a Aaaolutlon be oubmltted to a vote
Seyfried at the time of of
the Board of of !he people of uld
County, Ohio, being LLC
known and designated Plaintiff
her decuaed with the Township Trusleel ot aubdlvlolon
at
a
on the map of Lincoln
11ceptlon of a portion ·the Townahlp o1 Salem, General Election to be
.Heights, made by Edith Barnhouse, at al conveyed to Edith Langovllle,
Ohio, held In the VIllage of
Breece
&amp;Carper, Defendants
Thomas and with the peued on the 14th dey Rutland, Ohio, at the
Registered · Civil Case No. D6CV100
exception of Loll 159 of July, 2006, there will regular plllcee of vatEngineers, Huntington, Unknown
Heirs, and 160, which have be oubmltted Ia 1 vote lng lheraln, on the 7th
Wast Virginia, dated Devisees, Legatees, been ·conveyed by of !he people of uld day of November, 2006,
October 11. 1942, a A d m I n I a t r a t o r s , deed of even dille subdivision
at
a the queatlon of levying
General Election to be a tax, In exceea of the
copy of which map EKecutors, Creditors herewith.
was filed In the office and Assigns of Edith SubJect to oil legal held In theTownohlp of ten mill limitation, lor
of the Recorder of Barnhouse, deceased highways, easements, Salem, Ohlo, .llllhe reg· the beneiH ot Rutland
Meigs County, Ohio, on whose last known right ol weyo, zoning ular plllcea of vodng Vlllege for the purpou
December 17, 1942, address Is unknown, Is ordinances,
roatrlc· therein, on the 7th dey of Pollee Protection.
and recorded In Plat hereby notified that tiona and CO!IdHione ol ot Novamber, 2008, the Seld .tax being: an
book No. 3 at Pages 43 JPMorgan Chase Bank record.
quellllon ol levying a lddltlonal hlx of 2
and 44, as Lot No. 14 .as Trustae filed a 16.00074.000
tax, In axceea of the milia at a rate not
and more particularly Complaint
for 11H10075.000
ten mill limitation, for axceedlng2 (two) mills
tho benoiH of Salem for each one dollar of
described as follows: Foreclosure and Other 9 Liberty Lana.
Township for the pur· valuation,
Which
Beginning at a point In Equitable Relief on Pomeroy, Ohio 45788
the north line of July 14, 2006, Case No. PARCEL NUMBER: 16- pou ol Roed malnlll- amounll to twenty
Lincoln Road at the D6CVIOO, on the prop- 00072.000,
16· nonce.
.
centa ($0.20) tor each
corner between Lots arty described as lol· 00073.00,
16· Sold tax being: an one hundred dollara of
14 and 15, asshown on lows.
00074.000,
16· additional tax ol 2.92 valuation, for five (5)
00075.000,
16· mille at 1 rate not yeare.
said map; thence wllh Parcel No. 1:
tho saki line of Lincoln SNuated In the VIllage 00076.000,
&amp;
16- exceeding 2.92 milia The Polle for said
Road, norih 63 dog. 51 of Pomeroy, County of 00077.00
for each one dollar ol Election will open a!
west 50 feet; thence Meigs and . State of Property Addreas: 9 valuation,
which 6:30 o'clock a.m. and
with the line " " ' - " Ohio: And known as Liberty Lane, Pomeroy, amounts to twenty- ...,aln open until 7:30
Lots 13 and f4, north being Lots No.1 59 and OH 45769
·
nino and two tanth1 o'clock p.m. of sold
26 deg. 09' east 267.67 160 as shown on Plat Also known as 9 for each one hundred dey.
feel to a point In the of Horton and Dabneys Liberty Lane, Pomeroy, dollere of valuation, for By order. of the Board
south line of North Addition to Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, and thlll flve {5) Jllrl.
ol Elections, of Meigs
Street; thence with The real estate lnclud- there ram•!•• due ond The POlls for eeld County, Ohio.
N.
lhle
said line of North ad the land on Which owing $59,241.52 with Election will OIM" Ill John
Street, south 68 deg. the garage for the real- Interest at 7.75 percent 6:30 o'clock Lm. and Chalrpereon
33' east, 50.17 feet; dance Is located.
par
annum
from l'llllllln OIM" until 7:30 Rita D. Smith Director
thence whh the line 16-00072.000
February I, 2006, and o'clock p.m. ol uld Dilled Sept. 5, 2006
between seld Lots 14 16.00073.000
costs that the defen· dey.
(10) 25, (11) 1
and 15, south 26 deg. Parcel No. 2:
dante . named In tho By order ot the Boenl
·
09' west 217.78 feel to Situated In the VIllage Complaint may have of .Electtona, of Melge
the point of beginning. of Pomeroy, County of an Interest .In said County, Ohio.
Public Notice
Reserving however, Meigs and State of property,
lherafore, John
N.
lhla
the coal and all other Ohio:
Plaintiff .demands that Chairperson
NOTICE OF ELECTION
minerals In and under- And known as being It be found to have I Alta D. Smith Director ON TAX LEVY IN
l.ylng
the
above Lots Number 157 and good valid and sub- Del8d Sept. 5, 2008
EXCESS OF THE TEN
described property, 158as shown on the slating lien on aald (tO) 25, (11) 1
MILL LIMITATION
together with the right Plat of Horton and premleea, for the
REVISED CODE, SEC·
to mind the same wNh· Dabneys AddHion to amount owing; thlll the
TIONS 3501.11 {G),
out encumbrance to Pomeroy. Beginning at Detendonta equity ol
PubliC Notice
5705.19,5705.25
the surface, and sub- the Southwest comer redemption be toreNOTICE 11 hereby
)act to an ..aement for of Lot No. 158 above; ctoaecl; thlllall the par· NOTICE OF ELECTION given that In pureewege filter ditch or Thence South 4·112 Ilea be required to ON TAX LEVY IN auance of 1 Aeeolutlon
leaching dNch as set deg. Eaat, 22 feet to a answer as to their EXCESS OF THE TEN. of ttla Board of
lorth and described In stake on the South lntenaalln aald pneml• MILL UloiiTATION
Township Tru-s of
that Instrument beer- sldeohslonewall;
esorbefonoverberred REVISED CODE, SEC. the Township of Olive,
ing date November .26, Thence North 811-3/4 from auertlng any TIONS 3501.11 (G), Alldavlllo,
Ohio,
1943, and recorded In dog. East, 110 feel to lntereatthereln;thatoll 5705.19,5705.25
paued 0!' the 22nd
eeld Recorder's Oflice the Wall end of a stone Ilene on uld prernl- NOTICE Is hereby dey ol Augull, 2008,
December 3, 1943, In well on the South side be marshaled and lllelr given that In pur- th..-. .will be 1ubmltted
Deed boOk 151, Pege oflot Number 161 ;
priorities determined; a..nce of a Reaolutlon to a vota of the ·paople
178.
Thence North 4·112 that uld prernl- be ol the Board of of uid aubdlvtllon at 1
Relerence Is made to dog. Weal to the soldaoupon11ecutlon . Townehlp Tru- of General Election to be
deed of Ruth E. Carr to Southea at corner of and the proc:eedo o1 the Township o1 Oliva, held In the Townahlp of
· Irene M. Dill dated 7 Lot Number 160;
uld aala be applied Reedsville,
Ohio, Olive, Ohio, at the regNov. 1994 and record· Thence North 89 dog. according to law; and pened on tho 22nd uler places of voting
ed In Volume 15, Pege Weal along the South lor auch other rwllet 11 dey of Augull, 2006, therein, on the 7th dey
701, Ofliclal Recorda, line of uld Lot160 and is Just equitable.
there will be submitted of November, 2006, the
Malga
County along the South llna of Defendant first herein- to 1 vote of the people question ot levying a
·Recorder's Oflice.
aeid Lot 159 to the above mentioned Is of lllld aubdl...lon at a lax, In 11ceu of die
-..nee Deed: Book piece of beginning.
further notHied
General Election to be. ten mill limitation, for
65, Page 617, Meigs 11H10076.000
they ore required to hekllntheTownshlpof the benellt of Oliva
County
Official 11Hl0077.000 ·
enaiNer uld complaint Olive, Ohio, at the reg- Township lor the pur·
. Aeconts.
Parcel No. 3:
on or before 2Ith Day · utar plllcee of voUng poee of road melnlllAuditor's Parcel No.: S~uated In the Village of November, 2008, lhlreln, on the 7th dey nonce.
1~.000
of Poi)III'C)y, County of Which lnc:ludel '-tv· .o1 Nowau.,., 2006, the Seld tu bolng: an
Property Address: 166 Meigs ond State of eight (28) days from ' ~ ol levying 1 additional IIIli of 2.8
Lincoln
Heights, Ohio;
the lest dati o1 publ~ tax, In 110111 of the milia ot a rille not
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Beginning at the clition, or Judgmont t.n mill limitation, lor exceedlng2.8 mills for
Currant
Owner: Northwest corner of may be rendered es the benefit · ol Olive - h one dolllr olva~
Number
158; demanded lhlreln.
Townehlp tor the pur- Ultlon, Which amounta
Kimberly Holiday et al Lot
Property
at; 1665 Thence South 77 dog. Fronk &amp; Wooldridge poll ot llllllntalnlng to twenty..lght canto
Lincoln Heights
West, 55 112 IIIII; Co. l.M
.
lnd operating cern• for each one hundred
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Thence 44 112 dog. Attomeya for Plaltitlfl lerlee.
dollars o l -, for
West, 76 feel ; Thence 600 South ·..._. StNot Seld tax being: a five (5) yeare.
PPfi&amp;-OU 229.000
Prior
Deed South 46 112 dog. West, Columbua, Ohio 43206 reo-.1 olo tax o1 1 Tho Polio · for aald
References: Volume 40 112 - ; Thence 614-221·1662
mHI ot .a rille , no! ElecUon will OIM" Ill
65, Page 617
South 112 dog. Well, (9) 27, (10) 4, 11,11, 25, aaceecllng I (one) 6:30 o'clock o.m. end
Apprellld
at 207 feel; Thence North (11) 1
milia for each one dot- reoneln open until 7:30
$17,500.00 terms ot 76 1/2 dog. Eaat, 302
!lr ol valuation, which o'clock p.m. ol 111d
ule: cannot be sold feet; Thence North 2
amounta to ton day.
for leu than 213rda .of 114 dog. Weill, 163 Public Notice
tor each one hundred By order of the Board
!he oppralled value. to the ..ld Seyfrled'a
dolt.n o1 votuatlon, for of Electlona, o1 Melge
10% doWn on dey of Southall!
earner; Tho
Vlllego
of five (5) yeere.
County, OhiO.
ule, cash or certHied Thonca alpng 11ld Middleport will ICCipt The Polli for eeld John
N.
lhle
checl&lt;, balonce due on Seyfrled'a :South line, _... .bldl for 1 con- Election will OIM" 111 Cholrparaorl
South 80 314 dog. West, tract for Solid Wuta 8:30 o'Clock o.m. lnd Rita D. Smith Dhwclor
conflrrnltlon of ule.
The opprelul did not 110 teet ta . the Collection &amp; Dlapoeel reoneln DIM" untH 7:30 Deled Sept. 1, 20011
Included on Interior Southeast corner of for tho 2007 year, o'clock p.m. of 111d (10)25,(11)1
.
examination of · the Mrs. Thomas Lowden'l January 1 to o.camber dey.
houae.
Lot; Thence South 77 31 , 2007. Sealed bldl By order of the Board - - - - - - Robert E. Beegle, deg. W.at, 40 feet; must be delivered . to o1 Eleclloi•, of llelga
Public Notice
llelge County Sheriff Thence along sold the Middleport Wlller County, Ohlo.
------NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL UloiiTATlON
REVISED CODE, SEcTIONS 3501 .11 (G),
5705.11,5705.25
NOTICE Ia harwby
given that In pursuance of a Reaolutlon
"'
ol the VIllage Council
ol the VIllage ol
Middleport,
Middleport,
Ohio,
paiUd
on
the
24th
dey
'
ol July, 2006, there will
be submitted to a vote
ol the people ol said
at
a
aubdlvlalon
General Election to be
held In !he VIllage ol
Middleport, Ohio, Ill
the regular plecll ol
voting therein, on the
7th dey ol November,
2006, the quHtlon ol
levying I tax, In ox•• •
of the ten miH limitation, for the ol
Middleport VIllage for
the purpoaa of Fire
Protection.
Seld tax being: a
- .l ola taxof 2
milia ot 1 rate not
exceeding . 2 (two)
mills lor sech one dollar of valuation, Which
Sheriff Sales
Caoo Number 05CV11
1..- DHI Plaintiff va
Kimberly
Holiday

o

u.v-

vs

lh_.

- -----PubliC Notice
------Public Notice
The Meigs County
Sub-Committee · for
Round 21 SCIPILTP
Projecll will meet
Thureday October 26,
2006 at9:00 a.m. at the
Meigs
County
Commlaaloners Ofllce
In tho Courthoul8 on
Second
Street
In
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Committee Ia compoa.ed of one repre~en ­
tatlve appointed by the
villages ofthe county,
one
representative
appolnt,.t by the township trustees, one repra~entatlve appointed
by the county conimlaaloners, one repreuntallve appointed by the
county engineer and a
fifth member eelected
by the lour appointed
representatives. The
purpose of !his meetlng Is to select the fifth
member and to aulgn
local p11orlty to Meigs
County appllc~tlona
submitted for Round ·
21 SCIP/LTP.
(10) 25
------Public Notice

-------

$'27.00 '

The Daily Sentinel
&gt;992·2~55

•mount•

10

twenty

cents ($0.20) for each
one hundred dollars of
voluatlon, for five (5)
years.

..

\

" Take the pain out
painting-let us do it

Nortb

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

{famihj •·ttlH!:•

740-985-4180

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

We~t

FOR SALE
1111un Building With Or
SELF STIRAIE
97 Beech Street Without Business
(;OOD LOCATION
IN MIDDLEPORT

Middleport. OH

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or992·66l5

740-992-5458

"Middleport's only
5aH·Storoce"

All Calls Returned

...

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

We get greedy
from pair events

NOTIGe!

FOrt

-

. ~

ANYT~ING

nve

BARNEY

HardWood hiHnea, ladFnHure

www.-etq.-

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

Serviceg

r~-;:;;::r.:;:=;:=(-;;::;-;:;-;:;;;--:;;:;:;;;;r;:::,-~

9:001m-11 :00pm

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Stop &amp; Compare

Let's see. In this deai, you are in th ree
no-trump._West leads his fourth-highest

R -: Aprl128, 200?
Afaa of $20.00 wll bo
charged lor early arrival,

late arrival, early removal,
late removal, or anytime
access Is wanted to
fairgrounds ottler than
rated dates. Building
space is first com e
first serve.
Inside Storage: $4.00M
Open Span: $2.00!1f ·
Inside Fen ce~ $1 .0011f

THE BORN LOSER
I \o.Jf.6PUMPt~ P'WI-\r--T 1' 'I'OU Wel:£ UfTif'.IG,~ ""l'olo- I I-III::&gt; ~€.:'&gt;:)INC&gt; '1'~"'
•~mt»..'i!

S~IR.T:-;!

· WE.I"t\TS, GL('.,t;XS?

Call 985-4372

~;;;;;;;~~lor~m~ore~in~lorm~o~tion;;~\ f

Texas Road off Route 7

we Deliver To You!
• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System ·
• Helios System

PEANUTS
THE LOCH NE55 PUTTER!

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

.
ti t (t;~~;,~;Gc f

Cornerstone
Construction
Residential • Commtn::ill • Gmeral Contractinc
Painting • Doort&gt; • Windows • Decks
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Remodellng
WV 038H2
• Plumbing • ElectricaJ 740-317-GMI
OH 382..
• Accoustic Ceil ing
7o~Q.-33'J..3412

j,/t,...
.
a '"' ;s
l

!

SUNSHINE CLUB

• Stump Grinding

Bucket TNCk

David Lewis
Free

GARFIELD

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
-~

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

-·..--·

-;111.

...If I.IIIUI. .

WANTED: Full-time SUBSTITUTE
position avail abl~ lO work with
individu als with mental retardation in
Meigs County. Hour. are scheduled as
needed for all shifts . Pay differential if
required to work outside of Meigs CounJY.
Must have high school diploma/GED.
valid driver's license. three years good
driving experience and adequate
automobile ihsurance coverage: previous
experience in the MRIDD field required.
$7 .25/hr. Excellent benefit package. Send
resume to: Buckeye Community Services.
P.O. Box 604, Jac~on. OH 45640. Preemployment Drug Testing. Deadline for
applicants : i 0/31/06. ·
Equal Opportunity Employer

L-------------------------~

" UT

LTSPGTL

GCFN

SFKK

JRU

WRX

J F J T L· P A N • F C T P. X L G C· T U R X K L
. UPN

MXTPGTL

FJ

NTZTJ ."

•

NTJ.

X R S T X G M . S A X L"
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'No man should enter polilics unless he1s either
independently nch or. independently poor." · Roben James MaOion

Astro-

Graph
-'lllrlhdof:

'::~:~~· S©~J.llA-~~~~~~

- - - - - -· 14tle~ ~~ CV.Y l. POUAN -

WOl D
lAIII

- - --

horr""9o letters of lhe
0 four
xrambled words be·

low

to

form four sl"'!'lo words

NEKATI

relying on yo ur 1:1xperienceS of the past

Alhena

Top • Removal • Trim

740-992-6971

Today"s due: Mequals C

By Bernice 8ede 0.01

Tree Service

FOR YOU!!

Celebrity cv.er owtc9ram! ere Cfeated from QllOtatioos b', famooJs p!IOI)Ie , pa$1 and prtsent
Eadlletftor m tie opher stendsl01 a"lohlr

You can be extreme ly effective in fulfill ing
both yo ur SOCial and material desires by

JOlES'

l6 Years Experience

by Luis Campos

West has led away lrom lhe spade king.
or, if East takes this triQc , that he will not
find a klnmg diamond shift (which he
ought to do here).
But that is wrong When overtricks do not
matter. You should lake the firllt trick wilh
the dummy's spade ace and immediately play on clubs. What is the worst that
the defenders can do? They can win with
the c lub ace and take th~ spade tricks
if West had made an imaginative lead
from the K-8·5 of spades..Whateveir the
distribution, you are assured of at least

Thursday, Oct. 26, 2006

740-985-3616

liAS
SOMETHING

·CELEBRITY CIPHER

the board at triCk one, hoping either that

G

BIG NATE

• Leave a message
West Shade Barber Shop
Owned &amp; operated by
Chris Parker
17 yrs. experience.
First Barber Shop on

spade. How would you play?
· No~h. worried aboul a potential dia·
mond weakness, tried to uncover a 4-4
· spade fit But when South denied hold·
ing a four-card malor, North, plunged Into
three no-trump.
You have frve top tricks: one spade,
three hearts and one diamond. You
could get a sixth lnck by running lhe
opening lead around to your queen. And
you have· four readily establishable club
tncks.
In a pair event, you would play low from

nine tncks.

~ ••~.)l'l:"i~11'!eil'3!'ft:••

Sta 1
a ary
n ey
7411-742·2293

..

tricks?

AITivol: Oct. 28,

·N~ Homes

741-992-1611

____
_
.

Meigs County Fai=nds

ce•m•cn••

48 Packing
slip
50 Heavyhearted
51 Urge on
52 Ruby or
Sandra

bri ng home an overtrick. But when you

WINTER STORA~E

ROBERT
BIS$Ell

LO,.,..//'tl
M aI·a·

I HAVE A DEVIL OF A
TIME WASHIN' LI'L
TATER'S . '""\'"""'?!'.!

24 POI1ugal
and Spain
25 Outlaw
pursuers '
28 Large cycle
30 Alps, for
short
34 Public
personas
35 Digit
40 HaHield foe
41 Two fives
for - 43 Not decalved by
45 GUUer
locale
46 Fleece giver
47 Wemher Braun of
rockets

move away from pairs e.nd play In either
a team event or Chicago, can you adjust,
playing carefully to guarantee your co~ ·
tract and not worf}'lng about those over·

........_

.... .

Ano'"r to Previ ous Puu le

II you play in many pair events at dupli·
cate tournaments, you know hoW importanl o~~e rtricks can be. If e'w'el)'9ne else
with your cards is making four' spades
exactly, you get a lop board if you can

NOT rttSPONSIIL.t

197 Ln~ril n Strut-M iddkpon. OH

Hill's Se lf
Storage

A7 3

Opening lead: • 5

(,OMif'IG
WIT~ AN
lltONIC. TWIST.

K1m Bias-Owner

•

2.

Leave Message

740-794-07S1
740-367-7442

• Q 10 9 8

Dealer: South
Vultterable: Both
South
West North Ea st
I NT
Pass
Pass 2 •
Pass 3NT
All pass

Klmmy's Furniture
Outlet

c 11 G

"'

10 8 3 2

9 6, 5
K762 ·
4

South
• Q7
.• K J 4
t AJ 3
.KQt0 65

NOW OPEN

• References
Available
• free Estimates
"Insured"

STYlE.

K 4

•

•

...!::J#...,

lld'O
1r•n1
WHAT

•

•

70 Pine Street • G allip.o li s
740-446-fi007.Toll Free 877-669-0007

...,_011
Rick,;!=.,:!:;;..,.

trl

A 10 6 3
• AQ7
• 54
• J 98 2
East

. J 98 .52

t

for you"
Interior Only

10..25·06

•

MONTY

43 Libras' mo.
44 Command
1 More
to a mule ·
46 Show c1aorty
aenlible
6 RacloandTV 49 Tapfd over
11 Luckyclwm 53 Chlnlll
13 Summer
ltrm Job
54 Un
14 -shoots 55 Diplomat
15 Hems to be 56 Window sill
'attended to
1&amp; Long sigh
DOWN
17 That man's
18 Flower
1 Uaedtobe
droplet'
2 .Brat
21 Fragrant
3 California's
blossom
Big 23 Small bark . 4 Lamb's
26 Land In
alias
5 Royal
"Ia mer"
27 illlemper
emblems
28 Vagabond
6 Sorcery
29 Maka
7 Potato buds
vigorous
8 Huge racket
31 Lyric poems 9 Gary's sl
32 Vacuum·
10 Ktat ol note
s-.,er
12 Souvenir
contents
buy (hyph.)
33 Doubles
13 Big laugh
36 Goela
(hyph.)
37 Ostrich kin 18 tiara
38 Speak a
19 Climate
falsehood
aHecter
39 Low
(2 wds.)
40 Honorific
20 Goofball
for a lady
22 Ogled
42 Airline to
23 Alpine
Stockholm . , refrain•

dum/..::8

t

r---.:-----,

The Home National
BfOk will auction the
following nom on ·
Saturday, October 28,
2006, at 10:00 a.m. at
Mike Hill'a Storage Lot
located altho lnhi!IICtlon of Boshen Aoed ~;::::===~~~
and Tornado Road:
r
2002 16 1 80 Patriot
Mobile
Home
.._.,.
J
PAT258381 N
3 bedrocm, 2 beth,
washer 7 dryer, etove,
Oeanln
.
refrigerator, dish wosh·
er, plus extras. ·
The Home National
Bank will' auction the
Affordable
jollowlng Items on
Dependable
Saturday, October 28,
Fully Insured
2006, 11110:30 a.m. the
&amp; Bonded
Bank's parldng lot:
DaQy, Weekly, or
2001 Ford Fl50 414
Monthly Plans
1FTAW08L81KD51040
AvaHable
1992 Chevy Blazer
1-740-992-6196
1GNCT18WXN0139148 '::;,;;;;;;;;;;;;~
'Pieau not the two r ACf TR'r ,.rhlfi''Cf
eeperate locations and
« ••"' ''
times.
Come, Tree Care
The Home National cn:::..:,;.~"";"Bank reeerves the
,,..,,,_ •
right to rejoc:l any and
Owner
oil bids. All vshlclea
OISURED
llld mobllo homes are
eold, as Is where Is, ::;~;~~~
with no warranties r
llpi'8Saed or implied.
STANLEY TREE
For en appointment to
. TRIMMING &amp;
-·call 9411-2210, ask
GENERAL
lorShella.
CONTRACTING
(10) 25, 26, 27
, Prompt &amp; qualrty
.
work
.
, Affordable .Rates

ONTHISP.

AS LOW

Phillip

Alder
The Pollio for uld
Election will DIM" at
8:30 o'clock a.m. and
...,aln OIM" until 7:30
o'clock p.m. of uld
day.
BfyE.,.......Iacttoof the -lloard
o
na, ol Me1go
County, dhlo,
John
N.
lhle
Chalrpe110n
Rita D, Smith Director
Deled Sept. 5, 2008
(10) 25, (11) I

Cro·s sword Puzzle

11••ntca•

few years. It is now the time to use this
knowledge to your advantage.
' SCOR PIO
(Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Constructive me asures can be taken to
reo rganize your financial picture 1n ways
that w1ll be m uch eas ier for you to live
with. Don't h esi tate to take action
revam ping your situation.
SAGITTARIUS (t-Jov. 23· Dec. 21) - · It
won't be selfish of you to devote your
time and energy on situations that ca n
advance your personal interests. In fae1,
it will be wise to take adva ntage of what's
occurring.
C APRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) - In a
private develOpment. you are likely to
fare bener If you react to it by fo llowing
your own perceptions, rather than list~ n ·
ing to what others have to say. Follow
your intUitive instincts.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) An
assoc1ate could be instr umental in giving
you a different perspective on a wo rkrelated matter about which yo u're dubi·
-ous. Once you hear hif!l f?r her out . you
won't be reluctant anymore.
PISCES (feb. 20·March 20) - All it"ll
take to ac hieve se~~eral objectives tha t
are presently important to you Is a little
extra push . You have both the knowledge
and reserve available to be successful.
A RIES
(March
21·Apn l 19)
Something you can do where others
have failed is to reorga nize a situation
that has had everyone going around in
circles . Your creat1ve mind will figure it all
out beautifully.
TAURUS (Ap ril 20·May 20)- The sensitive manner in which you handle people
will resul1 in giving a big lift to someone
who really needs it. Owing to your input
this individua l will be able to get past a
damaged psyche. ,
GEM INI (May 21·June 20)- Once '}IOU
become Involved in a group situation.
you 'll arouse a needed cooperative spirit
among those who have been a bit divisive . You'll establish the ellample for all to
follow.
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ) - If '}IOU
choose to use It, you possess the ability
tor' turning mundane tasks into creative,
productive endeavors. Don't doWnplay
your natural talent tOr beautifying your
$UrTOUndlngs,
LEO (Jul-, 23·Aug. 22) -Your cornpanioriShip will ·be very much appreeiated
today. First, you'll just naturally brlnQ out
the best that's within others and second,
you'll Inspire them to bring joy to others.
VIRGO (Au g. 23-Sept 22) - ~wh8re
there Is a will. there II a way," In sltua·
tlon&amp; wh•r• yoiJ •r• atrongly motivated,
you 'll make sure things turn out to your

Z 0 RE F

8

I. I r I
A

LAC

k

I~

1 I I. I 16 O
5

.

-

.

•

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Roofing • Siding •
Painting
Gulfers ·Decks- Etc.

Room Addition• l
RemodeJing
NewG•r•ge•
Electdct~l

&amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutlert
Vmyl Siding &amp; Pamting

P1tio and Porch Declta

wvo36ns

V C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 s
Pomcr~•l

i•

.,

lf'&lt;HS .r•' l [)[)

'

r

Remodeling
t"or •·ast Courteous
Service
Free Estimates &amp;
AlTonlable Prices,

0111 Dennis Boyd

140-992-1189

by

fbe dwci!e

oucled

fd\ 1'19 1'1 lhtt m•Ul/\9 WOldS

1......1.....1-.J,..,....L-L-.J you develor;: ft om Sfep No. 3 b~tlcw

@ PliNT

NUMSfiiD tEllElS IN
THESI SQUARES

SCRAM-L£TS AN SWERS 10121106
K;/ler • Nudge - Bound · Taught · DON'T THINK
.1\ proles~or told h1s class !hal 10 a Democracy you

can say what vou tl11nk. even 1f you DON'T THINKI

ARLO&amp; JANIS

l TOW YOU

T~AT WA~ A !lAD PUII.PKI~.

LIB RA (Sept. 2.3~0ct . 23) - Good rea..._..__._.., aons to change a bad opinion you ha~
r
· of someone may be brought to your
•attention. Once ~u dlges1 the lntormatlon . It could be the ganesls lor dewlap.

lng 1 frlend1hl p.

SEAl IT
CONSTRUCTION

at lhe next loble always

Comolete

-

lil.._ _:::;::.....=::i:iiii ==::lie!::::l
YOUNG'S

p l at~

,..,-T-H..;R_l_M_E__,,looks ••••••

liking.

·-

A cutie sighed lo her date,
'No matter what I order. the'

SOUP TO NUTZ
:X:k TtliNI&lt;i&gt;IIO Of se·ING &lt;l
a 'tRuLY. EVIl
Cl1lleL aND
Hei!F!\~ss ... aN ENTIW

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www.mydallysentlnel.com

Page B-6 • The Dally Sentinel

VVednesda~Ckrtober25,2006

Bu8h says he's not ·
satisfied with Iraq war, A2

'BooFest' is
tonight, B6

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.; o ('I '\ ! ,'-, • \ ol. ;;(, , "Jo. :;- .

'

II II RSil \ Y. OCTOIH.R

"'"'·m)dail)scntinl'l.nom

:!b, :!IIOb

.

SPORTS
• High school football ·
previews. See Page 81

'

Meigs Board reviews data on school finances
Education Oct. 31 which than was predicted at the
predicts . the district will end of the fiscal year, July
move into a deficit in 2009. 1. Rhonemus attributed that
POMEROY- The finan- Estimated figures show that to "more ,tax revenue and
cia! outlook for the Meigs . the district will have a hal- the r,rice of utilities leveling
Local School District was ance on July · 30 in 2007 of 0111.' He said that ell:pendi- .
reviewed by Treasurer Mark $144,689, in 2008, $74,704, lures are calculated and that
Rhonemus at Tuesday and in 2009 will have a it clearly shows that revnight's meeting of the $343,034 deficit. It is pre- enue does not keep up with
Board of Education.
dieted that that deficit will ell:penditures. He described
Rhonemus presented the climb to $455,722 in 2010.' the forecast as a "living,
five year forecast due 10 the
While that deficit figure breathing, document, subState
Department
of seems high _it is in fact lower ject to cbange."
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Superintendent William five mill&gt; would only result
Buckley noted that 73 per- in increasing the local share
cent of funds to operate the of 'chool operafion funding
Meigs Local Schools come while dccreusing what the
from the state. He pointed state sends in.
out that state funding has
"Summary
of
A
not been certified ·as yet Significant
Forecast
"it's not settled this year." It Assumptions" presented by
was, however, noted that . the treasurer. noted that the
asking for additional funds most current state budget
through a local levy solves
provides per pupil funding
no problem because local
funds generated by up to
Please see Finances, AS

Two men
arrested in

Autopsy:
Trooper
had drunk
before crash

burglary

attempt

COLUMBUS (AP)- A
state trooper who caused a
crash that killed himself
and two others drank alco-.
hoi befere he 'died, refuting his union 's contention
the alcohol formed as hi s
body decomposed, an
autopsy found.
Trooper Joshua Risner's
blood-alcohol level was
0.08 percent. the level a
person is considered drunk
under Ohio Iaiii'. In addition. the alcohol level in
urine from his bladder was
0.07 percent. .
The absence or glucose in
his urine showed that Risner
consumed alcohol before
the crash, according to the
autopsy obtained by The
Columbus Dispatch.
Research has not shown
significant amounts of

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - 1\vo men
were arrested and appeared
in Meigs County Court on
burglary charges after they
allegedly attempted to break
.
into a Dexter cabin.
According to Meigs
County Sheriff .. Robert
Beegle, Antoine Wissman
Page AS
of Rockville, Md. and
• George Horak, 90
Jeremy Jones, Rutland, both
24, were released on personal recognizance bonds
after appearing befQfe
_
Jud~e
Steven L., StOli:JI41:ai\JfL
..~- ·•'··~•"'-. lf.t'o.: '!, •
_,_·..
-~burglary charger. ··
• Family Medicine.
According lo Beegle, his
office
received a complaint
See Page A3
that two men had tried to
• PVH names human
break into a log cabin on
resource director.
Dexter Road owned by Josh
Bass.
Bass, who was asleep
See Page A3
What do you get when you
at the time, heard the win• Professor files
put a lot of children in a
dow open and discovered a
room
with a lot of paint and
lawsu~ against OU.
male subject with his head
their choice of pumpkins as
See .Page A5
Please see Anoestecl. AS
a canvas? If you're lucky
• TOPS honors losers.
what results is a good time
See Page A6
which is exactly what was
had by all attending the
Meigs County District Public
Library's annual pumpkin
WEATHER
painting night. The.s e
"Pumpkin Picassos" spent
the evening being as
Bv BRIAN J. REED
creative as they could be,
BREED~MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
just like Griffen Miller who
points out what is so great .
POMEROY - U.S . Rep.
about
his pumpkin to friend
Ted Strickland, D-Lisbon,
Brayden Sanders.
will make a stop in Pomeroy
Here. Jeffrey Dolan makes
Saturday as part of a camhis painting face
paign trip through his Sixth
' while brother Grant
Congressional District.
The Democratic gubernaand mom Jennifer watch.
torial candi. SerpntfpllotOI
· DetalloonP...,A8
date
will
stop at the
stage area of
the Pomeroy
parking lot at
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
I :30 p.m.,
2 SECitONS - 12 PAGES
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
according to
Annie's Mailbox
Democratic
POMEROY ·
Ted
Party
Calendars
extraordinary
"Celebrating
Strlcklalld C h a i r m a n
deeds
performed
by ordiSue Maison.
Classifieds
Strickland is bringing his nary people on America's
Ohio campaign largest day of doing good."
Turnaround
Comics
to southeastern Ohio over
That's how Make A
Editorials
the weekend with stops in Difference Day to be
Marietta, Nelsonville and observed Satur&lt;iay, Oct. 2.
Obituaries
Pomeroy. as well as Vinton. is being described. "It is a
86 and Hocking counties. national day of doing
Places to go
Other Democratic candi- good," said Cassie Turner,
Sports
B Section · dates, including Charlie Extension Educator, 4-H
Wllso'n, the · party's candiA6 date to succeed Strickland Youth Development at the
Weather
Meigs · office. "People
© 2oo6 Ohio Valley Publishinl! Co.
Please see Stric~Rnd, AS everywhere will be going

OBITUARIES

.,

.

Tickets ;$5.00-each~ ,·

'

'

or

.

· "Can Be ·Bought in Advance Froni Any Rota~~an· Available At The Door '
· ·Au Proceeds .Benefit The·Fodd PrQgtam-t God's Net
'

Riverview dining patio, DeH and Bakery
Gaunnet foods and Wine Shop
Drive TIIIV, Ivy Hill Gift Baslcots
Amish Goods, Micros and Imports

I

MEIGS FAMI£ Y EYE CARE ££C
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes, Optometrist
(7 40) 992·3279
Toll Free 1-877·583-2433

'

.,

700 N. 2nd Avenue
Middleport, OH

113 Court Street,
Pomeroy,OH

740-992~3322
Antiques • Glfle. Folkart

Holiday Ope11 H(iuse • Nov. 16th

Curbside Carryout

· 9:00 am· 9:00pm

.
100 East Main Street • 992-7696 .Pomeroy

1·(304) 773-6112

'

20 MaD.rd Laue. Muoll. wv 25268

aug an
ency

Ingels Carpet
175 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

992-9784

740-992-7028

Pomeroy, Ohio

INDEX

Baumlumber
985-3301

Chester, Ohio
'·

QUA~~~RINT
992-3345 • ·Middlel)ort,
164 South Second Ave.
Middleport, Ohiq
7fO- 992- .' 14 I

590 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
"40-9Y!-.'i.U.S

Home Nationa
Rac.ine

949-2210

jgjj

Syracuse

992-6333

DowninQ-Chllds-MuUenMusser Insurance
992-3381
Pomeroy, Ohio

Swisher • Lohse
Pharmacy
992-2955
Pom

Ohio

mpkin
Picassos

Please see Trooper, AS

Heating
assistance
begins
Nov. I

Strickland
plans Saturday
visit to Pomeroy

740-992-2054
·-g,&amp; &amp;YAteS•

ouse

ll•ller

740-992-5500

~

t

CLARKS JEWELRY STORE

POMF.RO¥. OH ~5769
1740) 992-6111

East Main Street • Pomeroy, OH

• •

Dairy Queen Brazier

BUNS PARTY BAm;
63b f AST MAIN STREET

Companv

,

INSIDE

(Fnt•) Fa.rmers Ban.k

BY BETH SERGENT
BSER GENT@MVDAILYSENTINELCOM

4-Hers to observe Make a Difference Day
out into their communities invited to participate with the
to do projects to inake 4-Hers and Senior Center
volunteers in making a difthings a little better."
In Meigs County the 4-H ference in Meigs County.
Fashion Board and other 4-H The program will begin at 9
youth will be making a dif- a.m·. on Saturday and go until
ference by constructing bl \11- 2 p.m. at the OSU Extension
kets to be distributed Office located in the County
throughout
the
Meigs Annex · building next to
County
community. Holzer Medical Clinic.
For those who cannot
Assisting the 4-Hers in this
attend
on Saturday but
effort will be volunteers from
would
like·
to help. donathe Meigs County Senior
,
tions
of
fleece
(at least one
Center's RSVP program and
yard pieces) and quilting
other 4-H volunteers.
The goal of the· day is to materials are being collected at the Extension office.
construct 30 blankets and
quilts. The community is
Please see Observe, AS

POMEROY
Th e
reccni cold m'omings and
chilly nights have reminded
everyone that winter is on
its way along with higher
heating bills and emergency
heating assistance.
The
Gallia
Meigs
Community Action Agency
Emergency Home Energy
Assist.ance Program begins
on Nov. I and will continue
through March 31. 2007
according
to
Sandra
Edwards. emergency services · division director.
GMCAA will begin taking
call s for appointments at 8
a.m . on Friday. Ec!wards
said cl ients should realize an
appointment will •lOt extend
a scheduled utility shut-otT.
HEAP provitles financial
heating assistance for the
area's neediest re,itlents

Please see Heating. AS

V~ We re Your Bankfor Cifeill
POMERO'f

GALLIPOLIS.

TUPPERS PLAIN

MASON

PT PLEASANT

992·2136

4·1 6-2265

985 3385

733.Cr400

fi74 8200

Valley Lumber &amp;Supply
992-6611
Middleport, Ohio
•

.'

•

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